Martin Odegaard and Leandro Trossard remain doubts for today’s game, while Everton are hoping to call upon Jarrad Branthwaite after he came off in the closing stages of their clash with Burnley.
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Arsenal vs Everton LIVE: Premier League latest score and confirmed lineups | Football
Arsenal are looking to pile the pressure on Premier League title rivals Manchester City with a win at home against Everton on Saturday evening.
The Gunners have won three in a row in the league and now sit seven points clear at the top of the table after Pep Guardiola’s side dropped points to Nottingham Forest last time out.
And Mikel Arteta’s side can now move temporarily ten points clear at the top ahead of City’s clash with West Ham later on Saturday.
But they face a potentially awkward opponent in Everton, who have the fourth-best record away from home in the league this season and sit just five points off the Champions League places.
Metro’s LIVE matchday blog will bring you all the build-up, confirmed team news and starting XIs, goal updates and minute-by-minute coverage
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Early team news
How to watch Arsenal vs Everton
You can watch the match live on Sky Sports Main Event with streaming also available through the Sky Go app and NOW TV for subscribers.
Arsenal vs Everton kick-off time
Arsenal vs Everton kicks off tonight (Saturday 14 March) at 5:30pm.
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Hello and welcome to Metro’s live coverage of the Premier League clash between Arsenal and Everton.
Stay with us for all the build-up, team news and match updates from the Emirates Stadium.
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Three things we learned from Chelsea FC loss as Liam Rosenior trend gives cause for concern
Chelsea searched for an equaliser after the break, but Newcastle held on for a precious three points.
Liam Rosenior’s attack confounded
One of the key themes of Rosenior’s reign has been Chelsea’s ability to sustain and take advantage of attacking pressure.
For the first time tonight, though, Chelsea looked stifled in attack as they failed to score in the league for just the third time this season.
Despite having 67 per cent of the ball, Chelsea recorded fewer shots on target than Newcastle, who made the most of their rare forays forward.
This was a frustrating performance and a huge setback for Chelsea, who could take positives, even in defeat, from their display against Paris Saint-Germain.

Chelsea were well off the pace as Newcastle perfectly executed their game plan at Stamford Bridge
Chelsea FC via Getty Images
Away to the Champions League holders, Chelsea looked confident, unafraid to take risks in possession, and crucially, were sharp when presented with opportunities.
By contrast, they were toothless as Newcastle came to west London, soaked up pressure and came away with a rare three points.
This will be a hard lesson for Rosenior to take. Unlike in previous games, this was a performance utterly devoid of positives to build on.
Chelsea stumble in Champions League race
Chelsea were the first of the Champions League-chasing sides to play this weekend. Tonight was a great opportunity for the Blues to lay down a marker.
Chelsea have now dropped points in their last three home games, with their last win at Stamford Bridge coming in stoppage time against 10-man West Ham.

Liam Rosenior’s tactical tweaks had little effect
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Newcastle had not won at Stamford Bridge since a Papiss Cisse-inspired victory in May 2012, but they did not have to be at their best to get the better of Rosenior’s men.
Nervous in defence and lacking conviction in attack, Rosenior went from an animated figure on the touchline to slumped in his seat by the half-time whistle.
Chelsea have not been perfect under Rosenior, but their performances have at least shown plenty of character and attacking intent.
This was the first time under Rosenior that Chelsea have looked completely devoid of ideas, and the boos at half-time reflected that.
Robert Sanchez seizes chance to impress
Debate as to who should start in goal for Chelsea dominated the build-up to this match. Injury took the decision out of Rosenior’s hands today, with Jorgensen left out of the matchday squad against Newcastle with a groin injury.
That said, Rosenior still used his pre-match comments to reiterate that he has “got two very good goalkeepers” who are “both very good in their own right”, comments which underline the fact that the Blues coach is unsure who his first-choice keeper is heading into the business end of the season.

There was little Robert Sanchez could do to deny Anthony Gordon’s first-half winner
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Sanchez was not made to do an awful lot, but when called into action, he was alert and saved well from Jacob Ramsey and Gordon in each half.
The Spaniard did not look short of sharpness despite limited minutes in recent weeks.
Neither Sanchez nor Jorgensen have shown themselves to be the long-term answer in goal for Chelsea, but with plenty still to play for, it will be interesting to see who Rosenior opts for once Jorgensen is back fit.
Rosenior cannot keep chopping and changing his goalkeeper if Chelsea are to make a sustained bid for the Champions League places over the next couple of months, and Sanchez has made a strong case for himself.
NewsBeat
Meghan Markle’s former love interest worlds away from Suits
Patrick J Adams has opened up about his new role in The Madison, a modern Western series created by Yellowstone mastermind Taylor Sheridan
Meghan Markle’s former co-star Patrick J Adams is a far cry from Suits in the new Paramount+ contemporary Western series, The Madison.
Conceived by Yellowstone genius Taylor Sheridan, the six-part series tracks the Clyburns, a wealthy New York family who are abruptly compelled to move to rural Montana following a tragic loss.
Michelle Pfeiffer heads up the series as matriarch Stacy Clyburn, who relocates to her husband Preston’s (played by Kurt Russell) picturesque ranch house by the Montana River with her two daughters, Paige (Elle Chapman) and Abigail (Beau Garrett).
Suits actor Adams takes on the role of Russell, the city-dwelling investment banker spouse of Paige, who grapples with adjusting to the rigours of life in the wilderness.
Speaking exclusively to Reach at The Madison’s London premiere, Adams reminisced: “My first impression was how cool it is that he’s there for this journey. Because, at first I was like, this seems like a guy who’d probably be like ‘I’m gonna stay home and work. You go do your thing in Montana’”, reports the Express.
“So I was just really impressed that he showed up no matter what, to be this uncomfortable in an unfamiliar environment.
“But never is there a doubt that he’s gonna do it, because he loves these people and he’s gonna show up for them. Whatever the seed of that was, I had a lot of respect for that.”
In the first three episodes, released today (Saturday, 14th March) on Paramount+, Russell and Paige strive to solidify their bond whilst courageously navigating the challenges of their new surroundings, often with comical outcomes.
This is a stark contrast from Adams’ portrayal of the suave, unlicensed solicitor Michael James Ross in the USA Network drama Suits, where he starred alongside Meghan Markle as Rachel Elizabeth Zane for seven series.
Reflecting on his time on the show, he revealed: “I shot a show for years in a studio on the outskirts of Toronto, so now, every day, to drive through the most beautiful state in the world and just be by this river all day, it’s unspeakably beautiful.”
He added: “And inspiring, it does so much of the work for you. If you ever feel uninspired or you’re not sure how you feel, you just look around and look at the sky and look at the mountains and watch the sun go down. That’s all you need, it’s a magical place.”
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Numerous fans are poised to be captivated by Sheridan’s expansive new family drama, with another trio of episodes arriving in a week’s time.
Viewers also have reason to rejoice as The Madison has already been renewed and even filmed its second series, so anticipate the Clyburns’ saga to resume imminently.
The Madison continues next Saturday on Paramount+.
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what a new study says about menopause treatment
Hormone therapy is widely used to treat menopausal symptoms such as hot flushes and night sweats. But scientists have long debated whether it affects dementia risk.
A new study adds another piece to this puzzle. It suggests that an Alzheimer’s biomarker may help identify which women are more vulnerable to dementia with certain hormone therapies.
Researchers analysed blood samples from 2,766 women recruited into a clinical trial in 1996 to 1999. They then followed participants until 2021 to examine whether levels of plasma p-tau217 at the start of the study were linked to people developing dementia, and whether this relationship differed depending on whether participants had used hormone therapy.
Plasma p-tau217 is a biomarker for Alzheimer’s disease, a measurable biological signal of the condition. Higher levels in the blood are linked to brain changes associated with Alzheimer’s.
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The study compared women who received a placebo or two types of hormone therapy. One was combined hormone therapy containing oestrogen and progesterone, usually prescribed for women who still have their womb. The other was oestrogen-only therapy, typically given after hysterectomy.
Women with higher levels of the Alzheimer’s biomarker had a substantially greater risk of developing dementia. In the study’s main analysis, higher baseline p-tau217 levels were associated with about three times the risk.
However, the relationship differed depending on the type of hormone therapy used. Among women assigned to combined hormone therapy, higher biomarker levels were linked to roughly four times the risk of dementia. This pattern was not seen among women using oestrogen-only therapy.
The association was strongest in certain groups, including women aged over 70, white women and those carrying the APOE4 genotype, a genetic variant that increases a person’s risk of developing Alzheimer’s disease.
Scientists think the difference between therapies may relate to how hormones interact with Alzheimer’s biology. Oestrogen may help protect brain cells and influence how the brain processes amyloid and tau proteins that accumulate in Alzheimer’s disease. Progesterone may modify these effects in ways that are not yet fully understood.
Colleagues and I earlier found that carriers of this genetic risk factor who used hormone therapy also had worse dementia-related biomarkers than those not using hormones or not carrying the genetic risk.
Earlier evidence
Data for the new analysis came from the Women’s Health Initiative studies, a large programme of clinical trials examining the long-term health effects of hormone therapy.
One component of this programme, the Women’s Health Initiative Memory Study, examined whether hormone therapy influenced dementia risk. The 2003 study found that combined hormone therapy roughly doubled the risk of dementia among women aged 65 and older. The wider hormone therapy trial was later stopped earlier than planned because overall risks, including breast cancer, stroke and blood clots, outweighed the benefits.
These findings applied to women who began hormone therapy after age 65. At the time, hormone therapy was often prescribed long-term to prevent conditions such as osteoporosis. Today it is usually started earlier, around menopause, which occurs at about age 50.
After these results were published, many women stopped taking hormone therapy, including those near menopause.
Later research suggested a more nuanced picture. Follow-up analyses of women who started hormone therapy between the ages of 50 and 54 found no evidence that treatment affected cognitive function when assessed six to seven years after the trial ended.

SpeedKingz/Shutterstock
Similar findings have been reported in other clinical trials of relatively healthy women who began hormone therapy close to menopause. These studies suggest that up to ten years of combined hormone therapy appears generally safe but does not provide measurable cognitive benefits.
The picture looks different when hormone therapy is started later in life.
Different results in older women
Among women who began hormone therapy after age 65 in the Women’s Health Initiative studies, overall cognitive performance declined when tested around age 70. This decline was particularly noticeable in women who already had lower cognitive function at the start of the study.
Further evidence came from a 2010 analysis of the same group of women. Eight years after joining the study, MRI scans showed trends towards smaller volumes in the hippocampus and frontal lobes among older women using combined hormone therapy.
Shrinking in the hippocampus is commonly seen in Alzheimer’s disease and may indicate that combined hormone therapy could worsen existing brain vulnerability in some older women.
New findings
The new analysis adds further evidence and is consistent with meta-analyses by my colleagues and me of national registry data showing increased Alzheimer’s risk in older women using combination hormone therapy but not oestrogen alone. A smaller increase was also seen in women nearer menopause when treatment lasted more than five years.
Menopausal symptoms themselves may also play a role. Severe hot flushes and night sweats have been linked to a higher risk of dementia when they occur later in life. Women with these symptoms are also more likely to use hormone therapy, making the effects of symptoms harder to separate from treatment.
Symptom severity is also associated with other dementia risk factors, including smoking and obesity, poor sleep, and stress and alcohol use.
What does this mean for women?
Importantly, this study does not show that hormone therapy itself causes dementia. Instead, it suggests that biological risk markers may help identify women who could be more vulnerable when treatment begins later in life.
Overall, the relationship between hormone therapy and dementia risk appears to depend on when treatment starts, whether someone already has underlying risk factors, and how long therapy is used.
Starting combined hormone therapy later in life, particularly after age 65, may increase the risk of cognitive decline in some women. But studies have generally not found the same risks when treatment begins around menopause and is used for shorter periods.
Taking hormone therapy for five years or less when started around menopause has not been linked to increased cognitive decline or Alzheimer’s disease in clinical trials or in most national registry studies.
Because most women use hormone therapy for a limited time to manage menopausal symptoms, it is unlikely to increase dementia risk when started around menopause.
NewsBeat
Wales player ratings v Italy as new stars come of age amid captain’s courage
This was a much better performance from Wales who claimed their first win in the Six Nations since March 2023
Wales won a Six Nations game for the first time in three years as they claimed a 31-17 victory over Italy at the Principality Stadium.
Steve Tandy’s side scored four tries in total with Aaron Wainwright (twice), Dewi Lake and Dan Edwards touching down. Edwards also contributed 11 extra points from the kicking tee, including a 40-metre drop goal.
Here are the Wales player ratings.
15. Louis Rees-Zammit 7
The Wales full-back looked very threatening with ball in hand linking up very well with both Ellis Mee and Josh Adams.
Rees-Zammit was also strong under the high-ball.
14. Ellis Mee 8
Mee was excellent under the high ball, and he chased very well. The Scarlets man looked physical in contact and made a couple of incisive breaks.
He also got his body underneath an Italian player to stop a try in the second half.
13. Eddie James 7
The 23-year-old put in some huge hits and made some excellent reads in defence. James carried very well getting over the gain-line while his distribution was also very good.
12. Joe Hawkins 7
The Scarlets centre carried well while his distribution helped cut open the Italian defence.
Hawkins’ partnership with Eddie James has also improved over the past four Test matches.
11. Josh Adams 7
The experienced winger was as solid as ever under the high ball and defended well as usual.
Adams also looked a threat with ball in hand and seemed more like his old self.
10. Dan Edwards 8
The Ospreys man controlled the game and kicked well out of hand.
Edwards was a threat with ball in hand showing his pace to score his second international try while he also got the backline moving well.
He plays with so much confidence and even kicked a drop goal from 40 metres out.
9. Tomos Williams 7
The 31-year-old was a constant threat with ball in hand keeping the Italy backrow honest throughout.
He kicked well out of hand and put in a tremendous try-saving tackle on Tommaso Allan.
8. Aaron Wainwright 8 (Star man)
Wales’ best player throughout the course of this Six Nations and it was no different in the final round.
Wainwright hit a superb angle to power his way over the line for Wales’ opening try.
7. James Botham 8
The Cardiff backrower put in another huge shift making 15 tackles while he also carried very well.
His work at the breakdown was his main attribute ensuring Wales got clean ball at the ruck while also effectively slowing Italy’s down.
6. Alex Mann 7
It was another huge shift from the Cardiff backrower who put in 11 tackles and was also very effective at the breakdown.
One of Wales’ most improved players.
5. Ben Carter 8
The Dragons lock has come of age over the course of the Six Nations and is now a first choice player.
Carter was given the responsibility of calling the lineouts, an area of the game in which Wales excelled against the Azzurri.
4. Dafydd Jenkins 7
The Exeter Chiefs lock has been consistently excellent for Wales throughout the Six Nations.
Jenkins got through a mountain of unseen work yet again, making 12 tackles while he was also very effective at the set-piece.
3. Tomas Francis 7
At the start of the Six Nations Tandy said Francis was one of the first players he spoke to upon taking the job.
The Wales coach knows the importance of a strong scrummaging tighthead and Francis has been worth his weight in gold.
He only lasted 37 minutes this time around due to injury but in that time he was excellent.
2. Dewi Lake 8
The Ospreys star led from the front making 13 carries and consistently got Wales over the gain-line.
Lake has improved immeasurably since the opening round defeat at Twickenham and has been nothing short of outstanding in his courageous leadership.
1. Rhys Carre 8
The Wales prop was outstanding yet again carrying extremely well and even winning a penalty at the breakdown late in the first-half.
Carre also scrummaged very well as Wales took the Italians to the cleaners in this area.
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Replacements
16. Ryan Elias 6
The Scarlets hooker carried well and was solid at the lineout.
17. Nicky Smith 6
Smith scrummaged well and got through a lot of work.
18. Archie Griffin 5
The Bath prop was busy around the park but blotted his copybook when he got sent to the sin bin.
19. Adam Beard 5
Solid if not spectacular.
20. Olly Cracknell 5
Solid with a few strong carries.
21. Kieran Hardy N/A
Not enough time.
22. Jarrod Evans 5
Solid.
23. Blair Murray N/A
Not enough time.
NewsBeat
Interstate rivalry heats up as Chicago Bears flirt with leaving Soldier Field for Indiana
SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (AP) — A turf war over a football team is developing between two Midwestern states with a sometimes-discordant history.
The storied Chicago Bears want to leave historic Soldier Field, where they’ve played for half a century. Indiana lawmakers are attempting to lure them from the Windy City with a plan to finance and build a domed stadium in Hammond, Indiana, about 25 miles (40 kilometers) from their current home on Lake Michigan’s shore.
The Illinois General Assembly has responded with legislation that would give tax breaks to so-called megaprojects of at least $100 million, a plan that would encompass the Bears’ proposal to build a complex in the northwest Chicago suburb of Arlington Heights, about the same distance from Soldier Field as Hammond.
Critics complain it’s a bad deal for Illinois, where property taxes are already among the highest in the nation — especially when taxpayers still owe hundreds of millions of dollars on a Soldier Field renovation from two decades ago.
Here’s a look at what’s shaping up to be a showdown.
Why the big deal?
The Bears, one of only two remaining NFL founding members, are legend. Their nine championships, including a Super Bowl win, are second only to the rival Green Bay Packers — though recent decades have brought mostly heartbreak. The franchise carries an $8.9 billion price tag, among the most valuable of the NFL’s 32 teams, according to Forbes.
Born in the central Illinois city of Decatur in 1920, the Bears have called Chicago home for 105 years. Losing them to the Hoosier State would be a major thumb in the eye.
What’s wrong with Soldier Field?
With 61,500 seats, it’s the NFL’s smallest. The Bears have always rented their facilities — the Cubs’ Wrigley Field from 1921 to 1970, and Soldier Field, maintained by the Chicago Park District, since. Like most teams, they want to own a stadium, giving them control over operations, scheduling and revenue streams from ticket sales, concessions, parking, naming rights and more.
And Soldier Field is open air. An enclosed facility would allow for other marquee sporting events: Super Bowls, NCAA Final Fours or WrestleMania, for instance.
Why the imbroglio between the states?
Along with the states’ established cultural and economic differences and an intense college basketball rivalry, the political fissure between Democrat-dominated Chicago and conservative Indiana has widened. It amped up last year when Indiana adopted a commission to study changing the state’s boundaries to include some central Illinois counties whose voters have approved ballot measures calling for secession from Chicagoland.
Arlington Heights, back to Chicago, to Hammond
The Bears have threatened to leave Chicago previously. When they broached moving in 1975, then-Mayor Richard J. Daley replied, “Like hell they will.”
But the City of Big Shoulders heaved an anxious sigh in 2023 when the Bears paid about $200 million for a 326-acre (132-hectare) former horse-racing track in Arlington Heights. They have envisioned a $5 billion, taxpayer-assisted development for a domed stadium and campus of housing, hotels, entertainment and retail space.
In 2024, the Bears offered a $5 billion plan, partially taxpayer-funded, for an enclosed stadium next to Soldier Field, which garnered little interest in the capital of Springfield. Late last fall, the team turned to Indiana.
Where the proposals stand
Indiana’s lure creates the Northwest Indiana Stadium Authority to finance, construct and lease a domed stadium near Wolf Lake in Hammond. Indiana Gov. Mike Braun signed it into law on Feb. 26. The Bears would agree to a 35-year lease. Borrowed state money would cover the as-yet-unknown cost of construction, repaid by increased local hospitality taxes.
In Illinois, majority Democrats have advanced legislation in the House that would provide incentives for any so-called megaproject of at least $500 million — or less, down to $100 million, depending on the number of jobs created. Developers would pay property taxes frozen at the parcel’s pre-construction value for as long as 45 years. During that time, they would make annual payments in lieu of taxes negotiated with local governments. There would also be a sales tax exemption on building materials for up to 15 years.
Critics claim weakness in Illinois plan
Opponents say the Illinois legislation, with its decades-long property tax freeze, would simply mean increased taxes for homeowners and other businesses — the payment in lieu of taxes would be a bonus.
Democratic Gov. JB Pritzker, who supports the plan, last week countered that the proposal would encourage development on land that isn’t producing property taxes while ensuring increased revenue for local governments.
Meanwhile, a substantial debt remains on the last accommodation. Taxpayers in 2001 put up $399 million to finance a $587 million renovation of Soldier Field. With interest, the remaining tab is $467 million, according to the state’s Commission on Government Forecasting and Accountability.
The Bears’ $7 million annual lease runs through 2033. Breaking it would cost the Bears a $10.5 million penalty for each year left on the agreement.
NewsBeat
Love Island host Maya Jama ready to move on from presenting as she eyes up new career
TV personality Maya Jama has reportedly decided she would like to go back to her first choice of career, acting, despite giving up after becoming ‘disheartened’ as a teenager
Love Island host Maya Jama has admitted she “is ready to move on” from presenting, as she eyes up a new career in acting. Drama was actually the TV star’s first love, with Maya, 31, auditioning for Channel 4‘s hit teen series Skins when she was just 15.
Despite getting to the final stages, she didn’t make it into the cast, which launched the careers of the likes of Nicholas Hoult, Dev Patel and Daniel Kaluuya. And now the Bristol-born star, who is in a relationship with Man City footballer Ruben Dias, is ready to leave presenting to go back into acting.
Speaking to the BBC, Maya revealed she got “disheartened” after having to many unsuccessful auditions as a teen, leading her to give up on her dream. But now, after filming has wrapped for the upcoming release of the second season of Netflix crime thriller The Gentlemen, Maya’s love for the art has been reignited.
She told the broadcaster that her “dream role” would be to play a villain, but she “naturally fell into presenting roles” after starting out on YouTube. After a few years on social media, she made the move to TV to co-host ITV game show Cannonball, as well as MOBO Awards in 2017.
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The year after she booked to host reality show The Circle and then ITV2 panel show Don’t Hate the Playaz. Of course, Jama’s big break came in 2022 when she replaced Laura Whitmore as the host for hit ITV reality dating show, Love Island.
Maya added: “I always remember when I started being like ‘how on Earth am I going to get on primetime TV as a girl from Bristol doing YouTube videos’ – it seemed like a massive reach.”
She added: “I naturally fell into presenting when I was young because I got to be myself on camera and I’m interested in humans”, adding: “Now it just feels like the doors opened up again [to get into acting]”. Maya said she is “ready to do something else after presenting for so long.”
Maya reportedly plays the glam wife of a friend of lead character Eddie Horniman, alongside the likes of Vinnie Jones and Ray Winstone. She spent time in 2025 filming at Gloucestershire’s Grade II listed building Badminton House, which is Eddie’s home.
The TV personality soft-launched her new gig with the streamer on social media at the start of last year. She teased her followers on Instagram when she posted a snap of a cast list with the Netflix logo on it.
She also shared a peek of a Netflix script, and posted a photo of her and Skins star Kaya, who plays mob boss Susie Glass in the show. Further adding to the speculation around what is next for Maya, she posted a photo of a Netflix mug, with fans then certain she was working on something big.
A source told The Sun : “Maya is over the moon to land a role in such a massive show with Guy Ritchie at the helm. The Gentlemen was one of 2024’s biggest series and it’s such a glossy, sexy show. It’s a perfect fit.”
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‘Dangerous’ Welsh coast path closed as walkers relive hairy moments
Two sections of the Wales Coast Path have been closed due to dangerous conditions, with walkers saying they ‘literally nearly died’ on paths covered in mud and water above steep drops to the sea
Two stretches of the Wales Coast Path have been shut in Gwynedd due to “dangerous conditions”. Walkers had reported dangerous areas along the route on the northern Llŷn Peninsula.
The affected sections are between Traeth Towyn and Porth Ychain near Tudweliog; and from Porthor to Anelog slightly further west. Alternative routes are in place.
On social media, a walker reported the footpath has been “slowly slipping for a while”. Another said it was “where we literally nearly died”. A third remarked: “Can’t believe we made it round.”
In late January, a wooden walkway was engulfed by a large sinkhole in the same location, between Trefgraig Plas and Bodferin near Llangwnnadl. Members of the public were urged “not walk past under any circumstances”, reports North Wales Live.
The recent closures followed accounts that Pen Llŷn sections were submerged in mud and water above a precipitous drop to the sea. Cyngor Gwynedd said they were shut for safety purposes. For the biggest stories in Wales first sign up to our daily newsletter here
A spokesperson said: “This decision has been made to protect the path users, and we kindly ask that the public avoids the area and uses the alternative route for the time being.
“Cyngor Gwynedd’s Wales Coast Path team are monitoring the situation closely, and they will provide an update in the coming weeks.”
A succession of closures have impacted the 870-mile route following a winter of persistent rainfall. Eighteen sections are presently inaccessible.
While some are connected to construction projects, the bulk have resulted from erosion and landslides.
Among the most recent incidents was a significant landslip at Porth Swtan, Llanfaethlu. Also on Anglesey, a landslide affected the coastal path at Traeth Lligwy, requiring a diversion along road and footpath connecting to Porth y Môr.
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Love Island’s Alex Bowen undergoes vasectomy after Olivia’s ‘very scary close call’
Love Island star Olivia Bowen has opened up about how scary the birth of her second child was and how that has affected not only her parenting, but whether or not she would have more children
Olivia Bowen has said a “close call” during the birth of her daughter left her “anxious as a mum” and explained how her pregnancy led to her husband’s vasectomy. The Love Island star gave birth to her second child, Siena, August 2025.
The star, who shares her children with fellow Love Islander Alex Bowen, had already suffered heartbreak during the pregnancy, as she was originally expecting twins but suffered a miscarriage at eight weeks. As such, she only carried Siena to term. Olivia has now explained that the birth was difficult and that caused her and husband to decide not to have more children. They already shared a son called Abel.
READ MORE: Too Hot To Handle stars reveal they are expecting twins in sweet pregnancy postREAD MORE: Alex Bowen devastated by friend’s suicide as he makes desperate plea
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“I had a really bad haemorrhage during the birth,” Olivia told Fabulous. “It was a close call, so it was very scary for both of us.” She added that she felt the her “close call” changed her parenting.
“I think those things have made me a bit more anxious as a mum. I don’t think I was like this with Abel – I remember being more laid-back,” she said. “But if Siena’s got the smallest of snotty noses or a bit of a cough, I’m Googling it as I get so nervous.”
She went on to say that she and Alex decided they did not want anymore children. This was for a variety of reasons, including losing Siena’s twin, as Olivia felt she couldn’t “do that again”. To make sure they do not have anymore children, Alex underwent a vasectomy.
Olivia added that there was something “bittersweet” about knowing she would not be having anymore children. She said she didn’t want to stop breastfeeding Siena too soon as it “feels sad” that she “will never do it again”.
Alex’s vasectomy is not the only major parenting decision the two have made recently. Olivia and Alex also decided to move their whole family to the UK as “it feels scary” to raise their children in the UK.
Olivia told Fabulous that she is “scared to raise a son” and that it feels “heavy to be a parent in the UK”. This prompted their move to Alicante in Spain, especially as Abel enjoys being outside.
She said that the “lifestyle” in Spain makes sense for their family and that they are looking at schools in Marbella. Abel is due to start school in September, but Olivia explained that she and Alex were thinking about deferring him until January so that they could “get him used” to Spain.
Olivia and Alex first met in Spain. The two met when they both appeared on series two of Love Island in 2016, where they spent weeks in a villa in Mallorca. As that series’ winners, Nathan and Cara Massey had a brief split in 2017 before getting back together and getting married, Olivia and Alex are Love Island’s longest-lasting couple.
If you have been affected by this story, advice and support can be found at the Miscarriage Association. You can call them on 01924 200799 or email info@miscarriageassociation.org.uk
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Britain’s Got Talent viewers fuming as ITV show dropped from schedule this weekend
Britain’s Got Talent will not air this weekend because of the rugby Six Nations but some people are unhappy about the decision
Britain’s Got Talent viewers were left fuming as the latest instalment of the show was postponed because of the rugby.
The ITV entertainment favourite – which is fronted by presenters Ant and Dec – usually airs on Saturday nights.
But tonight’s instalment of the show (March 14) was delayed to make way for the Six Nations coverage. The tournament will air from 7.20pm on ITV1, with the France and England game set to kick off at 8.10pm.
However, some viewers were unimpressed, posting messages on social media revealing they would rather have tuned in to see Simon Cowell, Alesha Dixon, Amanda Holden and newcomer KSI judging the latest Britain’s Got Talent auditions.
READ MORE: ITV Britain’s Got Talent fans baffled as huge star fails to make main showREAD MORE: Britain’s Got Talent child star unrecognisable 17 years after ‘most watched’ audition
One posted on X, which was formerly Twitter: “What have you done with Britain’s Got Talent?? You have ruined Saturday’s viewing for millions of people… millions of viewers will switch to another channel.”
“There is no BGT, 1% Club or Jonathan Ross because of the rugby!” exclaimed someone else.
Another viewer remarked on Facebook: “The BGT show has been really amazing this year. A lot of unusual acts which have been amazing. Yes why take off prime shows for rugby. There should be a separate sports channel.”
“They should have a separate channel for sports,” agreed someone else. “Booo!!” said one fan on Reddit.
However, others were pleased to hear that the rugby would be on, saying it was “good” news and that they were looking forward to the coverage.
“If we only had other TV channels and programmes to watch???” joked one.
The latest series of Britain’s Got Talent started in February, with the pre-recorded auditions currently airing.
Simon and co have already given out some Golden Buzzers, with 16-year-old magician Rafferty Coope and Australian para-athlete Paul Nunnari among those sent straight through to the next round of the competition.
The judges also awarded the Golden Buzzer to real-world video game act Antigravity, who had Simon and Alesha racing to hit the button first.
For the latest showbiz, TV, movie and streaming news, go to the new **Everything Gossip** website.
Britain’s Got Talent airs on ITV.
NewsBeat
Suspected firearms seized following searches in Derry
The items were found during searches conducted in the city today
Detectives from the Police Service of Northern Ireland’s Terrorism Investigation Unit located two suspected firearms during searches conducted in the Currynierin and Creggan areas of Derry.
PSNI said the searches were carried out earlier today, on Saturday March 14, as part of an ongoing investigation into dissident Republican criminality.
Derry City and Strabane Chief Inspector Craig added: “Firearms are extremely dangerous and present a serious risk. Removing them from communities will remain a priority.
READ MORE: Man injured after detaining suspected burglar at South Down propertyREAD MORE: Witnesses sought after quad bike stolen and driven away from farm on trailer
“I want to thank the local community for their patience while officers conducted these searches.”
A number of items were seized for further examination, including the two suspected firearms, the force stated that enquiries are on going.
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