Get ready for a new week (Picture: Getty/Metro.co.uk)
The tail end of February brings us into a Mercury Retrograde, which is not the demon that folk paint it out to be — especially as this one is in lovely Pisces.
See this three-week phase more as a time to do less, think more, and recoup your energy ready for the launch phase of spring!
Winter is almost over. What outside, external, world-facing ambitions, energy or activity do you most want to tap into and pursue?
Time to plan and prepare. Make this Spring season amazing by getting your priorities and hopes lined up now, so you can research and schedule accordingly.
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So… let’s use the tarot to ask what you can be getting ready for spring right now.
Looking for deeper insight? My new Everything Covered reading has all the answers. Or, come join my magical, mystical tarot club, free for a whole month when you sign up using this link.
Aries
March 21 to April 20
Dream big, Aries (Picture: Getty/Metro.co.uk)
Tarot card for Aries for this week: The Sun
Meaning: Spring starts at the same time as your own sign’s season, so it’s like a double whammy of good vibes, positive energy and action. The Sun blesses this season even more with love, joy, travel, success, and opportunity. The preparation you can do now is to imagine what you’d be doing if failure wasn’t an option. What makes you feel most excited? What would you love to spend your time on this Earth pursuing?
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This is what you should plan to do this spring — seriously, the sky’s the limit. Write that business plan, invite your object of affection on a wild weekend, book a trip or holiday that makes you feel adventurous, apply for the promotion. Do it all!
Everything happens for a reason (Picture: Getty/Metro.co.uk)
Tarot card for Taurus for this week: Five of Cups
Meaning: The key to the best ever spring that you can plan for now is to simply have no regrets. That is going to be your mantra. Imagine that it is now winter again, what memories of this season would you love to have made, places visited, spring-like activities tried, new food eaten, relatives visited etc?
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Let this stance of ‘no regrets’ inform your priority to-do list and use this week to research and plan how you can land it over from March to June. This might be shaping up to be your best ever season, you know!
Soak in the joys of spring (Picture: Getty/Metro.co.uk)
Tarot card for Gemini for this week: Three of Cups
Meaning: As spring approaches, the sap rises, flowers unfurl, things heat up in all manner of ways. This applies to your nature too. You are a part of nature! So feel the warmth, light and fertile energies swirling through the air embrace you and lift your spirits. Focus on receiving the energy coming through and letting it change your mood, outlook and appetites.
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Hibernation is over. Winter habits are over. Time to refresh, renew and revive your spring-like personality and true nature. Time to get outside, start sniffing the air, taking walks, looking with curiosity at what’s going on that you can get involved with!
Hibernation time is over (Picture: Getty/Metro.co.uk)
Tarot card for Cancer for this week: Three of Coins
Meaning: You do have a tendency to go into total hibernation during winter, and folk wonder if you’ve dropped off the face of the Earth. But you are missed. Your presence is powerful and when it’s removed, people notice. So, as Spring starts to come around, start thinking about your social life, family outings, networking and general human interaction once more!
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What events are coming up, who have you not seen in ages, what trips or new places are there waiting for your attention, what professional relationships need some attention? Make a list, make a plan, start in advance now and get a head start.
Spring is pregnant with possibility for you, Leo (Picture: Getty/Metro.co.uk)
Tarot card for Leo for this week: The Empress
Meaning: This is the card of love, passion, nurturing, mothering and fertility and this suggests your spring is going to be very loving and fertile in new additions to your life. Abundance, blossoming, creation, and growth. So… get your magic wand of manifesting polished and poised.
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Where are you going to point it? What do you want create and make? What new things do you want to be birthed into your realm? Make a wish list. This powerful Empress energy is there to help you get what you desire and deserve. Know what you truly want, from the heart, and use that to guide your spring preparations and priorities. Also, look out for Taurus and Libra.
Making lists is a beloved Virgo pastime (Picture: Getty/Metro.co.uk)
Tarot card for Virgo for this week: King of Coins
Meaning: A new season is like you getting a new notepad or blank sheet of paper, on which you can project and plan a whole new era! Bliss. Vision boarding is what is needed right now. Create your ideal vision of where you want to be in terms of health, wealth, work and home this spring.
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What jobs need doing, what outcomes are you looking for, what investments might be worth exploring, what career ideas are you brewing, what health and wellbeing goals do you have in mind? Get it all down on paper this week and take charge of making it into a you Spring Schedule 2026!
Meaning: Use your closest relationships – family, romantic and otherwise – to plan your upcoming spring season. What do you want to do with those you love and like? Get together with these folk this week and have a pre-season planning get-together. What films, outings, events, trips, gatherings, new places, foods, shows, classes or reunions might you all want to undertake, share and arrange?
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Use this relationship-focused approach as the underpinning of your season ahead and you will feel loved, supported and valued. Getting together with people is your favourite thing. So, make it a real priority this season.
A solid foundation makes all the difference (Picture: Getty/Metro.co.uk)
Tarot card for Scorpio for this week: Two of Swords
Meaning: Spring is always a busy time when everyone comes up for air, breaks out the hibernation cycle, and new invites, news and opportunities flourish. So get ready to be a lot busier real soon, Scorpio! As such, take a step back this week and look at the bigger picture of your year. What decisions are awaiting your attention that will shape your plans and priorities?
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This card suggests there are at least two decisions you need to face into, process, research and decide, and this is the week to do it. Get all the info you can, discuss it, kick it around, sleep on each option and then make your move. Doing all of this now will help you come springtime when you’ve overwhelmed with new offers and ideas. You are creating a firm foundation from which to grow.
Time for a pre-spring clean (Picture: Getty/Metro.co.uk)
Tarot card for Sagittarius for this week: Knight of Coins
Meaning: You love spring. You love the return of the light and warmth, the energising vitality of the sun’s rays, and the sense of new possibilities ahead. So, this is a good week to get all those outstanding jobs, tasks and chores done that you’d rather have out of your hair by the time the season starts and you want to be ‘out out’.
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Work hard, make a strong to-do list and set to work, use your Jupiter powers of luck and fortune to get ahead and take a few chances. Invest your time and energy in things which need doing, so that you have more time and energy later when the ‘art of the possible’ in is play.
What do you wish for? (Picture: Getty/Metro.co.uk)
Tarot card for Capricorn for this week: Nine of Cups
Meaning: Springtime livens your spirits and makes you feel optimistic about life. And so it should, because the Nine of Cups suggests you have a magical season of wishes granted and dreams coming true awaiting you.
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Use this week to consider your greatest wishes right now. Let your imagination roam, spend time walking and daydreaming, fantasise and invent ideals, scenarios, and outcomes that make you feel proud, strong and excited. And use these visions as the raw clay to mould your plan of attack for the coming season. Whatever you wish for is possible this spring, don’t waste this hopeful energy by second guessing or undermining yourself.
Get ready for a springtime burst of excitement (Picture: Getty/Metro.co.uk)
Tarot card for Aquarius for this week: Ten of Wands
Meaning: The Ten of Wands wants you to eek the very last drops of hibernation restoration and rejuvenation energy out of this tail end of winter. Rest up. Do little. Heal and process and reflect and take in good stimulus physically and mentally.
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Spring will be busy, active, demanding, fun and lively. A great time. Expect several months of high energy and new news. For now, recharge your batteries so you have even more juice when the time comes and you need that vitality and stamina. This is worthwhile rest.
The ice is beginning to thaw (Picture: Getty/Metro.co.uk)
Tarot card for Pisces for this week: The World
Meaning: The World is a card of completion and achievement, a recognition that you have ‘done’ winter and are oh so ready for spring. For you, it will mean new challenges and ambitions to pursue, new travel and location plans or moves, and a fresh sense of where you’re heading — and why. A renewal of purpose.
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For now, enjoy this tail end of winter, celebrate the season’s achievements and successes, reflect on what you’ve done and learned, measure your progress against your goals, and start to notice what things or areas of your life might also be coming to a conclusion, along with the season. It’s time to let go, and then go again!
Kerry King has been reading, teaching and creating tarot for 30 years. Join her magical, exclusive Tarot Club for forecasts, predictions, lessons and readings straight to your inbox. Enjoy one month free for all Metro readers (no lock-in or commitment) over on Patreon.
Your daily Metro.co.uk horoscope is here every morning, seven days a week (yes, including weekends!). To check your forecast, head to our dedicated horoscopes page.
So, you do not miss seeing “the world’s greatest steeplechase”, here is all you need to know about the 2026 Grand National, including the start time, runners and where to watch.
How to watch the 2026 Grand National
Coverage for the Grand National will kick off on ITV1 and ITVX from 3.15pm.
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The race will start at 4pm on Saturday, April 11.
Saturday’s final race will also be shown online at Racing.tv .
The first (12.45pm) and final (5pm) races on Saturday will not be available to watch on ITV.
Grand National 2026 runners
The horses taking part in the race are:
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I Am Maximus
Panic Attack
Jagwar
Grangeclare West
Johnnywho
Monty’s Star
Iroko
Oscar’s Brother
Captain Cody
Haiti Couleurs
Gorgeous Tom
Gerri Colombe
Final Orders
Quai De Bourbon
Stellar Story
Who has the rights to the Grand National?
ITV currently has the rights to broadcast The Grand National in the UK, which it has had since 2017.
The race was first broadcast on the BBC back in 1960, and it stayed that way until 2013 when Channel 4 got the rights, which lasted until 2016.
Along with the Epsom Derby, the Grand National is one of two horse races that must be broadcast on free-to-air television in the UK.
Will you be watching the Grand National? Let us know in the comments below.
Classical concert of the week: York Late Music presents Amabile Clarinet Trio, Unitarian Chapel, St Saviourgate, York, tonight, 7.30pm
THE Amabile Clarinet Trio – York clarinettist Lesley Schatzberger, cellist Nicola Tait Baxter and pianist Paul Nicholson – presents an innovative programme featuring two premieres plus Thea Musgrave’s Canta Canta!, patron Nicola LeFanu’s Lullaby and Nocturne, American composer Robert Muczynski’s rarely played Fantasy Trio and the first York performance of Alexander von Zemlinsky’s Trio in D minor.
The UK premiere of David Lancaster’s Canzone Sospeso and a world premiere from composer David Power will be complemented by a set of Morris newly transcribed by York composer Steve Crowther. Lancaster gives a pre-concert talk at 6.45pm, to be enjoyed with a complimentary glass of wine or juice. Tickets: latemusic.org or on the door.
Farewell concert of the week: Steve Coates Music Productions present Swing When You Sing, Joseph Rowntree Theatre, York, tomorrow, 7.30pm
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Lesley Jones and Steve Coates: Teaming up for the last time for Swing When You Sing
BEV Jones Music Company and The Jubilee Celebration Singers producer Lesley Jones bids farewell to the York stage after 20 years of mounting shows with Swing When You Sing, presented with Steve Coates Music Productions.
Alan Owens’s 16-piece big band will be joined on stage by singers Ruth McNeil, Annabel van Griethuysen, Hayley Bamford, Johanna Hartley, Adele Barlow, Larry Gibson, Terry Ford, Stephen Wilson, David Hartley and Geoff Walker to perform Rat Pack, Minnie The Moocher, Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy, Under The Sea, Cheek To Cheek, Sway (Latin), Fever, Mr Bojangles, Amy Winehouse’s Back To Black and Sing, Sing, Sing (with Bob Fosse-style dancing). “Varied? Yes! Upbeat? Yes! Emotional? Yes!” says Lesley. Box office: 01904 501935 or josephrowntreetheatre.co.uk.
Start-up of the week: Bishy Road Community Choir, Stables Yoga Centre, Nunmill Street, York, from April 13
The poster for the launch of Bishy Road Community Choir
THE Stables Yoga Centre and Rachel Davies are setting up the Bishy Road Community Choir to run on Mondays from 5pm to 5.50pm at £5 a session from April 13. This welcoming, musically accessible group will use song to promote happiness, wellbeing and community. No experience or musical skills are needed; only enthusiasm to try feel-good singing. To book a place, visit stablesyoga.co.uk/timetable.
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Family politics of the week: York Actors Collective in Till The Stars Come Down, Theatre@41, Monkgate, York, April14 to 18, 7.30pm, Tuesday to Friday; 2pm and 6pm, Saturday
PREMIERED at the National Theatre in 2024 and now receiving its York premiere, Beth Steel’s contemporary British family drama is set on the wedding day of Sylvia and Marek in a South Yorkshire mining town.
Directed by Angie Millard, Till The Stars Come Down explores the tumultuous dynamics of a working-class family in a changing world of economic decline and political shifts as long-held secrets, passions, and tensions surrounding class, immigration, and social change spill over into chaos and tragedy. Box office: tickets.41monkgate.co.uk.
Titanic anniversary event of the week: Royal Shakespeare Company in Hamlet, York Theatre Royal, April 14 to 18, 7pm plus 1.30pm, April 16 and 2pm, April 18
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LET director Rupert Goold introduces the Royal Shakespeare Company’s Hamlet, starring Ralph Davis, as the tour sets sail for York on the 114th anniversary of the Titanic’s descent to the depths. “Our production is set aboard a ship but one that is soon to founder, going down with all hands,” he says.
“Its inspiration comes from the most famous sinking in history, and just as that icy tragedy came to pass in a little over two and a half hours, our play takes place in real time and for about as long, as much catastrophic thriller as poetic meditation. This production asks what it means to be human and decisive when time is running out.” Box office: 01904 623568 or yorktheatreroyal.co.uk.
Poetry at the double: Edge Street Live presents Henry Normal and Jan Brierton, Milton Rooms, Malton, April 16, 7.30pm
WRITER, poet, television & film producer and Manchester Poetry Festival founder Henry Normal is joined by Dubliner Jan Brierton for an evening of poetry and humour. Normal, whose credits include co-writing The Mrs Merton Show and the first series of The Royle Family, will be reading from his new book A Quiet Promise.
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Brierton riffs on modern life, love and friendships, wellness and ageing, rage and domestic exasperation in her poetic reflections on being a wife, mother, daughter, sister and retired raver, plus plenty of stuff about tea, lipstick and biscuits. Box office: 01653 696240 or themiltonrooms.com.
Not just cricket: Jonathan Agnew and Phil Tufnell in An Audience With Aggers & Tuffers, York Barbican, April 16, 7.30pm
Aggers & Tuffers: The chatter of cricket amid the clatter of wickets at York Barbican (Image: Supplied)
TEST Match Special commentator-and-pundit duo Jonathan Agnew and Phil Tufnell take to the road for more cricket chat from beyond the boundary. Former Leicestershire and England fast bowler and three-decade BBC cricket correspondent Aggers teams up anew with record-breaking former England spin bowler and crowd favourite Tuffers, who gives his spin on his maverick playing days and second wind as a media personality on I’m A Celebrity, Get Me Out Of Here, Strictly Come Dancing and A Question Of Sport. Box office update: limited availability at yorkbarbican.co.uk.
Slam champ of the week: Say Owt presents Maureen Onwunali, The Crescent, York, April 17, 7.30pm
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YORK spoken-word collective Sat Owt’s guest poet for April’s gathering will be Dublin-born Nigerian poet and two-time national slam champion Maureen Onwunali.
Rich with political observations and carefully crafted verse, her work has been featured by musicians, radio shows and organisations, such as the British Film Institute, Penguin, BBC, Roundhouse, Apples and Snakes, Obsidian Foundation and the Poetry Society. Box office: seetickets.com/event/say-owt-slam-featuring-maureen-onwunali/the-crescent/3588134.
Art event of the month: York Open Studios, York and beyond, April 18 & 19 and April 25 & 26, 10am to 5pm
ARTISTS and makers involved in York Open Studios are putting the final touches to their workplaces and studios within York and a ten-mile radius of the city, in readiness to welcome visitors across two weekends.
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This annual event offers the chance to gain a sneak peek into where the artists work, their methods and inspirations, whether a regular participant or the 27 newcomers, spanning traditional and contemporary painting and print, illustration, drawing, ceramics, mixed media, glass, sculpture, jewellery, textiles and photography. For more information, visit yorkopenstudios.co.uk; access the interactive map at yorkopenstudios.co.uk/map.
Two teenagers were declared dead at the scene after a car left a bridge and collided with a minibus
Peter Hennessy UK & World News Editor
07:22, 11 Apr 2026
Two teenagers have lost their lives following a serious collision on a busy UK motorway.
Officers were called to the incident shortly before junction 20 of the M1 in Leicestershire at 1.33pm on Friday afternoon, April 10.
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According to police, a blue car travelling along Gilmorton Lane towards Lutterworth had left the road bridge spanning the carriageway and struck a minibus heading southbound on the M1.
Leicestershire Fire and Rescue Service and East Midlands Ambulance Service were also deployed to the scene.
A spokesperson for Leicestershire Police said: “Four people in the minibus – a white Fiat Ducato – were taken to hospital with non-life-threatening injuries. The driver, a man, has been discharged and three women remain in hospital.”
“The two people in the blue car, both teenagers, were declared dead at the scene.”
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The carriageway was shut for several hours while forensic examinations took place at the scene.
Officers are appealing for anyone who was travelling on Gilmorton Lane or the M1 near junction 20 – in either direction – at approximately 1.30pm on Friday afternoon to come forward.
Anyone with dashcam footage or who witnessed either vehicle prior to the collision is urged to contact police.
You can contact us on 101, quoting incident number 308 of 10th April or visit Making a road traffic incident report | Leicestershire Police
Sky broadband customers can bag 500Mbps for the price of 300Mbps and get up to £200 to switch.
Jake Hackney Senior Consumer Writer
06:54, 11 Apr 2026
This article contains affiliate links, we will receive a commission on any sales we generate from it. Learn more
Sky has massively undercut BT by dishing out upgrades with one of its super-fast broadband deals. The TV and broadband provider is also dishing out a major upgrade at no extra cost with its 500Mbps Full Fibre Broadband.
It’s currently on offer at £28 per month or roughly 90p per day, the same price as Sky’s slower 300Mbps plan. These speeds are ideal for 4K streaming or online gaming, with Sky estimating a HD TV programme will take around 25 seconds to download.
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What’s more, Sky is paying new customers up to £200 in bill credit if they switch to cover and fees from their old provider. Sky’s Full Fibre 500 deal beats the equivalent plan at BT, where the same speeds cost £40.99 per month after a three-month free promotional period.
BT has also confirmed its monthly prices will rise by £4 each April. Sky says its rates ‘may change’ during the 24-month term too, but its customers are given the opportunity to cancel their contract if a price change is announced.
It’s worth noting that, as Sky says its full fibre is available to 60% of UK homes, not everyone will be able to get 500Mbps speeds. New customers can use Sky’s postcode checker to check their eligibility.
Sky’s 500Mbps Full Fibre Broadband
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Sky is offering 500Mbps for the price of 300Mbps with its Full Fibre 500 broadband deal.
Sky’s Full Fibre 500 deal also rivals a similar plan at Virgin Media, where the M500 Fibre Broadband – delivering speeds up to a slightly faster 516Mbps – comes in at £29.99. However, there’s a free upgrade here too, as the deal comes with a free subscription to Netflix.
For those opting for Sky’s 500Mbps Full Fibre Broadband, customers have left thousands of positive reviews of the brand on Trustpilot. Of these, some have praised the ‘reliable’ and ‘buffering-free’ internet and ‘excellent’ service.
One glowing review says: “I ditched my old broadband because the company insisted I have a phone line, which I wasn’t even using. Enter Sky Broadband: no phone, just pure internet bliss. I’m honestly amazed – it hasn’t dropped once. Cheers to buffering-free surfing.”
Another says: “Went to transfer my broadband from BT to Sky. The service was excellent, I got a great deal and I know exactly what will happen on my installation day and going forward.”
Despite being happy with Sky’s fibre broadband, this customer deducted a star for their customer service, saying: “Had no problems with the broadband. It worked well, reliable, speed was decent. Bills are easy to access online. The only problem is when you need to contact them.”
Meanwhile, another five-star review says: “Great help on saving money on broadband and helping with how to do everything step by step.”
Tyson Fury has come out of retirement to face Russian boxer Arslanbek Makhmudov in a heavyweight clash in London on April 11. The fight will stream live on Netflix, which fans can get for free with Sky’s £15 Essential TV bundle or £24 Ultimate TV bundle, the latter of which also includes HBO Max and Disney+.
Arne Slot’s side are winless in three Premier League games, with a draw at home to relegation-threatened Tottenham sandwiched between losses against Wolves and Brighton.
Furthermore, the Reds go into this game on the back of three straight defeats and have failed to score in their last two.
Fulham, meanwhile, have an outside chance of Champions League qualification but remain in the battle for Europe nonetheless and arrive on Merseyside having won three of their last five league games.
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Here’s everything you need to know about where to watch…
How to watch Liverpool vs Fulham
TV channel: In the UK, the game will be televised live on Sky Sports. Coverage starts at 5pm BST on Sky Sports Main Event and Sky Sports Premier League.
Live stream: Sky Sports subscribers can also catch the contest live online via the Sky Go app.
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Live blog: You can follow all the action on matchday via Standard Sport’s live blog.
WARNING, GRAPHIC CONTENT: Giuseppe Di Matteo, 12, was kidnapped by Giovanni Brusca’s Sicilian Mafia gang to stop his father Santino testifying against them
Young Giuseppe Di Matteo thought he was off to see his father when police officers came to pick him up one day in 1993.
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Ex- Mafia associate Santino Di Matteo had recently turned his back on his criminal comrades and was under the protection of the authorities for his own safety.
However, his 12-year-old son became a casualty when Cosa Nostra criminals in Sicily, Italy posed as police officers and kidnapped him.
The horrifying plot was masterminded by hitman Giovanni Brusca and crime boss Salvatore ‘Toto’ Riina. For nearly 800 days, the helpless lad endured unimaginable torment while held captive in a café.
He was beaten and starved by the criminals, who also sent photos of the boy to Santino as part of their sick mind games.
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The initial aim was to stop the informant from giving evidence in the trial of anti-Mafia judge Giovanni Falcone, who had been killed in a car bomb attack.
The esteemed judge had devoted his career to prosecuting organised crime, notably leading the notorious “maxi trial” in 1986, which led to the conviction of 342 mafiosi, according to the Mirror.
Woolly mammoths will return in 2028, how you could live to 200, alien signals lost in the weather, could we battle Godzilla, and a creature with 20 arms has been discovered near the Antarctic – all this and more in our latest peculiar science newsletter.
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Brusca was ordered to seek revenge and, in 1992, he placed half a tonne of explosives under a motorway near Palermo, targeting Falcone as his car drove past.
The judge died alongside his wife and three bodyguards, and Brusca was forced to go on the run immediately.
The later capture of Santino revealed Brusca – dubbed ‘The Pig’ – as the ringleader, sealing Giuseppe’s terrible fate.
In 1996 – 779 days following his kidnapping – Brusca gave the command to kill Giuseppe with five callous words: “Get rid of the puppy”.
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The boy was so frail from his ordeal that he offered no resistance as he was throttled to death.
His remains were subsequently dissolved in acid to guarantee they would never be found – a technique called ‘lupara bianca’. Shockingly, Brusca showed no regret, later boasting in his autobiography about his ever more appalling crimes.
“I’ve dissolved bodies in acid; I’ve roasted corpses on big grills; I’ve buried the remains after digging graves with an earthmover,” he wrote.
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“Some pentiti [former Mafiosi] say today they feel disgust for what they did. I can speak for myself: I’ve never been upset by these things.”
Brusca was later captured and jailed for 25 years after confessing his role in more than 100 killings.
His eventual freedom in 2021, then aged 64, triggered outrage throughout Italy that such a lethal murderer was now at liberty to roam the streets.
Tina Montinaro, whose bodyguard husband was murdered alongside Falcone, told the Repubblica at the time: “The state is against us – after 29 years we still don’t know the truth about the massacre and Giovanni Brusca, the man who destroyed my family, is free.”
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Three years earlier in 2018, Giuseppe’s family received over €2.2m (£1.9m) as compensation for his murder. On the 25th anniversary of his son’s abduction, Santino stated in an interview: “I think about it every day.
“How can there be people so evil to treat a child this way? When people get involved in stuff like this, it’s most likely they are never coming back.”
Captain Cody has the perfect conditions to bounce back to form and add to his triumph in the Scottish Grand National last April.
Willie Mullins’ stable in Co Carlow is the dominant force of National Hunt racing – a sovereignty that now extends to the world’s most famous steeplechase, once the very emblem of the lottery where even the small-stakes player could hit the jackpot.
Mullins has now won the National three times but, tellingly, that tally includes the last two runnings, with I Am Maximus and Nick Rockett.
The latter’s late withdrawal leaves the 69-year-old trainer with eight of the 34 runners, and drying weather on Merseyside has enhanced the chances of the eight-year-old Captain Cody.
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It’s hard to see the son of 2010 St Leger hero Arctic Cosmos coming home in front if he repeats the form of four underwhelming runs this season.
But the key to Captain Cody’s chance today is Aintree’s drying terrain.
It’s a year minus a day since my selection enjoyed the biggest victory of his career so far on Scotland’s west coast.
There are ‘Nationals’ run everywhere in Britain and Ireland nowadays – Midlands (Uttoxeter), London (Sandown), Somerset (Wincanton), Berkshire (Ascot), Sussex (Plumpton), Borders (Kelso), Leinster (Naas) and Kerry (Listowel), to name but a few.
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But there are four Nationals that really count – the English which, being the first, doesn’t need a geographical qualification, the Scottish, Irish and Welsh.
Of the 23 runners who lined up at Ayr last year, 10 turned for home with any chance of success, with Captain Cody moving with menace on the outside.
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His jumps at the final two fences weren’t pristine, but the casual ease with which the bay gelding lengthened to overhaul Klarc Kent – Harry Cobden had merely to shake the reins – and score by a length had to be seen to be believed. The handicap system rewards excellence with extra lead in the saddle, and Captain Cody is 12lb higher in the ratings today.
But his rise in the weights is well earned, and an eight-year-old jumper should be at the peak of his powers.
The Scottish National’s distance is three miles, seven furlongs and 176 yards, and Captain Cody will have no problem galloping for an additional two furlongs and 118 yards.
He has his own way of getting from one side of a fence to the other, but the National obstacles, with plastic cores replacing the timber of yore, are more tolerant of such eccentricity these days.
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Jockey Johnny Burke, whose best National placing from six attempts was a fifth aboard Goonyella in 2016, gets the leg-up today and the British-based Irishman represents a safe pair of hands.
Of Captain Cody’s 33 rivals, Mullins’ I Am Maximus, first in 2024 and second last year, Grangeclare West, third 12 months ago, and talented outsider Champ Kiely are all dangers, while Gorgeous Tom, whose trainer Henry de Bromhead won the race with the Rachael Blackmore-ridden Minella Times in 2021, is also in the mix.
But it’s the improving novice Oscars Brother, bidding to give his owner JP McManus a record fourth National triumph, who is feared most of all.
The eight-year-old, one of just two horses trained in Co Tipperary by 29-year-old Connor King, looked an embryonic stayer when fourth at the Cheltenham Festival and has more to offer.
It would be doing Bath a massive disservice to suggest they were all route one as they demonstrated with their third try which was strike play perfection. The scrum was solid and Redpath felt Russell, who faked pumped once to draw a gap to send Henry Arundell scurrying under the posts.
Then right on half-time came a try that both coaches identified as a key momentum shift as shortly after Smith missed a penalty to touch, replacement Francois van Wyk was driven over. Russell missed leaving the game tantalising poised at 35-26 to the visitors. After the madness of the first half, Smith took the first conservative decision of the game, by kicking a penalty in front of the posts. However, Saints were reduced to 14 men when JJ van der Mescht was sin-binned following repeated offences in the 22. Bath kicked to the corner and piled what seemed like half of Somerset into the maul with replacement Kepu Tuipulotu grounding the ball. Russell’s conversion made it a five-point game.
Another Smith penalty gave Saints a modicum of breathing space but that was wiped out by Russell’s penalty before a grandstand finish featuring Pollock, inevitably, and Hill’s try which will be celebrated long into the night.
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Match details
Scoring sequence 0-5, Pollock try; 0-7 Smith con; 0-12, Dingwall try; 0-14, Smith con; 5-14, Dunn try; 7-14, Russell con; 7-19, Lockett try; 7-21, Smith con; 7-26, Kemeny try; 7-28, Smith con; 12-28, Russell try; 14-28, Russell con; 14-33, Sleightholme try; 14-35, Smith con; 19-35, Arundell try; 21-35, Russell con; 26-35, Van Wyk try; 26-38, Smith con; 31-38, Tuipulotu try; 33-38, Russell con; 33-41, Smith pen; 36-41 Russell pen; 41-41, Hill try; 43-41, Russell con.
Bath T De Glanville (S Carreras, 52); H Arundell, O Lawrence, C Redpath, W Muir; F Russell, B Spencer (B van der Linde, 74); B Obano (F van Wyk, 29), T Dunn, (K Tuipulotu, 52), V Sela (T Du Toit, 47), Q Roux (T Hill, 47), C Ewels, G Pepper, S Underhill (A Barbeary, 32), M Reid (R Molony, 66).
Northampton Saints G Furbank; T Freeman, R Hutchinson (T Litchfield, 74), F Dingwall, O Sleightholme (G Hendy, 66); F Smith, A McParland (A Mitchell, 59); D Fischetti (E Iyogun, 47), C Langdon (C Wright, 17), C Kundiona (E Millar-Mills, 47), T Lockett (Van der Mescht, 68), JJ van der Mescht (E Prowse, 67), J Kemeny, T Pearson (C Chick, 27), H Pollock.
“Whilst our team put their training into practice, we will be opening our doors for a first look of our pizzeria and to support our friends at Harrogate Homeless Project – HHP
“Book your table now and you will get one free sharing garlic bread pizza per booking. A minimum of two pizzas + two drinks must be purchased to qualify.
“All proceeds from the evening, including money raised in our raffle, will be donated to Harrogate Homeless Project.”
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Earlier, as part of the opening, Rudy’s Pizza announced a giveaway of 3,000 pizzas for those who sent their contact details in advance.
The Manchester-based company gave a similar promotion when Rudy’s Pizza opened in York’s High Ousegate in 2024.
Since then, the York outside has won widespread acclaim, receiving 4.5 stars out of five on Google based on 434 Google Reviews.
Tripadvisor awards 4.6 stars out of five, based on 198 reviews, ranking it 85th out of 728 York restaurants.
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Rudy’s opened its first site in Manchester in 2015 and now operates 36 locations across the UK.
Follow Rudy’s on Instagram for the latest updates – @wearerudyspizza and head to www.rudyspizza.co.uk/location/harrogate for more information and bookings.
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