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When is England's Euro 2025 trophy parade? Route, times and how to watch Lionesses celebration today

When is England's Euro 2025 trophy parade? Route, times and how to watch Lionesses celebration today

A statement from the FA read: The event is free to attend, and those attending will be able to watch the Band of His Majesty's Royal Marines Portsmouth and the Central Band of the Royal Air Force welcome home the victorious England team, enjoy live music from DJ CharStape and see tournament highlights shown on big screens, before Sarina Wiegman and the Lionesses take the stage for a special European Championship winners trophy lift presentation.'
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FA Cup on display at Harwich and Parkeston FC
FA Cup on display at Harwich and Parkeston FC

BBC News

time3 hours ago

  • BBC News

FA Cup on display at Harwich and Parkeston FC

The FA Cup has been displayed at a non-league football club as part of its 150th anniversary side Harwich and Parkeston FC are returning to the competition for the first time since 2019, facing AFC Dunstable in the extra preliminary round on chairman Tony Armstrong said the display of the trophy was instrumental in showing how far the club had come since nearly going out of existence 23 years ago."It's the hard work from volunteers that has resurrected the club," he said. The club opened its doors to its youth teams and the public to come to see the iconic president Terry Francis said: "It's an honour for the club and inspiring for young people and non-league supporters."Supporter Mark, 38, who has been taking his daughter Holly, 11, to matches since she was born, said it was surreal to see the trophy, especially at his home team manager Matt Carmichael said: "A successful [cup] run would mean a lot to the club financially."He said the club was on a good trajectory, following their promotion to Premier Division of the Essex Senior League, and the "sky is the limit." Follow Essex news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X.

‘Players think it is a quick fix': Livingston's Brian Rice on breaking free of gambling addiction
‘Players think it is a quick fix': Livingston's Brian Rice on breaking free of gambling addiction

The Guardian

time13 hours ago

  • The Guardian

‘Players think it is a quick fix': Livingston's Brian Rice on breaking free of gambling addiction

Conversation with Brian Rice flows easily. Brian Clough pounced to sign the red-haired midfielder after he failed to agree a contract with Hibernian in the summer of 1985. 'Eff me, it's Steve Davis,' roared Clough as Rice entered the manager's office for the first time. It took until September '85 for a tribunal to determine Nottingham Forest would have to pay Hibs close to £200,000 for Rice. He had been unable to play until that dispute was resolved. Clough bawled at Rice again as he walked on to the training pitch the following day. ''You'll need to go back to Scotland. I'd need to sell the stand to sign you son,'' Rice recalls. 'You should have seen the look on my face. Then he just started laughing. The following week I made my debut at Anfield. Every day was different. You didn't know if you were training, going to play cricket or for an ice cream.' Rice is still very welcome at Forest, where he is most fondly remembered for an audacious finish against Arsenal in a 1988 FA Cup quarter-final. He cites Johnny Metgod as the best player he lined up alongside. Rice also remembers how during a Clough rant at Metgod, the Dutch centre-back snapped back that Forest's manager had signed him. 'And I'll sell you,' Clough retorted. A fortnight later, Metgod was a Tottenham player. The trouble is, this endearing trip down memory lane is a precursor to Rice's broader tale. He will begin the new Scottish season back in the top flight as Livingston's head of football operations, a switch upstairs after time spent on the coaching staff. Rice will be a loss on the training pitch – he is widely regarded as a superb coach – and an inevitable success in his new post. The 61-year-old's knowledge of football in Scotland is encyclopedic. Rice did not begin gambling in the midst of Forest's laddish culture. 'Mine started when I was at school,' he says. 'Throwing pennies against a wall, playing cards. I barely had a drink before I went to Nottingham because I wanted to be a football player and the training was intense. Drink really didn't interest me, but I always gambled. 'My dad gambled every day but that was 5p or 10p and it was fun to him. It was fun to me to start with, then it escalated. It takes a grip of you. I knew I had a problem, a massive problem. But in those days, to ask for help was a sign of weakness. Now I know it is a massive sign of strength.' Fast forward to January 2020 and the Scottish Football Association announce Rice, then the manager of Hamilton, has been given a 10-game ban for betting on matches. 'October 15th,' he says. 'I was going to watch Scotland Under-21s against Germany at Firhill. The phone went at half past four in the afternoon. It was the club secretary saying: 'Brian, we have had the SFA on and they are going to investigate you regarding gambling in football.' I said: 'Thank God it is over.' 'I was so relieved it was finished. The next day I went in to see the club owner, told him everything and made sure we went to the SFA and did the same. I gave them everything.' A whispering campaign ensued, including one that suggested Rice bet on games involving his own clubs. That proved to never be the case throughout a decade's worth of wagers the SFA examined. Scottish football's relationship with gambling is complex. Betting firms as sponsors are everywhere. Any harm attached to Rice's episode was primarily to himself. 'It was self-inflicted,' he says. 'I knew I was doing wrong. I don't make excuses about it. 'I don't think in any other line of work you would be punished for having an addiction. You get help. But they did help me. Alongside the suspension, I had to go to meetings for a year. It was the best punishment they could ever have given me. I was going to three or four meetings a week and I still do that to this day. Those meetings have changed my life, educated me and let me know why I gambled. It has given me the foundations to have a better life. If I stop going there, my mindset could change again. I'm not ashamed, I am doing something about my problem.' 'I know of cases that have been swept under the carpet, that nobody knows about,' Rice adds. 'Players reported to be injured at their club and they aren't. I know that for a fact because I have spoken to the players. But I think it is better that way, better than the way it came out with me. People have families as well.' Rice has had low points. Plenty of them. 'I was on the top of the 32-storey building in Qatar and ready to step off it,' he says. 'That's where it took me.' His successful relationship with Falkirk counted for nothing when a fan used gambling as a means to abuse the then-manager at Alloa Athletic. ''I hope it never happens to your family,' I replied. It was horrible. They see it as banter and I have to take it. I didn't that day because it was Falkirk and, to be fair to the club, they were fantastic. The guy didn't have the guts to come forward.' The 24-hour, 365-days availability of betting is unlike when Rice played on either side of the border and he believes he sold himself short with trips to the horse racing, casino or bookie when he could have been training. He also urges young footballers to get in touch if they fear gambling issues are spiralling out of control. 'I know the signs to look for,' Rice says. 'In six years, I have helped more than a dozen players and am still doing so now. Players think it is a quick fix; stop gambling for a month and I'll be cured. It's not stopping gambling, which can be quite easy; it's changing your habits. I had to completely change the way I lived, even the way I drove home so I wasn't passing five betting shops. Fill your day better.' The day after our chat, I message Rice to express gratitude for his candour. 'It's my story and I've nothing left to hide from nowadays,' he replies. 'Thanks again.' Judgment should include the fact he is one of the game's good guys. In the UK, Samaritans can be contacted on 116 123 or email jo@ You can contact the mental health charity Mind by calling 0300 123 3393 or visiting

‘He was a beast' – Barnet star recalls being outmuscled by Spurs ace at Wembley as side return to EFL after 7-year break
‘He was a beast' – Barnet star recalls being outmuscled by Spurs ace at Wembley as side return to EFL after 7-year break

The Sun

time15 hours ago

  • The Sun

‘He was a beast' – Barnet star recalls being outmuscled by Spurs ace at Wembley as side return to EFL after 7-year break

ANTHONY HARTIGAN was once taught a tough lesson at Wembley by Tottenham 'beast' Victor Wanyama as a skinny 17-year-old. But the Barnet captain is hoping to put that and all his EFL experience to good use as the Bees return to League Two on Saturday after a seven-year absence when they host Fleetwood. 3 Hartigan, 25, clocked 118 appearances in League One for AFC Wimbledon and another 20 for Newport (on loan) and Mansfield in League Two before dropping into non-league with Barnet. And he has also played at Wembley twice — including taking on Mauricio Pochettino 's Spurs in 2018 with the Dons while their new stadium was being built. He told SunSport: 'We got drawn away against Tottenham in the FA Cup so I had a unique chance to play at Wembley. It was an incredible experience to take on Premier League stars live on TV. 'I was only 17 and it was my breakthrough year. I'd only made my senior debut that season so to be walking out under the arch alongside the likes of Harry Kane was surreal. 'Tottenham had a great team then. They also had Dele Alli, Eric Dier, Jan Vertonghen, Kieran Trippier, Mousa Dembele, Son Heung-Min, Victor Wanyama, players like that. 'I was up against Alli and Wanyama. I've got a photo of me trying to get the ball off Wanyama, which is funny because I'm like a skinny little boy and he was just a beast! I didn't stand a chance! 'Our manager Neal Ardley told us the next morning, 'That's the standard you must reach if you want to make it to the top.' "They just do everything so well technically, tactically, physically and mentally. It's frightening how big a gap it is from our level.' 3 3 Hartigan was also on the losing side in the 2021 League Two play-off final with Newport when they were beaten after extra-time by Morecambe. Not only was the day soiled by the result but the crowd number was limited to only 9,083 because of Covid restrictions. Hartigan feels he has unfinished business in the EFL, having played regularly for the Dons. But when he joined Mansfield three years ago, a shoulder injury wrecked his first season there before he was loaned for a year to Barnet, a move he made permanent last July. However, he has found a home at the Hertfordshire club, starting 89 of his 90 league appearances — and winning the National League title in May. Now he cannot wait to get his EFL career motoring again with the Bees. He said: 'I had a bit of bad luck going to Manfield. It was the right club for me at the wrong time — but Barnet has definitely proved to be the right team at the right time. 'I've excelled here because there are good people around me, I'm getting games under my belt again and the whole environment has been excellent. 'We don't fear the jump into League Two because this team deserves to be here. 'On a personal level I want to reach the highest level I can and enjoy my football. I'm enjoying my journey with Barnet.'

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