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Sir Chris Hoy reveals cancer ‘feels like drowning’ as his wife is left ‘in daze of shock’ by double blow of MS diagnosis – The Sun

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Sir Chris Hoy reveals cancer ‘feels like drowning’ as his wife is left ‘in daze of shock’ by double blow of MS diagnosis – The Sun

SIR Chris Hoy has revealed his cancer “feels like drowning” as his wife was left “in a daze of shock” by the double blow of her MS diagnosis.

Britain’s most successful Olympian, 48, revealed his terminal prognosis at the weekend after announcing in February that he had been diagnosed with cancer.

Six-time Olympic gold medallist Sir Chris Hoy with his wife Sarra

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Six-time Olympic gold medallist Sir Chris Hoy with his wife SarraCredit: GETTY
Hoy recently gave an update on his health in a video on Instagram

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Hoy recently gave an update on his health in a video on Instagram
Hoy was told by doctors that he has two to four years to live

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Hoy was told by doctors that he has two to four years to live

His wife Sarra, 40, was also diagnosed with a “very reactive and aggressive” type of MS.

In excerpts published by The Sunday Times of Hoy’s autobiography All That Matters he spoke about the moment he learned he had cancer.

Hoy said: “The doctor turns the screen to me to reveal the scan in all its grainy detail and the tumour that is currently in my shoulder.

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“Hearing the word ‘cancer’ has had an immediate and profound effect on me, and not just me.

“In one short moment, life has changed irrevocably.”

He described the “dark moments” in the early days of his treatment as a “drowning sensation”, but added that he’s since become better able to cope.

The six-time Olympic gold medallist also opened up about learning Sarra had MS.

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She’d been told her diagnosis over the phone a month before she broke the news to Hoy.

Hoy said: “I immediately broke down, distraught both by the news and the fact she’d received it without me there.”

He explained that Sarra went to her own appointment just seven days after his cancer diagnosis in a “daze of shock”.

Hoy had said in a previous interview with the Sunday Times: “You know, we were all born and we all die, and this is just part of the process.

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Olympic Legend Sir Chris Hoy Battles Terminal Cancer

“You remind yourself, aren’t I lucky that there is medicine I can take that will fend this off for as long as possible?”

His diagnosis came after his father and grandfather were both diagnosed with prostate cancer.

In September 2023, a doctor delivered the awful news to Hoy that he had Stage 4 cancer.

What was first diagnosed as a tumour in his shoulder, the primary cancer was located in his prostate.

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What are the symptoms of prostate cancer?

Symptoms of prostate cancer can include:

  • Needing to pee more frequently, often during the night
  • Needing to rush to the toilet
  • Difficulty in starting to pee (hesitancy)
  • Straining or taking a long time while peeing
  • Weak flow
  • Feeling that your bladder has not emptied fully
  • Blood in urine or blood in semen

Source: NHS

It had then unfortunately spread to his bones, pelvis, hip, spine, shoulder and rib.

Medics have given Hoy two to four years to live.

Sarra’s condition was spotted when she went for a scan after experiencing a tingling sensation in her face and tongue.

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The Scottish cycling hero shared a touching video on social media just days ago.

He thanked fans for their support following his devastating diagnosis.

The cyclist said in the video: “Hi everyone, I just wanted to share an update about my health, after telling you that I was receiving treatment for cancer.

“I’m so grateful to everyone for their incredible kindness and support.

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“You have heard by now that I’m ready to share that my cancer is stage 4: I will be living with it for the rest of my life.

“Now it’s not the news anyone imagines hearing, and it obviously came as a huge shock.

“We’ve taken time to process it as a family and I now have a deep resolve to turn this incredibly difficult diagnosis into something more positive that can help not just me, but anyone anywhere living with stage 4.”

Sarra, 40, was diagnosed with a 'very reactive and aggressive' type of MS

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Sarra, 40, was diagnosed with a ‘very reactive and aggressive’ type of MS
Hoy winning gold at the Men's Sprint Final at the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games

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Hoy winning gold at the Men’s Sprint Final at the 2008 Beijing Olympic GamesCredit: PA
Chris Hoy and wife Sarra attend the GQ Men Of The Year Awards 2021

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Chris Hoy and wife Sarra attend the GQ Men Of The Year Awards 2021Credit: Getty
Hoy in Copenhagen, Denmark, 2010

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Hoy in Copenhagen, Denmark, 2010Credit: PA
The couple at BBC Sports Personality of the Year Awards 2022

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The couple at BBC Sports Personality of the Year Awards 2022Credit: PA

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‘I felt it click’ admits Khamzat Chimaev after inflicting gruesome injury on Robert Whittaker in brutal win at UFC 308

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‘I felt it click’ admits Khamzat Chimaev after inflicting gruesome injury on Robert Whittaker in brutal win at UFC 308

KHAMZAT CHIMAEV revealed he felt Robert Whittaker’s jaw “click” as he appeared to break his jaw before submitting him at UFC 308.

Chimaev, 30, and Whittaker, 33, was a highly-anticipated fight and the co-main event of the night – which ended with Ilia Topuria taking on Max Holloway.

Khamzat Chimaev made Robert Whittaker submit in the first round at UFC 308

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Khamzat Chimaev made Robert Whittaker submit in the first round at UFC 308Credit: Getty
Chimaev revealed after the fight that he felt Whittaker's jaw click

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Chimaev revealed after the fight that he felt Whittaker’s jaw clickCredit: Getty
Chimaev is one of the most feared men in the UFC

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Chimaev is one of the most feared men in the UFCCredit: Getty

Yet it turned into a lightning quick victory for unbeaten Russian Chimaev as he clinched the win inside the opening round.

After taking Whittaker down, he struck him a number of times before getting him in a chokehold.

Australian Whittaker immediately tapped out and seemed to instantly clutch his jaw.

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UFC commentators reported seconds after the stoppage that Whittaker was thought to have sustained a dislocated or broken jaw.

And Chimaev added to those claims with his post-fight comments.

The now 14-0 star said: “I felt something click in his jaw, I thought it was broken.

“That’s when I knew it was in.”

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MMA fans were left astonished by Chimaev’s finish, with one saying: “HE IS THE REAL DEAL. INCREDIBLE.”

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While another added: “Literally crushed Whittaker’s jaw. About as impressive of a win as it gets…”

A third replied: “His grip strength must be of another dimension 😳.”

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And a fourth responded: “We’ve never seen someone like Khamzat.”

After his win, Chimaev called for a fight with middleweight champion Dricus du Plessis – who is expected to rematch Sean Strickland early next year.

Chimaev’s win over Whittaker is the latest in a line of victories over the likes of Gilbert Burns, Kevin Holland and Kamaru Usman.

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United Rugby Championship: Leinster 24-6 Lions – Leo Cullen’s side stay top of URC with win over South African visitors

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United Rugby Championship: Leinster 24-6 Lions - Leo Cullen's side stay top of URC with win over South African visitors

Leinster will go into the international break top of the United Rugby Championship after beating the Lions 24-6 at the Aviva Stadium for their sixth win from six games played this season.

Leo Cullen’s men did, however, drop their first point of the campaign having failed to collect a four-try bonus for the first time in 2024-25.

All six points for the South African visitors, who came into this round second in the table, came from the boot of Kade Wolhunter.

Less than two weeks from Ireland meeting New Zealand at the same ground, Leinster were able to call on a healthy number of their Test contingent for the top of the table meeting.

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It was one of those Irish internationals who scored the only try of the first-half, Josh van Der Flier wriggling his way across the whitewash after Caelan Doris had been stopped short just prior.

Before that try in the 32nd minute, the only scoring of the first half had come through penalties, one for Leinster’s Sam Prendergast and a pair from the Lions’ Wolhunter.

The second half proved to be a similarly tight affair as conditions worsened.

While James Lowe was just unable to ground Prendergast’s grubber kick beyond the try line, it took until almost the hour mark for the first points after the turn.

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With Doris having made the carry that preceded Van der Flier’s score in the first half, this time it was the openside flanker swivelling to pass to his number eight to set up the try for the new Irish captain.

As the Lions’ charge faded despite a battling performance, Leinster had already made the victory safe by the time, with the last play of the game, they were awarded a penalty try when their maul was illegally stopped when driving over the line.

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2024 World Series: Top 4 takeaways from Dodgers’ 4-2 win in Game 2

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2024 World Series: Top 4 takeaways from Dodgers' 4-2 win in Game 2


LOS ANGELES — The Dodgers stormed ahead to a 2-0 World Series lead after winning the first two games at home. The Yankees‘ offense was all but shut down by Yoshinobu Yamamoto in Game 2, which also featured an injury scare for Shohei Ohtani after he was caught stealing second base in the seventh inning. 

Here are our top four takeaways from the Dodgers’ 4-2 win Saturday.

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1. Aaron Judge’s disappearing act

It’s extremely difficult to believe the Yankees will force this World Series to go the distance, much less win, without the MVP version of Judge. For the second straight day, the Dodgers’ starting pitcher completely neutralized Judge’s bat. Game 1 starter Jack Flaherty and Game 2 starter Yoshinobu Yamamoto combined to strike out Judge five times in six at-bats and didn’t allow him to reach base. Yamamoto especially looked confident facing the player who recorded the highest OPS (1.159) in baseball in the regular season.

Judge is now 1 for 9 with six strikeouts in the Fall Classic. He’s 6-for-40 in this postseason with 19 strikeouts to accompany just two home runs and six RBIs. Within a span of a few weeks, he’s gone from being the best hitter in the universe to waving at offspeed pitches like he’s an automatic out. 

The Yankees have had a hard time publicly admitting that Judge is missing pitches in the postseason that he would normally get to. Whether it’s the long layoff before the playoffs began or the break between the ALCS and the World Series, it seems entirely plausible that the lack of everyday at-bats and games have messed up Judge’s timing. That could be why he finally broke out in Game 3 of the ALCS against the Guardians with a game-tying two-run home run off top closer Emmanuel Clase. If he just needs time to warm up, then he could have a huge week ahead of him when the Series goes to the Bronx on Monday. With a championship on the line, the Yankees can only hope that’s the case. — Deesha Thosar

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2. Time to give Tommy Edman his flowers

Turns out Edman’s MVP performance in the Dodgers’ NLCS against the Mets wasn’t a fluke. Los Angeles’ Swiss-army knife has picked up right where he left off, going 4-for-8 with two runs scored and an RBI in the World Series so far. His latest trick was a solo shot to left field off Carlos Rodón in the second inning to put the Dodgers on the board. 

Edman hadn’t even played this season when Andrew Friedman traded for him this summer. The Dodgers needed an infielder at the time, knowing that they didn’t want to play Mookie Betts at shortstop anymore, while factoring in that Gavin Lux and Kiké Hernandez are not everyday players. There was real risk in making him the lone position-player addition at the deadline. Nobody really knew how Edman would play after his offseason wrist surgery, which included a setback in spring training. While his performance in August and September was serviceable, Edman has been huge for the Dodgers in October. 

Not only is he showing up at the plate, but the former Gold Glover has seamlessly shifted between shortstop and center field from game to game. While his name won’t often come up on a team full of superstars, he’s been a huge coup for the Dodgers — and he could be an enormous factor in them winning the whole thing. — Thosar

3. Carlos Rodón gets rocked

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After the southpaw’s turbulence this postseason, the Yankees had to know there was a fat chance that Rodón would unravel the way he did on Saturday. Aaron Boone and the Yankees’ decision-makers are just as responsible for this poor outing as the left-hander himself is. Rodón took the mound for Game 2 having surrendered seven earned runs in his previous three playoff starts (14.1 innings) this October. He spiraled against the Royals in the ALDS, then course-corrected in his first outing of the ALCS, only to struggle again in the clincher versus Cleveland. On Saturday, he surrendered home runs to Edman, Freddie Freeman and Teoscar Hernández by the third inning and was pulled in the fourth.

[RELATED: Full coverage of the World Series] 

The up-and-down nature of Rodón’s postseason spelled trouble the moment New York lost Game 1 to Los Angeles. More than anything, the Yankees needed a reliable starter who would give them the best chance to return to the Bronx with a series split. That made right-hander Clarke Schmidt the superior option for Game 2, not only because he has been more consistent on the road than Rodón, who pitches better at home, but also because the Dodgers hit lefties so well. Why take that chance when the Yankees had to get even? 

Beyond the team’s culpability, Rodón being unable to deliver on the sport’s biggest stage is a huge blow to the Yankees. Nights like Saturday were precisely why they signed him to a six-year, $162 million deal before the 2023 season. That he stayed healthy all year, ate up innings and delivered quality starts in half of his 32 outings when ace Gerrit Cole missed the first two-plus months of the season with an elbow injury was invaluable. His instability since then made him a questionable choice to start Saturday in the first place, and it now has the Yankees in a potentially insurmountable 0-2 hole. — Thosar

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4. A potentially costly loss in victory

A commanding 2-0 lead in the series did not come without a potentially significant cost, as an already injury-ravaged Dodgers roster might have taken its biggest hit.

Manager Dave Roberts said Ohtani suffered a subluxation of his left shoulder when he was caught stealing in the seventh inning. Roberts was encouraged by the initial strength and range of motion tests and said he’s “expecting him to be in the lineup,” but he won’t know more until scans are completed.

“Obviously when you get any one of your players that goes down, it’s concerning,” Roberts said. “But after kind of the range of motion, the strength test, I feel much better about it.”

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Dodgers players after the game did not seem to know the severity of the injury. Ohtani left the stadium immediately after the game and was not available to provide an update. Based on initial testing, though, Roberts believes Ohtani will be available to play as the series moves to New York.

“I’m expecting him to be there,” Roberts said.

Ohtani had been caught stealing just four times while recording 59 stolen bases during the regular season, but he has been caught stealing on both of his attempts this postseason. — Rowan Kavner

Deesha Thosar is an MLB reporter for FOX Sports. She previously covered the Mets as a beat reporter for the New York Daily News. The daughter of Indian immigrants, Deesha grew up on Long Island and now lives in Queens. Follow her on Twitter at @DeeshaThosar.

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Rowan Kavner is an MLB writer for FOX Sports. He previously covered the L.A. Dodgers, LA Clippers and Dallas Cowboys. An LSU grad, Rowan was born in California, grew up in Texas, then moved back to the West Coast in 2014. Follow him on Twitter at @RowanKavner.

[Want great stories delivered right to your inbox? Create or log in to your FOX Sports account, follow leagues, teams and players to receive a personalized newsletter daily.]


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Arsenal’s title hopes are OVER if they lose to Liverpool, warns Gunners legend Tony Adams

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Arsenal's title hopes are OVER if they lose to Liverpool, warns Gunners legend Tony Adams

ARSENAL continued their unbeaten run in the Champions League with a 1-0 win over Shakhtar Donetsk – but it was far from a convincing performance.

Gabriel Martinelli orchestrated the decisive goal when his low-driven strike hit the post and deflected in off the back of goalkeeper Dmytro Riznyk.

Here’s how SunSport’s Tony Robertson rated the Gunners…

DAVID RAYA – 7

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Seldom asked to do much aside from recycle the ball to Gabriel or Saliba until the final stages

Pushed a potentially dangerous cross out of danger in the 84th minute. Pulled out a magnificent low save in injury time before claiming a dangerous cross to keep his clean sheet.

BEN WHITE – 6

Back in at right-back today and played as if he had never been out of the team. 

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Received a yellow card in the 34th minute. Subbed at half-time for Mikel Merino.

WILLIAM SALIBA – 7

In the team after his red card against Bournemouth, played like his typically assured self marshalling the defence.

One or two sloppy passes late in the second half but otherwise can have no complaints with another solid performance.

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GABRIEL MAGALHAES – 5

Sloppily gave the ball away to hand the visitors a dangerous chance out of nothing. Had another lapse just after the opener but in the end he was bailed out by Calafiori.

Marked improvement in the second half.

RICCARDO CALAFIORI – 6

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Skied a golden chance over the bar after six minutes. Tested the goalkeeper again after 24 minutes.

Dragged his foot and went down injured after skipping under a tackle in the 67th minute. Replaced by Myles Lewis-Skelly in 71st minute.

THOMAS PARTEY – 6

Comfortable evening in midfield for him. Recycled the ball well when at his feet and kept play ticking over.

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Moved to right back as White was hooked but didn’t have too many worries. When he was caught out of position Rice was able to cover.

DECLAN RICE – 6

Like Partey, he had a quiet night in midfield with Shakhtar unable to retain meaningful possession.

Moved into the six as White was hooked and Partey moved to right-back. Cut out a dangerous low cross at the edge of the area. 

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LEANDRO TROSSARD – 4

Nothing quite went right for him all night with some sloppy touches ending attacks and putting Arsenal in trouble.

Summed up his night by missing a 77th minute penalty and was hooked in the 88th minute.

GABRIEL JESUS – 8

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Wore the captain’s armband and looked bright down the right wing.

Denied a well-deserved goal by the feet of the keeper in the 43rd minute after Havertz played him in.

Second half saw more good link play, but never had another chance to end his goal drought as he was replaced by Sterling in the 68th minute.

GABRIEL MARTINELLI – 7

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Grew into the game following a quiet start and was rewarded with a goal, of sorts, after 30 minutes.

Brazilian cut inside from the left wing before firing a shot to the near post before the shot rebounded off the woodwork and hit the goalkeeper Dmytro Riznyk to go in the net. 

KAI HAVERTZ – 7

Centimeters away from getting Arsenal’s second in the 39th minute after Jesus squared a volley back across goal.

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Returned the favour to set up his team-mate moments later only for the goalkeeper to prevent a goal.

Won a free-kick at the very end of the game to run the clock down.

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Mikel Merino (on for White HT) – 6

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Some nice touches and stitched play together well. A solid yet unspectacular performance.

Raheem Sterling (on for Jesus 68 mins) – 6

Tried to play on the shoulder of the last man but did not have the pace find the clear cut chance he would have liked.

Myles Lewis-Skelly (on for Calafiori 71 mins) – 6

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Slotted in at left-back and was not afraid to show for the ball but often did not receive it while tucking infield.

Jorginho (on for Trossard 88 mins) – N/A

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Paige VanZant through the years: Best photos

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Paige VanZant through the years: Best photos

Web Summit 2018 In Lisbon

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