{"title": ["Seven stars who refused to be body shamed - BBC News", "WSL 1 Spring Series: Chelsea Ladies win title on final day - BBC Sport", "British and Irish Lions beat Provincial Barbarians 13-7 in tour opener - BBC Sport", "Opioid crisis: The letter that started it all - BBC News", "French Open: Andy Murray beats Juan Martin del Potro, but Kyle Edmund loses - BBC Sport", "Jetlagged British and Irish Lions will improve after narrow opening win - Gatland - BBC Sport", "Andy Murray v Juan Martin del Potro: French Open set for biggest clash so far - BBC Sport", "Champions League final: Gianluigi Buffon inspired by Cameroon keeper Thomas N'Kono - BBC Sport", "The man who built his plane using YouTube videos - BBC News", "Anthony Crolla plans Manchester Arena return after terror attack - BBC Sport", "Juventus 1-4 Real Madrid - BBC Sport", "Champions Trophy: South African's Imran Tahir takes four wickets against Sri Lanka - BBC Sport", "Does Trump still think climate change is a hoax? - BBC News", "British and Irish Lions: Are the Lions sport's strangest concept? - BBC Sport", "Reality Check: Can we be self-sufficient in renewable energy? - BBC News", "I had to wait 11 days to be told of my daughter's death - BBC News", "Epsom Derby 2017: Wings of Eagles beats favourites Cliffs of Moher and Cracksman - BBC Sport", "World Cup 2030: Uefa would 'strongly support' pan-British or English bid - BBC Sport", "The young Japanese working themselves to death - BBC News", "Cristiano Ronaldo says that his records stack up after his fourth Champions League win - BBC Sport", "How has the fitness video adapted to the YouTube age? - BBC News", "Epsom Derby: Joint-favourite Cracksman leads way for John Gosden - BBC Sport", "America's Cup 2017: Great Britain face New Zealand in rearranged challenger play-offs - BBC Sport", "Champions Trophy: Sri Lanka's Lasith Malinga drops South Africa's Faf du Plessis - BBC Sport", "Leo Varadkar profile: Ireland's youngest PM - BBC News", "British and Irish Lions 2017: Owen Farrell leads race for 10 jersey, says Guscott - BBC Sport", "Novak Djokovic survives scare to reach French Open fourth round - BBC Sport", "Champions Trophy: Hashim Amla and Imran Tahir shine in South Africa win - BBC Sport", "Sergio Ramos: Real Madrid defender says they have 'appointment with history' - BBC Sport", "France's Emmanuel Macron: Birth of the anti-Trump? - BBC News", "Seven stars who refused to be body shamed - BBC News", "French Open 2017: Defending champion Garbine Muguruza & Venus Williams out - BBC Sport", "Opioid crisis: The letter that started it all - BBC News", "French Open: Andy Murray beats Juan Martin del Potro, but Kyle Edmund loses - BBC Sport", "Antoine Griezmann: Atletico Madrid forward to stay after transfer ban upheld - BBC Sport", "The man who built his plane using YouTube videos - BBC News", "Stockport air disaster: The holiday flight that ended in catastrophe - BBC News", "Does Trump still think climate change is a hoax? - BBC News", "Reality Check: Can we be self-sufficient in renewable energy? - BBC News", "I had to wait 11 days to be told of my daughter's death - BBC News", "How the Six Day War brought elation and despair - BBC News", "Champions Trophy: Steven Finn replaces injured Chris Woakes for England - BBC Sport", "Cristiano Ronaldo says that his records stack up after his fourth Champions League win - BBC Sport", "Gareth Bale: Real Madrid forward 'happy' to stay and wants more trophies - BBC Sport", "America's Cup 2017: Great Britain face New Zealand in rearranged challenger play-offs - BBC Sport", "Eden Hazard: Chelsea midfielder to have surgery on broken ankle - BBC Sport", "India v Pakistan: Virat Kohli leads his side to win in Champions Trophy - BBC Sport", "London Bridge attack: What powers do the police have? - BBC News", "Cristiano Ronaldo after Champions League final triumph: My numbers don't lie - BBC Sport", "British and Irish Lions 2017: Owen Farrell leads race for 10 jersey, says Guscott - BBC Sport", "London Bridge attack: Timeline of British terror attacks - BBC News", "How to live on an island just 20 minutes from Bond Street - BBC News", "Champions Trophy: India's Hardik Pandya hits three successive sixes - BBC Sport", "British and Irish Lions can't use jetlag excuse again - Ian Jones - BBC Sport", "Secret Mexican diary sheds light on Spanish Inquisition - BBC News", "French Open 2017: Rafael Nadal & Novak Djokovic in Roland Garros quarter-finals - BBC Sport", "France's Emmanuel Macron: Birth of the anti-Trump? - BBC News", "Andy Murray column: Beating Del Potro, player box etiquette and life in Paris - BBC Sport", "BBC election debate: Five key things - BBC News", "England v Bangladesh: Ben Stokes sledging leads to confrontation with Tamim Iqbal - BBC Sport", "British and Irish Lions tour: Steve Hansen says All Blacks are better than in 2005 - BBC Sport", "British and Irish Lions: Sam Warburton to captain tourists in opener - BBC Sport", "Chelsea paid £150.8m by Premier League after winning 2016-17 title - BBC Sport", "Kabul bomb: The hell of losing loved ones in Afghanistan - BBC News", "Are 'McJobs' really history? - BBC News", "Antoine Griezmann: Man Utd cool interest as forward suggests he will stay in Madrid - BBC Sport", "Ben Stokes: James Anderson worried by injuries to all-rounder - BBC Sport", "Champions Trophy: England's Chris Woakes to have scan on side strain - BBC Sport", "Alexis Sanchez & Mesut Ozil: Selling Arsenal players 'right' - Martin Keown - BBC Sport", "How is a major concert organised at short notice? - BBC News", "British and Irish Lions: Warren Gatland will not repeat Graham Henry mistake - BBC Sport", "French Open: Can Andre Agassi bring back 'warrior' Novak Djokovic? - BBC Sport", "General Noriega's pen pal: An American school girl - BBC News", "Freezing my eggs 'helped me after rape' - BBC News", "England v Bangladesh: Imrul Kayes out after Mark Wood's brilliant catch - BBC Sport", "Jonathan Agnew column: England will be concerned over Champions Trophy injuries - BBC Sport", "Reality Check: What would be the impact of a four-day week? - BBC News", "Messaging app Telegram centrepiece of IS social media strategy - BBC News", "Investment groups tell investors to give up tobacco industry - BBC News", "What happened to Robert the smoking robot? - BBC News", "BA computer chaos: The unanswered questions - BBC News", "Yaya Toure: Manchester City midfielder signs new contract - BBC Sport", "Martina Navratilova says Margaret Court is 'a racist and a homophobe' - BBC Sport", "UK's red letter day awaited in Brussels - with Brexit talks looming - BBC News", "French Open 2017: Andy Murray fights back to reach Roland Garros third round - BBC Sport", "Ederson Moraes: Manchester City sign goalkeeper from Benfica for £35m - BBC Sport", "British and Irish Lions beat Provincial Barbarians 13-7 in tour opener - BBC Sport", "Chelsea paid £150.8m by Premier League after winning 2016-17 title - BBC Sport", "Champions Trophy: England's Chris Woakes ruled out of tournament with strain - BBC Sport", "Champions Trophy: England's Chris Woakes to have scan on side strain - BBC Sport", "Champions Trophy: Australia and New Zealand share points after play abandoned - BBC Sport", "Does Trump still think climate change is a hoax? - BBC News", "British and Irish Lions: Are the Lions sport's strangest concept? - BBC Sport", "Is India's ban on cattle slaughter 'food fascism'? - BBC News", "The young Japanese working themselves to death - BBC News", "Will Paris pull-out hurt Trump? - BBC News", "How has the fitness video adapted to the YouTube age? - BBC News", "Jonathan Agnew column: England will be concerned over Champions Trophy injuries - BBC Sport", "Margaret Court: Tennis legend accuses 'US gay lobby' of conspiracy - BBC Sport", "Leo Varadkar profile: Ireland's youngest PM - BBC News", "Rafael Nadal races into French Open fourth round with one-sided win - BBC Sport", "Novak Djokovic survives scare to reach French Open fourth round - BBC Sport", "Sergio Ramos: Real Madrid defender says they have 'appointment with history' - BBC Sport", "Tiger Woods: Martin Kaymer criticises 'nasty' reaction to golfer's arrest - BBC Sport", "French Open 2017: Andy Murray fights back to reach Roland Garros third round - BBC Sport", "The world's not laughing, Donald, it's crying - BBC News"], "published_date": ["2017-06-03", "2017-06-03", "2017-06-03", "2017-06-03", "2017-06-03", "2017-06-03", "2017-06-03", "2017-06-03", "2017-06-03", "2017-06-03", "2017-06-03", "2017-06-03", "2017-06-03", "2017-06-03", "2017-06-03", "2017-06-03", "2017-06-03", "2017-06-03", "2017-06-03", "2017-06-03", "2017-06-03", "2017-06-03", "2017-06-03", "2017-06-03", "2017-06-03", "2017-06-03", "2017-06-03", "2017-06-03", "2017-06-03", "2017-06-03", "2017-06-04", "2017-06-04", "2017-06-04", "2017-06-04", "2017-06-04", "2017-06-04", "2017-06-04", "2017-06-04", "2017-06-04", "2017-06-04", "2017-06-04", "2017-06-04", "2017-06-04", "2017-06-04", "2017-06-04", "2017-06-04", "2017-06-04", "2017-06-04", "2017-06-04", "2017-06-04", "2017-06-04", "2017-06-04", "2017-06-04", "2017-06-04", "2017-06-04", "2017-06-04", "2017-06-04", "2017-06-04", "2017-06-01", "2017-06-01", "2017-06-01", "2017-06-01", "2017-06-01", "2017-06-01", "2017-06-01", "2017-06-01", "2017-06-01", "2017-06-01", "2017-06-01", "2017-06-01", "2017-06-01", "2017-06-01", "2017-06-01", "2017-06-01", "2017-06-01", "2017-06-01", "2017-06-01", "2017-06-01", "2017-06-01", "2017-06-01", "2017-06-01", "2017-06-01", "2017-06-01", "2017-06-01", "2017-06-01", "2017-06-01", "2017-06-02", "2017-06-02", "2017-06-02", "2017-06-02", "2017-06-02", "2017-06-02", "2017-06-02", "2017-06-02", "2017-06-02", "2017-06-02", "2017-06-02", "2017-06-02", "2017-06-02", "2017-06-02", "2017-06-02", "2017-06-02", "2017-06-02", "2017-06-02", "2017-06-02", "2017-06-02"], "authors": [["https://www.facebook.com/bbcnews"], [], [], ["https://www.facebook.com/bbcnews"], [], [], [], [], ["https://www.facebook.com/bbcnews"], [], [], [], ["https://www.facebook.com/bbcnews"], [], ["https://www.facebook.com/bbcnews"], ["https://www.facebook.com/bbcnews"], [], [], ["https://www.facebook.com/bbcnews"], [], ["https://www.facebook.com/bbcnews"], [], [], [], ["https://www.facebook.com/bbcnews"], [], [], [], [], ["https://www.facebook.com/bbcnews"], ["https://www.facebook.com/bbcnews"], [], ["https://www.facebook.com/bbcnews"], [], [], ["https://www.facebook.com/bbcnews"], ["https://www.facebook.com/bbcnews"], ["https://www.facebook.com/bbcnews"], ["https://www.facebook.com/bbcnews"], ["https://www.facebook.com/bbcnews"], ["https://www.facebook.com/bbcnews"], [], [], [], [], [], [], ["https://www.facebook.com/bbcnews"], [], [], ["https://www.facebook.com/bbcnews"], ["https://www.facebook.com/bbcnews"], [], [], ["https://www.facebook.com/bbcnews"], [], ["https://www.facebook.com/bbcnews"], [], ["https://www.facebook.com/bbcnews"], [], [], [], [], ["https://www.facebook.com/bbcnews"], ["https://www.facebook.com/bbcnews"], [], [], [], [], ["https://www.facebook.com/bbcnews"], [], [], ["https://www.facebook.com/bbcnews"], ["https://www.facebook.com/bbcnews"], [], [], ["https://www.facebook.com/bbcnews"], ["https://www.facebook.com/bbcnews"], ["https://www.facebook.com/bbcnews"], ["https://www.facebook.com/bbcnews"], ["https://www.facebook.com/bbcnews"], [], [], ["https://www.facebook.com/bbcnews"], [], [], [], [], [], [], [], ["https://www.facebook.com/bbcnews"], [], ["https://www.facebook.com/bbcnews"], ["https://www.facebook.com/bbcnews"], ["https://www.facebook.com/bbcnews"], ["https://www.facebook.com/bbcnews"], [], [], ["https://www.facebook.com/bbcnews"], [], [], [], [], [], ["https://www.facebook.com/bbcnews"]], "description": ["From Jennifer Lawrence to Vin Diesel - the celebrities who fought back against the shamers.", "Chelsea clinch the Women's Super League One Spring Series title with a 2-0 final-day victory at Birmingham City.", "The British and Irish Lions start their tour of New Zealand with a nervy 13-7 victory over the Provincial Barbarians in Whangarei.", "A Canadian doctor says one short letter managed to convince doctors that opioids were safe.", "Andy Murray reaches the French Open last 16 with a superb win over Juan Martin del Potro, but fellow Briton Kyle Edmund is out.", "British and Irish Lions boss Warren Gatland says jetlag was a factor in his side's lethargic display in the win over Provincial Barbarians.", "Andy Murray and Juan Martin del Potro resume their rivalry in the most anticipated match of the French Open so far, both with fitness concerns.", "Gianluigi Buffon is ready for Saturday's Champions League final - but it was a Cameroon keeper who inspired his long journey back in 1990", "Paen Long, a car mechanic from rural Cambodia, built a plane by watching YouTube videos.", "Anthony Crolla says he wants to fight again at Manchester Arena - the scene of a suicide bombing last month.", "Cristiano Ronaldo scores twice as Real Madrid become champions of Europe for a record 12th time after beating 10-man Juventus in Cardiff.", "Watch Imran Tahir take four wickets and make a run-out as South Africa beat Sri Lanka by 96 runs in the Champions Trophy at The Oval.", "The president's team sows confusion when asked about Donald Trump's views on global warming.", "From a Victorian-era Franken-side to modern-day commercial powerhouse, BBC Sport looks at how the Lions' unique appeal has survived and thrived.", "Liberal Democrat leader Tim Farron discusses his vision for renewable energy.", "When Sarah Jenkins saw pictures of distraught mothers appealing for information about missing children after the Manchester bombing, it reminded her of her own experience after the 7/7 attacks in London.", "Aidan O'Brien's 40-1 shot Wings of Eagles beats favourites Cliffs of Moher and Cracksman to win the Epsom Derby.", "An English or pan-British bid for the 2030 World Cup would be \"strongly supported\" by Uefa, says its president Aleksander Ceferin.", "Japan has some of the world's longest working hours, and some young Japanese are literally working themselves to death.", "Cristiano Ronaldo says \"people can't criticise me\" after his goals helped Zinedine Zidane's Real Madrid side beat Juventus 4-1 in Cardiff.", "In the 1980s, Jane Fonda sold millions of workout videos. Now anyone can be an online fitness guru.", "Trainer John Gosden hopes Cracksman will emerge as a \"diamond in the rough\" in Saturday's Epsom Derby.", "Great Britain will face New Zealand in the America's Cup semi-final on Monday after Sunday's race was postponed.", "Sri Lanka's Lasith Malinga drops a top-edged Faf du Plessis pull shot at fine leg in the Champions Trophy game at The Oval.", "There is much more to Leo Varadkar than his age, Indian heritage and sexuality.", "Owen Farrell has edged ahead of Johnny Sexton in the race to be the Lions' Test fly-half, says legend Jeremy Guscott.", "Champion Novak Djokovic survives a third-round scare at the French Open to beat Argentine Diego Schwartzman in five sets.", "South Africa come through some tricky moments to see off Sri Lanka by 96 runs in their Champions Trophy opener at The Oval.", "Real Madrid have an \"appointment with history\" when they face Juventus in the Champions League final on Saturday, says Sergio Ramos.", "Is the new French president the man the world's liberals have been waiting for?", "From Jennifer Lawrence to Vin Diesel - the celebrities who fought back against the shamers.", "Defending champion Garbine Muguruza is unhappy with a \"really tough\" crowd after defeat by home favourite Kristina Mladenovic at the French Open.", "A Canadian doctor says one short letter managed to convince doctors that opioids were safe.", "Andy Murray reaches the French Open last 16 with a superb win over Juan Martin del Potro, but fellow Briton Kyle Edmund is out.", "Antoine Griezmann says he will stay at Atletico Madrid next season as it would be a \"dirty move\" to leave the club after their transfer ban was upheld.", "Paen Long, a car mechanic from rural Cambodia, built a plane by watching YouTube videos.", "Fifty years ago a plane returning from Majorca plunged to the ground in Stockport, Greater Manchester, killing 72 people.", "The president's team sows confusion when asked about Donald Trump's views on global warming.", "Liberal Democrat leader Tim Farron discusses his vision for renewable energy.", "When Sarah Jenkins saw pictures of distraught mothers appealing for information about missing children after the Manchester bombing, it reminded her of her own experience after the 7/7 attacks in London.", "How the 1967 Six Day War affected lives on all sides.", "Middlesex bowler Steve Finn replaces injured all-rounder Chris Woakes in England's Champions Trophy squad.", "Cristiano Ronaldo says \"people can't criticise me\" after his goals helped Zinedine Zidane's Real Madrid side beat Juventus 4-1 in Cardiff.", "Real Madrid Gareth Bale says he is \"happy\" at the club and says the team can get better after a third Champions League success in four years.", "Great Britain will face New Zealand in the America's Cup semi-final on Monday after Sunday's race was postponed.", "Chelsea winger Eden Hazard will have surgery after breaking his right ankle on Sunday while on international duty with Belgium.", "An unbeaten 81 from captain Virat Kohli steers India to a comprehensive 124-run victory over Pakistan in the Champions Trophy.", "UK security services have a number of powers at their disposal to stop suspected terrorists, but is it enough?", "Cristiano Ronaldo says his \"numbers don't lie\" after his goals help Real Madrid beat Juventus 4-1 in the Champions League final in Cardiff.", "Owen Farrell has edged ahead of Johnny Sexton in the race to be the Lions' Test fly-half, says legend Jeremy Guscott.", "The deadly attack in London Bridge is not the first of such terror incidents in the city - or elsewhere in Great Britain.", "Residents of the new London City Island live less than 30 minutes away from central London.", "Watch as India's Hardik Pandya hits three successive sixes off Pakistan's Imad Wasim in the Champions Trophy game at Edgbaston.", "The British and Irish Lions can only use the jetlag excuse once, according to All Blacks great Ian Jones.", "The 16th-Century manuscripts had been lost for eight decades before being rediscovered at an auction.", "Rafael Nadal and Novak Djokovic reach the French Open quarter-finals to stay on course for a meeting in the last four.", "Is the new French president the man the world's liberals have been waiting for?", "In his latest column, Andy Murray tells BBC Sport about beating Juan Martin Del Potro, player box etiquette and life in Paris.", "From a missing PM to magic money trees - what we learned from the seven-way head-to-head.", "England's Ben Stokes and Bangladesh's Tamim Iqbal exchange words during the opening match of the Champions Trophy at The Oval.", "All Blacks coach Steve Hansen says his current team is better than the Dan Carter and Richie McCaw-inspired group of 2005.", "Captain Sam Warburton will lead the British and Irish Lions in their opening fixture against the Provincial Barbarians after recovering from injury.", "Chelsea were paid £150.8m by the Premier League after winning the 2016-17 title - 50% more than last season's top earners.", "The heavy toll from the huge blast in central Kabul underlines the fragility of security in Afghanistan.", "The head of McDonald's calls on firms to \"step up\" as controversies over new ways of working threaten to damage trust.", "Atletico Madrid striker Antoine Griezmann suggests he will stay with the club despite as Manchester United cool their interest in the player.", "James Anderson is \"worried\" by the injuries suffered by Ben Stokes, and England will have to be \"careful\" to manage the all-rounder.", "Chris Woakes is to have a scan after picking up an injury in the win against Bangladesh, reveals captain Owen Morgan.", "Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger should sell \"overindulged\" Alexis Sanchez and Mesut Ozil, says ex-defender Martin Keown.", "The co-producer of One Love Manchester talks about the \"incredible amount of work\" going into the show.", "British and Irish Lions boss Warren Gatland says he will not repeat Graham Henry's mistake by splitting the squad early in the tour.", "Will the addition of 'super coach' Andre Agassi be enough to bring back the \"warrior\" in Novak Djokovic?", "When a 10-year-old school girl wrote to her country's foreign enemy, it started a bizarre relationship.", "Winnie Li decided to have her eggs frozen after rape ruined her 30s.", "Bangladesh's Imrul Kayes is out after England's Mark Wood makes a brilliant diving catch during the opening match of the Champions Trophy at The Oval.", "It was job done for England in their potentially tricky Champions Trophy opener against Bangladesh, but injuries will be a worry, writes Jonathan Agnew.", "The Green Party suggests the introduction of a four-day week. Would it work?", "The Islamic State group relies on encrypted messaging app Telegram to spread its message digitally.", "Axa, Calpers, Scor and AMP Capital made the call on World No Tobacco Day.", "Robert the smoking robot was built in Kettering in the 1930s and became an international celebrity - but where is he now?", "Experts remain unconvinced by the explanations given for British Airways' IT meltdown last weekend.", "Manchester City midfielder Yaya Toure has signed a new one-year deal with the Premier League club.", "Martina Navratilova renews her call for the Margaret Court Arena to be renamed - describing the Australian as a \"racist and a homophobe\".", "In almost a year, there's been zero progress on a deal, but Brussels thinks that's about to change.", "World number one Andy Murray and British number two Kyle Edmund reach the third round of the French Open.", "Manchester City complete the signing of 23-year-old goalkeeper Ederson Moraes from Portuguese side Benfica.", "The British and Irish Lions start their tour of New Zealand with a nervy 13-7 victory over the Provincial Barbarians in Whangarei.", "Chelsea were paid £150.8m by the Premier League after winning the 2016-17 title - 50% more than last season's top earners.", "England's Chris Woakes is ruled out of the rest of the Champions Trophy after a scan revealed he has sustained a side strain.", "Chris Woakes is to have a scan after picking up an injury in the win against Bangladesh, reveals captain Owen Morgan.", "New Zealand's Kane Williamson scores a century as their Champions Trophy tie against Australia is abandoned after rain.", "The president's team sows confusion when asked about Donald Trump's views on global warming.", "From a Victorian-era Franken-side to modern-day commercial powerhouse, BBC Sport looks at how the Lions' unique appeal has survived and thrived.", "Critics say the beef ban is a brazen attack on India's secularism and federalism.", "Japan has some of the world's longest working hours, and some young Japanese are literally working themselves to death.", "Domestic politics is driving the president's Paris decision - but the cost of a mistake is high.", "In the 1980s, Jane Fonda sold millions of workout videos. Now anyone can be an online fitness guru.", "It was job done for England in their potentially tricky Champions Trophy opener against Bangladesh, but injuries will be a worry, writes Jonathan Agnew.", "Margaret Court believes there is a \"conspiracy\" from the \"US gay lobby\" to strip her name from one of the Australian Open stadiums.", "There is much more to Leo Varadkar than his age, Indian heritage and sexuality.", "Nine-time French Open champion Rafael Nadal produces a brilliant display to beat Nikoloz Basilashvili 6-0 6-1 6-0.", "Champion Novak Djokovic survives a third-round scare at the French Open to beat Argentine Diego Schwartzman in five sets.", "Real Madrid have an \"appointment with history\" when they face Juventus in the Champions League final on Saturday, says Sergio Ramos.", "The reaction to Tiger Woods' recent arrest has been \"disrespectful and unfair\", says former world number one Martin Kaymer.", "World number one Andy Murray and British number two Kyle Edmund reach the third round of the French Open.", "President Trump's statement takes a baseball bat to the Paris climate accord, writes Matt McGrath."], "section": ["Entertainment & Arts", null, null, "US & Canada", null, null, null, null, "Asia", null, null, null, "US & Canada", null, "Election 2017", "Magazine", null, null, "Business", null, "Business", null, null, null, "Europe", null, null, null, null, "Europe", "Entertainment & Arts", null, "US & Canada", null, null, "Asia", "Manchester", "US & Canada", "Election 2017", "Magazine", "Middle East", null, null, null, null, null, null, "Election 2017", null, null, "UK", "Business", null, null, "Latin America & Caribbean", null, "Europe", null, "Election 2017", null, null, null, null, "Asia", "Business", null, null, null, null, "Entertainment & Arts", null, null, "US & Canada", "Health", null, null, "Election 2017", "Technology", "Business", "Northampton", "Business", null, null, "Europe", null, null, null, null, null, null, null, "US & Canada", null, "India", "Business", "US & Canada", "Business", null, null, "Europe", null, null, null, null, null, "Science & Environment"], "content": ["Chloe Moretz wasn't happy with the way her Snow White film was advertised\n\nStories about \"body shaming\" are nothing new - but more and more celebrities are starting to fight back against the trend.\n\nEarlier this week, actress Chloe Moretz said she was \"appalled and angry\" over the marketing for her new animated Snow White film.\n\nA poster for Red Shoes & The 7 Dwarfs showed a tall woman next to a shorter, heavier version of herself.\n\nThe caption read: \"What if Snow White was no longer beautiful and the 7 dwarfs not so short?\"\n\nAfter plus-size model Tess Holliday tweeted a photo of the poster, Moretz apologised to her fans and said she hadn't approved the marketing.\n\nThe film's producers withdrew the ad campaign.\n\nAnd last week, Modern Family actress Sarah Hyland took to social media after suggestions she looked anorexic in a recent photo.\n\nHere are seven other stars who hit back after criticism over the way they look.\n\nLady Gaga came in for criticism after she wore a crop top during her performance at this year's Super Bowl.\n\nMore than 100 million people watched the legendary half-time show worldwide, but some made cruel remarks about her stomach and said she \"wasn't fit enough\".\n\nThe singer took to Instagram to respond with an empowering message to her fans.\n\n\"I heard my body is a topic of conversation so I wanted to say, I'm proud of my body and you should be proud of yours too,\" she said.\n\n\"I could give you a million reasons why you don't need to cater to anyone or anything to succeed. Be you, and be relentlessly you.\"\n\nThe comedian and actress has memorably taken on body shamers on more than one occasion.\n\nWhen the advert for her film Trainwreck was released in 2015, one critic referred to her as a new member of director Judd Apatow's \"Funny-Chubby Community\".\n\nPosting a photo of herself almost naked on Twitter, Schumer wrote: \"I am a size 6 and have no plans of changing. This is it. Stay on or get off. Kisses!\"\n\nAt the end of 2016, she responded to social media \"fat shamers\" who questioned whether she was an appropriate choice to play Barbie in a forthcoming film.\n\nAlongside a photo of herself in a swimsuit, she said she was honoured to be considered to play \"an important and evolving icon\".\n\n\"Is it fat shaming if you know you're not fat and have zero shame in your game?\" she asked.\n\n\"I don't think so. I am strong and proud of how I live my life and say what I mean and fight for what I believe in and I have a blast doing it with the people I love.\n\n\"Where's the shame? It's not there. It's an illusion. When I look in the mirror I know who I am.\"\n\nIn 2016, the singer made her record label take down the new video for her Me Too single after she noticed she'd been digitally altered.\n\nOr to use her words, \"they photoshopped the crap out of me\".\n\nTrainor took to Snapchat to tell her fans: \"I'm so sick of it, and I'm over it, so I took it down until they fix it.\"\n\nShe added: \"My waist is not that teeny, I had a bomb waist that night. I don't know why they didn't like my waist, but I didn't approve that video, and it went out for the world, so I'm embarrassed...\"\n\nA day later, the video reappeared with Trainor restored to her rightful size.\n\nIn March this year, the star and creator of HBO's Girls responded to criticism about her recent weight loss.\n\nDunham had attracted headlines about her dramatic new look. But in a lengthy Instagram post which referred to her struggle to control her endometriosis, she said: \"My weight loss isn't a triumph and it also isn't some sign I've finally given in to the voices of trolls.\"\n\nThe actress said she had made it clear over the years that she didn't care what anyone else felt about her body.\n\n\"I've gone on red carpets in couture as a size 14. I've done sex scenes days after surgery, mottled with scars. I've accepted that my body is an ever changing organism, not a fixed entity - what goes up must come down and vice versa.\"\n\nBack in 2013, Jennifer Lawrence said she thought \"it should be illegal to call someone fat on TV\" after red carpet criticism of her own figure.\n\nSpeaking to US host Barbara Walters, The Hunger Games star said she was worried about how the media's attitude affected young people.\n\n\"The media needs to take responsibility for the effect that it has on our younger generation, on these girls who are watching these television shows, and picking up how to talk and how to be cool,\" Lawrence said.\n\nShe added: \"I mean, if we're regulating cigarettes and sex and cuss words, because of the effect they have on our younger generation, why aren't we regulating things like calling people fat?\"\n\nThe actress, who won an Oscar for her performance in Silver Linings Playbook, had previously spoken out against gossip magazines and TV shows which criticise the way women look.\n\nShe told the December 2012 issue of Elle magazine that \"in Hollywood, I'm obese. I'm considered a fat actress\".\n\nThe Titanic star and Oscar-winning actress has spoken on occasions about how she was bullied at school and called \"Blubber\".\n\n\"I was even told that I 'might be lucky with my acting, if I was happy to settle for the fat girl parts',\" she said during a speech this year for the WE charity at London's Wembley Arena.\n\n\"I felt that I wasn't enough, I wasn't good enough. I didn't look right... and all because I didn't fit into someone else's idea of 'perfect.' I didn't have the perfect body.\"\n\nThe star said her love of acting meant she was always auditioning for roles - however small.\n\n\"I would often get cast as the crocodile, or the scarecrow, or the dark fairy, I was even a dancing frog once. But it didn't matter. I still loved it... I wanted to be great and I was determined to keep learning.\"\n\nKate, who made her film debut aged 17 in 1994's Heavenly Creatures, shot to global stardom three years later as Rose in James Cameron's blockbuster Titanic.\n\nShe said: \"The most unlikely candidate, Kate from the sandwich shop in Reading, [was] suddenly acting in one of the biggest movies ever made!\"\n\nIt's not just women who get criticised for how they look.\n\nVin Diesel found that out in 2015 after the publication of unflattering pap shots of him shirtless in Miami. Some comments on social media referred to his \"dad bod\".\n\nThe Fast and Furious star responded by posting a photo on Instagram which showed off his muscular physique.\n\nHe said one journalist, during an interview for his film The Last Witch Hunter, had even asked to see the \"dad bod\".\n\n\"Haha,\" Diesel wrote. \"I am wondering if I should show the picture... Body shaming is always wrong!\"\n\nFollow us on Facebook, on Twitter @BBCNewsEnts, or on Instagram at bbcnewsents. If you have a story suggestion email entertainment.news@bbc.co.uk.", "Last updated on .From the section Women's Football\n\nChelsea Ladies won the Women's Super League One Spring Series with a comfortable 2-0 final-day victory at Birmingham City.\n\nKaren Carney's first-half penalty and Fran Kirby's close-range finish gave Chelsea the victory that ensured them the title regardless of other results.\n\nManchester City finished second with a 3-1 win at fourth-placed Liverpool.\n\nUnbeaten Arsenal were 5-0 winners at Bristol City to go third and Reading drew 1-1 at Sunderland to finish sixth.\n\nStarting the final day top of the table, level on points with Man City but with a vastly superior goal difference, Chelsea controlled their own destiny with an assured performance at Birmingham.\n\nAfter Kirby was clattered in the box by Birmingham keeper Ann-Katrin Berger, Carney fired in from the spot against her old club to make it 1-0 and, after the break, Berger then spilled Gemma Davison's cross towards Kirby, who easily tucked in the second.\n\nChelsea's win ended Manchester City's run of three consecutive domestic club trophies, as Emma Hayes' side added to their double-winning year of 2015.\n• None Relive the final day as it happened\n\nThe Spring Series was a one-off, transitional competition aimed to bridge the gap between the old summer WSL campaigns and the first winter season in 2017-18.\n\nTeams played each other just once. Chelsea were beaten at 2016 champions Manchester City but clinched the title with three straight wins at the end of the campaign.\n\nHayes' side conceded just three times in the series and scored 32 goals - 10 more than anyone else.\n\nFA Cup winners and Champions League semi-finalists Man City finished their busy season with goals from Jill Scott, Mel Lawley and Megan Campbell at Liverpool, who netted a late consolation through Scotland's Caroline Weir.\n\nArsenal - who finished just one point behind the top two - were dominant at eighth-placed Bristol City, with Louise Quinn, Jordan Nobbs, Chloe Kelly, Danielle van de Donk and Beth Mead all scoring.\n\nAt Sunderland, Melissa Fletcher had put Reading deservedly ahead, before Beverly Leon equalised for the hosts, who finished fifth in the table despite reverting to part-time status before the start of the season.", "Last updated on .From the section Rugby Union\n\nBritish and Irish Lions tour of New Zealand\n\nThe British and Irish Lions started their tour of New Zealand with a nervy victory over the Provincial Barbarians in Whangarei.\n\nThe first of the Lions' 10 fixtures was expected to be the most straightforward, against a side made up of fringe players from Super Rugby.\n\nBut the visitors were put to the test throughout and had to come from behind to secure the win after a scrappy performance.\n\nA try from Sam Anderson-Heather, converted by Bryn Gatland - the son of Lions coach Warren - gave the Provincial Barbarians a 7-3 lead at the break.\n\nGreig Laidlaw added to Johnny Sexton's first-half penalty before Anthony Watson crossed to restore the visitors' lead on 53 minutes.\n\nReplacement Owen Farrell added the conversion but then missed a penalty, and the Lions survived a late surge from the hosts to hang on.\n\nWarren Gatland's side face all five Super Rugby teams, the New Zealand Maori, and the All Blacks, during the five-week tour, with their next match against the Blues on Wednesday (08:35 BST).\n\nGatland named 13 of the 14 players who attended the first training camp in his starting XV but the team, who landed in New Zealand three days ago, struggled to gel - especially in the first half.\n\nIreland's Sexton, picked ahead of Farrell and Dan Biggar in the number 10 shirt, missed a long-range penalty before getting the visitors off the mark from the tee on 17 minutes.\n\nBut the points failed to settle the Lions and moments later Wales number eight Taulupe Faletau was forced to make a try-saving tackle on Inga Finau, who was sent on his way after a quick break by Luteru Laulala.\n\nSoon the Provincial Barbarians got the score they deserved when hooker and captain Anderson-Heather crashed over and fly-half Gatland added the extras against his father's team.\n\nCaptain Sam Warburton, Faletau and Jonathan Joseph went close to responding for the visitors before the break but they were continuously held up on the line by black shirts.\n\nGatland opted to make five changes on 50 minutes - bringing on Saracens quartet Mako Vunipola, Jamie George, George Kruis and Farrell, alongside Leinster's Tadhg Furlong.\n\nAnd the impact was instant. England and Bath wing Watson spun over in the corner, and Farrell added the conversion for a 13-7 lead.\n\nEngland fly-half cum centre Farrell should have extended the Lions' advantage further but saw a penalty come off the upright.\n\nThe Provincial Barbarians did not give up hope of an upset and it fell to Vunipola to disrupt what was to be their final attack of the game, ripping the ball clear in a maul.\n\nGatland's side won the series 2-1 on their tour of Australia four years ago.\n\nBut the Lions have won only one series in New Zealand, back in 1971, and the All Blacks have not lost a Test on home soil to anyone since 2009.\n\nGetting the first win on the board was always going to be Gatland's priority in this match, but now the backroom staff - as well as the players - have bigger tests ahead.\n\nThere are six more matches before their first meeting with the All Blacks on Saturday, 24 June and Gatland will need to decide which members of the 41-man squad are up to the challenge of facing the world champions.\n\nA win is a win, so that is the number one objective completed, but there will be frustration amongst the squad and coaches as to why the Lions weren't more convincing against a scratch Barbarians team.\n\nThey have plenty of areas to work on, but we knew that would be the case.\n\nAnd, rugby tactics aside, it will have been an unbelievable feeling for those lads who put on the red jersey for the first time. England and Harlequins prop Kyle Sinckler in particular was outstanding, showing his ball-handling skills, work rate and physicality are all of Test standard.\n\nEnjoy a beer tonight, rest up and roll on Wednesday.\n\nLions head coach Warren Gatland: \"We would have preferred to have had a week in the UK with the full squad and a week in New Zealand before the first game.\n\n\"We arrived on Wednesday and we are still recovering from the travel and the guys haven't got into regular sleep patterns - perhaps the schedulers need to look at that for future tours.\n\n\"Some players are still seeing the doctor for sleeping pills to help them sleep.\"\n\nWhat was the Kiwi view?\n\nGregor Paul in the New Zealand Herald: \"The Lions got their heavily predicted opening-game victory but it was one that saw them reach unimaginable levels of mediocrity.\"\n\nPhil Gifford for Rugby Heaven: \"In blunt terms, the Lions looked incompetent. To be down 7-3 at half-time, and not take the lead until the 56th minute, was a disgrace to the jersey.\"\n\nMark Reason for Rugby Heaven: \"The Lions bench may have finally got them over the line, but not a soul in the crowd was fooled.\"", "Canadian researchers have traced the origins of the opioid crisis to one letter published almost 40 years ago.\n\nThe letter, which said opioids were not addictive, was published in the New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM) in 1980.\n\nDr David Juurlink says the journal's prestige helped fuel the misguided belief that opioids were safe.\n\nHis research found that the letter was cited more than 600 times, usually to argue that opioids were not addictive.\n\nOn Wednesday, the NEJM published Dr Juurlink's rebuttal to the 1980 letter, along with his team's analysis of the number of times the letter was cited by other researchers.\n\n\"I think it's fair to say that this letter went quite a long way,\" Dr Juurlink, who is head of clinical pharmacology and toxicology at Toronto's Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre.\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Mike John said heroin is \"one of the biggest challenges\" facing Ohio\n\nThe original letter, titled \"Addiction Rare in Patients Treated with Narcotics\", was just a paragraph long. The lone evidence cited was an anecdote that out of 11,882 hospitalised patients were treated with narcotics, only four patients with no history of addiction became addicted.\n\nThis paragraph should have triggered a host of red flags, says Dr Juurlink.\n\nThe letter only described the effects on hospitalised patients, not on patients who had chronic pain and would need to take painkillers regularly. It also only described the effects of narcotics that are no longer used today - and yet it was cited by many as proof that modern drugs such as OxyContin were safe outside of the hospital setting.\n\n\"I don't think it mattered that it didn't say much, what mattered was its title and its publication, and those two things went a long way,\" Dr Juurlink said.\n\nIt is now widely accepted by medical researchers that opioids are highly addictive, he said. In 2016, the British Medical Journal urged doctors to limit opioid prescriptions in order to combat the overdose crisis in the US and other parts of the world.\n\nIn 2007, the makers of OxyContin pleaded guilty in federal court to \"misbranding\" by falsely claiming OxyContin was less addictive and less subject to abuse than other pain medications.\n\nThis week, Ohio became the second state after Mississippi to sue opioid manufacturers for unleashing \"a health care crisis that has had far-reaching financial, social, and deadly consequences\".\n\nThe letter's author, Dr Hershel Jick, says he never intended for the article to justify widespread opioid use, and has testified for the government about how these drugs are marketed.\n\n\"I'm essentially mortified that that letter to the editor was used as an excuse to do what these drug companies did,\" Jick told The Associated Press. \"They used this letter to spread the word that these drugs were not very addictive.\"\n\nDr Juurlink believes that the misinformation that resulted after the letter's publication would not happen today. Back then, he said, if you wanted to read the original letter, you would need to go to a library. Many of the people who cited the 1980 letter were just plain \"sloppy\" he said and didn't do their diligence.\n\nNow, it's easy to read the original 1980 letter online, as well as Dr Juurlink's rebuttal.\n\n\"It would be taken apart overnight on Twitter\", he said.\n\nThere is now an editor's note on the original letter in the NEJM: \"For reasons of public health, readers should be aware that this letter has been 'heavily and uncritically cited' as evidence that addiction is rare with opioid therapy.\"", "Last updated on .From the section Tennis\n\nCoverage: Listen to live radio commentary and follow text coverage of selected matches on BBC Radio 5 live sports extra and online.\n\nAndy Murray saw off Argentina's Juan Martin del Potro with a superb straight-set win to reach the fourth round of the French Open.\n\nThe world number one, 30, won a gripping 84-minute opening set on his way to a 7-6 (10-8) 7-5 6-0 victory.\n\nThe Scot, bidding for his first Roland Garros title, goes on to face American John Isner or Russia's Karen Khachanov.\n\nBritish number two Kyle Edmund's run came to an end with a defeat by big-serving Kevin Anderson in five sets.\n\nThe South African, 31, fought back to win 6-7 (6-8) 7-6 (7-4) 5-7 6-1 6-4 in a near four-hour match.\n• None Third seed Halep through to last 16\n\nAfter searching for consistency in his opening two matches, Murray found something approaching his best form to win the most anticipated match of the first week.\n\nFormer US Open champion Del Potro, whose ranking has slid after injuries, posed an unusually severe test for the third round and he began strongly.\n\nThe Argentine's huge forehand drew regular gasps from the crowd, as well as what Murray later described as \"a very manly grunt\" from Del Potro.\n\nBut once he had levelled in a high-quality first set, Murray edged a thrilling tie-break and then dominated in arguably his best performance of 2017.\n\n\"I played some good matches at the beginning of the year, but definitely in the clay-court season, the second or third sets were the best I have played, for sure,\" Murray said.\n\nHe out-scored the powerful Argentine with 41 winners to 35, all the while mixing up his game with deft drop shots and sharp volleys.\n\nThe match turned late in the first set when Del Potro failed to serve it out and Murray eventually took the tie-break with his third set point, having saved four.\n\nA distraught Del Potro slumped on the net post for most of the changeover, pausing only to smack down his racquet in anger before moments later dropping serve at the start of the second set.\n\n\"I couldn't believe that I lost that set, because I had many opportunities to win,\" he said.\n\n\"But this happens when you play against the number one in the world.\"\n\nThere was no way back, especially after the Argentine - who struggled with a groin injury on the previous round - called for the doctor.\n\nMurray's hopes faltered only briefly when he failed to serve out at 5-4, but the Scot broke serve once again in the following game and then reeled off the last seven games in a row.\n\n\"Mentally I feel pretty good just now,\" he said.\n\n\"I'm happy with how the match was today. I'm working things out whilst I'm playing the matches. The really, really important part of my game is making adjustments.\n\n\"The tactical side is very important for me.\"\n\n'Winning the first set gave me momentum'\n\nAfter that marathon first set, the match quickly turned in Murray's favour as the Scot went on to clinch the final set in just 28 minutes.\n\n\"Whoever won that first set had big momentum,\" said Murray, who beat Del Potro in the Olympic gold-medal match at last year's Rio Games.\n\n\"It's slow and heavy, and coming back in these conditions is difficult.\n\n\"I thought I played some good tennis towards the end and I expected a tough match.\n\n\"It was tough. I think he was playing much better than me in the first set. Both of us hand some chances in the first set, the second set was the same. Both those sets could have gone either way.\"\n\nEdmund, 22, had hoped to match his best Grand Slam run by reaching the last 16, but Anderson's greater experience told in the latter stages of a hard-fought contest.\n\nEdmund held a slight edge in terms of ranking over Anderson, the Yorkshireman ranked nine places higher at 47th in the world, but the South African was playing in the third round of a Grand Slam for the 17th time.\n\nBy contrast, it was only Edmund's second appearance in the last 32 of a major.\n\n\"I played a good match and am disappointed to lose,\" said Edmund.\n\n\"I would love to win and get to the fourth round, and especially win that type of match in the fifth set like that.\n\n\"But, you know, quality by him. And he just beat me.\"\n\nAnderson, who was a top-10 player before being hampered by a series of injuries, will now meet 2014 US Open champion Marin Cilic in the fourth round.", "Last updated on .From the section Rugby Union\n\nBritish and Irish Lions head coach Warren Gatland says jetlag was a factor in his side's lethargic display against the Provincial Barbarians.\n\nAfter only arriving in New Zealand on Wednesday, the Lions laboured to a 13-7 victory in Whangarei.\n\n\"We are still recovering from the travel,\" Gatland said. \"A number of players still haven't got into regular sleep patterns.\n\n\"It was a tough hit-out for us. Some positives and lots to work on too.\"\n\nThe Lions trailed 7-3 at half-time, and relied on an Anthony Watson try to seal the victory.\n\n\"The most important thing was the result and getting the tour off to a good start,\" the Kiwi added.\n\n\"If we were a bit more clinical and finished our opportunities then the game is relatively comfortable.\n\n\"We will improve from tonight's performance, definitely.\"\n\nGatland will select an entirely new starting XV for Wednesday's fixture against the Blues, who will field the likes of All Blacks centre Sonny Bill Williams.\n\nBy then he will hope his players will have eased into regular sleeping patterns.\n\n\"The ideal scenario would be to have a week in New Zealand before the first game,\" he continued.\n\n\"We knew it was going to be difficult in terms of adjusting and preparation.\n\n\"Some players have recovered, but a number of the players and staff are seeing the doctor to try and get a sleeping pill to try and get some sleep.\n\n\"[Defence coach] Andy Farrell went to the doctor last night to get a sleeping pill, went to bed at 11 or 12 o'clock and was up at 4 o'clock this morning in the team-room, he wasn't able to sleep.\n\n\"Hopefully in the next few games everyone will be able to get into a cycle which will help us in terms of feeling fresh and acclimatised.\"\n\nOne of the few impressive Lions players was Wales back rower Taulupe Faletau, who looks set to start the Test series in number eight in the absence of the injured Billy Vunipola.\n\n\"I thought Faletau was absolutely outstanding, and with Vunipola out he becomes the most important player on the tour for me,\" said former Lions flanker Martyn Williams, who toured in 2001, 2005 and 2009.\n\nWilliams added on BBC 5 live: \"The Lions will dust themselves down and look at the positives - it's a win.\n\n\"But the next two games are absolutely crucial in how this tour will pan out.\"\n\nWhat was the Kiwi view?\n\nGregor Paul in the New Zealand Herald: \"The Lions got their heavily predicted opening-game victory but it was one that saw them reach unimaginable levels of mediocrity.\"\n\nPhil Gifford for Rugby Heaven: \"In blunt terms, the Lions looked incompetent. To be down 7-3 at half-time, and not take the lead until the 56th minute, was a disgrace to the jersey.\"\n\nMark Reason for Rugby Heaven: \"The Lions bench may have finally got them over the line, but not a soul in the crowd was fooled.\"\n\n'First game is often forgettable'", "Last updated on .From the section Tennis\n\nCoverage: Listen to live radio commentary and follow text coverage on BBC Radio 5 live and online.\n\nAndy Murray and Juan Martin del Potro will resume their rivalry in the most anticipated match of the French Open so far on Saturday.\n\nThe pair will meet in the third round on Philippe Chatrier Court at about 12:00 BST.\n\nMurray, the world number one, beat the Argentine to win Olympic gold last August, but lost their Davis Cup match the following month.\n\nThe 22-year-old from Yorkshire is through to the third round of a Grand Slam for only the second time, having reached round four at last year's US Open.\n\nMurray will hope to take another step back towards top form when he plays Del Potro for the 10th time, having won six of their previous encounters.\n\n\"I definitely feel like I'm capable of winning that match,\" said the Scot.\n• None 'I'm not playing like number one, but I can turn it around' - Murray\n\nAfter two epic contests in 2016, Murray and Del Potro will both head into Saturday's match with uncertainly surrounding their form and fitness.\n\nThe 30-year-old Scot has struggled with injury and illness this year and, although now suffering only with a mild cough, his relative lack of matches has left him searching for consistency.\n\nHe was heard complaining about his own movement as he fought his way past Martin Klizan on Thursday, but drew encouragement from the performance.\n\nTwo four-set matches this week have at least seen him run 5,248m over the course of six hours.\n\n\"Physically I pulled up well and felt good, so I will gain a lot of confidence from that,\" he said after his second-round match.\n\n\"And also, I hit a lot of balls out there today.\"\n\nDel Potro, 28, skipped the Australian Open at the start of the year to protect a fragile body that has seen the latter years of his career repeatedly interrupted by injuries.\n\nAs a result, he is ranked 30th and so meets the top players earlier in tournaments - he has already lost three times to Novak Djokovic and once to Roger Federer in 2017.\n\nHe made it through the second round in Paris when opponent Nicolas Almagro retired with an injury, but the Argentine was himself dealing with a groin problem, later saying: \"I felt some pain. I didn't move well.\"\n\nLooking ahead to Saturday, the 2009 US Open champion added: \"Andy is one of the favourites to win this tournament.\n\n\"And now I know his game a lot, but I need to be in good shape and physically be stronger to hold a long match if we play a long match, long rallies.\"\n\nMurray lost his composure at times during his second-round match and repeatedly looked to those in his player box for more obvious support.\n\nCoaches Ivan Lendl and Jamie Delgado, along with Davis Cup captain Leon Smith and members of Murray's support team and family, will again be in the box on Saturday.\n\n\"I think a lot of the time when I'm playing and especially when I'm frustrated or down, I don't always project a lot of positivity on the court,\" said Murray.\n\n\"Sometimes I think also for my team it's difficult to know exactly how I'm feeling or what it is that I need when I'm on the court.\n\n\"So I think my job is really to try to be more positive while I'm out there.\"\n\nEdmund might hold the edge in terms of ranking over Anderson at 47 in the world to 56, but the South African has far more experience.\n\nNine years older, at 31, the 6ft 8in Anderson will play in the third round of a Grand Slam for the 17th time.\n\nHe also has a huge weapon in his serve, hitting 34 aces to Edmund's four across the first two rounds.\n\n\"He's obviously got a big game, big guy,\" said Edmund.\n\n\"In hot conditions the ball is really pinging around, so Saturday I've just got to be on it. One match at a time.\n\n\"He's got a great serve and good groundstrokes. He was out a bit with injury, but before that he was consistent at the top of the game and getting good results.\"", "Last updated on .From the section European Football\n\nItalian football might have looked very different over the last two decades if an impressionable 12-year-old had not been captivated by the Cameroon goalkeeper at the 1990 World Cup.\n\nGianluigi Buffon played as an attacker back then but the performances of Thomas N'Kono - playing in his third World Cup - inspired him to try life as a goalkeeper.\n\n\"All the eyes of the world were on players like Diego Maradona and Gary Lineker, but I was mesmerised by Thomas N'Kono,\" said Buffon.\n\n\"It was the things he did for Cameroon during that World Cup that inspired me to become a goalkeeper myself.\"\n\nThe Indomitable Lions defeated holders Argentina on their way to becoming the first African side to reach the quarter-finals of the World Cup, where they were unluckily defeated 3-2 by England in Naples.\n\nWhen N'Kono retired he asked the Italian keeper to play in his farewell match - in Cameroon.\n\n\"I first met him when he was 20 and he was with Parma,\" N'Kono told the BBC's World Service,\n\n\"A year later I asked him to play in my farewell game in Cameroon. He said 'yes, no problem', but I never thought he would come.\n\n\"Then, at the last minute, he called me to say he was at the airport about to come to Cameroon. It was amazing.\"\n\nThe last time the two men met they discussed Buffon's eldest son Louis Thomas, named, at least in part, after the Cameroon keeper. N'Kono asked how Buffon's eldest was coming along. He told him the nine-year-old was doing well - but would play as an attacker, not a keeper.\n\nN'Kono, who spent the bulk of his career with Spanish side Espanyol, is now 60 but was in his 40s when he retired. Buffon is now 39 - and still at the top of his game.\n\nSecond most Serie A appearances - 619 for Parma and Juventus - and 282 clean sheets Second most appearances for Juve - 621 Been named in five World Cup squads - won it in 2006 Has won 168 caps for Italy - more than anyone else\n\nOn Saturday, the man with 168 Italian caps will play in his third Champions League final, having tasted defeat in 2003 and 2015.\n\nHis Juve team have conceded just three goals en route to the final and are the only unbeaten team in the competition.\n\nBut they face a Real Madrid team fresh from capturing the La Liga title and determined to retain the Champions League they won with a shootout victory over Atletico Madrid last season.\n\nThe decisive penalty last season was scored Cristiano Ronaldo - and the Portuguese claims he is fresh and ready to go after a season when he has been regularly rested by Zinedine Zidane.\n\nIt is also the season when Ronaldo became the first player to score 100 goals in the Champions League.\n\nAnd it is the fear of facing Ronaldo that Buffon hopes will give him a competitive edge in Cardiff on Saturday.\n\n\"It's the kind of fear you need to have when you play this kind of game,\" Buffon told Italian broadcaster Mediaset.\n\n\"The eve of a match of this kind, of this level, is always pretty much the same. You have to find your concentration; you feel a degree of fear and respect towards your opponents, but you also feel aware of your abilities - which is your key weapon.\n\n\"I'm pleased the media tend to see the game as a battle between me and Cristiano, but it's not the reality.\n\n\"We will play the game with confidence. We just want to have no regrets at the final whistle.\"\n\nWatching him close-up in training and during games is really quite impressive. Weaknesses? He has none.\n\nRegrets are something that Juve know all about in the Champions League.\n\nThey have lost their last four Champions League finals and six overall in the European Cup/Champions League.\n\nIf they lose on Saturday, they will equal the record for the most consecutive final defeats, currently held by Benfica.\n\n\"I have always maintained that, in football, making the final means nothing if you don't win it,\" added Buffon.\n\n\"I don't look at the Champions League as the trophy that evades me - but, yes, it is a big dream for me to win it.\n\n\"It would be great joy. There's nothing better in life than getting your reward, because you know how hard you've worked, how much you've sweated for it - and with team-mates who've worked even more to get it.\"\n\nThere appears to have been a groundswell of goodwill towards Juve because of the Buffon factor.\n\nFormer team-mate Gianluca Zambrotta told BBC World Service: \"He deserves to win this trophy.\"\n\nIt is a sentiment you might expect from someone who played alongside Buffon for so long for club and country - but old foes like Ryan Giggs and Edwin van der Sar have said they would like the Italian to finally win the trophy.\n\nAnd even Iker Casillas - who made more than 500 appearances for Real before moving to Porto in 2015 - has expressed his desire to see Buffon lift the trophy on Saturday.\n\n\"If they weren't up against Madrid, I would want to him to win the Champions with all my heart,\" he said. \"He deserves it - Gigi shouldn't end his career without a Champions League.\"\n\nAnd what advice does N'Kono have for the man he inspired all those years ago?\n\n\"Enjoy it - enjoy it like you always have,\" he said.\n\n\"If you enjoy what you do in life you will always do it without any pressure.\"\n\nThe man Buffon must stop - Ronaldo's astonishing 12 months in photos\n\nJune 2016: Ronaldo's Euro 2016 campaign did not start well - 20 shots, zero goals for Portugal. But a superb, flicked finish against Hungary in the group stages made him the first player to score in four different European Championship finals", "Mr Long is a trained mechanic who runs his own garage\n\nFor three years, car mechanic Paen Long stayed up long after his wife went to bed each night, spending countless hours watching videos on YouTube.\n\nBut these weren't the viral clips or pop music videos that most people while away hours on. Mr Long, who lives on the side of a highway in Cambodia's rural south-east, had a singular obsession: aeroplanes.\n\n\"In the beginning, I typed in the word 'jet',\" he says. From there, he was led to videos that showed planes taking off and landing, flight simulations, and virtual tours of factories that produce aircraft.\n\nOne of six children of rice farmers, Mr Long grew up in the years when Cambodia was struggling to recover from the devastation caused by the Khmer Rouge and had never been in an aircraft of any kind.\n\nAfter seeing a helicopter when he was about six years old, he says, the urge to fly preoccupied his mind - for decades. \"I always dreamt about aircraft every night. I always wanted to have my own plane,\" he says.\n\nAt first, it remained nothing more than a dream. Mr Long dropped out of school early and trained as a mechanic, one of the few non-farming professions available to young men without a high school education in his home province of Svay Rieng.\n\nBy last year his fascination with flight had taken over and Mr Long, now aged 30 and running his own garage in neighbouring Prey Veng province, decided he had saved enough money to realise his childhood fantasy.\n\n\"I started building a plane, making it in secret,\" he says. \"I was afraid that people would make fun of me, so sometimes I worked at night.\"\n\nBelieving that a helicopter would be more complex to re-create than a plane, Mr Long based his design on a Japanese plane used in WWII. The one-seater aircraft, which has a wing span of 5.5m, took Mr Long almost a year to produce entirely from scratch out of mostly recycled materials.\n\nThe pilot's seat is a plastic chair with chopped-off legs, the control panel a car dashboard, and the body made from an old gas container.\n\nMr Long has produced many parts of his aircraft from recycled materials\n\nThe moment of truth came on 8 March. Just before 15:00, Mr Long started the plane's engine. Three people helped to push it to his \"runway\": a nearby dirt road leading off the main artery toward rice paddy fields.\n\nAccording to villagers, about 200 to 300 people (Mr Long generously estimates the crowd size to be around 2,000) turned out to watch their first local aviator in action.\n\nHe strapped on a motorbike helmet - his only safety precaution - and sat inside the cockpit. The plane gained speed as he approached take-off before briefly lifting into the air - Mr Long says he reached a height of 50 metres - and crashing unceremoniously to the ground.\n\nThe sound of laughter greeted him on his return to Earth. \"I was standing there and tears came down [my cheeks]. I felt emotional, because I couldn't bear all the things they were saying to me,\" he says, blaming the failure on the 500kg weight of his machine.\n\nThe setback made him more determined than ever to succeed, and he soon turned his attention to a new project. Now, he is building a seaplane - also largely from scrap materials - which he believes he can make light enough to take to the skies.\n\nTo date, his hobby has cost him thousands of dollars\n\nNo matter that his village in Prey Chhor commune is located about 200km from the ocean - once it's built, Mr Long plans to transport the new prototype back to Svay Rieng by truck and launch it from the Waiko River.\n\nHe estimates that the original model cost him more than $10,000 (£7,700) to build and, to date, he has spent $3,000 on the seaplane - no small sum in a country where the minimum wage is $153 a month and 13.5% of the population lives below the poverty line.\n\nNot to mention the fact that Mr Long could have treated his entire family to a lavish international holiday for that amount. But, for Mr Long, it's no longer about simply flying. It's about making the impossible, possible.\n\n\"I never thought about spending money on other things,\" he says. \"I never feel regret about spending all this money.\"\n\nMr Long's wife, Hing Muoyheng, says she worries her husband is putting himself in danger\n\nAside from those who mocked him, many others in the area are in awe of their eccentric neighbour. \"I've never met such a person with an idea like this,\" says Sin Sopheap, a 44-year-old shop vendor.\n\n\"It's unusual to me,\" says 29-year-old Man Phary, who runs a roadside restaurant near Mr Long's house, \"because among our Cambodian people, no-one [else] would do it.\"\n\nMr Long's wife, Hing Muoyheng, a 29-year-old car parts seller, says she worries about her husband's safety, particularly as the couple have two young sons, but supports him nonetheless.\n\n\"I don't know how planes work and he doesn't have any experts to help him,\" she says of her concerns. \"I tried to ask him to stop a few times because I'm afraid, but he said he won't cause any danger, so I have to go along with his idea.\"\n\nYet although Mr Long hopes to cut the risks to himself and others by performing his July test flight over water, he's acutely aware that his flight of fancy contains a host of variables, many of them outside his control.\n\n\"Danger,\" he says, \"we cannot predict it.\"", "Last updated on .From the section Boxing\n\nFormer WBA lightweight world champion Anthony Crolla says he wants to fight again at Manchester Arena.\n\nThe venue in Crolla's home city remains closed following last month's suicide bombing at an Ariana Grande concert, which killed 22 people.\n\nThe 30-year-old is expecting his next bout to take place in October, although he has yet to name an opponent.\n\n\"It's about showing people we're not going to be put off by what's happened,\" he told BBC World Service.\n\n\"For me, it's such a special place. I've had some of my best nights there and I'm a proud Mancunian.\n\n\"It's always great to fight in front of your own people. I ran the Great Manchester Run last week and it showed the strength of the city. It makes you proud to be a Mancunian.\n\n\"There's nothing better than fighting in your hometown.\"\n\nCrolla is back in training after losing his WBA lightweight rematch against Jorge Linares in March.\n\nHe says he will not be affected by his back-to-back defeats by the Venezuelan.\n\n\"I've come back from much worse than a defeat in a boxing match,\" he said.\n\n\"I just lost to the better man on the night. I get over it quickly because I know that I can hold my hands up.\n\n\"There are no excuses. I believe I prepared the best I possibly could so I can live with it.\n\n\"I'm a big believer that if you work hard in anything then you get the results. I believe I'll be back better than ever.\"", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nBy Phil McNulty Chief football writer at the Principality Stadium\n\nCristiano Ronaldo scored twice as Real Madrid retained the Champions League in scintillating style by overwhelming Juventus in Cardiff.\n\nReal's record 12th triumph in this competition - and third in four seasons - was predictably orchestrated by Ronaldo, who has now scored in three different Champions League finals.\n\nRonaldo stopped a bright Juve opening in its tracks as he swept in Dani Carvajal's pass after 20 minutes, before Mario Mandzukic levelled with one of the great Champions League final goals, firing a sublime overhead kick beyond Real goalkeeper Keylor Navas.\n\nReal were unstoppable after the break, restoring their lead through Casemiro's deflected shot before Ronaldo scored at the near post from a cross by the outstanding Luka Modric.\n\nJuventus' misery increased when substitute Juan Cuadrado was sent off for a second caution after a clash with Sergio Ramos, before substitute Marco Asensio emphasised Real's superiority with a precise finish in the last minute.\n\nReal coach Zinedine Zidane has now won back-to-back Champions Leagues - as well as this season's La Liga title - since he took charge in January 2016.\n• None Reaction and relive the action from the Millennium Stadium\n• None Ronaldo in the same bracket as Pele' - BBC Radio 5 live Football Daily Podcast\n\nRonaldo cut a frustrated figure early in the match, gesturing to German referee Felix Brych about what he perceived as some rough treatment.\n\nBut he ended the night as Real's hero, winning his third Champions League winners' medal for the Spanish club and fourth in total, as the 32-year-old continues to write new chapters in his glittering career.\n\nOn display in Cardiff were all the facets that make him an all-time great - pace, desire, anticipation, technique - as he helped Real dismantle a Juve defence that conceded just three goals in 1,080 minutes en route to the final.\n\nRonaldo's first was an instant sweeping finish beyond the outstretched right arm of Gianluigi Buffon while the second showed the touch of a poacher, moving like lightning beyond static Juve defenders to guide in an emphatic near-post finish.\n\nThe Portugal captain now has a remarkable record of 105 goals in 140 Champions League games - 12 of those coming in just 13 games this season.\n\nBig players define big matches and Ronaldo defines more than most.\n\nHe did so again here in Cardiff.\n\nReal had their qualities questioned in their most recent Champions League finals, starting with their victory over Atletico Madrid in Lisbon in 2014 - when they needed Ramos' injury-time equaliser to force extra time before going on to win - and again last season when they beat the same opponents on penalties.\n\nNo such questions can be levelled at Real after this latest triumph.\n\nThis was the performance of a world-class team, ripping apart a defence that has a reputation as one of football's meanest and did not concede a goal in either leg of their quarter-final win against Barcelona, keeping out Lionel Messi, Neymar and Luis Suarez.\n\nReal survived a whirlwind Juventus opening before taking control after the break, with Modric and Toni Kroos manipulating possession in midfield and Ronaldo providing the cutting edge.\n\nJuventus had performed with such distinction in this Champions League that many experts understandably had them as favourites - instead they ended heavily beaten by a ruthless and wonderfully gifted side.\n\nJuventus come up short once more\n\nJuventus looked the complete package en route to this final. Not only did Massimiliano Allegri's side have that formidable defence but also a potent attack led by Gonzalo Higuain.\n\nThey started as if determined to banish the demons that have visited them in past Champions League finals. They made a razor-sharp start - Miralem Pjanic's early 25-yard shot beaten away by Navas.\n\nJuve were right in the game after Mandzukic's triumph of technique and athleticism pulled them level - but they faded badly in the second half and ended overwhelmed.\n\nAnd most sympathy will go to Buffon, a three-time loser at 39 years and 126 days and whose expression at the conclusion suggested he knows another chance could be beyond him.\n\nThe cruelty of the game was illustrated by the agony on his face as he reached in vain for Casemiro's long-range shot, which was deflected tantalisingly out of his reach off Sami Khedira's heel.\n\nJuve, though, can have no complaints and have now lost five Champions League finals since they last won the competition in 1996.\n• None Cristiano Ronaldo has scored in three different Champions League finals (2017, 2014 and 2008), more than any other player.\n• None Ronaldo scored his 600th goal in all competitions for club and country.\n• None Mario Mandzukic (Bayern Munich, Juventus) became the third player to score in a European Cup/Champions League final for two different teams after Velibor Vasovic (Partizan Belgrade, Ajax) and Cristiano Ronaldo (Manchester United, Real Madrid).\n• None Real are the first team in the Champions League era to retain the trophy.\n• None Juan Cuadrado became the third player to be sent off in a Champions League final, after Jens Lehmann (2006) and Didier Drogba (2008).\n• None Zinedine Zidane is the first manager to win back-to-back European Cup/Champions League trophies since Arrigo Sacchi with AC Milan (1989, 1990).\n• None Real have won their last six European Cup finals, last losing one in 1981 versus Liverpool.\n• None Real became the first team in Champions League history to score 500+ goals (503 goals total).\n• None Gianluigi Buffon was the third oldest player to feature in a European Cup final at 39 years and 126 days old.\n\nReal Madrid will face Europa League winners Manchester United in the 2017 Uefa Super Cup (19:45 BST) in Skopje, Macedonia, on 8 August.\n• None Dani Alves (Juventus) wins a free kick on the right wing.\n• None Attempt blocked. Gareth Bale (Real Madrid) left footed shot from outside the box is blocked.\n• None Attempt blocked. Álvaro Morata (Real Madrid) right footed shot from the left side of the box is blocked. Assisted by Gareth Bale.\n• None Marco Asensio (Real Madrid) is shown the yellow card for excessive celebration.\n• None Goal! Juventus 1, Real Madrid 4. Marco Asensio (Real Madrid) left footed shot from the centre of the box to the bottom right corner. Assisted by Marcelo following a set piece situation.\n• None Attempt blocked. Cristiano Ronaldo (Real Madrid) right footed shot from outside the box is blocked.\n• None Attempt missed. Alex Sandro (Juventus) header from the centre of the box is close, but misses to the left. Assisted by Dani Alves with a cross following a set piece situation.\n• None Juan Cuadrado (Juventus) wins a free kick on the right wing. Navigate to the next page Navigate to the last page", "Watch Imran Tahir take four wickets and make a run-out as South Africa beat Sri Lanka by 96 runs in the Champions Trophy at The Oval.\n\nAvailable to UK users only.", "For a speech about whether the US should remain a party to the Paris climate accord, Donald Trump's Rose Garden address on Thursday didn't have a whole lot of discussion about, you know, the climate.\n\nThere was plenty of talk about jobs and the US economy. He offered more than a few expressions of concern over whether other nations were being given an unfair advantage over the US. And then there was that lengthy opening plug for his presidential accomplishments that had nothing to do with the environment whatsoever.\n\nAt one point the president made a somewhat oblique reference to current climate science, asserting that even if all nations hit their self-set, non-mandatory greenhouse gas emissions targets under the Paris agreement, it would only result in a reduction of 0.2 degrees in average global temperatures by the year 2100. (The researchers who conducted the study said the number he cited was outdated and misrepresented.)\n\nMr Trump's relative silence on the matter has left reporters wondering whether the president still stands by earlier comments - and tweets - expressing serious scepticism about whether climate change is real.\n\nDoes he still believe it's a Chinese plot to make the US less competitive, as he tweeted in November 2012? Or that it is a money-making \"hoax\", as he said during a December 2015 campaign rally?\"\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. President Trump says the Paris climate accord \"disadvantages\" US\n\nHe's occasionally backed away from such sweeping denunciations. During the first presidential debate with Hillary Clinton, he denied having ever blamed the Chinese. In a New York Times interview shortly after his election victory, he said he thinks there's \"some connectivity\" between human activity and climate change.\n\nAfter Mr Trump announced his Paris agreement withdrawal, reporters posed the almost-too-obvious question once again to White House aides tasked with selling the move to the public. Does the president believe human activity contributes to climate change?\n\nThey asked about it during an on-background session with two administration officials on Thursday afternoon. They asked White House advisor Kellyanne Conway during a television appearance Friday morning. They asked Environmental Protection Agency head Scott Pruitt during his press conference on Friday afternoon.\n\nTime and time again the answer was some variation of \"I don't know\", \"I can't say\" or \"that's not relevant\".\n\n\"We focused on one key issue,\" Mr Pruitt said during one of the multiple times he was pressed on his boss's views. \"Was Paris good or bad for the country?\"\n\nOn Tuesday Press Secretary Sean Spicer had said he didn't know the president's thoughts about climate change because he hadn't asked him. On Friday he was asked whether he had since had a chance to speak to the president.\n\n\"I have not had the opportunity to do that,\" Spicer replied.\n\nThe rest of the press conference was an extended parlour game to try to get the press secretary to slip and perhaps inadvertently shed some light on Mr Trump's views - to no avail.\n\nIt's clear at this point that the administration has no interest in clarifying Mr Trump's position on climate change. But why?\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Students from Hazleton, Pennsylvania, are divided on Trump Paris pullout\n\nConfusion can often be a politician's ally. The embattled president needs his core supporters to stick with him through what could be a rough road ahead. Those who don't believe climate change is real can look at the president's past comments as proof their man still stands with them without anyone having to explicitly say so.\n\nThat allows the president to insist that he is willing to do something to address climate change - \"renegotiating\" the Paris accord, perhaps - without saying climate change is a problem. It allows him tell the majority of Americans who believe climate change is a real global threat that he is trying to address their concerns.\n\nIt allows administration surrogates like Mr Pruitt to tout that the US has lowered its carbon output without acknowledging the only reason this would be a noteworthy accomplishment - human activity affects the global climate.\n\nIt's a fine line to walk for even the most dextrous of White House communications teams - let alone one that has to be concerned that the next time the president is asked the question, there's no telling what he might say.", "Last updated on .From the section Rugby Union\n\nCoverage: Live text commentary on every match on the BBC Sport website and mobile app.\n\nSam Warburton's 48-hour journey to Auckland, featuring business-class air travel and stopovers in Dubai and Melbourne, was described this week as \"epic\".\n\nRobert Seddon would have something to say about that.\n\nWhen Seddon led the British and Irish Lions on their first ever tour in 1888, he and his team-mates arrived in Australia after 42 days at sea, with 300 stoats and weasels - tasked with bringing the local rabbit population under control - as fellow passengers.\n\nThe world has certainly changed since then, but the Lions - albeit these days lacking a cargo of ruthless little mustelids - remain at their core the same: a composite side featuring the best players from England, Wales, Scotland and Ireland, touring a southern-hemisphere stronghold every four years.\n\nAs the current class embark on their New Zealand trip, how has a team that began as a Victorian-era mix-and-match Franken-side not only survived, but thrived?\n\nAnd are the Lions, ultimately, an endangered species?\n\nA team like no other\n\nCross-sport comparisons with the Lions always fall short.\n\nEurope's best golfers come together every two years to represent the continent in the Ryder Cup. But in a largely individual sport, there are not the same national allegiances to be set aside.\n\nThe State of Origin rugby league sides and NBA All Star basketball games show a fine disregard for club loyalties, but these are domestic affairs that lack the jet-set international dimension of the Lions.\n\nScour the sporting world high and low and you'll find there is nothing quite the same.\n• None Radio 5 live special: How NOT to win a series (2005)\n\n'One player nearly took off another's foot with a shotgun'\n\nSo what does it mean to become a Lion?\n\nJeremy Guscott was called up to the Lions' tour of Australia in 1989 as a 23-year-old centre with just one England cap to his name.\n\nHe started both of the Test victories, and played in all six Tests on the subsequent tours of New Zealand and South Africa, famously kicking the decisive drop-goal against the Springboks in 1997.\n\n\"It was absolute, all-encompassing euphoria when I got selected for the first time,\" he told BBC Sport.\n\n\"And because of what I experienced then, I would have almost chopped off an arm to get on the tours in 1993 and 1997.\n\n\"Everyone has to be selfless, helping team-mates to be the best they can, while at the same time competing furiously for places.\n\n\"It is very hard to do because it is an incredibly competitive environment. But the more that people buy into that, the greater chance there is of success.\n\n\"That is the unique balance with a Lions tour.\"\n\nThe standard of play may be be stratospheric, but the touring traditions of scrapes, high-jinks and horseplay are as true for the Lions as for Old Rubber Duckians 3rd XV.\n\nWhether it be 1974 captain Willie John McBride asking an irate hotel manager just how many police would be arriving to quell his team-mates' partying or full-back Neil Jenkins decked out as Prince Ruprecht from the film 'Dirty Rotten Scoundrels' in 1997, there is a human and occasionally hell-raising side to the tours.\n\n\"There are moments which stay with you forever, both on and off field,\" remembers Guscott.\n\n\"There was an afternoon in New Zealand where we - and those involved will remain nameless - were out on a team-building activity and one player very nearly took off another's foot with a shotgun.\n\n\"He missed by a metre or so. The alternative didn't bear thinking about!\"\n• None All Blacks more complete than in 2005 - Hansen\n• None 'O'Driscoll thought spear tackle was going to kill him'\n\nThe series that could have broken the Lions\n\nAs Warren Gatland's squad headed off in the glare of the media spotlight, kitbags loaded with £595 red velvet jackets provided by one of their many sponsors, it is funny to recall that it was once feared 'professionalism' could kill them off.\n\nThe Lions represent the continuing legacy of the British Empire. That still has tremendous resonance in New Zealand, Australia and South Africa\n\nThe end of the sport's amateur status in 1995 prompted predictions that the Lions' days were numbered, as clubs would be reluctant to allow paid employees to tour, improved annual Six Nations battles would dominate the conversation and a burgeoning World Cup would suck up the corporate cash.\n\nSo the theory went, at least.\n\n\"There are two reasons that the Lions survived the advent of professionalism,\" explains Tony Collins, professor at De Montfort University's International Centre for Sports History and Culture and author of 'The Oval World: A Global History of Rugby'.\n\n\"The first is that the 1997 Lions tour of South Africa - two years after the game turned professional - was incredibly successful.\n\n\"It was a great series, that showed the credibility of a Lions tour to supporters and the esteem it was held in by the players themselves.\n\n\"The other thing is just as important, but less recognised. Although a lot has changed, there is still tremendous continuity in the way that people view the world and their place in it.\n\n\"The Lions represent the continuing legacy of the British Empire. That still has tremendous resonance in New Zealand, Australia and South Africa.\n\n\"When the first tours went, these were still very young countries and, in many ways, they still define themselves by their ability to compete with and defeat the British.\n\n\"Back home in Britain, despite the devolution of powers to the various constituent parts, there is still a nostalgia for British-ness in lots of places.\"\n\nWhile the Lions have thrived, the advent of professionalism has had an impact on another of the sport's great composite teams: the Barbarians.\n\nBack in 1973, the Barbarians beat the All Blacks in front of 51,000 in what was a full-blooded contest at the very highest level of the game.\n\nContrast that with the Barbarians' most recent outing last month, which saw the free-running invitational side comfortably beaten in what amounted to a pre-tour loosener for a second-string England side.\n\nThe challenge for the Lions now is to ensure they can marry their romantic past with modern realities.\n\nBefore the third and deciding Test on the 2013 tour of Australia, Gatland controversially dropped Irish legend Brian O'Driscoll to reunite the Welsh midfield axis of Jamie Roberts and Jonathan Davies.\n\nIn total 10 of the starting XV for that climatic match were players Gatland oversaw in his regular job as Wales head coach.\n\nIn the hours before kick-off, former Ireland hooker Keith Wood - a veteran of the 1997 and 2001 tours - accused him of fundamentally misunderstanding the Lions ethos.\n\n\"We are not seeing the blend of four teams, that is what makes the Lions phenomenal,\" he said.\n\n\"It about getting the best quality out of players from these islands, not having an intransigent game-plan that is low on subtlety and simplistic from the start.\"\n\nThe Lions recorded a thumping 41-16 victory to win the series. Wood, though, stood by his words, claiming that the Lions is about more than just the result.\n\nThis year's Lions will play six matches in 17 days before the first Test in an intense crash-course to prepare for the planet's best - the world-champion All Blacks.\n\nWith playbooks fatter than ever, can the Lions afford to start with a blank slate rather than arrive with a pre-heated plan?\n\nBut - given the unique and broad appeal that has has seen them survive for nearly 150 years - can they also afford to disregard the old traditions?\n\nWhat is clear is that the Lions' battle to hitch contemporary professionalism to timeless romance, and to knit four teams into one, makes them unique in a sporting world long since stripped of such idiosyncrasy at the top level.", "The claim: The UK can make itself energy self-sufficient in renewables.\n\nReality Check verdict: This is not the policy in the Liberal Democrat manifesto, which pledges to get 60% of electricity from renewables by 2030. Being self-sufficient and having all energy coming from renewables would require considerable development of storage technology to avoid having to use non-renewable sources or energy bought from overseas as back-up sources.\n\nIn Wednesday night's debate, Liberal Democrat leader Tim Farron said that the UK could become energy self-sufficient in renewable energy.\n\nIt came after he had said: \"If it is simply for hair shirt, muesli-eating, Guardian readers to solve climate change... we're all stuffed.\"\n\nBecoming energy self-sufficient in renewables is not current Liberal Democrat policy, although Mr Farron described it in a speech in February as being a \"patriotic endeavour\".\n\nThe manifesto says the party would: \"Expand renewable energy, aiming to generate 60% of electricity from renewables by 2030.\"\n\nA party spokeswoman described the leader's statement in the debate as \"visionary as opposed to completely literal\".\n\nThe problem with being entirely self-sufficient is that many renewable sources of energy cannot generate power all of the time (the notable exception being the burning of biomass), so if you are using a very high proportion of renewables you rely on interconnectedness (buying electricity from another country where the wind is blowing), storage (batteries in the short-term, some sort of gas storage in the longer term) or a back-up system using gas-fired power stations or nuclear energy.\n\nThe Liberal Democrat manifesto talks about investing in interconnectors, which would be unnecessary if the country was to become self-sufficient.\n\nThere are already private plans in place to increase the amount of electricity that may be bought from France via interconnectors.\n\nIt may be that when he said self-sufficient he meant that we should not have a trade deficit in energy, so it would be OK to buy energy from other countries when we needed it as long as we sold the same amount to other countries when they needed it.\n\nWhile there have been suggestions that marine energy could make the UK a net exporter of electricity, being self-sufficient and generating 100% of energy from renewables is considerably more challenging than, for example, 90%, mainly because of the challenges of storage.\n\nThe development of a smart grid, which co-ordinates renewable energy supplies depending on demand, may also be needed for a 100% renewable system.\n\nAlso, while the Liberal Democrat manifesto targets 60% of electricity, Mr Farron was talking about all energy, which means, for example, that all cars have to run on renewable energy and all buildings have to be heated by it.\n\nSo in 2016, the UK generated 24.4% of its electricity from renewables, but in 2015 (the latest year available) it was only producing 8.8% of energy from renewables.\n\nThe UK has an obligation under European Union rules to derive 30% of electricity from renewables by 2020, which it is on the way to achieving (although the UK is currently scheduled to have left the EU by then). But the other two parts of the targets are 12% of heat and 10% of transport to be powered by renewables, which we are less likely to achieve.\n\nThe Labour manifesto pledges to get 60% of energy from zero-carbon or renewable sources by 2030.\n\nThe Conservative manifesto looks at it in a different way, saying that \"energy policy should be focused on outcomes rather than the means by which we reach our objectives\".\n\nSo they say that the focus will not be on how the energy is generated but on achieving, \"reliable and affordable energy, seizing the industrial opportunity that new technology presents and meeting our global commitments on climate change\".\n\nThe Green Party would have a target of near-100% renewable electricity generation by 2030 with significant investment in electric vehicles and lower-carbon sources of heating.\n\nIt supports self-sufficiency and a decentralised system of communities owning their own generation systems, but would also invest in interconnectors to allow for co-operation with other countries.", "When Sarah Jenkins saw pictures of distraught mothers appealing for information about missing children after the Manchester bombing, it reminded her of her own experience 12 years ago. After the 7/7 attacks in London she had to wait 11 awful days for confirmation that her daughter Emily had died. She now campaigns for victims' relatives to be kept better informed.\n\n\"Emily was my fourth child, so the baby of the family. She could be naughty sometimes, but a great joy. All children are,\" says Sarah.\n\nOn the morning of 7 July 2005, Emily, aged 24, was on her way to work in London.\n\n\"She was staying in North London with a new boyfriend and I had no idea she was there so I didn't really prick up my ears or alert to the fact she was missing until my older daughter rang and said, 'We're all absolutely fine, Emily's late for work.' But there was nothing new in that, she was very often late for work,\" Sarah says.\n\nBut when she still hadn't heard from Emily by lunchtime, she began to suspect that something might be terribly wrong.\n\nSarah had spent the morning drawing in Clapham, south London, and walked with an awful sickness in her stomach towards the station, where she met one of her sons. The two of them went into a bar to watch live coverage of the bombing on a large TV screen.\n\n\"The first thing you do is ring helplines,\" she says.\n\n\"They give you very little information because they have no information.\"\n\nEvery time they rang they spoke to a different person, and were asked the same questions.\n\nSarah was also constantly ringing Emily's mobile phone and leaving messages.\n\nBy late afternoon she and all three of her other children had gathered together, but were not quite sure what to do. They called the police, who told them to call the helpline, which they did, constantly.\n\n\"I remember phoning all through that first night - of course one didn't sleep - so I was constantly phoning the helpline to get the same, 'Have you contacted her friends?'\n\nHer son James came up with the idea of going to the hospitals to look for Emily, but hospital staff just showed them into a room and asked to wait.\n\n\"The last thing they wanted was relatives there,\" Sarah says.\n\nThey also knew that Emily would have been travelling south on the Piccadilly line, so they visited King's Cross and Russell Square stations in the hope of picking up information. Again, without success.\n\nOne of the things Sarah remembers most clearly about this period, as the family waited together, was how her son Barnaby would go to buy pizza in the evening, which no-one could eat. Every day they threw away boxes of uneaten pizza. Sarah wondered what the rubbish collectors would think.\n\nAlthough she knew that the helpline staff were taking her concerns seriously, she says it wasn't made clear to the family that they had been logged as a priority case. So they kept ringing back to check for information, not knowing that they would in fact have been contacted as soon there was something to report.\n\nAll this time, Sarah hoped that Emily might still be alive.\n\n\"As a mother you have that absolute thing of (a) it should have been me and (b) I should have protected her and so she must be still alive. It can't be my child who's died,\" she says.\n\nAfter three days, Sarah's family was finally put in touch with a Family Liaison Officer. This was progress, but Sarah could still not understand why her daughter could not be identified. Emily had been carrying credit cards with her that day and a tube pass. She had been wearing a distinctive ring, and had a tattoo on her back, both of which Sarah carefully described.\n\n\"The other victims were identified slowly but not as slowly as us,\" she says. \"Emily was the last to be identified.\"\n\nLater Sarah found out that her daughter had been one of the first victims to be taken out of the tube carriage.\n\n\"The only thing that it (the bomb) had done was it had blown her legs off. She was absolutely fine apart from that,\" Sarah says.\n\nFinally, a full 11 days after the bombing, the Family Liaison Officer visited the family to give them the bad news about Emily's death.\n\nSarah later campaigned to improve the information given to victim's families after a major incident, and worked with a government department on plans for an official website that would tell families which hospitals were treating victims, and provide help to arrange funerals and claim compensation.\n\nShe says she received a promise that the website would be launched, but after the Manchester bombing it was clear to her that little or nothing had changed.\n\n\"People were still visiting hospitals with no results. Mothers were still crying in the streets with photographs of their daughters, saying frantically, 'Has anyone seen this child?'\n\n\"I don't think anybody in the day and age of fast communication should be out on the street with a photograph of their daughter or son.\"\n\nJohn Ramsbottom, a retired police inspector, says the length of time it takes to identify a body after a bombing has to do with the complexity of the police operation.\n\n\"Two people are key at the scene,\" he says.\n\n\"The first one is the Senior Investigating Officer. This person is concerned with investigating the crime and extracting from the scene all the evidence that will enable us to come to the conclusion of what happened that day. The second person at the scene is the Senior Identification Manager. They are responsible with the recovery of the dead and the identification of the dead.\"\n\nEach time a body part is removed from the scene it must be properly bagged and logged, generating large amounts of paperwork.\n\nSarah now wears the ring Emily was wearing on the day she died\n\n\"A large number of them are going to have fragments of the bomb in them, so we've got to gather from them forensic evidence as well as identification evidence,\" he says.\n\nIn many cases the body parts will be moved to a temporary mortuary, where work will be done to reassemble the bodies of the dead.\n\nThe goal is to ensure that no parts are wrongly allocated, and that \"the body we give back to the family is absolutely as pure as that body as we can possibly make it\".\n\nThere are only four ways to definitively identify a body, Ramsbottom says - through fingerprints, DNA, dental records and surgical implants, such as a hip joint or a pace-maker with a unique serial number.\n\nWallets and ID documents are not considered strong enough evidence. And \"if we don't know, we say nothing,\" he says.\n\n\"Do the police say to somebody, 'We are 90% sure we found them'? But then we leave them with 10% hope. Is it worse later if we destroy that 10% hope or not?\n\n\"That's not a legal or police question, it's a human-being question and I don't have the answer to it.\"\n\nHe adds: \"The only thing we console ourselves with is that when we've done what we've done, we've got absolutely the right body, and that the dead person there has told their story to the police and coroner, and that story becomes part of the narrative of the incident.\"\n\nSarah understands that information can be given out only when it is confirmed to be true, and that \"wrong information is worse than anything else\".\n\nBut she says she is angry that families are still going through the enormous stress that she endured 12 years ago.\n\nShe would like a central co-ordinating body to be created, to provide families with information after a major incident. \"But if they cannot do that, or nobody thinks it's a good idea, then I will compromise with a website.\"\n\nUntil that website exists, she is not going to let it lie, she says. \"I expect letters back from the Home Office.\"\n\nJoin the conversation - find us on Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat and Twitter.", "Last updated on .From the section Horse Racing\n\nLittle-known jockey Padraig Beggy, who served a one-year drugs ban, won the Epsom Derby on Saturday on Aidan O'Brien's 40-1 shot Wings of Eagles.\n\nIt proved a debut Derby victory for 31-year-old Beggy, who was given the suspension in Australia in 2014 after a positive test for cocaine.\n\nThe outsider came from deep to beat much-fancied stablemate Cliffs of Moher and 7-2 favourite Cracksman.\n\n\"It's brilliant, I can't describe it,\" Beggy told BBC Radio 5 live.\n\nHe added: \"I got into a bit of trouble in Australia and made a mistake. It is something that I've got to put behind me. I was knocked down then and had to pick myself up and come back fighting, and today I think I've proved that.\"\n\nWith only two horses behind him with three furlongs to run, Beggy led Wings of Eagles on a late charge to beat Cliffs Of Moher in the dying strides. Cracksman, ridden by Frankie Dettori, was third.\n\n\"I dreamed of it when I was fairly young. I had nearly given it up,\" added Beggy.\n\n\"Fair play to Aidan O'Brien - it doesn't matter what price you are riding when you are riding for Aidan in a big race.\"\n\nThe result had looked like going with the form book as Cliffs Of Moher (5-1) just got the better of the two Frankel colts, Cracksman and Eminent, inside the final furlong.\n\nBut that was not taking into account Wings Of Eagles - the son of 2011 Derby winner Pour Moi - who provided O'Brien with a sixth Derby winner.\n\n\"It means the world,\" added Beggy. \"I'll go down in history because I've won the Derby.\"\n\nIt was Beggy's first run in the Derby and trainer O'Brien was full of praise for his jockey.\n\n\"He's a brilliant rider, a world-class rider,\" O'Brien told BBC Radio 5 live. \"We're very lucky to have him.\"\n\nWe said that any one of about 10 or 12 might win and though Wings Of Eagles was maybe quite low down that list, he was definitely on it after a promising second at Chester.\n\nIf one's honest, the presence of Paddy Beggy on board didn't gain the horse any extra followers because although he's doing well, he's seen as batting down the order for Team O'Brien.\n\nBut, along with the winner who swept by his rivals in great style, Beggy was star of this show, clearly delighted to win, but also immensely grateful to O'Brien who's supported him as he's rebuilt his career after the drugs ban.\n\nThere were barely one and a half lengths between the first four - there is probably no superstar there, but all four are good solid performers.", "A British bid for the 2030 World Cup would be \"strongly supported\" and the tournament should not be sold to the country \"who wants to pay the most\", says Uefa president Aleksander Ceferin.\n\nBut, with the 2022 World Cup in Qatar, that would go against the governing body's continental rotation policy.\n\nCeferin says rules \"cannot change just because we have some big sponsors\".\n\nSpeaking to BBC Sport in Cardiff before the Champions League final, he added: \"It's simply time for us [Europe] to host the World Cup in 2030.\n\n\"I cannot say which country will place a bid from Europe, but we cannot just sell the World Cup to the ones who want to pay the most.\"\n\nAsked about China's commercial grip on Fifa, Ceferin told BBC Sport: \"I didn't want to speak just about China, but the most important thing is that the World Cup should go to the country that has the best bid.\"\n\nRussia will host the next World Cup in 2018, making a European bid for the 2030 tournament viable.\n\nCeferin says an English or pan-British bid would be welcomed.\n\n\"It just has to be a decision not just of the FA, probably also the government and others too. But they deserve to have a World Cup in the near future,\" the head of European football's governing body said.\n\n\"They are capable of organising the World Cup, of that I'm sure. If they decide to go, we will strongly support them.\"\n\nCerefin was speaking the day before Cardiff hosts the Champions League final and said Wales hosting the final was \"very important for the development of football\".\n\n\"For Cardiff, it's a fantastic experience,\" he added. \"For us it's a bit of a challenge in terms of infrastructure and hotels but I'm sure Wales will never forget the event.\n\n\"It's very important for the development of football. [Wales] made some fantastic results last year [at Euro 2016], they have one of the best players in the world - for a small country it is a fantastic result.\"\n\nGianni Infantino, head of world governing body Fifa, has also called for more transparency around transfers, and his Uefa counterpart Ceferin agrees.\n\nThe issue of agents' fees has been in the spotlight after claims Mino Raiola earned £41m from Paul Pogba's world record move to Manchester United last summer.\n\n\"First of all, there's crazy money around,\" said Ceferin. \"But we have to speak to all the stakeholders and to speak to Fifa and in the end, it has to be a Fifa decision.\n\n\"We were the ones who were pushing against third-party ownership [of players] and we succeeded with that, so we will have to work on this as usual. It's a problem.\"\n\nHowever, Ceferin says it is \"not a simple decision\".\n\n\"As a lawyer, if somebody agrees to an agreement about a certain amount it's hard to say he cannot get it,\" he added.\n\n\"I don't have a miracle solution but we have to react, otherwise hundreds of millions of money goes out of football.\"\n\n'Fifa will have to change... or hurt football around the world'\n\nA disagreement between Fifa and Uefa has also emerged over the flow of information between the two, with Uefa saying they were kept in the dark over certain issues.\n\nAlthough not mentioned by Ceferin, it is understood that previously unknown financial details of TV rights contracts for the 2026 World Cup, which is expected to be held in North America, form part of the complaint.\n\nIn addition, a Fifa monitoring committee uncovered evidence last year of North Koreans working in alleged \"appalling\" conditions on a stadium that will host World Cup games in St Petersburg next summer.\n\nInfantino only confirmed the presence of the workers and concerns over their living and working conditions in a letter to the presidents of the Nordic FAs earlier this month, a copy of which was seen by several media organisations.\n\nCeferin says he \"condemns\" such treatment and welcomed the fact follow-up inspections found no evidence of other North Koreans working on World Cup stadiums.\n\nHowever, Uefa intends to send a letter next week to Fifa outlining its concerns over the lack of information, with Ceferin warning his organisation will refuse to make decisions at key meetings unless they receive timely updates.\n\n\"What disturbs me is that we have to read about that in the media,\" he said. \"It's not a criticism towards the president of Fifa, it's a criticism towards an organisation which is the world governing body of football and doesn't give us very important information.\n\n\"In the end, Fifa will have to change completely or it will hurt all the football organisations around the world.\"", "Michiyo Nishigaki lost her only son Naoya to \"karoshi\"\n\nJapan has some of the longest working hours in the world, and some young Japanese workers are literally working themselves to death. Now there are calls for the government to do more.\n\nMichiyo Nishigaki was a proud mother when her only son Naoya landed a job at a large Japanese telecoms company, straight out of college.\n\nHe loved computers, and it seemed like a great opportunity in Japan's competitive graduate jobs market.\n\nBut just two years later things started to go wrong.\n\n\"He was telling me he'd been busy, but he said he was OK,\" Ms Nishigaki tells me. \"But then he came home for my father's funeral and he couldn't get out of bed. He said: 'Let me sleep a while, I can't get up. Sorry, Mum, but let me sleep'.\"\n\nJapan has some of the longest working hours in the developed world\n\nLater she learned from colleagues that he'd been working around the clock.\n\n\"He usually worked until the last train, but if he missed it he slept at his desk,\" she said. \"In the worst case he had to work overnight through to 10pm the next evening, working 37 hours in total.\"\n\nTwo years later Naoya died at the age of 27 from an overdose of medication. His death was officially rule a case of \"karoshi\" - the Japanese term to describe death attributed to overwork.\n\nJapan has a culture of long working hours and this is not a new phenomenon - it was first recorded in the 1960s - but recently high-profile cases have thrust karoshi back into the spotlight.\n\nOn Christmas Day in 2015, 24-year-old Matsuri Takahashi, an employee at the Japanese advertising agency Dentsu, jumped to her death.\n\nIt emerged she had barely slept after working more than 100 hours of overtime a month in the period leading up to her death.\n\nMakoto Iwahashi says that is not unusual, particularly for new starters in a company. He works for Posse, an organisation that runs a helpline for young workers, and says most of the calls are complaints about long working hours.\n\n\"It's sad because young workers think they don't have any other choice,\" he tells me. \"If you don't quit you have to work 100 hours. If you quit you just can't live.\"\n\nMr Iwahashi says declining job security has made the situation worse.\n\n\"We had karoshi in the 1960s and 70s - the big difference is they had to work long hours but they were secured lifetime employment. That's not the case any more.\"\n\nOfficial figures put cases of karoshi in the hundreds each year, counting heart attacks, strokes and suicides. But campaigners say the real figure is much higher.\n\nNearly a quarter of Japanese companies have employees working more than 80 hours overtime a month, often unpaid, a recent survey found. And 12% have employees breaking the 100 hours a month mark.\n\nThose numbers are important; 80 hours overtime a month is regarded as the threshold above which you have an increased chance of dying.\n\nNearly a quarter of Japanese companies have employees working more than 80 hours overtime a month\n\nJapan's government has been under increasing pressure to act, but the challenge has been to break a decades-old work culture where it's frowned upon to leave before your colleagues or boss.\n\nEarlier this year the government introduced Premium Fridays, encouraging firms to let their employees out early, at 3pm, on the last Friday each month. They also want Japanese workers to take more holiday.\n\nWorkers are entitled to 20 days leave a year but currently about 35% don't take any of it.\n\nIn the local government offices in Toshima, a district of downtown Tokyo, they have resorted to turning the office lights off at 7pm in an effort to force people to go home.\n\nHitoshi Ueno says it's important for employees to develop their own interests outside of the office\n\n\"We wanted to do something visible,\" says manager Hitoshi Ueno.\n\n\"It's not just about cutting working hours. We want people to be more efficient and productive, so that everyone can protect and enjoy their spare time. We want to change the work environment in total.\"\n\nIn focusing on efficiency he may have a point. While the country may have some of the longest working hours it is the least productive of the G7 group of developed economies.\n\nBut campaigners say these measures are piecemeal and fail to address the core problem: that young workers are dying because they are working too hard and for too long.\n\nThe only solution they say is to put a legal limit on the overtime employees are permitted to work.\n\nJapan may have some of the longest working hours it is the least productive of the G7 group of developed economies\n\nEarlier this year the government proposed limiting average overtime to 60 hours a month though firms would be allowed to up this to 100 hours during \"busy periods\" - well into the karoshi red zone.\n\nCritics say the government is prioritising business and economic interests at the expense of the welfare of workers.\n\n\"The Japanese people count on the government but they are being betrayed,\" says Koji Morioka, an academic who has studied the karoshi phenomenon for 30 years.\n\nIn the meantime, more young workers are dying and the support groups for bereaved families keep getting new members.\n\nMichiyo Nishigaki, who lost her son Naoya, says the country is killing the very workers it should be cherishing.\n\n\"Companies just focus on short-term profits,\" she says. \"My son and other young workers don't hate work. they are capable and they want to do well.\n\n\"Give them the opportunity to work without long hours or health problems and the country would be privileged to have them.\"", "Cristiano Ronaldo said that his \"numbers don't lie\" after his double helped Zinedine Zidane's Real Madrid side beat Juventus 4-1 in Cardiff.\n\nA goal in each half took the Portuguese to 105 Champions League strikes as Real became the first side since AC Milan in 1990 to win back-to-back cups.\n\n\"This is one of the best moments of my career but it seems I am able to say that every year,\" he said.\n\n\"People won't be able to criticise me because the numbers don't lie.\"\n\nJuventus were on top for large periods of an entertaining and open first 45 minutes, as Ronaldo's opener was cancelled out by Mario Mandzukic's superb overhead kick.\n\nBut Real were dominant after the break as efforts from Casemiro, Ronaldo again, and Marco Asensio sealed a 12th European Cup win and a third in four seasons.\n\nRonaldo has now scored at least twice as many Champions League goals as any other player in the quarter-finals (20), semi-finals (13) and finals (4).\n\nHe has won the Champions League on four occasions and has now scored 11 more goals in the competition than Barcelona's Lionel Messi - his nearest challenger.\n• None How did the players rate?\n• None 'Ronaldo is in the same bracket as Pele' - BBC Radio 5 live Football Daily Podcast\n\nSuccess capped an incredible start to management for former Real playmaker Zidane, who last month guided the club to a first La Liga title since 2012 and became the first French coach to win the Champions League twice.\n\n\"I feel like dancing,\" he said. \"I consider myself a man of this house [Real Madrid].\n\n\"This club is really in my heart and we are going to enjoy this. Today is a truly historic day for Real Madrid, for all Madrid fans.\"\n\nReal Madrid midfielder Toni Kroos, who has now won the Champions League three times with Real and Bayern Munich, praised the impact of Ronaldo after Zidane's side retained the trophy.\n\n\"I didn't expect that it was possible to defend this title, it is so difficult to win it once,\" he said. \"To win it three times in four years means a lot.\n\n\"Everybody knows that Cristiano is very important. As a team we played very well in the quarter-finals, the semi-finals and the final but you need a guy to score the goals and he did it again.\"\n\nVeteran Juventus goalkeeper Gianluigi Buffon was the focus of many neutral supporters before the game, with the 39-year-old looking to win the trophy at the third time of asking.\n\nBut, as with defeats to AC Milan in 2003 and Barcelona in 2015, it was to be another loss for the Italy number one.\n\n\"We thought we had enough to win the game,\" he said. \"It is a huge disappointment.\n\n\"I cannot explain why we played like we did in the second half. Real Madrid deserved to win in the second half. They showed their class and the attitude needed to play in this kind of game.\"\n\nCoach Massimiliano Allegri was disappointed with his side's reaction to going 2-1 down to Casemiro's deflected strike but pledged to return next season and \"try again\".\n\n\"I don't think Juventus has reached the end of a cycle at all,\" he said. \"Buffon will still be Juventus's goalkeeper next season and Andrea Barzagli will still be with us.\n\n\"Clearly the club knows we can improve our team if we want to achieve a higher technical level.\n\n\"We all need some rest and after the holidays we will be ready to get back with new drive and impetus. Football gives you the chance to try again next year.\"\n\nZidane has answered questions spectacularly tonight. The way he has handled the big players and the confidence he has shown in the role has been excellent. Not for once in that second half did they ever feel in danger of losing that game.\n\nHe has achieved something very special here this evening. To be the first to retain the trophy since 1990 - you can't underestimate that. It's too easy to say he's got amazing players because you have to handle them. He has and he's done it with such good style.", "Pilates devotee Cassey Ho has nearly four million YouTube followers\n\nIn the 1980s, a Lycra-clad Jane Fonda sold millions of her pioneering workout video cassettes. But videotape gave way to DVDs, then along came the internet and digital streaming. So how has the workout video adapted?\n\nWhen Cassey Ho, 30, logs on to her YouTube page \"blogilates\" and uploads her latest workout video, she knows she will soon be inundated with comments from fans across all her social media accounts.\n\nThe fitness video blogger, or vlogger for short, has amassed nearly four million subscribers to her YouTube channel, as well as millions of followers on Facebook and Instagram.\n\nShe is one of a new breed of fitness vloggers exploiting the internet's ability to beam content to global mass audiences at very low production costs.\n\nIt's a far cry from when fitness queen Jane Fonda inspired millions of people around the world to try aerobics in front of their living room TVs throughout the 1980s. She sold more than 17 million tapes.\n\nJane Fonda (right) was the fitness video queen in the 1980s\n\nScores of other models, actors and stars followed suit.\n\nBut today, you can find more than 30 million fitness videos on YouTube alone, and countless more on other social media platforms.\n\nBudding fitness kings and queens can publish and gain a following without star status, a fancy studio or thousands of pounds' worth of equipment, simply recording workouts on their smartphones at the beach or in their gardens and editing the content on their laptops.\n\nBut unlike the traditional workout video, where weight loss and fitness was the goal, consumers are logging on to their favourite fitness vloggers for a more intimate and interactive experience.\n\n\"Fitness videos have switched from being functional to being aspirational content that give people a window into the lives of the fitness influencers they look up to,\" says Richard Wilson, chief executive of Clickon Media, a content creation firm.\n\nFor example, Zuzka Light, a 35-year-old Czech fitness vlogger now based in Los Angeles, started her channel in 2012. Her vlog shows short workout videos, with some of them attracting up to 20 million views.\n\nFitness vlogger Zuzka Light thinks the \"personal approach is really key\"\n\nTaking her brand on to other social media platforms, such as Twitter and Instagram, has raised her profile, giving her the opportunity to launch a $9.99 a month subscription to her website and her own clothing and food supplement lines.\n\n\"I always try to post videos that I would like to watch myself,\" she tells the BBC.\n\n\"Sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn't. I've had feedback from my viewers who say they feel connected to me and see me as their friend, their workout buddy.\n\n\"I think the personal approach is really key.\"\n\nShe regularly works with brands, but admits she's picky about the products she introduces to her audiences.\n\n\"Being an influencer I have a responsibility and I wouldn't want to take advantage of that and promote something I wouldn't use myself or something I wouldn't recommend to my loved ones.\"\n\nA study by marketing platform MuseFind found that 92% of people preferred hearing about brands from influencers, rather than through paid adverts.\n\n\"This switch in perspective provides marketers and advertisers the freedom to develop more authentic content that tells a story as opposed to being purely functional and demonstrating things such as weight loss and technique,\" says Mr Wilson.\n\nThe fitness sector in general is huge, with the International Health, Racquet & Sportsclub Association reporting that global health club industry revenue reached an estimated $81bn (£63bn) in 2015, with around 151 million members worldwide.\n\nAnd the fitness clothing industry is worth more than $320bn in the US alone, says the NPD Group.\n\nNo wonder vloggers are proving very useful for brands trying to reach consumers directly and bypass the growing use of ad blockers on mobiles and desktops.\n\n\"The growth of smartphone usage and mobile video viewing lends itself well to a fitness audience,\" says Mark Brill, lecturer in digital communications at Birmingham City University.\n\n\"Not only can content be viewed anywhere, but mobile devices also make the interaction personal and more private.\n\n\"In the past, word of mouth has been an important way to recommend brands. That has shifted into the digital word of mouth - social media.\"\n\nAnd it's not just fitness vloggers benefiting from taking their workouts online.\n\nFitness studios are realising the potential of live streaming videos of classes and videos featuring their clients' favourite instructors.\n\nSome fitness studios, such as Barre3, are putting classes online to widen their appeal\n\nBarre3, the ballet-based workout in New York, has a subscription-based fitness video service via its website to allow members to exercise from the comfort of their own homes.\n\nStandalone services, such as Flex TV, which provide online access to live high-intensity interval training workouts and yoga classes, are popping up too.\n\nSo the traditional workout video on tape or DVD has adapted to a world in which people are more used to streaming entertainment over services such as Netflix, Amazon Prime and YouTube. Declining DVD sales bear this out.\n\n\"Fewer people are buying DVDs and it reduces the revenue opportunities for a workout video,\" says Mr Brill.\n\n\"The new revenue comes from advertising share, especially on YouTube, and from sponsorship for those with a large enough social media following.\n\n\"Looking at it that way, it seems almost inevitable that the fitness vloggers will triumph.\"", "Last updated on .From the section Horse Racing\n\nDates: Coverage: Commentaries on BBC Radio 5 live; results and reports on BBC Sport website\n\nTrainer John Gosden hopes joint favourite Cracksman will emerge as a \"diamond\" on Saturday in what he says will be a \"terribly open\" Epsom Derby.\n\nCracksman is one of five runners for Newmarket-based Gosden, who teams up with Frankie Dettori again after victory in the Oaks with Enable.\n\nGosden also runs Crowned Eagle, Glencadam Glory, Pealer and Khalidi, while Aidan O'Brien has six runners.\n\nDerby outsider Diore Lia was ruled out on Saturday after pulling a muscle.\n\nApprentice jockey Paddy Pilley was to ride Diore Lia after Gina Mangan was barred from riding the 500-1 shot by the British Horseracing Authority (BHA) on Wednesday when they deemed her too \"inexperienced\".\n• None Dettori: 'Winning Epsom Derby is the best feeling ever'\n\nVictory for Cracksman would seal Gosden a third Derby success, after Benny The Dip in 1997 and Golden Horn two years ago.\n\nThe son of Frankel won his only start as a juvenile at Newmarket and then beat fellow Derby contender Permian in a trial at Epsom in April.\n\n\"Cracksman has pleased me a lot, but he's light on experience,\" Gosden said.\n\n\"We'll probably find a champion at the end of it, but at the moment no-one can quite find that diamond in the rough.\n\n\"We like this horse a lot, but he is a different type altogether to Golden Horn, who was a very strong favourite.\"\n\nDettori said: \"He is not Golden Horn by any means, but potentially he could be anything on Saturday and we will find out.\"\n\nO'Brien, who has saddled five previous winners of the race but had to settle for second in the Oaks with hot favourite Rhododendron, has Dee Stakes winner Cliffs Of Moher leading his team.\n\n\"Cliffs Of Moher was a little bit slowly away [at Chester] and Ryan got him into a good position fairly quick,\" O'Brien said.\n\n\"He's a horse that always showed plenty of pace, so we weren't even sure about going up to a mile and a half, but he galloped out well to the line at Chester.\"\n\nO'Brien's daughter Ana will ride his three-year-old colt The Anvil to become only the third female jockey to ever race in the Derby.\n\nAnother of O'Brien's horses, Finn McCool, was the only withdrawal at the final declaration stage.\n\nThe total purse is set to be £1.625m, the richest race ever staged in Britain, with the winner receiving £920,913 and prize money then paid down to sixth place, which will net £21,922.", "Last updated on .From the section Sailing\n\nRace coverage: Watch highlights on BBC Two, Red Button, Connected TVs, online and BBC Sport app from 11 June.\n\nGreat Britain will face New Zealand in a rearranged America's Cup semi-final on Monday after a lack of wind caused Sunday's races to be postponed.\n\nAs the highest scoring challengers, second-placed New Zealand picked their opponents leaving Sweden to face Japan in the other play-off.\n\nNew Zealand said they chose Great Britain after studying the forecast.\n\n\"The winds simply didn't reach the required six knot strength,\" said regatta director Iain Murray.\n\n\"This is how it is sometimes in sailing. Here in Bermuda we have been spoilt for action so far, and today was just one of those days.\"\n\nTeam USA won the qualifying round with a crucial victory over New Zealand and take a one-point lead into the finals.\n\nHolders USA advance automatically to the first-to-seven America's Cup matches - which begin on 17 June - and will have a bonus-point lead over their challengers.\n\nThe first team in each semi-final to win five races progresses to the challenger final for a chance to take on the American team.\n\nBen Ainslie said his Land Rover BAR team are facing \"a real battle\" against New Zealand but were \"up for it\".\n\nGreat Britain went into the final day of qualifying with an unassailable lead over bottom-of-the-table France knowing qualification was already guaranteed.\n\nIn their first race of the day, the British boat jumped Japan at the pre-start and then dealt well with the conditions to seal their fourth race win of the qualifiers before losing the final race to USA.\n\nElsewhere, Sweden comfortably beat France, who were eliminated on Friday - all but one of the six teams taking part in the qualifiers advanced to the play-offs.\n\nStandings and how it works\n• *Land Rover BAR (GB) started the round-robin qualifiers with two points and Oracle Team USA with one point after finishing first and second in the 2015-16 World Series\n• Each team raced the other teams twice in this stage, gaining one point per victory, with the top four progressing\n• Defending champions USA skip the next stage and advance automatically to the America's Cup matches. They take a bonus point with them after topping the qualifying group\n\nWhat happens next?\n\nHolders Oracle Team USA await the winners of the challenger final in the America's Cup.\n\nThe first to seven points wins the America's Cup, or the Auld Mug as the trophy is known, with a possible 13 races to be sailed on 17-18 and 24-27 June.\n\nThe America's Cup, the oldest competition in international sport, was first raced in 1851 around the Isle of Wight and has only been won by four nations.", "Sri Lanka's Lasith Malinga drops a top-edged pull shot by South Africa's Faf du Plessis in the Champions Trophy game at the Oval.\n\nAvailable to UK users only.", "Mr Varadkar has come to embody the liberalisation of a country\n\nThere have been plenty of international headlines about Leo Varadkar's rise to the top of Irish politics.\n\nAlmost all focus on the fact that the Republic of Ireland now has a half-Indian, openly gay prime minister.\n\nMr Varadkar has come to embody the liberalisation of a country which was once regarded as one of the most socially conservative in Europe.\n\nBut, in Ireland, Mr Varadkar's sexuality and ethnic background have not been particularly prominent.\n\nHe took over as taoiseach (Irish prime minister) on Thursday, having won the race for the leadership of Fine Gael - the biggest party in the country's ruling coalition.\n\nThe leadership contest focused primarily on socio-economic issues and the defining challenges for Mr Varadkar will be how to build on the Republic of Ireland's recovery from the financial disaster of several years ago, and how to manage Brexit.\n\nMr Varadkar was born on 18 January 1979 in Dublin.\n\nHis father Ashok - a doctor from Mumbai - met his mother Miriam, an Irish nurse, while they were both working in Slough in Berkshire.\n\nMr Varadkar followed his father into medicine\n\nThey settled in Ireland in the 1970s.\n\nThe country Mr Varadkar grew up in was very different to today.\n\nUntil the 1990s, homosexuality and divorce were illegal.\n\nThere were few immigrants, and the Republic of Ireland was one of the poorer members of the EU.\n\nMr Varadkar followed his father into medicine.\n\nHe became a councillor aged 24 and, in 2007, he was elected to the Irish parliament, Dáil Éireann.\n\nThe so-called Celtic Tiger was a global phenomenon - low corporate tax rates and financial deregulation meant the Irish economy became associated with Apple and Google rather than just agriculture and Guinness.\n\nBut the economy crashed amidst the worldwide financial crisis - and Ireland had to accept a £71bn international bailout.\n\nIn the aftermath, Fine Gael came to power at the head of a coalition in 2011.\n\nMr Varadkar was appointed minister for transport, tourism and sport - and then health minister.\n\nIn 2015, he came out as gay in an interview with the Irish national broadcaster RTÉ\n\nMore recently he has run Ireland's welfare system.\n\nHe has built up a high media profile - descriptions of him as a \"sharp-shooter\" and \"straight-talker\" are common.\n\nIn 2015, he came out as gay in an interview with the Irish national broadcaster, RTÉ.\n\nHe said: \"It's not a big deal for me any more. I hope it's not a big deal for anyone else - it shouldn't be.\"\n\nA few months later, Ireland voted in a referendum to legalise same-sex marriage.\n\nWhen Enda Kenny announced his retirement as taoiseach and Fine Gael leader, Mr Varadkar's supporters launched a \"shock-and-awe\" strategy which saw most of the party's parliamentarians endorse him within 48 hours.\n\nHis opponent, Housing Minister Simon Coveney, was never able to recover.\n\nBut he did express \"deep concern\" at the direction in which his rival would take Fine Gael - suggesting Mr Varadkar's economic policies would pull the party to the right.\n\nMr Varadkar said Fine Gael should represent those \"who got up early in the morning\".\n\nHe went on to say he was talking about \"people working in the public and private sector, the self-employed, carers getting up to mind loved ones, parents getting up to mind children\".\n\nBut Fine Gael's political enemies have tried to portray him as a rightwing ideologue - pointing to a recent campaign against benefits cheats.\n\nMr Varadkar's predecessor, Mr Kenny, stood down a year after an election result in which Fine Gael lost seats, and could only form a minority government.\n\nNow officially installed as premier, he is, at 38, the country's youngest prime minister.\n\nHe faces what Mr Kenny has described as the biggest challenge the Irish state has ever had - the departure of its nearest neighbour from the EU.\n\nBut Mr Varadkar has an internationalist outlook - seeing himself in the same mould as the French President Emmanuel Macron or the Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau - a youthful, dynamic, centrist leader.\n\nHis potent political brand has taken him far- but his toughest tests are still to come.\n• None Irish health minister says he is gay", "In the opening match of the tour of Australia four years ago, the Lions won 59-8.\n\nOn their last visit to New Zealand back in 2005, the Lions scored two tries in the first six minutes of their first match on Kiwi soil.\n\nSo I was surprised by the heavy weather the Lions made of their 13-7 win over the Provincial Barbarians in Saturday's tour opener.\n\nIt was a very scratchy performance. The players seemed like strangers, struggling to get to know each other and work out how they should combine.\n\nOf course the Lions might have had limited preparation time, but the Provincial Barbarians side had only been together for a week or so.\n\nThat instinctive handling and offloading game might be part of the Kiwi DNA but the Lions are a team of seasoned internationals.\n\nIndividually there were some bright spots. Prop Kyle Sinckler, number eight Taulupe Faletau, flanker Ross Moriarty and centre Ben Te'o took their chance to impress.\n\nFlanker Justin Tipuric and prop Mako Vunipola played with energy and intensity off the bench\n\nBut some players need to sharpen up their act.\n\nAt full-back, Stuart Hogg looked tense. His sparkling attacking play earned him the Six Nations player of the tournament award in each of the past two seasons.\n\nBut against the Provincial Barbarians he was forcing things, attempting a moment of magic as soon as he got hold of the ball.\n\nSecond row Iain Henderson and centre Jonathan Joseph just didn't get into the game enough.\n\nOn a Lions tour - particularly these ones with a short run-in to the Test series - you have to go looking for the ball. If you wait for the game to come to you, the whole trip can pass you by.\n\nScrum-half Greig Laidlaw was decent. But he did what we know he can do and no more. He organised well, but rarely is he going to make a break. He was flagging at the end and was not whip-sharp with the pass.\n\nPerversely, however, that underwhelming performance will be quite positive for the squad.\n\nThere are 18 players who weren't involved at all in the game on Saturday. The likes of Leigh Halfpenny, George North and Conor Murray will know that some of their rivals for a Test place have missed an opportunity and that they can stake their own claim against the Blues in midweek.\n\nThe battle for the 10 jersey\n\nWarren Gatland's decision over the team's fly-half might be the one that defines the tour.\n\nThe two main contenders were in competition and, even on the back of 20 minutes as a replacement, Owen Farrell is now the man in possession.\n\nIt is a very different prospect coming on after an hour or so when a lot of the hard work has already been done, especially against a side such as this which was high on enthusiasm but low on real top-class quality.\n\nBut Farrell made such a difference, just because Johnny Sexton was so average.\n\nLike Hogg, Sexton seemed stifled by the expectation. At Leinster he is used to being the main man in team talks and on the field. He sets the mood music for that side and when you are not playing at your best that is a burden.\n\nFarrell is part of a Saracens set-up that functions like a well-oiled machine.\n\nHe kept it simple, getting into organisational mode, zipping off a couple of good passes in the build-up to Watson's score and putting up a good tactical kick from which Rhys Webb almost scored.\n\nThere is still a long way to go, but Sexton is playing catch up after the opener.\n\nThe template to beat the All Blacks\n\nThe good news for the Lions is that you don't have to do anything wonderfully different to beat the All Blacks tactically.\n\nBut your standards have to be skyscraper high in everything you do - ruthlessly accurate, relentlessly intense and with the strictest self-discipline to keep the penalty count down.\n\nThat was what England did when they won at Twickenham in 2012 and Ireland did in Chicago in 2016.\n\nOn both occasions they put the All Blacks under such pressure that the world champions eventually cracked and lost.\n\nSome have been tempted to see if Sexton and Farrell could combine with one at fly-half and the other at inside centre.\n\nTo base a Test team around that would be a coaching decision from way out of leftfield by Gatland - particularly given the limited preparation time and the fact that a dual playmaker set-up is not one that he has ever really tried with Wales.\n\nTo rattle the All Blacks, you have got to have momentum. Both England and Ireland had powerful ball carrying inside centres - Manu Tuilagi and Robbie Henshaw respectively - in their famous wins over New Zealand.\n\nThat is not a template that you can fit both Sexton and Farrell into.\n\nModern sides are so much more drilled than teams in the past, they have a thick playbook of pre-cooked moves and will have had endless talks through what they should do in certain scenarios.\n\nThat makes them stronger overall but it can mean that they end up looking to the sidelines for direction.\n\nWith a lot of the great touring sides, the players worked it out themselves. It was the case when the Lions won their only series in New Zealand back in 1971.\n\nCoach Carwyn James told the players to express themselves and helped them come up with solutions themselves rather than instructing them on what to do.\n\nIt was the same on the victorious Lions tours I was on with Sir Ian McGeechan as coach in 1989 and 1997.\n\nThe class for 2017 have to take responsibility to come up with the answers as well. Otherwise the team can stall.", "Last updated on .From the section Tennis\n\nCoverage: Listen to live radio commentary and follow text coverage of selected matches on BBC Radio 5 live sports extra and online.\n\nDefending champion Novak Djokovic survived a third-round scare at the French Open to beat unseeded Argentine Diego Schwartzman in five sets.\n\nThe Serb came back from two sets to one down to win 5-7 6-3 3-6 6-1 6-1.\n\nDjokovic, 30, finished strongly despite making 55 unforced errors and arguing with umpire Carlos Ramos over a conduct warning.\n\nThe second seed goes on to face Spain's Albert Ramos-Vinolas, who beat France's Lucas Pouille.\n• None Agassi to keep working with Djokovic\n\nThe presence of new coach Andre Agassi has yet to inspire Djokovic to rediscover the form that made him a seemingly untouchable world number one this time last year.\n\nAn erratic performance saw the 12-time Grand Slam champion hit 21 errors in relinquishing a 4-1 lead in the first set.\n\nHowever, Agassi's unexpected arrival midway through the second set apparently inspired Djokovic to a break of serve.\n\n\"I was focused on the screen and I saw obviously people reacting when he arrived,\" said the Serb.\n\n\"He was not supposed to be here today, because we have finished yesterday with our in-person collaboration here in Paris.\n\n\"I appreciate that. I respect that very much that he managed to do things and move his commitments around so he could come and watch.\"\n\nThat late break in the second appeared to have settled the world number two, but Schwartzman - playing his first ever third-round match at a Grand Slam - was his equal throughout the third.\n\nThe 5ft 7in Argentine then broke serve for a 5-3 lead and remarkably recovered from 0-40 to serve out the set.\n\nWith the crowd now excited by the prospect of an upset, Djokovic finally took a firm grip on the match by quickening the pace and shortening the rallies.\n\nIt was not plain sailing, however, and despite racing into a 4-0 lead in the fourth set, Djokovic became embroiled in a row with umpire Ramos after receiving two warnings in a game - one of slow play, the second for unsportsmanlike conduct.\n\nClearly annoyed, the champion retained his focus on the job in hand and reeled off 12 of the last 14 games as dark clouds above threatened to delay his progress.\n\n\"Playing a five-setter at this stage is good,\" added Djokovic.\n\n\"I enjoyed playing, really, even though of course at times I was not playing my best, especially for first three sets, but fourth and fifth sets went completely my way.\"\n• None The victory was Djokovic's 58th in the French Open and means he ties Guillermo Vilas in third place on the all-time list for most matches won at Roland Garros. He has a 58-11 win-loss record behind Rafael Nadal (75-2) and Roger Federer (65-16) while Vilas recorded 58-17.", "Last updated on .From the section Cricket\n\nSouth Africa came through some tricky moments to see off Sri Lanka by 96 runs in their Champions Trophy opener at The Oval.\n\nHashim Amla stroked a calm 103, but some disciplined Sri Lanka bowling kept the Proteas to 299-6.\n\nNiroshan Dickwella then made 41 from 33 balls to make the chase seem possible.\n\nBut after he fell, Sri Lanka lost eight wickets for 98 runs to be bowled out for 203, with leg-spinner Imran Tahir taking 4-27.\n\nWorld number ones South Africa are favourites to progress from Group B, alongside India, who play Pakistan at Edgbaston on Sunday.\n• None Watch all the highlights from South Africa's win against Sri Lanka\n\nOn a sluggish surface, South Africa failed to fully capitalise on Amla's 25th ODI ton.\n\nOpting to bowl first, Sri Lanka adapted well to the conditions, restricting South Africa to only six fours and one six in the first 20 overs.\n\nThe pressure they created could have earned more rewards, but Lasith Malinga failed to get a hand on a Faf du Plessis top edge when he was on only eight.\n\nDu Plessis made 75 in a second-wicket stand of 145 with Amla, who worked the ball off his pads and guided it behind square on the off side with the minimum of fuss.\n\nHowever, the Proteas were unable to fully accelerate and Du Plessis' edge behind from the impressive pace bowling of Nuwan Pradeep was the first of four wickets to fall for 43 runs.\n\nIt took the late hitting of JP Duminy, whose 20-ball 38 included 10 runs from the final two balls of the innings, to set Sri Lanka a target of 300.\n\nThat mark seemed well within reach when the energetic Dickwella was swatting the ball all around The Oval.\n\nThe left-hander played whips and drives to some ordinary South Africa pace bowling until he sliced Morne Morkel to third man.\n\nHis exit allowed South Africa to squeeze through the brilliant fielding of AB de Villiers and excellent bowling of Tahir.\n\nFirst De Villiers leapt to remove Kusal Mendis with a one-handed catch at mid-on, then, in Tahir's first over, the South Africa skipper produced a stunning swoop and throw to run out Dinesh Chandimal. Three balls later, Tahir trapped Chamara Kapugedara lbw.\n\nUpul Tharanga, captaining Sri Lanka in place of the injured Angelo Mathews, remained, but when he was caught at deep cover off Tahir for 57, the contest was effectively over.\n\nTahir underlined South Africa's dominance with a direct hit from mid-on to run out Suranga Lakmal, and it was his bowling that completed the Proteas' eighth successive win against Sri Lanka.\n\nSri Lanka captain Tharanga has been suspended from the next two Champions Trophy matches after his side were found guilty of a serious over-rate offence.\n\nSri Lanka were ruled to be four overs short of their target when time allowances were taken into consideration.\n\nTharanga pleaded guilty to the offence and accepted the proposed sanction, so there was no need for a formal hearing.\n\nHe will miss the matches against India on 8 June and Pakistan four days later, while each of his players were fined 60 per cent of their match fee.\n\n'It doesn't matter about winning pretty' - what they said\n\nSouth Africa captain AB de Villiers: \"It wasn't as true a wicket as the England v Bangladesh game so I was happy with our total.\n\n\"I thought Sri Lanka could chase it down, but also thought we should have enough. Hashim is a great asset to have. He's a great team man who contributes so much in the changing room, as well as scoring all those runs.\"\n\nSri Lanka captain Upul Tharanga: \"We bowled well. We kept them down below 300, which is a good effort. We have to come back strongly against India, especially with our batting.\"\n\nMan of the match Imran Tahir: \"Every time I put this jersey on, I feel honoured. I'm working hard and I hope this form continues in the tournament. We stuck to our plans today and won and that's very pleasing and encouraging.\"\n\nFormer England batter Ebony Rainford-Brent on TMS: \"Sri Lanka could have taken this deeper, but South Africa were very good. In tournament cricket, it's about building momentum. It doesn't matter about winning pretty. They shut Sri Lanka down today and move on to the next match.\"", "Coverage: Live text commentary on the BBC website - and commentary on Radio 5 live from 19:00 BST\n\nReal Madrid have an \"appointment with history\" when they face Juventus in the Champions League final in Cardiff on Saturday, says captain Sergio Ramos.\n\nEleven-time champions Real are aiming to become the first team since AC Milan in 1989 and 1990 to retain the trophy.\n\nItalian side Juventus are looking to win the crown for the third time, while Real can extend their own record.\n\n\"We never dreamed of this opportunity but the stats are there,\" said Spain international defender Ramos.\n\n\"It is a wonderful chance to take the cup home, then history speaks for itself. We are extremely excited about the chance to have two successive Champions League trophies.\n\n\"We have been very solid. Every time we have had the chance to fight for a trophy, we have done that. We are going to be extremely focused, very concentrated so we make as few mistakes as possible.\"\n\n'We will see a great final'\n\nReal Madrid won La Liga ahead of Barcelona this season and have scored 169 goals in all competitions this season.\n\nIn a repeat of the 1998 final, which the Spaniards won 1-0 in Amsterdam, Real come up against a side who are unbeaten in this season's competition\n\nBoss Zinedine Zidane, who played for opponents Juventus between 1996 and 2001, said: \"We know all about pressure at Real Madrid.\n\n\"We are not favourites, nor are Juventus. It is 50-50. But we are in the final again, and everything is possible. I expect an open game on both sides.\n\n\"I have lived and been at Juventus, in Italy there is the famous Catenaccio, but Juve do not just have that.\n\n\"We are going to try to play our game, we know we are going to play against a great team. What everyone who likes football wants to see is to see a great final - and I think we will see that.\"\n\nZidane must decide whether to choose between Gareth Bale and Isco in what seems like his only selection issue before Saturday's Champions League final.\n\nBale has not played since 23 April but is fit, while in-form Isco has scored five goals in his last eight games.\n\n\"I am not going to tell you who is going to play on Saturday,\" said Zidane.\n\nJuventus boss Massimiliano Allegri also has a fully-fit squad to choose from. His side defeated Monaco 4-1 on aggregate to reach their second final in three seasons.\n\nReal knocked out city rivals Atletico with a 4-2 aggregate win and are looking to defend the title they won last year.\n\n'We need to win'\n\nTreble-chasing Juventus clinched a record sixth consecutive Serie A title this season and beat Lazio in the Italian Cup.\n\nJuve have been European Cup winners twice, in 1985 and the last in 1996, but have been defeated finalists on six occasions, most recently against Barcelona two years ago.\n\nThey have conceded just three goals in 12 games so far, while Real have scored in every single one of their 12 games - a total of 32 goals.\n\nManager Allegri said: \"We have worked hard all year and the wins this season have been all about reaching this game. But on Saturday we need to win and we need to understand when will be the moments to attack and when to defend.\n\n\"We have to have the belief that we can bring the cup home and we have to be fiendish to strike when Real offer us an opening.\"\n\nMassimiliano Allegri has done a great job at Juventus and has continued the work of Antonio Conte since arriving in Turin in 2014. He has been able to create a strong team spirit and is currently one of the best managers in Europe.\n\nI had the privilege of playing alongside Zinedine Zidane in Italy for two years. He was a fantastic player with amazing technical skills and a strong personality. I was his room mate in hotels before games so I had an opportunity to know him very well.\n\nI expected him to be a great manager because he has all the skills to do the job. I did not expect him to achieve great results so soon though. He has been doing an excellent job for Real Madrid.\n\nJuventus full-back Dani Alves, 34, could win the competition for the fourth time, while 39-year-old goalkeeper Gianluigi Buffon is looking to triumph for the first time and in turn become the oldest winner of the tournament.\n\nAlves, who played in that match for the La Liga side, said: \"A player as important and big as Gigi, to not have this trophy, it would not really change much in his career but it would add one more page to his wonderful football history if he won. To win the title with him would be quite something for me before he retires.\n\n\"I am not a person who thinks about himself. If everything around me is fine, then I am fine too. The objective is for the whole team to win and for me to be up to the level of my colleagues.\"\n\nWorld Cup winner Buffon announced in January 2016 that he will retire from football after the 2018 World Cup and this may be his last shot at winning Europe's elite club competition.\n\nHe said: \"Dani is a bit like me, he is an optimist. He told me 'I will make you win the Champions League' and he has been a revelation for me. Real Madrid are used to winning finals, we have lost quite a number of them. It is a good match and we will try to overturn our record.\n\n\"The emotions I might feel may be different to a younger player. Dani has won this competition and has four or five years left in his career but I have to exclude this possibility. Yes, it will be much more special for me, but I want to play without regrets and without thinking of these issues.\"\n\nJune 2016: Ronaldo's Euro 2016 campaign did not start well - 20 shots, zero goals for Portugal. But a superb, flicked finish against Hungary in the group stages made him the first player to score in four different European Championship finals\n\nItalian football might have looked very different over the last two decades if an impressionable 12-year-old had not been captivated by the Cameroon goalkeeper at the 1990 World Cup.\n\nBuffon played as an attacker back then but the performances of Thomas N'Kono - playing in his third World Cup - inspired him to try life as a goalkeeper.\n• None This is the 19th encounter between Juventus and Real Madrid - all in the European Cup/Champions League, making this the second-most played fixture in the history of the tournament after Bayern Munich v Real Madrid (24).\n• None Juventus and Real Madrid have eight wins each and two draws. However, their only previous meeting in the Champions League final saw Real Madrid win 1-0 in 1998 thanks to a Predrag Mijatovic goal.\n• None Real Madrid have reached the European Cup/Champions League final for the 15th time, four more than any other club (AC Milan have reached 11). They've won 11 of the previous 14 - again more than any other team in history.\n• None Juventus have won only two of their eight European Cup/Champions League finals. They have lost their last four - in 1997, 1998, 2003 and 2015.", "Emmanuel Macron has just won the rare distinction of being the most re-tweeted French person in history.\n\nIn less than 24 hours, his Trump-defying message \"make our planet great again\" was shared more than 140,000 times, easily ousting the previous record-holder, the rather less high-minded TV presenter Cyril Hanouna. One fifth of the re-tweets were in the US.\n\nIt is proof yet again that what we witnessed from the Elysee on Thursday was a master class in communications.\n\nIn giving his TV reaction to the US president, not only did Macron break brazenly with longstanding convention, according to which French presidents never speak publicly in English, but he even had the chutzpah to subvert the US leader's personal campaign slogan.\n\n\"Make our planet great again\" was a provocation dressed up as a call to virtue. As a catchphrase for the faithful, it was irresistible.\n\nBy tweeting it, Macron took one more step down his road to investiture as that long-awaited international figure: the anti-Trump.\n\nThe French leader has a growing fan club: in France, the US and across the globe, among people who see him as the polar opposite, the perfect antithesis of his counterpart in the White House.\n\nThese people love the fact that with the arrival of Macron, the existing order appears to have been turned on its head.\n\nIt used to be France that was old, inward-looking and incapable of regeneration, and America that was the land of youth, energy and leadership.\n\nBut where is that caricature now?\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Donald Trump's handshakes with world leaders, including President Macron, have been closely watched\n\nAnd they adore the way that Macron had the nerve to face down Trump in the Brussels handshake. At last, they feel, we have a champion with the guts and the conviction to challenge the Trumpian order.\n\nMacron himself never planned any of this. When he first thought of running for the presidency, the chances of a Trump in the White House seemed too ludicrous to contemplate.\n\nBut not for the first time, the stars seem to have aligned for France's boy-prodigy.\n\nJust as in domestic politics doors seemed to open miraculously for President Macron, so in the world of international affairs shifts of power and ideology are also working in his favour - for now.\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. French President Emmanuel Macron says Paris agreement will \"make the planet great again\"\n\nThe tilt towards nationalist interests exemplified by Trump's America has created a clear leadership space for someone who will fly the other flag. Providential or not, Macron has come to power just as a reaction sets in against the populist tide of the last few years - and he is poised to reap the reward.\n\nWith its perpetual harping on about ideals and morals, France's capacity to irritate is prodigious. Perhaps it will not be long before Macron loses his touch and the world starts panting for his comeuppance.\n\nBut right now, with Trump in the White House, French preachiness doesn't appear to raise as many heckles as it used to. Having a quotable charmer for a president certainly helps.", "Chloe Moretz wasn't happy with the way her Snow White film was advertised\n\nStories about \"body shaming\" are nothing new - but more and more celebrities are starting to fight back against the trend.\n\nEarlier this week, actress Chloe Moretz said she was \"appalled and angry\" over the marketing for her new animated Snow White film.\n\nA poster for Red Shoes & The 7 Dwarfs showed a tall woman next to a shorter, heavier version of herself.\n\nThe caption read: \"What if Snow White was no longer beautiful and the 7 dwarfs not so short?\"\n\nAfter plus-size model Tess Holliday tweeted a photo of the poster, Moretz apologised to her fans and said she hadn't approved the marketing.\n\nThe film's producers withdrew the ad campaign.\n\nAnd last week, Modern Family actress Sarah Hyland took to social media after suggestions she looked anorexic in a recent photo.\n\nHere are seven other stars who hit back after criticism over the way they look.\n\nLady Gaga came in for criticism after she wore a crop top during her performance at this year's Super Bowl.\n\nMore than 100 million people watched the legendary half-time show worldwide, but some made cruel remarks about her stomach and said she \"wasn't fit enough\".\n\nThe singer took to Instagram to respond with an empowering message to her fans.\n\n\"I heard my body is a topic of conversation so I wanted to say, I'm proud of my body and you should be proud of yours too,\" she said.\n\n\"I could give you a million reasons why you don't need to cater to anyone or anything to succeed. Be you, and be relentlessly you.\"\n\nThe comedian and actress has memorably taken on body shamers on more than one occasion.\n\nWhen the advert for her film Trainwreck was released in 2015, one critic referred to her as a new member of director Judd Apatow's \"Funny-Chubby Community\".\n\nPosting a photo of herself almost naked on Twitter, Schumer wrote: \"I am a size 6 and have no plans of changing. This is it. Stay on or get off. Kisses!\"\n\nAt the end of 2016, she responded to social media \"fat shamers\" who questioned whether she was an appropriate choice to play Barbie in a forthcoming film.\n\nAlongside a photo of herself in a swimsuit, she said she was honoured to be considered to play \"an important and evolving icon\".\n\n\"Is it fat shaming if you know you're not fat and have zero shame in your game?\" she asked.\n\n\"I don't think so. I am strong and proud of how I live my life and say what I mean and fight for what I believe in and I have a blast doing it with the people I love.\n\n\"Where's the shame? It's not there. It's an illusion. When I look in the mirror I know who I am.\"\n\nIn 2016, the singer made her record label take down the new video for her Me Too single after she noticed she'd been digitally altered.\n\nOr to use her words, \"they photoshopped the crap out of me\".\n\nTrainor took to Snapchat to tell her fans: \"I'm so sick of it, and I'm over it, so I took it down until they fix it.\"\n\nShe added: \"My waist is not that teeny, I had a bomb waist that night. I don't know why they didn't like my waist, but I didn't approve that video, and it went out for the world, so I'm embarrassed...\"\n\nA day later, the video reappeared with Trainor restored to her rightful size.\n\nIn March this year, the star and creator of HBO's Girls responded to criticism about her recent weight loss.\n\nDunham had attracted headlines about her dramatic new look. But in a lengthy Instagram post which referred to her struggle to control her endometriosis, she said: \"My weight loss isn't a triumph and it also isn't some sign I've finally given in to the voices of trolls.\"\n\nThe actress said she had made it clear over the years that she didn't care what anyone else felt about her body.\n\n\"I've gone on red carpets in couture as a size 14. I've done sex scenes days after surgery, mottled with scars. I've accepted that my body is an ever changing organism, not a fixed entity - what goes up must come down and vice versa.\"\n\nBack in 2013, Jennifer Lawrence said she thought \"it should be illegal to call someone fat on TV\" after red carpet criticism of her own figure.\n\nSpeaking to US host Barbara Walters, The Hunger Games star said she was worried about how the media's attitude affected young people.\n\n\"The media needs to take responsibility for the effect that it has on our younger generation, on these girls who are watching these television shows, and picking up how to talk and how to be cool,\" Lawrence said.\n\nShe added: \"I mean, if we're regulating cigarettes and sex and cuss words, because of the effect they have on our younger generation, why aren't we regulating things like calling people fat?\"\n\nThe actress, who won an Oscar for her performance in Silver Linings Playbook, had previously spoken out against gossip magazines and TV shows which criticise the way women look.\n\nShe told the December 2012 issue of Elle magazine that \"in Hollywood, I'm obese. I'm considered a fat actress\".\n\nThe Titanic star and Oscar-winning actress has spoken on occasions about how she was bullied at school and called \"Blubber\".\n\n\"I was even told that I 'might be lucky with my acting, if I was happy to settle for the fat girl parts',\" she said during a speech this year for the WE charity at London's Wembley Arena.\n\n\"I felt that I wasn't enough, I wasn't good enough. I didn't look right... and all because I didn't fit into someone else's idea of 'perfect.' I didn't have the perfect body.\"\n\nThe star said her love of acting meant she was always auditioning for roles - however small.\n\n\"I would often get cast as the crocodile, or the scarecrow, or the dark fairy, I was even a dancing frog once. But it didn't matter. I still loved it... I wanted to be great and I was determined to keep learning.\"\n\nKate, who made her film debut aged 17 in 1994's Heavenly Creatures, shot to global stardom three years later as Rose in James Cameron's blockbuster Titanic.\n\nShe said: \"The most unlikely candidate, Kate from the sandwich shop in Reading, [was] suddenly acting in one of the biggest movies ever made!\"\n\nIt's not just women who get criticised for how they look.\n\nVin Diesel found that out in 2015 after the publication of unflattering pap shots of him shirtless in Miami. Some comments on social media referred to his \"dad bod\".\n\nThe Fast and Furious star responded by posting a photo on Instagram which showed off his muscular physique.\n\nHe said one journalist, during an interview for his film The Last Witch Hunter, had even asked to see the \"dad bod\".\n\n\"Haha,\" Diesel wrote. \"I am wondering if I should show the picture... Body shaming is always wrong!\"\n\nFollow us on Facebook, on Twitter @BBCNewsEnts, or on Instagram at bbcnewsents. If you have a story suggestion email entertainment.news@bbc.co.uk.", "Last updated on .From the section Tennis\n\nCoverage: Listen to live radio commentary and follow text coverage of selected matches on BBC Radio 5 live sports extra and online.\n\nDefending champion Garbine Muguruza was unhappy with a \"really tough\" crowd after defeat by home favourite Kristina Mladenovic at the French Open.\n\nThe Spaniard, 23, lost 6-1 3-6 6-3 on a packed Suzanne Lenglen Court which gave its full backing to Mladenovic.\n\nSeven-time Grand Slam winner Venus Williams' defeat by Swiss Timea Bacsinszky means a new major champion will be crowned in Paris on Saturday.\n\n\"It's a very painful defeat here in the French Open,\" said a tearful Muguruza.\n\n\"The crowd was really tough today. I can't really understand. I don't know how to explain.\n\n\"If you had been in my shoes on the court, I think you would have understood.\n\n\"I don't know what people were expecting. I'd rather not say anything more.\"\n• None Brilliant Nadal into the last eight\n\nMladenovic, 24, served 16 double faults but came through amid a raucous atmosphere on the second show court at Roland Garros.\n\n\"I don't think that they crossed the line,\" she said of the crowd.\n\n\"I mean, I noticed once - and I think it was bad - when they kind of screamed between her first and second serve, but that's because they thought it's a double fault because the first serve was a let or something.\n\n\"But that's the only thing that happened. Otherwise, they were quite fair.\"\n\nNo Frenchwoman has won the title at Roland Garros since Mary Pierce in 2000.\n\nThirteenth seed Mladenovic joins Bacsinszky, Denmark's Caroline Wozniacki and Latvian Jelena Ostapenko in the last eight, with only three of the top 10 seeds still in the draw.\n\nMuguruza, 23, left her media conference briefly because she was so upset, before returning to reveal she was glad to relieve the pressure of being French Open champion.\n\n\"I love this tournament no matter what happens,\" said Muguruza, who claimed not to have been distracted by Mladenovic's cries of \"Forza!\" after the Spaniard's errors.\n\n\"I'm going to be super happy to come back.\n\n\"Everybody is going to stop bothering me asking me about this tournament, so it's going to be a little bit like, 'Whew, let's keep going.'\"\n\nSecond seed Karolina Pliskova, third seed Simona Halep and fifth seed Elina Svitolina will aim to reach the quarter-finals when they play their fourth-round matches on Monday.\n\nPliskova and Svitolina won their rain-delayed third-round matches on Sunday, while former world number one Wozniacki reached the last eight.\n\nWilliams, the 10th seed, fought back from 5-1 down to take the opening set against Bacsinszky.\n\nBut 27-year-old Bacsinszky broke Williams' serve in the first game of the second set as she won 12 of the last 15 games in the match.\n\nWozniacki, 26, reached the quarter-finals at Roland Garros for the first time since 2010 with a 6-1 4-6 6-2 win over Russia's Svetlana Kuznetsova, the eighth seed and 2009 champion.\n\nPliskova, the Czech, beat Carina Witthoft of Germany 7-5 6-1, while Svitolina of Ukraine overcame Poland's Magda Linette 6-4 7-5.", "Canadian researchers have traced the origins of the opioid crisis to one letter published almost 40 years ago.\n\nThe letter, which said opioids were not addictive, was published in the New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM) in 1980.\n\nDr David Juurlink says the journal's prestige helped fuel the misguided belief that opioids were safe.\n\nHis research found that the letter was cited more than 600 times, usually to argue that opioids were not addictive.\n\nOn Wednesday, the NEJM published Dr Juurlink's rebuttal to the 1980 letter, along with his team's analysis of the number of times the letter was cited by other researchers.\n\n\"I think it's fair to say that this letter went quite a long way,\" Dr Juurlink, who is head of clinical pharmacology and toxicology at Toronto's Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre.\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Mike John said heroin is \"one of the biggest challenges\" facing Ohio\n\nThe original letter, titled \"Addiction Rare in Patients Treated with Narcotics\", was just a paragraph long. The lone evidence cited was an anecdote that out of 11,882 hospitalised patients were treated with narcotics, only four patients with no history of addiction became addicted.\n\nThis paragraph should have triggered a host of red flags, says Dr Juurlink.\n\nThe letter only described the effects on hospitalised patients, not on patients who had chronic pain and would need to take painkillers regularly. It also only described the effects of narcotics that are no longer used today - and yet it was cited by many as proof that modern drugs such as OxyContin were safe outside of the hospital setting.\n\n\"I don't think it mattered that it didn't say much, what mattered was its title and its publication, and those two things went a long way,\" Dr Juurlink said.\n\nIt is now widely accepted by medical researchers that opioids are highly addictive, he said. In 2016, the British Medical Journal urged doctors to limit opioid prescriptions in order to combat the overdose crisis in the US and other parts of the world.\n\nIn 2007, the makers of OxyContin pleaded guilty in federal court to \"misbranding\" by falsely claiming OxyContin was less addictive and less subject to abuse than other pain medications.\n\nThis week, Ohio became the second state after Mississippi to sue opioid manufacturers for unleashing \"a health care crisis that has had far-reaching financial, social, and deadly consequences\".\n\nThe letter's author, Dr Hershel Jick, says he never intended for the article to justify widespread opioid use, and has testified for the government about how these drugs are marketed.\n\n\"I'm essentially mortified that that letter to the editor was used as an excuse to do what these drug companies did,\" Jick told The Associated Press. \"They used this letter to spread the word that these drugs were not very addictive.\"\n\nDr Juurlink believes that the misinformation that resulted after the letter's publication would not happen today. Back then, he said, if you wanted to read the original letter, you would need to go to a library. Many of the people who cited the 1980 letter were just plain \"sloppy\" he said and didn't do their diligence.\n\nNow, it's easy to read the original 1980 letter online, as well as Dr Juurlink's rebuttal.\n\n\"It would be taken apart overnight on Twitter\", he said.\n\nThere is now an editor's note on the original letter in the NEJM: \"For reasons of public health, readers should be aware that this letter has been 'heavily and uncritically cited' as evidence that addiction is rare with opioid therapy.\"", "Last updated on .From the section Tennis\n\nCoverage: Listen to live radio commentary and follow text coverage of selected matches on BBC Radio 5 live sports extra and online.\n\nAndy Murray saw off Argentina's Juan Martin del Potro with a superb straight-set win to reach the fourth round of the French Open.\n\nThe world number one, 30, won a gripping 84-minute opening set on his way to a 7-6 (10-8) 7-5 6-0 victory.\n\nThe Scot, bidding for his first Roland Garros title, goes on to face American John Isner or Russia's Karen Khachanov.\n\nBritish number two Kyle Edmund's run came to an end with a defeat by big-serving Kevin Anderson in five sets.\n\nThe South African, 31, fought back to win 6-7 (6-8) 7-6 (7-4) 5-7 6-1 6-4 in a near four-hour match.\n• None Third seed Halep through to last 16\n\nAfter searching for consistency in his opening two matches, Murray found something approaching his best form to win the most anticipated match of the first week.\n\nFormer US Open champion Del Potro, whose ranking has slid after injuries, posed an unusually severe test for the third round and he began strongly.\n\nThe Argentine's huge forehand drew regular gasps from the crowd, as well as what Murray later described as \"a very manly grunt\" from Del Potro.\n\nBut once he had levelled in a high-quality first set, Murray edged a thrilling tie-break and then dominated in arguably his best performance of 2017.\n\n\"I played some good matches at the beginning of the year, but definitely in the clay-court season, the second or third sets were the best I have played, for sure,\" Murray said.\n\nHe out-scored the powerful Argentine with 41 winners to 35, all the while mixing up his game with deft drop shots and sharp volleys.\n\nThe match turned late in the first set when Del Potro failed to serve it out and Murray eventually took the tie-break with his third set point, having saved four.\n\nA distraught Del Potro slumped on the net post for most of the changeover, pausing only to smack down his racquet in anger before moments later dropping serve at the start of the second set.\n\n\"I couldn't believe that I lost that set, because I had many opportunities to win,\" he said.\n\n\"But this happens when you play against the number one in the world.\"\n\nThere was no way back, especially after the Argentine - who struggled with a groin injury on the previous round - called for the doctor.\n\nMurray's hopes faltered only briefly when he failed to serve out at 5-4, but the Scot broke serve once again in the following game and then reeled off the last seven games in a row.\n\n\"Mentally I feel pretty good just now,\" he said.\n\n\"I'm happy with how the match was today. I'm working things out whilst I'm playing the matches. The really, really important part of my game is making adjustments.\n\n\"The tactical side is very important for me.\"\n\n'Winning the first set gave me momentum'\n\nAfter that marathon first set, the match quickly turned in Murray's favour as the Scot went on to clinch the final set in just 28 minutes.\n\n\"Whoever won that first set had big momentum,\" said Murray, who beat Del Potro in the Olympic gold-medal match at last year's Rio Games.\n\n\"It's slow and heavy, and coming back in these conditions is difficult.\n\n\"I thought I played some good tennis towards the end and I expected a tough match.\n\n\"It was tough. I think he was playing much better than me in the first set. Both of us hand some chances in the first set, the second set was the same. Both those sets could have gone either way.\"\n\nEdmund, 22, had hoped to match his best Grand Slam run by reaching the last 16, but Anderson's greater experience told in the latter stages of a hard-fought contest.\n\nEdmund held a slight edge in terms of ranking over Anderson, the Yorkshireman ranked nine places higher at 47th in the world, but the South African was playing in the third round of a Grand Slam for the 17th time.\n\nBy contrast, it was only Edmund's second appearance in the last 32 of a major.\n\n\"I played a good match and am disappointed to lose,\" said Edmund.\n\n\"I would love to win and get to the fourth round, and especially win that type of match in the fifth set like that.\n\n\"But, you know, quality by him. And he just beat me.\"\n\nAnderson, who was a top-10 player before being hampered by a series of injuries, will now meet 2014 US Open champion Marin Cilic in the fourth round.", "Last updated on .From the section European Football\n\nAntoine Griezmann says he will stay at Atletico Madrid next season as it would be a \"dirty move\" to leave the club after their transfer ban was upheld.\n\nThe 26-year-old forward had been linked with a move to Manchester United, before their interest in him cooled.\n\nAtletico's appeal against a transfer ban for breaching Fifa rules over the signing of minors was rejected by the Court of Arbitration for Sport (Cas).\n\n\"It's a hard time for the club,\" Griezmann told French television.\n\nThe France international told Telefoot he had decided to stay at the Spanish side after discussion with his sporting advisor Eric Olhats.\n\n\"It would be a dirty move to leave now - we talked to the leaders and we will be back for next season,\" he added.\n\nAtletico, together with city rivals Real Madrid, were banned in July 2016 from registering players for two transfer windows and fined after a Fifa investigation concerning players aged under 18 who played in competitions for Atletico between 2007 and 2014, and Real from 2005 to 2014.\n\nBoth sides failed in their initial appeals to Fifa, but Real had their ban halved by Cas, while Atletico's suspension was upheld on Thursday, although their fine was reduced.\n\nAtletico called the Cas ruling \"unfair\" and said it would cause \"irreparable damage\" to the club.\n\nLater on Thursday, Griezmann posted a message on social media reading: \"Now more than ever! #atleti #alltogether.\"\n\nHe had previously told French television show Quotidien there was a \"6/10\" chance of joining Manchester United this summer.\n\nAs Atletico cannot register new players again until 1 January 2018, it is anticipated they will offer Griezmann a new contract - his current deal includes a 100m euro (£86m) release clause.", "Mr Long is a trained mechanic who runs his own garage\n\nFor three years, car mechanic Paen Long stayed up long after his wife went to bed each night, spending countless hours watching videos on YouTube.\n\nBut these weren't the viral clips or pop music videos that most people while away hours on. Mr Long, who lives on the side of a highway in Cambodia's rural south-east, had a singular obsession: aeroplanes.\n\n\"In the beginning, I typed in the word 'jet',\" he says. From there, he was led to videos that showed planes taking off and landing, flight simulations, and virtual tours of factories that produce aircraft.\n\nOne of six children of rice farmers, Mr Long grew up in the years when Cambodia was struggling to recover from the devastation caused by the Khmer Rouge and had never been in an aircraft of any kind.\n\nAfter seeing a helicopter when he was about six years old, he says, the urge to fly preoccupied his mind - for decades. \"I always dreamt about aircraft every night. I always wanted to have my own plane,\" he says.\n\nAt first, it remained nothing more than a dream. Mr Long dropped out of school early and trained as a mechanic, one of the few non-farming professions available to young men without a high school education in his home province of Svay Rieng.\n\nBy last year his fascination with flight had taken over and Mr Long, now aged 30 and running his own garage in neighbouring Prey Veng province, decided he had saved enough money to realise his childhood fantasy.\n\n\"I started building a plane, making it in secret,\" he says. \"I was afraid that people would make fun of me, so sometimes I worked at night.\"\n\nBelieving that a helicopter would be more complex to re-create than a plane, Mr Long based his design on a Japanese plane used in WWII. The one-seater aircraft, which has a wing span of 5.5m, took Mr Long almost a year to produce entirely from scratch out of mostly recycled materials.\n\nThe pilot's seat is a plastic chair with chopped-off legs, the control panel a car dashboard, and the body made from an old gas container.\n\nMr Long has produced many parts of his aircraft from recycled materials\n\nThe moment of truth came on 8 March. Just before 15:00, Mr Long started the plane's engine. Three people helped to push it to his \"runway\": a nearby dirt road leading off the main artery toward rice paddy fields.\n\nAccording to villagers, about 200 to 300 people (Mr Long generously estimates the crowd size to be around 2,000) turned out to watch their first local aviator in action.\n\nHe strapped on a motorbike helmet - his only safety precaution - and sat inside the cockpit. The plane gained speed as he approached take-off before briefly lifting into the air - Mr Long says he reached a height of 50 metres - and crashing unceremoniously to the ground.\n\nThe sound of laughter greeted him on his return to Earth. \"I was standing there and tears came down [my cheeks]. I felt emotional, because I couldn't bear all the things they were saying to me,\" he says, blaming the failure on the 500kg weight of his machine.\n\nThe setback made him more determined than ever to succeed, and he soon turned his attention to a new project. Now, he is building a seaplane - also largely from scrap materials - which he believes he can make light enough to take to the skies.\n\nTo date, his hobby has cost him thousands of dollars\n\nNo matter that his village in Prey Chhor commune is located about 200km from the ocean - once it's built, Mr Long plans to transport the new prototype back to Svay Rieng by truck and launch it from the Waiko River.\n\nHe estimates that the original model cost him more than $10,000 (£7,700) to build and, to date, he has spent $3,000 on the seaplane - no small sum in a country where the minimum wage is $153 a month and 13.5% of the population lives below the poverty line.\n\nNot to mention the fact that Mr Long could have treated his entire family to a lavish international holiday for that amount. But, for Mr Long, it's no longer about simply flying. It's about making the impossible, possible.\n\n\"I never thought about spending money on other things,\" he says. \"I never feel regret about spending all this money.\"\n\nMr Long's wife, Hing Muoyheng, says she worries her husband is putting himself in danger\n\nAside from those who mocked him, many others in the area are in awe of their eccentric neighbour. \"I've never met such a person with an idea like this,\" says Sin Sopheap, a 44-year-old shop vendor.\n\n\"It's unusual to me,\" says 29-year-old Man Phary, who runs a roadside restaurant near Mr Long's house, \"because among our Cambodian people, no-one [else] would do it.\"\n\nMr Long's wife, Hing Muoyheng, a 29-year-old car parts seller, says she worries about her husband's safety, particularly as the couple have two young sons, but supports him nonetheless.\n\n\"I don't know how planes work and he doesn't have any experts to help him,\" she says of her concerns. \"I tried to ask him to stop a few times because I'm afraid, but he said he won't cause any danger, so I have to go along with his idea.\"\n\nYet although Mr Long hopes to cut the risks to himself and others by performing his July test flight over water, he's acutely aware that his flight of fancy contains a host of variables, many of them outside his control.\n\n\"Danger,\" he says, \"we cannot predict it.\"", "The aircraft crashed in open land on the edge of Stockport town centre\n\nFifty years ago a plane returning from Majorca plunged to the ground in Stockport, Greater Manchester, killing 72 people. Here survivors and eyewitnesses recall what remains one of Britain's worst, but lesser-known, air disasters.\n\nThe British Midland flight was full of returning holidaymakers bound for Manchester Airport when, on the morning of 4 June 1967, it suddenly lost power and began to fall.\n\nTerrified residents watched the aircraft hurtling across rooftops, so low they could see people inside, banging on the windows.\n\nMoments later it crashed on a small patch of open ground at Hopes Carr, on the edge of the town centre, striking a garage building and lighting up in a ball of fire.\n\nOf its 84 passengers and crew, 72 died and the remaining 12 were seriously injured. They included a stewardess and the captain.\n\n\"We were met with a scene of sheer horror,\" said retired Stockport firefighter Mike Phillips, who was 21 at the time.\n\nThe cause of the crash was found to be a problem with the aircraft's fuel lines\n\n\"There were bodies all over the place, and body parts. Members of the public were just screaming for us to do something.\"\n\nThe aircraft had narrowly avoided hitting rows of nearby houses, averting an even greater disaster. Incredibly, no-one on the ground was hurt.\n\n\"There was this thick black smoke,\" Mr Phillips said. \"Hundreds of people arrived. I always say the real heroes are the civilians who got stuck in and were a real help to us.\n\n\"I saw the body of a young boy, and he just looked like there was nothing wrong with him. That stayed with me.\"\n\nAn air accident investigation found the cause of the crash to be \"fuel starvation\" due to a fault in the fuel lines and the Canadair C-4 Argonaut propeller aircraft's poor warning system.\n\nIt is still considered one of the worst air disasters in British aviation history, alongside Lockerbie in 1988 and Staines 16 years earlier.\n\nThere is evidence to suggest the pilot made efforts to steer the aircraft away from homes\n\nCaptain Harry Marlow was not blamed, and there were strong indications he made concerted efforts to steer the aircraft away from people's homes.\n\nThe former RAF display pilot suffered amnesia and never flew again. He died in 2009.\n\nSurvivor Harold Wood was 15 at the time of the crash.\n\nRemembering the flight's final moments, he said: \"We were banking quite steeply and I could see a gentleman coming out of a shop and getting into his little Anglia van and looking up at the aircraft. We were that low that I could really at that time tell you the registration.\n\n\"I thought to myself at this point 'we aren't going to make this'.\n\n\"And at this point this is where I can't remember a thing about the actual flight other than actually waking up in the aircraft itself, surrounded by flames and my brother next to me.\n\n\"I saw a hole in the side of the aircraft so I thought, right, let's get out of here.\"\n\nMr Wood's brother, Bill, also survived but his father did not.\n\nA plaque was placed at the scene of the crash in memory of the victims\n\nVivienne Thornber, who was 19 and travelling with friend, Susan Howarth, remembers the plane plunging \"as low as the bedroom windows\".\n\nThe pair later escaped the smouldering wreckage with the help of policemen.\n\nShe said: \"There was no mention of 'fasten your seatbelts' or anything like that. We were not informed that there was anything wrong and we hadn't realised until we knew that we were too low to go anywhere.\n\n\"I woke up after the impact and saw the cabin door swinging backwards and forwards.\n\n\"There were flames and I thought 'come on Vivienne, do something or else you are going to get burned alive here.\"\n\nEmergency services were helped by many members of the public during the rescue effort\n\nCharles Hunt, now aged 95, was a police inspector placed in charge of a makeshift mortuary. He had the upsetting task of dealing with the dead.\n\n\"Casualties had been brought in,\" he said. \"They were all dead of course. There were 32 in there.\n\n\"The only two that could be identified were a little girl of about six, with hardly a mark on her body, and the co-pilot had a head injury. The rest were all burned beyond recognition.\n\n\"It was upsetting to see all the passengers' belongings. They had just been on holiday, and this was the end of it.\"\n\nAnother view of the wreckage shows just how close the crash came to buildings in the town\n\nA service will be held on Sunday at the site of the crash, where two memorials stand in tribute to the victims and the rescuers.\n\nAn hour-long documentary has also been made to mark 50 years since the disaster. Six Miles from Home will be shown shown at the Stockport Plaza on 10 June, from 19:30 BST.\n\nAviation expert Ian Barrie, who produced the film with Roger Boden, said: \"I was four years old at the time, and Roger was a boy who cycled to the scene on his bike.\n\n\"While we all grew up knowing about the plane crash, it seems to often be forgotten.\n\n\"What emerged very quickly was what a human story it was. People were sitting in their kitchens making a slice of toast, there was a huge boom, they looked outside and it was an air liner.\n\n\"It's just hard to comprehend.\"\n\nAn hour-long documentary has been made to mark the anniversary of the disaster\n\nThough the flight ended in such horror, some survivors said one thing that impressed them was the response from the people of Stockport.\n\nMs Thornber said the messages she received while battling severe injuries were \"wonderful and very, very moving\".\n\n\"When I was in hospital there were a lot of letters written to me most of whom I have to say I've no idea who they were, just normal people wishing me all the best.\n\n\"The kind people at Stockport Infirmary forwarded more letters. It was just marvellous that people would even think of doing that for somebody they'd never even met.\"", "For a speech about whether the US should remain a party to the Paris climate accord, Donald Trump's Rose Garden address on Thursday didn't have a whole lot of discussion about, you know, the climate.\n\nThere was plenty of talk about jobs and the US economy. He offered more than a few expressions of concern over whether other nations were being given an unfair advantage over the US. And then there was that lengthy opening plug for his presidential accomplishments that had nothing to do with the environment whatsoever.\n\nAt one point the president made a somewhat oblique reference to current climate science, asserting that even if all nations hit their self-set, non-mandatory greenhouse gas emissions targets under the Paris agreement, it would only result in a reduction of 0.2 degrees in average global temperatures by the year 2100. (The researchers who conducted the study said the number he cited was outdated and misrepresented.)\n\nMr Trump's relative silence on the matter has left reporters wondering whether the president still stands by earlier comments - and tweets - expressing serious scepticism about whether climate change is real.\n\nDoes he still believe it's a Chinese plot to make the US less competitive, as he tweeted in November 2012? Or that it is a money-making \"hoax\", as he said during a December 2015 campaign rally?\"\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. President Trump says the Paris climate accord \"disadvantages\" US\n\nHe's occasionally backed away from such sweeping denunciations. During the first presidential debate with Hillary Clinton, he denied having ever blamed the Chinese. In a New York Times interview shortly after his election victory, he said he thinks there's \"some connectivity\" between human activity and climate change.\n\nAfter Mr Trump announced his Paris agreement withdrawal, reporters posed the almost-too-obvious question once again to White House aides tasked with selling the move to the public. Does the president believe human activity contributes to climate change?\n\nThey asked about it during an on-background session with two administration officials on Thursday afternoon. They asked White House advisor Kellyanne Conway during a television appearance Friday morning. They asked Environmental Protection Agency head Scott Pruitt during his press conference on Friday afternoon.\n\nTime and time again the answer was some variation of \"I don't know\", \"I can't say\" or \"that's not relevant\".\n\n\"We focused on one key issue,\" Mr Pruitt said during one of the multiple times he was pressed on his boss's views. \"Was Paris good or bad for the country?\"\n\nOn Tuesday Press Secretary Sean Spicer had said he didn't know the president's thoughts about climate change because he hadn't asked him. On Friday he was asked whether he had since had a chance to speak to the president.\n\n\"I have not had the opportunity to do that,\" Spicer replied.\n\nThe rest of the press conference was an extended parlour game to try to get the press secretary to slip and perhaps inadvertently shed some light on Mr Trump's views - to no avail.\n\nIt's clear at this point that the administration has no interest in clarifying Mr Trump's position on climate change. But why?\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Students from Hazleton, Pennsylvania, are divided on Trump Paris pullout\n\nConfusion can often be a politician's ally. The embattled president needs his core supporters to stick with him through what could be a rough road ahead. Those who don't believe climate change is real can look at the president's past comments as proof their man still stands with them without anyone having to explicitly say so.\n\nThat allows the president to insist that he is willing to do something to address climate change - \"renegotiating\" the Paris accord, perhaps - without saying climate change is a problem. It allows him tell the majority of Americans who believe climate change is a real global threat that he is trying to address their concerns.\n\nIt allows administration surrogates like Mr Pruitt to tout that the US has lowered its carbon output without acknowledging the only reason this would be a noteworthy accomplishment - human activity affects the global climate.\n\nIt's a fine line to walk for even the most dextrous of White House communications teams - let alone one that has to be concerned that the next time the president is asked the question, there's no telling what he might say.", "The claim: The UK can make itself energy self-sufficient in renewables.\n\nReality Check verdict: This is not the policy in the Liberal Democrat manifesto, which pledges to get 60% of electricity from renewables by 2030. Being self-sufficient and having all energy coming from renewables would require considerable development of storage technology to avoid having to use non-renewable sources or energy bought from overseas as back-up sources.\n\nIn Wednesday night's debate, Liberal Democrat leader Tim Farron said that the UK could become energy self-sufficient in renewable energy.\n\nIt came after he had said: \"If it is simply for hair shirt, muesli-eating, Guardian readers to solve climate change... we're all stuffed.\"\n\nBecoming energy self-sufficient in renewables is not current Liberal Democrat policy, although Mr Farron described it in a speech in February as being a \"patriotic endeavour\".\n\nThe manifesto says the party would: \"Expand renewable energy, aiming to generate 60% of electricity from renewables by 2030.\"\n\nA party spokeswoman described the leader's statement in the debate as \"visionary as opposed to completely literal\".\n\nThe problem with being entirely self-sufficient is that many renewable sources of energy cannot generate power all of the time (the notable exception being the burning of biomass), so if you are using a very high proportion of renewables you rely on interconnectedness (buying electricity from another country where the wind is blowing), storage (batteries in the short-term, some sort of gas storage in the longer term) or a back-up system using gas-fired power stations or nuclear energy.\n\nThe Liberal Democrat manifesto talks about investing in interconnectors, which would be unnecessary if the country was to become self-sufficient.\n\nThere are already private plans in place to increase the amount of electricity that may be bought from France via interconnectors.\n\nIt may be that when he said self-sufficient he meant that we should not have a trade deficit in energy, so it would be OK to buy energy from other countries when we needed it as long as we sold the same amount to other countries when they needed it.\n\nWhile there have been suggestions that marine energy could make the UK a net exporter of electricity, being self-sufficient and generating 100% of energy from renewables is considerably more challenging than, for example, 90%, mainly because of the challenges of storage.\n\nThe development of a smart grid, which co-ordinates renewable energy supplies depending on demand, may also be needed for a 100% renewable system.\n\nAlso, while the Liberal Democrat manifesto targets 60% of electricity, Mr Farron was talking about all energy, which means, for example, that all cars have to run on renewable energy and all buildings have to be heated by it.\n\nSo in 2016, the UK generated 24.4% of its electricity from renewables, but in 2015 (the latest year available) it was only producing 8.8% of energy from renewables.\n\nThe UK has an obligation under European Union rules to derive 30% of electricity from renewables by 2020, which it is on the way to achieving (although the UK is currently scheduled to have left the EU by then). But the other two parts of the targets are 12% of heat and 10% of transport to be powered by renewables, which we are less likely to achieve.\n\nThe Labour manifesto pledges to get 60% of energy from zero-carbon or renewable sources by 2030.\n\nThe Conservative manifesto looks at it in a different way, saying that \"energy policy should be focused on outcomes rather than the means by which we reach our objectives\".\n\nSo they say that the focus will not be on how the energy is generated but on achieving, \"reliable and affordable energy, seizing the industrial opportunity that new technology presents and meeting our global commitments on climate change\".\n\nThe Green Party would have a target of near-100% renewable electricity generation by 2030 with significant investment in electric vehicles and lower-carbon sources of heating.\n\nIt supports self-sufficiency and a decentralised system of communities owning their own generation systems, but would also invest in interconnectors to allow for co-operation with other countries.", "When Sarah Jenkins saw pictures of distraught mothers appealing for information about missing children after the Manchester bombing, it reminded her of her own experience 12 years ago. After the 7/7 attacks in London she had to wait 11 awful days for confirmation that her daughter Emily had died. She now campaigns for victims' relatives to be kept better informed.\n\n\"Emily was my fourth child, so the baby of the family. She could be naughty sometimes, but a great joy. All children are,\" says Sarah.\n\nOn the morning of 7 July 2005, Emily, aged 24, was on her way to work in London.\n\n\"She was staying in North London with a new boyfriend and I had no idea she was there so I didn't really prick up my ears or alert to the fact she was missing until my older daughter rang and said, 'We're all absolutely fine, Emily's late for work.' But there was nothing new in that, she was very often late for work,\" Sarah says.\n\nBut when she still hadn't heard from Emily by lunchtime, she began to suspect that something might be terribly wrong.\n\nSarah had spent the morning drawing in Clapham, south London, and walked with an awful sickness in her stomach towards the station, where she met one of her sons. The two of them went into a bar to watch live coverage of the bombing on a large TV screen.\n\n\"The first thing you do is ring helplines,\" she says.\n\n\"They give you very little information because they have no information.\"\n\nEvery time they rang they spoke to a different person, and were asked the same questions.\n\nSarah was also constantly ringing Emily's mobile phone and leaving messages.\n\nBy late afternoon she and all three of her other children had gathered together, but were not quite sure what to do. They called the police, who told them to call the helpline, which they did, constantly.\n\n\"I remember phoning all through that first night - of course one didn't sleep - so I was constantly phoning the helpline to get the same, 'Have you contacted her friends?'\n\nHer son James came up with the idea of going to the hospitals to look for Emily, but hospital staff just showed them into a room and asked to wait.\n\n\"The last thing they wanted was relatives there,\" Sarah says.\n\nThey also knew that Emily would have been travelling south on the Piccadilly line, so they visited King's Cross and Russell Square stations in the hope of picking up information. Again, without success.\n\nOne of the things Sarah remembers most clearly about this period, as the family waited together, was how her son Barnaby would go to buy pizza in the evening, which no-one could eat. Every day they threw away boxes of uneaten pizza. Sarah wondered what the rubbish collectors would think.\n\nAlthough she knew that the helpline staff were taking her concerns seriously, she says it wasn't made clear to the family that they had been logged as a priority case. So they kept ringing back to check for information, not knowing that they would in fact have been contacted as soon there was something to report.\n\nAll this time, Sarah hoped that Emily might still be alive.\n\n\"As a mother you have that absolute thing of (a) it should have been me and (b) I should have protected her and so she must be still alive. It can't be my child who's died,\" she says.\n\nAfter three days, Sarah's family was finally put in touch with a Family Liaison Officer. This was progress, but Sarah could still not understand why her daughter could not be identified. Emily had been carrying credit cards with her that day and a tube pass. She had been wearing a distinctive ring, and had a tattoo on her back, both of which Sarah carefully described.\n\n\"The other victims were identified slowly but not as slowly as us,\" she says. \"Emily was the last to be identified.\"\n\nLater Sarah found out that her daughter had been one of the first victims to be taken out of the tube carriage.\n\n\"The only thing that it (the bomb) had done was it had blown her legs off. She was absolutely fine apart from that,\" Sarah says.\n\nFinally, a full 11 days after the bombing, the Family Liaison Officer visited the family to give them the bad news about Emily's death.\n\nSarah later campaigned to improve the information given to victim's families after a major incident, and worked with a government department on plans for an official website that would tell families which hospitals were treating victims, and provide help to arrange funerals and claim compensation.\n\nShe says she received a promise that the website would be launched, but after the Manchester bombing it was clear to her that little or nothing had changed.\n\n\"People were still visiting hospitals with no results. Mothers were still crying in the streets with photographs of their daughters, saying frantically, 'Has anyone seen this child?'\n\n\"I don't think anybody in the day and age of fast communication should be out on the street with a photograph of their daughter or son.\"\n\nJohn Ramsbottom, a retired police inspector, says the length of time it takes to identify a body after a bombing has to do with the complexity of the police operation.\n\n\"Two people are key at the scene,\" he says.\n\n\"The first one is the Senior Investigating Officer. This person is concerned with investigating the crime and extracting from the scene all the evidence that will enable us to come to the conclusion of what happened that day. The second person at the scene is the Senior Identification Manager. They are responsible with the recovery of the dead and the identification of the dead.\"\n\nEach time a body part is removed from the scene it must be properly bagged and logged, generating large amounts of paperwork.\n\nSarah now wears the ring Emily was wearing on the day she died\n\n\"A large number of them are going to have fragments of the bomb in them, so we've got to gather from them forensic evidence as well as identification evidence,\" he says.\n\nIn many cases the body parts will be moved to a temporary mortuary, where work will be done to reassemble the bodies of the dead.\n\nThe goal is to ensure that no parts are wrongly allocated, and that \"the body we give back to the family is absolutely as pure as that body as we can possibly make it\".\n\nThere are only four ways to definitively identify a body, Ramsbottom says - through fingerprints, DNA, dental records and surgical implants, such as a hip joint or a pace-maker with a unique serial number.\n\nWallets and ID documents are not considered strong enough evidence. And \"if we don't know, we say nothing,\" he says.\n\n\"Do the police say to somebody, 'We are 90% sure we found them'? But then we leave them with 10% hope. Is it worse later if we destroy that 10% hope or not?\n\n\"That's not a legal or police question, it's a human-being question and I don't have the answer to it.\"\n\nHe adds: \"The only thing we console ourselves with is that when we've done what we've done, we've got absolutely the right body, and that the dead person there has told their story to the police and coroner, and that story becomes part of the narrative of the incident.\"\n\nSarah understands that information can be given out only when it is confirmed to be true, and that \"wrong information is worse than anything else\".\n\nBut she says she is angry that families are still going through the enormous stress that she endured 12 years ago.\n\nShe would like a central co-ordinating body to be created, to provide families with information after a major incident. \"But if they cannot do that, or nobody thinks it's a good idea, then I will compromise with a website.\"\n\nUntil that website exists, she is not going to let it lie, she says. \"I expect letters back from the Home Office.\"\n\nJoin the conversation - find us on Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat and Twitter.", "Rival claims to East Jerusalem remains one of the most burning issues\n\nFrom a monastery rooftop just outside Jerusalem's ancient walls there is a spectacular view of the Dome of the Rock, rising in gold above the Old City.\n\nThe author Meir Shalev was brought to this spot as a boy to look across at the Western Wall - which at the time could not be accessed by Israelis.\n\nHe would gaze at the top few bricks of this holy Jewish site while his father told him: \"You will grow up, you will become a soldier and you will fight over this city.\"\n\nAt the time Jerusalem was divided between Israeli and Jordanian control.\n\nIt followed the 1949 armistice that divided the new Jewish state of Israel from other parts of what had been British Mandate Palestine.\n\nFor Meir Shalev's father, a well-known Israeli poet, the exclusion of Jews from their holiest sites represented a tragedy for his people.\n\nThe outbreak of war on 5 June 1967 would change many lives - and reshape that part of the Middle East.\n\nIsrael launched a pre-emptive attack on Egypt and battled Jordanian and Syrian forces the same day.\n\nMr Shalev was about to turn 19 - the age of his country at the time - and remembers a national mood of panic before the conflict.\n\n\"People were talking about the possibility of Israel being destroyed and us being exiled or killed,\" he says.\n\n\"We were very eager to fight,\" he remembers. \"We thought: 'This is our chance'.\"\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Meir Shalev: We cannot hold on to the West Bank\n\nMr Shalev found himself in action against Syrian troops on the Golan heights during a series of battles that would lead to Israel's capture of that territory.\n\nBut it was the occupation of the West Bank that he believes consumed Israel's energy - something he says it has had to \"deal with\" ever since its victory in 1967.\n\nHe recalls how after the war he told his father in a heated confrontation: \"We took a bite we will suffocate on.\"\n\nOther Israelis saw a divine purpose in the fighting to bring a return to their biblical Jewish lands.\n\nIn Jerusalem, the conflict saw Israeli troops involved in close quarters fighting with Jordanians.\n\nAnother young soldier, Yoel Ben Nun, was being transported to a checkpoint that separated control of the city.\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.\n\nHe speaks of surrounding the Old City at night, facing a battalion of the Jordanian Legion which rapidly retreated.\n\n\"That was a miracle,\" he says, recalling Israel's victory in six days.\n\nYoel Ben Nun told his commander at the time that he felt like two millennia of history had passed.\n\n\"The meaning was that for 2,000 years the people of Israel were in exile - persecuted, tortured, subjected to anti-Semitism. Those 2,000 years were over,\" he says.\n\n\"This is what I felt on the Temple Mount at the time,\" referring to the revered hilltop also known to Muslims as Haram al-Sharif.\n\nYoel Ben Nun later became a rabbi and joined the movement building Jewish settlements in the West Bank - the territory that Palestinians want for a future state.\n\nThe settlements are considered illegal under international law, though Israel disputes this.\n\nFor Palestinians, the war represented the loss of land following what they saw as the catastrophe of the first Israeli-Arab conflict two decades earlier.\n\nFatima Khadir was eight years old in 1967 when her family - whom she says were already displaced from their village in the previous war - fled Jerusalem's Old City.\n\nShe points to the side of her left eye, explaining she was injured by shrapnel from the debris of Israeli bombing.\n\nFatima Khadir: 'We are still suffering'\n\n\"I was looking around me, everyone was grabbing whatever they could - mothers and fathers carrying their babies and children\".\n\nShe ended up with her parents in a refugee camp in the desert border area of Jordan and Saudi Arabia.\n\nFifty years on, from her home in East Jerusalem, she speaks of her desire to return to her family's village of the 1940s.\n\n\"I still feel the hurt, pain and intolerable struggle,\" she says.\n\n\"We were never able to go back. I'm still hurting. We are still suffering.\"\n\nThe outbreak of war had been accompanied by enthusiastic, but false, radio reports of Arab success in the fighting.\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.\n\nMahmoud Erdisat was training to be a fighter pilot - and would later become a major general in the Jordanian air force.\n\n\"We were very excited that finally we would get the chance to fight the Israelis and get Palestine back,\" he recalls.\n\nBut he says it soon became apparent that Israel was overwhelming its opponents.\n\nThe Israeli territorial increase, claims Mr Erdisat, made it harder to negotiate a \"just solution\" on the issue of Palestinian statehood.\n\nHe believes the Arab defeat also had a profound impact on the way Israel's neighbours came to view themselves.\n\n\"It was a blow to Arab nationalism,\" he says.\n\nBut its legacy further fuelled Palestinian national aspirations.\n\nOccupation became central to their calls to activism and militancy, placing it firmly on the international agenda for years to come.\n• None Why aren't the Israelis and Palestinians talking?", "Last updated on .From the section Cricket\n\nCoverage: Highlights every evening on BBC Two, ball-by-ball Test Match Special commentary on BBC Radio 5 live sports extra; in-play highlights and text commentary on the BBC Sport website\n\nFinn, 28, who has played 69 one-day internationals, was selected ahead of Tom Curran, Stuart Broad and Toby Roland-Jones.\n\nEngland's next game in the tournament is against New Zealand on Tuesday.\n\nVictory over the Black Caps in Cardiff would put England into the semi-finals, after New Zealand's match with Australia on Friday was abandoned because of rain.\n\nEoin Morgan's side face Australia at Edgbaston on Saturday in their final Group A game.\n\nFinn took 3-54 and 2-49 for England Lions in back-to-back wins over South Africa A this week, sealing victory in the three-match one-day series that concludes on Monday.\n\nEngland were already likely to drop a pace bowler to make way for leg-spinner Adil Rashid, so it is now a three-way fight between Finn, Jake Ball and David Willey.\n\nAs for Woakes, he now faces a fight to be fit for the first Test against South Africa in July. When James Anderson suffered a similar injury in 2015, he was out for almost two months.", "Cristiano Ronaldo said that his \"numbers don't lie\" after his double helped Zinedine Zidane's Real Madrid side beat Juventus 4-1 in Cardiff.\n\nA goal in each half took the Portuguese to 105 Champions League strikes as Real became the first side since AC Milan in 1990 to win back-to-back cups.\n\n\"This is one of the best moments of my career but it seems I am able to say that every year,\" he said.\n\n\"People won't be able to criticise me because the numbers don't lie.\"\n\nJuventus were on top for large periods of an entertaining and open first 45 minutes, as Ronaldo's opener was cancelled out by Mario Mandzukic's superb overhead kick.\n\nBut Real were dominant after the break as efforts from Casemiro, Ronaldo again, and Marco Asensio sealed a 12th European Cup win and a third in four seasons.\n\nRonaldo has now scored at least twice as many Champions League goals as any other player in the quarter-finals (20), semi-finals (13) and finals (4).\n\nHe has won the Champions League on four occasions and has now scored 11 more goals in the competition than Barcelona's Lionel Messi - his nearest challenger.\n• None How did the players rate?\n• None 'Ronaldo is in the same bracket as Pele' - BBC Radio 5 live Football Daily Podcast\n\nSuccess capped an incredible start to management for former Real playmaker Zidane, who last month guided the club to a first La Liga title since 2012 and became the first French coach to win the Champions League twice.\n\n\"I feel like dancing,\" he said. \"I consider myself a man of this house [Real Madrid].\n\n\"This club is really in my heart and we are going to enjoy this. Today is a truly historic day for Real Madrid, for all Madrid fans.\"\n\nReal Madrid midfielder Toni Kroos, who has now won the Champions League three times with Real and Bayern Munich, praised the impact of Ronaldo after Zidane's side retained the trophy.\n\n\"I didn't expect that it was possible to defend this title, it is so difficult to win it once,\" he said. \"To win it three times in four years means a lot.\n\n\"Everybody knows that Cristiano is very important. As a team we played very well in the quarter-finals, the semi-finals and the final but you need a guy to score the goals and he did it again.\"\n\nVeteran Juventus goalkeeper Gianluigi Buffon was the focus of many neutral supporters before the game, with the 39-year-old looking to win the trophy at the third time of asking.\n\nBut, as with defeats to AC Milan in 2003 and Barcelona in 2015, it was to be another loss for the Italy number one.\n\n\"We thought we had enough to win the game,\" he said. \"It is a huge disappointment.\n\n\"I cannot explain why we played like we did in the second half. Real Madrid deserved to win in the second half. They showed their class and the attitude needed to play in this kind of game.\"\n\nCoach Massimiliano Allegri was disappointed with his side's reaction to going 2-1 down to Casemiro's deflected strike but pledged to return next season and \"try again\".\n\n\"I don't think Juventus has reached the end of a cycle at all,\" he said. \"Buffon will still be Juventus's goalkeeper next season and Andrea Barzagli will still be with us.\n\n\"Clearly the club knows we can improve our team if we want to achieve a higher technical level.\n\n\"We all need some rest and after the holidays we will be ready to get back with new drive and impetus. Football gives you the chance to try again next year.\"\n\nZidane has answered questions spectacularly tonight. The way he has handled the big players and the confidence he has shown in the role has been excellent. Not for once in that second half did they ever feel in danger of losing that game.\n\nHe has achieved something very special here this evening. To be the first to retain the trophy since 1990 - you can't underestimate that. It's too easy to say he's got amazing players because you have to handle them. He has and he's done it with such good style.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nGareth Bale says he is happy at Real Madrid and has committed his future to the Champions League winners.\n\nThe Wales forward came off the bench after 77 minutes in Saturday's 4-1 win over Juventus in Cardiff as Real Madrid secured a third title in four seasons.\n\nThe 27-year-old, who signed a deal until 2022 in October, has been linked with a move away from the Bernabeu.\n\n\"We are winning trophies and I am happy. I have signed a long-term contract at Madrid,\" said Bale.\n• None Listen: 'Bale will stay at Real Madrid' - former president\n\n\"My family is happy and I am happy, so yes we will continue what we are doing.\"\n\nThe former Tottenham player joined Real in 2013 for a then world record fee of £85m.\n\n\"It's the reason why I came to Real Madrid - to win trophies. We're enjoying winning them at the moment, so we'll continue to do so,\" Bale added.\n\n\"Three Champions Leagues in four seasons isn't too bad.\n\n\"I think we can get better. We are still quite young as a whole team and we have a great squad.\"\n\nBale was determined to play in the final in his home city despite still being troubled by an ankle injury.\n\nHe had surgery in November and suggested that without the Cardiff final in his sights he may have opted for a second operation.\n\n\"It's been difficult with my ankle this year,\" Bale said.\n\n\"I obviously came back way too early from my surgery and I suffered a bit.\n\n\"We were considering more at one point, but I've worked tirelessly hard to get back and to get ready for this game.\n\n\"I need to go on holiday and rest, and come back stronger next season - mainly for my ankle just to get it properly recovered.\n\n\"Then I'll obviously do some work in the off-season to get it stronger and ready for next season so I'll be firing on all cylinders.\"\n\nBale replaced Karim Benzema with Real leading 3-1 thanks to two Ronaldo goals and a long-range strike from Casemiro.\n\n\"I was just happy to get on for the last few minutes,\" Bale said.\n\n\"We just had to go for it. It's always cagey in a final but we're happy with the win.\n\n\"To play a final in your home city is incredible, but to win it is even better, a great experience.\n\n\"Cardiff has held an incredible event and we've literally not had a problem since we've been here; it's been immaculate.\n\n\"I don't think many players have won the Champions League in their home city where they were born, so it's a great memory to have.\"\n\nBale became the sixth player to lift the Champions League or European Cup in their home town, and the first since Nicolas Anelka with Real in 2000 in Paris.\n\nThe others are Angelo di Livio (Rome 1996), Alex Stepney (London 1968), and Miguel Munoz and Enrique Mateos (both Madrid 1957).\n\nBale also became the first Welshman to win the trophy three times - he also won it with Real last season and in 2014 - edging ahead of Ian Rush, Ryan Giggs and Joey Jones.\n\nBale is suspended for Wales' World Cup qualifier in Serbia on 11 June and will rest over the summer in a bid to regain full fitness, having also suffered calf problems along with his ankle injury.\n\n\"It's very disappointing to be honest, but I'll be cheering on the boys,\" Bale added.\n\n\"We always stick together, work as a team. We're never scared to battle and fight.\"", "Last updated on .From the section Sailing\n\nRace coverage: Watch highlights on BBC Two, Red Button, Connected TVs, online and BBC Sport app from 11 June.\n\nGreat Britain will face New Zealand in a rearranged America's Cup semi-final on Monday after a lack of wind caused Sunday's races to be postponed.\n\nAs the highest scoring challengers, second-placed New Zealand picked their opponents leaving Sweden to face Japan in the other play-off.\n\nNew Zealand said they chose Great Britain after studying the forecast.\n\n\"The winds simply didn't reach the required six knot strength,\" said regatta director Iain Murray.\n\n\"This is how it is sometimes in sailing. Here in Bermuda we have been spoilt for action so far, and today was just one of those days.\"\n\nTeam USA won the qualifying round with a crucial victory over New Zealand and take a one-point lead into the finals.\n\nHolders USA advance automatically to the first-to-seven America's Cup matches - which begin on 17 June - and will have a bonus-point lead over their challengers.\n\nThe first team in each semi-final to win five races progresses to the challenger final for a chance to take on the American team.\n\nBen Ainslie said his Land Rover BAR team are facing \"a real battle\" against New Zealand but were \"up for it\".\n\nGreat Britain went into the final day of qualifying with an unassailable lead over bottom-of-the-table France knowing qualification was already guaranteed.\n\nIn their first race of the day, the British boat jumped Japan at the pre-start and then dealt well with the conditions to seal their fourth race win of the qualifiers before losing the final race to USA.\n\nElsewhere, Sweden comfortably beat France, who were eliminated on Friday - all but one of the six teams taking part in the qualifiers advanced to the play-offs.\n\nStandings and how it works\n• *Land Rover BAR (GB) started the round-robin qualifiers with two points and Oracle Team USA with one point after finishing first and second in the 2015-16 World Series\n• Each team raced the other teams twice in this stage, gaining one point per victory, with the top four progressing\n• Defending champions USA skip the next stage and advance automatically to the America's Cup matches. They take a bonus point with them after topping the qualifying group\n\nWhat happens next?\n\nHolders Oracle Team USA await the winners of the challenger final in the America's Cup.\n\nThe first to seven points wins the America's Cup, or the Auld Mug as the trophy is known, with a possible 13 races to be sailed on 17-18 and 24-27 June.\n\nThe America's Cup, the oldest competition in international sport, was first raced in 1851 around the Isle of Wight and has only been won by four nations.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nChelsea winger Eden Hazard will have surgery after breaking his right ankle on Sunday while on international duty with Belgium.\n\nIt is understood the 26-year-old is now back in Chelsea's care.\n\nHazard will miss Belgium's friendly on Monday against the Czech Republic and their World Cup qualifier against Estonia on 9 June.\n\nThe extent of Hazard's injury has not been revealed but it has been reported he will miss the start of next season.\n\nThe Belgian Football Association had confirmed on Twitter that the playmaker twisted his ankle and subsequent scans revealed a fracture.\n\nHazard was instrumental as Chelsea won the Premier League last season, scoring 16 goals in 36 games.\n\nHe still has three years to run on his contract at Stamford Bridge but has been linked with a move to Real Madrid.", "Last updated on .From the section Cricket\n\nAn unbeaten 81 from captain Virat Kohli helped steer India to a comprehensive 124-run victory over Pakistan in the opening match of their Champions Trophy campaign at Edgbaston.\n\nKohli's big hitting - allied to a more patient 91 from opener Rohit Sharma and a blistering half-century from Yuvraj Singh - saw India post a daunting 319-3 from their rain-reduced 48 overs.\n\nPakistan, chasing a DLS-revised target of 289 off 41 overs, lost wickets at regular intervals, with only Azhar Ali threatening a substantial score.\n\nThe result leaves India level on points with South Africa at the top of Group B, with their second of three group matches against Sri Lanka on Thursday.\n\nPakistan meet South Africa in Birmingham on Wednesday, their struggle to 164 all out underlining how much they will have to improve to make the semi-finals.\n\nIt was a disappointingly, one-sided ending to a match which is regarded by many as the 'biggest in sport'. India now have seven successive wins against their rivals in ICC tournaments.\n• None Watch highlights of the match on BBC Two at 23:30 BST (00:40 in NI)\n\nWith 10 overs of their innings to go, India were 202-2, becalmed by smart bowling and two rain delays in quick succession.\n\nBut with Pakistan losing bowlers Mohammad Amir and Wahab Riaz to injury and two straightforward catches going down, the India dream team of Kohli and Yuvraj were able to pile on the runs in stirring fashion.\n\nYuvraj, dropped badly on eight by Hasan Ali, accelerated to his half-century off just 29 balls, pulling one six from the top of off stump over deep mid-wicket and clubbing eight fours from the denuded attack.\n\nWhen he fell for 53, Kohli and Hardik Pandya took over, the India captain pulling Hasan over long-on for one six and then driving the same bowler over deep extra cover for six more.\n\nKohli had been dropped himself on 43, but with a characteristic blend of power and panache went on to an unbeaten 81 garlanded by six fours and three sixes.\n\nA massive 89 runs came off the last 36 balls, 72 from the concluding four overs alone, Pandya hitting Imad Wasim for three consecutive sixes in the final over and Wahab hobbling off with figures of 0-87 off 8.4 overs, the most expensive in Champions Trophy history.\n\nChampions looking impressive once again\n\nWith all eight teams now having played one match, it is India who are unsurprisingly shaping up as the most potent threat to pre-tournament favourites England.\n\nWith power-hitters throughout the team and a bowling attack that never allowed Pakistan a realistic chance, they seldom looked in trouble on the ground where they won the trophy four years ago.\n\nRavindra Jadeja's left-arm spin accounted for Azhar on 50 and Mohammad Hafeez for 33, while his direct hit from backward point ran out Pakistan's other big hope Shoaib Malik for just 15.\n\nThe accuracy of Bhuvneshwar Kumar and pace of Umesh Yadav had tied Pakistan down early, with the unorthodox Jasprit Bumrah also economical on a pitch that had offered little during India's innings.\n\nWhile their fielding was sometimes sloppy, the final margin was authoritative, a much-anticipated contest meandering to a close in the most one-sided fashion.\n\n'It was a very complete game for us' - what they said\n\nIndia captain Virat Kohli: \"With bat and ball we were nine out of 10. In the field we were six today.\n\n\"If we tune that up to eight or nine we will be a strong side, it was a very complete game for us.\"\n\nPakistan captain Sarfraz Ahmed: \"It was in control in 40 overs but we lost the plot in the last eight overs.\n\n\"I think we will sit together and talk about how to control our bowling rate and also our batting as well.\"\n\nBBC cricket correspondent Jonathan Agnew on Test Match Special: \"A comfortable victory for India. It's a bit of a hiding, frankly.\n\n\"It's difficult to assess when games are changed around with rain breaks but that's a thumping win.\"", "Following the London terror attack, which left seven people dead and 48 injured, Theresa May has said the UK must adapt to a \"new trend\" in terrorism.\n\nThere were 255 terrorism-related arrests in the year ending 31 March 2016, according to the latest statistics from the Home Office. The arrests led to 37 prosecutions.\n\nIn 2015, 128 terrorist and extremist prisoners were released from custody, the Home Office says.\n\nReality Check has been looking into the main powers the police and security services have to stop suspected terrorists.\n\nUnder Section 43 of the Terrorism Act 2000 the police can stop and search a suspect if they have reasonable suspicion of involvement in terrorist activities.\n\nIt's difficult to know how many stop and searches are carried out under this power as most police forces don't separate Section 43 from other types of stop and search.\n\nOne force that does hold the data is the Met police. They say that 541 people were searched under the Terrorism Act in the 12 months to March 2016 - a rise of 32% on the previous year.\n\nThe police also have the power to search suspects even if they don't have suspicion of any links to terrorist activities.\n\nIn May 2012 the rules were tightened: the police can only carry out searches in designated places where they have reasonable grounds to believe an act of terrorism will take place.\n\nAt present anyone arrested under the Terrorism Act can be held without charge for up to 14 days.\n\nIn 2006 the law was changed in order to double the maximum period to 28 days. Only six suspects were ever held for that length.\n\nIn 2011 it reverted back to 14 days. This was during the coalition government when it was decided not to proceed with the annual vote in Parliament to keep it at 28 days. Theresa May was home secretary at the time.\n\nIn the year to March 2016, 46 people were detained under the powers - 25 of whom were charged. The longest anyone was held for was 13 days, which happened on three occasions during that year.\n\nThe police can arrest individuals who they suspect of planning an attack. Section 5 of the 2006 Terrorism Act made it a specific offence to prepare (or help others prepare) for an act of terrorism.\n\nThe maximum sentence for this offence is imprisonment for life. According to the CPS, 25 people were convicted under Section 5 in the year ending September 2016, up from 11 in the previous 12 months.\n\nThere is no specific offence for carrying out a terrorist act. If a perpetrator was arrested after committing an attack they would be charged with offences such as murder or grievous bodily harm.\n\nIt is also an offence for someone not to tell the police about someone they believe is involved in planning a terrorism act. A conviction for this offence can lead to a five year maximum sentence.\n\nOrganisations can be banned by the home secretary if they are believed to be participating, promoting or encouraging terrorism.\n\nBeing a member - or claiming to be a member - of a banned organisation can lead to a maximum of 10 years in prison and or a fine.\n\nThe Home Office says 71 international terrorist organisations are proscribed under the Terrorism Act 2000.\n\nA small number of agencies are able to carry out surveillance inside residential premises or private vehicles. The power requires authorisation by the secretary of state. The Office of Surveillance Commissioners provides independent oversight.\n\nThe security services also have the power to intercept communication data. The power is available to nine agencies, including GCHQ and MI5.\n\nThe Investigatory Powers Act, passed in 2016, compels internet companies to keep records of every website and messaging service UK-based citizens visit for a year.\n\nTerrorism Prevention and Investigation Measures, or TPims, are a form of house arrest. It applies to people who are deemed a threat but cannot be prosecuted or deported if they are a foreign national. They were first introduced in 2012 and replaced controversial control orders.\n\nThose under TPims can be subjected to electronic tagging, having to report regularly to the police and surrendering travel documents. A suspect must live at home and stay there overnight - possibly for up to 10 hours.\n\nElectronic tags are used to monitor the movements of criminals\n\nThe suspect is allowed to use a mobile phone and the internet to work and study, subject to conditions.\n\nIn 2015, TPims were toughened by granting the ability to relocate subjects up to 200 miles away from their normal residence.\n\nTPims initially last for one year, although they can be extended to two. It is possible for them to remain beyond the two-year maximum if there is suspicion of further terrorism activity. A breach of the TPims can lead to imprisonment.\n\nAs of November 2016, seven people were subjected to TPims - six of whom were British citizens.\n\nTemporary Exclusion Orders (TEOs) were created by the 2015 Counter-Terrorism and Security Act. They apply to British citizens suspected of involvement in terrorist activity abroad. They are designed to stop suspects from re-entering the UK unless they give themselves up at the border.\n\nThose subjected to TEOs are only allowed to return if they make contact with the UK authorities. If they do come back, they are likely to face either prosecution or close supervision under monitoring powers.\n\nThe Orders last for up to two years at a time and can be renewed. Breaches could lead to a prison sentence.\n\nThe home secretary applies the TEO where they \"reasonably suspect that the subject is or has been involved in terrorism-related activity while outside the UK\".\n\nThe government released details on its disruptive and investigatory powers in February.\n\nIn the wake of the Manchester bombing, the Home Secretary Amber Rudd confirmed they had been used once so far.\n\nSchedule 7 of the Terrorism Act 2000 gives the police the power to stop, search and hold individuals at ports, airports and international railway stations.\n\nInitially individuals could be questioned for up to nine hours - although a change in the guidelines means it is now up to six hours. The police also have the power to inspect electronic devices such as phones and laptops.\n\nThe police do not need prior knowledge or suspicion to use Schedule 7 - although the Home Office says it's done after \"informed considerations\".\n\nA total of 23,717 people were stopped under the power in the year ending June 2016, a fall of 23% on the previous year.\n\nDespite fewer people being stopped, the number detained under the power has increased by 7%, rising from 1,649 to 1,760 in the same period.", "Cristiano Ronaldo says his \"numbers don't lie\" after his goals help Real Madrid beat Juventus 4-1 in the Champions League final, while Gareth Bale describes playing in his home city of Cardiff as an \"incredible occasion\".", "In the opening match of the tour of Australia four years ago, the Lions won 59-8.\n\nOn their last visit to New Zealand back in 2005, the Lions scored two tries in the first six minutes of their first match on Kiwi soil.\n\nSo I was surprised by the heavy weather the Lions made of their 13-7 win over the Provincial Barbarians in Saturday's tour opener.\n\nIt was a very scratchy performance. The players seemed like strangers, struggling to get to know each other and work out how they should combine.\n\nOf course the Lions might have had limited preparation time, but the Provincial Barbarians side had only been together for a week or so.\n\nThat instinctive handling and offloading game might be part of the Kiwi DNA but the Lions are a team of seasoned internationals.\n\nIndividually there were some bright spots. Prop Kyle Sinckler, number eight Taulupe Faletau, flanker Ross Moriarty and centre Ben Te'o took their chance to impress.\n\nFlanker Justin Tipuric and prop Mako Vunipola played with energy and intensity off the bench\n\nBut some players need to sharpen up their act.\n\nAt full-back, Stuart Hogg looked tense. His sparkling attacking play earned him the Six Nations player of the tournament award in each of the past two seasons.\n\nBut against the Provincial Barbarians he was forcing things, attempting a moment of magic as soon as he got hold of the ball.\n\nSecond row Iain Henderson and centre Jonathan Joseph just didn't get into the game enough.\n\nOn a Lions tour - particularly these ones with a short run-in to the Test series - you have to go looking for the ball. If you wait for the game to come to you, the whole trip can pass you by.\n\nScrum-half Greig Laidlaw was decent. But he did what we know he can do and no more. He organised well, but rarely is he going to make a break. He was flagging at the end and was not whip-sharp with the pass.\n\nPerversely, however, that underwhelming performance will be quite positive for the squad.\n\nThere are 18 players who weren't involved at all in the game on Saturday. The likes of Leigh Halfpenny, George North and Conor Murray will know that some of their rivals for a Test place have missed an opportunity and that they can stake their own claim against the Blues in midweek.\n\nThe battle for the 10 jersey\n\nWarren Gatland's decision over the team's fly-half might be the one that defines the tour.\n\nThe two main contenders were in competition and, even on the back of 20 minutes as a replacement, Owen Farrell is now the man in possession.\n\nIt is a very different prospect coming on after an hour or so when a lot of the hard work has already been done, especially against a side such as this which was high on enthusiasm but low on real top-class quality.\n\nBut Farrell made such a difference, just because Johnny Sexton was so average.\n\nLike Hogg, Sexton seemed stifled by the expectation. At Leinster he is used to being the main man in team talks and on the field. He sets the mood music for that side and when you are not playing at your best that is a burden.\n\nFarrell is part of a Saracens set-up that functions like a well-oiled machine.\n\nHe kept it simple, getting into organisational mode, zipping off a couple of good passes in the build-up to Watson's score and putting up a good tactical kick from which Rhys Webb almost scored.\n\nThere is still a long way to go, but Sexton is playing catch up after the opener.\n\nThe template to beat the All Blacks\n\nThe good news for the Lions is that you don't have to do anything wonderfully different to beat the All Blacks tactically.\n\nBut your standards have to be skyscraper high in everything you do - ruthlessly accurate, relentlessly intense and with the strictest self-discipline to keep the penalty count down.\n\nThat was what England did when they won at Twickenham in 2012 and Ireland did in Chicago in 2016.\n\nOn both occasions they put the All Blacks under such pressure that the world champions eventually cracked and lost.\n\nSome have been tempted to see if Sexton and Farrell could combine with one at fly-half and the other at inside centre.\n\nTo base a Test team around that would be a coaching decision from way out of leftfield by Gatland - particularly given the limited preparation time and the fact that a dual playmaker set-up is not one that he has ever really tried with Wales.\n\nTo rattle the All Blacks, you have got to have momentum. Both England and Ireland had powerful ball carrying inside centres - Manu Tuilagi and Robbie Henshaw respectively - in their famous wins over New Zealand.\n\nThat is not a template that you can fit both Sexton and Farrell into.\n\nModern sides are so much more drilled than teams in the past, they have a thick playbook of pre-cooked moves and will have had endless talks through what they should do in certain scenarios.\n\nThat makes them stronger overall but it can mean that they end up looking to the sidelines for direction.\n\nWith a lot of the great touring sides, the players worked it out themselves. It was the case when the Lions won their only series in New Zealand back in 1971.\n\nCoach Carwyn James told the players to express themselves and helped them come up with solutions themselves rather than instructing them on what to do.\n\nIt was the same on the victorious Lions tours I was on with Sir Ian McGeechan as coach in 1989 and 1997.\n\nThe class for 2017 have to take responsibility to come up with the answers as well. Otherwise the team can stall.", "Britain has been hit by a series of terror attacks in 2017, the most recent being an attack on Muslim worshippers in Finsbury Park.\n\nHere is a list of some major terrorist attacks and attempted terror plots going back to 1996:\n\nA group of Muslim worshippers were hit when a van mounted the pavement and drove into them in Finsbury Park. The attack happened during the holy month of Ramadan after 00:00 BST, when many people were in the area attending evening prayers. One man, who had fallen ill before the attack, died and nine other people were treated in hospital. A 47-year-old man has been arrested on suspicion of terrorism offences.\n\nAn attack in London left seven people dead and 48 injured. A white van hit pedestrians on London Bridge before three men got out of the vehicle and began stabbing people in nearby Borough Market. The suspects were shot dead by police minutes later.\n\nAn attack in Manchester left 22 people dead and 59 injured after a male suicide bomber targeted children and young adults at the end of a concert at the Manchester Arena by US singer Ariana Grande. The bomber, Salman Ramadan Abedi, 22, was born in Manchester to Libyan parents.\n\nSix people, including the attacker, died and 50 people were injured in a terror attack near the Houses of Parliament. Khalid Masood mounted the pavement in a hired car and drove into pedestrians on Westminster Bridge. He then ran towards Parliament and stabbed a police officer to death before being shot dead by officers.\n\nThomas Mair shot and stabbed to death Labour MP Jo Cox in Birstall, West Yorkshire. Mair, who accessed extremist websites and was an avid reader of far-right literature, shouted: \"Britain first,\" in the attack. He was given a whole life sentence for the murder.\n\nA man attacked Tube passengers with a knife at Leytonstone station in east London. Muhiddin Mire shouted: \"This is for my Syrian brothers, I'm going to spill your blood,\" before he was finally subdued. Mire, who had a history of mental illness, was jailed for life. The judge at his trial said he had been driven by \"Islamic extremism\".\n\nBritish soldier Lee Rigby was murdered in Woolwich, south-east London by Islamic extremists Michael Adebolajo and Michael Adebowale. The men drove into Fusilier Rigby with a car before attacking him with a knife. Adebolajo was given a whole-life term and Adebowale was jailed for a minimum of 45 years.\n\nA failed suicide nail-bomb attack occurred at the Giraffe restaurant in Exeter. Nicky Reilly - a Muslim convert - was the only person injured when the homemade device went off in his hands in the restaurant's toilets. Reilly was found dead in Manchester prison in 2016.\n\nA Jeep was driven into the main terminal building at Glasgow Airport in an attempted suicide attack. Five people were hurt. One of the perpetrators, Kafeel Ahmed, died about a month later from severe burns sustained in the crash. The other, Bilal Abdullah - an Iraqi-born doctor - was sentenced to a minimum of 32 years in prison.\n\nTwo car bombs were discovered and disabled in London's West End. The first was left near the Tiger Tiger nightclub - police sources said it would have caused \"carnage\" if it had exploded. The second was found in a Mercedes after it was given a parking ticket in Cockspur Street and towed to Park Lane.\n\nFour attempted bombings took place exactly two weeks after the 7 July blasts. As with the previous plot, the attacks targeted the public transport system - but the devices failed to explode. In July 2007, four men were each sentenced to life imprisonment.\n\nCo-ordinated suicide bombings targeted London's public transport system during the morning rush hour. Three bombs exploded on separate underground trains and a fourth exploded on a double-decker bus. It was the worst terror attack since the Lockerbie bombing in 1988 and left 52 victims dead and 700 injuries.\n\nA car bomb planted by the Real IRA exploded around midnight in Ealing Broadway. Seven people were injured.\n\nThe Real IRA detonated a car bomb outside BBC Television Centre in west London. The police received a warning shortly before the blast, and one London Underground worker suffered deep cuts to his eye from flying glass.\n\nDavid Copeland carried out a 13-day nail bombing campaign that left three people dead and 139 injured in London. The hate-crime killings separately targeted the black, Bangladeshi and gay communities in attacks in Brixton, Brick Lane, and Soho.\n\nA lorry carrying 1,500kg of explosives blew up in Manchester city centre. One of the biggest bombs the IRA detonated on the British mainland, it caused massive damage to the Arndale shopping centre and other buildings within a half mile radius. Nobody died but 212 people were injured.", "Call me pedantic, but London City Island in the capital's Docklands is not really an island at all.\n\nA bird's eye view reveals that it is actually a peninsula, caused by an oxbow bend in the River Lea, shortly before it flows into the Thames.\n\nBut before I go too far in pricking the balloon of the marketing team that invented the island concept, it is worth pointing out that whoever named the nearby Isle of Dogs had the same problem; that too is very definitely joined to the mainland.\n\nThat said, London City Island - as I shall agree to call it - is a remarkable, if expensive, development.\n\nThere is certainly lots of water here, although at low tide there is also quite a lot of mud.\n\nGiven that it is corralled by a loop in the river, it also has the appeal of a very individual and separate place.\n\nHayleigh O'Farrell, head of communications at Ballymore Developments, accepts it may not be a physical island, but says, \"It's got that different, kind of island feel.\"\n\nIt also has truly excellent transport links.\n\nAfter residents walk over the footbridge to the tube station, it is just a 20-minute ride into the very centre of London, according to Transport for London's journey planner.\n\nWithin a couple of years the 12-acre island will also be home to the English National Ballet (ENB), and the London Film School. The ENB will base its production facilities there, and stage rehearsals.\n\nLorries will be able to drive in and out to transport sets all over the world.\n\nFor that reason Sean Mulryan, the Irish billionaire behind the development, has described it as his \"island of dance\".\n\nThis is no dormitory suburb. When it is fully finished, it will be a place that some say will be a spectacle in its own right.\n\nOnce the site of a margarine factory, the 1,700 flats are being built in double-quick time.\n\nMost of the units were prefabricated in a factory in Holland, and shipped to the UK, enabling the first phase to be finished in less than a year.\n\n\"They go up like Lego,\" says Ms O'Farrell. \"It's one of the fastest-paced constructions to go up in London.\"\n\nThe design is modelled after the colourful apartment blocks typical of Manhattan or Chicago.\n\n\"They are super-bold colours - so each of the bricks really pops.\"\n\nSo what sort of person will be living here? Given the big gym on-site, one imagines the residents being highly athletic, ballet aficionados who are pretty wealthy. The kind that spend their weekends at Glyndebourne perhaps.\n\n\"They've clearly set out to provide a very sophisticated product for what they hope will be a sophisticated - and wealthy - clientele,\" says property commentator Henry Pryor.\n\nHe believes most buyers will be asking the Bank of Mum and Dad for support.\n\n\"If asked to help their kids afford these kind of properties, they're going to say, 'Look, it's something that we can justify because not only does it work for you, but darling, we can come and stay there too.'\"\n\nHowever, the developers point out that there are 119 affordable properties in the development, around 7% of the total.\n\nThey also say that among the 650 people who've already moved in are artists, writers and animators. Presumably many of the others are wealthy bankers who work at nearby Canary Wharf, just four minutes away by tube.\n\n\"It is a young profile, a lot of people working in the area,\" says Ms O'Farrell.\n\n\"What really surprised us is that people have moved from all over London: 10% I think were from Battersea, and there are people who moved from Chelsea and from Tower Hamlets.\"\n\nBy any definition, you have to be wealthy to buy here.\n\nPrices start at £495,000 for a one bedroom flat, rising to just over £1m.\n\nOn that basis, anyone putting down a 25% deposit of £124,000 would need to earn £80,000 to £90,000 a year to afford the mortgage.\n\nIn a market where central London house prices have fallen by 20% in a year, some experts believe such prices are now too high.\n\n\"The question is: will it suffer the same issues and challenges that so many of the shiny developments strung out along the river from Putney Bridge to Greenwich are suffering from now? Are there people who can afford to pay the prices that are being sought here?\" says Mr Pryor.\n\nHe points out that many of the foreign buyers that used to inflate demand for London properties have now disappeared.\n\n\"The prices are clearly going to be incredibly challenging in this market, because they appear to be priced for buyers from 18 months ago.\"\n\nBallymore insists the flats are not over-priced.\n\nSince launching in 2014, it says 85% of the properties have already been sold.\n\nBallymore is about to launch its next development nearby, close to Trinity Buoy Wharf. With its Victorian lighthouse, and surviving brickwork from old shipyards, this too is likely to become an interesting place to live - as long as it does not spoil the area's wonderful industrial heritage.\n\nFrom both places the views along the river are spectacular.\n\n\"As developments go, this has been incredibly well-thought-through, and deserves every expectation that it will succeed,\" says Mr Pryor.\n\nBut if you want to live on a real island, London City Island may not be the place for you.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Watch as India's Hardik Pandya hits three successive sixes off Pakistan's Imad Wasim in the Champions Trophy game at Edgbaston.\n\nAvailable to UK users only.", "Last updated on .From the section Rugby Union\n\nThe British and Irish Lions can only use the jetlag excuse once, according to All Blacks great Ian Jones.\n\nThe Lions laboured to a 13-7 win against the Provincial Barbarians on Saturday, three days after arriving in New Zealand.\n\nHead coach Warren Gatland says the players were still struggling to adjust to the time difference.\n\n\"It's an easy cop out to say these guys are jetlagged,\" Jones told the BBC Rugby Union Weekly podcast.\n\n\"If you go down the line of [saying it's] a scratch side, with jetlag, you can use that excuse only once on a tour, ever. You cannot go back on that.\n\n\"They have known a long time out they were going to play this game, so they had to go through their professional routines to get them into sync.\"\n\nThe Lions already face a decisive week on the tour, with matches against the Blues on Wednesday and the in-form Crusaders on Saturday.\n\nThe schedule has been labelled \"suicidal\" by former New Zealand coach Graham Henry, but Jones says the itinerary is a \"non-issue.\"\n\n\"Let's not worry about the brutality of this tour, because they have 41 players,\" added Jones, who played in 79 Tests for New Zealand between 1990 and 1999.\n\n\"So that's a non-issue. Don't even worry about how tough this tour is.\n\n\"With 15 players you can call it brutal, but they have 41 players remember, and a huge medical staff, so it shouldn't be raised.\"\n\nJones played alongside Lions boss Gatland throughout the 1990s, and was coached by his fellow Kiwi when a player at Wasps at the turn of the century.\n\n\"A) because I've been coached by the guy, B) because I've played alongside the guy and know what he means, and C) because he can get things right off the field.\n\n\"When you get things right off the field, it just translates to things on the field.\"\n\nThe Lions have embarked on a charm offensive with the New Zealand public so far on this trip, and on Sunday visited the Waitangi Treaty Grounds for an official Maori welcome, or pōwhiri.\n\nDespite fears the Lions are putting too much stall in off the field commitments, Jones feels embracing the Kiwi culture will be crucial to success.\n\n\"What he's doing off the field in terms of getting his players out there to meet New Zealanders, understand what New Zealand rugby is all about, learning the culture; it's 100% important,\" Jones continued.\n\n\"Once the Lions players get into the mind of Gats, or get into the minds of the New Zealand public and understand what rugby means to us - playing a home - I think that's actually a really important thing.\"", "Luis de Carvajal used gold leaf from Bibles to decorate the diary\n\nA story of torture, betrayal and persecution is captivating Mexicans almost 500 years after it happened.\n\nThe dramatic life and death of the Carvajal family in 16th-Century Mexico is in the spotlight after a decades-long search for a national treasure came to an unexpected happy ending.\n\nLuis de Carvajal \"The Young\" came to Mexico - then known as New Spain - with his large, well-to-do family during the early colonisation of the Americas.\n\nHis family governed part of northern Mexico and soon made enemies, including a power-hungry viceroy keen to topple them from power.\n\nThe ambitious viceroy discovered that Luis de Carvajal was a practising Jew, a crime punishable by death in the times of the Spanish Inquisition\n\nOlder relatives had urged Luis de Carvajal to convert to Catholicism for his own safety, but he staunchly stuck to his faith.\n\nWhen he was first arrested, the authorities let him off with a warning but kept tabs on him.\n\nFar from giving up his religion, Luis de Carvajal became a leader in Mexico's underground Jewish community.\n\nLuis de Carvajal chronicled his fall from governor to being sentenced to death in his tiny handwriting\n\nWhen the inquisitors caught up with him again a few years later, he was sentenced to death. He was just 30 years old.\n\nBefore he was executed, he was tortured so badly that he revealed the names of 120 fellow Jewish people, historian Alicia Gojman explains.\n\nHis captors forced him to listen as those \"heretics\", which included his own mother, were tortured in the cell next to him.\n\n\"He tried to commit suicide because he couldn't cope with having told them about his family and friends, but didn't manage it,\" says Ms Gojman.\n\nWe know the excruciating details of Luis de Carvajal's persecution because he managed to keep secret diaries.\n\nBut these were not any old notebooks. They were painstakingly crafted, miniature manuscripts with almost microscopic handwriting in Latin and Spanish.\n\nSome pages were intricately decorated with gold leaf he scraped from pages of a Bible.\n\nEach of the three memoirs was no larger than a present-day iPhone, most likely so he could keep them hidden away under his hat.\n\nThe small size of the diaries meant they could be hidden easily\n\nLuis de Carvajal wrote about being a young Jew in the New World, about exploring his heritage and practising his beliefs despite the dangers.\n\nBut much of the memoirs focus on his final tragic days before he was burned at the stake, with vivid descriptions of him falling to his knees upon hearing his mother's tortured screams as she was pulled on the rack.\n\nLuis de Carvajal found comfort in poetry, writing verses and prayers to reaffirm his faith in the face of so much cruelty.\n\nLuis de Carvajal's memoirs are treasured by Mexico's Jewish population as chronicles of keeping faith despite the ruthlessness of the Spanish Inquisition.\n\n\"Children who go to Jewish schools study the Carvajal family history,\" says Mauricio Lulka, executive director of the Central Committee for the Jewish Community in Mexico.\n\nThe history told in the diaries is taught in Jewish schools in Mexico today\n\nFor centuries, the delicate manuscripts were kept in Mexico's National Archives. They were treasured as being among the first artefacts documenting the arrival of Jews to the Americas and were studied by researchers from around the world.\n\nBut in 1932 they vanished, leading to suspicions among the small group of academics who had access to them that one of them may have stolen the precious diaries. After all, they were small enough to hide under a hat.\n\nWith no trace of the documents, the search was eventually suspended and the trail went cold.\n\nMore than 80 years after their disappearance, the London auction house Swann in 2016 listed \"replicas\" of the manuscript at an initial price of $1,500 (£1,150).\n\nBut a US collector of Judaica, Leonard Milberg, was suspicious.\n\nWhy would someone go to the trouble of recreating the minuscule handwriting of Luis de Carvajal's original to create a replica?\n\nIntrigued, he contacted the Mexican consulate which confirmed that the originals were still missing and sent experts to check the \"replicas\" out.\n\nBaltazar Brito is the director of the National Library of Anthropology and History in Mexico and one of the experts sent to assess the documents.\n\n\"When I got there, something told me they were originals, I knew it in my heart,\" he says.\n\nBaltazar Brito said he had a \"gut feeling\" the documents were originals\n\nFor Mr Brito, the documents have relevance beyond their time.\n\n\"They tell the story of religious intolerance that we shouldn't let happen again in the world,\" he says. \"Despite that, it still happens.\"\n\nLeonard Milberg felt the manuscripts belonged in Mexico, so the collector made it his mission to deal with all the international agencies involved and covered the costs of sending them back.\n\nTheir safe return was welcome news for Mexico's now thriving Jewish community of about 50,000 people, many of whom were drawn to the country by its modern-day commitment to religious freedom.\n\nAfter they were briefly exhibited in Mexico City they are now safely stored in a special climate-controlled vault in the National Library of Anthropology and History in Mexico, as no one wants to risk the miniature manuscripts disappearing for another eight decades.", "Last updated on .From the section Tennis\n\nCoverage: Listen to live radio commentary and follow text coverage of selected matches on BBC Radio 5 live sports extra and online.\n\nRafael Nadal continued his superb form with a dominant 6-1 6-2 6-2 win over Roberto Bautista Agut to move easily into the French Open quarter-finals.\n\nSecond seed Novak Djokovic remains on course to face Nadal in the semi-finals after a 7-6 (7-5) 6-1 6-3 win against 19th seed Albert Ramos-Vinolas.\n\nNadal, 31, is looking to become the first man to win 10 titles at a single Grand Slam event.\n\nHe will face another Spaniard, Pablo Carreno Busta, in the last eight.\n• None Not ready for home yet - Andy Murray column\n\nMargaret Court is the only player to have won 10 or more titles at one Grand Slam event, winning the Australian Open on 11 occasions between 1960 and 1973.\n\nNadal now has a 76-2 win-loss record at Roland Garros with his only defeats coming against Robin Soderling in the fourth round in 2009 and Djokovic in the 2015 quarter-finals.\n\nNadal's victory was not quite as simple as Friday's incredible 6-0 6-1 6-0 defeat of Nikoloz Basilashvili but the fourth seed has not dropped a set yet.\n\nIt is the 11th time he has reached the quarter-finals at the French Open - a record shared with Roger Federer.\n\nCarreno Busta, 25, reached his first Grand Slam quarter-final with a 4-6 7-6 (7-2) 6-7 (6-8) 6-4 8-6 win over Canadian fifth seed Milos Raonic.\n\nCarreno Busta, seeded 20th, failed to convert six match points in the deciding set before eventually grinding down last year's Wimbledon runner-up.\n\nAnd a first career win against a top-10 ranked opponent will be rewarded with a meeting against nine-time champion Nadal.\n\nTwelve-time Grand Slam champion Djokovic, 30, has not found his way through the draw as easily as old rival Nadal - especially during a gruelling five-set win against unseeded Argentine Diego Schwartzman in the previous round.\n\nRamos-Vinolas' resistance in a 73-minute opening set, where Djokovic had his serve broken twice to trail 4-2 before fighting back to win the tie-breaker, indicated it could be another battle for the Serb.\n\nBut any fears he might have had were unfounded.\n\nDjokovic won the first four games on his way to wrapping up the second set in 28 minutes, then broke again in the sixth game of the third set - after Ramos-Vinolas saved a break point two games earlier following a thrilling 41-shot rally - before serving out to victory.\n\nBefore thinking about the prospect of facing Nadal in the last four, Djokovic's first task is to overcome sixth seed Dominic Thiem.\n\nThe 23-year-old Austrian - like Nadal and third seed Stan Wawrinka - has not dropped a set on his way to the last eight, needing little over an hour and a half to win 6-1 6-3 6-1 against unseeded Argentine Horacio Zeballos.\n\nNishikori through in five sets\n\nJapan's eighth seed Kei Nishikori survived a scare to beat unseeded South Korean Hyeon Chung in five sets.\n\nNishikori, 27, needed almost four hours to win 7-5 6-4 6-7 (4-7) 0-6 6-4 in a third-round match finished on Sunday after the previous day's rain delay.\n\n\"I think the rain helped me a lot, because I was really down in the fourth set and mentally I wasn't ready,\" said Nishikori, whose only Grand Slam final appearance came when he lost at the 2014 US Open.\n\n\"I knew I had to change something to beat him, so I think I made some adjustments to make it a little better than yesterday.\"\n\nBig-serving American John Isner, seeded 21, was knocked out in his third-round match by Karen Khachanov of Russia, who won 7-6 (7-1) 6-3 6-7 (5-7) 7-6 (7-3).\n\nThe 21-year-old will now face British world number one Andy Murray in the fourth round on Monday.\n\nFrench 15th seed Gael Monfils reached the fourth round for a seventh time when compatriot Richard Gasquet withdrew from their rain-delayed match with a thigh injury.\n\nMonfils, 30, was leading 7-6 (7-5) 5-7 4-3 when his opponent withdrew, setting up a last-16 meeting with Wawrinka.", "Emmanuel Macron has just won the rare distinction of being the most re-tweeted French person in history.\n\nIn less than 24 hours, his Trump-defying message \"make our planet great again\" was shared more than 140,000 times, easily ousting the previous record-holder, the rather less high-minded TV presenter Cyril Hanouna. One fifth of the re-tweets were in the US.\n\nIt is proof yet again that what we witnessed from the Elysee on Thursday was a master class in communications.\n\nIn giving his TV reaction to the US president, not only did Macron break brazenly with longstanding convention, according to which French presidents never speak publicly in English, but he even had the chutzpah to subvert the US leader's personal campaign slogan.\n\n\"Make our planet great again\" was a provocation dressed up as a call to virtue. As a catchphrase for the faithful, it was irresistible.\n\nBy tweeting it, Macron took one more step down his road to investiture as that long-awaited international figure: the anti-Trump.\n\nThe French leader has a growing fan club: in France, the US and across the globe, among people who see him as the polar opposite, the perfect antithesis of his counterpart in the White House.\n\nThese people love the fact that with the arrival of Macron, the existing order appears to have been turned on its head.\n\nIt used to be France that was old, inward-looking and incapable of regeneration, and America that was the land of youth, energy and leadership.\n\nBut where is that caricature now?\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Donald Trump's handshakes with world leaders, including President Macron, have been closely watched\n\nAnd they adore the way that Macron had the nerve to face down Trump in the Brussels handshake. At last, they feel, we have a champion with the guts and the conviction to challenge the Trumpian order.\n\nMacron himself never planned any of this. When he first thought of running for the presidency, the chances of a Trump in the White House seemed too ludicrous to contemplate.\n\nBut not for the first time, the stars seem to have aligned for France's boy-prodigy.\n\nJust as in domestic politics doors seemed to open miraculously for President Macron, so in the world of international affairs shifts of power and ideology are also working in his favour - for now.\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. French President Emmanuel Macron says Paris agreement will \"make the planet great again\"\n\nThe tilt towards nationalist interests exemplified by Trump's America has created a clear leadership space for someone who will fly the other flag. Providential or not, Macron has come to power just as a reaction sets in against the populist tide of the last few years - and he is poised to reap the reward.\n\nWith its perpetual harping on about ideals and morals, France's capacity to irritate is prodigious. Perhaps it will not be long before Macron loses his touch and the world starts panting for his comeuppance.\n\nBut right now, with Trump in the White House, French preachiness doesn't appear to raise as many heckles as it used to. Having a quotable charmer for a president certainly helps.", "Coverage: Live radio and text commentary of every Andy Murray match on BBC Radio, the BBC Sport website and BBC Sport app.\n\nIt was really good to work things out on court and come through against someone as good as Juan Martin del Potro, after a couple of tournaments worrying about my game and where it was at.\n\nSometimes it is the case when you play a top player early in a tournament that you're a bit more focused, a bit more alert.\n\nWhen you're going through the tactics for the match it's maybe a little bit more precise, because you're aware that if you get it wrong, the best players will make you pay for that.\n\nIf you play a guy you don't really know, it's difficult to get the right gameplan, so it also helps that I know Juan Martin's game very well.\n\nWe've played each other many, many times from juniors right through to the biggest matches as pros.\n\nBut he's still one of the best players in the world, and after struggling with my game and what I was trying to do for a while, rather than actually concentrating on actually trying to beat my opponent, it was great to get things right.\n\nWorking things out tactically and making adjustments during matches gives me confidence, so that's been a real positive for me over the last couple of matches.\n\n'It's all about preparing for the next point'\n\nCertain players look up to their box more than others and generally all you would like to see coming back is encouragement.\n\nEveryone's different in how they watch - Ivan Lendl obviously doesn't say a lot, Jamie Delgado's a little bit more vocal, my physical trainer Matt Little and my physio Mark Bender are probably the most vocal in the box in terms of encouragement.\n\nBut there's nothing organised, we don't sit down and discuss what they do or hand out different roles within the box.\n\nI guess if they were on their phones or looking completely disinterested, or cracking up and having a laugh up there, I would probably find it a bit difficult to concentrate.\n\nIn that respect, what the people in your box do could have an impact on your concentration, but from a player's perspective that time between points is all about preparing for the next one.\n\nWhat happens during the three or four seconds after a point ends is generally your reaction to winning or losing that point.\n\nYou can be very pumped - \"great, I've won the point\" or \"damn, I've lost the point and just got broken, I'm really upset\".\n\nBut you then have another 15 to 20 seconds to either calm yourself down and think about the next one, or spend that time thinking about what just happened - \"why did I just get broken serving for the set?\"\n\nI don't feel against Del Potro that was the case at all, and I also feel for large parts of the previous match against Martin Klizan that was a real positive for me as well.\n\n'I can get back quickly to see the family'\n\nLast year was the first time at the French Open that we stayed in a house near to the courts, and we're doing the same again this time.\n\nIt's very relaxed, we can eat at home and watch TV, spend family time together.\n\nWe've been following all the political debates from home as well the football, like the Europa League and Champions League finals - does that count as watching French TV?\n\nIt's very different in New York, for example, because we stay in the city and it's really busy.\n\nYou'd sign up for 40 minutes getting to the courts, so there's quite a lot of time spent going to and from the tennis, which makes the days feel a bit longer.\n\nHere, we're five minutes away and it's great. I can arrive a bit later and get back quickly to see the family.\n\nIt's not quite Wimbledon, when I get to stay in my own bed every night, but it feels a little bit more like normal home life than the other Slams.\n\nHopefully I can extend my stay a little longer, I'm not ready to go home quite yet.", "This video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.\n\nSenior politicians from seven parties - although not the prime minister - took part in the BBC election debate on Wednesday.\n\nHome Secretary Amber Rudd went head-to-head with Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn, Lib Dem leader Tim Farron, UKIP's Paul Nuttall, SNP deputy leader Angus Robertson, Green co-leader Caroline Lucas and Plaid Cymru's Leanne Wood.\n\nDefending her absence, Mrs May said she preferred \"taking questions and meeting people\" on the campaign trail rather than \"squabbling\" with other politicians.\n\nHere are five key themes from the showdown.\n\n\"WhereisTheresa\" was trending before the debate began, and the party leaders didn't let the PM's absence be forgotten.\n\nLeanne Wood went on the attack first, saying Mrs May was not there because \"her campaign of soundbites is falling apart\".\n\nMr Farron was hot on her heels, quipping: \"Where do you think Theresa May is tonight? Take a look out your window. She might be out there sizing up your house to pay for your social care.\"\n\nFor the SNP deputy leader, the PM's no-show was evidence she lacked \"guts\".\n\nMeanwhile, Mr Corbyn asked \"where is Theresa May, what happened to her?\" as he defended his own leadership abilities. Ms Lucas said the \"first rule of leadership is to show up\".\n\nHowever, it was the Lib Dem leader who persistently went after Mrs May, telling voters they should \"make a brew\" and watch Bake Off instead because the PM \"couldn't be bothered\" to turn up.\n\nTwitter users also embraced the theme with memes searching for the PM.\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Which party will help those in need?\n\nMs Rudd repeatedly accused Mr Corbyn of having a \"magic money tree\" - most notably after he attacked a Tory U-turn on disability benefits and accused the party of planning more cuts.\n\n\"Jeremy, I know there is no extra payment you don't want to add to, no tax you don't want to rise... we have to stop thinking - as you do - that there is a magic money tree,\" she said.\n\nMr Corbyn counter-attacked on poverty, asking Ms Rudd whether she had ever been to a food bank or seen people sleeping around stations.\n\nBut the \"magic money tree\" kept reappearing.\n\n\"May's strong and stable replaced by Rudd's 'magic money tree',\" was the Guardian deputy editor Paul Johnson's verdict.\n\nIt was inevitable that a question about Brexit would turn into a debate about immigration.\n\nTim Farron cited a doctor receiving racial abuse as a consequence of what happens when you \"demonise\" migrants.\n\nThe UKIP leader - who Ms Lucas accused of \"hate-filled rhetoric\" on immigration - denied claims he was demonising immigrants, but insisted: \"We have to get the population under control.\"\n\nMs Rudd said it was important to have an immigration policy the UK can control, while Mr Corbyn said he wanted it to be \"fair\".\n\nArguably the most powerful moment came when Mr Robertson said the debate about immigration \"shames and demeans us all\".\n\nIt's been a while since the Tory party had to talk about a coalition, but Ms Rudd kept mentioning the \"coalition of chaos\".\n\nShe said a vote for anyone other than Theresa May would be a \"vote for Jeremy Corbyn and that coalition\" - and all the \"squabbling\" made her realise how chaotic a coalition would be.\n\nMs Wood wasn't too happy about the suggestion, hitting back that it was the Conservative Party and UKIP that were in coalition.\n\nThe debate was difficult to follow at times, with politicians interrupting and shouting over each other. \"Let him speak\" and \"can I finish?\" were common mantras.\n\nTim Farron's one-liners, which weren't reserved for Mrs May's no-show, went down a storm on social media.\n\nBuzzfeed's Jim Waterson joked that the Lib Dem leader added 500,000 viewers to the viewing figures for Bake Off.\n\nBut it was the Plaid Cymru leader's personal attack on UKIP leader Paul Nuttall that arguably attracted the most attention.\n\nCriticising the party's approach to Brexit, she suggested the UKIP leader was someone who would try to divorce his wife without paying, adding: \"We all know about blokes like you.\"", "England's Ben Stokes and Bangladesh's Tamim Iqbal exchange words during the opening match of the Champions Trophy at The Oval. Tamim went on to make a century.\n\nAvailable to UK users only.", "Coverage: Live text commentary on every match on the BBC Sport website and mobile app.\n\nThe All Blacks have a better team now than the Dan Carter and Richie McCaw-inspired group that whitewashed the Lions on their last tour of New Zealand in 2005, says coach Steve Hansen.\n\nHansen was assistant to Graham Henry when the All Blacks beat Sir Clive Woodward's team 3-0 12 summers ago.\n\nHe told BBC Radio 5 live: \"I think it's a more complete side now.\n\n\"If you look across the board there are one or two positions where we're stronger.\"\n\nFlanker McCaw retired after leading the All Blacks to World Cup final victories in 2011 and 2015, while fly-half Carter quit international rugby after the latter of those wins.\n\nHansen said: \"McCaw and Carter were very special players, and probably all-time greats.\n\n\"But we're better at the line-out because we've got more height there. I think it's a slightly stronger side.\"\n• None 'Welcome to the jungle' - Lions arrive\n• None Lions 'strong enough to beat New Zealand' - Cotter\n\nWith the Lions missing talismanic number eight Billy Vunipola through injury, and with the majority of the tourists' players having just finished a punishing domestic season, the All Blacks are clear favourites to win the series.\n\nTwo of the three Tests will be played at Eden Park in Auckland, where New Zealand have not lost a match in 23 years. Not since 2009 have they lost a home Test anywhere across the North and South Islands.\n\nHansen does not believe Vunipola's absence to be as critical as many in the northern hemisphere fear, nor that the Lions should be cowed by recent precedent.\n\n\"Billy is a quality player. It'll be a loss. But somebody will step up; I'm a firm believer that one man's misfortune is another man's opportunity,\" he said.\n\n\"James Haskell is a good player, he knows New Zealand well, he's played Super Rugby, and after missing out the first time he'll be keen to show he should have been picked in the first place.\n\n\"I don't think I have to give Lions supporters any reason for optimism. I think they've already got it. They'll be coming out here with reasonably large expectations that they can win the series.\n\n\"This is a good team. If I were a Lions supporter coming down I'd think, we've got four countries coming up against one - we should win.\n\n\"That's an expectation the Lions will have to bear on their shoulders, because it's going to be there, whether they like it or not. It's just like where we come from - we have that expectation all the time. And you can either run from it or accept it and get on with it.\"\n\nIt was during the famous 1971 series - the only one the Lions have won in New Zealand - that Hansen first fell in love with the game of rugby.\n\n\"The first Test I ever went to was the Lions one at Carisbrook in 1971,\" he said.\n\n\"It was a pretty good Test match. I remember the size of the two teams. I watched the match pretty close to the sidelines, and the sheer force and impact - I thought, wow, these guys are massive…\"\n\nHansen's father Des was a long-time coach with club side Marist and the man who developed his son's interest in how the game should be played.\n\n\"He was ahead of his time as a coach,\" said Hansen.\n\n\"If you look back at that series, the Lions were given a lot of kudos for being a running side, but they did kick the ball a lot, and the All Blacks actually outscored them in tries across the series. But they played smart rugby, and there's a lesson to be learned there.\"\n\n'A challenge that's right up our alley'\n\nHansen is not known for public displays of emotion. Even in becoming the first All Blacks coach to win the World Cup on foreign soil he was relatively restrained, but he says the series ahead excites him as much as that achievement.\n\n\"We're looking forward to this challenge immensely,\" he said. \"It's one of the best sides that have toured here for a long time, if not their best side.\n\n\"It's the creation of four countries pouring in the best they've got, and the best they've got are playing pretty well at the moment - you only have to look at the last Six Nations, where there was some very good rugby played by some very good players.\n\n\"It's an opportunity for us to measure ourselves. We're a team who always try to be better than we were before - we don't always do that, but we're trying to - and this is a challenge that's right up our alley. \"\n\n'It's not all crash and bash'\n\nHansen believes there is a fundamental difference between rugby players from the northern and southern hemispheres.\n\n\"I don't think there's a difference in skill, but I do think environmentally there's a difference,\" he said.\n\n\"As a kid growing up in Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, and even the south of France, the weather conditions are conducive to being outside all the time, and you're developing athletic muscle that's natural.\n\n\"Your agility and your guile is being built. In the nations that produce the Lions, the game has issues with weather for large parts of the season. So as children growing you're not outside as much, climbing trees and doing all the things that build natural muscle. And I think that makes a little bit of a difference.\n\n\"It doesn't mean to say those players can't have the same skills, but when it's hosing down or sleeting, it's not as conducive to running with the ball, and it develops your game in a different way.\n\n\"You watch your competitions up there and the game is subtly starting to change. It's not all crash and bash. And maybe that's a reflection of the last World Cup, when you didn't get the results you wanted.\n\n\"People have had a look and thought, maybe we need to have a look at how we're playing.\"\n\nListen to the full interview on the Dawson and Mehrtens Lions Show on BBC Radio 5 live from 20:00 BST on Thursday, 1 June.", "Last updated on .From the section Rugby Union\n\nSam Warburton will captain the British and Irish Lions in their opening match against the Provincial Barbarians on 3 June.\n\nThe flanker will play his first game since suffering a knee injury in April, lining up in an all-Welsh back-row.\n\nThe Scottish trio of Greig Laidlaw, Tommy Seymour and Stuart Hogg all start, as does Kyle Sinckler, who has yet to start a Test for England.\n\nAnyone involved in club finals or play-offs last weekend was not considered.\n\n\"We have selected the majority of players who were together for the training weeks in Wales and Ireland,\" said head coach Warren Gatland.\n\nWales captain Alun Wyn Jones, who recently recovered from a shoulder problem, starts in the second row and joins compatriots Ross Moriarty, Taulupe Faletau and Warburton in the forwards.\n\nEngland prop Joe Marler is named alongside his Harlequins' team-mate Sinckler in the front row, with hooker Rory Best and second row Iain Henderson making up the pack.\n\nAfter being called up as a replacement for Ben Youngs, scrum-half Laidlaw partners Ireland's Jonny Sexton at half-back, with Ben Te'o paired with fellow Englishman Jonathan Joseph in the centre.\n\nBath and England wing Anthony Watson joins Hogg and Seymour in the back three.\n\n\"We have named a side that showcases a strong combination of experience and youth and we are really looking forward to Saturday,\" Gatland added.\n\n\"We are all hugely excited about the first game; it's a great opportunity for the starting XV and the whole match day squad to lay down a marker and get the tour off to a good start.\"\n\nThe Saracens quartet of Jamie George, Mako Vunipola, George Kruis and Owen Farrell are all on the bench, as are the Irishmen Tadgh Furlong and Jared Payne, and the Welsh pair of Justin Tipuric and Rhys Webb.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nChelsea were paid £150.8m by the Premier League after winning the 2016-17 title - 50% more than the top earners in 2015-16.\n\nThe 2016-17 season was the first of the latest TV deal and saw a total of almost £2.4bn paid to the 20 clubs - up from £1.6bn last season.\n\nBottom club Sunderland got £93.471m - more than the £93.219m 2015-16 winners Leicester pocketed the previous season.\n\nThe figures are based on broadcast and commercial deals plus prize money.\n\nFunds from the Premier League's central commercial deals and overseas broadcast rights are shared equally - as is half of the domestic broadcast income.\n\nA quarter is paid out in prize money based on each club's league position and the other quarter in \"facility fees\" for each game broadcast on UK television.\n\nArsenal were the top earners in 2015-16 with £100.9m - but only the three relegated sides of Hull, Middlesbrough and Sunderland were paid less than that figure in 2016-17.\n\nThe ratio between the highest and lowest totals paid by the Premier League to its clubs in 2016-17 was 1.61 to 1, the lowest among Europe's top leagues, which means the Premier League is more equal when it comes to sharing revenue than its rivals.\n\nThe Premier League also paid out nearly £220m to Aston Villa, Cardiff, Fulham, Newcastle, Norwich, QPR, Reading and Wigan in parachute payments.\n\nVilla, Newcastle and Norwich - the relegated sides in 2016 - got almost £41m each.\n\nFull table broken down into all categories on the Premier League website.", "This video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. BBC's Tajuden Soroush was a passenger in the car with Mohammed Nasir when bomb exploded\n\nBBC driver Mohammed Nazir was among scores of victims of Wednesday's bombing in Kabul's secure central zone. As Afghanistan mourns those killed, the editor of the BBC's Afghan service Waheed Massoud, remembers a friend and colleague caught up in an all too familiar scenario.\n\nI woke to a phone call telling me that \"a BBC minibus\" had been caught up in the Kabul truck bomb attack.\n\nBut we did not know for sure how bad it was, and how many of our colleagues were hurt.\n\nAs things stand at least 90 were killed, but this toll will undoubtedly rise with hundreds injured.\n\nThe immediate feeling was so familiar: a racing heart beat and a thousand simultaneous thoughts going through my head.\n\nMy heart felt heavier. I felt it was sinking down to my feet.\n\nI desperately made phone calls any way I could - through Viber, WhatsApp, Facebook, and my mobile - but to no avail.\n\nThe whole network was down, another indication that something horrendous had happened.\n\nI was torn between hope and fear. Fearing the loss of another dear one and hoping that all would be fine.\n\nIt is devastating when fear wins over hope; I soon found out that one dear colleague, Mohammed Nazir, our driver, had been killed and four other colleagues wounded.\n\nThe truck bomb exploded close to Kabul's \"Green Zone\", the most secure place in the heart of the city protected by guards, blast walls and security boom gates. It killed and wounded dozens of people.\n\nInjured Afghans run from the site of the blast\n\nI can imagine what Nazir's family, his wife and children, were going through as they were waiting for news from BBC colleagues who were searching hospitals and morgues to find him.\n\nAs they prayed for good news, they too were battling fears and hopes.\n\nAnd they are not the only ones. The friends and family of the hundreds of victims of today's attack, like those of Mohammed Nazir, will have had the same experience.\n\nMohammed Nazir was young. He was the father of three children and the only breadwinner in his family. He had a gentle smile and a warm personality.\n\nI knew Nazir for years and I worked with him most days of the week.\n\nBBC journalists, support staff and visitors remember him as an honest and reliable person. Most colleagues deploying from Kabul to dangerous provinces would prefer to go with Nazir.\n\nThe irony is he survived decades of war, conflict and hostile environments but was killed by a bomb in the most secure diplomatic enclave in the heart of Kabul.\n\nMany BBC colleagues find it hard to believe that the smiling face that drove them to work this morning will be buried by the end of the same day.\n\nThe thought that he is no longer with us is hanging over everyone. We think of his children, his wife and extended family and how they will survive without him in a country that does not have a welfare system.\n\nAfghanistan has no welfare system, adding to the agony for families who lose a breadwinner\n\nAt least Nazir's family will receive financial support from the BBC. But what will happen to those of the others killed and wounded?\n\nThe attack today not only took lives, and caused injury. It also in an instant changed the future for hundreds of families.\n\nSoon, the carnage of today will linger only as another casualty figure from yet another attack. Life will carry on.\n\nBut what happened here in Kabul is simply a reflection of what Afghanistan has been experiencing over the past 38 years in various different forms and guises.\n\nAfghan security personnel were deployed to guard the bomb site in Kabul\n\nThe early post-2001 years were a brief period of hope when many believed the country would finally be able to breathe a sigh of relief from constant chaos. But it did not last long.\n\nToday, Afghanistan is as much a battleground for proxy wars and regional arm wrestling as it was decades ago, with ordinary Afghans feeling like victims of an unchosen fate.\n\nAlthough Nato military boots on the ground are present to provide training and support to the Afghan security forces and the government, the situation has not improved. The insurgents enjoy similar covert support today from regional players.\n\nAs Wednesday's devastating events proved, security, even in the most protected areas, is fragile.\n\nVulnerabilities in the security forces, or the sophistication of the insurgent groups, or both, could be to blame .\n\nBut for the public the situation represents one continuous, and lifelong, nightmare.", "It was the Washington Post that first coined the term in 1986.\n\n\"The fast-food factories: McJobs are bad for kids\" a headline announced over a report about thousands of teenagers employed in McDonald's US kitchens.\n\nThe term took hold, to such an extent the Oxford English Dictionary still defines McJobs - 30 years later - as a catch-all for \"unstimulating, low-paid jobs with few prospects, especially ones created by the expansion of the service sector\".\n\nFretting about \"McJobs\" has returned as the world of work changes rapidly.\n\nAnd whoever wins the next general election will need to deal with this most fundamental of changes, away from the world of the nine-to-five, permanent job with a single employer, and towards a world of flexibility where people and technology become more entwined.\n\nThe very wealth of our economy depends on riding this wave - a global trend - successfully.\n\nOne of the first challenges the new prime minister will face is how to react to the most significant inquiry into the new world of work at present being finalised by Matthew Taylor, the head of the Royal Society of Arts.\n\nHe was commissioned to undertake the review by Theresa May last autumn, and has said he will deliver the report to Number 10 shortly after 8 June.\n\nMuch of this new world of work is said to be negative.\n\nThe number of zero-hours contracts - which offer no guaranteed work - has grown from 143,000 in 2008 to over 900,000 now.\n\nThe term McJobs was first used in the 1980s to describe teenagers employed in McDonald's US kitchens\n\nAlongside that development comes the expansion of \"self-employment\" which has accounted for 45% of all employment growth over the same period (although it is worth remembering that more than 80% of working adults are still in more traditional, permanent employment).\n\nAre zero hours contracts simply the return of \"casualisation\", where employees are at the beck and call of profit-hungry and often unscrupulous employers?\n\nOr a nod to new, modern needs for flexibility, so that work can be balanced with the rest of life?\n\nIs hiring from the new army of the \"self-employed\" simply a way of businesses avoiding tax and pension responsibilities and bypassing the rights - such as holiday and maternity leave - guaranteed to full time workers?\n\nOr a nod to individual autonomy, where people work to their own rhythm and receive just reward for their entrepreneurial flair?\n\nOf course, it depends which businesses you speak to.\n\nEspecially if it's the business that was the original butt of the McJobs attack - McDonald's.\n\n\"We have restaurant managers that look after 100 people, they are running businesses over £2m [in revenues] and they are responsible at a young age for their fortunes and their future,\" Paul Pomroy, the chief executive of McDonald's UK, told me.\n\nMany of those managers started in the kitchens - not actually flipping burgers, it turns out, as machines fry the beef patties on both sides and there is no need to turn them over.\n\nIndeed, when I put it to one manager, Liz Stephenson, that working in McDonald's is not all \"flipping burgers\", she replies archly: \"I've never flipped a burger.\"\n\nSome fear that automation could increasingly replace workers in the future\n\nSnobbery is one word that comes to the mind of people like Liz when they consider how some view a career like hers, which started behind the counter on casual hours when she was at school and now involves being the company point person for restaurant managers who are running businesses with revenues counted in the tens of millions of pounds a year.\n\nWe have long had a rather romanticised vision of manufacturing jobs - even low-skilled ones - and have yet to fall in love with the service economy - such as retail - despite the fact it makes up the vast proportion of our economy.\n\n\"McDonald's offer training and a real career,\" Ms Stephenson (who is off to Chicago to receive a global company award for her achievements) tells me. \"I've heard all the jokes.\"\n\nWhatever the protestations of businesses which say they have worked hard improving their employment practices (McDonald's offers zero-hours workers rights to sick and holiday pay and has never demanded employees abide by \"exclusivity clauses\"), chief executives know controversies over companies such as Sports Direct and Uber can muddy all their reputations.\n\n\"Businesses take decisions that do damage,\" Mr Pomroy said, making clear he is not referring to any specific examples.\n\n\"Businesses in the modern world need to open up more, be transparent and be honest about how they treat their people and how they treat their customers.\n\n\"The internet has such a vast array of information, you can't sit back and hide anymore and not be front foot.\"\n\nHe added: \"People up and down our workforce want to be treated with respect, they want a fair chance, they want progression, they want to have fun when they are working, they want to feel part of a team.\n\nMcDonald's says it will hire more people in the UK\n\n\"I want to be able to walk into our staff rooms and look people in the eye and know we are treating them fairly - whether it is the 16-year-old school leaver or the 35-year-old mum who is using our flexible contacts to interweave with childcare.\"\n\nMr Pomroy dismisses claims that zero-hours contracts, for example, are simply a method for firms to keep people in insecure, low-paid work.\n\nAs I wrote last month, when offered the chance to move on to fixed-hours contracts, 80% of McDonald's staff affected said they preferred zero-hours.\n\nThe other big, robotic, beast in the room when it comes to the new world of work is technology.\n\nThe fear is that while we worry about zero-hours and self-employment, artificial intelligence and computers that can crunch \"big data\" in the blink of an eye are going to replace millions of us in the workplace.\n\nFor services industries like his, Mr Pomroy is not so sure.\n\n\"Since we have introduced technology - you can place your order on giant screens - it hasn't actually saved us labour in terms of reducing the number of people we need,\" he said.\n\n\"We've actually used that as a springboard to put more people out in the dining area, so giving hospitality.\n\n\"We've introduced table service. Using technology to enhance the customer experience is what is critical - not cutting the number of jobs we offer.\n\n\"So since we have been introducing technology, we've recruited a further 5,000 people - taking our total workforce to 115,000.\"\n\nThat jobs growth will continue, he insists, revealing plans to recruit 2,000 to 3,000 jobs a year.\n\n\"We have over half our restaurants open 24 hours a day, five days a week, and there is still opportunity to extend the number of restaurants that operate 24 hours a day, seven days a week.\n\n\"We are also a growing business. We have had 11 years of consecutive sales growth. I've got no plans to slow that down.\"\n\nIn 2007 McDonald's launched a campaign to have \"McJobs\" removed from the dictionary.\n\n\"I would love it to go,\" Mr Pomroy said.\n\n\"Not for me, I'm the CEO. It's more for the 115,000 people that work in our restaurants; they would love it to be removed.\"\n\nMcDonald's spawned the \"McJobs\" tag in the 1980s and insists it has moved on.\n\nMr Pomroy's problem is that other businesses could now be taking on the mantle as the new world of work throws up a very 21st century challenge.", "Last updated on .From the section European Football\n\nAtletico Madrid striker Antoine Griezmann has suggested he is staying with the club despite reported interest from some of Europe's top sides.\n\nThe France international, 26, posted a message on social media reading: \"Now more than ever! #atleti #alltogether.\"\n\nIt came just hours after a transfer ban on the club was upheld - meaning they could not replace him if he left.\n\nEarlier on Thursday it emerged Manchester United had cooled their interest in signing the player.\n\nAs Atletico cannot buy players until January, it is anticipated they will offer Griezmann a new contract.\n\nUnited were keen on the forward and were considering whether to trigger his 100m euro (£87m) escape clause.\n\nHowever, a source close to United said Griezmann was no longer a priority.\n\nIt is understood the long-term injury to Zlatan Ibrahimovic has forced the club to change their priorities, with doubts over the Swede's future beyond the expiry of his contract on 30 June.\n\nNo decision has yet been made over an extension but, given he is unlikely to play until January, the odds are against him being offered a new deal.\n\nUnited are now thought to be targeting a main striker rather than a number 10, believing they already have enough players to fill that role.\n\nAfter his side beat Ajax to win the Europa League last week, manager Jose Mourinho said executive vice-chairman Ed Woodward has had his targets \"for more than two months\".\n\nIf Griezmann is not coming to Old Trafford, who are United going to get instead?\n\nEverton's Romelu Lukaku is an obvious one, a battering ram of a striker in the Didier Drogba mould. And United have also been linked with Torino's Andrea Belotti - who has a release contract of £87m - and Real Madrid's Alvaro Morata.\n\nNo-one from the club is saying it, but by targeting a replacement for Ibrahimovic, United appear to be indicating the Swede has no future at Old Trafford once his contract expires on 30 June.", "England bowler James Anderson is \"worried\" by the injuries Ben Stokes has suffered and says the team may have to carefully manage the all-rounder.\n\nStokes, 25, has been suffering with a knee injury since returning from the Indian Premier League and was rested for Monday's loss against South Africa.\n\nHe missed last year's Test series with Sri Lanka after knee surgery, plus two Tests with Pakistan over a calf injury.\n\n\"The worry is how much Ben has played,\" Anderson told BBC Radio 5 live.\n\n\"At some point, you think something is going to break down,\" the 34-year-old said on the Tuffers and Vaughan Cricket Show.\n\n\"It is a worry when someone so young has had a problem with his knee and he's still getting that when he bowls.\n\n\"He will play with a broken leg - he loves playing, he charges round the outfield and is a fantastic player for the side. But it's possible he might need holding back.\"\n\nIt's a little bit concerning. He gives you so much, he's the lynchpin of that England side. It's crucial for him to be firing on all cylinders.\n\nDurham player Stokes showed signs of his knee problem in the first one-day international against South Africa on 24 May. And despite making a century in the second ODI to help England seal the series, he only bowled three overs before being rested.\n\nHe is set to bowl in England's Champions Trophy opener against Bangladesh at the Oval, but his workload will be determined by a fitness test on Thursday morning. He did bowl in practice on Wednesday.\n\n\"It sounds like it is an issue but they can manage him. Getting five or six overs out of him would be a bonus,\" added the Lancashire player, who also spoke about his own recovery from a groin injury suffered in May.\n\nAnderson has not played in four of England's past 10 Test matches after picking up a shoulder injury last summer, and his fitness for the first Test against South Africa from 6 July had been in doubt.\n\nBut he said: \"I'm hoping to get a game for Lancashire before the first Test. It feels good at the minute and I've had a couple of weeks of rehab.\"", "Last updated on .From the section Cricket\n\nEngland's Chris Woakes has been sent for a scan on a side strain and is a \"worry\" for the rest of the Champions Trophy, says captain Eoin Morgan.\n\nWoakes bowled two overs in the eight-wicket one-day-international win over Bangladesh before leaving the field.\n\nMorgan said: \"He'll have a scan tonight [Thursday] and we'll see what it comes up with. It doesn't feel right.\"\n\nThe captain added on TMS that man of the match Joe Root \"showed his class, even [though he picked] up a niggle\".\n\nRoot compiled a career-best ODI score of 133 not out at better than a run a ball, despite sustaining a calf strain.\n\nMorgan, who scored an unbeaten 75 to help see his side home, described Root as \"the glue in our side\".\n\n\"He has scored a lot of runs in the last couple of years and continues to do it,\" the captain continued.\n\n\"He is not slow. He is batting at pace. He has been working on his power hitting and today it worked.\"\n\nIf Woakes was to be ruled out, England can still call up a replacement, with Middlesex pair Steven Finn or Toby Roland-Jones likely replacements.\n\nBen Stokes, who is recovering from a knee injury, bowled seven overs on Thursday and Morgan says the all-rounder came through it well.\n\n\"It was a stretch for him but he hasn't felt his knee all day,\" said Morgan.\n\nOpener Jason Roy, under pressure coming into this tournament, received a vote of confidence from his skipper despite falling for just one.\n\nRoy averages 35 at over a run a ball in one-day internationals, but since the start of May he has reached double figures just once in six innings and was dismissed flicking a delivery to backward square leg against Bangladesh.\n\n\"I thought Jason Roy was terribly unlucky today. Those things happen when you can't seem to score runs but we back him - he's been brilliant for us,\" Morgan said.", "Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger should sell \"overindulged\" star players Alexis Sanchez and Mesut Ozil after agreeing to extend his stay at the club, says ex-defender Martin Keown.\n\nThe Frenchman has signed a two-year deal and says his side can challenge for the Premier League title next term.\n\nForward Sanchez and midfielder Ozil are entering the final year of their deals.\n\n\"If they have to say cheerio to those two players, then that is the right decision,\" Keown told BBC Radio 5 live.\n• None Hear more from Keown speaking to BBC Radio 5 live\n\nChile striker Sanchez scored 24 goals and provided 10 assists for the Gunners last season while Germany player Ozil netted eight goals and laid on nine assists. Wenger's side finished fifth in the league, missing out on Champions League football for the first time in 20 years.\n\nThe north London club went out of this year's competition at the last-16 stage following a 10-2 aggregate defeat by Bayern Munich.\n\nSanchez has reportedly been offered a new £300,000-a-week contract, while Ozil has reportedly refused to sign a £250,000-a-week deal.\n\n\"They have been overindulged at times this season and they let Arsenal down in the period when they lost twice to Bayern Munich, conceding 10 goals. That is the level of the problem,\" said Keown, who played more than 300 games for Arsenal.\n\n\"The manager needs to make some really tough decisions now. Sanchez's contract needs to get 100% secured. Is that going to happen? Will Ozil leave?\n\n\"I am sure both players want to go elsewhere because they want to win the Champions League, win the Premier League and maybe they do not feel it can be done at Arsenal. The club is bigger than two individuals.\"\n• None Can Arsene write a new chapter in Arsenal's history?\n\n'I do not want it to all fall apart in the next two years'\n\nWenger has said his side are \"two players\" off challenging for the title, and the club are expected to spend at least £100m on new players in the upcoming transfer window - which opens on 1 July - having also spent about that figure last summer.\n\nEx-captain Tony Adams, who played more than 500 games in a one-club career at Arsenal, feels the current group of players are not good enough to challenge for major honours.\n\n\"Maybe he thinks they can win the league in the next two years or get back into the Champions League. Looking at this squad, I don't think they can,\" Adams told BBC Wiltshire.\n\n\"But I can understand the frustration of the fans that want a league title and want to be competitive.\n\n\"We need to start being competitive and seen as number one by number one players instead of number four players on the pecking list.\"\n\nRussian billionaire Alisher Usmanov owns a 30% stake in the club and had a £1bn bid to wrest control from majority shareholder Stan Kroenke rejected.\n\nHe issued a statement on Wednesday which called on the board to support Wenger.\n\n\"He has a great opportunity to deliver the success that the fans deserve and the legacy that his long contribution merits. However, without the right support there remains a real risk that his legacy will be tarnished,\" he added.\n\nAdams added he does not want Wenger's job to \"end in tears\".\n\n\"I just do not want it to all fall apart in the next two years and Arsene is seen as a villain, a bad man for Arsenal. that would be wrong. He has been so brilliant for the club,\" he said.\n\n'Fans must now unite behind Wenger'\n\nWenger joined the club in 1996 and has won three league titles - the last in their unbeaten season of 2003-04 - and seven FA Cup titles - a record for any manager.\n\nBut last season saw regular protests from some supporters, who called for him to end his long tenure at the club.\n\nArsenal Supporters' Trust spokesperson Tim Payton told BBC Sport that fans have \"a right to a voice\". Arsenal Fan TV presenter Robbie Lyle says the atmosphere at Emirates Stadium could become \"toxic\" again next season if they lose back-to-back games.\n\nKeown added: \"Whether the fans want this decision or not, they have to get behind the manger. You cannot have a situation like last season, where there was a really difficult environment for the players to go in to.\n\n\"Coming off the bus there were people hurling abuse, all the 'Wenger Out' placards. It is time now they got behind the manager for the next two years and if that is going to be the send-off, then that is what he deserves.\"", "The concert, which features Justin Bieber and Grande, will be broadcast on BBC One\n\nA benefit concert in aid of the victims of the Manchester bombing is being organised for Sunday, but how much work goes into planning an event in so little time?\n\n\"To be honest, it's possibly the hardest task I've ever had to undertake,\" says Melvin Benn in an interview with the BBC about the One Love Manchester concert he is co-producing.\n\nBenn, boss of Live Nation subsidiary Festival Republic, is the man behind some of the UK's biggest music festivals, including Latitude, Reading and Leeds, Wireless and Download.\n\n\"We started the conversations on Friday evening, here we are on Wednesday and the concert is on Sunday. It's eight-and-a-half days to put it together. It's an incredible amount of work,\" he says.\n\nOne Love takes place at the Emirates Old Trafford in Manchester on Sunday, and will feature in its line-up Justin Bieber, Coldplay, Katy Perry, Miley Cyrus, Pharrell Williams, Usher, Take That and Niall Horan.\n\nAriana Grande will also perform for the first time since last Monday, when 22 people were killed and 116 injured in a suicide bombing after a concert she played a concert at Manchester Arena.\n\nColdplay will also perform at the concert this Sunday\n\nFree tickets are being offered to those who attended the original gig, with proceeds from sales to the general public raising money for Red Cross's Manchester Emergency Fund.\n\n\"Clearly there are some families suffering bereavement or who have family members in hospital, and we're trying to do as much as we can to look after them as a priority, as well as all the rest of the fans that came,\" Benn says.\n\n\"We felt offering free tickets to everybody that was there on that night was the minimum we could do. The rest of the people that are coming will be the people who will be providing the money for the fundraising, but for those fans that were there we felt this was a good way of honouring those that lost their lives.\"\n\nThe gig will naturally require a great deal of logistical organisation, but Benn says \"everybody is pulling together\".\n\nMiley Cyrus will join Katy Perry and The Black Eyed Peas at Sunday's concert\n\n\"Greater Manchester Police, Trafford Borough Council, Manchester City Council, Transport for Greater Manchester, all pulling in the same direction to make this work, as well as the music industry and all the pop stars, it's incredible really,\" he says.\n\n\"The way Manchester has responded [to the attack] has been phenomenal, and I think that's been part of the inspiration for Ariana, to want to come back so quickly.\"\n\nBenn added that Grande was \"traumatised, absolutely traumatised immediately after the gig, in complete shock, but she knew she had to do something\".\n\nFollow us on Facebook, on Twitter @BBCNewsEnts, or on Instagram at bbcnewsents. If you have a story suggestion email entertainment.news@bbc.co.uk.", "Last updated on .From the section Rugby Union\n\nCoverage: Live text commentary on every match on the BBC Sport website and mobile app.\n\nBritish and Irish Lions head coach Warren Gatland says he will not repeat Graham Henry's 2001 mistake by splitting the squad early in the tour.\n\nGatland says Henry indicated to his players at the outset of the trip of Australia who would be selected for the Test matches.\n\nHe says that meant his compatriot \"lost half the team on day one\".\n\n\"The players knew straight away what was the Test side and who was making up the numbers,\" said the New Zealander.\n• None Radio 5 live special: How NOT to win a series (2005)\n• None All Blacks more complete than in 2005 - Hansen\n• None 'O'Driscoll thought spear tackle was going to kill him'\n\nGatland, who on Wednesday named his side to face the Provincial Barbarians in the tour opener on Saturday, says each of his 41-man squad is in contention to face the All Blacks.\n\n\"Keeping harmony in the squad is paramount,\" he said. \"It's about giving everyone an opportunity.\n\n\"It's important these guys feel like they are putting themselves in the shop window and have a chance to prove themselves, and with a little bit of luck are in contention for the Tests.\n\nOwen Farrell and Johnny Sexton appear to be in competition for the fly-half spot after Gatland reiterated he sees the Englishman as a \"world-class 10\", rather than a centre.\n\nIrishman Sexton starts on Saturday, with Farrell on the bench.\n\n\"The players are pretty aware about the competition in that position,\" Gatland said. \"Johnny gets a start on Saturday, and the other two [Farrell and Dan Biggar] will get a start in the next two games.\"\n\nGatland's son Bryn will start for the Provincial Barbarians at fly-half.\n\n\"I spoke to Bryn last night and he's enjoying the week,\" Gatland Sr said. \"We'll catch up tomorrow, and he'll expect to have to make a few tackles on the weekend.\n\n\"We haven't spoken too much about the game but he's excited about the opportunity.\"\n\nA round-up of the rest of the news from the tour\n\nLions boss Gatland was put on the spot in Thursday's news conference by a local reporter, who quoted a survey that found 78% of Kiwis couldn't name a single player from the Lions squad.\n\n\"It doesn't surprise me,\" was Gatland's retort. \"Our job is to come here, play some good rugby and earn respect. If we reduce that number down to 77% that will be a good start….\"\n\nTargeting the opposition captain is a well-worn tactic before big sporting series - think Steve Waugh and the Australian cricket team - but the New Zealand media seem to have been won over by the \"calm, composed, and eloquent\" Sam Warburton.\n\nThe Welshman starts and captains Saturday's tour opener as he tries to do what no other man has done in history, and lead the Lions to back-to-back series victories.\n\nFor the first time, provincial teams the Blues, Crusaders and Chiefs will join the Maori and the All Blacks in conducting their versions of the Haka before matches.\n\nUnperturbed, Gatland has suggested the Haka is in danger of losing its mystique, and that it will soon become routine for his players: \"The more times you face up to it, you don't mind it, it's a motivational thing, it's not intimidating.\n\n\"And I'm pleased my players will face it more than once. You become familiar with it. It becomes part of regular preparation for a game.\"", "Coverage: Listen to live radio commentary and follow text coverage of selected matches on BBC Radio 5 live sports extra and online.\n\nAndre Agassi has attracted as many camera lenses as Novak Djokovic in the opening days of this year's French Open, but the question remains whether this is a fleeting glimpse or the long-term return of one of the game's greats.\n\nThe 47-year-old Las Vegan began working with Djokovic via phone calls to Madrid and Rome last month, and took up coaching duties in person last week in Paris.\n\nThere is no clear idea yet of how long the relationship will last.\n\n\"That's a question for him, to be honest,\" was all Djokovic would say on the subject before the tournament.\n\nWhat we do know is that Agassi is scheduled to leave Paris at the end of the first week to carry out prior engagements, and there is no clue yet as to when, or if, he will be back in Team Djokovic.\n\n\"I will be very surprised if this relationship is going over the US Open,\" said Fabrice Santoro, a former rival of Agassi now commentating at Roland Garros.\n\n\"I think it's going to be a very short relation between Andre and Novak,\" the Frenchman told BBC Radio 5 live.\n\n\"Andre Agassi knows the game very well, he loves the game, he likes Novak, but it's not his life at the moment.\n\n\"He has his own life at home with his foundation, with his family, and I'm not sure he's happy to spend much time in the locker room.\"\n• None Agassi expects to be coaching Djokovic at Wimbledon\n\nIt was in Paris 12 months ago that Djokovic finally cemented his place among the very best by completing the career Grand Slam, and holding all four major titles at once - something that has eluded Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal.\n\nBut with 12 Grand Slam titles to his name and seemingly set to dominate for the foreseeable future, the Serb's form deserted him.\n\n\"I think Novak needs to be back as a warrior, like he was a few months ago,\" said Santoro.\n\n\"It's not like 10 years ago - when he won the French Open last year he was not giving one free point to the opponent, he was sliding all over Paris to win a point. You could see in his eyes how big his ambition was. He's lost that.\"\n\n\"Private issues\" contributed to Djokovic's early exit at Wimbledon, he later revealed, while a wrist injury curbed hopes of a quick return to form.\n\nBut by his own remarkable standards, the fact that he has since lost his grip on three of those Slams and seen the number one ranking go to Andy Murray is little short of a disaster.\n\n\"Shock therapy\" was what he felt necessary, and it came with the surprise announcement late last year that he was parting ways not only with 'super coach' Boris Becker after three years, but his entire team, including long-time coach and confidante Marian Vajda.\n\n\"All these beautiful memories we shared with each other on and off the court cannot be forgotten just like that,\" said Djokovic. \"We are still very close.\"\n\nDjokovic won six Grand Slam titles over three years with Becker, and all 12 since starting work with Vajda in 2006.\n\nThe Serb's employment of Becker in 2013 was seen by many as a response to the success Andy Murray had after taking on another legend of the past in Ivan Lendl.\n\nBut even in his current, second coaching spell, Lendl is likely to spend up to 18 weeks of the year working with Murray, with Jamie Delgado alongside the Scot throughout the season.\n\n\"I think Andre Agassi's help could be enough if Marian Vajda was still there, but he's not,\" Santoro said of the fledgling Djokovic arrangement.\n\n\"So Novak needs someone to replace Vajda first, and then find a super coach like Andre.\n\n\"I know that if Andy Murray was travelling only a few weeks a year with Ivan Lendl, but without Jamie Delgado, he would be in trouble. This is the situation now with Novak.\"\n\nMurray himself was a huge Agassi fan growing up and once discussed working with the American, but it never came to a formal offer.\n\n\"He was always really, really nice to me, which is great,\" said Murray.\n\n\"I'm sure he'll help Novak as well. I'm not sure exactly what their deal is or the situation is, but having someone with that much experience around can only help.\"\n\nDjokovic is currently just working with his brother, Marko, a former professional but with no coaching credentials, and Pepe Imaz, a former world number 146 who now runs a tennis academy that preaches a philosophy of love, peace and meditation.\n\n\"I'm not convinced that this person helps Novak Djokovic a lot,\" said Santoro. \"Maybe I'm wrong, maybe I'm right. On court, for sure not.\"\n\nFor all the scrutiny that his relationship with Imaz has come under, the lack of a settled fitness trainer and physio is incongruous for a player who wrote a book on the value of physical and mental well-being.\n\n\"I have certain people and methods that I have been trying out lately,\" said Djokovic on Monday. \"I am working on something, for sure, but still not ready to be shared.\"\n\nSo what can Agassi bring that will rejuvenate and enhance the Djokovic game?\n\nDjokovic turned 30 a few weeks ago, and Agassi won two of his eight Grand Slam titles in his 30s.\n\nHe also returned from the depths of 141 in the world in 1997 to regain the number one spot and complete the career Grand Slam in 1999 - a mountainous challenge compared to Djokovic's relatively minor slide.\n\nTechnical changes are rarely the major issue when elite players call upon greats of the past, and Djokovic is sure to look more for emotional support from Agassi, with neither man averse to a bout of introspection.\n\n\"On the first day we had two practice sessions, and then we had a very, very long conversation in the evening,\" the Serb said of their first day together in Paris.\n\nBecker, the man who used to provide that support, gave Agassi a very public welcome to the role in the stands of Philippe Chatrier Court during Djokovic's opening match at the French Open.\n\n\"I think it's an excellent choice,\" Becker told the BBC. \"Andre's personality fits with Novak's.\n\n\"Ideally you don't want to start a new relationship at a Grand Slam because you have to get to know each other but that was their decision, so I wish them luck.\n\n\"Ideally you have to spend a lot of time together - even in smaller tournaments to really get to know each other and trust each other - but it is what it is and hopefully successful.\"", "Andrea was around 14 years old, flipping through her school friend's photo album when something strange caught her eye.\n\nShe was at a US boarding school in the early 1990s and, in the days before mobile phones, everyone kept their hard copy keepsakes with them. \"There were all these pictures of her family in rural Michigan,\" she recalled. \"Baby photos of her and her siblings…\"\n\nBut then among all the standard-issue images, something a little different caught her eye. There was her friend, Sarah, sitting with someone else's family: the family of General Manuel Noriega, the former Panamanian leader who died on Tuesday.\n\nAndrea recognised him instantly. In the 1980s, Noriega was public enemy number one in the US, as the country battled for continuing control of the Panama Canal. Coming across this photo back then was the equivalent of finding decades-old photos of a school pal cosying up with Osama Bin Laden.\n\n\"Pineapple face,\" said Andrea Morningstar (née Maio). That was the nickname detractors had given him, and which became known even to school children.\n\nAndrea's friend was Sarah York, a girl whose childhood had taken an unusual turn around four years earlier, when she wrote a letter, on a whim, to a man she saw on the TV news.\n\nWhile her parents were watching a special edition of the current affairs show 60 Minutes discussing Noriega's drug-trafficking links, 10-year-old Sarah happened to observe that he had a nice hat.\n\nHer dad collected hats. Perhaps if she wrote to this man on the TV, he would send them a hat.\n\nSo she did. She sent short letter on notepaper with a picture of a partridge on it.\n\nTo the family's surprise, a few weeks later, an envelope arrived in their mailbox, with a Panamanian flag stamped on the front. It was not hat-shaped, but it was from General Noriega. It was officially headed and signed. And, not only that, he also asked her to keep up the correspondence.\n\nHe wrote: \"Dear Sarah, I feel honored by your letter. I appreciate your message of faith and friendship. I hope you continue sending your message and tell me about yourself and your city. With friendship and appreciation, General Manuel Antonio Noriega.\"\n\nThey did so for a number of months. He sent books about Central America; she told him about her school grades. He even sent the much-wanted hat. Then, in the weirdest twist of all, he sent an invitation for her and her family to visit Panama City, all expenses paid.\n\nThe visit went ahead in 1988, making the international press - from The New York Times to the Guardian - while attracting plenty of criticism. People accused the family of lacking patriotism, and supporting a brutal regime. Even Sarah's brother - an avid reader of the news - was angry, at least at first.\n\nMeanwhile, Noriega was accused of exploiting a child and using her in political games.\n\nAfter her 15 minutes of fame faded, Sarah chalked the visit up as a weird life experience and, showing signs of musical talent, pursued an education in the arts, where she met Andrea during a year at boarding school.\n\nShe was not keen to share the story when Andrea happened upon the photos. \"I had to ask and she reluctantly told me,\" said Andrea. \"I thought it was remarkable, and hilarious.\"\n\nSarah York (L) and Andrea Claire Morningstar pictured together last year; they remain good friends\n\nTen years later, Andrea had finished film school and was keen to get involved with a radio show called This American Life, which is famed for its storytelling and is popular globally in podcast form.\n\n\"I had a friend from college who was a producer there, and he would send me their production themes lists,\" she said. When she saw an upcoming show called Love Your Enemies, she knew she had the perfect tale.\n\nSarah agreed to take part only if her friend was the interviewer. So the producers agreed to take a punt on Andrea, then a 20-something with no radio experience.\n\nThe My Pen Pal episode, which aired in 2003, made compelling listening. It tackled the good guy/bad guy narrative of the press and politics; it explored childhood innocence and curiosity; it looked at propaganda and multiple realities.\n\nRadio host Ira Glass presented the My Pen Pal episode of This American Life\n\n\"I knew that I was going to get plenty of the bad guy story, so why not get the story from the bad guy, you know?\" said Sarah, during the interview. \"But I don't know that I ever said: 'I'm going to be the judge of this'. I think it was more just, let's see what happens. Or let's see what we can find out.\"\n\nThe radio show recalled the friendship bracelet she made for Noriega in camouflage colours. Her memories of touching down in the Panamanian capital: \"Flashbulbs were going off everywhere, and everyone was, like, saying my name.\"\n\nThe show's host, Ira Glass, told the BBC he still remembers that show and it remains one of his favourite episodes. \"When I heard that Manuel Noriega died, the first thing I thought of was this episode from 2003, that revealed a side of him that was personal and surprising. His motives in starting a correspondence with a 10-year-old American were obviously self-serving. But the way the whole thing plays out show a private side of the man that was fascinating for me and I'm guessing for anyone who saw him in the news back in the 1980s.\"\n\nNow living in Minnesota, Sarah still performs as a musician and has two children, as well as a lifelong interest in Panama. But she would still rather not talk about her former pen pal publicly.\n\nA yearbook photo with Sarah (third left) and Andrea (far right)\n\n\"I think it is complicated,\" said Andrea, now an artist and filmmaker. \"The perceived reality is so different from her experiences. It's taxing, to be defined by it, although she doesn't mind people knowing.\"\n\nAndrea said her friend has always been a intriguing character, motivated by curiosity. At university she taught herself to swim after checking out some swimming books from the library. After graduating, she moved to northern Wisconsin and went off-grid for a few years, teaching herself about indigenous herbal remedies.\n\nAs for Noriega, he was overthrown in a 1989 US invasion, and later jailed in the US on drugs and money laundering charges.\n\nHe spent the rest of his life in custody, latterly in Panama for murder, corruption and embezzlement. He died earlier this week, two months after brain surgery.", "Winnie at a red carpet film event before her life changed\n\nAt the age of 29, Winnie Li was living in London and enjoying a successful career as a film producer, working with film stars like Daniel Craig.\n\nShe had been to the Oscars where a film she had helped to produce had been nominated.\n\nBut in 2008, this all came to a halt. One Saturday afternoon, while hiking in Northern Ireland, she was raped.\n\nShe says it is something she will never forget and the emotional impact stays with her.\n\nShe told the BBC: \"It was awful. It went from one day, being the person I'd always been, to the next - I felt like I was gutted like a fish, unable to feel any joy or hope.\n\n\"My insides were torn out. I was a shell of the person I'd been before.\"\n\nHer perpetrator - a 15-year-old stranger to whom she had been giving directions - was caught.\n\nWinnie then lived in a constant state of anxiety as she waited for the trial.\n\nShe told the BBC: \"I wasn't feeling emotions. I was just in shock for months.\"\n\nWinnie suffered severe depression, anxiety and post-traumatic stress disorder. She was too scared to go out and had frequent panic attacks.\n\nShe said: \"I went from being a well-adjusted 29-year-old to feeling like I couldn't function anymore.\"\n\n\"All my other friends were continuing on with their careers, personal lives, getting married and having kids.\n\n\"And I just wasn't there - I was on a completely different trajectory.\"\n\nLast year, she found herself single, aged 37.\n\nShe said: \"I was at that age where people warn you about your fertility dropping off and I wasn't anywhere further on the path to being a mother.\"\n\nIt was this realisation that led her to the decision to freeze her eggs.\n\nShe had two rounds of egg freezing. And though doctors managed to harvest some viable eggs, there were not enough for her to consider them a viable insurance plan.\n\nShe said: \"A lot of women describe freezing eggs as an empowering thing. In some ways it's not. I spent thousands of pounds.\"\n\nShe says she cannot afford a third round.\n\nWinnie added: \"It's not necessarily given me hope but it's given me a sense of an option to see if those eggs can become a child.\"\n\n\"I'll always know I have at least done the best I could in this situation.\"\n\nWinnie has written a novel, Dark Chapter, inspired by her experience of being raped and the journey to recovery.\n\nShe is also working on a doctorate at the London School of Economics, exploring how social media is allowing rape survivors to tell their stories.\n\n\"I learn every day from other women how difficult it is for them to put their lives back together.\n\n\"But I'm hoping by sharing these stories, we can understand how we can start to heal from this kind of trauma.\"", "Bangladesh's Imrul Kayes is out after England's Mark Wood makes a brilliant diving catch during the opening match of the Champions Trophy at The Oval.\n\nAvailable to UK users only.", "The eight-wicket win against Bangladesh on Thursday was an excellent way for England to begin the Champions Trophy.\n\nTo chase 306 against any side, even in the ideal batting conditions of The Oval, is a challenge. You have to work hard to get those runs.\n\nIn the context of the tournament, that sort of game is much more beneficial to England than if they rolled Bangladesh for 120 then chased them down in 20 overs.\n\nJoe Root made a wonderful century, Alex Hales was in the runs, Eoin Morgan continued his good form and Liam Plunkett was amongst the wickets. In that sense, it was perfect.\n\nHowever, it was marred by the injury to Chris Woakes, who bowled only two overs before having to leave the field with an injury to his left side.\n• None Woakes to have scan on side strain\n• None Vaughan on why England can win Champions Trophy\n\nThe Warwickshire man had a scan on Thursday evening, with the results probably known to us by Friday morning. If it turns out to be a side strain, it could be serious.\n\nAs an old fast bowler, I can tell you that having a proper side strain is like having a red hot poker jammed between your ribs. If Woakes has one of those, he won't play again in the tournament.\n\nIn fairness, that did not look to be the case with Woakes. It seemed that he felt something and knew he had to stop - which was the right thing to do.\n\nBut side injuries are tricky. It's not just a case of strapping them up and saying \"on you go\". England will have to be very careful and give some serious consideration to ruling him out.\n\nIt's very anxious for Morgan's men, because Woakes is their highest-placed bowler in the International Cricket Council's one-day international rankings.\n\nFor a time, it also looked like Root's fitness could be a concern. It seemed like he rolled his ankle while batting and spent most of the second half of his innings hobbling around.\n\nHowever, after the match he said he thought it was cramp in his calf, so that is much less of a worry.\n\nAll of this slightly shifted the focus away from Ben Stokes, whose knee problem dominated the pre-match build-up.\n\nAs promised, Stokes turned up early for a fitness test and was deemed healthy enough to play his part with the ball.\n\nStill, even with Woakes off the field, Stokes only bowled seven overs. That tells us that England are still protecting him. That is sensible and he will benefit from more rest before the game against New Zealand on Tuesday.\n\nOn top of the injury concerns, England will be hoping that Jason Roy gets a score at the top of the order sooner rather than later.\n\nBefore this game, Roy was heavily backed by Morgan after a poor sequence where he had not passed 20 in his previous six ODI innings.\n\nHere, he made only one from eight deliveries, but again received the support of his captain.\n\nNow, it is quite right for Morgan to back his man, but I was surprised by the shot Roy played - a scoop off the pace bowler Mashrafe Mortaza to be caught at short fine leg.\n\nAny batsman can edge a good ball, or even have a rush of blood and try to whack one, but those split-second decisions are made in the heat of the moment.\n\nIn this case, Roy made the choice to premeditate a stroke, probably as the bowler was walking back to his mark.\n\nInstead of sticking to what he is good at, playing the ball down the ground, Roy simply did not give himself the chance of scoring runs on his home ground.\n\nIt just goes to show that poor form does not only mess with the way a batsman hits the ball, but also the decisions that are made.\n\nEngland now move on to games against New Zealand and Australia, the two finalists from the 2015 World Cup, knowing that one win is likely to be enough for a place in the semi-finals.\n\nTheir confidence will be high, not least because they have got the hiccup of the final game against South Africa out of their system.\n\nThey could do without the injuries and the shot Roy played, but other than that they got the job done.", "It's one of the policies included in the Green Guarantee. The first thing to say is that it's not quite as radical as it sounds - the maximum number of hours worked a week would be 35, which is the same as has applied in France since 2000, although the exceptions in the French system mean that their average number of hours worked per week is actually a bit above 35, according to the OECD.\n\nAlso, we already have a number of four-day weeks each year thanks to bank holidays.\n\nExplaining the policy on the BBC's Andrew Marr Show last month, Green Party co-leader Caroline Lucas said: \"I think there's a lot of evidence that suggests that when people are exhausted their productivity goes down.\n\n\"People are working ever more hours, getting ever more stressed, getting ever more ill-health - mental health problems as well.\"\n\nThe manifesto also said that the 35-hour week would be phased in. In the UK, the current limit is 48 hours a week, although you can opt out of it and various jobs are excluded.\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Should we work a four day week?\n\nThe average number of paid hours worked by full-time employees in the UK in 2016 was 39.2.\n\nWhile it is relatively straightforward to impose a maximum number of hours worked in the week for employees, it is harder to do so for the self-employed and harder still to legislate to force people to work a four-day week, especially because not everybody could take the same days off and there would presumably need to be some flexibility about when the hours were worked.\n\nThe idea is that working fewer hours would boost productivity, which is the value created by each hour worked.\n\nThe UK has comparatively low productivity. The UK's national income per hour worked is 22.7% below that of France, which means that if we could be as productive as the French then we could work a four-day week and not lose much output.\n\nThere are various suggestions in the parties' manifestos on what to do about UK productivity.\n\nTrying to boost productivity by reducing hours worked would not be without its costs. France has higher unemployment than the UK. It is likely that its more restrictive labour laws have meant that companies have invested more in machinery to reduce the number of people they need.\n\nAlso, a working paper from the International Monetary Fund suggested that the 35-hour week in France had reduced employment and not made workers any happier.\n\nBut it's not just about maintaining economic growth - part of the idea of the four-day week is that to create a more sustainable economy we need to stop being obsessed by growth and start thinking about having a lower impact on the environment.\n\nThe left of centre think tank, the New Economics Foundation, did some work on the idea of a more radical 21-hour working week.\n\nIt said that in addition to reducing environmental impact, a 21-hour week would distribute work more evenly across the population, reducing both the problems of over-work and unemployment, as well as evening up the amount of unpaid work done by men and women.\n\nIt identified potential problems with the introduction of such a system such as increased poverty by reducing the number of hours worked by low-paid workers and increased unemployment.\n\nSome businesses would also be likely to resent the extra regulation. The Green Party maintains that working fewer hours would reduce stress and ill-health.\n• None Reality Check: What do manifestos say about productivity?\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "The Islamic State militant group (IS) is fighting on many fronts against those seeking to defeat it. One of those fronts is a digital one.\n\nIts use of social media has been thrown into the spotlight again after it used messaging app Telegram to claim responsibility for Saturday night's terror attack in London.\n\nIS puts media warfare on a par with its battle on the ground and often glorifies \"media martyrs\" - people who are killed while creating videos and other digital content for the group.\n\nLike many other such groups, IS has been an enthusiastic user of social media and the web, broadcasting propaganda about its successes and using it as a recruitment tool.\n\nAlthough a long-time user of social media, IS activities took a significant turn in September 2015 when the group's official media outlets took to Telegram. The move to the encrypted messaging service came after a long-running conflict with Twitter, which regularly shut down IS accounts, and some experimentation with less well-known platforms from which it was also expelled.\n\nThe timing was significant because that was the moment when Telegram set up the \"channel\" feature, letting users broadcast to an unlimited number of other users - a tool that many online jihadists were quick to exploit.\n\nThe move to Telegram did not go unnoticed and IS went underground in August 2016 after its official accounts were repeatedly suspended.\n\nBut IS media operatives set up lots of separate channels that simply repeated or mirrored what appeared on the official channel.\n\nThese channels simultaneously stream material produced by IS's central media operation, including its self-styled news agency Amaq, and are described as being dedicated to distributing official IS news.\n\nThe mirror channels, called the Nashir News Agency, have also regularly been suspended.\n\nTo circumvent this, their administrators use a stealthy approach in which they set up a user or channel and allow it to build up a substantial following before suddenly switching it to the easily recognisable IS mirror brand.\n\nThe channels continuously promote new join-up links for their proliferating replica versions, calling on IS supporters to distribute them further.\n\nSome channels, whose promotion on popular social media platforms is prohibited, are designed to maintain a lower profile to avoid suspension.\n\nIS supporters enjoy relative freedom to post material on Telegram\n\nThis enables them to attract a significant number of followers but the channels are usually removed before this exceeds 1,000.\n\nSuch numbers suffice to get IS's message out for distribution by online supporters.\n\nProminent pro-IS figures reliably stream the group's propaganda alongside other content. But IS's strong media branding renders the group's material easily recognisable among other fare.\n\nThis was seen on Sunday, when the IS news outlet Amaq said on Telegram that \"a security unit of Islamic State fighters carried out the London attacks of yesterday\".\n\nTelegram does not allow comprehensive searches of public content, which means that the number of pro-jihad users cannot be accurately gauged.\n\nNashir agency boasted that it had 100 replica channels on Telegram\n\nIn mid-April, the Nashir agency published a poster congratulating itself on setting up 100 mirror accounts - and there are now said to be more than 130.\n\nThis was shortly followed by a campaign to celebrate 12 months of Nashir agency's operation. As part of the campaign, the outlet called for admirers and readers to send in articles and images praising its work, which they did in large numbers.\n\nThese promotional campaigns appeared to be an effort to buoy morale among IS supporters who enjoy relative freedom to post material on Telegram.\n\nThe BBC has asked Telegram to comment on IS-related activity on its service but has not received a reply.\n\nTelegram has advertised its daily efforts to take down pro-IS channels since December last year.\n\nNashir agency recently trumpeted the anniversary of its online presence\n\nIn another recent move, Nashir agency has switched from just being a mouthpiece for IS to urging its followers on Telegram to spread content via Twitter and Facebook.\n\nIt has advertised its own accounts on those platforms, which have repeatedly been suspended. It has also launched accounts on Instagram and set up English-language feeds for the first time.\n\nFive people were killed in the Westminster attack\n\nThe outlet now posts IS material in Arabic and English translation via its main feeds - the latest step of an initiative to post in English that began after the Westminster attack on 22 March.\n\nThese moves by Nashir agency to expand its reach have followed criticism by IS supporters on Telegram that pro-IS channels were preaching to the converted and should step up their efforts on other platforms.\n\nIS has sought to cultivate the commitment of virtual foot-soldiers by highlighting their importance in its war.\n\nIS supporters are encouraged to spread the group's propaganda on popular social media platforms\n\nCharlie Winter of the International Centre for the Study of Radicalisation and Political Violence (ICSR) acknowledges the success IS has had with Telegram.\n\nHe says the messaging service's action against pro-IS channels \"seems to be very haphazard\".\n\nHome Secretary Amber Rudd has also named Telegram among tech firms she wants to be tougher on pro-jihad users.\n\nMr Winter adds that IS's efforts to expose unsuspecting audiences to its propaganda on other, more popular platforms now meet with much less success.\n\nIS might regularly post content specifically designed for Twitter, but this attempt at \"amplification\" no longer goes well, he says.\n\nThe group is still most successful on Telegram but its reliance on it could come at a cost, as supporters flock to the app instead of pushing the IS message to audiences elsewhere.\n\nBBC Monitoring reports and analyses news from TV, radio, web and print media around the world. You can follow BBC Monitoring on Twitter and Facebook.", "Four international investment groups have called on investors to quit the tobacco industry.\n\nAxa, Calpers, Scor and AMP Capital have already sold or are selling their tobacco investments.\n\nThe companies launched their appeal on the annual World No Tobacco Day (WNTD).\n\nAlong with 50 other firms with investments totalling $3.8tn, they have pledged \"to openly support the tobacco control measures being taken by governments around the world\".\n\nThe statement reads: \"We in the investment community are becoming increasingly aware of the important role we can play in helping to address the health and societal impacts of tobacco.\n\n\"We strive within our own scope of action to support the ambition of the World Health Organisation (WHO) in line with our commitment to the positive role finance can play in sustainable development more broadly.\"\n\nLast year, when Axa announced it was selling its tobacco investments, its chief executive Thomas Buberl told the BBC: \"The business case is positive. It makes no sense for us to continue our investments within the tobacco industry. The human cost of tobacco is tragic - its economic cost is huge.\"\n\nWNTD is one of eight official global public health campaigns marked by the WHO.\n\nIts Tobacco Fact Sheet explains: \"Tobacco kills more than seven million people each year. More than six million of those deaths are the result of direct tobacco use, while around 890,000 are the result of non-smokers being exposed to second-hand smoke.\n\n\"Nearly 80% of the world's more than one billion smokers live in low and middle-income countries.\"\n\nIn the developing world, tobacco markets are still growing, largely through ignorance of the dangers. A 2009 survey in China revealed that only 38% of smokers knew that smoking caused coronary heart disease and only 27% knew that it caused strokes.\n\nWNTD is the only one of the WHO's health campaigns that pits itself against a specific industry.\n\nThe tobacco business remains a formidable adversary. It has been one of the best investments of the last decade, indeed possibly of the post-Second World War era.\n\nThe shares in companies listed in the Bloomberg tobacco producers index have risen 351% since 2009, compared with just over 101% for the MSCI global index.\n\nA 2009 survey in China showed only 38% of smokers knew that smoking causes coronary heart disease\n\nDespite the growing aversion of the big investors, many believe there is more growth to come.\n\nDan Caplinger, of the financial services company The Motley Fool, wrote in January: \"As a new year begins, there are reasons to believe that 2017 could be a great year to invest in tobacco stocks.\"\n\nHe goes on to explain that mergers and a move into non-traditional tobacco products, such as e-cigarettes and \"heat-not-burn\" tobacco products, could boost share prices further.\n\nThe success of the industry is all the more remarkable, bearing in mind the forces ranged against Big Tobacco.\n\nThese include multinational agencies, lobby groups, governments and the global medical establishment, as well as the stark fact, as formulated by the WHO, that \"tobacco kills up to half of its users\".\n\nThe regulations are getting tighter, specifically in the way companies can advertise tobacco products. Even so, only 29 countries, representing just 12% of the world's population, have completely banned all forms of tobacco advertising, promotion and sponsorship.\n\nFor instance, the European Union's Tobacco Products Directive forced tobacco companies to cover 65% of their packets with health warnings and clamped down on e-cigarette advertising.\n\nThe tobacco companies have fought back, complaining that they are being unlawfully deprived of the right to display their brands.\n\nBut last month, they lost a High Court challenge in the UK against new plain packaging rules. These mean all cigarette packets must now look the same, with the same green colour, font, size, case and alignment of text on boxes.\n\nThe move by investors against tobacco is part of a wider trend in so-called ethical investing, which seems to be gathering pace.\n\nThe US-based Forum for Sustainable and Responsible Investment estimates that there has been 33% growth in what it calls sustainable, responsible and impact investing (SRI) over the past two years, and a 14-fold increase since 1995.\n\nIts 2016 report says: \"SRI investing continues to expand - now accounting for more than one out of every $5 under professional management in the United States.\"\n\nThe report is only talking about US-domiciled assets, but that's still $8.72tn. Of that, $1.97tn is invested with specific instructions to avoid tobacco and alcohol.", "More than 80 years ago, a robot could be found in the unlikely surroundings of Kettering, directing traffic and smoking a cigarette.\n\nToday, the story of Robert the Robot is little known, even in the Northamptonshire town where he was once a celebrity.\n\nYet in the 1930s, his fame reached as far as Czechoslovakia and the United States, where he even featured in Time magazine.\n\nAnd the reason he came to be?\n\n\"Someone bet me £5 I could not make a robot in three weeks,\" inventor Charles Lawson, who had a radio shop, told a newspaper at the time.\n\nRobert could be seen outside Mr Lawson's shop in Wellington Street, Kettering\n\nThe electrical engineer's creation first hit headlines in the Northamptonshire Evening Telegraph, which proclaimed: \"Kettering robot 'enjoys' smoke.\"\n\nThe article from March 1939 proclaimed the android could do \"practically everything that a human being can do\", even crediting him with the \"ability of mind reading\".\n\n\"You may pick up a card from a pack and the robot will tell you the card you have chosen,\" it read.\n\n\"It has a sense of humour too, for when Mr Lawson was bending down to examine its leg he received a slap on the face.\"\n\nSo how did he function? Frustratingly, it is not entirely clear.\n\nRobert was popular with children and could also - apparently - direct traffic\n\nThe only remaining evidence for his existence are a selection of photographs and Robert himself disappeared from view after World War Two.\n\nMr Lawson's son David, an 84-year-old retired farmer, remembers \"wires and gears, a maze of chains and electronics\" inside the robot's 10ft-tall frame.\n\nHe said his father had built a prototype in 1938, which he had installed in Kettering's Temperance Hall.\n\nThe robot had a microphone and speaker in its head and hidden assistants would surprise the unsuspecting people walking past.\n\n\"They (the assistants) would be looking down at people passing by and suddenly say something about someone's pink hat,\" he said.\n\nHis father then moved on to the more advanced Robert, who could move his arms and hands.\n\nThe Meririam Webster dictionary used a picture of Charles Lawson's robot in an advert\n\n\"It used to light its own cigarettes. It even directed the traffic in Kettering,\" David Lawson said.\n\n\"It even used to tell fortunes and he took it to the seaside, including trips to Blackpool. [My father] got obsessed with it.\"\n\nRobert was one of the first robots seen in the UK. The very term robot was less than 20 years old, having been coined by Czech writer Karel Capek in his 1920 play RUR.\n\nThe first British robot is believed to have been constructed in 1928 and was called Eric. He was subsequently rebuilt and is on display at the Science Museum in London.\n\nNoel Sharkey, professor of robotics at Sheffield University and head judge on BBC Two's Robot Wars, said it was most likely Robert was a similar construction to Elektro, a robot made by US power company Westinghouse in 1937 for the New York World's Fair in 1939.\n\nRobert first hit the headlines in the Northamptonshire Evening Telegraph\n\n\"As is claimed for the Charles Lawson robot, it could walk, talk, smoke and count,\" he said.\n\n\"The robot relied on a combination of motors, photoelectric cells, telephone relays and a record player to perform 26 pre-programmed routines, each one initiated by voice commands from a human co-star.\n\n\"Smoking was done using automated bellows which were also a feature of 19th Century automatons.\n\n\"Remember that this type of robot did not have access to a computer and so talking was done using a triggering mechanism for a record player playing old 78 RPM bakelite records.\"\n\nScience fiction was in vogue in the 1930s - serials such as Flash Gordon were popular in the cinemas - and Robert became a huge media sensation, drawing the attention of English newspapers.\n\nHis story was then syndicated abroad where it was eagerly reported by the foreign press.\n\nThe entry in one Czech newspaper, under the headline Robot Friend of the Children, read: \"In the English town of Kettering a robot often appears in the streets, it strides, sits down, smoke and speaks.\n\nThe robot was shown in displays at theatres in Kettering and received coverage in Czech newspapers\n\n\"The steel servant is an invention of C. Lawson, once an electric tramway employee. The robot has a sound apparatus in its head.\n\n\"Every move of the robot is followed, chiefly by the crowd of young folk, especially when he is on point duty.\"\n\nMr Lawson tried to capitalise on Robert's fame, exhibiting him around the country. His son said he eventually sold him to a pier showman in Blackpool shortly before the start of World War Two.\n\nDespite several attempts to trace him, Robert's whereabouts remain unknown. But it seems possible he enjoyed a post-war career as a seaside attraction before disappearing into obscurity.\n\nTony Sharkey, head of local history at Blackpool library, said robots often appeared in sideshows during the 1950s, including one from South Africa called Magna.\n\n\"From images I've seen it appears to have been very different [to Robert]. The show included illusions and the robot would mind read and tell people what they were wearing.\"\n\nMr Lawson sold his shop in the 1960s and retired, but although he was \"quiet man\" he would talk to people about his robots if asked.\n\nHe died in 2002 in Kettering, aged 96.\n\n\"It is only recently when I've thought about the complexity of the robot that I realised how clever he was,\" his son said.\n\nMr Lawson often staged events in Kettering to publicise his robot and his radio shop", "I admit I'm no IT expert, but over the past few days I've spoken to plenty of people who are.\n\nThese are people who have either engineered airline IT networks or actually worked on British Airways' systems in the past.\n\nWhat I've heard is a lot of confusion and scepticism at the idea that a local power surge could have wreaked such havoc.\n\nThere is also confusion as to why back-up systems didn't do their job.\n\nOnly the people in the room know exactly what happened, so these views are based on the information made public, and bucketfuls of IT experience, including at BA.\n\nOne put it like this: \"BA has two data centres near Heathrow, about a kilometre apart, so how could a power surge affect both?\"\n\nThen there are all the fail-safes in place.\n\nThe two data centres mirror each other I'm told, so when one collapses the other should take over.\n\nAll the big installations have back-up power. If the mains fails, a UPS (uninterruptable power supply) kicks in. It's basically a big battery that keeps things ticking over until the power comes back on, or a diesel generator is fired up.\n\nThis UPS is meant to take the hit from any \"surge\", so the servers don't have to.\n\nAll the big servers and large routers, I'm told, also have dual power supplies fed from different sources.\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. The BBC's Richard Westcott quizzed boss Alex Cruz over the outsourcing of technical staff to India\n\nI'm also told that, certainly a while ago, they used to have regular outages to confirm all the back-up bits were working. And daily inspections of the computer room. There is no reason to think these were stopped.\n\nIt's not even clear who was monitoring the system at the crucial time. Was it a contractor? How much experience did they have?\n\nThe point is this: certainly up until a while ago, British Airways' IT systems had a variety of safety nets in place to protect them from big dumps of uncontrolled power, and to get things back on their feet quickly if there was any problem. I'm assuming those safety nets are still there, so why did they fail? And did human error play a part in all this?\n\nBritish Airways chief executive Alex Cruz told me recently that the company has launched an exhaustive investigation into what went wrong, although no-one can say when it will report back, and whether the findings will ever be made public.\n\nIf BA wants to repair its reputation, its owner IAG needs to convince the public that making hundreds of IT staff redundant last year did not leave them woefully short of experts who could have fixed the meltdown sooner. And that it won't happen again - at least not on this epic scale.\n\nMr Cruz was adamant, by the way, that the outsourcing did not contribute in any way to this mess.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nManchester City midfielder Yaya Toure has signed a new one-year deal with the Premier League club.\n\nThe 34-year-old has played 299 games for City, scoring 81 goals, since joining from Barcelona in 2010.\n\nEarlier this season, Toure was left out of the Champions League squad and manager Pep Guardiola fell out with the player's agent, Dimitri Seluk.\n\n\"I am delighted. I told myself the journey at City is not done,\" Toure told the club's website.\n\nThe former Monaco and Olympiakos man played in the first leg of the Champions League play-off against Steaua Bucharest in August, but was then dropped from the team by Guardiola.\n\nSeluk claimed the midfielder had been \"humiliated\" and the Spaniard refused to pick Toure until Seluk apologised for criticising the decision to leave the player out.\n\nBut Toure apologised on Seluk's behalf at the start of November and he was selected for the Premier League game against Crystal Palace later that month, in which he scored two goals following his three-month exile.\n\nToure became an important part of the team for the remainder of the campaign, playing a total of 31 games, as City finished third in the league.\n\nHe said: \"I am very lucky now to be part of a great club with great players around me who are helping me to achieve my targets.\n\n\"Of course I want to win trophies, that is very important to me. I want to enjoy it at this age still and remaining here is a massive, massive thing.\n\n\"It is a great club, going in the right direction with new players who are coming in.\"\n\nCity's director of football Txiki Begiristain added: \"Yaya has been a fantastic servant for Manchester City and continues to be a vital member of Pep Guardiola's squad.\n\n\"He is one of our most experienced and popular players and we couldn't be happier that he is staying with us as we embark on what we all hope will be a very exciting season.\"\n\nToure's deal at Etihad Stadium was coming to an end this summer, while out-of-contract goalkeeper Willy Caballero, winger Jesus Navas and defenders Pablo Zabaleta, Gael Clichy and Bacary Sagna will all leave the club at the end of the month.\n\nCity have completed the £43m purchase of Monaco midfielder Bernardo Silva, while they have agreed a £35m deal for Benfica goalkeeper Ederson Moraes.\n\nIt is quite remarkable that Toure should be the only one of City's out-of-contract players to sign a new deal.\n\nIn November the 34-year-old appeared to have no future at the club - with his departure in the January transfer window looking increasingly inevitable.\n\nBut not only did manager Pep Guardiola extract the apology from Toure's agent he had demanded after his negative comments about the City boss, he then saw the midfielder produce the sort of performances that brought to mind his fantastic early seasons at City when he was one of the most dominant midfielders in the Premier League.\n\nPlaying in a deep midfield role, he brought nous and experience to City's team at a point when they badly needed it.\n\nAnd unlike long-time team-mate Pablo Zabaleta, who has left for West Ham, Toure evidently believes he still has a role to play under Guardiola.\n\nWith Ilkay Gundogan likely to remain sidelined for several more months yet with his cruciate injury, expect to see plenty of Toure in the early months of the season.", "Last updated on .From the section Tennis\n\nEighteen-time Grand Slam champion Martina Navratilova has renewed her call for the Margaret Court Arena to be renamed - describing the Australian as a \"racist and a homophobe\".\n\nCourt, 74, has said she would not fly on Qantas \"where possible\" in protest at its support of same-sex marriage.\n\nShe then told a Christian radio station \"tennis is full of lesbians\".\n\nIn an open letter, Navratilova said: \"We should not be celebrating this kind of behaviour.\"\n\nThe 60-year-old addressed her letter to the Margaret Court Arena, one of the main show courts at the Australian Open.\n\nShe said: \"It is now clear exactly who Court is: an amazing tennis player, and a racist and a homophobe.\n\n\"Her vitriol is not just an opinion. She is actively trying to keep LGBT people from getting equal rights (note to Court: we are human beings, too).\"\n\nIn 1990, Court said Navratilova was a poor role model for young tennis players because of her homosexuality.\n\nNavratilova said she had forgiven Court for those comments, but had only just been made aware of remarks the Australian made about South Africa's apartheid regime.\n\nIn 1970, Court said: \"South Africa has the racial situation rather better organised than anyone else, certainly much better than the United States.\"\n\nCourt won 24 Grand Slam singles titles, 11 of them in the Open era, which began in 1968 and allowed professionals to compete alongside amateurs.\n\nNavratilova described Court's actions as \"bullying\" and said sporting venues are named after athletes for \"who they are as human beings\" and \"not just for what this person did on the field\".\n\n\"The platform people like Margaret Court use needs to be made smaller, not bigger,\" she said.\n\nNavratilova believes the Margaret Court Arena should be renamed after Evonne Goolagong, a 14-time Grand Slam winner of Australian Aboriginal descent.\n\n\"I think the Evonne Goolagong Arena has a great ring to it,\" she added. \"Now there is a person we can all celebrate. On every level.\"\n\nFreedom of speech is one thing, but Margaret Court has caused widespread offence within tennis with these most recent remarks.\n\nTennis Australia has so far tried to separate Court's views from her achievements as a player to argue the name of the arena does not need to change. But they will find it very hard to withstand such pressure from figures like Martina Navratilova. And the current generation of players have much influence, too.\n\nAndy Murray, who is a member of the ATP Player Council, says it would be difficult for players to boycott a particular court during a Grand Slam. But he points out they could collectively agree a position before the tournament, which would make life very difficult indeed for Tennis Australia.", "Theresa May, pictured in July 2016 on her first trip as PM - to meet Germany's Angela Merkel\n\nIt's now almost a year since the UK blind-sided the EU by voting to leave the club.\n\nAnd the sum total of face-to-face negotiations between the two sides to date? Zero.\n\nPerfectly explicable in political circles, though baffling for much of the general public.\n\nThat's why, on both sides of the Channel, 8 June is a red-letter day.\n\nNot only is it general election time for the UK, but here in Brussels it means finally starting Brexit negotiations - once the new British government is in place.\n\nThe first day of EU-UK Brexit talks is expected to be 19 June. And they will focus on who will meet, how often, in which country, discussing which aspects of Brexit, in which order.\n\nAnd how prepared are the two sides?\n\nWell, there's a definite aura of smugness emanating from the European Commission. Their man, Michel Barnier, is the EU's chief Brexit negotiator.\n\nWhile the UK seemed to tear itself apart with recriminations hurled between Leavers and Remainers after the EU referendum, with politics and press coverage then becoming caught up in general election fever, the EU was quietly getting its Brexit ducks in a row.\n\nIt struck me once again this week just how far apart the two sides' pre-negotiating styles are.\n\nTheresa May's government insists it has a Brexit plan - but prefers not to divulge it.\n\nInstead, British voters are doused in rhetoric: Brexit means Brexit, No deal is better than a bad deal, and so forth, repeated by Prime Minister May in a televised interview just this Monday.\n\nBoth large parties in the UK election are set for Brexit, no matter what\n\nThe very same day, the European Commission produced groaningly meaty documents with draft negotiating details on two of its key Brexit priorities: the post-Brexit rights of EU citizens in the UK and of UK citizens in the EU, and the financial settlement the EU insists Britain pays before leaving.\n\nThe documents contain no real surprises, but as one of my colleagues noted, \"no detail seems too small\".\n\nA stark reminder that the EU has been mulling all this over for the past 11 months. It's been busy game-planning. It's got in the lawyers.\n\nIn the draft papers, the EU even calls for the salaries of native English teachers at elite European schools attended by civil servants' children to be included in Britain's exit bill.\n\nAlso listed are the multiple legal acts from which the EU is calculating the UK's financial liabilities, though the final sum is notably absent. The EU wants Britain to agree on a methodology, to work out the precise exit bill in the first stage of negotiations.\n\nBrexiteers desperate to \"take back control\" will be angry to see that Brussels wants the European Court of Justice to maintain jurisdiction in disputes involving the rights of EU citizens remaining in the UK after Brexit.\n\nMichel Barnier is leading the EU side - and he's been preparing\n\nIt's this sort of detail that could well lead to confrontation with the UK government from the start - so why publish the minutiae in the first place?\n\nWith so many players involved on the EU side, the likelihood of press leaks are manifold, so Brussels is going for full disclosure in the name of \"transparency\".\n\nImportantly for the UK, absent from any EU document is a mandate for Mr Barnier to negotiate post-Brexit relations with Britain, including a future trade deal, during the first phase of talks.\n\nSo insist though the British may, it is not in his discretion to start parallel negotiations.\n\nThis will be tough for Britain's new government to accept. The time pressure is huge.\n\nUnder EU rules, the Brexit deal must be agreed by March 2019 at the latest, and that's just the divorce, never mind the complexities of sorting out a new UK-EU relationship.\n\nAlso of note - no matter what some high-profile British politicians like Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson might insist - there is in fact no wiggle room in any EU paper published to date to allow UK cherry-picking from the single market, along the lines of 'we want to be part of the single market for cars and financial services, but we don't want to accept freedom of movement'.\n\nAlongside the smug ambience at EU HQ as regards Brexit there is also a growing sense of coldness.\n\n\"We've gone through the five stages of mourning in rapid succession,\" is something you're often told here. \"From huge sadness at the UK departing, to anger, remorse and now matter-of-fact acceptance.\"\n\nUnlike normal trade deals between the EU and third countries, Brexit from the EU perspective is about destruction, not creating something new and filled with potential.\n\nWhatever emerges from Brexit will be worse, it's felt, than what existed before - and many in the EU want Brexit to be difficult.\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. \"We Europeans have to take our destiny in our own hands,\" says Mrs Merkel\n\nBrussels is more than aware that Euroscepticsm is alive and well across the continent. If liberal governments like President Emmanuel Macron's in France disappoint voters, for example, populist nationalists could yet win the day.\n\nMainstream EU leaders are anxious to demonstrate that exiting the club doesn't pay. Brexit has to hurt, they think, to damage the arguments of those in other countries pushing to leave the bloc,\n\nFrom now until March 2019, the UK exists in an uncomfortable twilight zone - legally still an EU member, emotionally already viewed as an outsider.\n\nThe pre-negotiations rhetoric these 12 months has been bullish and threatening on both sides.\n\nThat led to a plea from a former judge at the European Court of Justice: for the EU and Britain's new government after 8 June to keep in mind that this is a divorce, not a war.", "Last updated on .From the section Tennis\n\nCoverage: Listen to live radio commentary and follow text coverage of selected matches on BBC Radio 5 live sports extra and online.\n\nWorld number one Andy Murray came from a set down to beat unseeded Slovakian Martin Klizan in the French Open second round.\n\nThe Briton won 6-7 (3-7) 6-2 6-2 7-6 (7-3) and goes on to face Argentina's Juan Martin del Potro.\n\nIt was Murray's 18th win of a season that has been interrupted by illness and injury.\n\nBritish number two Kyle Edmund also progressed after beating Renzo Olivo 7-5 6-3 6-1.\n\nThe 22-year-old Yorkshireman will next play South Africa's Kevin Anderson, who beat Australian Nick Kyrgios 5-7 6-4 6-1 6-2.\n\nDel Potro, seeded 29th after his own injury struggles, went through when his opponent Nicolas Almagro retired at one set all.\n\nAsked about facing former US Open champion Del Potro as early as the third round, Murray said: \"It's a tough match. In my opinion he's one of the best players in the world.\"\n\nMurray needed three hours and 34 minutes to see off Klizan, the world number 50, and claim his second four-set win of the week.\n\nThe Scot, 30, could again be heard to complain he was struggling with his movement, but once again his form improved as the match wore on.\n\n\"I'm playing way better than I was two weeks ago, and today's match will have done me a lot of good,\" said Murray.\n\n\"Physically I pulled up well and felt good, so I will gain a lot of confidence from that. And also, I hit a lot of balls out there today, more than the first-round match.\"\n\nIt could have been a much quicker afternoon on the Suzanne Lenglen Court had Murray completed a comeback from a break down in the first set.\n\nHaving weathered the expected early storm from his big-hitting opponent, Murray drew level at 5-5 only to play a poor tie-break and fall a set behind.\n\nKlizan, 27, began the match with his left calf heavily strapped and it was no surprise that his level dropped in the second set.\n\nMurray raced through seven straight games and when he made it 11 out of 13 to take a two-sets-to-one lead, there looked no way back for the Slovakian.\n\nHe was offered a lifeline early in the fourth thanks to a wayward Murray forehand and made it through to 5-3, only to fail once again when trying to serve out the set.\n\nKlizan was broken for the sixth time when he framed a smash over the baseline and, despite brilliantly saving one match point, saw his challenge end in another tie-break.\n\nMurray lunged to his right to send a superb volley past the Slovakian on the second match point.\n\n\"Consistency is definitely what I'm looking for,\" Murray told BBC Sport.\n\n\"I felt a little bit more in control of the first-round match than I did today. At times today I played some very solid stuff.\n\n\"The most positive things for me are physically I felt good after a pretty long match in tough conditions, and also I made some quite significant changes during the match to my tactics.\"\n\nEdmund's progress was considerably easier as he beat Argentina's Olivo, ranked 91st in the world, in straight sets.\n\nIt is the first time the 22-year-old has progressed to the third round of the French Open after being knocked out in round two in 2015 and 2016.\n\nThe world number 49 dropped just nine games, hitting 30 winners along the way, 18 on his impressive forehand side.\n\n\"There was a stage when I really felt the match turn in my favour and helped me get on top,\" said Edmund.\n\n\"Olivo had beaten Jo-Wilfried Tsonga in the last round and I knew I had to play well today. I am pleased I got it done.\"\n\nMurray expended more energy than is ideal in a first-week Grand Slam match, but time on the match court is important right now - and every win valuable. He is starting to play very well for periods of a match and now seeks to add the consistency required.\n\nEdmund knows he has a formidable game when he is on song and is learning to trust his instincts in the Grand Slams. He beat Richard Gasquet and John Isner in his run to the fourth round of the US Open last year and will emulate that with a victory over the slightly lower-ranked Kevin Anderson on Saturday.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nManchester City have signed goalkeeper Ederson Moraes for £35m from Benfica.\n\nThe 23-year-old broke into the Benfica team last March and won the Portuguese league and cup double this season.\n\n\"I like everything about Manchester City,\" said Ederson, who will join the Premier League club when the transfer window opens on 1 July.\n\n\"With Pep Guardiola, City are growing more and more. He's putting in place a young team for the future. Those were important factors in my decision.\"\n\nHe added: \"I have always had the dream to play in English football and now I'm going to make it true.\n\n\"Manchester City has an amazing squad. Next season, we will have to be focused to achieve the goal of winning trophies.\"\n\nA world-record fee - but only in sterling\n\nGianluigi Buffon's world-record move for a goalkeeper from Parma to Juventus in 2001 was reported to be worth 53m euros, or £32.6m at the time.\n\nBut at current exchange rates, Ederson's 40m euros transfer is equivalent to £35m. It is a world record in sterling, but not euros.\n\nBenfica announced the deal had been agreed last Thursday, when they also confirmed 50% of the fee will be paid to \"third parties\".\n\nBut the transfer could not be concluded until the Premier League was satisfied its rules on third-party ownership were met.\n\n'There's a bit of Manuel Neuer in him'\n\nEderson is a very different kind of keeper to Claudio Bravo in that he is bigger, much more physically imposing, and much younger.\n\nHe has ability with his feet and has a howitzer of a big kick, which paradoxically could help City play out from defence by forcing the opposing press back a bit. He looks confident on the ball, but how he copes with that style will be very important to how he does at the club.\n\nThere seems to be a bit of the Manuel Neuer in him. He's big and commanding; there's that chest of steel when he comes off his line very quickly. He looks a very promising goalkeeper indeed, but I'm not sure what his English is like, so communication could be a problem.\n\nWhat now for Bravo and Hart?\n\nEderson has played for Brazil's Under-23 side but is yet to make his full international debut. However, he is in the squad for two friendly matches - against Argentina on Friday and Australia on Tuesday.\n\nCity manager Pep Guardiola has been interested in Ederson for some time and made room in his squad by releasing Willy Caballero at the end of the season.\n\nHis arrival will place more pressure on Claudio Bravo, who has had a difficult first season since arriving from Barcelona to take over from Joe Hart as City's number one.\n\nEngland goalkeeper Hart has left Torino after a season-long loan. In March he told BBC Sport he was \"surplus to requirements\" at City and did not see himself playing for the club again.\n\nThe deal for Ederson is Guardiola's second signing of the summer, following the £43m arrival of Monaco's Portuguese playmaker Bernardo Silva.\n\nFind all the latest football transfers on our dedicated page.", "Last updated on .From the section Rugby Union\n\nBritish and Irish Lions tour of New Zealand\n\nThe British and Irish Lions started their tour of New Zealand with a nervy victory over the Provincial Barbarians in Whangarei.\n\nThe first of the Lions' 10 fixtures was expected to be the most straightforward, against a side made up of fringe players from Super Rugby.\n\nBut the visitors were put to the test throughout and had to come from behind to secure the win after a scrappy performance.\n\nA try from Sam Anderson-Heather, converted by Bryn Gatland - the son of Lions coach Warren - gave the Provincial Barbarians a 7-3 lead at the break.\n\nGreig Laidlaw added to Johnny Sexton's first-half penalty before Anthony Watson crossed to restore the visitors' lead on 53 minutes.\n\nReplacement Owen Farrell added the conversion but then missed a penalty, and the Lions survived a late surge from the hosts to hang on.\n\nWarren Gatland's side face all five Super Rugby teams, the New Zealand Maori, and the All Blacks, during the five-week tour, with their next match against the Blues on Wednesday (08:35 BST).\n\nGatland named 13 of the 14 players who attended the first training camp in his starting XV but the team, who landed in New Zealand three days ago, struggled to gel - especially in the first half.\n\nIreland's Sexton, picked ahead of Farrell and Dan Biggar in the number 10 shirt, missed a long-range penalty before getting the visitors off the mark from the tee on 17 minutes.\n\nBut the points failed to settle the Lions and moments later Wales number eight Taulupe Faletau was forced to make a try-saving tackle on Inga Finau, who was sent on his way after a quick break by Luteru Laulala.\n\nSoon the Provincial Barbarians got the score they deserved when hooker and captain Anderson-Heather crashed over and fly-half Gatland added the extras against his father's team.\n\nCaptain Sam Warburton, Faletau and Jonathan Joseph went close to responding for the visitors before the break but they were continuously held up on the line by black shirts.\n\nGatland opted to make five changes on 50 minutes - bringing on Saracens quartet Mako Vunipola, Jamie George, George Kruis and Farrell, alongside Leinster's Tadhg Furlong.\n\nAnd the impact was instant. England and Bath wing Watson spun over in the corner, and Farrell added the conversion for a 13-7 lead.\n\nEngland fly-half cum centre Farrell should have extended the Lions' advantage further but saw a penalty come off the upright.\n\nThe Provincial Barbarians did not give up hope of an upset and it fell to Vunipola to disrupt what was to be their final attack of the game, ripping the ball clear in a maul.\n\nGatland's side won the series 2-1 on their tour of Australia four years ago.\n\nBut the Lions have won only one series in New Zealand, back in 1971, and the All Blacks have not lost a Test on home soil to anyone since 2009.\n\nGetting the first win on the board was always going to be Gatland's priority in this match, but now the backroom staff - as well as the players - have bigger tests ahead.\n\nThere are six more matches before their first meeting with the All Blacks on Saturday, 24 June and Gatland will need to decide which members of the 41-man squad are up to the challenge of facing the world champions.\n\nA win is a win, so that is the number one objective completed, but there will be frustration amongst the squad and coaches as to why the Lions weren't more convincing against a scratch Barbarians team.\n\nThey have plenty of areas to work on, but we knew that would be the case.\n\nAnd, rugby tactics aside, it will have been an unbelievable feeling for those lads who put on the red jersey for the first time. England and Harlequins prop Kyle Sinckler in particular was outstanding, showing his ball-handling skills, work rate and physicality are all of Test standard.\n\nEnjoy a beer tonight, rest up and roll on Wednesday.\n\nLions head coach Warren Gatland: \"We would have preferred to have had a week in the UK with the full squad and a week in New Zealand before the first game.\n\n\"We arrived on Wednesday and we are still recovering from the travel and the guys haven't got into regular sleep patterns - perhaps the schedulers need to look at that for future tours.\n\n\"Some players are still seeing the doctor for sleeping pills to help them sleep.\"\n\nWhat was the Kiwi view?\n\nGregor Paul in the New Zealand Herald: \"The Lions got their heavily predicted opening-game victory but it was one that saw them reach unimaginable levels of mediocrity.\"\n\nPhil Gifford for Rugby Heaven: \"In blunt terms, the Lions looked incompetent. To be down 7-3 at half-time, and not take the lead until the 56th minute, was a disgrace to the jersey.\"\n\nMark Reason for Rugby Heaven: \"The Lions bench may have finally got them over the line, but not a soul in the crowd was fooled.\"", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nChelsea were paid £150.8m by the Premier League after winning the 2016-17 title - 50% more than the top earners in 2015-16.\n\nThe 2016-17 season was the first of the latest TV deal and saw a total of almost £2.4bn paid to the 20 clubs - up from £1.6bn last season.\n\nBottom club Sunderland got £93.471m - more than the £93.219m 2015-16 winners Leicester pocketed the previous season.\n\nThe figures are based on broadcast and commercial deals plus prize money.\n\nFunds from the Premier League's central commercial deals and overseas broadcast rights are shared equally - as is half of the domestic broadcast income.\n\nA quarter is paid out in prize money based on each club's league position and the other quarter in \"facility fees\" for each game broadcast on UK television.\n\nArsenal were the top earners in 2015-16 with £100.9m - but only the three relegated sides of Hull, Middlesbrough and Sunderland were paid less than that figure in 2016-17.\n\nThe ratio between the highest and lowest totals paid by the Premier League to its clubs in 2016-17 was 1.61 to 1, the lowest among Europe's top leagues, which means the Premier League is more equal when it comes to sharing revenue than its rivals.\n\nThe Premier League also paid out nearly £220m to Aston Villa, Cardiff, Fulham, Newcastle, Norwich, QPR, Reading and Wigan in parachute payments.\n\nVilla, Newcastle and Norwich - the relegated sides in 2016 - got almost £41m each.\n\nFull table broken down into all categories on the Premier League website.", "Coverage: Highlights every evening on BBC Two, ball-by-ball Test Match Special commentary on BBC Radio 5 live sports extra; in-play highlights and text commentary on the BBC Sport website\n\nEngland all-rounder Chris Woakes has been ruled out of the rest of the Champions Trophy after a scan revealed he has sustained a side strain.\n\nWoakes, who has played 63 one-day internationals, bowled two overs in the eight-wicket win over Bangladesh on Thursday before leaving the field.\n\nSpeaking on Friday after being ruled out, Woakes said: \"More than anything, it's really frustrating.\"\n\nEngland's next game in the tournament is against New Zealand on 6 June.\n\n\"An update on a replacement for the remainder of the tournament will follow in due course,\" said the ECB.\n\nWoakes is England's highest-placed bowler in the International Cricket Council's one-day international rankings at seventh.\n\nThe 28-year-old has taken 89 wickets at an average of 31.60 and an economy rate of 5.58, while he has scored 800 runs for his country in one-day internationals at an average of exactly 25 and a strike rate of 86.86.\n\n\"It's a tough one to take, right at the start of a tournament which we have been building up to as a team for a while,\" he added.\n\n\"We've had our eyes on the Champions Trophy for a while now as a team and we were coming into the tournament in good form.\n\n\"The toughest thing as a bowler is having to come off after only bowling a couple of overs.\n\n\"Leaving the guys out there with almost 10 men is difficult to take, so I'm really pleased the boys managed to get over the line with a win.\"\n\nWoakes did not feature in the second and third one-day internationals against South Africa last month because of a thigh problem and despite a Test series against the Proteas set for next month, he says he isn't going to put a timescale on his recovery.\n\n\"I will rehab it as well as I can. I'll listen to the medical staff, they know exactly what they are doing,\" he said.\n\n\"We will be as professional as possible and try and get back as soon as possible.\n\n\"I don't want to set a target to come back, I want to take it day-by-day and build it back up to return as soon as possible.\n\n\"I've never had a side strain before but as a bowler it's one of those injuries that is important not to risk.\"\n\nEngland can still call up a replacement, with Middlesex pair Steven Finn or Toby Roland-Jones among the contenders.\n\nAfter New Zealand, the tournament hosts face Australia at Edgbaston on 10 June.\n\nAs an old fast bowler, I can tell you that having a proper side strain is like having a red hot poker jammed between your ribs. It seemed that he felt something and knew he had to stop - which was the right thing to do. It's not just a case of strapping them up and saying \"on you go\".\n\nEngland were already likely to drop a pace bowler to make way for leg-spinner Adil Rashid, so Woakes' absence probably means a three-way fight between Jake Ball, David Wiley and whoever is called into the squad.\n\nThere will be a clamour for England to call on Stuart Broad - who the ECB had already asked to be rested for Nottinghamshire game with Derbyshire on Friday - but the selectors will be consistent. Steven Finn is an experienced option, while Toby Roland-Jones impressed on his debut against South Africa and offers lower-order runs.\n\nAs for Woakes, he now faces a fight to be fit for the first Test against South Africa in July. When James Anderson suffered a similar injury in 2015, he was out for almost two months.", "Last updated on .From the section Cricket\n\nEngland's Chris Woakes has been sent for a scan on a side strain and is a \"worry\" for the rest of the Champions Trophy, says captain Eoin Morgan.\n\nWoakes bowled two overs in the eight-wicket one-day-international win over Bangladesh before leaving the field.\n\nMorgan said: \"He'll have a scan tonight [Thursday] and we'll see what it comes up with. It doesn't feel right.\"\n\nThe captain added on TMS that man of the match Joe Root \"showed his class, even [though he picked] up a niggle\".\n\nRoot compiled a career-best ODI score of 133 not out at better than a run a ball, despite sustaining a calf strain.\n\nMorgan, who scored an unbeaten 75 to help see his side home, described Root as \"the glue in our side\".\n\n\"He has scored a lot of runs in the last couple of years and continues to do it,\" the captain continued.\n\n\"He is not slow. He is batting at pace. He has been working on his power hitting and today it worked.\"\n\nIf Woakes was to be ruled out, England can still call up a replacement, with Middlesex pair Steven Finn or Toby Roland-Jones likely replacements.\n\nBen Stokes, who is recovering from a knee injury, bowled seven overs on Thursday and Morgan says the all-rounder came through it well.\n\n\"It was a stretch for him but he hasn't felt his knee all day,\" said Morgan.\n\nOpener Jason Roy, under pressure coming into this tournament, received a vote of confidence from his skipper despite falling for just one.\n\nRoy averages 35 at over a run a ball in one-day internationals, but since the start of May he has reached double figures just once in six innings and was dismissed flicking a delivery to backward square leg against Bangladesh.\n\n\"I thought Jason Roy was terribly unlucky today. Those things happen when you can't seem to score runs but we back him - he's been brilliant for us,\" Morgan said.", "Last updated on .From the section Cricket\n\nKane Williamson scored a century for New Zealand in their abandoned Champions Trophy game against Australia at Edgbaston.\n\nThe Kiwi captain top-scored as his side looked to be heading for a win before play was halted in the second innings.\n\nAustralia were 53-3 after nine overs, chasing a revised target of 235 from 33 overs, when rain intervened.\n\nThe two teams pick up a point each as England top the group after Thursday's win over Bangladesh.\n\nThe hosts now need one win from their matches against Australia and New Zealand to secure a place in the semi-finals.\n\nAustralia needed to bat for at least 20 overs for a result to be declared through the Duckworth-Lewis method.\n• None Watch highlights of the match on BBC Two at 00:25 BST on Saturday (01:20 in Scotland)\n\nNew Zealand opener Luke Ronchi got his side off to a flying start, showcasing a repertoire of shots with an aggressive approach.\n\nThe Australian bowlers struggled to find their line and length as a long rain delay in the morning reduced the number of overs to 46.\n\nRonchi raced to his half-century from just 34 balls before he was caught by Glenn Maxwell off the bowling of John Hastings for 65, handing the reins over to his skipper Williamson.\n\nWilliamson batted superbly, starting with a patient approach. Accompanied by Ross Taylor, who scored 46, he kept the scoreboard ticking along between some high-scoring shots.\n\nHe registered his ninth one-day-international century in a knock that included eight fours and two sixes, before being run out on 100.\n\nAustralian seamer Josh Hazlewood registered career-best ODI figures, taking six wickets for 52 runs, as New Zealand's middle and lower order collapsed soon after their captain's dismissal.\n\nNew Zealand stuttered as they lost their last seven wickets for just 37 runs.\n\nHazlewood ensured the opposition did not see see out their allotted overs, mopping up the tail with three wickets in four balls.\n\nAnother rain delay at the midway point set Australia their revised target.\n\nDavid Warner and Aaron Finch did not get off to the most convincing start, with both openers dismissed in the space of eight balls.\n\nNew Zealand's Adam Milne struck again to leave their opponents reeling, before play was called off.\n\nThe result is reminiscent of the last time the sides met at Edgbaston, which was also rained off in the second innings.\n\nEx-New Zealand batsman Jeremy Coney on Test Match Special: \"Kane Williamson has such good hands, plays the ball very late and is able to see the length and line at the last moment.\n\n\"It's very hard to keep his scoring just down to singles, he keeps on scoring. At his best I think he is one of the top four players in the world. \"\n\nEx-England batsman James Taylor on TMS: \"The partnership between Williamson and Taylor laid the perfect platform for New Zealand but the crescendo never came.\n\n\"If they are to win the tournament, they can't afford to collapse like they did.\"\n\n'One of the worst bowling displays that we've put on'\n\nAustralia captain Steve Smith: \"I thought it was probably one of the worst bowling displays that we've put on for a very long time. We bowled both sides of wicket.\n\n\"We gave them a lot of freebies. And it was pretty ordinary, to be honest with you. Let's hope it's rust and let's hope it's gone.\"\n\nNew Zealand captain Kane Williamson: \"We were playing some good cricket. Would have been nice to see how the game would unfold if we were able to get out and finish it. But it is a funny game, cricket.\n\n\"And when there's rain around, the Duckworth-Lewis does tend to help the side batting second; but, like I say, the guys were going well with the ball in hand, and it would have been interesting to see how it unfolded.\"", "For a speech about whether the US should remain a party to the Paris climate accord, Donald Trump's Rose Garden address on Thursday didn't have a whole lot of discussion about, you know, the climate.\n\nThere was plenty of talk about jobs and the US economy. He offered more than a few expressions of concern over whether other nations were being given an unfair advantage over the US. And then there was that lengthy opening plug for his presidential accomplishments that had nothing to do with the environment whatsoever.\n\nAt one point the president made a somewhat oblique reference to current climate science, asserting that even if all nations hit their self-set, non-mandatory greenhouse gas emissions targets under the Paris agreement, it would only result in a reduction of 0.2 degrees in average global temperatures by the year 2100. (The researchers who conducted the study said the number he cited was outdated and misrepresented.)\n\nMr Trump's relative silence on the matter has left reporters wondering whether the president still stands by earlier comments - and tweets - expressing serious scepticism about whether climate change is real.\n\nDoes he still believe it's a Chinese plot to make the US less competitive, as he tweeted in November 2012? Or that it is a money-making \"hoax\", as he said during a December 2015 campaign rally?\"\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. President Trump says the Paris climate accord \"disadvantages\" US\n\nHe's occasionally backed away from such sweeping denunciations. During the first presidential debate with Hillary Clinton, he denied having ever blamed the Chinese. In a New York Times interview shortly after his election victory, he said he thinks there's \"some connectivity\" between human activity and climate change.\n\nAfter Mr Trump announced his Paris agreement withdrawal, reporters posed the almost-too-obvious question once again to White House aides tasked with selling the move to the public. Does the president believe human activity contributes to climate change?\n\nThey asked about it during an on-background session with two administration officials on Thursday afternoon. They asked White House advisor Kellyanne Conway during a television appearance Friday morning. They asked Environmental Protection Agency head Scott Pruitt during his press conference on Friday afternoon.\n\nTime and time again the answer was some variation of \"I don't know\", \"I can't say\" or \"that's not relevant\".\n\n\"We focused on one key issue,\" Mr Pruitt said during one of the multiple times he was pressed on his boss's views. \"Was Paris good or bad for the country?\"\n\nOn Tuesday Press Secretary Sean Spicer had said he didn't know the president's thoughts about climate change because he hadn't asked him. On Friday he was asked whether he had since had a chance to speak to the president.\n\n\"I have not had the opportunity to do that,\" Spicer replied.\n\nThe rest of the press conference was an extended parlour game to try to get the press secretary to slip and perhaps inadvertently shed some light on Mr Trump's views - to no avail.\n\nIt's clear at this point that the administration has no interest in clarifying Mr Trump's position on climate change. But why?\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Students from Hazleton, Pennsylvania, are divided on Trump Paris pullout\n\nConfusion can often be a politician's ally. The embattled president needs his core supporters to stick with him through what could be a rough road ahead. Those who don't believe climate change is real can look at the president's past comments as proof their man still stands with them without anyone having to explicitly say so.\n\nThat allows the president to insist that he is willing to do something to address climate change - \"renegotiating\" the Paris accord, perhaps - without saying climate change is a problem. It allows him tell the majority of Americans who believe climate change is a real global threat that he is trying to address their concerns.\n\nIt allows administration surrogates like Mr Pruitt to tout that the US has lowered its carbon output without acknowledging the only reason this would be a noteworthy accomplishment - human activity affects the global climate.\n\nIt's a fine line to walk for even the most dextrous of White House communications teams - let alone one that has to be concerned that the next time the president is asked the question, there's no telling what he might say.", "Last updated on .From the section Rugby Union\n\nCoverage: Live text commentary on every match on the BBC Sport website and mobile app.\n\nSam Warburton's 48-hour journey to Auckland, featuring business-class air travel and stopovers in Dubai and Melbourne, was described this week as \"epic\".\n\nRobert Seddon would have something to say about that.\n\nWhen Seddon led the British and Irish Lions on their first ever tour in 1888, he and his team-mates arrived in Australia after 42 days at sea, with 300 stoats and weasels - tasked with bringing the local rabbit population under control - as fellow passengers.\n\nThe world has certainly changed since then, but the Lions - albeit these days lacking a cargo of ruthless little mustelids - remain at their core the same: a composite side featuring the best players from England, Wales, Scotland and Ireland, touring a southern-hemisphere stronghold every four years.\n\nAs the current class embark on their New Zealand trip, how has a team that began as a Victorian-era mix-and-match Franken-side not only survived, but thrived?\n\nAnd are the Lions, ultimately, an endangered species?\n\nA team like no other\n\nCross-sport comparisons with the Lions always fall short.\n\nEurope's best golfers come together every two years to represent the continent in the Ryder Cup. But in a largely individual sport, there are not the same national allegiances to be set aside.\n\nThe State of Origin rugby league sides and NBA All Star basketball games show a fine disregard for club loyalties, but these are domestic affairs that lack the jet-set international dimension of the Lions.\n\nScour the sporting world high and low and you'll find there is nothing quite the same.\n• None Radio 5 live special: How NOT to win a series (2005)\n\n'One player nearly took off another's foot with a shotgun'\n\nSo what does it mean to become a Lion?\n\nJeremy Guscott was called up to the Lions' tour of Australia in 1989 as a 23-year-old centre with just one England cap to his name.\n\nHe started both of the Test victories, and played in all six Tests on the subsequent tours of New Zealand and South Africa, famously kicking the decisive drop-goal against the Springboks in 1997.\n\n\"It was absolute, all-encompassing euphoria when I got selected for the first time,\" he told BBC Sport.\n\n\"And because of what I experienced then, I would have almost chopped off an arm to get on the tours in 1993 and 1997.\n\n\"Everyone has to be selfless, helping team-mates to be the best they can, while at the same time competing furiously for places.\n\n\"It is very hard to do because it is an incredibly competitive environment. But the more that people buy into that, the greater chance there is of success.\n\n\"That is the unique balance with a Lions tour.\"\n\nThe standard of play may be be stratospheric, but the touring traditions of scrapes, high-jinks and horseplay are as true for the Lions as for Old Rubber Duckians 3rd XV.\n\nWhether it be 1974 captain Willie John McBride asking an irate hotel manager just how many police would be arriving to quell his team-mates' partying or full-back Neil Jenkins decked out as Prince Ruprecht from the film 'Dirty Rotten Scoundrels' in 1997, there is a human and occasionally hell-raising side to the tours.\n\n\"There are moments which stay with you forever, both on and off field,\" remembers Guscott.\n\n\"There was an afternoon in New Zealand where we - and those involved will remain nameless - were out on a team-building activity and one player very nearly took off another's foot with a shotgun.\n\n\"He missed by a metre or so. The alternative didn't bear thinking about!\"\n• None All Blacks more complete than in 2005 - Hansen\n• None 'O'Driscoll thought spear tackle was going to kill him'\n\nThe series that could have broken the Lions\n\nAs Warren Gatland's squad headed off in the glare of the media spotlight, kitbags loaded with £595 red velvet jackets provided by one of their many sponsors, it is funny to recall that it was once feared 'professionalism' could kill them off.\n\nThe Lions represent the continuing legacy of the British Empire. That still has tremendous resonance in New Zealand, Australia and South Africa\n\nThe end of the sport's amateur status in 1995 prompted predictions that the Lions' days were numbered, as clubs would be reluctant to allow paid employees to tour, improved annual Six Nations battles would dominate the conversation and a burgeoning World Cup would suck up the corporate cash.\n\nSo the theory went, at least.\n\n\"There are two reasons that the Lions survived the advent of professionalism,\" explains Tony Collins, professor at De Montfort University's International Centre for Sports History and Culture and author of 'The Oval World: A Global History of Rugby'.\n\n\"The first is that the 1997 Lions tour of South Africa - two years after the game turned professional - was incredibly successful.\n\n\"It was a great series, that showed the credibility of a Lions tour to supporters and the esteem it was held in by the players themselves.\n\n\"The other thing is just as important, but less recognised. Although a lot has changed, there is still tremendous continuity in the way that people view the world and their place in it.\n\n\"The Lions represent the continuing legacy of the British Empire. That still has tremendous resonance in New Zealand, Australia and South Africa.\n\n\"When the first tours went, these were still very young countries and, in many ways, they still define themselves by their ability to compete with and defeat the British.\n\n\"Back home in Britain, despite the devolution of powers to the various constituent parts, there is still a nostalgia for British-ness in lots of places.\"\n\nWhile the Lions have thrived, the advent of professionalism has had an impact on another of the sport's great composite teams: the Barbarians.\n\nBack in 1973, the Barbarians beat the All Blacks in front of 51,000 in what was a full-blooded contest at the very highest level of the game.\n\nContrast that with the Barbarians' most recent outing last month, which saw the free-running invitational side comfortably beaten in what amounted to a pre-tour loosener for a second-string England side.\n\nThe challenge for the Lions now is to ensure they can marry their romantic past with modern realities.\n\nBefore the third and deciding Test on the 2013 tour of Australia, Gatland controversially dropped Irish legend Brian O'Driscoll to reunite the Welsh midfield axis of Jamie Roberts and Jonathan Davies.\n\nIn total 10 of the starting XV for that climatic match were players Gatland oversaw in his regular job as Wales head coach.\n\nIn the hours before kick-off, former Ireland hooker Keith Wood - a veteran of the 1997 and 2001 tours - accused him of fundamentally misunderstanding the Lions ethos.\n\n\"We are not seeing the blend of four teams, that is what makes the Lions phenomenal,\" he said.\n\n\"It about getting the best quality out of players from these islands, not having an intransigent game-plan that is low on subtlety and simplistic from the start.\"\n\nThe Lions recorded a thumping 41-16 victory to win the series. Wood, though, stood by his words, claiming that the Lions is about more than just the result.\n\nThis year's Lions will play six matches in 17 days before the first Test in an intense crash-course to prepare for the planet's best - the world-champion All Blacks.\n\nWith playbooks fatter than ever, can the Lions afford to start with a blank slate rather than arrive with a pre-heated plan?\n\nBut - given the unique and broad appeal that has has seen them survive for nearly 150 years - can they also afford to disregard the old traditions?\n\nWhat is clear is that the Lions' battle to hitch contemporary professionalism to timeless romance, and to knit four teams into one, makes them unique in a sporting world long since stripped of such idiosyncrasy at the top level.", "Beef kebabs are popular with millions of Indians\n\nA lawmaker from India's southern state of Kerala has announced that he is returning to eating meat, fish and eggs after practising vegetarianism for nearly two decades.\n\nThere's nothing unusual about a lapsed vegetarian but VT Balram said his decision was prompted by the federal Hindu nationalist BJP government's attempt to seize the people's right to eat what they wanted.\n\n\"I have been living without eating meat, fish or eggs since 1998. But now the time has come break it and uphold the right politics of food assertively,\" Mr Balram said, while posting a video of him eating beef with friends and fellow party workers.\n\nThe BJP believes that cows should be protected, because they are considered holy by India's majority Hindu population. Some 18 Indian states have already banned slaughter of cattle.\n\nBut millions of Indians, including Dalits (formerly untouchables), Muslims and Christians, consume beef. And it's another matter, say many, that there's no outrage against the routine selling of male calves by Hindu farmers and pastoralists to middlemen for slaughter as the animals are of little use - bullocks have been phased out by tractors in much of rural India, and villagers need to rear only the occasional bull.\n\nIronically, the cow has become a polarising animal. Two years ago, a mob attacked a man and killed him over \"rumours\" that his family ate beef. Vigilante cow protection groups, operating with impunity, have killed people for transporting cattle.\n\nMore recently, the chief of BJP's powerful ideological fountainhead Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (National Volunteers' Organisation) has called for a countrywide ban on the slaughter of cows. And this week, a senior judge said the cow should be declared a national animal and people who slaughter cows should be sentenced to life in prison.\n\nMany say this is all contributing to effectively killing India's thriving buffalo meat trade.\n\nSeveral states opposed the federal government's decision to ban the sale of cattle for slaughter\n\nEarlier this week, several Indian states opposed the federal government's decision to ban the sale of cattle for slaughter at livestock markets. The government said the order was aimed at preventing uncontrolled and unregulated animal trade.\n\nBut the ban, say many, could end up hurting some $4bn (£3.11bn) in annual beef exports and millions of jobs. There are some 190 million cattle in India, and tens of millions \"go out of the system\" - die or need to be slaughtered - every year. How will poor farmers sell their animals?\n\nSo, as lawyer Gautam Bhatia says, the new rules are \"perceived as imposing an indirect beef ban\". He believes the government will find it difficult to defend them if they are challenged in the court - one state court, responding to a petition that they violate the right of a person to chose what he eats, has already put the ban on hold.\n\nThe badly-drafted rules, Mr Bhatia says, are \"an opportunity for citizens and courts to think once again whether the prescription of food choices is consistent with a Constitution that promises economic and social liberty to all\".\n\nCritics have been calling the beef ban an example of \"dietary profiling\" and \"food fascism\". Others say it smacks of cultural imperialism, and is a brazen attack on India's secularism and constitutional values. Don't laugh, but there could be a conspiracy to turn India vegetarian, screamed a recent headline.\n\nMany believe that the BJP, under Narendra Modi, appears to be completely out of depth with India's widely diverse food practices which have always been distinguished by religion, region, caste, class, age and gender.\n\nIndians now eat more meat, including beef - cow and buffalo meat - than ever. Consumption of beef grew up 14% in cities, and 35% in villages, according to government data analysed by IndiaSpend, a non-profit data journalism initiative.\n\nBeef is the preferred meat in north-eastern states like Nagaland and Meghalaya. According to National Sample Survey data, 42% Indians describe themselves as vegetarians who don't eat eggs, fish or meat; another baseline government survey showed 71% of Indians over the age of 15 are non-vegetarian.\n\nCritics say the ban is an attack on rights of citizens\n\nGovernments have tried to impose food bans and choices around the world, mostly using health and environment concerns and hygiene concerns.\n\nIn the US, for example, groups have rallied against subsidised vegetables, outlawing large sodas, promotion of organic food and taxing fat. Bangkok is banning street food to clean up streets and enforce hygiene standards.\n\nIndia has done the same in the past. Crops like BT brinjal have been stalled by the government and industrially manufactured food like Maggi noodles banned temporarily amid claims they contained dangerously high levels of lead. Scarcity has also led to bans - a ban of milk sweets in the 1970s in Delhi was justified because milk used to be in short supply.\n\n\"To the extent that this ban on cattle slaughter justifies itself by speaking of 'unfit and infected cattle', it seems to invoke public health, but then stops short by not banning the sale of goats, sheep and chicken as well,\" sociologist Amita Baviskar told me.\n\n\"In fact, the public health argument leads logically to a move towards better regulation like stricter checking of animals for disease, more hygienic slaughter and storage of meat rather than a flat-out ban.\"\n\nClearly, the ban appears to be working already.\n\nThere are fears that the proposed ban would hit a thriving buffalo meat exports\n\n\"Selling red meat, even goat meat, in a BJP-ruled state is now injurious to one's health. Who would want to risk the wrath of the vigilantes?,\" says Dr Baviskar.\n\nAs it is, she says, meat-eating habits of Indians have been changing rapidly in the last couple of decades and the chicken, once regarded as a \"dirty bird\", is now the most popular meat.\n\n\"I see a greater polarisation taking place between red states (meat-eating) and white states (chicken eating) Within the white states, meat-eaters will have to skulk about, looking over their shoulder as they bite into a beef kebab\".", "Michiyo Nishigaki lost her only son Naoya to \"karoshi\"\n\nJapan has some of the longest working hours in the world, and some young Japanese workers are literally working themselves to death. Now there are calls for the government to do more.\n\nMichiyo Nishigaki was a proud mother when her only son Naoya landed a job at a large Japanese telecoms company, straight out of college.\n\nHe loved computers, and it seemed like a great opportunity in Japan's competitive graduate jobs market.\n\nBut just two years later things started to go wrong.\n\n\"He was telling me he'd been busy, but he said he was OK,\" Ms Nishigaki tells me. \"But then he came home for my father's funeral and he couldn't get out of bed. He said: 'Let me sleep a while, I can't get up. Sorry, Mum, but let me sleep'.\"\n\nJapan has some of the longest working hours in the developed world\n\nLater she learned from colleagues that he'd been working around the clock.\n\n\"He usually worked until the last train, but if he missed it he slept at his desk,\" she said. \"In the worst case he had to work overnight through to 10pm the next evening, working 37 hours in total.\"\n\nTwo years later Naoya died at the age of 27 from an overdose of medication. His death was officially rule a case of \"karoshi\" - the Japanese term to describe death attributed to overwork.\n\nJapan has a culture of long working hours and this is not a new phenomenon - it was first recorded in the 1960s - but recently high-profile cases have thrust karoshi back into the spotlight.\n\nOn Christmas Day in 2015, 24-year-old Matsuri Takahashi, an employee at the Japanese advertising agency Dentsu, jumped to her death.\n\nIt emerged she had barely slept after working more than 100 hours of overtime a month in the period leading up to her death.\n\nMakoto Iwahashi says that is not unusual, particularly for new starters in a company. He works for Posse, an organisation that runs a helpline for young workers, and says most of the calls are complaints about long working hours.\n\n\"It's sad because young workers think they don't have any other choice,\" he tells me. \"If you don't quit you have to work 100 hours. If you quit you just can't live.\"\n\nMr Iwahashi says declining job security has made the situation worse.\n\n\"We had karoshi in the 1960s and 70s - the big difference is they had to work long hours but they were secured lifetime employment. That's not the case any more.\"\n\nOfficial figures put cases of karoshi in the hundreds each year, counting heart attacks, strokes and suicides. But campaigners say the real figure is much higher.\n\nNearly a quarter of Japanese companies have employees working more than 80 hours overtime a month, often unpaid, a recent survey found. And 12% have employees breaking the 100 hours a month mark.\n\nThose numbers are important; 80 hours overtime a month is regarded as the threshold above which you have an increased chance of dying.\n\nNearly a quarter of Japanese companies have employees working more than 80 hours overtime a month\n\nJapan's government has been under increasing pressure to act, but the challenge has been to break a decades-old work culture where it's frowned upon to leave before your colleagues or boss.\n\nEarlier this year the government introduced Premium Fridays, encouraging firms to let their employees out early, at 3pm, on the last Friday each month. They also want Japanese workers to take more holiday.\n\nWorkers are entitled to 20 days leave a year but currently about 35% don't take any of it.\n\nIn the local government offices in Toshima, a district of downtown Tokyo, they have resorted to turning the office lights off at 7pm in an effort to force people to go home.\n\nHitoshi Ueno says it's important for employees to develop their own interests outside of the office\n\n\"We wanted to do something visible,\" says manager Hitoshi Ueno.\n\n\"It's not just about cutting working hours. We want people to be more efficient and productive, so that everyone can protect and enjoy their spare time. We want to change the work environment in total.\"\n\nIn focusing on efficiency he may have a point. While the country may have some of the longest working hours it is the least productive of the G7 group of developed economies.\n\nBut campaigners say these measures are piecemeal and fail to address the core problem: that young workers are dying because they are working too hard and for too long.\n\nThe only solution they say is to put a legal limit on the overtime employees are permitted to work.\n\nJapan may have some of the longest working hours it is the least productive of the G7 group of developed economies\n\nEarlier this year the government proposed limiting average overtime to 60 hours a month though firms would be allowed to up this to 100 hours during \"busy periods\" - well into the karoshi red zone.\n\nCritics say the government is prioritising business and economic interests at the expense of the welfare of workers.\n\n\"The Japanese people count on the government but they are being betrayed,\" says Koji Morioka, an academic who has studied the karoshi phenomenon for 30 years.\n\nIn the meantime, more young workers are dying and the support groups for bereaved families keep getting new members.\n\nMichiyo Nishigaki, who lost her son Naoya, says the country is killing the very workers it should be cherishing.\n\n\"Companies just focus on short-term profits,\" she says. \"My son and other young workers don't hate work. they are capable and they want to do well.\n\n\"Give them the opportunity to work without long hours or health problems and the country would be privileged to have them.\"", "In the end the collected pressure from environmentalists, diplomats, major US corporations, foreign leaders, Mitt Romney, Leonardo Di Caprio and Ivanka Trump wasn't enough. The US is charting its own course, leaving the international community to fend for itself.\n\nThe implications for that community, and the role of US leadership in it, will be the subject of considerable discussion in the days ahead. This decision was not made with international affairs in mind, however. It was one of domestic politics, pure and simple.\n\nIf anything, the international community was the foil against which the president made a show of his dedication to the American people - putting Pittsburgh over Paris, as he phrased it.\n\n\"The Paris Agreement handicaps the United States economy in order to win praise from the very foreign capitals and global activists that have long sought to gain wealth at our country's expense,\" he said. \"They don't put America first. I do, and I always will.\"\n\nDonald Trump campaigned on the economy, jobs and deregulation first and foremost. While he's had more than a few tweets and asides about climate change over the years - the \"Chinese hoax\" quote being the most publicised of the bunch - environmental issues hardly came up over the course of the campaign, either in debates or on the stump.\n\nOn a sun-drenched Thursday afternoon in the White House Rose Garden, it was more of the same. Despite a few throw-away lines about clean air and loving the environment, the president's speech was all about jobs and the economy; the \"unfairness\" of the agreement and the US as the object of international derision.\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Trump: The world won't laugh any more at US\n\nTraditionally, environmental issues have tended to rise in importance in the US during good times and taken a back seat when voters are more concerned about their economic livelihood.\n\nAccording to Gallup polling, 40% of Americans worried a \"great deal\" about climate change in 2000, dropping to 26% in 2004 after the 9/11 attacks and the dot com recession. Concern peaked again at 41% in 2007, before collapsing to 25% in the wake of the Great Recession.\n\nNow the issue is on the rise again, reaching a record high of 45% in March, up 8 points from the same time last year.\n\nSome of this can be attributed to the anti-Trump phenomenon, where the president's position drives near universal opposition from those who hold him in low esteem. The dynamic played itself out earlier this year on healthcare, where the Obamacare reforms reached net-positive levels of approval for the first time shortly after Republicans began efforts to pass repeal legislation.\n\nParis City Hall turned green in an act of defiance\n\nThe question now is whether global warming and environmental issues will have political legs. Activists will certainly be motivated to unseat Mr Trump and his fellow Republicans - including some of the Bernie-or-bust voters and Green Party supporters who turned their backs on Democrats last autumn.\n\nBecause of the way the Paris agreement withdrawal is structured, the process won't be complete until just weeks after the 2020 presidential election, virtually guaranteeing the issue will come up in the campaign in some fashion.\n\nWhether it hurts Mr Trump and his party will have little to do with the amount of scorn he receives from the international community or degraded US influence on the world stage, and considerably more to do with the state of the US economy over the next few years.\n\nAre coal-country jobs coming back? Given the underlying economic fundamentals of the US energy sector, that seems unlikely, despite the president's boast of a new mine opening up soon in Pennsylvania (resulting in only about 70 new jobs).\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.\n\nDuring his White House speech, Mr Trump predicted that the US economy would grow in the range of 3% to 4% in the coming years - an ambitious mark that, if realised, would put him well on the way to re-election.\n\nCome in under that mark, however, and the president will have to campaign on jobs not lost and economic growth not thwarted. If working-class Americans continue to struggle, that will be as hard a sell for him as it was for Democrats when they held power the last eight years.\n\nThen there's history's judgement to consider. Decades from now, Americans could look back and see 1 June 2017 as a missed opportunity, when the US had a chance to address an impending environmental disaster and shrugged. If that's the case, there will be one party - and one president - to blame.\n\nOr, if Republicans are right and the dire climate warnings are overblown, the date will be nothing more than a historical footnote.\n\nIn the near term and long, Mr Trump and Republicans are playing political roulette, betting against the rest of the world and half of their own nation. The price for being in the wrong spot when the wheel stops spinning will be high.\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Five Trump changes you may have missed", "Pilates devotee Cassey Ho has nearly four million YouTube followers\n\nIn the 1980s, a Lycra-clad Jane Fonda sold millions of her pioneering workout video cassettes. But videotape gave way to DVDs, then along came the internet and digital streaming. So how has the workout video adapted?\n\nWhen Cassey Ho, 30, logs on to her YouTube page \"blogilates\" and uploads her latest workout video, she knows she will soon be inundated with comments from fans across all her social media accounts.\n\nThe fitness video blogger, or vlogger for short, has amassed nearly four million subscribers to her YouTube channel, as well as millions of followers on Facebook and Instagram.\n\nShe is one of a new breed of fitness vloggers exploiting the internet's ability to beam content to global mass audiences at very low production costs.\n\nIt's a far cry from when fitness queen Jane Fonda inspired millions of people around the world to try aerobics in front of their living room TVs throughout the 1980s. She sold more than 17 million tapes.\n\nJane Fonda (right) was the fitness video queen in the 1980s\n\nScores of other models, actors and stars followed suit.\n\nBut today, you can find more than 30 million fitness videos on YouTube alone, and countless more on other social media platforms.\n\nBudding fitness kings and queens can publish and gain a following without star status, a fancy studio or thousands of pounds' worth of equipment, simply recording workouts on their smartphones at the beach or in their gardens and editing the content on their laptops.\n\nBut unlike the traditional workout video, where weight loss and fitness was the goal, consumers are logging on to their favourite fitness vloggers for a more intimate and interactive experience.\n\n\"Fitness videos have switched from being functional to being aspirational content that give people a window into the lives of the fitness influencers they look up to,\" says Richard Wilson, chief executive of Clickon Media, a content creation firm.\n\nFor example, Zuzka Light, a 35-year-old Czech fitness vlogger now based in Los Angeles, started her channel in 2012. Her vlog shows short workout videos, with some of them attracting up to 20 million views.\n\nFitness vlogger Zuzka Light thinks the \"personal approach is really key\"\n\nTaking her brand on to other social media platforms, such as Twitter and Instagram, has raised her profile, giving her the opportunity to launch a $9.99 a month subscription to her website and her own clothing and food supplement lines.\n\n\"I always try to post videos that I would like to watch myself,\" she tells the BBC.\n\n\"Sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn't. I've had feedback from my viewers who say they feel connected to me and see me as their friend, their workout buddy.\n\n\"I think the personal approach is really key.\"\n\nShe regularly works with brands, but admits she's picky about the products she introduces to her audiences.\n\n\"Being an influencer I have a responsibility and I wouldn't want to take advantage of that and promote something I wouldn't use myself or something I wouldn't recommend to my loved ones.\"\n\nA study by marketing platform MuseFind found that 92% of people preferred hearing about brands from influencers, rather than through paid adverts.\n\n\"This switch in perspective provides marketers and advertisers the freedom to develop more authentic content that tells a story as opposed to being purely functional and demonstrating things such as weight loss and technique,\" says Mr Wilson.\n\nThe fitness sector in general is huge, with the International Health, Racquet & Sportsclub Association reporting that global health club industry revenue reached an estimated $81bn (£63bn) in 2015, with around 151 million members worldwide.\n\nAnd the fitness clothing industry is worth more than $320bn in the US alone, says the NPD Group.\n\nNo wonder vloggers are proving very useful for brands trying to reach consumers directly and bypass the growing use of ad blockers on mobiles and desktops.\n\n\"The growth of smartphone usage and mobile video viewing lends itself well to a fitness audience,\" says Mark Brill, lecturer in digital communications at Birmingham City University.\n\n\"Not only can content be viewed anywhere, but mobile devices also make the interaction personal and more private.\n\n\"In the past, word of mouth has been an important way to recommend brands. That has shifted into the digital word of mouth - social media.\"\n\nAnd it's not just fitness vloggers benefiting from taking their workouts online.\n\nFitness studios are realising the potential of live streaming videos of classes and videos featuring their clients' favourite instructors.\n\nSome fitness studios, such as Barre3, are putting classes online to widen their appeal\n\nBarre3, the ballet-based workout in New York, has a subscription-based fitness video service via its website to allow members to exercise from the comfort of their own homes.\n\nStandalone services, such as Flex TV, which provide online access to live high-intensity interval training workouts and yoga classes, are popping up too.\n\nSo the traditional workout video on tape or DVD has adapted to a world in which people are more used to streaming entertainment over services such as Netflix, Amazon Prime and YouTube. Declining DVD sales bear this out.\n\n\"Fewer people are buying DVDs and it reduces the revenue opportunities for a workout video,\" says Mr Brill.\n\n\"The new revenue comes from advertising share, especially on YouTube, and from sponsorship for those with a large enough social media following.\n\n\"Looking at it that way, it seems almost inevitable that the fitness vloggers will triumph.\"", "The eight-wicket win against Bangladesh on Thursday was an excellent way for England to begin the Champions Trophy.\n\nTo chase 306 against any side, even in the ideal batting conditions of The Oval, is a challenge. You have to work hard to get those runs.\n\nIn the context of the tournament, that sort of game is much more beneficial to England than if they rolled Bangladesh for 120 then chased them down in 20 overs.\n\nJoe Root made a wonderful century, Alex Hales was in the runs, Eoin Morgan continued his good form and Liam Plunkett was amongst the wickets. In that sense, it was perfect.\n\nHowever, it was marred by the injury to Chris Woakes, who bowled only two overs before having to leave the field with an injury to his left side.\n• None Woakes to have scan on side strain\n• None Vaughan on why England can win Champions Trophy\n\nThe Warwickshire man had a scan on Thursday evening, with the results probably known to us by Friday morning. If it turns out to be a side strain, it could be serious.\n\nAs an old fast bowler, I can tell you that having a proper side strain is like having a red hot poker jammed between your ribs. If Woakes has one of those, he won't play again in the tournament.\n\nIn fairness, that did not look to be the case with Woakes. It seemed that he felt something and knew he had to stop - which was the right thing to do.\n\nBut side injuries are tricky. It's not just a case of strapping them up and saying \"on you go\". England will have to be very careful and give some serious consideration to ruling him out.\n\nIt's very anxious for Morgan's men, because Woakes is their highest-placed bowler in the International Cricket Council's one-day international rankings.\n\nFor a time, it also looked like Root's fitness could be a concern. It seemed like he rolled his ankle while batting and spent most of the second half of his innings hobbling around.\n\nHowever, after the match he said he thought it was cramp in his calf, so that is much less of a worry.\n\nAll of this slightly shifted the focus away from Ben Stokes, whose knee problem dominated the pre-match build-up.\n\nAs promised, Stokes turned up early for a fitness test and was deemed healthy enough to play his part with the ball.\n\nStill, even with Woakes off the field, Stokes only bowled seven overs. That tells us that England are still protecting him. That is sensible and he will benefit from more rest before the game against New Zealand on Tuesday.\n\nOn top of the injury concerns, England will be hoping that Jason Roy gets a score at the top of the order sooner rather than later.\n\nBefore this game, Roy was heavily backed by Morgan after a poor sequence where he had not passed 20 in his previous six ODI innings.\n\nHere, he made only one from eight deliveries, but again received the support of his captain.\n\nNow, it is quite right for Morgan to back his man, but I was surprised by the shot Roy played - a scoop off the pace bowler Mashrafe Mortaza to be caught at short fine leg.\n\nAny batsman can edge a good ball, or even have a rush of blood and try to whack one, but those split-second decisions are made in the heat of the moment.\n\nIn this case, Roy made the choice to premeditate a stroke, probably as the bowler was walking back to his mark.\n\nInstead of sticking to what he is good at, playing the ball down the ground, Roy simply did not give himself the chance of scoring runs on his home ground.\n\nIt just goes to show that poor form does not only mess with the way a batsman hits the ball, but also the decisions that are made.\n\nEngland now move on to games against New Zealand and Australia, the two finalists from the 2015 World Cup, knowing that one win is likely to be enough for a place in the semi-finals.\n\nTheir confidence will be high, not least because they have got the hiccup of the final game against South Africa out of their system.\n\nThey could do without the injuries and the shot Roy played, but other than that they got the job done.", "Last updated on .From the section Tennis\n\nTennis great Margaret Court believes there is a \"conspiracy\" from the \"US gay lobby\" to strip her name from one of the Australian Open stadiums.\n\nThe 74-year-old has been criticised for her beliefs on same-sex marriage, with 18-time Grand Slam champion Martina Navratilova calling for the Margaret Court Arena to be renamed.\n\nI have 35 cultures in my church and I love them all. I think it's very sad and sick it's being brought up now\n\n\"They have a lot of money behind them,\" Court told 3AW radio.\n\nCourt won 24 Grand Slam titles, 11 in the Open era, which began in 1968.\n\nRegarding calls for the stadium in her honour to be renamed, she said: \"I think I've won more Grand Slams than any man or woman and if it is [renamed], I don't believe I deserve it.\n\n\"They could probably get 100,000 petitions in 24 hours because that's how they work. There's a lot of money behind it, and it's coming from America.\"\n\nAnd asked about a possible conspiracy, she added: \"Yes, I believe there is... I think the [gay] lobby, yeah.\"\n\nTennis Australia and the operator of the Margaret Court Arena, Melbourne and Olympic Parks, have distanced themselves from Court's views on gay marriage. There are currently no plans to rename the venue.\n\nThe recent furore started following Court's open letter to The West Australian, when she declared she would not fly on Qantas \"where possible\" in protest at its support of same-sex marriage. She then told a Christian radio station \"tennis is full of lesbians\".\n\nNavratilova responded: \"It is now clear exactly who Court is: an amazing tennis player, and a racist and a homophobe.\n\n\"Her vitriol is not just an opinion. She is actively trying to keep LGBT people from getting equal rights (note to Court: we are human beings, too).\"\n\nIn 1970, during Apartheid in South Africa, Court said: \"South Africa has the racial situation rather better organised than anyone else, certainly much better than the United States.\"\n\nCourt denied allegations of racism, stating that she had played tennis with compatriot and seven-time Grand Slam singles champion Evonne Goolagong Cawley in South Africa.\n\n\"Evonne and I went in there and played for the black people,\" she is quoted as saying in The West Australian. \"I have 35 cultures in my church and I love them all. I think it's very sad and sick it's being brought up now.\"", "Mr Varadkar has come to embody the liberalisation of a country\n\nThere have been plenty of international headlines about Leo Varadkar's rise to the top of Irish politics.\n\nAlmost all focus on the fact that the Republic of Ireland now has a half-Indian, openly gay prime minister.\n\nMr Varadkar has come to embody the liberalisation of a country which was once regarded as one of the most socially conservative in Europe.\n\nBut, in Ireland, Mr Varadkar's sexuality and ethnic background have not been particularly prominent.\n\nHe took over as taoiseach (Irish prime minister) on Thursday, having won the race for the leadership of Fine Gael - the biggest party in the country's ruling coalition.\n\nThe leadership contest focused primarily on socio-economic issues and the defining challenges for Mr Varadkar will be how to build on the Republic of Ireland's recovery from the financial disaster of several years ago, and how to manage Brexit.\n\nMr Varadkar was born on 18 January 1979 in Dublin.\n\nHis father Ashok - a doctor from Mumbai - met his mother Miriam, an Irish nurse, while they were both working in Slough in Berkshire.\n\nMr Varadkar followed his father into medicine\n\nThey settled in Ireland in the 1970s.\n\nThe country Mr Varadkar grew up in was very different to today.\n\nUntil the 1990s, homosexuality and divorce were illegal.\n\nThere were few immigrants, and the Republic of Ireland was one of the poorer members of the EU.\n\nMr Varadkar followed his father into medicine.\n\nHe became a councillor aged 24 and, in 2007, he was elected to the Irish parliament, Dáil Éireann.\n\nThe so-called Celtic Tiger was a global phenomenon - low corporate tax rates and financial deregulation meant the Irish economy became associated with Apple and Google rather than just agriculture and Guinness.\n\nBut the economy crashed amidst the worldwide financial crisis - and Ireland had to accept a £71bn international bailout.\n\nIn the aftermath, Fine Gael came to power at the head of a coalition in 2011.\n\nMr Varadkar was appointed minister for transport, tourism and sport - and then health minister.\n\nIn 2015, he came out as gay in an interview with the Irish national broadcaster RTÉ\n\nMore recently he has run Ireland's welfare system.\n\nHe has built up a high media profile - descriptions of him as a \"sharp-shooter\" and \"straight-talker\" are common.\n\nIn 2015, he came out as gay in an interview with the Irish national broadcaster, RTÉ.\n\nHe said: \"It's not a big deal for me any more. I hope it's not a big deal for anyone else - it shouldn't be.\"\n\nA few months later, Ireland voted in a referendum to legalise same-sex marriage.\n\nWhen Enda Kenny announced his retirement as taoiseach and Fine Gael leader, Mr Varadkar's supporters launched a \"shock-and-awe\" strategy which saw most of the party's parliamentarians endorse him within 48 hours.\n\nHis opponent, Housing Minister Simon Coveney, was never able to recover.\n\nBut he did express \"deep concern\" at the direction in which his rival would take Fine Gael - suggesting Mr Varadkar's economic policies would pull the party to the right.\n\nMr Varadkar said Fine Gael should represent those \"who got up early in the morning\".\n\nHe went on to say he was talking about \"people working in the public and private sector, the self-employed, carers getting up to mind loved ones, parents getting up to mind children\".\n\nBut Fine Gael's political enemies have tried to portray him as a rightwing ideologue - pointing to a recent campaign against benefits cheats.\n\nMr Varadkar's predecessor, Mr Kenny, stood down a year after an election result in which Fine Gael lost seats, and could only form a minority government.\n\nNow officially installed as premier, he is, at 38, the country's youngest prime minister.\n\nHe faces what Mr Kenny has described as the biggest challenge the Irish state has ever had - the departure of its nearest neighbour from the EU.\n\nBut Mr Varadkar has an internationalist outlook - seeing himself in the same mould as the French President Emmanuel Macron or the Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau - a youthful, dynamic, centrist leader.\n\nHis potent political brand has taken him far- but his toughest tests are still to come.\n• None Irish health minister says he is gay", "Last updated on .From the section Tennis\n\nCoverage: Listen to live radio commentary and follow text coverage of selected matches on BBC Radio 5 live sports extra and online.\n\nThe fourth seed needed only 90 minutes to see off the Georgian and secured his place in the fourth round with his most one-sided win at Roland Garros.\n\nNadal, 31 on Saturday, has now won 98 of 100 best-of-five clay-court matches.\n\nThe Spaniard is bidding to become the first player in the Open era - and only the second in history - to win 10 titles at any Grand Slam event.\n\nMargaret Court is the only player to have won 10 or more titles at one Grand Slam event, winning the Australian Open on 11 occasions between 1960 and 1973.\n\nNadal has a 75-2 win-loss record at Roland Garros with his only defeats coming against Robin Soderling in the fourth round in 2009 and Novak Djokovic in the 2015 quarter-finals.\n\nThis was the first time in a completed match at the tournament that Nadal has only lost one game.\n\nNadal won the first set in 23 minutes and won the next five games before world number 63 Basilashvili finally got on the scoreboard.\n\nThe Spaniard wrapped up the set by winning the next game and, with a storm threatening to interrupt play, clinched victory in clinical fashion with his 27th winner.\n\nThe 14-time Grand Slam champion will face compatriot Roberto Bautista Agut in the next round.\n\nMy best match in a while - Nadal\n\n\"It is always important to be through, that's the most important thing,\" said Nadal. \"But obviously when you have positive feelings it is even more important.\n\n\"Basilashvili had been playing well. He won against Gilles Simon in the first round who is a tough opponent and also Viktor Troicki.\n\n\"I'm happy because I had never played against him and I knew it would be tough.\n\n\"He hits the ball so quick but I believe I played my best match in a while.\"\n\nBasilashvili was left with rather different feelings. \"The score is quite embarrassing but I have to accept it,\" said the 25-year-old.\n\nBelgium's David Goffin retired with an ankle injury after slipping while leading in the first set of his third-round match against Horacio Zeballos.\n\nThe 10th seed, who was 5-4 up on Court Suzanne Lenglen, was chasing a deep backhand and slid into a cover, hurting his right ankle.\n\nHis coach Thierry van Cleemput revealed positive news about the injury but was unsure whether he will be fit for Wimbledon.\n\nVan Cleemput said: \"He had an MRI, and the news is reassuring. There is no tearing of the ligaments and no bone that's been broken. There is a swelling, and in 48 hours we will see how things go on.\"\n\nThiem, 23, beat American 25th seed Steve Johnson, who has been \"an emotional mess\" after the recent death of his father, in an enthralling 6-1 7-6 (7-4) 6-3 victory.\n\nThiem is considered one of the outside favourites to win the tournament after beating favourite Rafael Nadal in straight sets in Rome earlier this month.\n\nFifth seed Milos Raonic reached the last 16 after Guillermo Garcia-Lopez retired because of a thigh injury.\n\nRaonic won the first set 6-1 in 21 minutes and led 1-0 in the second when the Spaniard retired at the changeover.\n\nThe Canadian will now face Pablo Carreno Busta who beat Bulgarian 11th seed Grigor Dimitrov 7-5 6-3 6-4.", "Last updated on .From the section Tennis\n\nCoverage: Listen to live radio commentary and follow text coverage of selected matches on BBC Radio 5 live sports extra and online.\n\nDefending champion Novak Djokovic survived a third-round scare at the French Open to beat unseeded Argentine Diego Schwartzman in five sets.\n\nThe Serb came back from two sets to one down to win 5-7 6-3 3-6 6-1 6-1.\n\nDjokovic, 30, finished strongly despite making 55 unforced errors and arguing with umpire Carlos Ramos over a conduct warning.\n\nThe second seed goes on to face Spain's Albert Ramos-Vinolas, who beat France's Lucas Pouille.\n• None Agassi to keep working with Djokovic\n\nThe presence of new coach Andre Agassi has yet to inspire Djokovic to rediscover the form that made him a seemingly untouchable world number one this time last year.\n\nAn erratic performance saw the 12-time Grand Slam champion hit 21 errors in relinquishing a 4-1 lead in the first set.\n\nHowever, Agassi's unexpected arrival midway through the second set apparently inspired Djokovic to a break of serve.\n\n\"I was focused on the screen and I saw obviously people reacting when he arrived,\" said the Serb.\n\n\"He was not supposed to be here today, because we have finished yesterday with our in-person collaboration here in Paris.\n\n\"I appreciate that. I respect that very much that he managed to do things and move his commitments around so he could come and watch.\"\n\nThat late break in the second appeared to have settled the world number two, but Schwartzman - playing his first ever third-round match at a Grand Slam - was his equal throughout the third.\n\nThe 5ft 7in Argentine then broke serve for a 5-3 lead and remarkably recovered from 0-40 to serve out the set.\n\nWith the crowd now excited by the prospect of an upset, Djokovic finally took a firm grip on the match by quickening the pace and shortening the rallies.\n\nIt was not plain sailing, however, and despite racing into a 4-0 lead in the fourth set, Djokovic became embroiled in a row with umpire Ramos after receiving two warnings in a game - one of slow play, the second for unsportsmanlike conduct.\n\nClearly annoyed, the champion retained his focus on the job in hand and reeled off 12 of the last 14 games as dark clouds above threatened to delay his progress.\n\n\"Playing a five-setter at this stage is good,\" added Djokovic.\n\n\"I enjoyed playing, really, even though of course at times I was not playing my best, especially for first three sets, but fourth and fifth sets went completely my way.\"\n• None The victory was Djokovic's 58th in the French Open and means he ties Guillermo Vilas in third place on the all-time list for most matches won at Roland Garros. He has a 58-11 win-loss record behind Rafael Nadal (75-2) and Roger Federer (65-16) while Vilas recorded 58-17.", "Coverage: Live text commentary on the BBC website - and commentary on Radio 5 live from 19:00 BST\n\nReal Madrid have an \"appointment with history\" when they face Juventus in the Champions League final in Cardiff on Saturday, says captain Sergio Ramos.\n\nEleven-time champions Real are aiming to become the first team since AC Milan in 1989 and 1990 to retain the trophy.\n\nItalian side Juventus are looking to win the crown for the third time, while Real can extend their own record.\n\n\"We never dreamed of this opportunity but the stats are there,\" said Spain international defender Ramos.\n\n\"It is a wonderful chance to take the cup home, then history speaks for itself. We are extremely excited about the chance to have two successive Champions League trophies.\n\n\"We have been very solid. Every time we have had the chance to fight for a trophy, we have done that. We are going to be extremely focused, very concentrated so we make as few mistakes as possible.\"\n\n'We will see a great final'\n\nReal Madrid won La Liga ahead of Barcelona this season and have scored 169 goals in all competitions this season.\n\nIn a repeat of the 1998 final, which the Spaniards won 1-0 in Amsterdam, Real come up against a side who are unbeaten in this season's competition\n\nBoss Zinedine Zidane, who played for opponents Juventus between 1996 and 2001, said: \"We know all about pressure at Real Madrid.\n\n\"We are not favourites, nor are Juventus. It is 50-50. But we are in the final again, and everything is possible. I expect an open game on both sides.\n\n\"I have lived and been at Juventus, in Italy there is the famous Catenaccio, but Juve do not just have that.\n\n\"We are going to try to play our game, we know we are going to play against a great team. What everyone who likes football wants to see is to see a great final - and I think we will see that.\"\n\nZidane must decide whether to choose between Gareth Bale and Isco in what seems like his only selection issue before Saturday's Champions League final.\n\nBale has not played since 23 April but is fit, while in-form Isco has scored five goals in his last eight games.\n\n\"I am not going to tell you who is going to play on Saturday,\" said Zidane.\n\nJuventus boss Massimiliano Allegri also has a fully-fit squad to choose from. His side defeated Monaco 4-1 on aggregate to reach their second final in three seasons.\n\nReal knocked out city rivals Atletico with a 4-2 aggregate win and are looking to defend the title they won last year.\n\n'We need to win'\n\nTreble-chasing Juventus clinched a record sixth consecutive Serie A title this season and beat Lazio in the Italian Cup.\n\nJuve have been European Cup winners twice, in 1985 and the last in 1996, but have been defeated finalists on six occasions, most recently against Barcelona two years ago.\n\nThey have conceded just three goals in 12 games so far, while Real have scored in every single one of their 12 games - a total of 32 goals.\n\nManager Allegri said: \"We have worked hard all year and the wins this season have been all about reaching this game. But on Saturday we need to win and we need to understand when will be the moments to attack and when to defend.\n\n\"We have to have the belief that we can bring the cup home and we have to be fiendish to strike when Real offer us an opening.\"\n\nMassimiliano Allegri has done a great job at Juventus and has continued the work of Antonio Conte since arriving in Turin in 2014. He has been able to create a strong team spirit and is currently one of the best managers in Europe.\n\nI had the privilege of playing alongside Zinedine Zidane in Italy for two years. He was a fantastic player with amazing technical skills and a strong personality. I was his room mate in hotels before games so I had an opportunity to know him very well.\n\nI expected him to be a great manager because he has all the skills to do the job. I did not expect him to achieve great results so soon though. He has been doing an excellent job for Real Madrid.\n\nJuventus full-back Dani Alves, 34, could win the competition for the fourth time, while 39-year-old goalkeeper Gianluigi Buffon is looking to triumph for the first time and in turn become the oldest winner of the tournament.\n\nAlves, who played in that match for the La Liga side, said: \"A player as important and big as Gigi, to not have this trophy, it would not really change much in his career but it would add one more page to his wonderful football history if he won. To win the title with him would be quite something for me before he retires.\n\n\"I am not a person who thinks about himself. If everything around me is fine, then I am fine too. The objective is for the whole team to win and for me to be up to the level of my colleagues.\"\n\nWorld Cup winner Buffon announced in January 2016 that he will retire from football after the 2018 World Cup and this may be his last shot at winning Europe's elite club competition.\n\nHe said: \"Dani is a bit like me, he is an optimist. He told me 'I will make you win the Champions League' and he has been a revelation for me. Real Madrid are used to winning finals, we have lost quite a number of them. It is a good match and we will try to overturn our record.\n\n\"The emotions I might feel may be different to a younger player. Dani has won this competition and has four or five years left in his career but I have to exclude this possibility. Yes, it will be much more special for me, but I want to play without regrets and without thinking of these issues.\"\n\nJune 2016: Ronaldo's Euro 2016 campaign did not start well - 20 shots, zero goals for Portugal. But a superb, flicked finish against Hungary in the group stages made him the first player to score in four different European Championship finals\n\nItalian football might have looked very different over the last two decades if an impressionable 12-year-old had not been captivated by the Cameroon goalkeeper at the 1990 World Cup.\n\nBuffon played as an attacker back then but the performances of Thomas N'Kono - playing in his third World Cup - inspired him to try life as a goalkeeper.\n• None This is the 19th encounter between Juventus and Real Madrid - all in the European Cup/Champions League, making this the second-most played fixture in the history of the tournament after Bayern Munich v Real Madrid (24).\n• None Juventus and Real Madrid have eight wins each and two draws. However, their only previous meeting in the Champions League final saw Real Madrid win 1-0 in 1998 thanks to a Predrag Mijatovic goal.\n• None Real Madrid have reached the European Cup/Champions League final for the 15th time, four more than any other club (AC Milan have reached 11). They've won 11 of the previous 14 - again more than any other team in history.\n• None Juventus have won only two of their eight European Cup/Champions League finals. They have lost their last four - in 1997, 1998, 2003 and 2015.", "Last updated on .From the section Golf\n\nThe reaction to Tiger Woods' recent arrest has been \"disrespectful and unfair\", according to former world number one Martin Kaymer.\n\nWoods, 41, winner of 14 majors, was found \"asleep at the wheel\" with the engine running when he was arrested on Monday in Florida.\n\nWhy so nasty? Why don't you try to do the opposite and help him now in the way he inspired us? Martin Kaymer on the reaction to Tiger Woods' arrest\n\nThe American said it was because of a reaction to medication.\n\nKaymer said: \"Stop being so nasty. Try to help. We all want to see him happier and one day see him play golf again.\"\n\nPalm Beach County police released video of Woods' arrest and subsequently of his breathalyser test inside the Sheriff's Office, which shows the former number one handcuffed and appearing to sit slumped on a chair.\n\nHe was initially charged with Driving Under the Influence (DUI).\n\n\"Obviously a lot of people know what happened to Tiger Woods the last few days,'' Kaymer said in a video on his Twitter account, seemingly in reaction to disparaging remarks on social media.\n\n\"There's so many comments, so many opinions. They are so unfair and so disrespectful, in my opinion.\n\n\"He inspired kids, teenagers; he inspired all of us.\n\n\"I find it so nasty that people just kick him while he's already on the floor, and at the end of the day it's just using someone else for your own sadness. Yes, he's in the public eye, he's in the spotlight a lot, so of course people will talk about him.\n\n\"But why so nasty? Why don't you try to do the opposite and help him now in the way he inspired us?''\n\nWoods has been recovering from back surgery - his fourth such operation - and is expected to be out of action until October.", "Last updated on .From the section Tennis\n\nCoverage: Listen to live radio commentary and follow text coverage of selected matches on BBC Radio 5 live sports extra and online.\n\nWorld number one Andy Murray came from a set down to beat unseeded Slovakian Martin Klizan in the French Open second round.\n\nThe Briton won 6-7 (3-7) 6-2 6-2 7-6 (7-3) and goes on to face Argentina's Juan Martin del Potro.\n\nIt was Murray's 18th win of a season that has been interrupted by illness and injury.\n\nBritish number two Kyle Edmund also progressed after beating Renzo Olivo 7-5 6-3 6-1.\n\nThe 22-year-old Yorkshireman will next play South Africa's Kevin Anderson, who beat Australian Nick Kyrgios 5-7 6-4 6-1 6-2.\n\nDel Potro, seeded 29th after his own injury struggles, went through when his opponent Nicolas Almagro retired at one set all.\n\nAsked about facing former US Open champion Del Potro as early as the third round, Murray said: \"It's a tough match. In my opinion he's one of the best players in the world.\"\n\nMurray needed three hours and 34 minutes to see off Klizan, the world number 50, and claim his second four-set win of the week.\n\nThe Scot, 30, could again be heard to complain he was struggling with his movement, but once again his form improved as the match wore on.\n\n\"I'm playing way better than I was two weeks ago, and today's match will have done me a lot of good,\" said Murray.\n\n\"Physically I pulled up well and felt good, so I will gain a lot of confidence from that. And also, I hit a lot of balls out there today, more than the first-round match.\"\n\nIt could have been a much quicker afternoon on the Suzanne Lenglen Court had Murray completed a comeback from a break down in the first set.\n\nHaving weathered the expected early storm from his big-hitting opponent, Murray drew level at 5-5 only to play a poor tie-break and fall a set behind.\n\nKlizan, 27, began the match with his left calf heavily strapped and it was no surprise that his level dropped in the second set.\n\nMurray raced through seven straight games and when he made it 11 out of 13 to take a two-sets-to-one lead, there looked no way back for the Slovakian.\n\nHe was offered a lifeline early in the fourth thanks to a wayward Murray forehand and made it through to 5-3, only to fail once again when trying to serve out the set.\n\nKlizan was broken for the sixth time when he framed a smash over the baseline and, despite brilliantly saving one match point, saw his challenge end in another tie-break.\n\nMurray lunged to his right to send a superb volley past the Slovakian on the second match point.\n\n\"Consistency is definitely what I'm looking for,\" Murray told BBC Sport.\n\n\"I felt a little bit more in control of the first-round match than I did today. At times today I played some very solid stuff.\n\n\"The most positive things for me are physically I felt good after a pretty long match in tough conditions, and also I made some quite significant changes during the match to my tactics.\"\n\nEdmund's progress was considerably easier as he beat Argentina's Olivo, ranked 91st in the world, in straight sets.\n\nIt is the first time the 22-year-old has progressed to the third round of the French Open after being knocked out in round two in 2015 and 2016.\n\nThe world number 49 dropped just nine games, hitting 30 winners along the way, 18 on his impressive forehand side.\n\n\"There was a stage when I really felt the match turn in my favour and helped me get on top,\" said Edmund.\n\n\"Olivo had beaten Jo-Wilfried Tsonga in the last round and I knew I had to play well today. I am pleased I got it done.\"\n\nMurray expended more energy than is ideal in a first-week Grand Slam match, but time on the match court is important right now - and every win valuable. He is starting to play very well for periods of a match and now seeks to add the consistency required.\n\nEdmund knows he has a formidable game when he is on song and is learning to trust his instincts in the Grand Slams. He beat Richard Gasquet and John Isner in his run to the fourth round of the US Open last year and will emulate that with a victory over the slightly lower-ranked Kevin Anderson on Saturday.", "President Trump went on the attack over what he sees as a bad deal for the US\n\nPresident Trump's statement is a very clear repudiation of the Paris climate agreement and international efforts to fund climate mitigation and adaptation in poorer countries.\n\nIn many ways it is far worse than many observers had expected.\n\nThe president clearly believes that the accord is a job killer, an economy strangler and a desperately unfair stitch-up by other countries wanting to take economic advantage of the US.\n\n\"We don't want other leaders and other countries laughing at us anymore,\" thundered President Trump, \"and they won't be.\"\n\nHe spoke of being open to re-negotiating the deal or trying to build a new agreement - but the idea of re-working the accord is an unlikely scenario.\n\nFrench President Emmanuel Macron has already dismissed the idea.\n\n\"The President said that they could continue to talk, but indicated that nothing was renegotiable with regard to the Paris accords. The United States and France will continue to work together, but not on the subject of climate change,\" sources close to the President were reported as saying.\n\nThe solar industry now employs twice as many Americans as coal now does\n\n\"President Trump's speech was confused nonsense,\" said Bob Ward from the UK's Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change.\n\n\"He announced that the United States will withdraw from the Paris Agreement on climate change, while also launching negotiations to re-enter the agreement.\n\n\"But the agreement states that no country can withdraw within three years of it coming into force, and the process of withdrawal takes a further year to complete.\n\nMr Ward continued: \"That means the United States cannot complete withdrawal from the Paris Agreement before 5 November 2020, the day after the next presidential election in the United States. So Mr Trump will not have withdrawn from the agreement within this presidential term.\"\n\nThe scale of President Trump's opposition to the deal is all about the money. He sees the accord as \"a massive redistribution of US wealth to other countries\". This is a clear indication that he has fully bought into an economic nationalist and climate sceptic perspective supported by several members of his inner circle.\n\nOthers don't see climate change that way.\n\nCalifornia governor Jerry Brown and other state leaders have formed an alliance to \"live by Paris\"\n\n\"Today's decision is not only disappointing, but also highly concerning for those of us that live on the front line of climate change,\" said Marshall Islands President Hilda Heine.\n\n\"While today's decision will have grave impacts, it is not too late to act. We must not give up hope. Our children and their children deserve not only to survive, they deserve to thrive.\"\n\nShe added: \"That is why the rest of the world remains firmly committed to the Paris Agreement, and our own commitment to it - and that of our wider Pacific family - will never waver.\"\n\nAgain and again, the question of unfairness cropped up in President Trump's lengthy statement. The \"world's worst polluters\", which he argued were China and India, had \"no meaningful obligations\" placed on them by the Paris deal.\n\nPulling the US out of the deal was, he said, his way of choosing Pittsburgh over Paris. However, the mayor of Pittsburgh rejected the association. Bill Peduto tweeted: \"I can assure you that we will follow the guideline of the Paris agreement for our people, our country & future.\"\n\nThe president was scathing about the green climate fund, saying it would cost billions of dollars - the US has pledged $3bn and paid around $1bn.\n\nThe overall tone and content of his speech clearly plays to the support base that elected him but is also a clear disavowal of multilateralism, especially on climate change, and will definitely push other countries more closely together on this issue.\n\nIn an interview with the BBC, former US Secretary of State John Kerry, who signed the Paris accord on behalf of the Obama administration in 2016, said of Trump's \"laughter\" comments: \"I think other countries will stop laughing at us when we don't have announcements like we had today and we have a presidency that offers America a greater vision of the possibilities of the future.\"\n\nFollow Matt on Twitter and on Facebook"], "link": 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