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England ‘have to support devastated Lawrence’

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Fly-half Fin Smith says England have to get around a “devastated” Ollie Lawrence after he suffered a season-threatening Achilles injury against Italy on Sunday.

The centre was carried off during the early stages of England’s Six Nations win over the Azzurri at Allianz Stadium, which could rule him out of Bath’s Premiership title challenge and selection for this summer’s British and Irish Lions tour to Australia.

The 25-year-old will miss England’s final game of the Six Nations against Wales in Cardiff next Saturday and is set to undergo a scan to determine the extent of the injury.

Northampton’s Smith, who progressed through the Worcester Warriors academy with Lawrence, said the impact of his injury had been heartbreaking for the rest of the squad.

“Obviously, you play in a game and you want to win, but I think there is a sort of deeper level to it”, said Smith.

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Smith added: “We are all absolutely devastated for him. I’ve got everything crossed that the scans say it is not too bad, but it is not looking brilliant. He is absolutely devastated.

” He has been a massive part of Bath and pushing them forward, and a massive part of this England team. I don’t think he has played below a seven or eight out of 10 ever for either his club or his country.

“We have just got to get around him. I think as team-mates, we’ve got to be good friends to him now and look out for him because it is going to be a tough time for him”.

England head coach Steve Borthwick, meanwhile, said Lawrence would have consultations with the “very best people” and receive the “very best care”.

Despite losing Lawrence, who has impressed in the Six Nations and cemented his position in England’s midfield, Borthwick’s side scored seven tries to claim a 47-24 bonus-point victory.

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England shine in the sun but Cardiff cauldron awaits

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  • 438 Comments

Perhaps it was not quite sevens weather, but there was a definite post-season play-offs feel as the team buses rolled into the Twickenham car park.

Supporters shed layers and donned shades as the sun shone on south-west London, and with a change of season in the air England needed to show a spring in their step.

The standings demanded it. With a free-scoring France now making the pace at the top of the table, a bonus point would bolster England’s – admittedly slim – chances of a title heist.

More importantly though, the public required it.

After the strength of the opposition, the situation of the game and the severity of the conditions had variously been blamed for England’s inability to deliver running rugby, this was a day that invited ambition and invention.

England’s pre-match record against Italy was as pristine as the Twickenham turf, with 31 unanswered wins.

When Ben Earl galloped clear on the final play to add a seventh try, pump the winning margin to 23 points and make it 32 straight successes, it felt like the hosts had lived up to the occasion.

“We were trying to play a lot more”, said Luke Cowan-Dickie after the 47-24 win. “We got seven tries so something went right.

” We tried to attack from anywhere. We knew it was going to be risky, but we want to show the fans that we don’t want to kick as much and play with the ball. “

Wing Ollie Sleightholme, who crossed twice for the hosts, added:” Us as players decided just to beat people, score more tries and be more aggressive with the ball. “

It was clear. England kicked 31 times, but carried 145 times. Against Scotland last time out, they kicked five times more and carried 67 times fewer.

A remarkable shift, even allowing for the change in opposition.

It isn’t a tactic that comes naturally to England’s coaching staff, whose Premiership triumph with Leicester in 2022 came via grindingly accurate percentage rugby and a barrage of kicks.

And, even with the near-wholesale adoption of a Northampton backline which won the 2024 domestic crown in more style, England’s attack took time to throw off the ring rust.

A duff pass from Tommy Freeman drew the first groan from the stands inside 30 seconds. Earl was pounced on for a turnover shortly after.

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But England, as the old adage goes, earned the right to play before exercising it well in the second half.

Marcus Smith, who started the campaign as England’s attacking talisman but began this match on the bench, was key.

His defensive ability has been questioned, but his tackle on Matt Gallagher early in the second half as the Italy wing loomed out wide was impeccable in intent and execution.

Two minutes later he picked his moment in attack perfectly too, timing his run off Tom Curry’s shoulder to scamper in. A twin-moment, 10-point swing, that critical passage eased the pressure and allow England to loosen up their style.

When Sleightholme dotted down his second it was via a party game of a passing move, with England’s forwards improvising increasingly outlandish offloads. By then the Italy defence had faded.

This was still streets behind the otherworldly handling France showed off in Dublin the day before. But it was a definite step up by England.

The pluses are multiple for head coach Steve Borthwick.

Fin Smith, with sharp shooting off the tee, put in another cool-headed performance at fly-half, pulling strings and making plays.

Fraser Dingwall, forced into an unexpected centre combination by Ollie Lawrence’s injury, was smart enough to find a way.

Elliot Daly, the other half of that makeshift midfield, worked the angles superbly. The 32-year-old’s abilities – grey matter as much as fast twitch – will age slowly and well.

Ollie Chessum, Tom Curry and Earl ranged wide, far and effectively. Ben Curry and Chandler Cunningham-South added energy from the bench.

Jamie George felt the love as the crowd took to their feet to clap him on and off the pitch on his 100th appearance for England. He and his front-row colleagues had the best of the set-piece once more.

There will be tougher days and more stringent tests ahead.

Cardiff, on the final day, will probably be one of them.

Wales have stirred themselves under Matt Sherratt. The prospect of wrecking England’s title pretensions while dodging the Wooden Spoon will brew up an almighty atmosphere under the Principality roof.

The sunlight and support won’t be nearly so plentiful next week. There won’t be much of either for England in that city-centre cauldron. It will be a very different feel.

This video can not be played

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Related topics

  • Rugby Union
  • English Rugby

England shine in the sun but Cardiff cauldron awaits

This video can not be played

To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.

  • 438 Comments

Perhaps it was not quite sevens weather, but there was a definite post-season play-offs feel as the team buses rolled into the Twickenham car park.

Supporters shed layers and donned shades as the sun shone on south-west London, and with a change of season in the air England needed to show a spring in their step.

The standings demanded it. With a free-scoring France now making the pace at the top of the table, a bonus point would bolster England’s – admittedly slim – chances of a title heist.

More importantly though, the public required it.

After the strength of the opposition, the situation of the game and the severity of the conditions had variously been blamed for England’s inability to deliver running rugby, this was a day that invited ambition and invention.

England’s pre-match record against Italy was as pristine as the Twickenham turf, with 31 unanswered wins.

When Ben Earl galloped clear on the final play to add a seventh try, pump the winning margin to 23 points and make it 32 straight successes, it felt like the hosts had lived up to the occasion.

“We were trying to play a lot more”, said Luke Cowan-Dickie after the 47-24 win. “We got seven tries so something went right.

” We tried to attack from anywhere. We knew it was going to be risky, but we want to show the fans that we don’t want to kick as much and play with the ball. “

Wing Ollie Sleightholme, who crossed twice for the hosts, added:” Us as players decided just to beat people, score more tries and be more aggressive with the ball. “

It was clear. England kicked 31 times, but carried 145 times. Against Scotland last time out, they kicked five times more and carried 67 times fewer.

A remarkable shift, even allowing for the change in opposition.

It isn’t a tactic that comes naturally to England’s coaching staff, whose Premiership triumph with Leicester in 2022 came via grindingly accurate percentage rugby and a barrage of kicks.

And, even with the near-wholesale adoption of a Northampton backline which won the 2024 domestic crown in more style, England’s attack took time to throw off the ring rust.

A duff pass from Tommy Freeman drew the first groan from the stands inside 30 seconds. Earl was pounced on for a turnover shortly after.

This video can not be played

To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.

But England, as the old adage goes, earned the right to play before exercising it well in the second half.

Marcus Smith, who started the campaign as England’s attacking talisman but began this match on the bench, was key.

His defensive ability has been questioned, but his tackle on Matt Gallagher early in the second half as the Italy wing loomed out wide was impeccable in intent and execution.

Two minutes later he picked his moment in attack perfectly too, timing his run off Tom Curry’s shoulder to scamper in. A twin-moment, 10-point swing, that critical passage eased the pressure and allow England to loosen up their style.

When Sleightholme dotted down his second it was via a party game of a passing move, with England’s forwards improvising increasingly outlandish offloads. By then the Italy defence had faded.

This was still streets behind the otherworldly handling France showed off in Dublin the day before. But it was a definite step up by England.

The pluses are multiple for head coach Steve Borthwick.

Fin Smith, with sharp shooting off the tee, put in another cool-headed performance at fly-half, pulling strings and making plays.

Fraser Dingwall, forced into an unexpected centre combination by Ollie Lawrence’s injury, was smart enough to find a way.

Elliot Daly, the other half of that makeshift midfield, worked the angles superbly. The 32-year-old’s abilities – grey matter as much as fast twitch – will age slowly and well.

Ollie Chessum, Tom Curry and Earl ranged wide, far and effectively. Ben Curry and Chandler Cunningham-South added energy from the bench.

Jamie George felt the love as the crowd took to their feet to clap him on and off the pitch on his 100th appearance for England. He and his front-row colleagues had the best of the set-piece once more.

There will be tougher days and more stringent tests ahead.

Cardiff, on the final day, will probably be one of them.

Wales have stirred themselves under Matt Sherratt. The prospect of wrecking England’s title pretensions while dodging the Wooden Spoon will brew up an almighty atmosphere under the Principality roof.

The sunlight and support won’t be nearly so plentiful next week. There won’t be much of either for England in that city-centre cauldron. It will be a very different feel.

This video can not be played

To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.

Related topics

  • Rugby Union
  • English Rugby

Melvin Odoom finally lands ‘date’ with crush Carol Vorderman after I’m A Celebrity dream

Melvin Odoom is over the moon after finally securing a “date” with his crush, Carol Vorderman.

The I’m A Celebrity… Get Me Out of Here! star, 44, took to Instagram on Sunday to share a sweet snap of himself and former Countdown star Carol, 64. The photos saw Melvin cosy up to Carol for the long-awaited meeting, and the BBC Radio 1 host couldn’t look any happier.

“Dreamed it then real lifed it” he captioned the post and it didn’t take long for his fans to rush to the comments to share their support. “The king of manifesting. We need the tea”, one wrote.

“The selfies we’ve all been waiting for. Vodderzzz”, another quipped. While someone else added: “And the crowd stood up and cheered”. And someone else gushed: “Man like Melvin making manifestations happen! I hope you didn’t just get a couple of selfies and that you two now can build on a blossoming friendship. Your looking good bruv and VERY happy”.

Melvin said that he's made his manifestations come true
Melvin said that he’s made his manifestations come true (melvinodoom/Instagram)
Carol is Melvin's biggest celebrity crush
Carol is Melvin’s biggest celebrity crush (Gareth Cattermole/Getty Images)

Melvin revealed his admiration for Carol while in the I’m A Celebrity jungle, picking a pillow with the former Countdown host printed on it as his luxury item. Although months have gone by since he publicly stated his love for Carol, Melvin made it clear that she hasn’t brushed him off yet, and that he had a master plan to finally secure a date.

Speaking to the Mirror at the TV Choice Awards, Melvin blasted claims that Carol had “ghosted” him on Instagram. “She didn’t ghost me! I don’t know where this – she just hasn’t read my message yet! There’s this rumour going around that she ghosted me”, he jokingly protested. The DJ then gushed over Carol, and shared that he had complete faith she’d get in touch with him when the time’s right.

“Carol’s a lovely lady. I just want to put that in black and white right now. She is a wonderful lady, she’s hardworking, and she’s busy out here trying to look after people and take care of them”, he said. “She ain’t got time to look at my DMs every five seconds! So when she sees it, I’m sure she’ll read it… when she’s ready”.

Melvin told his campmates about his admiration and attraction for Carol
Melvin told his campmates about his admiration and attraction for Carol (ITV/REX/Shutterstock)

While Carol hadn’t read Melvin’s message, she did send him a message of her own while he was still in Australia. The Cambridge graduate appeared on I’m a Celebrity… Unpacked, and sent a voice note to Melvin. “Melvin, I’m blushing redder than that leather red dress I’m wearing on your pillowcase. But I’ll be rooting for you all the way through, and see you on the other side”, she teased.

Aside from his major crush on Carol, Melvin has always kept his private life private. However, he revealed that he’s open to love wherever he might find it. In a YouTube interview last year, he said: “Dating is hard. For me, don’t shut yourself off from anything because your potential partner could be anywhere. You have to chill and go with the flow, you can’t control love”.

Like this story? For more of the latest showbiz news and gossip, follow Mirror Celebs on TikTok , Snapchat , Instagram , Twitter , Facebook , YouTube and Threads.

Can Trump reach a nuclear deal with Tehran?

Iran’s top leader says he refuses to negotiate under pressure.

United States President Donald Trump wants a deal with Iran over its nuclear programme.

He has reached out for talks while also tightening sanctions on Iran’s economy.

For now, Tehran says it will not negotiate under pressure.

It was Trump who pulled the US out of the previous nuclear deal, saying it did not go far enough.

Is there now scope for a diplomatic solution that is acceptable to both sides?

And what will it take to get them to the negotiating table?

Presenter: James Bays

Guests:

Heino Klinck – Former US deputy assistant secretary of defence

Hamidreza Gholamzadeh – Director of the House of Diplomacy, a think tank

Syria’s al-Sharaa launches probe into deadly clashes, vows accountability

Syria’s interim President Ahmed al-Sharaa has launched an investigation after hundreds of people were killed in fighting between security forces and fighters loyal to ousted President Bashar al-Assad in the coastal cities of Latakia and Tartous.

“We announce the formation of a fact-finding committee regarding the events on the coast and form a higher committee”, al-Sharaa said in an address to the nation on Sunday following days of violent unrest.

The Syrian leader said that the country was confronting attempts to drag it into a civil war. In his speech, al-Sharaa said that “remnants of the former regime” had no choice but to surrender immediately as he vowed to hold accountable “anyone involved in civilian bloodshed”.

The Syrian presidency earlier announced that an “independent committee” had been formed to “investigate the violations against civilians and identify those responsible for them”, adding that the perpetrators would be referred to court.

“The Committee has the right to use whoever it deems appropriate to perform its duties, and submit its report to the Presidency of the Republic within a maximum period of thirty days from the date of issuance of this decision”, the presidency’s statement read.

According to Al Jazeera’s Resul Serdar, the clashes on Sunday took place in the town of Qardahah in Latakia.

“Qardahah is symbolically an extremely important]city], because it is the birthplace of the al-Assad regime”, said Serdar, reporting from Damascus.

“But one of the critical locations … is Baniyas, in Tartous. Banias is home to the largest oil refinery in Syria, and the security forces are saying that remnants of the old regime]have] several times attempted to attack that oil refinery”, he added.

The violence in Banias came despite a call for peace by al-Sharaa earlier on Sunday.

Serdar said that Syrian security forces have reported a loss of 230 of their own personnel, while the majority of those killed have been civilians.

Syria's interim president Ahmed al-Sharaa holds a joint press conference with the Turkish president following their meeting at the Presidential Palace in Ankara, on February 4, 2025. Syria's interim president is in Turkey for talks with the country's leader after flying in from Saudi Arabia, where he was seeking help from wealthy Gulf countries to finance the reconstruction of his war-ravaged nation and revive its economy, as part of his second international trip since ousting the former Syrian president. (Photo by OZAN KOSE / AFP)
Syria’s interim President Ahmed al-Sharaa said on Sunday that “no one is above the law and we criminalise any call to spread strife and divide Syria”]File: Ozan Kose/AFP]

Deadly clashes

The fighting began after the pro-Assad fighters coordinated attacks on security forces on Thursday. The attacks spiralled into revenge killings as thousands of armed supporters of Syria’s new leadership went to the coastal areas to support the security forces.

The clashes – which London-based war monitor the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said had already killed 1, 000 people, mostly civilians – continued for a fourth day on Sunday. Syrians have circulated graphic videos of executions of civilians.

Al Jazeera has been unable to independently verify the casualty figures.

In the face of the clashes, al-Sharaa urged “national unity” as he reassured a crowd at a mosque in his childhood neighbourhood of Mezzeh, in Damascus.

“We have to preserve national unity and domestic peace. We can live together”, the president said.

“Rest assured about Syria, this country has the characteristics for survival … What is currently happening in Syria is within the expected challenges”.

‘ A major setback ‘

United Nations rights chief Volker Turk demanded prompt investigations into the killings and said those responsible must be held to account. Turk said announcements by the country’s authorities to respect the law need to be followed by action to protect Syrians and to ensure accountability for abuses.

According to Labib al-Nahhas, a Syrian opposition politician and activist, the violence is “a major setback” for post-Assad Syria.

“What happened right now is a highly sophisticated, coordinated attack, instigated and supported by Iran and Hezbollah, according to data and intel that is available”, al-Nahhas told Al Jazeera.

“Iran, which is looking for new leverage in Syria … they are counting on the sectarian and religious tension that exists in Syria due to six decades of the Syrian regime. But this is where the new authorities have a chance to show a different kind of tone and way”.

The new government must build “a strong national, unified front” – the cornerstone of which “would be a new transitional government that is truly inclusive, not]just] lip service”, al-Nahhas said.

“It’s the responsibility not only of the authorities, but also the entire Syrian society, to really focus on the positives, on the common ground”.

Regional stability

Jordan, meanwhile, hosted a regional conference on Sunday to discuss issues facing Syria such as security, reconstruction and refugees. Top officials from Turkiye, Syria, Iraq, and Lebanon joined the meeting in the Jordanian capital Amman.

“All of those countries sharing a border with Syria have a vested interest that there is stability and security for the new administration and for the Syrian people”, said Al Jazeera’s Nour Odeh, reporting from Amman.

“For example, stability in Syria means that the millions of refugees that Turkiye and Jordan are hosting can return voluntarily to Syria”, she added.

“If there is stability and the rule of law and a united Syria, then Iraq can have more comfort in the fight against ISIS]ISIL] …. If there is stability and security, Jordan can also be more comfortable in the fight against drug trafficking, which has created a crisis for the Jordanian government”.