The Lloyd Mullaney previously left the ITV jungle after just four days
Former Coronation Street star Craig Charles has revealed why he couldn’t watch I’m A Celebrity after his brother’s death.
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Known for playing Lloyd Mullaney on the ITV soap from 2005 until 2015, as well as starring in Red Dwarf as Dave Lister, the actor and DJ appeared on the Ant and Dec reality series back in 2014. However, he only stayed in the Australian jungle for four days.
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Craig had to go back home to the UK after he was informed that his brother Dean had suffered a fatal heart attack. Dean was just 52-years-old when he lost his life.
However, Craig is now taking part in I’m A Celebrity All Stars. Serving as an All Stars version of the series, he’s taking part with the likes of his former Coronation Street colleague Beverley Callard, TOWIE’s Gemma Collins and football legend Harry Redknapp.
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Viewers on Monday night (April 6), saw Craig and Gemma introduced as the season’s first late entries. Speaking to ITV, Craig reflected on how Dean’s passing affected how he viewed the programme.
“The death of my brother, Dean, changed my life the last time I was on I’m A Celebrity… I was 50 at the time, my brother was 52, I had been in Corrie for ten years and I came in to do the jungle, then Dean passed away.
“It made me re-evaluate things. I just thought if that had happened to me, would I be happy with what I’d achieved? I came up with the answer and it was ‘no’. I had been in Corrie for ten years and I felt in a rut.
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“I was really enjoying my time in the Australian jungle and it got sadly cut short. I knew I wanted to have some new adventures after that. “But since I left, there have been years of ‘What ifs?’ It’s nice to put that to bed,” he said.
Craig continued: “At first, I’m A Celebrity… felt bittersweet after I’d left,” he admits. “And in the first few years I couldn’t watch the show. It made me sad and it opened a world of loss.
“Every year it came around, I would feel a sense of loss and a feeling of what might have been – both for my brother and for me. He was only 52 and he would have been 63 now, which is no age.
“But that feeling has decreased over the years, and the last few years I have been able to watch it again without feeling the pain and the grief. And so, when this came round, it was at the right time. I feel strong and confident enough to face it again and have a laugh!”
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Asked if Dean were still alive today, would he like to make him proud by going into the jungle again, Craig noted that his brother did get to see him in the jungle before he died.
“I found out when I got back for the funeral that after the first episode, he turned to his wife and said: ‘he is going to win that’. But sadly, Dean never woke up and so hopefully I will make him proud,” she stated.
A cyclist was taken to hospital with serious injuries after a crash on a busy Cambridge road. Emergency services were called to Station Road in Cambridge at around 6pm on Saturday (April 4).
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The crash involved a bike and bus. Cambridgeshire Police attended and the cyclist was taken to Addenbrooke’s Hospital with serious injuries.
The bus driver remained at the scene. Officers made no arrests and continue to investigate the incident.
Stagecoach and the East of England Ambulance Service have been contacted for more information.
Bayern were simply too good for Atalanta in the last round as they won 10-2 on aggregate and made light work of key absentees in the second leg.
Attentions now turn to Europe’s biggest stage and both teams go into the quarter-final first leg on the back of contrasting results at the weekend.
Real Madrid were beaten 2-1 by Real Mallorca as their LaLiga title hopes took a massive hit, while Bayern left it late to come from two goals down to beat Freiburg and inch closer to retaining their Bundesliga crown.
Date, kick-off time and venue
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Real Madrid vs Bayern Munich is scheduled for an 8pm BST kick-off tonight, Tuesday, April 7, 2026.
The match will take place at the Santiago Bernabeu, in Madrid.
Where to watch Real Madrid vs Bayern Munich
TV channel: In the UK, the game will be televised live on TNT Sports. Coverage starts at 7pm BST on TNT Sports 1.
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Live stream: TNT Sports subscribers can also catch the contest live online via the HBO Max app and website.
Live blog: You can follow all the action on matchday via Standard Sport’s live blog!
Real Madrid vs Bayern Munich team news
Andriy Lunin will deputise in goal once again but Ferland Mendy and Rodrygo remain sidelined.
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Federico Valverde is expected to return after serving a domestic suspension, Vinicius Jr should join Kylian Mbappe in attack, but Jude Bellingham may have to settle for a place on the bench as his minutes continue to be managed following injury
Kane is expected to be fit to play, but on-loan Chelsea forward Nicolas Jackson is an option to start if required.
Michael Olise and Joshua Kimmich are available again after serving a suspension in the last round, while Manuel Neuer, Jamal Musiala and Alphonso Davies have all since returned to fitness.
Doubtful: Harry Kane
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Real Madrid vs Bayern Munich prediction
Bayern are, arguably, the best team in Europe on current form and the return of some key players should make them favourites for this quarter-final tie overall.
However, Real Madrid showed against Man City in the last round that they are more than capable of turning it on in the Champions League, especially at home.
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We are not expecting the first leg to be a cagey affair whatsoever. Los Blancos know they need a result to take to the Allianz Arena and Bayern’s best form of defence is to attack, so goals are guaranteed.
If you walk along the wall that surrounds St Cuthbert’s Church in the heart of Darlington, you might notice, set between the old stones, a weathered block carved with the date 1846.
To most it’s just a curiosity, maybe a mason’s marker or a relic reused from an old church building. But look closer, and you’ll uncover a link to one of Darlington’s most enduring institutions — its grammar school.
The 1846 stone set into the wall around St Cuthbert’s Church in Darlington — a surviving reminder of the town’s former grammar school (Image: ANDREW WHITE)
This modest piece of masonry once marked the addition of a second storey to the Free Grammar School of Queen Elizabeth, which once stood hard against the churchyard.
It commemorates a phase in a story that stretches back centuries, when education in the town was a church-led affair and Latin was the key to learning.
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The origins of Darlington’s grammar school can be traced to the medieval collegiate life of St Cuthbert’s.
As early as 1291, boys were being taught in the church’s All Saints chantry — Latin, of course, being essential for monks and clerics. The first written record of a grammar school comes from 1535, but its roots seem far older.
The man credited as its true founder was Robert Marshall, a Cockerton-born scholar who rose to become a provost of Oxford.
When he died in 1531, he left lands in Heighington, Thornaby, Tubwell Row and High Row to support the education of Darlington’s young people in the very church where he had learned his first lessons.
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Royal politics almost destroyed his legacy. Henry VIII eyed the church’s wealth hungrily, but Marshall’s bequest survived — just.
An Edwardian postcard of the old Darlington Grammar School (Image: ARCHIVE)
Under his successor Edward VI, religious schools were still viewed with suspicion, and some of the All Saints’ school property was confiscated.
But help came from the next monarch. In 1563 Queen Elizabeth granted the establishment a royal charter, restoring what had been taken and securing its future. The school proudly took her name — The Free Grammar School of Queen Elizabeth.
For the next three centuries, it endured in various guises. The early buildings were humble – there’s a record from 1632 showing that 16 pence was paid to cover the floor with rushes, and that the headmaster, Richard Smelt, was liable for any broken windows.
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By the mid-17th century, a new schoolhouse was built for £60 — still modest, but more substantial than before.
Not all masters were orthodox. One, the Reverend Thomas Cooke, took his religious experiments to alarming extremes.
Appointed in the 1750s, Cooke fasted for 40 days in imitation of Christ, though he gave up at seventeen, and, according to his obituary, even practised circumcision on himself to prove a theological point.
Declared mad, he was dismissed after two years and eventually ended his days in Bedlam.
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By the early 1800s, the churchyard had become so overcrowded that the school was moved in 1813 to Leadyard, on land adjoining the church’s east end.
The 1846 stone set into the wall around St Cuthbert’s Church in Darlington — a surviving reminder of the town’s former grammar school (Image: ANDREW WHITE)
The 1846 extension — recorded by that modest little stone — gave it a second storey, though townsfolk were apparently unimpressed.
One historian judged it “a shabby, plain building”, hardly a showpiece for Darlington’s pride.
Still, that wall and its stone remain, a quiet survivor of eras when learning clung to the church’s shadow.
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The school would eventually rise again — rebuilt in 1878 on Vane Terrace to designs by local architect GG Hoskins, opening with 84 pupils and a handsome clock donated by Henry Pease.
From the turn of the 20th century, the school came increasingly under the eye of local government.
Durham County Council made several attempts to take control, finally succeeding in 1917 after Darlington achieved county borough status.
Recommended reading:
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The “free” school had never quite lived up to its title — not until the Education Act of 1944 made secondary education truly free. By then, though, three-quarters of pupils already paid no fees thanks to scholarships and sponsored places.
As education modernised, so too did Darlington’s schools. A full reorganisation in 1968 turned the Girls’ High School into Hummersknott Comprehensive, and by 1970 the Boys’ Grammar School had become Darlington Sixth Form College.
But it’s that unassuming fragment, set into the church wall, that connects the modern passer-by with centuries of Darlington’s educational history — a reminder that great institutions, like great stones, often begin from humble foundations.
Masters chairman Fred Ridley is due to make his traditional pre-tournament speech and some will be wondering if US President Donald Trump gets a mention
Fred Ridley, chairman of the Masters, declined to mention Donald Trump in his speech ahead of the 2025 edition of the tournament and appears unlikely to give the United States president a shout-out this time either. Trump has reportedly pursued membership of Augusta National, the storied Georgia golf club where the tournament is held, though he was recently given a brutal verdict on why that is unlikely to arrive any time soon.
Ridley’s speech ahead of the 2026 event is due to take place on Wednesday. Once again, Trump’s name is not expected to come up, giving an indication of where the chairman’s head is at.
When asked about Trump being overlooked for membership, Harmon – who coached the likes of Tiger Woods and Phil Mickelson – made his feelings clear. “I think you can answer that yourself. Because he’s Trump,” the 82-year-old said.
“I think he is who he is. He’s full of himself. He’s the type of person that I don’t think fits the profile of an Augusta member. I’ve known him most of my whole life, because his father was a member of Winged Foot.
“I’ve known Donald pretty much my whole life. What you see is what you get with him. And I don’t think his personality fits the membership at Augusta.
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“I don’t think that [being president] has anything to do with it, because there’s been a lot of other presidents who played golf, and they’re not members. [Bill] Clinton, [Barack] Obama… they played golf. I think it’s just his personality doesn’t mix with that particular club. That’s as politically correct as I can be.”
The 2026 Masters is due to begin on Thursday. Rory McIlroy is the defending champion at Augusta, having beaten Justin Rose in a play-off last year to complete a career grand slam.
“It only boosts my belief that I can go ahead and do it,” Rose said when addressing his latest near-miss. “I’ve pretty much done what it takes to win. I just haven’t kind of walked over the line. I feel like I’ve executed well enough to have done the job.
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“From that point of view, I don’t feel like I have to find something in myself or do something different. I truly believe that. No, I don’t feel like [the Masters] owes me anything. I come here with a good attitude.”
Watch The Masters with Sky’s Ultimate TV bundle
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Coverage of The Masters gets underway on April 6 and golf fans can watch it live with Sky’s Ultimate TV and Sky Sports bundle. This includes 135 channels, nine from Sky Sports, plus HBO Max, Netflix, Disney+, discovery+ and Hayu.
The countdown continues today with a number of iconic sport stars of the past featuring
Belfast Live Sport
08:06, 07 Apr 2026
The countdown continues as Belfast Live brings you the top 25 Northern Ireland sport stars ever.
On day one, we had international hockey star Katie Mullan, gymnast trailblazer Rhys McClenaghan, rugby legend Mike Gibson, GAA colossus Kieran McGeeney and Olympic gold medal winning swimmer Dan Wiffen, in that descending order.
The stakes are higher today and the arguments sure to strengthen..
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20. PAT JENNINGS
It’s often a struggle for goalkeepers to get themselves into ‘greatest ever’ lists, given the constraints of their position, but when it comes to Pat Jennings, it’s hard to ignore his impact on the game.
So much so that the Football Writers’ Association named him their Player of the Year in 1973, and the PFA gave him their award three years later. He remains one of only two keepers to win the PFA prize.
One of the few to cross the North London divide and remain popular at both clubs, he was outstanding for Tottenham and Arsenal.
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His 1982 World Cup displays are still fondly remembered.
19. RICHARD DUNWOODY
Former three-time Champion Jockey, Richard Dunwoody became the only jockey of his generation to win the Big Three National Hunt races following wins on West Tip, Charter Party and Kribensis.
He also partnered the great Desert Orchid to seven victories. He won the Grand National again on Miinnehoma in 1994 and was Champion Jockey three times (1993-95). He was awarded the MBE for services to his sport in 1993.
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The Belfast native won a then record 1,874 races. In 1993 he was awarded an MBE for his services to sport. Since retiring as a jockey in 1999 he has travelled extensively and undertaken expeditions to both the Arctic and Antarctic.
18. NORMAN WHITESIDE
Two World Cup appearances, in 1982 and 1986, two FA Cups with Manchester United, and a host of individual honours give Norman Whiteside a spot on our list.
Similar to Best, he was a joy to watch in possession, as he slalomed past challenges from defenders who weren’t as constrained as their modern day counterparts.
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The Shankhill Road man notched almost 70 goals for United before moving on to Everton.
A knee injury cut his career short in his prime, but by then he had broken Pele’s record by becoming the youngest ever player to feature at a World Cup, and he was the youngest player to score a first-team goal for Manchester United.
17. SEAN CAVANAGH
The Moy man was one of the players of his generation, winning three All-Ireland medals, six Ulster crowns and five All-Star awards with Tyrone.
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He was Footballer of the Year in 2008 and represented Ireland on the International Rules Series, after resisting offers to go and play professionally in Aussie Rules.
He was a standout player at youth level, leading his school St Pat’s Armagh to the MacRory Cup and his county to an All-Ireland minor title.
Cavanagh and those Red Hand minor stars backboned Tyrone’s breakthrough Sam Maguire wins in 2003, 2005, and 2008. He was named man of the match in that ‘08 defining clash with big rivals Kerry.
16. WAYNE McCULLOUGH
The Olympic silver medallist from Barcelona in 1992 – who beat future world champions Arturo Gatti, Tim Austin and Willie Jorrin in the amateur ranks. In 1995, he travelled to Japan to challenge WBC champion Yasuei Yakushiji in his home town – and came away with a split decision win and the world title.
Two successful defences, against Johnny Bredahl in Belfast and Jose Luis Bueno in Dublin, followed before he relinquished the title to move up to super-bantamweight
He would go on to have five more world title chances – against Naseem Hamed, Erik Morales, Scott Harrison and two against Oscar Larios – but lost them all.
*****
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Tomorrow, the numbers 11-15 of our top 25 Northern Ireland sport stars of all time will be revealed.
Authorities in British Columbia have urged the public to steer clear of a rock face overlooking a highway, where a red Volkswagen Beetle shell has been suspended in what appears to be an elaborate prank. The province’s Environment Ministry confirmed on Monday that BC Parks is working to remove the vehicle within the week, with the Royal Canadian Mounted Police and park rangers now investigating.
The car shell, emblazoned with a large ‘E’ on its roof, first appeared last week above Highway 99 in Squamish. This distinctive marking suggests the stunt is a continuation of a long-standing tradition among University of British Columbia engineering students, known for placing Beetle shells in challenging locations.
In 2009, a Beetle fell from the Iron Workers Memorial Bridge, and Vancouver police arrested five students in a failed attempt to suspend it from the span.
A spokesperson for the university did not immediately return a message seeking comment.
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The shell of a Volkswagen Beetle hangs suspended on a cliff above the Sea-to-Sky Highway, in Squamish, British Columbia, Monday, April 6, 2026, after it appeared on the rock face last week with a large “E” on its roof, indicating that University of British Columbia engineering students carried out a long-standing tradition of placing the shell in difficult to reach locations. (Darryl Dyck/The Canadian Press via AP)
Squamish Mayor Armand Hurford said the area around the Stawamus Chief rock formation is a “sacred place” with deep cultural meaning to the Squamish Nation.
He said the area is also popular among hikers and climbers and what “may have felt like an innocent prank” has affected the community.
“This is an area that deserves respect, and that wasn’t the case here,” Hurford said in the statement.
Who is at the Masters dinner? Guest list in full as Rory McIlroy hosts for first time – The Mirror
Need to know
Ahead of the most prestigious event in the golfing calendar, Rory McIlroy has the honour of hosting the annual Masters dinner
Rory McIlroy will host the annual Champions Dinner ahead of the 2026 Masters tournament(Image: Getty Images)
Everything you need to know about Rory McIlroy’s Masters dinner:
The hosting honour: Rory McIlroy is hosting the annual Masters dinner as the defending champion at Augusta National. After his dramatic playoff victory over Justin Rose in 2025, Rory became only the sixth player in history to complete the career Grand Slam, a feat that makes this year’s dinner particularly poignant.
Date and location: The dinner is held annually on the Tuesday night before the tournament begins (on this occasion, April 7). The event takes place on the second floor of the Augusta National clubhouse, specifically in the Library, which is transformed into a private dining room for the members of the Masters Club.
The exclusive guest list: The dinner is strictly reserved for past Masters champions only. In addition to Rory, the expected guest list includes legends like Jack Nicklaus, Tiger Woods, Gary Player and Phil Mickelson, alongside recent winners like Scottie Scheffler, Jon Rahm and Hideki Matsuyama.
The green jacket requirement: Every attendee is required to wear their green jacket – the prize for winning the Masters – for the duration of the evening. It is the only night of the year when the most iconic piece of clothing in sports is worn collectively by every man in the room.
A LIV ‘reunion’: Despite the ongoing tensions between the PGA and LIV Golf, the Champions Dinner remains a neutral ground. LIV Golf stars like Dustin Johnson, Sergio Garcia, Patrick Reed and Bubba Watson will all be in attendance, as the evening is famously centred on mutual respect rather than circuit politics.
McIlroy’s menu: As host, McIlroy’s primary job is designing the menu. To start, he’s gone with Peach & Ricotta Flatbread, Rock Shrimp Tempura, and Bacon-wrapped Dates, followed by a main course of Wagyu Filet Mignon or Seared Salmon served with traditional Irish Champ (mashed potatoes with scallions), and for dessert: sticky toffee pudding with vanilla ice cream.
The master of ceremonies: While Rory is the host, two-time champion Ben Crenshaw continues his traditional role as the night’s unofficial MC. Crenshaw typically leads the “remembrances” for champions who have passed away and formally introduces the new host to the room.
The chairman’s presence: The only non-champion in the room will be Fred Ridley, the chairman of Augusta National. He sits at the head of the table alongside McIlroy and the senior champions, representing the club’s leadership for this private 74-year-old tradition.
The app encourages people to think differently about their journey to sobriety
06:30, 07 Apr 2026
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A man from Co Antrim has used his own sobriety journey to help others by building a new app that takes a holistic approach to recovery.
Matt Waterworth from Carrickfergus spent much of his young life drinking heavily, and became a running influencer under the name of Angry Jogger. In 2014, he wrote a book documenting his running journey, which mixed this experience with drinking.
The 42-year-old was sober for seven years until 2022, when the grief from his mum’s death and the outbreak of the Ukraine War led to him panic buying a bottle of rum and items to protect him from the potential outbreak of a nuclear war.
Now, Matt is on a mission to help many people who may be struggling with addiction through his app, Better Without Booze. The app takes a holistic approach, to help people understand why they may be turning to alcohol, and find better ways of coping.
Speaking to Belfast Live, he said: “Throughout most of my young adult life, I was someone who would be considered to be an alcoholic.
“I’m a former running influencer, and after I quit drinking I did a lot of charity runs including Land’s End to John O’Groats for Mind the mental health charity which was equivalent of 38 marathons in 38 days.
“I did a book a long time ago called Angry Jogger which mixed running and drinking. It was a big mistake, and I quit soon after this.
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“I was sober for seven years, from 2015 to 2022. My mum died at the end of 2021 and then at the beginning of 2022 the Ukraine War started. I was living on my own and grieving, then Vladimir Putin put his nukes on high alert and I just freaked out.
“I bought a bottle of rum and all this nuke protection gear stuff. Once I drank, I felt like I’d lost those seven years, whereas now I realise that was just one day out of say 3,000 where I lapsed.
“The idea for the app really came from that, the idea of trying to encourage people to be open and positive about the experiences they’re creating by not drinking.”
Matt said many people in Northern Ireland drink as a result of intergenerational trauma, and associated repression of emotions rather than being open with each other.
He added: “My parents were both very heavy drinkers, but they avoided the whole alcoholic term. They weren’t addressing what was going on, there was no sort of language to address what was going on at the time.
“Being born in those times, and trying to understand what was going on with them and that they were trying to cope in the best way they can.”
In a bid to help people on their recovery journeys, Matt founded the Better Without Booze app with Stu Nugent, a YouTuber who talks about his own experience with sobriety.
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A main aspect of the app is to change how people think of the journey to sobriety, with the experience turning into a game. It features different sections including craving tracking, recovery wins, and sober firsts.
Matt said: “The idea behind the app is to make it like a computer game. A lot of apps are like counters, for people who are trying to quit alcohol, you need around four or five attempts to properly get off it.
“For example, if you are two months sober and you then go out drinking with a friend, a conventional app will dictate that you’ve failed, because you’ve drank one day out of say 75 days. What we’re trying to do is say okay, you drank – but this is what you can do, and what is possible in the future. That sort of attitude is completely unique to the whole industry.”
Using his own experience, Matt is hoping the app will look deeper into why people drink, and the emotions they go through as they do so.
“From 2022 to 2024, after seven years of sobriety, I was drinking too much. I was trying to get help on the NHS because I knew it was increasing and that I was drinking for the wrong reasons. When I was drinking, it was in moments where I was feeling really depressed,” he explained.
“A key part of it is why you drink. So many of these apps don’t actually ask why, and that’s the biggest part for most people who are struggling. We all have reasons why we drink or why we need to block things out. This app is more about trying to get people to think about those reasons, and find better ways through the difficulties they face in everyday life.
“It’s the issue of trying to meet people where they are with addiction, trying to get them to have some hope for the future and have no shame for the past. It’s about trying to forge a way through by not drinking, and trying to show them life is better without booze.”
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So far, 150 people have signed up to the Better Without Booze app, with around five people already signed up for lifetime subscriptions.
For anyone who is hoping to start their own sobriety journey, Matt said: “If you’re trying to find a way out of addiction, that’s the best thing ever. If our app helps, that’s amazing. If another app helps, then that’s amazing too.
“What we’re trying to do is bring everything together because me and Stu, who I’m running this with, we were both hopeless alcoholics at some point in our lives. We understand how lonely that feels, so we’re trying to get people to try again until they find something that works.
“Whether it’s this or something else, if it’s going to AA, getting out and meeting people, having a talk – there’s so many people out there who could benefit from a holistic, straightforward approach, and that’s what we’re trying to do at the moment.”
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To find out more about the Better Without Booze app, click here.
Drinkline is the national alcohol helpline. If you’re worried about your own or someone else’s drinking, you can call this free helpline in complete confidence. Call 0300 123 1110 (weekdays 9am to 8pm, weekends 11am to 4pm).
To find alcohol addiction support services in your area, click here.
The county’s Fire and Rescue Service said crews were called to Jockey Lane, close to the LNER Community Stadium in Huntington, at around 4.45pm yesterday (April 6).
Smoke billowing over the LNER Community Stadium in York on Monday afternoon (April 6) (Image: Charlie Putt)
Eyewitnesses said firefighters were seen in the car park of the Stoneacre motor vehicle dealership.
A spokesperson for North Yorkshire Fire and Rescue Service said: “Crews from Huntington, Tadcaster, Acomb, Selby, Knaresbrough and Malton alongside a water bowser from Tadcaster, Ariel ladder platform from Harrogate, welfare unit from Thirsk and a incident command unit from Northallerton attended a fire at a commercial property.
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“Crews used multiple Breathing apparatus, hose reel jets, main jets and positive pressure ventilation fans to deal with the incident.”
Rory McIlroy already knows who he will tee off against for the first two rounds at Augusta National as he looks to defend his Masters crown
Rory McIlroy already knows one of his playing partners for the opening two rounds at Augusta National. While the tee times for the Masters are still to be confirmed, the reigning champion begins his title defence on Thursday.
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He will tee it up alongside amateur star Mason Howell and one other player from the 91-man field. The 18-year-old is the US Amateur champion, a title that not only carries an invitation to three majors but also a tee time alongside the defending Masters champion.
Howell is yet to play collegiate golf but he will be buoyed by passionate support in Augusta, having committed to the University of Georgia. He will embark on the next chapter of his bright career in Athens this autumn. Last year, the honour of playing alongside reigning champion Scottie Scheffler fell to LIV Golf’s Josele Ballester, who angered tournament officials by urinating in Rae’s Creek.
Howell, who admitted he is “super nervous”, will be keen to steer clear of similar controversy when he tees it up with McIlroy on Thursday. Playing in the Masters already carries enormous pressure for any competitor but Howell must keep his composure while playing alongside one of his “idols”.
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“I’ll be super excited, but at the same time I’ll be super nervous,” he said Monday. “I think just controlling my emotions and sticking to my game plan, and just having fun.
“Rory was one of my idols growing up, so it’ll be a super special moment for me. I can’t oggle at his game too much. I got to focus on myself. It’ll be fun.”
Howell has been able to draw on the guidance of mentor Harris English to ready himself for the challenge ahead. Sea Island native English is a University of Georgia alumnus who honed his skills at the same club as his protégé. The pair played a practice round together on Monday.
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English said: “I’ve known Mason for a long time now. I was really excited about his win at the U.S. Amateur. Been pulling on him for a long time and it’s awesome to rub off on him I guess a little bit out here.
“I think this is my seventh Masters, so just little stuff that I can help him with. I know his brain is spinning right now. I can’t imagine what he’s going through at 18 years old and playing in the Masters for the first time.
“So just to have fun. Have a cool experience out here. He’s getting to play with Rory for the first couple of rounds. Talked about that some. Just told him, ‘Take it all in, but manage your time well. Don’t get lost in everything. This is just another golf tournament.’”
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English added: “We grew up at the same club, Glen Arven. I remember him as a little kid, eight or nine years old, probably. Had a good crew down there. Got a lot of good young junior golfers down there that are very competitive.
“Another one that’s playing at Georgia this year in Mason. It’s awesome to see. We had some good players around my era, and it’s nice to see the next wave come through. I don’t know what is in the water down there, but they’re doing some good things at Glen Arven.”
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