
There were a few tears – Wales forward David Brooks expecting first child
David Brooks cried tears of joy after being told he is to become a dad – something the Wales forward feared might not happen following his 2021 cancer diagnosis.
Brooks, who was diagnosed with stage-two Hodgkin lymphoma nearly four years ago, and wife Flora are expecting their first child on November 1.
The 27-year-old Bournemouth player announced he was cancer-free in May 2022, but the long-term effects of the disease in terms of fathering children were unclear.
'Obviously when I was diagnosed you have those conversations and there were never any guarantees that I would be able to have children in the future,' said Brooks, who has linked up with the Wales squad for their World Cup qualifying double header against Liechtenstein and Belgium.
'There was a chance it wouldn't have been possible and I was really lucky that it came naturally. After my treatment things went back to normal so, of course, I was really happy.
'We were trying so it wasn't a massive shock, but there were a few tears.
'We always wanted kids at some point, but the situation kind of took it out of hands a little bit.
'So it's obviously very nice for everything to come naturally and progress into being a family.
'We're really looking forward to it, even though she is going through everything that comes with being pregnant.'
Brooks was the Wales hero in their last World Cup qualifier against North Macedonia in March.
His equaliser in the sixth minute of stoppage time secured a precious 1-1 draw, making it four points from the opening two qualifiers and extending Craig Bellamy's unbeaten start as Dragons manager to eight games.
'I think it instils a little bit of fear into who we are playing,' said Brooks.
'They know we are not going to give up, even if it's the 96th minute. It's a massive positive.
'If felt like a big goal in North Macedonia and it makes the table looks a lot better for us. I feel like we are on a good journey.'
Brooks says he is now in the 'old box' at 27 with the Wales squad having changed so much in recent years.
Gareth Bale and Joe Allen are retired and captain Aaron Ramsey, the third standout member of the team which reached the semi-finals of Euro 2016, is recovering from another injury setback.
Brooks said: 'This is probably the first campaign we have had without them.
'There's a lot of young talent coming through and a lot of lads, including myself, who have been waiting for an opportunity to showcase ourselves.
'We are all looking as a collective to try to move forward, instead of it being about the special individual.'
Hashtags

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

South Wales Argus
6 minutes ago
- South Wales Argus
Friday briefing: Lamine Yamal stars for Spain and ‘no crisis' for Sarina Wiegman
England boss Sarina Wiegman named her squad for Euro 2025 – insisting there was no 'crisis' in the Lionesses' camp. Russell Martin was announced as the new Rangers manager and Wales geared up for their next World Cup qualifier in Cardiff on Friday night, when Scotland and the Republic of Ireland will both play friendlies. Lamine Yamal stars as Spain edge Les Blues An all-time classic in the Nations League semi-finals 🤯#NationsLeague — UEFA EURO (@UEFAEURO) June 5, 2025 Barcelona teenager Lamine Yamal scored twice as holders Spain beat France 5-4 in an entertaining heavyweight clash in Stuttgart to book their place in the Nations League final against Portugal. Goals from Nico Williams and Mikel Merino in the space of three minutes midway through the first half had put the European champions in control. Yamal, 17, slotted in a penalty soon after the restart, with Pedri then swiftly clipping home a fourth before Kylian Mbappe pulled a goal back for France from the spot in the 59th minute. After Lamal showed more fine close control to slide in a second goal, Lyon winger Rayan Cherki marked his debut off the bench when he crashed in a volley with 10 minutes left. A late own goal from Dani Vivian saw France claw back another before Randal Kolo Muani headed in during stoppage time. Spain, though, held out to make a third straight Nations League final, which will be played in Munich on Sunday. Sarina Wiegman shuts out the noise England boss Sarina Wiegman insisted there was no 'crisis' as she named a 23-strong squad for Euro 2025 following a tumultuous month for the Lionesses. It has been a far from settled few weeks as England prepared to defend their European crown, opening the campaign against France in Zurich on July 5. Both goalkeeper Mary Earps and attacker Fran Kirby had announced their retirement from international football, while defender Millie Bright pulled out of the tournament to prioritize her mental health, with Chelsea later confirming she had undergone minor knee surgery. Sarina Wiegman feels 'happy and excited' as focus sharpens ahead of Euro 2025 (Martin Rickett/PA) Wiegman, though, dismissed the idea the Lionesses camp is unsettled. Chelsea striker Lauren James, recovering from a hamstring injury, has been included in the squad, alongside 19-year-old Michelle Agyemang. 'We're going with this 23 to the Euros and I'm comfortable, happy and excited. For me it doesn't feel like a crisis at all,' Wiegman said. 'There is always noise, so we expect noise before we go into a tournament. The difference is in my first tournament, the attention and visibility with the women's team has increased. 'We have to deal with it and move on and focus on football.' Craig Bellamy wants Wales in focus Wales head coach Craig Bellamy wants his team in the right mindset against the rank outsiders (Adam Davy/PA) Wales boss Craig Bellamy says one of the world's worst football teams Liechtenstein have given him sleepless nights ahead of their World Cup qualifier. Liechtenstein – ranked 205th out of FIFA's 210 nations – have not won a competitive game since September 2020, and lost their opening two World Cup qualifiers in March. Bellamy, though, warned against any sense of complacency from his side in Cardiff on Friday night. 'We've prepared for Liechtenstein as we did for Turkey and everyone else – it doesn't matter who we play against,' the Wales boss said. 'I was up late last night. I didn't sleep well. Does that tell you something? I treat every team the same.' Russell Martin ready for Ibrox challenge Russell Martin is ready to meet the challenges head on at Ibrox (Steve Welsh/PA) New Rangers head coach Russell Martin has told sceptics he is looking to prove them wrong. News of the former MK Dons, Swansea and Southampton manager's three-year deal at Ibrox has not gone down well with some supporters. However, former Scotland defender Martin, who had an unsuccessful loan period at Rangers in 2018, is ready to meet the challenges head on. 'My whole career has been based on proving people wrong, really. At every level I got questioned,' former Norwich captain Martin, 39, said. 'I got to the Premier League as a player, I wasn't convinced I could do it, but I managed to establish myself there for a little while, played international football, which I'm incredibly proud of. 'So it's the same again as a manager – I had to prove people wrong at every opportunity.' What's on today? England manager Thomas Tuchel will speak to the media ahead of Saturday's World Cup qualifier against Andorra (Bradley Collyer/PA) England boss Thomas Tuchel will hold a press conference on Friday afternoon ahead of the World Cup qualifier against Andorra in Barcelona. Wales later take on Liechtenstein in their Group J fixture in Cardiff, while Scotland play a friendly against Iceland as do the Republic of Ireland when they host Senegal. Ahead of all that on Friday morning, England under-21s coach Lee Carsley will name his squad for the upcoming European Championships in Slovakia.


BBC News
8 minutes ago
- BBC News
Norwich sign Argyle goalkeeper Grimshaw
Norwich City have signed goalkeeper Dan Grimshaw from Plymouth Argyle for an undisclosed 27-year-old made 21 Championship appearances for the Devon side last season after joining from Blackpool in who has signed a three-year deal, becomes new Norwich boss Liam Manning's first signing and has played under him previously during a loan spell at Belgian club Lommel SK in the 2020-21 former Manchester City trainee endured a difficult campaign at Plymouth, including conceding six goals in a hammering at Carrow Road in November, before being replaced by the returning Conor Hazard in January."I've known of the interest for a little while and as soon as I heard about it, it was a place I really wanted to come - a big club with big ambitions, so it matched what I wanted to do," Grimshaw told Norwich's club website., external"We want to push for promotion - I'm here to give everything I have and hopefully we'll achieve that together."The Canaries released previous first-choice goalkeeper Angus Gunn at the end of the season after they finished 13th in the Championship table.


Sky News
9 minutes ago
- Sky News
The NHS winter crisis is a recurring seasonal theme – tackling it will bring challenges
Longer summer days when conversations revolve around hosepipe bans and barbeques might seem million miles away from the dark, cold nights of winter. But right now that's exactly what NHS Trust leaders are thinking about, as they publish their new Urgent and Emergency Care Plan for England. They are busy planning their winter response. To devise and implement a battle strategy to prevent the appalling scenes that have played out in emergency departments across the country, with patients on trolleys waiting for hours on end and ambulances stacked up and unable to offload the sickest patients for the care they need and deserve. The basic care they are entitled to. Like Christmas TV repeats and snow-capped robins, the NHS winter crisis is a recurring seasonal theme. The poor care has become normalised. It has come to define the NHS, and that's why it is so important for Wes Streeting to make it a priority. His Urgent and Emergency Care Plan was trailed back in January when the health service was in the grip of one of its worst winter crises. The hundreds of millions of pounds in investment, extra ambulances, and new urgent treatment centres are to stop a repeat of those unacceptable emergency department scenes. But there's more: a shift away from hospital-based acute emergency treatment to community-based care. More investment on virtual wards and paramedics armed with a full patient history treating their call-outs in situ, and therefore keeping as many patients away from ED as possible. The challenge here will be to get NHS and Social Care providers to work together. This has not happened as much as it should or could. 1:39 Keeping patients away from the ED doors will also require a reset in patient expectations. And ED consultants will tell you, as they tell me often, that a significant percentage of patients who turn up at A&E do not need to be there. Their needs are better served in speciality care in the community. But they come because the ED never closes. All of these patients need to be triaged and that volume creates the backlogs and lengthy waiting times. And while the urgent care recovery plan has been broadly supported and welcomed by the royal colleges, there is some concern that not enough has been done to address the crisis in social care. 4:01 The plan does highlight the need to improve patient flow through a hospital, the ability to discharge medically fit patients back into the community and free up beds for waiting patients. But for this to happen, social care packages need to be in place for patients who need them. This has been a constant challenge and unless there is significant investment in social care, it will continue to be a problem. Wes Streeting will say that this will be addressed when he publishes his NHS 10-Year Plan, expected sometime in July.