
Girl, 8, tells Kate not to be ‘nervous' for Wimbledon trophy presentation
The princess presented the trophy to Polish player Iga Swiatek, who won the title for the first time by beating American Amanda Anisimova 6-0 6-0 in the final which lasted only 57 minutes.
Kate consoled Anisimova, who was in tears after the heavy defeat, as the American collected her runner's up prize.
The princess also spoke to ball boys and girls as she came onto court for the presentation.
Ahead of the final, the princess, wearing a white belted jacket and pleated skirt, met eight-year-old Lydia Lowe, who performed the coin toss at the women's wheelchair final.
After shaking her hand, the princess asked the eight-year-old whether she was 'nervous' about the coin toss, adding: 'Have you got any advice for me? Because I've got to go out.'
Lydia, who suffered a brain injury in January 2024, leaving her visually impaired and having to relearn to walk, talk and eat, replied: 'Don't be nervous. Take deep breaths.'
Kate told Lydia that she was a 'pro' and asked her 'what does it mean to you to come and do this?', with the eight-year-old replying: 'It means loads to me.'
The princess added that she wanted to say 'well done' and celebrate Lydia's 'bravery'.
Lydia performed the coin toss while representing the Dan Maskell Tennis Trust, a charity supporting people with disabilities who play tennis by providing them with specialist equipment and grants.
Kate also met Sophie Kneen, 12, who was selected to perform the coin toss at the women's singles final, representing the AFC Wimbledon Foundation.
Speaking after meeting the future queen, Sophie told the PA news agency: 'It was so, so good, and I'm really honoured to be able to meet her.
'She asked me a bit about the charity I'm with and I said how they try and encourage young girls to play sports.'
Accompanied by All England Club chairwoman Deborah Jevans, Kate also congratulated women's wheelchair singles champion Wang Ziying and asked her whether the final was a 'good game'.
The princess said to the Chinese player: 'It's very hot playing in this weather, isn't it?
'It must be nice to celebrate at Wimbledon.'
Kate, who donned a bow-shaped brooch in the Wimbledon colours of purple and green, also spoke with Jefferson Iweh, a ticket sales operator; Bob Flint, an honorary steward; and Wimbledon foundation host Shaniah Williams.
The princess told Mr Flint, 75, who first worked at the championships in 1980: 'Well done for all the years of commitment and dedication.'
Asked about meeting the princess, Ms Williams, 23, said: 'It was an absolute privilege to actually meet and have a conversation with her. She's so beautiful.
'It was really nice to catch up with her and tell her a bit about my role.'
Last year, the princess presented the Wimbledon men's final trophy to Carlos Alcaraz in her second public engagement since she announced her cancer diagnosis.
The Princess of Wales's parents, Carole and Michael Middleton, were seen in the Royal Box on Monday, with the Duchess of Edinburgh and the Duchess of Gloucester also in attendance.
The Queen told tennis star Novak Djokovic that she was keeping her 'fingers crossed' as she visited Wimbledon on Wednesday.
The Princess Royal's son Peter Phillips attended the championships on Wednesday, with Hugh Grant and former prime minister Sir John Major also in the Royal Box.
Olympic champion Sir Mo Farah, former footballer Ian Wright and Welsh singer Katherine Jenkins were among the notable names to attend a hot day at Wimbledon on Saturday.
Temperatures are forecast to peak at around 30C and fall short of a record for a women's singles final day, with 31.2C having been recorded on the day of the 1976 final between Chris Evert and Evonne Goolagong Cawley.
Met Office meteorologist Greg Dewhurst said: 'There will be blue skies at Wimbledon throughout the day, so it will feel hot, with very high UV levels and a light wind.
'There might be a little bit more cloud around tomorrow, making it a degree lower.'
The men's singles semi-final on Friday between Carlos Alcaraz and Taylor Fritz was stopped twice in less than five minutes because of crowd emergencies, amid temperatures of 32C on Centre Court.
Three fans also needed attention on Centre Court on Thursday in similarly hot conditions.
The men's singles final on Sunday, with highs of 29C predicted, is unlikely to break the record of the warmest closing day on record of 34.1C recorded on July 3 1976.
The extreme heat during the 1976 tournament prompted organisers to allow umpires to remove their jackets.
Wimbledon has said the heat rule will apply for all singles events for players, which allows for a 10-minute break when the wet bulb globe temperature (WBGT) is at or above 30.1C.
The rule will apply after the second set for all best-of-three-set matches, and after the third set for all best-of-five-set matches.
Players may leave the court during the break, but they may not receive coaching or medical treatment.
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Reuters
3 hours ago
- Reuters
NYC skyscraper shooter blamed NFL for his mental health issues, mayor says
NEW YORK, July 29 (Reuters) - The man who killed four people with a semi-automatic rifle while rampaging through a Midtown Manhattan office tower carried a note with him that appeared to blame the National Football League for a degenerative brain disease he said he had, New York Mayor Eric Adams said on Tuesday. Police have identified the shooter as Shane Tamura, a 27-year-old Las Vegas resident and former high school football player and said he had a history of mental illness. Tamura killed two security officers and two office workers before ending the Monday evening massacre by shooting himself in the chest on the 33rd floor of the Park Avenue skyscraper. It was the deadliest mass shooting in New York City in a quarter of a century. The NFL has its headquarters in the skyscraper alongside major financial firms, but Tamura used the wrong elevator bank and ended up in the offices of Rudin Management, a real estate company that owns the building, where he killed one Rudin employee, the mayor said. "The note alluded to that he felt he had CTE, a known brain injury for those who participate in contact sports," Adams told CBS News. "He appeared to have blamed the NFL for his injury," even though he never played at that level of American football. Chronic traumatic encephalopathy is a serious brain disease with no known treatment that can be caused by repeated shaking of the brain that can occur when playing contact sports. Linked to aggression and dementia, the condition can only be diagnosed conclusively after death. The NFL has paid more than $1 billion to settle concussion-related lawsuits, opens new tab with thousands of retired players after the deaths of several high-profile players. It has made changes to the sport to mitigate the risk of concussions. Tamura was never an NFL player, but online records show he played football at his California high school and was a varsity player at a Los Angeles charter school until graduating in 2016, according to school sports databases. The note found in his wallet said his football career was cut short by a brain injury and that the NFL had not done enough to address CTE in the sport, Bloomberg News reported. A former coach, Walter Roby, told Fox News that Tamura was a "quiet, hard worker" and one of his "top offensive players" during the year he spent on the team at Granada Hills Charter School. Wesley LePatner, a senior executive who oversaw some of the Blackstone's (BX.N), opens new tab real estate operations was also among those Tamura killed, according to the private equity firm, which also has its headquarters in the tower. Several other Blackstone employees were injured. The skyscraper was closed to workers on Tuesday, as were some neighboring buildings, although much of Park Avenue hummed as usual. Chad Gordon, a 36-year-old strategist at an insurance firm, works in the building next door and often walks over to eat lunch or use the ATM. "I luckily left about 20 minutes before the shooting happened," he said. "It's just terrifying." The shooting follows last year's murder of a UnitedHealth executive outside a hotel about three blocks away from Monday's rampage. Prosecutors say the man charged with that murder targeted his victim as a symbol of corporate greed. According to the police account, as soon as Tamura entered the lobby he fatally shot a New York Police Department officer, Didarul Islam, 36, who came from Bangladesh. Islam was part of the building's security detail, police said. Islam has two young sons, according to his cousin Mizanul Haque in his hometown in Bangladesh's Sylhet region. Hours before the killing, Islam had "laughed and chatted like always" with his cousin on the WhatsApp messaging app. "When I heard the news, it felt like the sky had fallen on me," Haque told Reuters. Tamura then shot a security guard stationed at a desk in the lobby. The guard was identified by his labor union 32BJ SEIU in a statement as Aland Etienne. He was "a dedicated security officer who took his job duties extremely seriously." Etienne's brother said in a social media post that the family were heartbroken: "He was a father, a son and a light in our eyes," Gathmand Etienne said. Tamura also killed LePatner before taking the elevator and exiting the Rudin offices. An NFL employee was also injured and was in stable condition at a hospital, according to a memo sent by NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell to league staff. Goodell wrote that an "increased security presence" was planned for the league's offices "in the days and weeks to come." A spokesperson for the NFL did not respond to queries about the shooter's reported motives. Tamura appeared to have driven to New York City from Las Vegas over three days and to have acted alone, New York Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch told reporters on Monday night. Security video circulated by police showed a man walking from a double-parked car into the tower carrying what police identified as an M4 Carbine, a large semi-automatic rifle popular with civilian U.S. gun enthusiasts modeled on a fully automatic rifle used by the U.S. military. In Nevada, unlike New York, no permit is needed to buy a rifle or carry it openly in public. A widely circulated photo showed the permit issued to Tamura by the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department allowing him to legally carry a concealed gun. He had recently worked as a security guard at a Las Vegas casino, Fox 11 News channel in Los Angeles reported. On two occasions, in 2022 and 2024, records show law enforcement officials detained him for up to 72 hours under a "mental health crisis hold," which requires the detainee to be evaluated at a hospital, ABC News reported.


The Guardian
4 hours ago
- The Guardian
New York shooting: gunman said in note that playing football gave him CTE
The gunman identified in the mass shooting in New York on Monday that killed four victims – including a police officer – was a former high school football player who left a note complaining that the sport had given him the brain injury known as CTE. Detectives are still trying to determine the motive behind 27-year-old Shane Devon Tamura's shooting spree in 345 Park Avenue in Manhattan on Monday. It ranks as the deadliest firearms attack in New York City in a quarter of a century. Tamura shot and killed an off-duty police officer, Didarul Islam, 36, and three other victims. He also shot and seriously injured an employee of the National Football League (NFL) which has corporate offices in the skyscraper, and the New York police department (NYPD) is investigating whether he was targeting the NFL, having blamed the organisation for his perceived brain injuries. At the end of the attack, Tamura rode an elevator up to the 33rd floor, where he killed a fourth person before taking his own life in the offices of the real estate company Rudin Management, which owns the targeted building. The NFL's offices are on floors lower than the one where Tamura died. CNN reported that Tamura's body was found with a note in his back pocket in which he said that he was suffering from chronic traumatic encephalopathy, or CTE. The disease – which has similarities to Alzheimer's – has been linked to repetitive blows to the head and concussions incurred by American football players. 'Terry Long football gave me CTE,' part of the note said according to CNN. It went on: 'You can't go against the NFL, they'll squash you. 'Study my brain please I'm sorry Tell Rick I'm sorry for everything.' Long, a former player with the Pittsburgh Steelers, was one of the first NFL players to be diagnosed with CTE in 2005. He killed himself after drinking antifreeze that same year. The identity of 'Rick' was not immediately clear. New York's mayor, Eric Adams, confirmed the existence of the note on CBS's This Morning. 'He did have a note on him,' Adams said. 'The note alluded to that he felt he had CTE, a known brain injury for those who participate in contact sports. He appeared to have blamed the NFL for his injury.' The mayor added that early police investigations suggested that the shooter had been targeting the NFL. 'We have reason to believe that he was focused on the NFL agency that was located in the building,' Adams remarked. The NFL commissioner, Roger Goodell, said on Tuesday that a league employee had been seriously injured in the attack. The employee is in hospital in a stable condition. Goodell said that security had been tightened in the Park Avenue offices. Addressing league staff, he said: 'Every one of you is a valued member of the NFL family. We will get through this together.' New York police said that Tamura travelled from his home in Las Vegas, Nevada, to the city. A search of his car uncovered a loaded revolver, ammunition and prescription medicines for Tamura, who had a history of mental health problems. Public records show that he had acquired a security guard license, and reports suggest he had been working security at a Las Vegas casino. His voter registration showed him having no party affiliation. As a teenager, he played competitive football as a running back at Golden Valley high school in Santa Clarita and later at Granada Hills Charter school in Los Angeles. A teammate from those days told the local LA news station ABC7 that he was a 'great guy in general. He was just a guy who really enjoyed the sport, not problematic at all.' A video recorded after a game between Granada Hills and a local rival school showed Tamura describing how his team came back from being 10-0 down to winning 35-31. 'Definitely, definitely had to stay disciplined,' he said. 'Coach just kept telling us don't hold your head down. We had to just keep playing, keep playing through it, just hold your heads up high and a good result is going to come.' CTE is a neurodegenerative disease that has been found to be caused by repeated head injuries. It is most associated with contact sports as well as with military personnel who suffer traumatic brain incidents. The NFL first publicly accepted there was a link between the disease and football in 2016, having resisted acknowledging the connection for years. The previous year a multimillion-dollar settlement was agreed between the NFL and thousands of former players. Research conducted by Dr Ann McKee of the CTE Center at Boston University made the association irrefutable. A 2023 study from the center found that of 376 former NFL players whose brains were studied after death, 345 were diagnosed with CTE. Symptoms of the disease include depression, headaches and sleeping problems. Last year, a study by Mass General Brigham in Boston of 2,000 former NFL players found that more than a third thought they had the disease and many reported having frequent suicidal thoughts.


Daily Mail
4 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Josh Allen shows his true colors after training camp interaction with service members
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