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Oti Mabuse makes baby confession almost two years after traumatic birth

Oti Mabuse has opened up on the potential of growing her family with husband Marius Lepure, almost two years after her traumatic birth with the pair’s daughter

Oti Mabuse is a mum of one

Former Dancing On Ice judge Oti Mabuse has hinted she could be ready to grow her family. The 34-year-old star and husband Marius Lepure, 41, welcomed their first child together in 2023.

The tot, whose name has not been publicly revealed, was born prematurely and suffering with an infection. She had to spend six weeks in intensive care. Oti, who had been diagnosed with gestational diabetes at 28 weeks, also experienced complications after the birth as she contracted sepsis.

However, despite the difficulties endured with her first child, the former professional dancer has confessed it could be time to expand her brood.

Oti Mabuse with her daughter
Oti Mabuse with her daughter(Image: Instagram/ @otimabuse)

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Speaking to The Express, Oti said: “I would love to have more children, I’ve never shied away from that. I think it’s a matter of time and obviously if God allows it. Only God will say no is the right time, but yes, I would love to grow my little family.”

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And she also touched on life as a working mum, admitting she is still figuring out the best way to “juggle” her responsibilities. Oti continued: “I’m still finding it. Planning is something that we find really, really important and it really, really helps, but I think it will be a lifetime struggle. “

Her openness comes after she spoke candidly about her situation while in the I’m A Celebrity camp. It left husband Marius weeping after watching his wife’s tears in the Jungle.

“It moved me…I definitely was crying with her,” he said at the time as he flew out to meet her. “I know how real she is and how much she always tries to keep it together, so I felt it with her. ”

Shortly after his arrival, Oti and Marius along with their daughter embraced in a touching moment before leaving the ITV show.

And in December, just before Christmas, Oti has shared a heartfelt post on Instagram to mark a year since the duo brought their baby girl home from the hospital for the first time. The caption read: “One year ago today, we brought our baby girl home from the hospital, and it still feels like a dream.

“After weeks of incredible care from the midwives at UCLH (thank you doesn’t even cover it), she was finally ready – breathing on her own, eating on her own, and at the right weight. “

She went on: “I remember that first car ride home, holding my breath the whole way, overwhelmed with gratitude and disbelief. The world suddenly felt brighter – Christmas lights twinkling, our family waiting to welcome her, and the darkest days behind us.

“From that day, December 23rd, until forever, she’s been our greatest joy. Today, she’s sassy, hilarious, full of energy, and fills our home with laughter and love,” she continued.

“This journey has taught us so much about strength, hope, and family. We’re so lucky to have her, and we’ll never stop being grateful for this miracle. “

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Alcaraz sets up Barcelona Open final against Rune

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Carlos Alcaraz reached the Barcelona Open final for the third time in four years, where he will face Holger Rune for the title.

Spanish world number two Alcaraz, bidding for his second title in seven days, swept aside France’s Arthur Fils 6-2 6-4.

Alcaraz won his home tournament in 2022 and 2023 before missing it last year because of injury.

“Since I was a little kid, I watched the final every Sunday,” Alcaraz, the reigning French Open and Wimbledon champion, said.

“Being in the final again means a lot, in front of my people and my friends who came from Murcia [Alcaraz’s home city].

“Let’s see if tomorrow we will end the day with the trophy. “

Denmark’s Rune secured his place in the final with a 6-3 6-2 win over Russia’s Karen Khachanov.

Alcaraz beat Fils in three closely contested sets on his way to the Monte Carlo Masters title last week, but he was by far the better player in Barcelona.

He saved the one break point he faced and committed just 13 unforced errors compared to 38 from Fils.

Top seed Alcaraz won five games in a row to take an early break lead against world number 14 Fils before serving out the set to love.

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Hamer-Webb hat-trick seals Cardiff win v Ospreys

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URC Judgement Day

Ospreys (7) 19

Try: K Williams, Spencer, Hardy Cons: Edwards 2

Cardiff (22) 36

Wing Gabriel Hamer-Webb claimed a hat-trick to help Cardiff withstand a late Ospreys comeback and keep their United Rugby Championship (URC) play-off hopes alive.

Matt Sherratt’s side were playing their first game since Cardiff had been placed temporarily into administration before being taken over by the Welsh Rugby Union (WRU).

That disruption was not in evidence at the home of Welsh rugby as Cardiff proved successful in the first of the Welsh derby double-header at Judgement Day at Principality Stadium.

Hamer-Webb’s hat-trick was supplemented by two tries from flanker Alex Mann and a penalty try for the bonus-point win.

Ospreys centre Keiran Williams scored a first-half try before further efforts from replacements Will Spencer and Kieran Hardy.

This brought Mark Jones’ side to within three points with three minutes remaining but two late Cardiff scores sealed the win.

Cardiff’s victory resulted in captain Liam Belcher lifting the Welsh Shield trophy as the Arms Park side topped the mini league of derbies between the four professional sides.

Ospreys watched on as their opponents celebrated with their own play-off hopes now hanging by a thread.

A weakened Ospreys side struggled in the first half after missing injured forwards Justin Tipuric, Adam Beard, Rhys Davies and Morgan Morris, before their second-half recovery.

Referee Ben Connor, just 21, was busy in only his second league game, as he showed five yellow cards and gave more than 30 penalties.

Cardiff control first half

It has been a troubled build-up for Cardiff and they deserved credit for the win.

The WRU had confirmed the players and staff would be unaffected by the takeover with contracts being honoured but it had still been a stressful couple of weeks for the Arms Park side.

Wales wing Josh Adams demonstrated his intentions by signing a new Cardiff deal this week and celebrated his 50th game.

The early emotion was in evidence as Cardiff lock Teddy Williams was shown a yellow card for a high tackle on Ospreys fly-half Dan Edwards and Ospreys took advantage of the extra man.

Scrum-half Reuben Morgan-Williams popped a lovely pass to Wales’ Jac Morgan, who was stopped by Callum Sheedy before centre Williams dived over.

Despite being down to 14 men, Cardiff retaliated as flanker Mann dived over for his opening score.

After Williams returned, Cardiff were again on the offensive as they softened up Ospreys before Hamer-Webb proved the beneficiary of a long Cameron Winnett pass.

A fine break and pass from lock Ben Donnell gave Hamer-Webb his second, despite a desperate tap tackle from Jack Walsh and a last-ditch defensive effort from Morgan Morse.

Hamer-Webb was enjoying himself after being given the opportunity to start following an injury to centre Rey Lee-Lo, with Harri Millard moving into the midfield.

Cardiff’s bonus-point try arrived in the 35th minute and it was a tale of two successful kicks.

Hamer-Webb’s initial effort was gathered by scrum-half Johan Mulder before Ben Thomas’s pinpoint chip was collected by Mann for his second score.

Ospreys onslaught

Trailing by 15 points, Ospreys enjoyed some early second-half dominance but initially lacked the guile to unlock Cardiff’s defence before Mann was shown a yellow card for a no-arms tackle on Morgan-Williams.

Similar to the Challenge Cup defeat by Lyon, Ospreys had plenty of opportunities in the opposition 22 but struggled to convert territory and possession.

Some of this was down to Cardiff’s defiant defence with likes of Teddy Williams, James Botham, Winnett and Adams making crucial challenges in one move alone.

Ospreys’ offensive efforts finally paid off when replacement lock Spencer galloped over.

Cardiff regrouped with flankers Mann and Thomas Young denied by desperate Ospreys’ defence.

Millard was shown a yellow card for a deliberate knock-on with Ospreys replacement scrum-half Hardy almost immediately diving over.

This set up a grandstand finish but Cardiff kept calm and forced Ospreys into conceding a penalty try.

Line-ups

Ospreys: Jack Walsh; Daniel Kasende, Evardi Boshoff, Keiran Williams, Keelan Giles; Dan Edwards, Reuben Morgan-Williams; Gareth Thomas, Sam Parry, Tom Botha, James Fender, James Ratti, Tristan Davies, Jac Morgan (capt), Morgan Morse.

Replacements: Dewi Lake, Garyn Phillips, Ben Warren, Will Spencer, Lewis Lloyd, Kieran Hardy, Owen Williams, Iestyn Hopkins.

Sin-bin: Morse 39

Cardiff: Cam Winnett; Josh Adams, Harri Millard, Ben Thomas, Gabriel Hamer-Webb; Callum Sheedy, Johan Mulder; Corey Domachowski, Liam Belcher (capt), Keiron Assiratti, Ben Donnell, Teddy Williams, Alex Mann, James Botham, Taulupe Faletau.

Replacements: Evan Lloyd, Danny Southworth, Rhys Litterick, Rory Thornton, Alun Lawrence, Thomas Young, Aled Davies, Rory Jennings.

Sin-bin: T Williams 6, Mann 51, Millard 75

Referee: Ben Connor (WRU)

Assistant referees: Ben Whitehouse & Ben Breakspear (WRU)

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Arsenal ‘alive’ in semi-final despite first-leg defeat

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Arsenal face a mammoth task.

Overturning a deficit away from home against a club who have made winning in Europe their trademark will not be easy, but the Gunners have belief.

“We are alive,” says Gunners midfielder Mariona Caldentey.

Arsenal looked like they would travel to Lyon for the second leg of their Women’s Champions League semi-final with a clean slate after Caldentey made it 1-1 from the penalty spot with 15 minutes left at Emirates Stadium.

But eight-time winners Lyon bounced back immediately, with Melchie Dumornay’s sharp finish giving the eight-time champions a one-goal advantage.

“We wanted to win in front of our fans, we wanted a better result,” Caldentey told DAZN afterwards.

‘The biggest difference is they weren’t clinical’

Since Arsenal won their first and only Champions League title in 2007, French side Lyon have won the competition a record eight times.

Against such serial winners, you need to take your chances. Arsenal could not.

They had more shots than their opponents, but only managed four on target from their 14 attempts.

 Frida Maanum of Arsenal watches as her shot goes wide Getty Images

Beth Mead and Frida Maanum failed to hit the target from close range on multiple occasions, the woodwork denied Alessia Russo, while Christiane Endler denied Caitlin Foord.

“We create chances and get numbers in the box – we just couldn’t get the ball in the net,” said Slegers, who watched her team put five past Leicester in the Women’s Super League four days ago.

“We are not going to change those things in a week. We have been really good with our clinical finishing before. I trust the team that we can score those goals from those opportunities. “

While Arsenal had nine shots in Lyon’s box and threatened Endler’s goal constantly, the visitors were forced to take aim from range.

But when better opportunities appeared, the French side took them.

Even then, there was work to do. Kadidiatou Diani had to squeeze the ball past Manuela Zinsberger and into the far corner with pinpoint precision, while Dumornay had to beat both Emily Fox and Steph Catley to the ball before expertly lifting it over the Arsenal keeper.

‘Maybe the pressure is off Arsenal’

While Arsenal will be disappointed with the result, Slegers’ side will take confidence from their ability to create so many chances against Europe’s elite.

“You will be excited about the amount of opportunities,” former Liverpool forward Natasha Dowie said on BBC Radio 5 Live.

“It would be a different game if you come away and lose without those opportunities. It’s very unlike them not to take those chances. “

Lyon have conceded just three times in nine Champions League games this season, while they remain the only unbeaten team in the competition.

However, former Arsenal defender Asante, who won the Uefa Women’s Cup – as it was then called – in 2007, believes the Gunners can cause an upset.

“Arsenal’s home record at the Emirates has now been broken, but the opposite can happen for them,” Asante said.

“They can go to Lyon and cause an upset. The good thing is they know they can dominate the ball. Now it’s about being clinical. “

Lyon boss Joe Montemurro, who managed Arsenal for three-and-a-half years before leaving in 2021, said he was “astounded” by the growth of the club since his departure and stressed that the semi-final tie remains in the balance.

“I am just astounded at 40,000 people at the Emirates, a beautiful game of football, a spectacle. That’s what I am so pleased about, I am so pleased that since I left there has been three or four years of amazing growth. “

He added: “It’s not over yet. This thing is not over. Maybe the pressure has been taken off Arsenal, maybe.

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Inside Rory Mcllroy’s top-secret wedding from ‘drone defense to strict phone rule’

Rory McIlroy married his wife, Erica Stoll, in 2017 with the couple keeping their wedding day as under wraps as possible. The big event reportedly featured a strict phone ban and ‘drone defence’

Rory McIlroy had a privateceremony with rules to follow when he married his wife Erica Stoll(Image: Getty Images)

Masters winner Rory Mcllroy has been heavily supported by his wife Erica Stoll during his turbulent rise to the top. The Irish professional golfer clinched a career grand slam last week after winning the Masters during a nail-biting finale. At Augusta, McIlroy’s celebrations were boosted by the presence of his wife and their four year old daughter, Poppy. The duo’s romance has been firmly under the public gaze, especially since McIlroy initiated divorce proceedings last May, with the pair thankfully making amends a month later.

Mcllroy has been with American sweetheart Erica since 2015 and just two years later they tied the knot during a secret ceremony in Co Mayo. The couple said ‘I do’ at the luxurious five-star Ashford Castle on April 22, 2017, with celebrity guests like Niall Horan and Padraig Harrington gracing the occasion.

READ MORE: Rory McIlroy’s tearful phone call with his mum and dad – ‘No, it won’t be OK’

Rory McIlroy of Northern Ireland poses with daughter Poppy and wife Erica Stoll holding the Masters trophy during the Green Jacket Ceremony after winning the 2025 Masters Tournament
Rory McIlroy with daughter Poppy and wife Erica Stoll holding the Masters trophy during the Green Jacket Ceremony(Image: Getty Images)

Despite reportedly being offered numerous magazine deals for exclusive coverage of their wedding day – including a whopping $3million offer from a US magazine – the couple chose to keep it an intimate affair. It’s said that the staff at Ashford Castle were even made to sign non-disclosure agreements to be present at the wedding and guests were prohibited from using their mobile phones.

McIlroy is also rumoured to have shelled out around €30,000 ($32,460) on UK anti-drone company, Drone Defence, to prevent any unauthorised photos of their special day. Additionally, he splurged on top-notch security, led by Bono’s bodyguard Brian Murphy, to safeguard the 13th-century castle for five days, according the Irish Star.

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Away from the spotlight, the couple live in a sprawling nine-bedroom and 10 bathroom £16. 6 million mansion in Jupiter, Florida – a grand 13,000-square-foot estate tucked away in the ultra-exclusive Bear’s Club. Their plush abode boasts deluxe amenities such as an infinity pool, a tennis court, a gym, home theatre, games room and a custom-built recording studio.

Rory McIlroy of Team Europe and wife Erica attend the Gala Dinner prior to the 2023 Ryder Cup
Rory and Erica live in a stunning £16.6 million mansion in Jupiter(Image: Getty Images)

A six-car garage houses his collection of high-performance vehicles and the grounds are dotted with palm trees and tropical plants. They also have direct access to a private hole on the Bear’s Club golf course – allowing McIlroy to practice in total privacy.

However, last month, fellow golfer JJ Spaun revealed that McIlroy had shared plans with him of building a home in the UK, specifically in the Cotswolds area. Speaking on the Fore Play podcast, Spaun mentioned: “He’s super cool. We were discussing the UK. Knowing he’s from Northern Ireland, I asked if he ever spends time in London. My wife has a close friend living there and loves visiting, so over the past couple of years, we’ve taken a December vacation to the Cotswolds. I asked him about it, and he said, ‘Oh yeah, I’m building a house out there. ‘”.

Erica Stoll and Rory McIlroy of Europe attend the 2016 Ryder Cup Opening Ceremony at Hazeltine National Golf Club
The couple have been married since 2017(Image: Getty Images)

However, as speculation reached a fever pitch, sources confided in the Mirror that such a move wouldn’t be happening “any time soon”. An insider who resides near the McIlroys in Florida revealed: “It is way too premature to think Rory and Erica are moving to the UK.

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“Their daughter Poppy is settled, and Rory is committed to the PGA tour in the States. He has no plans to join the European one. You may see him and Erica more in the UK, but for now, as much as he loves Britain, his future is still in Florida. A move back to the UK will not be happening any time soon. “

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