
Teenager Brookes wins World Cup snowboard title for GB
British athlete Mia Brookes has won the overall World Cup Snowboard Park & Pipe title.The 18-year-old, who in 2023 became the youngest world champion in snowboard history at the age of 16, took the title after the cancellation of the finals of the Absolut Park Slopestyle World Cup.Brookes has recorded seven World Cup podiums this season including victories in Beijing, Klagenfurt and Laax.She takes the title with 500 World Cup points, 35 clear of Japan's Mari Fukada in second, while New Zealander Zoi Sadowski-Synott claimed third with 436 points.There was more British success as Kirsty Muir took her maiden World Cup skiing victory with a sensational performance at the Tignes Slopestyle World Cup.Having only returned to action from a serious knee injury in February after a year out, the 20-year-old beat Australia's Abi Harrigan and New Zealand's Ruby Star Andrews, who were second and third respectively.Muir said: "I'm so stoked, just over the moon. I'm super happy to get a clean run down and make it on to the top of the podium – first time!"I'm back stronger than I was which is even better. This is what I wanted and here I am – first World Cup win and after my knee, I'm just so stoked."
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Daily Mirror
24 minutes ago
- Daily Mirror
Kane fumes at England decision as Tuchel's side suffer embarrassing defeat
Harry Kane bemoaned the decision that would've seen England equalise before going down to Senegal as Jude Bellingham's late strike was ruled out by VAR for handball Harry Kane felt England were cruelly denied an equaliser as Jude Bellingham 's late strike was disallowed with the skipper ruthlessly claiming "if you know the rules it's a goal". The Real Madrid man came off the bench and was looking to help rescue the Three Lions as they trailed to Senegal - eventually falling to defeat. He thought he'd found it with a quick touch and finish from close range, setting up a grandstand finish. However VAR quickly interjected to highlighted a potential handball to the referee, who then went to the screen for a second look. The initial delivery from the corner hit Levi Colwill on the arm before it headed in Bellingham's direction and that was deemed deliberate. As Bellingham, the goalscorer, didn't handle the ball the interpretation of the rule can be different, which is what Kane may have been hinting at as he claimed England should've had a second goal. He told ITV: "If you know the rules it is not handball. It obviously gets us back in the game at 2-2 and maybe we go on and win the game so it is a big moment but its something to discuss with them after." Bellingham's strike would've given England just over five minutes to find a winning goal at the City Ground in Nottingham. Instead Senegal were able to add a third in stoppage time. Both Ian Wright and Roy Keane agreed that the officials had got the decision wrong. The loss comes after Andorra had run England close, eventually losing 1-0 having been level at the break. The Three Lions were booed at half-time and needed a response, but were again poor with jeers ringing out at the full-time whistle. Kane said on the performance: "Again, not really good enough. I think we had moments but with and without the ball aren't quite clicking, the right passes, the right tempo. One-on-one we're losing those duels, lacking that aggressive nature and we got punished. we're playing against a good side. "We're not going to panic, but for sure we know we need to be better. There's some ideas that are new, we have new players in the team who don't haven't international experience. Its a mixture of things but it is no excuse. We need to find it quick, obviously we won't meet again for a few months but the World Cup is going to come around fast." 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
24 minutes ago
- Daily Mirror
Liverpool 'agree British record Florian Wirtz deal' as Reds to sign German star
Liverpool have agreed a deal to sign Florian Wirtz from Bayer Leverkusen, according to reports, with the Reds having agreed to meet the Bundesliga side's demands Liverpool have reportedly clinched a British record-breaking deal for the highly sought-after Florian Wirtz, with Bayer Leverkusen's valuation finally met by the Anfield side. The transfer saga that has dominated headlines is seemingly drawing to a close as the Reds have reached an agreement with the German club that is thought to reach their £126.9million valuation should various add-ons be met. The move will surpass the £115m Chelsea paid for Moises Caicedo when they signed from Brighton two years ago. After rejecting two previous offers from Liverpool, Leverkusen stood firm on their asking price, which Liverpool have now apparently satisfied, although the specifics of the deal's structure remain undisclosed. Wirtz is poised for a medical and to put pen to paper, with reports noting that the German talent had his sights set on joining Liverpool and had agreed to terms over a fortnight ago. Despite interest from Manchester City and Bayern Munich, Wirtz has opted for a future with the Merseyside outfit. The young star's ascent at the BayArena has been nothing short of spectacular, earning him the title of Bundesliga Player of the Season in the last campaign. "You have to give special players like Flo the possibility to do special things on the pitch," former Leverkusen boss Xabi Alonso had enthused when discussing his prodigy. Wirtz, a European Under-21 Champion with Germany in 2021, has already racked up an impressive 29 appearances for the senior national team, netting six goals for Die Mannschaft. Former Germany gaffer and current Barcelona boss Hansi Flick praised: "Florian is just a huge asset for this team with his care-free nature. "He's simply an outstanding technician, loves to play, is very creative, has a good shot, runs hard and is quick. He's the full package."


The Independent
24 minutes ago
- The Independent
England left battered and booed as Senegal expose the weaknesses Thomas Tuchel must address
Managing England, as Thomas Tuchel is fast discovering, is harder than it may seem. A chastening week took a turn for the worse, culminating in the boos that followed his first defeat. It is a moot point whether losing to an accomplished Senegal side is actually a better result than only beating Andorra 1-0 but, a year from the World Cup, England looked anything but potential winners. It was a momentous occasion instead for Senegal: when Cheikh Sabaly scored the injury-time third, they celebrated becoming the first African team ever to beat England. They did not merely overcome them. They outclassed them. Out-passed, outrun and outwitted, England encountered opponents who were quicker of foot and mind, cleverer and more coherent. That can't all be attributed to Tuchel, in just the fourth game of his reign, but this was a snapshot of familiar England weaknesses. They lost their way after taking an early lead, lacked control in midfield and looked less than the sum of their parts. They were dismal and dreadful. Rarely a man to keep his emotions under wraps, Tuchel was visibly irritated. His quixotic moves compounded their difficulties. If friendlies offer a chance to experiment, if he needs to get to know his new charges, if there is an element of trial and error, some of the choices that backfired felt odd. Even the most successful arguably illustrated their problems. Dean Henderson was the first goalkeeper to concede in Tuchel's tenure but a string of saves illustrated that England at least have a fine alternative to Jordan Pickford. His best stops came in the opening quarter of an hour, blocking Nicolas Jackson 's shot with his legs and parrying his Crystal Palace teammate Ismaila Sarr 's header. Yet he was overworked, his defence shambolic at times. Tuchel had argued that fielding an all- Chelsea centre-back pairing would help subdue Jackson. They did not, though the debutant Trevoh Chalobah made several timely interventions. Levi Colwill fared worse, while Habib Diarra surged behind left-back Myles Lewis-Skelly for Senegal's second goal. Yet neither was embarrassed quite as much as the senior citizen in the back four. While Kyle Walker 's evening included a guided deep cross that, somehow, Anthony Gordon steered wide from four yards, he offered evidence his 96th cap should be his last. Senegal's equaliser was an indictment of Walker: as Jackson hooked the ball across the penalty area, he was too slow to react as Sarr stole in to finish. It should scarcely be news that Walker has lost his speed. A booking for a late challenge on El Hadji Malick Diouf was a case in point: Walker would have got their quicker if he still had his pace. Tuchel had seemed to ignore Walker's performances in his final few months before leaving Manchester City when selecting him; Trent Alexander-Arnold, left unused on the bench, may wonder how he was deemed an inferior option. In midfield, meanwhile, Conor Gallagher was particularly poor in possession. England's formation strayed dangerously close to a lumpen 4-4-2, making it easier for Senegal to outmanoeuvre them. The exception came when Harry Kane dropped deep; at times he came so deep he materialised behind much of the midfield, doing his impression of a quarterback, an East London Andrea Pirlo, looking to release Gordon, who began with energy and intensity but faded. Kane had started his night in familiar terrain and fashion. Tuchel made 10 changes. One name stayed the same: Kane started again and marked a fourth cap under Tuchel with a fourth goal in that time. A tap-in was testament to his predatory instincts, even if much of the credit belonged to Eberechi Eze, for winning the ball from Lamine Camara, and Gordon, whose shot was parried into Kane's path. A 107th cap took him past Sir Bobby Charlton; Kane now has as many goals as Charlton and Geoff Hurst combined. But England are yet to get goals from many of their other attacking talents under Tuchel. When Kane went off, the German initially played without a specialist striker; a slight, perhaps, for Ivan Toney, who was confined to a late cameo, as Morgan Rogers and Eze operated in central attacking roles, with neither as an out-and-out centre-forward. One substitute thought he had equalised, Jude Bellingham celebrating what seemed a leveller only for his volley to be disallowed because Colwill had handled. Another substitute twice almost brought England level. The Nottingham Forest favourite Morgan Gibbs-White was bright and prominent on home soil as Edouard Mendy made two fine saves, denying him and Bukayo Saka. But no sooner had Gibbs-White come on than England were behind, Diarra shooting through Henderson's legs. And another England replacement inadvertently set up their third goal, Curtis Jones losing the ball and Camara, in redemptive fashion, powering away to find Sabaly. After three wins for England came three goals in a loss. Senegal are much the best side they have faced under Tuchel but they could face far better again next summer. To say this bodes badly is an understatement. The rest of the world are unlikely to be quaking in their boots.