
Woman given terminal diagnosis says she plans to fulfil her life dream
Jazz Turner, from Seaford, East Sussex, aims to take part in next year's Royal Western Yacht Club of England 's WorldStar challenge.
Should she succeed, Ms Turner would become the first female, disabled sailor to complete the feat.
Diagnosed at 18, she lives with Ehlers Danlos Syndrome, a debilitating genetic condition that affects connective tissue, and causes fainting and seizures.
Due to complications, doctors have told her that her condition is now terminal.
'As my condition has progressed, the one thing I made sure of was that I never stopped sailing,' she said.
Next year's challenge follows her recent circumnavigation of the UK and Ireland, known as Project Fear, but she now needs to secure the right boat and sponsorship to carry her around the globe.
'I've always been drawn to challenges that push me to my edge,' she said.
'Project Fear was born off the back of the announcement of the WorldStar 2026. I face many a 'no' in my life, and I do my best to turn them into 'yes'. The right partnership could turn this vision into reality.
'Whether it's a boat owner willing to lend their yacht or sponsors eager to back a remarkable human and sporting story, I'm inviting them to join me on this journey.'
The WorldStar 2026 leaves Plymouth in September next year and tests sailors to circle the globe without outside assistance or stops.
Adrian Gray, commodore of the Royal Western Yacht Club, said: 'Jazz is the epitome of why we created this Corinthian-style race.
'This is a race for sailors, run by sailors and the only one of its style in the UK.
'When we initially reached out to Jazz and she told us her 'Project Fear' campaign, a solo, non-stop, unassisted circumnavigation of the UK and Ireland, was started following our announcement of the WorldStar, we knew we wanted to help Jazz fulfil her life's dream.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
21 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
TOM UTLEY: As a lapsed Catholic, I'm in no position to lecture anyone about religion. But Kemi's reasons for rejecting God strike me as frankly preposterous
A few years ago I received a borderline-blasphemous birthday card, which I have to admit made me chuckle. It showed a sweet little birthday girl of about five, dressed in pink, kneeling in prayer by her bed, with a thought bubble emerging from her head reading: 'So where's my f****** pony?' I thought of that card this week when I heard Kemi Badenoch 's explanation of why she had 'rejected God'.


Times
33 minutes ago
- Times
Ballon d'Or nominee Scott McTominay is best Scottish success in 40 years
It's all about the company you keep. There he was, Scott McTominay, rubbing shoulders with Jonny Evans, Altay Bayindir and Toby Collyer while barely anyone paid attention. The day of his last active service as a Manchester United player and he was in with the substitutes yet again. There or thereabouts, neither essential nor indispensable. An option. A solid squad guy. The story of his United career as far as too many managers were concerned. McTominay saw a wee bit of the action that day last August, given the last 11 minutes when Bruno Fernandes had done his bit in a league game at the Amex Stadium. Brighton & Hove Albion scored a 90th-minute winner and that was it, the flat and unheralded end of McTominay after a 22-year association with United. There were just over 250 appearances over nine seasons and many more debates about whether a) you needed a guy like him to win a league or b) having someone like him suggested you never would. Some respect and some ridicule. By the time United were being battered 3-0 at home by Liverpool a week later, their spare-part, overlooked talent had begun the gear change to end them all. Now? Scott McTominay, Ballon d'Or nominee, officially one of the best footballers in Europe, a line to make a United fan choke on their cornflakes. A nomination as the final act and recognition of a debut season that became absurdly fantastic and rewarding. A guy could get lost in Naples, drowned by the fanaticism and pressure of delivering for one of the most suffocating and intense fanbases in football. Instead McTominay rose to become an icon, a figure far greater than most could have imagined possible across the years when English football largely dismissed him as a limited utility guy, useful to have around without being front-of-house material. Italy got the surging, unbridled McTominay 2.0. A dozen goals in 34 league games for Napoli, and the city that idolises Diego Maradona happily made headspace for a new darling. Barely a week went by without news emerging of some startling new McTominay goal or triumph. He is a Serie A champion, the most valuable player of the Italian league season, the recipient of player and goal of the month awards, and now he has a puncher's chance in the Ballon d'Or. Perhaps this will be the year of Ousmane Dembélé as a driving force for Champions League winners Paris Saint-Germain. The Barcelona pair Lamine Yamal and Raphinha are heavyweight candidates too. The Premier League is represented by Virgil van Dijk, Alexis Mac Allister and Mohamed Salah from Liverpool, Arsenal pair Declan Rice and Viktor Gyokeres, Manchester City's Erling Haaland and Chelsea's Cole Palmer. England men Harry Kane and Jude Bellingham are on the list too. In terms of sheer impact and emergence over the season, only the 18-year-old Yamal surpasses McTominay. It's about the company you keep. It seems reasonable to wonder if he will ever stop growing. Over the course of a couple of years, about a decade ago, he spurted from a runtish 5ft 6in to a strapping 6ft 4in. It was the making of him as a footballer. At 28 he has grown again, in profile and celebrity this time. This news underlines his status as the biggest star in the Scotland team — sorry Andy Robertson, sorry John McGinn — and by one measure the biggest success story the country has produced in nearly four decades. OK, 'produced' is doing some heavy lifting given he was born and raised in Lancaster and has never played a minute in Scottish club football, but his dad, Frank, from Helensburgh, shaped where his boy's allegiances lie. The old European Footballer of the Year award, as it was known, has been won only once by a Scottish player. After Denis Law's great achievement in 1964, Jim Baxter, Jimmy Johnstone, Billy Bremner, Graeme Souness and Gordon Strachan all received subsequent nominations and Kenny Dalglish was runner-up in 1983. The last Scot to get on the shortlist was Ally McCoist in 1987. That's why McTominay's nomination is a big deal. It's amusing to think that when the first approach came from Napoli the depth of his connection to United — he has always been painstakingly respectful since his departure — meant there must have been a moment when he considered staying there. Maybe give it one more go, maybe see if Erik ten Hag could be convinced. Not every move works out, not everyone gets a reward for uprooting and throwing themselves headfirst into an entirely unfamiliar culture, but McTominay's decision transformed his career and his life. Let's just assume that as he sits with his feet up of an evening, looking out as the sun sets across the Bay of Naples, he isn't losing too much sleep about whether he ought to have stuck around at Carrington. Of course, letting a Ballon d'Or contender go for just £25million and then having their worst season in years felt very Manchester United. He is his own man now. Last month he rocked up at Wimbledon, cutting a dash in cream slacks, a navy blue blazer and sunglasses. He has always been image-conscious and no doubt he'll cut an immaculate figure and look similarly Hollywood at the Ballon d'Or ceremony on September 22. Scots and Neapolitans will be together in willing him on. One lot, you can guess which, proudly shouting: 'Gaun yersel, big man!' Nominees for 2025 Ballon d'Or award Men's nominees Ousmane Dembélé (PSG & France) Gianluigi Donnarumma (PSG & Italy) Jude Bellingham (Real Madrid & England) Désiré Doué (PSG & France) Denzel Dumfries (Inter Milan & Netherlands) Serhou Guirassy (Borussia Dortmund & Guinea) Erling Haaland (Man City & Norway) Viktor Gyokeres (Arsenal & Sweden) Achraf Hakimi (PSG & Morocco) Harry Kane (Bayern Munich & England) Khvicha Kvaratskhelia (PSG & Georgia) Robert Lewandowski (Barcelona & Poland) Alexis Mac Allister (Liverpool & Argentina) Lautaro Martínez (Inter Milan & Argentina) Scott McTominay (Napoli & Scotland) Kylian Mbappé (Real Madrid & France) Nuno Mendes (PSG & Portugal) João Neves (PSG & Portugal) Pedri (Barcelona & Spain) Cole Palmer (Chelsea & England) Michael Olise (Bayern Munich & France) Raphinha (Barcelona & Brazil) Declan Rice (Arsenal & England) Fabián Ruiz (PSG & Spain) Virgil van Dijk (Liverpool & Netherlands) Vinícius Jr (Real Madrid & Brazil) Mohamed Salah (Liverpool & Egypt) Florian Wirtz (Liverpool & Germany) Vitinha (PSG & Portugal) Lamine Yamal (Barcelona & Spain) Women's nominees Lucy Bronze (Chelsea & England) Barbra Banda (Orlando Pride & Zambia) Aitana Bonmati (Barcelona & Spain) Sandy Baltimore (Chelsea & France) Mariona Caldentey (Arsenal & Spain) Klara Buhl (Bayern Munich & Germany) Sofia Cantore (Washington Spirit & Italy) Steph Catley (Arsenal & Australia) Melchie Dumornay (Lyon & Haiti) Temwa Chawinga (Kansas City Current & Malawi) Emily Fox (Arsenal & USA) Cristiana Girelli (Juventus & Italy) Esther González (Gotham & Spain) Caroline Graham Hansen (Barcelona & Norway) Patri Guijarro (Barcelona & Spain) Amanda Gutierres (Palmeiras & Brazil) Hannah Hampton (Chelsea & England) Pernille Harder (Bayern Munich & Denmark) Lindsey Heaps (Lyon & USA) Chloe Kelly (Arsenal & England) Marta (Orlando Pride & Brazil) Frida Leonhardsen Maanum (Arsenal & Norway) Ewa Pajor (Barcelona & Poland) Clara Mateo (Paris FC & France) Alessia Russo (Arsenal & England) Clàudia Pina (Barcelona & Spain) Alexia Putellas (Barcelona & Spain) Johanna Rytting Kaneryd (Chelsea & Sweden) Caroline Weir (Real Madrid & Scotland) Leah Williamson (Arsenal & England) Men's coach of the year nominees Antonio Conte (Napoli) Luis Enrique (Paris St-Germain) Hansi Flick (Barcelona) Enzo Maresca (Chelsea) Arne Slot (Liverpool) Women's coach of the year nominees Sonia Bompastor (Chelsea) Arthur Elias (Brazil) Justine Madugu (Nigeria) Renee Slegers (Arsenal) Sarina Wiegman (England) Men's club of the year nominees Barcelona (Spain) Botafogo (Brazil) Chelsea (England) Liverpool (England) Paris St-Germain (France) Women's club of the year nominees Arsenal (England) Barcelona (Spain) Chelsea (England) OL Lyonnes (France) Orlando Pride (United States)


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
JAN MOIR: Andrew is utterly irredeemable but Fergie is so much worse. Her late-night emails to me say it all
Well. We all knew the Yorkies were a pair of flakes – but who could have guessed how deep the rot went? Historian Andrew Lownie's new biography of Prince Andrew is withering in its depiction of the Duke and Duchess of York as a pair of money-grabbing, rude, sex-obsessed, royal thickos.