Archive September 26, 2025

Strictly Come Dancing’s Amy Dowden admits she worried if she would dance again

The Welsh dancer was diagnosed with breast cancer in 2023 and shared her journey on social media

Amy Dowden has opened up about the ‘hard slog’ of recovery following her battle with cancer. The Strictly Come Dancing star, 35, underwent a mastectomy and intense chemotherapy after being diagnosed with breast cancer in 2023.

Amy documented her journey on social media, happily announcing in February 2024 that she had ‘no evidence of the disease.’ However, the Welsh dancer has now revealed that recovery took longer than expected, which she described as a ‘very scary time’.

Speaking on the Breast Cancer Uncovered podcast, she said: “All of a sudden my diary was blank because I was cancelling dance shows, I was cancelling up and coming work. And I didn’t know: was I going to be dancing again?

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“Was I going to be working again? It was a very scary time and you don’t know when you are going to get back to full health. There is no guarantee you will. ” Breast Cancer Uncovered is a five-part series which explores the ‘realities of breast cancer’, touching on topics like diagnosis, recovery and even diet.

Amy worked with breast cancer surgeon, Naren Basu, to film the series, which is available to listen to on YouTube, Spotify and Apple Podcasts. During this episode’s conversation, she continued: “For me, if somebody who had such a full-on loaded diary to all of a sudden then to be cancelling everything and not know when your life was going to resume was, for me particularly, was really tough.”

She also added: “I thought that was it. Life was going to resume. I didn’t realise that hard slog then of recovery and how long that actually took.”

Possible signs of breast cancer

Amy often uses her platform to highlight breast cancer awareness and encourages women to frequently examine themselves for crucial warning signs. Amongst potential indicators to watch for are lumps, swelling, and unusual changes in breast size or shape, alongside other symptoms:

  • Change in the skin of your breast, such as dimpling (it may look like orange peel) or redness, which may be harder to see on black or brown skin
  • Change in the shape or look of your nipple, such as it turning inwards (inverted nipple) or a rash on it (it may look like eczema)
  • Nipple discharge (if you’re not pregnant or breastfeeding), which may have blood in it
  • Lumps or swelling in your breast, chest, or armpit
  • Change in size or shape of 1 or both breasts, or either side of your chest – it’s common for breasts to be different sizes, but check for any changes that are not normal for you
  • Sores or ulcers on your chest

Advice from the NHS also adds: “Checking your breasts or chest regularly helps you learn what looks and feels normal for you. This makes it easier to notice any changes that could be a sign of a condition such as breast cancer.

“You should try to check your breasts or chest about once a month. “

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How can I get a breast screening?

The NHS invites females registered with a GP to take a breast screening every three years between the ages of 50 and 71. These invitations are generally sent in the post.

“If you’re a trans man, trans woman or are non-binary you may be invited automatically, or you may need to talk to your GP surgery or call the local breast screening service to ask for an appointment,” the health body adds. “You need to be registered with a GP surgery to be invited for breast screening. “

However, anyone who notices unusual changes in their breasts is encouraged to seek GP advice, regardless of their age. The NHS adds: “Lumps in the breasts can have lots of different causes. They’re often caused by something harmless like a non-cancerous tissue growth (fibroadenoma) or a build-up of fluid (breast cyst).

“Sometimes, a breast lump can be a sign of something serious like breast cancer. Do not try to self-diagnose the cause of your lump – always see a GP. “

Further information is available at the NHS website.

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Catterall and Azim on Eubank-Benn 2 undercard

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British welterweights Jack Catterall and Ekow Essuman will meet in the co-main event fight when Chris Eubank Jr faces Conor Benn on 15 November.

Catterall and Essuman are both coming off wins and will hope victory at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium will propel them into world-title contention.

The full undercard for Eubank v Benn 2 has been announced, with a host of British fighters in action, including Adam Azim and Richard Riakporhe.

Recent heavyweight convert Riakporhe faces domestic rival Tommy Welch, who is unbeaten in 16 fights.

Riakporhe has had one fight at heavyweight and, at 35, needs to move quickly to establish himself as a serious contender.

Undefeated Azim, 23, faces Zaur Abdullaev in a light-welterweight contest.

Azim recently signed a new promotional deal with Boxxer as he looks to move into world-title contention in the next 12 months.

Rising super-flyweight prospect Mikie Tallon will take on Londonder Fezan Shahid.

Liverpool’s Tallon, 20, is undefeated in 10 fights, while 33-year-old Shahid has four wins, two draws and two defeats since making his debut in 2021.

Sam Gilley and Ishmael Davis will meet in a British and Commonwealth light-middleweight title fight.

Eubank v Benn undercard in full

Chris Eubank Jr v Conor Benn 2 – middleweight

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‘Bigger than football’ – the Dublin NFL game 100 years in the making

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NFL: Minnesota Vikings v Pittsburgh Steelers

Venue: Croke Park, Dublin Date: Sunday 28 September Kick-off: 14:30 BST

When the anthems play at Sunday’s NFL game in Dublin, it will hit different for everyone involved.

For the Irish fans who have longed for the NFL to return after a solitary pre-season game in 1997.

For the league itself, which has shown reverence for being granted the opportunity to play in a historic institution such as Croke Park.

For the fans and players visiting from America, who see this as a bucket-list trip.

And mostly it will hit different for the Rooney family, who have brought one of the NFL’s most-storied franchises to their homeland, almost 100 years after their Irish ancestors founded the Pittsburgh Steelers.

From Newry to NFL champions

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Art Rooney’s great-grandparents were among the estimated two million Irish people who emigrated to North America during the Great Famine.

After leaving Newry, County Down in the 1840s, they spent time in Wales and Canada before settling in Pennsylvania.

Art was born there in 1901 and went on to become a multi-sport athlete, earning an athletic scholarship. He played and managed minor league baseball and semi-pro football teams before buying an NFL franchise in 1933 for $2,500 (£1870).

After initially sharing the name of Pittsburgh’s baseball team – the Pirates – the football team was renamed in recognition of the city’s steel industry in 1940.

The Steelers struggled for decades, having a winning record in only eight out of 36 seasons before Chuck Noll became head coach in 1969.

Dan Rooney, the eldest of Art’s five sons, began working in the team’s front office at an early age and was 36 when he became general manager and interviewed Noll.

Dan Rooney’s legacy in NFL & Ireland

The Pittsburgh Steelers squad at the White House, with US President Barack Obama, Steelers chairman Dan Rooney and head coach Mike Tomlin stood beside the Super Bowl trophyGetty Images

Dan Rooney was already running the Steelers’ day-to-day operations before becoming president in 1975.

A year later, he formed a charity with Sir Anthony O’Reilly, the former Ireland rugby player who at the time was president of Pittsburgh-based food giant HJ Heinz.

Now known as the Ireland Funds, the philanthropic group has raised more than $650m (£485m) for thousands of Irish organisations around the world.

And as the NFL began to expand globally, playing pre-season games overseas from 1986, Rooney pushed for a game in Ireland and succeeded in 1997, with the Steelers facing the Chicago Bears at Croke Park.

He also oversaw key changes to the league while serving on several NFL committees, including the 2003 introduction of the Rooney Rule, which requires an ethnic minority candidate to be interviewed for each head coach and general manager vacancy.

That year the eldest of his nine children, Art II, assumed operational control as Steelers president and from 2009 to 2012, Rooney served as the US Ambassador to Ireland, making sure he visited all 32 counties on the island of Ireland.

“The idea was to let the people know that America cared,” he said. “We wanted to do the right thing. “

In 2000, Rooney followed his father into the Pro Football Hall of Fame and in 2013 was inducted into the Irish American Hall of Fame.

‘Dream’ return to Irish roots

Steelers executive Dan Rooney and former players Jerome Bettis and Ike Taylor with pupils at St Mary’s High School in NewryPA Media

The Steelers organisation is very much a family business for the Rooneys. Five members of the family still work in the front office, including Art II’s eldest son Dan.

He is currently director of business development and strategy and this week was part of a Steelers contingent that visited Newry, an hour’s drive from Dublin, just across the border in Northern Ireland.

“[While I was] growing up, my grandfather and father always talked about their love for Ireland, so this is a dream come true for the Rooney family,” he told the BBC.

“Making sure we engage with the island and its people is something my grandfather cared deeply about, and we’re doing that in a big way this week. “

While back in his ancestors’ hometown, Rooney announced two scholarships for local pupils via the Ireland Funds, along with grants for their schools.

The team also held a flag football event in Belfast, one of many community events they have organised across the island of Ireland before Dublin becomes the sixth international city to host a regular-season NFL game.

Almost one in 10 Americans have Irish heritage – including NFL executive Peter O’Reilly and Pittsburgh’s new quarterback Aaron Rodgers – which is partly why more than 30,000 international visitors are expected this weekend.

“There’s not another international game where that connection between the team, the owners and the country is this deep,” said O’Reilly.

“Seeing NFL fans in Dublin and such an iconic stadium being transformed, it’s really special. “

Rodgers, a four-time MVP, added: “This game means a lot to all of us so we want to represent the team and the Rooney legacy well.

“Being a part of the first game in Ireland is pretty cool. I have Irish heritage, so I’m very excited to get out there. “

While Rodgers is new to the organisation, head coach Mike Tomlin has been the Steelers’ head coach since 2007 and remembers their former president fondly.

“I think a lot about the late Ambassador Rooney and how fired up he would be about this trip, and how important the development of this trip was for him,” he said.

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Gauff Launches China Open Title Defence In Style

Coco Gauff’s 6-4, 6-0 victory over Kamilla Rakhimova, who is currently chasing a repeat China Open title, secured her place in the final 32.

Leylah Fernandez, the third-ranked American, will next face her in Beijing, where she defeated Maria Sakkari from Greece 6-2, 6-0.

After the game, Gauff said, “I think the mindset is a little bit different because playing well at a place gives you a lot of confidence.”

You experience the familiarity of the circumstances from the days before those difficult times,” she said.

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Coco Gauff’s women’s single match with Kamilla Rakhimova from the US on September 26, 2025, returns to Kamilla Rakhimova from Russia. (WANG Zhao/AFP photo)

The defending Beijing champion won a drawn-out second game to take home four break points and level for 1-1 with a cross-court winner in her first appearance since the US Open.

Gauff broke first, winning 4-3 with a perfect touchdown.

The reigning French Open champion won the following match, and despite Rakhimova holding her for another, Gauff once more won.

In the opening game of the second set, an energized Gauff broke early without conceding a single point and countered a struggling Rakhimova for a 2-0 lead.

The 21-year-old American fought hard to defeat the dejected but unrepentant 89th-ranked Russian to win a third straight game.

Russian Kamilla Rakhimova and Coco Gauff play one more women’s single matches at the China Open tennis tournament in Beijing on September 26, 2025. (WANG Zhao/AFP photo)

Rakhimova, 24, had no chance of a comeback, so Gauff quickly made work of the rest and won the game.

Gauff told reporters, “I anticipated it to be close.”

She excels as a player and has competed in the past few tournaments with top players.

I just found my rhythm and began to flow.

No one wants to lose in the first round, so I believe it was because I was a little too tight, but I believe the result showed up in the score.

Iga Swiatek, who recently won the title in Seoul, is Gauff’s biggest rival in Beijing, having already lost to top-ranked Aryna Sabalenka.

UNDP, Channels TV Sign MoU To Drive SDG Advocacy In Africa

To advance the UNDP’s commitment to sustainable development in Nigeria, the UNDP has signed a memorandum of understanding with Channels Television.

Through effective public engagement, digital content on development issues, and success stories to promote peace, harmony, and prosperity, the partnership will be able to demonstrate its benefits.

Elsie Attafuah, the UNDP Resident Representative, was met by Dr. John Momoh, the head of the diplomatic and foreign desk, as well as the Chairman of Channels Media Group, Dr. John Momoh.

The partnership’s benefits will be demonstrated by effective, cost-effective advocacy, public engagement, digital content on development issues, and success stories to promote peace, harmony, and prosperity.

The UNDP resident representative stated that she was anticipating the partnership’s potential for young Nigerians and innovators and the resulting prosperity.

Through effective public engagement, digital content on development issues, and success stories to promote peace, harmony, and prosperity, the partnership will be able to demonstrate its benefits.

Momoh assured the UNDP that Channels Television will continue to influence international affairs and aid youth in achieving their goals.

“This is going to be fascinating,” he declared. We only want things to get better, and we want things to stay the way and the way they have always been with the UNDP.

Let’s see what we can do to help shape the world’s affairs and ensure that we can help the youths in particular learn how to advance their lives and achieve their goals in a world that is supposedly turbulent at this time, he said.

According to Attafuah, Channels Television will be crucial in amplifying the voices of the things happening in Nigeria and Africa, including technological advancements and other areas.

The UNDP resident representative said, “We’re living in a time of uncertainty, whether it’s because of wars or because of economic volatility, but we’re also living in times of opportunities, technological advancements, demographic dividends, and other things.”

However, we also live in a time of contested influence, where influence can be found in stories, values, and narratives. And I believe that Channels and the media will have a significant impact, she continued.