
British Indoor Athletics Championships delayed after fire at Utilita Arena
A fire has delayed the start of the British Indoor Athletics Championships in Birmingham. The Utilita Arena had to be evacuated after the incident on Saturday morning, around 90 minutes before the first event was due to start.
British Athletics said in a statement: 'The start of the 2025 Microplus UK Athletics Indoor Championships has been delayed by one hour, following an incident that required the evacuation of the Utilita Arena in Birmingham this morning, Saturday 22 February.
'A one-hour delay to the timetable has been agreed in order to give athletes, officials and spectators adequate time to prepare for the day's events.'
Former Olympian Katharine Merry wrote on X: 'Not made it into the Utilita Arena yet. It's been fully evacuated due to a fire. Fire brigade here and smoke coming from the top floor.'
She added a few minutes later: 'The British Indoor Champs will be going ahead today after a fire in a kitchen. Just now need to clear the water.' Katarina Johnson-Thompson and Laura Muir are among the star names competing this weekend.
Sign up to The Recap
The best of our sports journalism from the past seven days and a heads-up on the weekend's action
after newsletter promotion
The event is also being used as the British trials for the European Athletics Indoor Championships, which take place in the Netherlands next month.
Hashtags

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


Daily Mirror
19 hours ago
- Daily Mirror
Confirmed Soccer Aid 2025 line-ups as Tyson Fury and Man Utd legends return
Wayne Rooney and Peter Schmeichel will take charge of England and World XI as charity fundraiser returns to Old Trafford with Tyson Fury set for central role on Sunday night Soccer Aid makes its return to Old Trafford on Sunday night and there is no shortage of Manchester United legends involved with Wayne Rooney taking over the England side as player manager. And the United legend will need to overcome one of the club's greatest goalkeepers Peter Schmeichel, who will manage a world XI also featuring Nemanja Vidic and Carlos Tevez. The match will kick off at 7:30pm and be shown live on ITV with Tyson Fury also announced as one of Rooney's assistant coaches as England look to tie level in the head battle with the World XI holding a narrow 7-6 advantage. Here is the full list of confirmed stars set to appear for the annual UNICEF fundraiser. England Rooney will be joined by former team-mates Gary Neville and Paul Scholes for England. One Direction star Louis Tomlinson returns, as does Player of the Match 12 months ago, Steven Bartlett. And the former Manchester City goalkeeper turned pundit Joe Hart makes his Soccer Aid debut. The rest of the Three Lions squad includes Jermain Defoe, Steph Houghton, Toni Duggan, Aaron Lennon, Jill Scott, Sam Thompson, Sam Quek, Sir Mo Farah, Paddy McGuinness, Dame Denise Lewis, Bear Grylls, Tom Grennan, Alex Brooker and Angry Ginge. England's coaching staff is made up of Rooney, heavyweight boxing champion Tyson Fury, Harry Redknapp, actor Vicky McClure and David James. England: Steven Bartlett (Entrepreneur), Alex Brooker (TV personality), Jermain Defoe (Former footballer), Toni Duggan (Former footballer), Sir Mo Farah (Former Olympian), Angry Ginge (YouTuber), Tom Grennan (Musician), Bear Grylls (TV personality), Joe Hart (Former footballer), Steph Houghton (Former footballer), Aaron Lennon (Former footballer), Dame Denise Lewis (Olympic gold medallist), Paddy McGuinness (TV personality), Gary Neville (Former footballer), Sam Quek (Former Olympian), Wayne Rooney (Former footballer), Paul Scholes (Former footballer), Jill Scott (Former footballer), Sam Thompson (King of the Jungle), Louis Tomlinson (Musician). World XI The visitors will be managed by former United shotstopper Schmeichel and includes a host of prominent ex-players, including fellow Red Devils legends Edwin van der Sar and Vidic. Boxer and Evertonian Tony Bellew is set to play alongside Leonardo Bonucci, Harry Kewell, Carlos Tevez, Toby Brown, Martin Compston, Richard Gadd, Bryan Habana, Dermot Kennedy, Kaylyn Kyle, Gorka Marquez, Nadia Nadim and Livi Sheldon. World XI: Noah Beck (Actor), Tony Bellew (Boxer), Leonardo Bonucci (Former footballer), Tobi Brown (Sideman star), Martin Compston (Actor), Richard Gadd (Actor/comedian), Bryan Habana (Rugby), Dermot Kennedy (Musician and halftime performer), Harry Kewell (Former footballer), Kaylyn Kyle (Former footballer), Gorka Marquez (Strictly), Nadia Nadim (Footballer), Livi Sheldon (Diamond from Gladiators), Carlos Tevez (Former footballer), Edwin van der Sar (Former footballer), Nemanja Vidic (Former footballer), Billy Wingrove (Freestyle footballer), Big Zuu (Musician and TV personality) Join our new WhatsApp community and receive your daily dose of Mirror Football content. We also treat our community members to special offers, promotions, and adverts from us and our partners. If you don't like our community, you can check out any time you like. If you're curious, you can read our Privacy Notice.


Daily Mirror
a day ago
- Daily Mirror
Unacceptable FIFA deal is final straw - they must stop advertising fossil fuels
At the last COP climate conference in Azerbaijan, athletes from around the world spoke about the impact of the climate crisis on their sports and the need for more climate action. Eroni Leilua is a two time sailing Olympian from Samoa, an island nation that could disappear entirely due to rising sea levels. Pragnya Mohan, India's most decorated triathlete and David Rudisha, two time Olympic champion from Kenya, spoke about the impacts extreme heat and drought have on their performance. Fellow football players Sofie Junge Pedersen and Katie Rood talked about their letter, signed by over 130 female footballers, that urges FIFA to reconsider the sponsor deal between FIFA and oil company Aramco. We agree with them, this sponsor deal is unacceptable in times of a rapidly escalating climate crisis. It is clear that the climate crisis has a massive impact on the sports we love. Athletes – from kids to professionals – need ice to skate on, pitches on which to run and kick a ball around, and conditions that do not put them at risk of death. We simply cannot play if our pitch is flooded, and we cannot perform in extreme heat or polluted air. Climate impacts are impossible to ignore. From floods displacing hundreds of thousands in west Africa and killing hundreds in Spain, to wildfires in and around Los Angeles to drought and extreme heat from southern Africa to India. The impacts of climate change are getting worse and it is clear what we need to do: the world must reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 50 per cent by 2030 and restore nature. As football players, coaches and others working in men's football, we are glad to see that international football association FIFA has signed up to this target under the UN Sports for Climate Action Framework. FIFA president Gianni Infantino has become a regular at UN climate summits. Unfortunately, we do not see FIFA taking the necessary action to deliver a 50 per cent emissions reduction. There are two major issues that need to be addressed. Firstly, FIFA must look at its own emissions. Expanded World Cups and Club World Cups, with more teams and more air travel, are steps in the wrong direction. Many players also speak out on the impact the expanding football calendar has on their physical and mental health, supported by players' union FIFPRO. A smarter, smaller and more regional football calendar can solve two problems at once. FIFA, as well as UEFA and other confederations, need to take their responsibility here. Secondly, from stadiums to football jerseys, football is used to promote products and companies to an audience of billions. This includes fossil fuel companies. We know that to address the climate crisis, we must phase-out fossil fuels. The first step is to stop promoting them. We call upon FIFA, other associations and clubs to stop signing deals with fossil fuel companies. We can learn from the past here: to get people to stop smoking and protect people from the health impacts of tobacco smoke, most of the world stopped advertising tobacco. Many cities are now also banning advertisements for fossil fuel products. We love football and we want future generations to enjoy it as much as we do. For that, the football world needs to step up its game. David Wheeler, English, Shrewsbury Town FC Michael Devlin, Scottish, Ayr United Football Club, 3 caps for the Scottish national team Bart Vriends, Dutch, Adelaide United Aarón Ñíguez Esclápez, Spanish, formerly Elche CF, Málaga, Glasgow Rangers and others Emiliano Marcondes, Danish, Norwich City Sam Vokes, Welsh, Wycombe Wanderers, 64 caps for the Welsh national team Yann Fillion, Canadian, Floriana FC Georgie Kelly, Irish, Carlisle United James Keohane, Irish, Galway United Maël Corboz, American / French, DSC Arminia Bielefeld Funso King Ojo, Belgian, Shrewsbury Town FC Hugo Wentges, Dutch, ADO Den Haag Erik Panzer, New Zealander, last club Melville United Olav Øby, Norwegian, last club Sandnes Ulf Robbie Crawford, Scottish, Charleston Battery Bradley Pritchard, British, formerly Charlton Athletic and others Matthew Pennington, British, Blackpool FC Pat Baldwin, British, formerly Chelsea, Colchester United and others Jacob Gardiner-Smith, British, Sholing FC Nick Freeman, British, Stevenage FC Matt Butcher, British, Wycombe Wanderers / Bristol Rovers (loan) Charlie Dobres, British, former director Lewes FC Caleb Watts, English / Australian, Exeter City Jack Grimmer, British, Wycombe Wanderers Maarten de Fockert, Dutch, formerly SC Heerenveen, Excelsior Rotterdam and others Flemming Pedersen, Danish, Director Right to Dream Academy Alex Hartridge, English, Exeter City Christian Borchgrevink, Norwegian, Heart of Midlothian FC


Daily Mail
2 days ago
- Daily Mail
Ben Askren rushed to hospital with severe pneumonia as wife reveals he is 'unable to respond to anything'
Former MMA world champion and Team USA Olympian Ben Askren has been rushed to hospital and is in critical condition. On Saturday Ben's wife Amy posted on Facebook to clarify that her husband, 40, is unresponsive after being hospitalized following a sudden bout of pneumonia. She wrote on Facebook: 'You may have heard that my husband Ben is going through something. He developed severe pneumonia which came on very suddenly. He's currently in the hospital and unable to respond to anything at this time.' Amy added: 'We welcome all prayers for healing and for peace. 'We are trying to keep life as normal as possible for our children currently and doing our best to support them thoughtfully so please refrain from discussing it with them for now.' The news sparked support from the MMA community, with former UFC star Chael Sonnen writing on X: 'Ben is alive and prayers are wanted. Family choosing privacy at this time.' Known for his suffocating grappling skills, Ben made his MMA debut in 2009 after a decorated collegiate wrestling career that saw him become a two-time NCAA division 1 champion. The 2008 Olympian would go on a decade-long undefeated streak inside the cage, winning world titles in Bellator and ONE and was widely regarded as one of the best fighters in the world outside the UFC. Despite a fractious relationship with UFC president Dana White, Ben would go on to make his Octagon debut in 2019 after a trade deal involving former flyweight champion Demetrious Johnson. After defeating Robbie Lawler in his UFC debut, Ben suffered back-to-back losses against Jorge Masvidal and Demian Maia before announcing his retirement from the sport. Despite undergoing major hip surgery after hanging up his gloves, helater returned to competition, losing to Jake Paul via first-round TKO in April 2021. Since then, he has co-hosted the Funky And the Champ podcast alongside his Olympic teammate Daniel Cormier. He also recently signed with Real American Freestyle, an amateur wrestling promotion headed by WWE legend Hulk Hogan and former WCW executive Eric Bischoff.