logo
Who are the favourites to win Race Across the World? Odds

Who are the favourites to win Race Across the World? Odds

Scotsman28-05-2025

A new favourite to win BBC's Race Across the World has emerged. The popular show is nearing the conclusion of its fifth series and it is still wide open.
The leaderboard has changed up dramatically over the last few weeks - as a fresh pair of frontrunners emerged in episode five. Having started the race at the bottom in the early episodes, Caroline and Tom were the first to the checkpoint in McLeod Ganj.
However does that mean they have become the favourites to win the whole competition? Gambling.com has issued its latest odds ahead of episode six tonight (May 28).
But who are the frontrunners to win Race Across the World series five? See the latest runners and riders.
Have you got a story you want to share with our readers? You can now send it to us online via YourWorld at www.yourworld.net/submit . It's free to use and, once checked, your story will appear on our website and, space allowing, in our newspapers.
1 . Yin and Gaz - eliminated
A twist of fate - and a brutal storm - left Yin and Gaz with too much to do going into the elimination leg and unfortunately they were knocked out of the competition at the end of episode 3. They will not be winning Race Across the World. | BBC Photo: BBC Photo Sales
2 . Fin & Sioned - 6/1
The young Welsh couple have found the race tough going after arriving in India and a travel mix-up has left them lagging behind the rest of the competition. Gambling.com has them at 6/1 to win. | BBC Photo: BBC Photo Sales
3 . Elizabeth and Letitia - 4/1
Having started the race strongly, reaching the first two checkpoints in first place. Elizabeth and Letitia have found themselves further behind on recent legs - the pair's odds have drifted to 4/1 to win via Gambling.com | BBC Photo: BBC Photo Sales
4 . Brian and Melvyn - 2/1
Having led the race in recent weeks, Brian and Melvyn found themselves in second place after the fifth leg of the race. Can they climb back to the top of the leader board? Gambling.com has them at 2/1 to win the fifth series. | BBC Photo: BBC Photo Sales
Related topics: BoostTVBBC

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Ryan Reynolds faced with £350million Wrexham sale decision as talks in early stages
Ryan Reynolds faced with £350million Wrexham sale decision as talks in early stages

Wales Online

time20 minutes ago

  • Wales Online

Ryan Reynolds faced with £350million Wrexham sale decision as talks in early stages

Ryan Reynolds faced with £350million Wrexham sale decision as talks in early stages Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney are believed to be seeking external investment in Wrexham after taking the Welsh club from the National League to the Championship Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney are reportedly seeking new investment in Wrexham (Image: Leon Bennett/The Hollywood Reporter via Getty Images ) Wrexham's Hollywood owners are reportedly seeking fresh investment in a move which could see the club's value soar to as much as £350million. Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney bought the Welsh side for a nominal amount in February 2021, subject to an immediate cash injection of £2m. The Red Dragons have since risen from the National League to the Championship after being promoted for three seasons in a row. The club's profile has grown significantly in the last four years thanks to the success of the Welcome to Wrexham documentary, which follows the actors' ownership. ‌ Reynolds and McElhenney took steps to shore up the club's financial position back in October when they welcomed the Allyn family from New York as new investors. According to Bloomberg, their acquisition of a minority stake placed Wrexham's value at approximately £100m. ‌ The same outlet now reports that the club is working with bank advisers to find further potential investors and to discover if there is a demand. The move has been discussed internally as the owners look to secure enough money to enable Wrexham to compete in the second tier. The new suggested valuation of around £350m would make Wrexham the highest priced team in the Championship. For context, Sheffield United were recently bought by an American consortium for roughly £111m. Wrexham have posted strong financial results under Reynolds and McElhenney's ownership. The latest available accounts show the club recorded a record annual turnover of more than £26m while still playing in League Two. Article continues below Wrexham's popularity has soared under the ownership of Reynolds and McElhenney (Image: 2023 AMA Sports Photo Agency ) Watch Welcome to Wrexham season 4 on Disney+ This article contains affiliate links, we will receive a commission on any sales we generate from it. Learn more from £4.99 Disney+ Get Disney+ here Product Description Welcome to Wrexham is back on Disney+ for a fourth season. Fans can watch the series with a £4.99 monthly plan, or get 12 months for the price of 10 by paying for a year upfront. That figure is understood to be set to rise to anywhere between £30m and £40m for the most recent season in League One. Talks over new investment are said to be in the early stages, with Wrexham expecting a boost in revenue from broadcast payments and sponsorship deals at Championship level. ‌ Deadpool star Reynolds openly discussed the idea of selling a further stake in the club during a recent appearance on the Fearless in Devotion fan podcast. However, he stressed that it would not diminish the passion that he and McElhenney feel for Wrexham. "There are still people who think we are fading away or we're going to get bored," he said. "I don't know how you get bored with something like this. Sign up to our newsletter! Wrexham is the Game is great new way to get top-class coverage Wrexham AFC is the arguably the fastest-growing club in the world at the moment thanks to a certain Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney. The Dragons have achieved two consecutive promotions and are cheered on by crowds from not only North Wales but also from all over the globe, thanks to the success of the Disney+ documentary 'Welcome to Wrexham'. But does it have a dedicated, quality source of information piped through to your inbox each week, free of ads but packed with informed opinion, analysis and even a little bit of fun each week? That's where Wrexham is the Game steps in... Available every Wednesday, it provides all the insights you need to be a top red. And for a limited time, a subscription to 'Wrexham is the Game' will cost fans just £15 for the first year. Sign up for Wrexham is the Game here Article continues below "I have said this before, I love this sport so much now that I f***ing hate it. I really feel that in my cells." He later added: "Even if our stake in the club shrinks because we have to go all the way up to the Premiership (Premier League), that's what's called an uptown problem. "It doesn't change a thing in terms of the emotional investment. The financial investment stuff I've never cared as much about – emotional investment is my job, that's Rob's job, and that's what we love the most."

BBC Bargain Hunt star Ochuko Ojiri jailed for terrorist financing
BBC Bargain Hunt star Ochuko Ojiri jailed for terrorist financing

Metro

time20 minutes ago

  • Metro

BBC Bargain Hunt star Ochuko Ojiri jailed for terrorist financing

Bargain Hunt star Ochuko Ojiri has been jailed for failing to report a series of high-value art sales to a man suspected of being a Hezbollah financier. The art dealer, 53, pleaded guilty to eight counts under the Terrorism Act 2000 of failing to make a disclosure during the course of business. He has been sentenced to jail for two and a half years after selling artwork worth around £140,000 to Nazem Ahmad, a man designated by US authorities as a suspected financier for the Lebanese organisation. Ojiri has made regular appearances on the BBC programme as well as Antiques Road Trip. The 53-year-old, from west London, was charged following an investigation into terrorist financing by officers from the National Terrorist Financial Investigation Unit (NTFIU), part of the Met's Counter Terrorism Command, a Met Police statement reveals. He is the first person to be charged with a specific offence under Section 21A of the Terrorism Act 2000. To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video Described as an 'expert' in a Bargain Hunt Q&A on the BBC's website, Ojiri said he was 'absolutely obsessed' with collecting contemporary art, paintings, prints, sculpture and drawings. More Trending He also discusses his role and says his favourite parts of it are 'meeting new people, and breathing new life and context into forgotten and neglected treasures'. When asked why he chose a career in antiques, he said: 'No other industry would accept my rare mixture of sarcasm, cynicism and passion.' He also said he had 'no idea' why he became involved in Bargain Hunt, and would want to work in 'forecast trends' if not in antiques. View More » 'You're literally looking into the future, deciding what you'll eat before you're even hungry. Mind blowing.' Got a story? If you've got a celebrity story, video or pictures get in touch with the entertainment team by emailing us celebtips@ calling 020 3615 2145 or by visiting our Submit Stuff page – we'd love to hear from you. MORE: BBC Bargain Hunt star Ochuko Ojiri pleads guilty to terrorist financing

Doorbell Detectives and Scam Interceptors review: These Big Brother-style shows turn daytime TV into long periods of boredom punctuated by moments of terror
Doorbell Detectives and Scam Interceptors review: These Big Brother-style shows turn daytime TV into long periods of boredom punctuated by moments of terror

Scotsman

time29 minutes ago

  • Scotsman

Doorbell Detectives and Scam Interceptors review: These Big Brother-style shows turn daytime TV into long periods of boredom punctuated by moments of terror

You can tell its summer as, despite the downturn in the weather leaving us less likely to head outside, the main terrestrial broadcasters don't seem to have anything new for our viewing pleasure. Sign up to our daily newsletter Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to Edinburgh News, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... Which is how I ended up watching Doorbell Detectives (BBC1, Mon, 8.30pm), which inexplicably was given a prime-time slot this week before retreating to a more usual daytime airing in a terrifyingly Big Brother-style anti-crime double bill with Scam Interceptors (BBC1, weekdays, 2.30pm). Watchdog's Matt Allwright – who has carved himself a niche in these low-budget infotainment shows – hosts Doorbell Detectives, standing uneasily in the middle of a set which is part hay-barn and part GP's waiting room. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad What little budget the show has is taken up by a floating screen in the middle of the barn, on which Matt can show us grainy footage from doorbell cameras up and down the country. Matt Allwright in the Doorbell Detectives studio, a 'cross between a hay barn and a GP's waiting room' (Picture: BBC/Objective Media Group t/a Purple Productions) Apparently, one-in-five homes comes equipped with these mini CCTV rigs, constantly texting alerts to phones across suburbia, alerting home owners to the delivery man chucking a parcel on the doorstep, next door's cat relieving itself on the azaleas, or little Tommy from No.35 belting down the pavement on his e-scooter. Matt and his doorbell detectives seem to the think this is a good thing, and brings in Anton, a former police officer with 30 years' experience, to help one Manchester resident previously left severely under-surveilled to fit a camera to her own home. Anton, who seems to think he is testifying in the witness box rather than offering advice on a semi-serious daytime TV show, offers essential advice such as 'make sure the battery is charged', while brushing off concerns about the invasion of everyone's privacy. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad 'Some people can get a bit funny about catching what's going in neighbouring properties,' he says, as if the wish to maintain some sort of privacy is the main indicator of a serial killer. Doorbell Detectives features footage taken from doorbell cameras of would-be criminals attempting thefts and burglaries (Picture: BBC/Objective Media Group t/a Purple Productions) Meanwhile, back in the studio, Matt chats to people who caught would-be burglars in the all-seeing eye of their doorbell camera, and finds out what they did next. Mainly, it seems, telling everyone else in the neighbourhood WhatsApp group, so they could check their doorbell cameras as well. That's because 'confronting thieves is dangerous', Matt tells us, before then proving it by talking to homeowner Alison, whose husband was badly beaten up by a fleeing criminal. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Understandably, Alison doesn't want to be identified, so Matt ends up talking to a floating phone lock-screen in the middle Doorbell Detectives' luxo-barn. It all gets very tense in the Scam Interceptors HQ. The team are Harleen Nottay, Mark Lewis, Aaron Ng, and Nick Stapleton (Picture: BBC Studios) It's all very low-rent, and frankly very dull, unlike its partner Scam Interceptors, which is Mission: Impossible compared to Doorbell Detectives' Hettie Wainthropp Investigates. Rav Wilding sits in 'Interceptor HQ' in Glasgow, accompanied by a team of black-clad investigators, staring at a bank of screens – all with headsets and flashing lights. Apparently, they have employed the services of an 'ethical hacker' to get into the computer systems of those scam callers who regularly call to warn you that someone has spend thousands of your hard-earned pounds online. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad They can listen into the scammers calling an unsuspecting pensioner and – hopefully – warn them they are being scammed. Unfortunately, you wonder how they don't get caught in that Spider-Man meme, the one where several Spider-Men are all pointing at each other, each caller claiming the other is the scammer. Rav is incredibly enthusiastic, the music is pounding and urgent, and the sense of tension is palpable. Both these shows leave you with the uncomfortable feeling of being observed anonymously, distantly by unknown powers. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad But beyond that, the effect they have must be the opposite of the one required. Far from imparting information that might help keep you safe, far from being an effective crime-busting tool, and very far from giving you a reassuring notion that these criminals are being deterred, these shows can only serve to frighten the viewers at home. Given these are daytime shows, many of those viewers will be the very frail, vulnerable or elderly people they profess to want to protect. And leaving them in a state of fear, unwilling to go out, to engage with the world, to enjoy a full life. Only stuck inside watching TV. Which, as we know, is a problem. Because its summer, and there's nothing on.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store