
Linfield: Some fans 'determined to destroy' clubs reputation
Speaking to BBC News NI, the chairman said the board had spent spent long hours discussing the problem of sectarianism over a number of years.He said the club held meetings with the Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI), supporters groups and local representatives."We try to make progress and promote positive behaviours and to an extent it has worked, but when big games come around there is an element who seem determined to damage the reputation of the club, not just financially, but also it is very important to us, our reputation, in terms of sponsorship," he said.
Responding to the sanction at the time, Linfield noted their "extreme disappointment", adding: "This sanction is as a result of sectarian chanting and the use of flares by individuals who would profess to be our supporters."The club has repeatedly urged its supporters to refrain from all forms of sectarian and discriminatory chanting at our games and also to avoid the use of pyrotechnics."
Linfield manager David Healy said the board are "at their wits' end".Healy said a "very small minority" had "let the club down", and emphasised the vast majority of supporters make up "a brilliant fan base".The Windsor Park game finished 1-1 with Dubliners Shelbourne progressing 2-1 on aggregate.
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Telegraph
26 minutes ago
- Telegraph
Princess Anne's attempted kidnapper released from psychiatric hospital
A man who attempted to kidnap Princess Anne and shot four people has been freed from Broadmoor Hospital. Ian Ball, who stalked the Princess and ambushed her limousine in March 1974, also attacked the men who came to her rescue. He admitted attempted kidnap and two attempted murders when he was brought before the Old Bailey and was sentenced aged 26. Ball, who was deemed mentally ill, was detained 'without limit of time' under the Mental Health Act but the Daily Mail has reported he has been released from Broadmoor. He was released on probation in 2019. Ball, 77, in an interview with the Daily Mail, said: 'I'm an innocent, sane man because I had good reason to believe the gunpowder had been taken out of the bullets and another girl had been substituted for Princess Anne.' Ball claimed it would be a 'waste of time' to apologise to the men he shot, and said of Anne, who had two guns waved in her face: 'She wasn't bothered on the night... I didn't scare her. I was more scared than she was.' It has been reported that the Princess Royal and royal security chiefs have been informed of Ball's release. Buckingham Palace declined to comment. During the hearing at the Old Bailey in May 1974, two months after the incident, he did not deny the charges brought against him including attempted kidnap, attempting to murder two policemen, and wounding a chauffeur along with a journalist. He confirmed that he brought the Princess's car to a halt by skidding his Ford Escort then held her up by gunpoint, grabbed her arm and threatened to shoot her. Ball held her by the right arm and the Princess's then-husband, Captain Mark Phillips, pulled her by the left arm, ripping her velvet dress. Ball shot her police bodyguard, her chauffeur, a police constable and a journalist who rushed to help. The Princess refused to leave the car, famously saying: 'Not bloody likely.' In his self-published 'autobiographical novel', To Kidnap A Princess, Ball has claimed his innocence. A Ministry of Justice spokesman said: 'Restricted patients can be recalled to hospital if their mental health deteriorates such that the risk they pose becomes unmanageable in the community.' Ball claimed the kidnap 'hoax' was set up with a police officer known as Frank. He was never found, although Ball claimed it was Frank who removed the gunpowder from his bullets and substituted another woman for the Princess. He said: 'The whole idea of performing the hoax was to get the publicity so I could write my autobiography, and I expected to get £10,000 in royalties.'


The Sun
an hour ago
- The Sun
Horse racing tips: ‘He's a stayer who won't be stopping' – Templegate's big 11-2 NAP on the final day of Goodwood
TEMPLEGATE is in red-hot form and he tackles Saturday's action from Glorious Goodwood confident of smashing the bookies once more. Back a horse by clicking their odds below. SAM HAWKENS (1.55 Goodwood, nap) He is a stayer on the up as he showed when scooting in over 1m5f at Hamilton last time. There was a bit of juice in the ground at the Scottish track and he wasn't stopping at the line. This is a hotter race but there's more to come. SAYIDAH HARD SPUN (2.10 Newmarket, nb) She has won two of her past three runs and saw out this trip well when scoring at Ascot last time. The handicapper has been fair with a 3lb rise in the weights and she can take another step forward. She won this race 12 months ago and returning to this trip and track can bring out her best form. She was beaten when odds-on at Sandown last time but that was a muddling race and he was only two lengths away at the line. We know she stays and a little give in the ground is fine while William Haggas is in fine form. GOODWOOD 1.20 ARABIAN CROWN was a solid third in a Newmarket Group 2 last time and the form has been franked here this week. He goes on any ground and sees out this trip. There's more to come from this four-year-old. Al Aasy won this last year and, while he's not the greatest battler, his class will see him close again. Candleford is seven now but looked as good as ever when taking a Beverley Listed prize last month. He likes this trip and William Haggas is in decent form. Meydaan was second on his last visit here in May and has been running well at Listed level without winning. Ryan Moore taking over is a plus but he needs a bit more to score. Ambiente Friendly hasn't fired this season and has been gelded since a poor effort at Royal Ascot. 1.55 SAM HAWKENS is a stayer on the up as he showed when scooting in over 1m5f at Hamilton last time. There was a bit of juice in the ground at the Scottish track and he wasn't stopping at the line. This is a hotter race but there's more to come. Aeronautic was a good fifth in the Copper Horse handicap at Royal Ascot over this distance and is open to improvement for Joseph O'Brien. He's off the same mark and may prefer this slightly slower ground. Stressfree would have a massive chance if seeing out this longer trip. He has been going well around 1m4f and looks a big price to place. French Duke is another stepping up in distance and he won at this meeting last season. Roger Varian's hope is 10lb higher than that now but should have more to offer. Master Builder often travels well without winning but he has scored over this trip and didn't run badly on his last run here. 2.30 TERM OF ENDEARMENT won this race 12 months ago and returning to this trip and track can bring out her best form. She was beaten when odds-on at Sandown last time but that was a muddling race and he was only two lengths away at the line. We know she stays and a little give in the ground is fine while William Haggas is in fine form. Danielle is interesting on this hike in distance having shown Group quality over shorter. This may not be the day after a long break she's one to watch. Fellow Gosden runner Sueno was a solid second at Newmarket latest and ran well over this distance at York before that. She is another with solid claims. Goodie Two Shoes won a Group 3 over this distance at Fairyhouse latest and is respected with William Buick up. Waardah is a three-year-old with a bright future after a Listed win here in June. That was over 1m2f so she has to prove her staying power. I'M in the PUROSANGUE gang in the £250,000 Stewards' Cup. Top jockey William Buick teams up with Andrew Balding with this four-year-old who saves his best for this distance and likes soft ground. He should get his conditions here and run a big race at fair odds. Last year's winner Get It took the Wokingham last time and will go close again, while Completely Random also went well at Royal Ascot. Elmonjed is another one high on the shortlist. Here's my guide to the big field, where I rate them 1 (worst) to 5 (best): ALZAHIR 3 HIR we go. Went off far too quick at York last time after three good wins. Goes on any ground and may bounce back at too big a price. ANNAF 3 AF a go. Big player at best but unreliable and slow away too often. Talented if getting a clean break but has a big weight. APOLLO ONE 3 ONE show. Twice second in this and always runs his race but probably needs a personal best to finally win it. CIRCE 4 YES Cir. Strong traveller with three wins this summer. Up in class but big field suits and Moore up. Handles soft. COMMANCHE FALLS 2 COM on. Dual winner of this race in his proime. Stable back in nick but latest form underwhelming. Hard to rule out, but needs best to hit the frame. COMPLETELY RANDOM 4 RAN raid. Good run in the Wokingham latest and will love the pace of this. Just the type to pop up in a race like this. DESERT COP 1 COP out. Decent form in Bahrain but has been poor back here. Looks the yard's second string. DRAMA 2 NO Drama. Plenty of form on AW but turf record is weaker. Unlucky last time but needs more for this. ELMONJED 4 EL of a bet. Improved a bundle to win at York and likes this trip and going. More weight but a major player. GERMANIC 2 TOO Manic. Two quiet on turf efforts since a big run over this at Newcastle. Trip fine but needs a lot more. GET IT 4 IT makes sense. Won this at 40s last year and took the Wokingham last time in style. Only 4lb higher and set for bold bid from from front. No shock to see him go very close. HAMMER THE HAMMER 3 HAMMER time. Good second at Royal Ascot over 5f and likes this trip. Not tackled slow ground before but it's early days and there's more to come. JAKAJARO 3 ALRIGHT Jak. Unlucky at Ascot and ran well here Tuesday. First try at 6f but looks well treated. Off the same mark and not discounted. JORDAN ELECTRICS 1 JOR drop. Getting on a bit now and poor comeback latest. Hard to fancy despite trainer Jim Goldie being in good form. JUNGLE DRUMS 1 JUNGLE juiced. Fair 2yo but been poor for a while and this looks much too tough. Drums out of tune. KORKER 3 KOR blimey. Hold-up horse who needs luck but trip fine and likes soft. Each-way shout if getting the breaks. ORAZIO 1 ON Raz. Hit and miss last year and poor comeback at Ascot. Hard to fancy despite handling any ground. PUROSANGUE 5 URO Star. Backed for this last year on firm but best efforts on soft and dropped to a very nice mark. Can go close. RUN BOY RUN 3 ON Run. Has been reliable in top 6f races and didn't stay 7f last twice. Back to best trip and could sneak a place. SAINT LAWRENCE 1 LAW broken. Not won since the 2023 Wokingham and poor in that race this year. Tall order in current form. SEVEN QUESTIONS 1 SEVEN down. Group 3 winner last term over 5f and best at that trip. Shown little form this season. STRIKE RED 3 RED alert. Best of group behind Elmonjed at York. Nicely treated and peaking at right time. Can run a good race. THE X O 1 CROSS out X. Out of sorts for a while and tailed off on stable debut. Trip suits but not good enough for this. TOCA MADERA 2 MAD bet. Good third at York in May and holding his form but doesn't look well treated in first-time cheekpieces. TWILIGHT CALLS 1 TWILIGHT in dark. Three years without a win tells the tale. Best over this trip but likely to struggle again. TWILIGHT JET 2 JET must fly. Ran well at Epsom but was poor here on Tuesday. Prefers this trip on soft but needs a lot more. TWO TRIBES 3 TWO true. Won strong 7f race last week at Ascot and stamina may help in conditions. Could get involved late. VADREAM 2 BAD Vad. Was tailed off at Royal Ascot and on a long losing run. Slow ground suits but up against it again. 3.45 SPIRIT OF FARHH looks a big price given how well he took a Newmarket handicap over this trip 14 days ago. The ground was tacky on the July course but he went through it nicely and is open to improvement. In-form trainer Eve Johnson Houghton has a good record here and can go close again. Montpellier won a couple of maidens and ran well at Salisbury on handicap debut last time. There's more to come with this step up in distance a wise move. Consolidation was snookered by the draw at Royal Ascot but won over this course and distance two starts ago. It's early days and there should be a lot more to come. Mudbir is bred to be classy and scored on handicap debut at Sandown 28 days ago. He should progress from there from the Gosdens and looks a big player. Rare Change was hampered at Newcastle last time after winning at Pontefract. He likes this trip and has place claims. Yah Mo Be There ran well in the Jersey Stakes from a moderate draw and is another danger. NEWMARKET 2.10 SAYIDAH HARD SPUN has won two of her past three runs and saw out this trip well when scoring at Ascot last time. The handicapper has been fair with a 3lb rise in the weights and she can take another step forward. Awaafi was a promising second at Haydock last time. She shapes as though seven furlongs would be ideal but her stamina could be an asset here. Azleet enjoyed the all-weather when scoring over this distance at Southwell 20 three weeks ago. Her opening handicap mark of 76 looks on the lenient side and there should be more to come. Ruby's Angel is another making her handicap debut and was a place behind Awaafi last time. Despite that she carries 1lb more which seems a little strange but she's not out of this. Meelaf completes the field for in-form Karl Burke and has run well at Group 3 level so is no mug in this wide-open contest. Her mark is not the kindest and she might have less scope than a few of these now but she's quick. 3.20 MERIBELLA had some traffic problems in a Pontefract Listed race last time so did well to finish third. This trip is ideal and she will be on the premises again. Jane Temple clocked a personal best when third in a similar contest to this last time. She goes on any ground and will be right there. Silent Love steps out of maiden company where she landed a battling success at Kempton latest. This longer trip will suit and there's a fair bit more to come. Sioux Life is an Italian Group 2 winner over 1m2f so has quality but her first crack at this trip at Haydock last time was only a modest run. Karmology was second in good company at Beverley and will try to nick this off the front. She's likely to be collared by a couple in the closing stages. Templegate's tips Commercial content notice: Taking one of the offers featured in this article may result in a payment to The Sun. You should be aware brands pay fees to appear in the highest placements on the page. 18+. T&Cs apply. Remember to gamble responsibly A responsible gambler is someone who:


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Can the Bitcoin Batman save Bedford? He's seen his hometown ravaged by shoplifting, drug abuse and homelessness. Now he's splashing his own cash to make the streets safe
A life-size bronze statue of Bedford's most famous son, John Bunyan, stands at the end of the high street – a stone's throw from the prison where he wrote his best known work, The Pilgrim's Progress. Today, some 360 years after he was banged up for preaching in public, the God-fearing author, whose Christian allegory was set to music in the hymn To Be A Pilgrim, is facing a tough crowd. By 4pm, the nearby park benches have been entirely taken over by alcoholics. 'Come here at the right time and there will be 20 or 30 of them,' says my guide, local businessman Peter McCormack. 'They'll be shouting or fighting or harassing people who walk past.' Another group of undesirables can be found at the bus station, where aggressive begging is the order of the day, while visitors to Bedford's pedestrianised shopping precinct have to negotiate doorways filled with the belongings of rough sleepers. Down an alley next to his town centre coffee shop, McCormack shows me a courtyard where drug addicts gather after dark. It contains small piles of rubbish and the remains of burned mattresses. 'From time to time, people leave used needles here too,' he says. 'This is the centre of town, but there's anti-social behaviour everywhere. Dealers on e-bikes. Crackheads who'll run up and shout in your face. People shooting up in stairwells. Alcoholics in the parks. 'No wonder the shops are all closing and the place looks like a s***hole. People who don't feel safe won't come and spend their money, will they?' On the basis of our tour, McCormack certainly seems to have a point. In theory, the centre of Bedford – a commuter town with 185,000 inhabitants and 20 churches, which lies just 40 minutes from London's St Pancras station, and where suburban executive homes fetch upwards of £1m – ought to be bustling and prosperous. In reality, it's a case study in modern civic decay. Dozens of stores, including an entire arcade, lie empty. Large chain stores, such as Debenhams, are long gone, along with The Body Shop and Marks & Spencer, its former premises now occupied by a B&M discount shop. Graffiti covers shuttered windows. Several bank branches have closed, together with the once-imposing police station, which has been replaced by a comically tiny 'community hub'. The only businesses which seem to be doing a decent trade are vape stores, takeaways and a large Wetherspoons pub, The Pilgrim's Progress, where you can buy a pint of Ruddles Best for the bargain price of £1.79. 'When I was a lad, I used to walk around Bedford and feel totally safe,' says McCormack. 'Now I've got a daughter who's 15 and I won't let her do the same thing. That's a problem. 'There's a plague of addiction and crime, shoplifting is a real problem, and the whole place looks a mess. 'The other day, one of the shopkeepers sent me a message saying, 'There's a guy running round off his face, exposing himself.' Who wants to come shopping in a place like that?' The same could, of course, be said for many of Britain's town centres, which have been in decline for a generation – thanks to the rise of online shopping and out-of-town retail parks and being ravaged by the pandemic, and now having to survive in a world where Chancellor Rachel Reeves is taxing shopkeepers to the hilt. The justice system has also more or less given up on enforcing laws against shoplifting, casual drug use and other petty crime. Yet McCormack, a heavily tattooed 46-year-old, who has made a small fortune in Bitcoin and for years hosted cryptocurrency's most successful podcast, is determined he will not sit back and watch his town go to the dogs. Instead, today – and every Saturday this month – he will pay for ten private security guards to patrol the streets of Bedford, armed with body cameras and radios, to help deter crime, hostile begging, drug-taking, public drunkenness and other anti-social behaviour. The £10,000 initiative, which has seen him dubbed 'Bitcoin's first Batman', is designed to entice shoppers back to the town. He also runs a variety of businesses including the Auction Room bar and Real Coffee, a cafe which doubles up as the club shop of Real Bedford, the local non-league football club which he co-owns with Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss, the American twins who co-founded Facebook and have since made billion-dollar fortunes in crypto. 'People tell me they won't come to Bedford because the town centre looks like a s***hole and is dangerous,' he says. 'Every year, we see more crackheads, more aggressive beggars, more shoplifters. Women are being harassed, shops are closing and families no longer feel safe. McCormack, a heavily tattooed 46-year-old, who has made a small fortune in Bitcoin and for years hosted cryptocurrency's most successful podcast, is determined he will not sit back and watch his town go to the dogs 'I've been saying for ages that if the police won't fix it, then I will do it for them. They haven't, so here we are.' McCormack's patrolmen are instructed to act as the equivalent of 'scarecrows', deterring crime by their presence. They will follow known criminals, including shoplifters, report law-breaking to the police and, on occasions where they witness a potentially dangerous incident, have been instructed to intervene. 'I've travelled to a lot of failed states, places like El Salvador or Venezuela, and you get parallel institutions, where people take responsibility for their own security. You see it in South Africa, with gated communities. That's what we are doing here in Bedford. 'I am sick of the decline. I don't think the police can sort it. Too much tape and bureaucracy. So I am going to put my money where my mouth is. 'In a few years' time, Bedford is either going to look like Stoke, or like Bath, and I don't want it to be Stoke.' The project is not without controversy. Some have accused McCormack of talking Bedford down, while the county's police and crime commissioner, John Tizard, has described his project as 'political stunt'. Mr Tizard says anti-social behaviour is 'at a long-term low in Bedford town centre' and he argues that 'keeping our town centres safe is the responsibility of publicly accountable police and local authorities, not private individuals.' McCormack promptly hit back on X, where he boasts nearly 600,000 followers, telling Mr Tizard: 'You are a weak man and you should resign.' His combative way with words will be familiar to listeners of his podcast, which has seen him interview well-known figures and activists from across the political spectrum, including Liz Truss, Ann Widdecombe, George Galloway and the US military whistleblower Chelsea Manning, or those who have followed his topsy-turvy career. As his unusual life story attests, he is quite the disrupter. Raised by a nurse and an aircraft engineer, who 'worked all hours' to send him to Bedford Modern, a local private school, McCormack says that being 'a poor kid among rich kids' forced him to develop an entrepreneurial streak – selling football stickers and marbles at the school gates before setting up a heavy metal music fanzine to get free tickets to gigs. The project is not without controversy. Some have accused McCormack of talking Bedford down, while the county's police and crime commissioner, John Tizard, has described his project as 'political stunt' At Buckinghamshire New University in the late 1990s, he taught himself how to build a website for the publication. Then his landlord, who ran a window company, paid him £450 to create one for their business. A local recruitment business also offered him £2,000 to build its website. Within a few months, he'd abandoned his studies and moved to London, where a dotcom firm had offered him a £1,000-a-week job. In 2007, he started his own agency with a friend, titled McCormack & Morrison. It specialised in web design, social media and marketing and quickly grew to 35 staff, generating a turnover of about £3m a year. But in 2014, McCormack's marriage to the mother of his two children collapsed and following the divorce, his life went spectacularly off the rails. 'I basically got addicted to cocaine,' he says. 'I went hard. To the point where I was taking a gram a day and drinking heavily every night. There's doing the drug at parties or in a bar in London on Friday night, and there's doing it at 11am because your head's gone. And I was the latter.' There followed a 'Jerry Maguire' moment where he sabotaged his successful career. 'I felt like I was constantly trying to sell people shit they didn't need and lying. So I wrote this article headlined 'Online advertising doesn't work', published it and walked out.' Then, having sold the remnants of his business for £180,000, he decided to hit the cocaine even harder, sparking a downward spiral. He was eventually hospitalised, his heart beating at over 200 beats a minute, with a suspected heart attack Luckily, it turned out to be the less serious supraventricular tachycardia, an arrhythmia triggered by drug consumption. But the near-miss persuaded McCormack to clean himself up. Ignoring doctors, who had advised him to take antidepressants, he bought some running shoes, temporarily turned vegan, quit booze and began jogging every day. While pounding the streets of Bedford, McCormack began listening to podcasts by Rich Roll, an American former drug addict- turned ultra-endurance athlete and healthy living influencer. A friendship ensued and, in 2017, he asked Roll for advice on how to start a career in podcasting. 'He basically told me, 'Pick a subject and stick with it,'' McCormack says. 'I had come across Bitcoin in the past because I'd used it to buy cocaine. I thought, 'That'll do.' So I got on a plane and flew to America to interview people in the industry.' Later that year, he launched a podcast called What Bitcoin Did. In the Bitcoin boom which followed, it became the world's most successful crypto podcast, making roughly £10m in advertising revenue and turning McCormack – who invested much of the profits in the online currency – into a very wealthy man indeed. In 2021, he spent a portion of his fortune on Bedford FC, which was languishing in the tenth tier of the non-league pyramid. They were rebranded as Real Bedford, with a skull and crossbow logo, and marketed as the world's first 'Bitcoin club', where fans can pay in crypto and staff and players can take wages in it. Games were streamed online to followers of McCormack's podcast, who spent hundreds of thousands of pounds on merchandise. Consecutive promotions followed and then, in February, the Winklevoss twins came on board. The brothers, who in 2004 sued their Harvard contemporary Mark Zuckerberg for stealing their idea for a social media website (he settled for $65m and actor Armie Hammer starred as the twins in the film The Social Network), have since made billion-dollar fortunes in crypto and had been meeting McCormack to discuss collaborations with his podcast. They were apparently fascinated by the concept – alien to American sport and which revolves around closed shop franchises – that a small local team could potentially be promoted to the Premier League. They agreed to pay £3.6m for a 45 per cent stake. Real Bedford has since been promoted and will start this season in English football's seventh tier. What is less clear, of course, is how deep someone's pockets need to be to sort out a town like Bedford. 'We need people to come to town, buy stuff and mooch around shops,' McCormack says. 'That starts by making them actually feel safe here' McCormack, meanwhile, describes himself as a 'budget Ryan Reynolds' after the Hollywood star who owns Wrexham AFC and whose story is the subject of hit Disney+ series Welcome To Wrexham. 'You can buy pretty much any league, depending on how deep your pockets are,' is how he puts it. What is less clear, of course, is how deep someone's pockets need to be to sort out a town like Bedford. 'We need people to come to town, buy stuff and mooch around shops,' he says. 'That starts by making them actually feel safe here. There are loads of rich people round here but, at the moment, they spend their money in London or Cambridge. 'I have this thing I tell people: that if half the people who live in town spent just a tenner a week more here, that would add up to £50m a year. 'Imagine what that could achieve. A few security guards might not instantly fix Bedford, or any other town for that matter. But it's got to be a start.