Connect with us
DAPA Banner
DAPA Coin
DAPA
COIN PAYMENT ASSET
PRIVACY · BLOCKDAG · HOMOMORPHIC ENCRYPTION · RUST
ElGamal Encrypted MINE DAPA
🚫 GENESIS SOLD OUT
DAPAPAY COMING

NewsBeat

Wales rugby coach Jonathan Humphreys found living a very different life now

Published

on

Wales Online

For the first time in some 35 years, Jonathan Humphreys has taken a break from rugby – and he is loving the experience.

He’s quick to stress that he considers himself hugely fortunate to have made a living out of the game for as long as he did.

But he also admits there were tough times along the way, particularly when he was Wales captain and then again more recently while coaching the national team.

With that latter role having ended last year, Humphreys is now away from it all, living up in Scotland on a smallholding near Stirling.

Advertisement

That’s where I caught up with the 57-year-old former hooker for an extended chat about a rugby career which frequently left him struggling to believe what was happening to him.

Born and brought up in North Cornelly, a village four miles from Porthcawl, he was something of a later developer, being 23 before he became a regular with Cardiff, for whom he was to make 240 appearances.

Boxing was a big focus during his teenage years, with his father Colin having competed at a high level in the sport.

“He was the youngest ever ABA champion. He was just 17 when he won it,” he says.

Advertisement

“Whoever won the ABAs at the time would go to the Rome OIympics in 1960, but my dad broke his thumb in the semi-final. He boxed the final and won, but they wouldn’t let him go to the Olympics even though he was fit. It was the Games where Muhammad Ali won his gold.”

Humphreys donned the gloves himself as a youngster.

“My dad used to take me down the boxing gym in Porthcawl a lot when I was 13, 14,” he recalls.

“It would just be me and him. He made me skip for three minutes and then I would be on the bag for another three. It was brutal.

Advertisement

“I kept on doing that for a good while, but I didn’t do it competitively. It was something I definitely wanted to do, but my mum stepped in because a lot of the shows were in the evenings and quite late, so she wouldn’t let me do it.”

When he reflects on his rugby journey, Humphreys picks out various people who played key roles.

Advertisement

The first of those were Cardiff and Wales hooker Alan Phillips and his brother Howard.

“Howard was my coach at Cornelly RFC Youth,” he says.

“I had never played for any representative team, not for the County or Wales Schoolboys or Wales Youth.

“If it wasn’t for him, I don’t think I would have gone anywhere.

Advertisement

“He went to speak to Alan and said ‘You want to come and see this boy’.

“Alan, who was coming towards the end of his playing career at the time, would then take me training. We would go over the sand dunes.

“Because of all the stuff I was doing with my dad, I was just ridiculously fit, but I wasn’t big enough. So Alan became like my personal trainer.

“I have got a huge amount to thank those two brothers for.”

Advertisement

It was through Alan Phillips’ influence that Humphreys made his Cardiff debut against Harlequins in September 1989, aged 20.

At the time, he was doing a Human Movement Studies degree at South Glamorgan Institute of Higher Education, where he played for the college alongside future Wales scrum-half Paul John, who he shared a house with.

He went on to sign for Cardiff, but opportunities were very limited during his early years at the Arms Park. So how did that situation change?

“There was one massive reason – Alec Evans,” he replies.

Advertisement

“I was going to join Pontypridd because Paul (John) was there, but then Cardiff appointed Alec.

“I was third or fourth choice hooker at the time, but the very first meeting I had with him, he said ‘If I promise you the first five games of next season, will you stay?’

“And he had never seen me play! It was a pretty ballsy call by him. So I stayed.”

Wales VIP hospitality tickets from £330

Advertisement
This article contains affiliate links, we will receive a commission on any sales we generate from it. Learn more
Content Image

Prices vary

Seat Unique

Book tickets here

Seat Unique offers VIP hospitality tickets for Wales’ autumn internationals including New Zealand and Australia

Humphreys went on to become a regular starter under the Aussie coach. So what was it Evans saw in him?

“I think it was my attitude,” he says.

Advertisement

“Everything to me was a bonus. I never thought I was good enough to be there, but I just thought I will try my hardest, I will try my guts out.

“In those days in rugby, if you were fit and you were aggressive and you would just do anything, you could go a long way. You didn’t necessarily have to have a lot of skill.

“Alec was a very combative player himself, so he just loved people who had a bit of guts and would do anything.

“In those first games I started, there were plenty of people in his ear telling him what he was doing was wrong and that I shouldn’t be playing.

Advertisement

“But he kept on telling me I was the best hooker in Wales, because that’s the way he worked.”

Evans also saw Humphreys as the man to implement a radical change.

“When he came over, he wanted the hooker to throw in with two hands. There was nobody in the northern hemisphere doing it, but he had seen this guy in Japan do it.

“If he wanted me to, I would have kicked the ball in! So I was the one who took it up.

Advertisement

“I was going over the fields in Cornelly and throwing it and it was horrendous trying to do it, especially when everybody was saying ‘What the f*** are you doing?’

“I remember Alan Phillips came up to me and said ‘Look mate, you are never going to play for Wales as long as you are throwing the ball in two hands’.

“I said ‘Mate, I don’t care about that. I am playing every week!’

“I was definitely the first to do it in Europe. Now everybody does it.”

Advertisement

With the new approach adopted, an early highlight under Evans was the 1994 Swalec Cup final victory over Llanelli at a packed National Ground.

“It was the first time I had played at the stadium.

“I remember running out and it was just the most unbelievable feeling. I was thinking ‘What am I doing here?’

Advertisement

“It was just incredible because I never thought I had any chance of doing anything like that.

“It was a beautiful day and we went on to win. I remember I put Mikey Rayer in for a try down the short side. I drew a guy and passed the ball to him. I had never done that before in my life. I usually just put my head down!

“It was just the perfect day. It’s very close to my favourite rugby memory ever.”

The following year, Cardiff won the league, so Evans was an obvious choice to take over as Wales coach for the 1995 World Cup in South Africa following the departure of Alan Davies.

Advertisement

One of his first actions in the job was to call up his hooker.

“When I was named in the squad, it was the same old thing ‘What am I doing here?’” recalls Humphreys.

“It was unbelievably surreal. I only really started playing when Alec took over in 1993. So, we are talking two years.”

Things got even more surreal when Humphreys was selected to make his Test debut in the group match against mighty New Zealand in Johannesburg.

Advertisement

“I remember looking down the tunnel in Ellis Park and thinking ‘F****** hell, look at the size of that second row’. But it was Jonah Lomu!

“As I was running out, Sean Fitzpatrick said to me ‘You are not ready for this, little boy’. I felt like saying to him ‘I know, mate!’

“It was that same feeling again, ‘What the f*** are you doing here?’

“During the second half, Robert Jones passed the ball to me and Jamie Joseph forearm smashed me straight in the head. From that point on, I don’t remember anything.

Advertisement

“I was in the changing room afterwards asking boys next to me ‘How did I play? Was I any good?’

“I had no idea – and I played then three days later against Ireland and scored a try!”

With just two caps under his belt, Humphreys received the biggest bombshell of them all ahead of Wales returning to South Africa three months later for a game against the newly crowned world champion Springboks.

“I can still vividly remember getting the phone call from Alec.

Advertisement

“He goes ‘Do you want to be captain out in South Africa?’

“I think I said ‘F*** yeah!’

“So, in two years, I have gone from nothing to being captain of my country.”

Leading Wales out against the ‘Boks that day in Johannesburg remains a very special memory.

“It was a feeling of pride more than anything. My parents flew over for the game.

“Anybody who grew up with me in rugby would have gone ‘There is no chance he is going to do that, he will never captain Wales’, but here I was.

“It was all just so new. There I was tossing the coin with Francois Pienaar, who was a world icon at that point.

Advertisement

“Then I’m running out in front of the team at Ellis Park and it was a celebration of South Africa winning the World Cup, so it was packed.

“We were seen as lambs to the slaughter, but we didn’t do as badly as everyone thought we would.

“We were actually leading for a bit and we were pretty competitive for large periods. We showed a lot of guts.”

Humphreys continued as captain for victories at home to Fiji and Italy under new coach Kevin Bowring and then the 1996 Five Nations. Initially, there was something of a honeymoon period.

Advertisement

“I was so naive about it,” he admits.

“What happens with anything, the first period of time, everybody is positive. Everybody is saying good things about you, you are doing stuff for the papers.

“Nobody had ever asked me for an interview before, so it was all right, here we go.

“But what it doesn’t prepare you for is when it all turns.”

Advertisement

There was the high point of a victory over title-chasing France in March 1996, but that summer brought heavy defeats on tour in Australia and then things really got nasty during the 1997 Five Nations.

“We beat Scotland in the first game, but then went downhill badly after that.

“You had the disharmony in the Welsh camp with all the players from different clubs fighting against each other. There was a massive divide between Cardiff, Swansea and Neath. There was no team spirit as such. There was a huge split in the camp.

“Then, outside that, you had the clubs and the Union fighting against each other.

Advertisement

“It was just a perfect storm, especially for me.

“What should have been the best time in my life was literally the worst.

“I wasn’t prepared for the criticism. It felt like it came from everywhere. It did affect me and it affected my family. It was the toughest time in my rugby life.

“I remember the bus journey to one match and I was counting in my mind ‘How many games have I got until I retire?’

Advertisement

“I probably didn’t think I deserved to be there, in the team, let alone captain, and then I’ve got everyone telling me I shouldn’t be there.

“The tail end of the 1997 Five Nations was the worst bit. I was getting hate mail sent to the team hotel. I had to stop reading the papers at that point. Every letter the Western Mail would print would be about me. That’s what it felt like.”

Around that time, he was being pilloried for the number of penalties he was giving away, picking up the unflattering nickname of ‘Offside Humphreys’.

“I don’t know who started that. I have no idea,” he says.

Advertisement

“I look back at all that and I think it was probably that I would do anything to stop us getting pumped.

“Wales weren’t very good at the time. I would be offside because I thought to myself if they get the ball they are going to score. I did give away a lot of penalties. I was over committed, I suppose.

“If you wanted to decipher it, it probably came from a place of ‘If we get pumped here, I am going to get more s**t.’

“I remember in games, if we were losing, I was thinking ‘What the f*** are the press going to do to me now?’

Advertisement

“What sort of way is that to live?”

So when his first reign as skipper came to an end after the 1997 Five Nations, it was something of a blessing.

“When Kevin Bowring rang me to say he was going to put Gwyn Jones as captain, my reaction was immense relief,” he reveals.

“I didn’t want to do it anymore.

Advertisement

“I remember Gwyn coming round my house and he thought it would be an awkward conversation, but I welcomed him with open arms. It was ‘In you come, son!’”

Over the next couple of years, starts for Wales were to be few and far between, with Garin Jenkins, Barry Williams and Robin McBryde all vying for the hooking berth.

However, Humphreys did share in the memorable winning run in 1999, coming on as a replacement for Jenkins in the series-clinching win out in Argentina and the historic victory over South Africa in the first game at the new Millennium Stadium, while also figuring at the home World Cup that autumn.

“After that World Cup, I started playing the best rugby I had probably played for a long time,” he recalls.

Advertisement

“I remember Graham Henry ringing me up to say I would be starting the 2000 Six Nations opener against France. But, that same day, I dislocated my shoulder against Harlequins, so I never got back.”

With that, Humphreys’ international career appeared to be over, but then, in 2003, came another seismic shock.

Now with Bath and aged 33, he was called up to the Wales squad as injury cover by Steve Hansen ahead of the Six Nations game against England – but that was just the half of it.

“I was only expecting to be there for a day,” he recalls.

Advertisement

“I saw Steve and he said just to go into a couple of meetings and I would be done.

“So, I went into this team meeting and, with them playing England, one of the coaches said ‘What do we know about Jason Robinson?’.

“Because I was playing in that league and nobody was answering, I said he does this, this and this.

“Anyway, I came out of that meeting and said I will have something to eat and I will go.

Advertisement

“But then Steve comes on to me and says ‘Can I have a chat with you, mate?’

“So he takes me into a room and he goes ‘I want you to play on the weekend and I want you to be captain’.

“I looked at him and my exact words were ‘F*** off’.

“The press conference that afternoon when they announced me as captain was chaos.

Advertisement

“I went on my phone afterwards and it had gone nuts.

“It was all the boys from Bath going ‘Is this a joke?’”

But it was no joke, with Humphreys returning to the side as skipper.

Advertisement

“We could have beaten England and we should have beaten Ireland,” he recalls.

“My eldest son came to watch the games, so at least he saw me play in that stadium.

“I was honoured to captain Wales. I did it 19 times in all. But I think the only time I actually really enjoyed it was when I came back in 2003 because I was determined I was going to enjoy it for what it was.

“Then it came full circle where everybody was saying nice things about me.

Advertisement

“I had young children and I was conscious of ‘Am I going back into all this shit again?’

“But to have people say nice things about you at the end was a nice way to go. They said nice things at the start and nice things at the end!”

In all, Humphreys won 35 Wales caps and played more than 300 games for club and country before hanging up his boots in 2005, aged 36.

Then came the move into coaching, with the next two decades taking in spells with the Ospreys, Scotland, Glasgow and Wales.

Advertisement

“I could have stayed playing another year at Bath, but I just felt I was done. I didn’t like the nerves before games any more. That sort of stuff.

“So I never missed playing and coaching was just something completely different for me.

“You still get the buzz, but I never felt like I wanted to go back out there and throw myself around.

“I really enjoyed the early part of my coaching career because it was all so new to me and we were pretty successful at the Ospreys. The biggest shame was we never won Europe because we had a team that should have done so.

Advertisement

“My fondest memories as a coach are of the people I worked with, some incredible people, people I really enjoyed.”

Humphreys came in as Wales forward coach after the 2019 World Cup to work with new boss Wayne Pivac and shared in both the 2021 Six Nations title triumph and the historic victory over South Africa in Bloemfontein the following year.

After Pivac’s departure, he was retained by the returning Warren Gatland and looks back on the 2023 World Cup campaign with particular fondness.

But, following Gatland’s exit, Humphreys’ time with Wales came to an end after the 2025 Six Nations.

“I’m not bitter about leaving because if you lose 17 games in a row you’re lucky to stay in a job. So I have no issue that they wanted to go a different way.

“I loved my time with Wales and I was proud to win the Six Nations and beat the Springboks for the first time out in South Africa, but everything must come to an end at some point.

“I will always look back at my time in the job with an equal measure of pride and disappointment.”

Advertisement

Since the end of his six-year stint with Wales, father-of-three Humphreys has stepped away from the game.

“I have taken a big break because I haven’t had one for 35 years,” he says.

“I have taken a complete break which I have very much enjoyed. I have loved it. I haven’t missed rugby at all.

“With Wales, towards the end, you knew it was going to be a massive struggle to compete. All that comes with the stresses of it all.

Advertisement

“Until you have actually taken yourself away from it, you don’t know how much effect that has on you.

“It’s again like having the Welsh captaincy taken off me. It’s like a relief and I feel a lot better for it.

“I’m more relaxed and your emotions are not up and down on a weekly basis.”

So it is that we find Humphreys at ease with life up in the Scottish countryside with the crowing of a cockerill and the braying of a horse in the background as we chat.

Advertisement

“We are about 15 minutes from Stirling. We moved up when I did the Scotland job and the kids all settled up here. It’s great.

“I have got a smallholding, a few acres at the back of the house, and my wife has got horses.

“I have been able to spend more time with my younger son, who is 14. It’s been good.”

So, finally, as he looks back on it all, what are his thoughts?

Advertisement

“I was lucky to have rugby as my life for so long,” he says.

“It has given me everything. I was very fortunate to play when I did, where I could do something I would have done for free as my living.

“I have never had to work a day in my life and that’s true. It’s never felt like work. There are not many people who can do that.”

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading
Click to comment

You must be logged in to post a comment Login

Leave a Reply

NewsBeat

Liverpool vs Chelsea: Predicted lineups today and confirmed team news | Football

Published

on

Liverpool vs Chelsea: Predicted lineups today and confirmed team news | Football
Salah is unlikely to be fit in time to face his former side (Picture: Getty)

Chelsea are expected to be without a number of players for their Premier League with Liverpool this afternoon.

While there is an FA Cup final to look forward to next weekend, the Blues’ league campaign is spiralling towards a dreadful conclusion, losing six games on the bounce and scoring just once in that run.

Robert Sanchez was involved in that dreadful head-to-head collision with Morgan Gibbs-White during Monday’s defeat against Nottingham Forest with both men requiring stitches.

The former Brighton goalkeeper will not be involved today, nor will Jesse Derry who was also involved in another sickening clash of heads in a separate incident.

Advertisement

To add to Chelsea’s woes, both Alejandro Garnacho and Pedro Neto are expected to miss out with knocks. With Estevao’s season over due to a serious hamstring injury and Jamie Gittens sidelined, it leaves Calum McFarlane very light on the wings.

In better news for the Blues, Reece James and Levi Colwill trained this week. Colwill played the second-half against Forest having also played a full 90 for the Under-21s in April.

Liverpool meanwhile hope to have Alexander Isak available to start after he missed the defeat at Manchester United last time out.

Hull City v Chelsea - Emirates FA Cup Fourth Round
Garnacho and Neto are both carrying knocks (Picture: Getty)

The Sweden international returned to training on Thursday with Arne Slot hopeful he can have a role to play. Giorgi Mamardashvili also returned to training this week and will be pushing to reclaim his place in goal with Alisson Becker still out.

Mohamed Salah meanwhile is still to return to training after his hamstring issue and is set to miss out again.

Advertisement

Florian Wirtz and Ibrahima Konate missed training earlier this week but both were back among the group on Friday.

Chelsea XI to face Liverpool – Metro prediction

With no wingers fit, Calum McFarlane may turn to Enzo Fernandez to occupy a more advanced role once again.

Joao Pedro is also an option to drop deep if Liam Delap gets the nod up top.

While Colwill has only recently returned to action after his ACL injury, he will be desperate to be fully up to speed for next weekend’s FA Cup final against City. A starting role today at Anfield would certainly aid that.

Advertisement

Liverpool XI to face Chelsea – Metro prediction

Isak’s availability offers a focal point up top for Liverpool with Hugo Ekitike a long-term absentee.

Liverpool vs Chelsea live stream, TV channel and kick-off time

Liverpool vs Chelsea kicks off at 12:30pm today (Saturday 9 May) at 12:30pm.

You can watch the match live on TNT Sports 1 with streaming also available through the HBO Max app.

Advertisement

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

NewsBeat

Newscast – Electioncast: The Winners And The Losers

Published

on

Newscast - Electioncast: The Winners And The Losers

Available for over a year

Today, Labour suffered a historic loss in the Welsh Senedd elections coming in third behind Plaid Cymru and Reform UK.

In Scotland, the SNP held onto it’s majority with second place too close to call between Labour and Reform as Newscast began recording.

And in England, a bruising run of results continued for Labour, who lost more than a thousand council seats. Reform won more than 1400 councillors and the Greens made gains.

Advertisement

Adam, Chris and James break down the results.

You can now listen to Newscast on a smart speaker. If you want to listen, just say “Ask BBC Sounds to play Newscast”. It works on most smart speakers.

You can join our Newscast online community here: https://bbc.in/newscastdiscord

Get in touch with Newscast by emailing newscast@bbc.co.uk or send us a WhatsApp on +44 0330 123 9480.

Advertisement

New episodes released every day. If you’re in the UK, for more News and Current Affairs podcasts from the BBC, listen on BBC Sounds: https://bbc.in/4guXgXd

Newscast brings you daily analysis of the latest political news stories from the BBC. The presenter was Adam Fleming. It was made by Anna Harris with Shiler Mahmoudi. The social producer was Joe Wilkinson. The technical producer was Stephen Bailey. The assistant editor was Jack Maclaren. The senior news editor is Sam Bonham.

Programme Website

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

NewsBeat

‘I went to Benidorm on lad’s holiday and 1 thing made me never return to UK’

Published

on

Belfast Live

Harry Poulton went on a “lads’ holiday” to Benidorm, Spain and decided to up sticks and move to the popular destination for good, with one thing in particular making his decision “easy”

A young man took the leap and moved to Benidorm after becoming enamoured with the tourist hotspot while on a lads’ holiday, and he’s sworn he’ll never come back to the UK. While the United Kingdom has its charms, it’s far from perfect. Between the famously fickle weather and the relentless cost of living crisis, it’s little wonder some people decide to up sticks and seek out sunnier shores.

That’s precisely what happened to Harry Poulton, 24, who fell head over heels for Benidorm during a lads’ getaway and immediately saw it as the place he needed to call home.

Advertisement

For Harry, one significant factor made the choice easy – enjoying a fun lifestyle on a far tighter budget compared to “gloomy” Britain.

The Brighton-born travel vlogger had grown weary of life in dreary England and, aged just 18, made the radical choice to completely upend his life by leaving his homeland behind for good.

Speaking in a TikTok video about his reasoning, he revealed that escaping Britain’s “horrible” weather was among his primary motivations for the move.

Financial pressures also played a crucial role in his thinking. Living in the Spanish coastal resort works out considerably more affordable for Harry.

Advertisement

He went on to say: “Everything in the UK is just going up, up, up and up, and no one knows when it’s going to stop. At least here in Spain, your money travels so much further – you’ll get way more for your money here in Spain than you would in the UK, and that’s my opinion.”

Speaking to Luxury Travel Daily, Harry explained: “I don’t know why anybody would want to live in Britain. It’s cold, dreary and gloomy all the time.

“There’s no room to have fun outside of the constant boring routine and work. After I visited Benidorm, I knew that it was the place I wanted to settle down.

Advertisement

“It offers great weather, beautiful beaches and such a laid-back vibe. It’s the complete opposite of the UK.”

Harry is a passionate advocate for Benidorm, believing many Brits unfairly make a “mockery” of the popular holiday hotspot. The Spanish resort is renowned for its bustling hospitality and entertainment sector, pristine beaches, and litany of high-rise buildings.

The municipality reportedly attracts equal numbers of international visitors as it does Spanish holidaymakers. He said: “Stop making a mockery of such a wonderful place. If you live here, you’ll know better than any British tourists what this country is really like.”

Content cannot be displayed without consent

Harry continued: “Everyone says not to visit Benidorm, as you’ll get scammed or mugged. And that bars will rip tourists off with extortionate prices for drinks – but that’s all absolute rubbish.

Advertisement

“It’s crazy what Brits believe. It’s not just for party-goers or stag dos. Benidorm has so much on offer and it’s not a place you’ll regret going. There are so many haters out there that like to spread misinformation or myths, stopping people from coming here.”

He went on: “It’s mad. Look at the state of the UK – all of these things happen there more than they do in Benidorm.”

Harry believes his quality of life in Spain far exceeds anything he experienced back in the UK.

For anyone contemplating a similar leap across borders, he advised: “Learn some basic Spanish before coming. Ensure to plan financially, too. Be prepared for some paperwork, especially since Brexit, but it’s so worth it once you’re here.”

Advertisement

Looking back on taking such a momentous step while just a teenager, he added: “It’s completely transformed my life – and being so young, I’m glad I leaped now rather than later. Who wants to wake up to grey skies every day, when you can have blue ones greeting you each morning? Benidorm is paradise – anyone who says otherwise is lying.”

Source link

Continue Reading

NewsBeat

Mum of murdered teen Paige Doherty launches blistering attack on wife of killer

Published

on

Daily Record

Pamela Doherty spoke up about John Leathem’s wife after someone referred to her online as “his poor wife”.

The of murdered teenager Paige Doherty has slammed the wife of the killer for sticking by her husband.

Advertisement

Pamela Doherty, 43, was provoked into posting about John Leathem’s wife, Katya Karbowiak, after someone put a comment on a post referring to “his poor wife”.

Leathem, 42, was sentenced to life after he admitted killing the 15-year-old – who who was 4ft 8in – at his deli in Clydebank, in 2016. Paige’s body was found two days later dumped in a wood.

She had more than 140 injuries and had been stabbed 61 times. Pamela wrote on Facebook: “I’ve never said much about what I think about the wife of the man who killed Paige. So here it is.

“When Paige died, I had loads of people say I should tell people ‘don’t blame the wife’.”

Advertisement

Pamela explained that she believes Karbowiak was wrong to stand by her husband. She added: “I gave her the benefit of the doubt. I thought she was maybe ­terrified. Maybe he had threatened her.

“Instead, she defended her husband, even shouting outside Low Moss Prison he was innocent. When people feel sorry for this woman, please remember.”

Pamela told the Record in March about her wish to visit Leathem in jail and challenge him to explain why he murdered.

Advertisement

The interview marked the 10th anniversary of Paige’s murder and since then, Pamela has held a charity ball in her memory to raise funds for Paige’s Promise, set up to help families who lose children in tragic circumstances.

Pamela belives there was a sexual motive for the attack and that Paige was killed because she fought back. She also said she had written previously to Leathem, asking him to accept a visit from her in jail, but he failed to reply.

Pamela intends to try again. She said: “I want him to face me, look me in the eye and tell me why he took my daughter’s life when she had so much ahead of her.”

Advertisement

Pamela also revealed that the justice system had added to the torture she felt at losing her daughter.

She had to delay the funeral for weeks to allow the defence to have its own post-mortem, and when Leathem appealed against his 27-year minimum sentence and saw it reduced to 23, she had no input into the proceedings.

Get more Daily Record exclusives by signing up for free to Google’s preferred sources. Click HERE.

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

NewsBeat

‘It’s something we should all be concerned about’ – Belfast studio moves to temporary hub amid rising costs

Published

on

Belfast Live

A Belfast-based arts collective is calling for more funding for the arts in Northern Ireland and more affordable studio space to help the country’s thriving creative sector.

Vault Artist Studios was formed in 2017 as a community driven, non-profit charity, with the initial intention to transform derelict buildings by bringing them back to life, all while providing much-needed affordable artist studio space.

The multi-disciplinary collective has over 100 members consisting of musicians, circus performers, visual artists, photographers and more. Up until this month, the group had spent three years between studio space on Victoria Street in Belfast city centre and at the Shankill Mission building.

READ MORE: Where are we with the big “game-changing” development projects in Belfast?READ MORE: Belfast arts collective looking to the future after setting up first city centre location

Advertisement

Prior to this, the group had been based on Tower Street in East Belfast for five years, with the building recently demolished to make way for affordable housing. Now, the group has moved into a new home in Bankmore House on Bedford Street, which gives studio space to 30 artists, as well as a gallery and project space.

Further studio space will come from a move back to the East of the city, with a hub opening soon in the former Masonic Lodge on the lower Newtownards Road.

Speaking to Belfast Live, Rob Hilken, a visual artist on the board of trustees for Vault Artist Studios, said they’re delighted with their new space on Bedford Street.

“This is the best building we’ve ever had,” he said. “The gallery space is incredible and our studios are great here, we’re in a busy part of town with lots of businesses, a lot of developments in the are, so it’s a real opportunity for us to engage with the local community.

Advertisement

“This space is going to be essential for us to manage keeping our studio rents affordable because artists are some of the lowest paid workers in the economy. We use these rentable spaces to continue to be affordable to those who would otherwise struggle.

“We’ve designed the space to be multifunctional and we’re working really closely with Linen Quarter BID and they’re going to be taking on the space to run wellbeing workshops for local people and businesses at lunchtime.

Advertisement

“We have one exhibition a month that we programme for Late Night Art, but in between that, there are groups of artists who come and rent our space and put on their own exhibitions here.”

Reflecting on the nomad status of Vault Artist Studio, with moving from derelict building to derelict building being in the collective’s DNA, Rob said: “With these buildings, there’s always a long-term plan for them which we’re not a part of because we can’t pay commercial rents, so we occupy on a short-term basis.

“When we move in we work hard to get a space immediately working for us. We haven’t got unlimited energy to do this, but we’ve got good energy to make things happen in a short space of time.”

The collective’s first exhibition in their new space is titled ‘Mayday Mayday’, a fitting theme in their new temporary home, with the term being both a distress signal and a rallying call for workers to come together.

Advertisement

It comes as funding for the arts in Northern Ireland is less than a quarter of the sum invested in the Republic of Ireland, and half of that in Wales. Of the estimated 14,500 artists in NI, only 29% can work full-time in the arts, with the majority supplementing their income by taking on multiple jobs.

Visual artist Cathy Scullion curated the exhibition, and took a week off on holiday from her day job to put it together. She said: “The exhibition is all about celebrating workers and the working classes. For me personally, there’s a real worry that as the cost of being an artist rises, we’re basically eliminating the ability for working class people to be able to do this type of work and exist in this world.

“It’s something we should all be really concerned about as working class people have a lot of really important and interesting things to say. I come from a working class background myself and I went back to university later in life because when you were younger it was very much drummed into you that that isn’t for you.

Advertisement

“There are still certain parts of the art world you can feel like you don’t belong, so that’s why this exhibition was personally really important to me to be the first thing to launch this new space.”

As for the importance of collectives such as Vault at a time when the costs of being an artist are on the rise, Rob sadi: “We provide studios to people that don’t necessarily make a full-time living from their art, which is very hard to do. Most people have other work, but to justify having a studio that is expensive would just push a lot of people out of the sector.

“So by having this affordable studio space we can include people of all demographics. The whole spectrum of the arts is here, so that’s really important to the city and brings an energy to this place that is so unique.”

Such groups also add to the fabric of the city, with exhibitions being a central part of the monthly Late Night Art event on the first Thursday of each month at galleries around the city.

Rob said it provides a vital space to get people interested in the arts and to meet new people, with community engagement a vital part of Vault’s mission.

He said: “We have a lot of students who come to the exhibitions, young artists moving to the city who want to meet other artists and embed themselves in the scene. The gallery does a lot for lots of different people.

“We’re hoping local people, the businesses and communities in the local area start to see us as a place where they can come and socialise. Some people don’t necessarily want to go to a pub, or maybe they don’t know anybody in the area, but it’s quite easy to just talk to somebody about a piece of art on the wall.

Advertisement

“On the other side of us there are flats, there are people living in this immediate area. We always have a goal to have an impact locally, we see ourselves as a community of artists and artists in the community as very much a two-sided thing about why we exist.”

For all the latest news, visit the Belfast Live homepage here and sign up to our daily newsletter here.

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

NewsBeat

Armed police swoop in Rosemary Court – man arrested

Published

on

Armed police swoop in Rosemary Court - man arrested

Firearms officers and a dog unit were called to the property in Rosemary Court, near Walmgate, shortly after 1pm on Friday (May 8).

It followed a report of affray that happened earlier on Friday, North Yorkshire Police said.

The force said the incident was “safely resolved” but officers would remain at the property on Friday to conduct a search.

Police cars parked in Rosemary Court, York, on Friday (May 8) (Image: Alice Kavanagh)

One woman visiting a friend in the area said she was surprised by the police presence.

Advertisement

“I had absolutely no idea, we didn’t see or hear anything that was happening,” she said.

A nearby resident said: “I saw three or four police cars before, but it wasn’t too close to me.

“I just keep myself to myself … It’s generally really nice living around here, but we do have police showing up a few times a month.”

A 43-year-old man was arrested in connection with the reported affray on Friday, police said.

Advertisement

Source link

Continue Reading

NewsBeat

M61 advice for motorists as motorway shut in Bolton

Published

on

M61 advice for motorists as motorway shut in Bolton

The M61 in Greater Manchester is closed in both directions between J2 and J4 (M60/ A666) near Bolton due to a police led incident.

National Highways is advising motorists do the following:

Road users travelling northbound are advised to follow the Solid square diversion symbol on road signs.

Advertisement

Leave the M61 northbound at junction 2.

  • Follow the A666 Kearsley Spur northbound for 2.2 km.
  • Leave the A666 Kearsley Spur northbound at A666/A6053 roundabout.
  • At A666/A6053 roundabout, take the first exit on to the A6053  northbound and follow for 0.3 km.
  • At A6053 /A5082 junction, turn left on to A5082 westbound and follow for 2.9 km.
  • At A5082/A6 junction , turn right onto A6 westbound and follow for 2.2 km.
  • At A6/Watergate Lane roundabout, take the second exit leading to M61 and follow for 0.5 km.
  • At Watergate Lane/M61 junction 4 roundabout, take the first exit and re-join the M61 northbound.

Road users travelling southbound are advised to follow the solid circle diversion symbol on road signs.

  • Leave the M61 southbound at junction 4.
  • At Watergate Lane/M61 junction 4 roundabout, take the third exit to join the A6.
  • Follow the A6 southbound for 0.5 km.
  • At A6/Watergate Lane roundabout, take the first exit onto A6 eastbound and follow for 2.2 km.
  • At A5082/A6 junction, turn left onto A5082 northbound and follow for 2.9 km.
  • At A5082/A6053 junction, turn right onto A6053 eastbound and follow for 0.3 km.
  • At A666/A6053 roundabout, take the third exit to join the A666 Kearsley Spur southbound and follow for 2.2 km.
  • Leave the A666 Kearsley Spur southbound at junction 2.
  • Join the M61 southbound at junction 2.

If this closure impacts on your planned route, please allow extra journey time. Plan ahead, you may wish to re-route or even delay your journey.”

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

NewsBeat

Salford police bust suspected’Breaking Bad’ style drugs lab

Published

on

Salford police bust suspected'Breaking Bad' style drugs lab

Officers carried out a dawn raid where they discovered a large quantity of suspected Class A drugs – including a 20 litre barrel of a substance believed to be in the manufacture of drugs.

Two men have been arrested

Police raided the property on Elmira Way, Salford.

Two men– both aged 29 – were arrested on suspicion of possession with intent to supply class A and B drugs, in addition on suspicion of being concerned in the supply of Class A and B drugs.

Advertisement

They remain in custody for questioning.

During searches of the property, officers uncovered a quantity of suspected class A drugs – including crystal meth, ketamine, and other related paraphernalia.

A 20 litre barrel of a substance believed to be used as part of the manufacturing process was also recovered, and will be tested before being appropriately disposed of.

The work comes as part of an ongoing operation, with the warrant conducted by the Violence, Reduction and Exploitation team.

Advertisement

Discovery after raid (Image: GMP)

Sergeant Adam Culpan said: “This morning’s work resulted in significant recoveries and has seen harmful substances taken out of circulation.

“Our proactive teams work diligently every single day to tackle drug-related criminality, in addition to the wider repercussions that it can cause – such as exploitation and addiction.

“If you have any information about criminality in your area, please don’t hesitate to get in touch with police, either directly or anonymously via Crimestoppers.”

Advertisement

Source link

Continue Reading

NewsBeat

How to pronounce Shittlehope- The County Durham place name explained

Published

on

How to pronounce Shittlehope- The County Durham place name explained

Is the name as naughty as it seems, or is there a different way to pronounce it?

Where is Shittlehope?

Shittlehope sits between Stanhope and Frosterley in the upper Wear Valley, tucked into the North Pennines landscape of farmland, steep banks and old mining ground.

The name lives on in Shittlehope Burn, which cuts down to meet the River Wear, and in Shittlehope Shield, a small settlement close to the main road up the dale.

Advertisement

It is the sort of place you are more likely to walk or drive past than search for, until the sign flashes past and the spelling sticks in your mind.

Why the name confuses people

Written down, the first part of Shittlehope looks like a word many people avoid saying in polite company, which is why some visitors try to soften it to “Sheetlehope” or glide over the middle completely.

Online, there are threads where people argue about the “right” way to say it and joke about how broadcasters will cope.

Advertisement

For people in Weardale, however, the joke wears thin quickly: it is simply the name of a burn, a shield and a small corner of the valley they call home.

How do you pronounce Shittlehope?

Locally, Shittlehope – as in Shittlehope Burn and Shittlehope Shield in Weardale – is generally pronounced “SHIT-uhl-hohp”, with a clear short “i” and both parts sounded as written.

In faster local speech, it is often clipped even further to something closer to “SHIT-lup”, the second half tumbling away in a single syllable.

Both versions sit comfortably within the Weardale accent, where vowels are short and place names are often shortened in everyday use.

Advertisement


A call for local voices

Even in an age of mapping apps and street-level images, small places like Shittlehope rarely come with audio guides. That is why local knowledge still matters.

If you live in or around Stanhope, Frosterley or along Shittlehope Burn, how do you say it?

Do you lean towards “SHIT-uhl-hohp”, the clipped “SHIT-lup”, or something else entirely?

Let us know in the comments.

Advertisement

Source link

Continue Reading

NewsBeat

Police urge people to install ‘best type’ of security light outside home

Published

on

Wales Online

One type of outside light may make burglars “think twice before attempting to break into the property”

Worried homeowners who feel troubled by security and safety have been urged to install one type of light. And it may help prevent a break-in.

Advertisement

Touching on Home Security, one question on a police website asks: “Are external lights a good idea for security?” In its answer, the Ask the Police website, hosted by the Police National Legal Database, issued guidance and said “yes.”

It explained: “Yes they are, outside lights deter potential burglars from dark hidden areas. The best type of external light is one that stays on all the time. Any intruder that has made up their mind to break into a property will more than likely not be put off by lights that are triggered by movement.

“If the light is on all the time then it may make them think twice before attempting to break into the property.” In another question that asks, “how can I protect my home from burglary?”, the site recommends making sure you have taken all the necessary steps to ensure your home is not a target.

Advertisement

It says: “A secure home will reduce the chance of you getting burgled. Many domestic burglaries are committed by opportunists; criminals will look for homes that have little or no obvious security, have doors or windows left open or seem unoccupied.”

It recommends these “top tips” listed below “to help keep your home safe from thieves”.

  • Install an alarm system will help to deter burglars.
  • Ensure you have a robust, secure front door with British Standard-approved locks and hinges.
  • Install outside lighting, such as motion sensor lights so that intruders cannot approach without being seen.
  • Lock your doors and windows every time you leave the house, even when you are just out in the garden.
  • Consider installing CCTV, as this is good deterrent for thieves and if you are targeted, CCTV can provide valuable evidence.
  • When you go out, leave radios or lights in your house on a timer to make the property appear occupied.
  • Keep hedges and walls at the front of your house low (under one metre) so burglars have nowhere to hide.
  • Keep side and rear boundaries high and add trellis or prickly defensive planting to make it harder for burglars to climb over.
  • If you have a sliding patio door, check that it has an anti-lift device fitted so it can’t be lifted out of the frame.
  • Move bins or garden furniture that could be used to reach windows.
  • Ensure communal doors in flats/apartments are closed and secure, and report any faults to your landlord or maintenance company.
  • Never buzz anyone into the building that you do not know, or let them follow behind you.
  • Lock and secure any sheds and outbuildings.
  • Property mark and register valuable items.
  • Think about having your door reinforced with a security door bar.
  • Mark your property with a UV marker pen or Security DNA marking Kit – these can be bought online or in some stores.

Source link

Continue Reading

Trending

Copyright © 2025