GB sevens back Boatman signs new Trailfinders deal
The 28-year-old won gold at the 2023 European Games to qualify for the 2024 Olympics with Team GB, where the team finished seventh.
Advertisement
She played for Saracens, Richmond, Wasps and Harlequins before moving to Trailfinders in 2023.
"I'm really excited to be focusing on Trailfinders Women this coming season. I'm proud of my journey in sevens, and that chapter of my career, but I'm looking forward to bringing all that to XVs and Trailfinders," she told the club's website.
"The environment here is ambitious and professional, and I'm looking to being part of a group that's pushing standards every week."

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


Los Angeles Times
34 minutes ago
- Los Angeles Times
Shaquille O'Neal talks about abusing painkillers, his regrets and his fragile kidneys
Shaquille O'Neal was never suspended for drug use of any kind during his decorated 19-year NBA career. The rugged 7-foot-1, 325-pound Hall of Famer center freely acknowledged playing through pain and openly worried about damage to his kidneys and liver from his prolonged use of legal anti-inflammatory medications. He also recently recounted on 'Inside the NBA' a bizarre story about testing positive for cocaine ahead of the 1996 Olympics. The result was thrown out — and never publicized — because O'Neal told officials he'd eaten a poppy seed muffin shortly before the test. Never mind that while poppy seeds can trigger a false positive test for opioids such as morphine or codeine, they can't do the same for cocaine, which is identified in drug tests by the presence of its major metabolite, benzoylecgonine. So in his recounting of an episode from nearly 30 years ago, O'Neal was wrong either about the illegal substance for which he tested positive or about what he ingested that caused the false positive. Perhaps he just meant to say codeine rather than cocaine. Point being, recollections can be fuzzy, and O'Neal isn't immune to such fuzziness, something to keep in mind when listening to the four-time NBA champion 'fess up to his use of painkillers on this week's 'Armchair Expert With Dax Shepard' podcast. O'Neal toggled between referring to opioid painkillers such as oxycodone and powerful, non-steroidal anti-inflammatories such as Indocin. He said he used opioids when recovering from injuries and took NSAIDs throughout his career. But he also said his doctor told him he was addicted to painkillers, leading to 'a heated discussion.' O'Neal didn't feel high, he said, even when he would take more than the prescribed dose 'I would do homeboy math,' he said. 'If it said take one, I'm taking three.' 'It was a club sandwich, fries and two pills for 19 years.' O'Neal first discussed painkillers during his four-part HBO documentary 'Shaq,' which debuted in 2022, and on the podcast Shepard mostly asked him to expand on what he'd said then about the potential damage to internal organs, the warnings from doctors and his current regrets. In the documentary, O'Neal had this to say: 'Sometimes I couldn't play if I didn't take it. All it did was mask the pain. ... Had a lot of painkillers. I got limited kidney stuff now, going on. I don't have the full range, but I took so many painkillers that [doctors are] saying, 'Hey, man, we don't need you taking that stuff now. You got to be careful.' 'My kidneys are kind of just chilling out right now,' he continued. 'I don't want to flare 'em back up.' Both opioids and NSAIDs can cause kidney and liver damage, and O'Neal didn't specify on the podcast which substances caused him the most concern. He said he struggled with accepting that he might have an addiction, eventually concluding, 'I had to have them. So, is that addiction?' And he hid the use of painkillers from his wife and kids, although he said 'the trainers knew.' As far back as 2000 — a year when O'Neal was the NBA's most valuable player and led the Lakers to the first of three consecutive championships — he expressed concern about the dangers of anti-inflammatories. O'Neal suspected that the kidney disease that threatened the life of fellow NBA star Alonzo Mourning might be the result of anti-inflammatories and said he would stop taking them. Two years later, however, O'Neal had resumed NSAID use. After a stomach ailment he originally believed was an ulcer, diagnostic tests were done on his kidneys and liver. He described the results to The Times thusly: 'I'm not great, but I'm cool.' O'Neal was playing with a badly aching arthritic big toe, a sprained wrist and a handful of unlisted bangs and bruises. He needed the pills, although it was unclear whether he was referring to painkillers, anti-inflammatories or both. 'I tried to stay off of them, but if I don't take them I can't move or play,' he said in 2002. 'I was taking them. When my stomach was giving me problems I had to get the test.' O'Neal has long championed non-prescription means of addressing pain. He's been the spokesperson for the topical analgesic Icy Hot since 2003 and he spoke on Capitol Hill in 2016, plugging efforts to give police better tools to recognize when drivers are under the influence of drugs. He pledged two years of funding for officers to become drug recognition experts. O'Neal's comments on Shepard's podcast are a clear indication that his use of painkillers and NSAIDs continues to weigh heavily on his mind. He added that these days he relaxes with a different vice: a hookah. 'I've never been into weed,' he said. 'Hookah, it enables me to follow the routine of sit your ass down.'
Yahoo
4 hours ago
- Yahoo
Michael Phelps links up with Ravens to provide swimming lessons for players
Marlon Humphrey's request to Michael Phelps was answered on Tuesday when the Olympic swimming legend visited Baltimore Ravens training camp to help players learn how to swim. [Join or create a Yahoo Fantasy Football league for the 2025 NFL season] Two weeks ago, Humphrey posted a video on social media featuring several teammates asking Phelps for lessons since a number of players did not know how to swim. Phelps responded that he was down to help and the swimming G.O.A.T. was in Owings Mills, Md. this week to make it happen. After taking a tour of the Ravens' new aquatic center and checking out practice with his seven-year old son, Beckett, and franchise great Ray Lewis, Phelps got to watch some players take part in a diving contest and a swimming race, then it was time to get down to business. Those who wanted help learning to swim received lessons from the 23-time Olympic gold medalist and members of the Michael Phelps Foundation, which provides learn-to-swim classes to help prevent drowning and raise self-esteem and wellness. Players used pool noodles and kickboards to improve their skills and build confidence in the water. "If I have to swim less than 20 yards, I could survive somehow because I could doggy paddle," said Ravens linebacker Roquan Smith. "But as far as actually swimming and knowing how to breathe and things of that nature, honestly, it was my first time. It was really cool. It was really solid, some of the lessons they gave me. I feel a little more confident." To thank Phelps, a Baltimore native a big Ravens fan, for his help, the team made a $100,000 donation to his foundation. "I didn't know what I was getting into. I had no idea what their comfort level was," Phelps said via the Ravens website. "When I see the guys in there and some of the guys who are literally working on floating and breathing, and they're focused on paying attention to those details, it shows their vulnerability, especially when they're uncomfortable. "It was a special day. Racing some of the fellas in the 25 [meter]. My son raced some of the guys. It was a great day. I truly hope they learned something, hopefully got some confidence, and hopefully can transition into something else."
Yahoo
5 hours ago
- Yahoo
Michael Phelps gives Baltimore Ravens players swimming lessons
Baltimore Ravens players asked Michael Phelps to teach them how to swim. The 23-time Olympic gold medalist answered the call. In a social media video, Ravens Marlon Humphrey, Ronnie Stanley, Kyle Hamilton and Charlie Kolar invited Phelps, a Baltimore native and longtime Ravens fan, to visit their training camp. They said that one in three Ravens players could not swim. Ravens players joined Phelps at Loyola University's Mangione Aquatic Center, where Phelps' name is on the wall signifying his pool records. Phelps brought Cathy Bennett, who taught him how to swim at age 7 despite a young Phelps being afraid to put his face in the water. "Start with baby steps," Phelps said in a TODAY interview. "I know it might sound crazy, but try just blowing bubbles in the water. Become more vulnerable. I think that's something that a lot of people are afraid of. Jump right in. Literally jump in. Come jump in with me." Phelps has been a water safety advocate dating back to his competitive career. In 2008, he launched the Michael Phelps Foundation, which includes a learn-to-swim program. Phelps has a longtime relationship with the Ravens, including a friendship with Hall of Fame linebacker Ray Lewis. In 2008 and 2016, Phelps' Olympic races were shown on the M&T Bank Stadium big screen during Ravens preseason games. A young Phelps considered trying out for his high school football team, but it wasn't feasible given the time necessary for swimming, which for years meant seven-days-per-week training. Phelps and Lewis each gave huddled speeches to the Ravens at practice Tuesday. Phelps' transcript: "When I stood up on the block at World Championships, the Olympic Games, any major international competition, I knew I was the most prepared human on that pool deck. Because I know that nobody would have been doing what I was doing day-in and day-out. Getting up at 6 o'clock and getting in the pool, all the recovery, the eating, the stretching, all the small things. Stack those small things on top of each other. You've heard him say it so many times it. Those small things are the reason why I won a race by a hundredth of a second, five hundredths of a second, faster than you're snapping your fingers. It's what you do behind closed doors that no one sees that gives you the opportunity to stand out on this field every single week during the season and be great. Coach has got you all ready, right? But every single day you have to be on top of those small things. You miss a step, you're giving your opponent something else. For me, every single box was checked off. When I stepped up on the block, I knew what was going to happen. My dreams and my goals were bigger than anybody else on the planet, especially in the swimming pool. I worked the hardest. That's why I got the results. So for me, when I step up, it's preparation only. There were times when I stepped up in the 2012 Olympics where I wasn't fully prepared. I got the results that I deserved. Sometimes I didn't make the podium. Sometimes I got second or third. That's not what I want. I want to be up top. So, for me, that's why I came back in '16. I said, I'm doing it my way, because when I retired I wanted to hang my suit up and say I've done everything I could put my mind to. 23 Olympic golds, that was it." What Michael Phelps told the University of Alabama football team Michael Phelps visited the University of Alabama for a preseason pep talk, which was shared by the program on social media last week. OlympicTalk,