
Barton Seagrave crash leaves motorcyclist with serious injuries
A motorcyclist has been seriously injured in a collision involving a car on a village road. The crash happened at about 20:20 BST on Saturday on Barton Road in Barton Seagrave, near Kettering, according to Northamptonshire Police.The force said the motorcyclist, a man in his 30s, was riding a red Aprilia Shiver which collided with a white Ford Fiesta.He was taken to University Hospital Coventry with serious injuries.
The force appealed for witnesses and any dashcam footage.
Follow Northamptonshire news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X.
Hashtags

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


Daily Mail
27 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Dressage rider left in a wheelchair after pack of dogs let off the lead by their walker spooked her horse wins £500k payout
A top dressage rider who was left in a wheelchair after a horrific accident caused by out of control dogs has won £500,000 in damages. Melissa Smith, a former international grand prix competitor, was riding her horse along a bridlepath in Surrey when two dogs being walked off the lead by a professional dog walker suddenly spooked her mare - causing it to rear up and fall on top of her. The devastating incident left the 40-year-old with a broken pelvis, broken back and serious head injury, and she had to be airlifted to hospital where doctors warned her the injuries were life-threatening. The terrifying fall left her unable to walk and confined to a wheelchair for months but determined Melissa battled back through multiple surgeries and two years of grueling rehab, and has even managed to get back in the saddle. Now, after a lengthy legal fight, she's been awarded half a million pounds in compensation and a court ruling which could have serious implications for dog walkers across the country. The accident happened in December 2018, when Ms Smith, who ran a livery yard and trained dressage horses, was out riding her eight-year-old mare Lorentina, affectionately known as Loti, on Crooksbury Common in Surrey. She encountered dog walker Diane Worth, who was out with four dogs, and warned her to keep them under control. Ms Worth managed to put two of the animals back on the lead, but two others, a black cockapoo named Buddy and a white cavapoochon named Harley, ignored her commands and ran free. As the dogs darted around her horse, Ms Smith again warned: 'Although my horse is good with dogs, their walker should not let them get behind her horse in case it kicked out.' Moments later, disaster struck. The startled horse reared up and threw Ms Smith to the ground, then fell on top of her, crushing her beneath its body. Speaking this week, Ms Smith told The Telegraph: 'The horse I was riding was badly frightened by the loose dogs and she fell on top of me, crushing me, becoming stuck with her legs up in the air. 'She managed to get up but I knew I was very seriously injured. I was taken by air ambulance to St George's where I was told I had life-threatening injuries, needed emergency surgery and would need two years' rehabilitation to recover.' Ms Smith took legal action against the dog walker, suing for negligence. The case went to court in 2023 after Ms Worth's insurance company disputed liability but the judge ruled in Melissa's favour, concluding she had suffered because of the dog walker's failure to keep the animals under control. Judge Jonathan Simpkiss found that something must have spooked the usually calm horse to cause her to rear and said it could 'only have been the dogs' behaviour.' He added: 'With the benefit of hindsight, one can easily see that if all four dogs had been on leads, this accident would probably not have happened.' One of the dogs, Harley, had reportedly been described by its owners as able to walk off the lead, 'but may chase other wildlife.' The judge said this should have included horses unless it was specifically noted that the dog was used to them. He ruled that it was foreseeable that if a dog ran loose near a horse, it could frighten the animal and the risk of a rider being seriously injured was significant. Ms Worth, he said, should have known that horses were regularly ridden on the common and ought to have anticipated such a risk. He found her liable, saying her failure to take reasonable steps to prevent the risk had caused the accident. Ms Worth admitted in court that she had lost control of Buddy and Harley. Her legal team had tried to argue that Ms Smith herself was partly to blame, saying her horse had been 'pawing' the ground and snorting, but the judge dismissed the claim, adding that the rider had been 'experienced and highly competent' and had been in control until the moment the horse reared. An allegation that Ms Smith should not have been riding in an area used by dog walkers, despite it being a public bridlepath, was withdrawn during proceedings. Melissa's solicitor Mary Ann Charles, from equestrian law specialists Shaw & Co, who is also a rider herself, said the accident should never have happened. She said: 'It's not an accident that should have happened. There's a lack of understanding that this risk exists. 'The person on the horse usually understands but the person with the dog doesn't necessarily. They're concerned about the welfare of the dog, not really thinking about the welfare of the people they're encountering.'


Daily Mail
2 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Michail Antonio releases footage of painstaking recovery journey after surviving horror car crash that left him with a broken leg
Michail Antonio has released footage of his painstaking journey to return to full fitness after surviving a horror car crash that left him with a broken leg. The Hammers front man has not featured since the December accident that required him to be cut from the wreckage of his £260,000 grey Ferrari by fire crews in Essex and airlifted to hospital. After colliding with a tree on his way home from training in Epping Forest, the striker was trapped for more than 45 minutes and feared for his life. Antonio underwent surgery for a broken leg the following day, but has worked hard on a miraculous recovery which has seen him return to training just four months on from the accident. On Sunday, the 35-year-old took to Instagram to share a clip of his journey, titling the video with the caption 'Faith will overcome all challenges'. The Jamaica international showed clips of himself regaining his strength on his leg that was broken in the accident. The touching montage of his rehab concluded with his return to first team training, as well as the heartwarming scenes at the London Stadium when he was introduced to the West Ham fans in March. Antonio is out of contract this summer but West Ham are understood to have offered him a short-term deal while he regains his fitness but it remains to be seen whether he will stay beyond the summer or look for a move elsewhere. Last month, a senior Hammers source told Mail Sport: 'He's looking at what offers he gets.' In a May interview with French outlet L'Equipe, Antonio said: ''The question is whether the club wants to extend my contract. That's my priority, but I'm waiting. Until then, all I can do is focus on my recovery so that, wherever I am next year, I can deliver.' Antonio also stated that he had ambitions of extending his Premier League goal tally, which currently sits at 68. 'I'd like to push the record forward so that Jarrod Bowen doesn't catch me,' Antonio said of his Hammers team-mate, who is currently on 54 goals. Antonio also shed light on the support that West Ham gave him in the aftermath of the crash, revealing that the Premier League side had paid for a private room at a hotel for him to continue his convalescence with medial support and privacy. 'West Ham were incredible for me from the very beginning, and even today, they are there for me every day,' Antonio added. But while a potential move away from the club remains in play with his deal drawing to a close, recovery continues to prove a challenging prospect. 'The sessions are very tough,' the forward continued. 'After each one, my leg is dead for a few hours! 'I do a lot of strength and power work to get my body back to normal. I'm still struggling because my brain is constantly telling my leg, "You can't do it."' But, he added: 'It's getting better every day, every week.' In April, West Ham's record Premier League goal-scorer revisited the car's remains at a scrapyard, which put the horror incident into perspective. 'It gave me a weird feeling in my stomach,' Antonio told BBC One programme Morning Live. 'It just made me realise how close I was to dying. I had seen the pictures, but it was 10 times worse in person. The car was an absolute mess. It was difficult for me. 'All I know is that I hit a tree - I don't know how I hit a tree - and that the police came and when they found me in the car, I was in between the two seats. 'From the crash, I've been more of an emotional man. I was avoiding going back because I was slightly embarrassed by the crash and the accident. Obviously I've almost died in the car crash.'


BBC News
2 hours ago
- BBC News
Rutter sustains spine and leg fractures in TT crash
Seven-time Isle of Man TT winner Michael Rutter has had "a number of fractures" in his spine "stabilised" after a crash in Friday's Supertwin 53-year-old crashed on the third and final lap at the 31st milestone on Friday and was transferred to the Walton Unit at Aintree Hospital in Liverpool.A statement on Bathams Racing's Facebook page said "the worst of his injuries have been treated successfully" and he has "already been able to mobilise on his feet"."He suffered a number of fractures in his spine between the L2 and L5 vertebrae," Rutter's team said. "Surgeons have successfully stabilised all the fractures and Michael has already been able to mobilise on his feet."He requires more surgery in his ankle to repair a further fracture, but for now the worst of his injuries have been treated successfully."Rutter made his Isle of Man TT debut in 1994 and decided to step back from the Superbike and Superstock races for the 2025 event to focus on the Supertwins - the slowest of the four classes at the road Isle of Man TT is an annual road race which takes place on 37.7 miles of closed public roads on the Mountain Course.