Café Italia and Tesoro Pizza Napoletana have both been announced as finalists in the Best Restaurant (North West) category at the UK Italian Awards 2026.
They will compete against other top venues from across the region, with the winners set to be revealed at a gala final at the London Marriott Grosvenor Hotel on March 30.
Tesoro Pizza Napoletana, a family-run restaurant based on New Hall Lane in Heaton, specialises in authentic Neapolitan pizza.
Joe Whittaker and Peter Lancaster from Tesoro (Image: Newsquest)
The business says it has focused on quality over quantity since opening, using high-quality ingredients sourced from local suppliers alongside authentic Italian cheeses and cured meats.
Advertisement
Some of the produce used in the restaurant is also available to buy at its neighbouring deli, Provisions by Tesoro.
The restaurant also highlights the traditional approach taken by its team, with pizzas prepared by hand and baked in a traditional Neapolitan oven, visible to diners from the dining room.
Café Italia, which was established in 2014, is owned by Vito Cammarota, who trained as a chef in his native Italy before moving to the UK.
Mr Cammarota, who is originally from Naples, moved to England 17 years ago at the age of 18. After working in a number of Italian restaurants across Bolton, he took ownership of Café Italia in 2017.
Advertisement
Bruschetta from Café Italia (Image: NQ)
He told The Bolton News: “We’ve been going for at least seven years now and we actually won in 2020.
“It’s across the whole of the UK, so it’s a good competition to be a finalist in.
“It would be a great achievement to win, as it shows the hard work we’re putting in.
“We’d like to thank all of our customers because it means they appreciate what we’re doing.
Advertisement
“Hopefully it will be a good night.”
The UK Italian Awards 2026 celebrate Italian cuisine and businesses across the country, with categories including Best Chef, Best Pizza and Best Mixologist.
Regional awards aim to recognise talent nationwide, while London-specific categories are judged by an expert panel including several celebrity chefs.
Both Bolton restaurants will be hoping to bring the title back to the town and further highlight its thriving Italian food scene.
Speaking about Aramayo on the red carpet of the 79th British Academy Film Awards, Jones said: “I knew Robert was right for the part very early on, and because the finance was structured in a certain way, I was able to cast him without having to justify that decision or ask for people’s permission to do it – which is the purest way to cast the film. That’s how it should be done.
Christopher Williams Davies was banned indefinitely following a professional conduct hearing
Carrington Walker and Abbie Wightwick
17:13, 22 Feb 2026
A college lecturer has been removed from the teaching register after sending a student a series of messages in which he called them “sweet cheeks” and “good girl”.
Christopher Williams Davies was banned indefinitely following a professional conduct hearing, which found his messages to two students at Coleg y Cymoedd, which has campuses in Aberdare, Nantgarw, Rhondda and Ystrad Mynach, were inappropriate, “sexual in nature” and amounted to serious misconduct, WalesOnline reports.
Advertisement
In one exchange, Davies told a student, or someone he believed to be a student: “Nobody sees your phone though, right? Can’t even begin to say the trouble I’d be in if anyone else saw these messages,” the panel heard.
The panel heard other messages sent by the former teacher to the student, which included a picture of a chocolate bar on his lap, with comments such as:
‘What’s it worth?’, ‘Persuade me’, ‘So what do I get?’, ‘You’re not trying very hard. You can’t want this Freddo that much…’, ‘Interesting… What else do I get?’, ‘What else you got?’, ‘What could you give that you don’t have to buy?’, ‘You didn’t show me the photos like you promised’, ‘Why can’t I see them now?’, ‘Good girl’ and ‘Sweet cheeks’.
Advertisement
The exchange occurred between October 11, 2023, and November 22, 2023, and also involved the student, identified only as Learner A to protect their identity, receiving a chocolate bar, the panel found.
In another set of messages, the teacher told a second student: “Could look at you all day ngl (not going to lie)” and said “You’re making me very hot under the collar here”. Davies also told the student, referred to only as Learner B in the hearing: “Wow you really are incredible” and “these pics are getting addictive”.
The now-banned teacher then seemed to become worried, messaging Learner B: “Nobody sees your phone though, right? Can’t even begin to say the trouble I’d be in if anyone else saw these messages”, and: “Just realised this convo took place on a works platform”.
Advertisement
In another message sent to Learner B between around September 26, 2023, and November 29, 2023, Davies said: “You’re giving me very unprofessional thoughts again… You’re getting very good at doing that xx”.
A committee, sitting remotely between January 2 and 22, 2026, found that the messages were sexual in nature and that they, along with giving Learner A a chocolate bar, did not maintain professional boundaries.
Publishing the findings online, the EWC said the committee imposed a Prohibition Order, indefinitely removing Mr Davies from the Register of Education Practitioners in the category of further education teacher.
It also decided Mr Davies might not make an application for restoration to the Register of Education Practitioners for two years from the hearing’s decision.
Advertisement
If Davies does not make a successful application for eligibility for restoration to the Register after January 22, 2028, he will remain prohibited indefinitely. He had the right of appeal to the High Court within 28 days of the hearing.
The latest rugby news from Wales and around the world
These are your evening rugby headlines on Sunday, February 22.
Advertisement
Wales star addresses ‘gut-wrenching’ moment
Wales star James Botham has addressed the “gut-wrenching” moment Darcy Graham caught the Welsh defence napping to score a try and help Scotland to a comeback victory in Cardiff.
The Cardiff flanker delivered an impressive performance after replacing the injured Taine Plumtree just 10 minutes into Saturday’s Six Nations clash at the Principality Stadium, putting in a huge defensive shift with 15 tackles.
But after Jarrod Evans had stretched Wales’ lead to 11 points from the tee shortly before the hour mark, Botham could only watch on helplessly as Finn Russell took the restart quickly and the Scotland fly-half’s kick dropped over his shoulder and into the hands of Graham, who raced over to score.
The Edinburgh wing’s try brought Scotland right back into the game at 23-19 and helped momentum shift in the visitors’ favour, with George Turner’s score five minutes from time denying Wales a first Six Nations victory in nearly three years.
Like most players in red, Botham was getting back into position when Russell took the restart and had his back turned to the action as Graham capitalised to devastating effect.
Having been closest to the ball, however, the back-rower – who turned 28 today – admits that the split-second change in fortunes is difficult to take but will serve as motivation to progress in the final two games of the tournament.
“That’s international sport,” he said of the moment. “If you look at all the teams everyone’s so good now. Switch off for a split second and you’re penalised for it.
Advertisement
“It is gut-wrenching but we’ve got to use that to move forward into the next game.”
On the overall result, Botham added: “Emotionally it is tough, but that’s professional sport. We started off really well, that’s what we were aiming to do. The fact that it hurts is probably a good thing and that we were in it until the last minute.
“There’s a lot of positives to take from it because it was definitely one of the best performances we’ve done for a long time. It’s all progression, we’ve got two games left and we’ve got to focus on them now.
“Debrief this one and then we’ll go to Ireland raring to go,” he added. “It’s how we bounce back now.”
Advertisement
Ensure our latest sport headlines always appear at the top of your Google Search by making us a Preferred Source. Click here to activate or add us as Preferred Source in your Google search settings
Six Nations star receives apology
England back-rower Sam Underhill says he and his team-mates felt compelled to apologise to captain Maro Itoje after his special day went badly wrong against Ireland.
Itoje won his 100th cap for his country at Twickenham on Saturday, with his family cheering him on from the stands as they celebrated the latest landmark achievement of his career.
But things soon went pear-shaped as England suffered a humiliating 21-42 thumping at the hands of Andy Farrell’s side, with skipper Itoje replaced after 54 minutes to cap a miserable day for the Saracens lock.
Advertisement
After the match, Underhill revealed that the team were all too aware that they couldn’t give Itoje what he deserved on his milestone day, as he admitted the result was “disappointing”.
“We addressed it as a team that we couldn’t give him the day we wanted for him,” he told reporters. “He’s an incredibly gracious human being. He mentioned it himself, that’s sport, progress isn’t linear. Those were his words.
“We can still celebrate what an achievement 100 caps is. It’s disappointing but it doesn’t take the shine off what is a phenomenal individual accomplishment. He’s a phenomenal player, athlete, human being and leader.”
With England – who were seen as potential title contenders ahead of the tournament – falling to two defeats in their opening three matches, Underhill added: “We’re obviously disappointed with the result.
Advertisement
“We can acknowledge that, but also acknowledge that it’s a part of progress sometimes. Progress isn’t linear and how we respond is important. This is a phenomenally competitive tournament and the game is always evolving, teams are always evolving. Any team you play is never the same again: stylistically, individually.
“Our job is to keep improving as much as we can. Even off the back of a win, you come away with a dozen things you can improve. It’s no different after a loss,” he continued.
“You’re never as bad as people think you are and never as good as people think you are. We weren’t the best team in the world four weeks ago and we’re not the worst team now. We’ll stick at it. Stay close as a group. I hope there are good things ahead for this team.”
Doris: This is the benchmark
By Edward Elliot, Press Association
Advertisement
Ireland captain Caelan Doris believes Saturday’s record-breaking 42-21 demolition of England is a new benchmark for future performances.
Andy Farrell’s side responded to their detractors in emphatic fashion by securing Ireland’s largest win at Twickenham courtesy of a stunning display in the Guinness Six Nations.
Ireland’s heavy round-one loss away to France had fuelled suggestions the team is in decline following a tough autumn series before last weekend’s unconvincing win over Italy did little to quell the concerns.
“I spoke about Paris being a reference point where hopefully we’ll see a pretty steep incline in terms of performances,” said Doris. “I think this will now be a reference point that we look back on as a proper good performance that’s given us a lot of belief.
Advertisement
“I’ve also mentioned that at the core of what we’re doing in training, in camp, there has been belief still, and I think you saw some of that through how we played.
“It was just an unbelievable atmosphere. You talk about inspiring the nation and getting the Irish people behind us and hopefully that brought both the people here and at home a bit of joy. “We definitely enjoyed it.”
Ireland’s previous biggest victory away to England was a 32-15 success in 2022. Back-rower Doris played a starring role in south-west London and was singled out for praise by head coach Farrell.
“I thought he had his best game in a good while,” Farrell said. “He was immense in his carry. That’s Caelan at his best.
Advertisement
“How he led from the front and got us over the gainline was outstanding, but we could 100 per cent have two minutes on every single person out there.”
NEW YORK (AP) — The Transportation Security Administration said Sunday that its PreCheck program would remain operational despite an earlier announcement from the U.S. Department of Homeland Security that the airport security service was being suspended during the partial government shutdown.
“ As staffing constraints arise, TSA will evaluate on a case by case basis and adjust operations accordingly,” the agency said.
It was not immediately clear whether Global Entry, another airport service, would be affected. PreCheck and Global Entry are designed to help speed registered travelers through security lines, and suspensions would likely cause headaches and delays.
The turmoil is tied to a partial government shutdown that began Feb. 14 after Democrats and the White House were unable to reach a deal on legislation to fund the Department of Homeland Security. Democrats have been demanding changes to immigration operations that are core to President Donald Trump’s deportation campaign.
Advertisement
Homeland Security previously said it was taking “emergency measures to preserve limited funds.” Among the steps listed were “ending Transportation Security Administration (TSA) PreCheck lanes and Customs and Border Protection (CBP) Global Entry service, to refocus Department personnel on the majority of travelers.”
Secretary Kristi Noem said in a statement on Saturday night that “shutdowns have serious real world consequences.”
One group of fliers will definitely be affected, according to TSA.
“Courtesy escorts, such as those for Members of Congress, have been suspended to allow officers to focus on the mission of securing America’s skies,” the agency said.
Advertisement
Airlines for America, a trade group representing major carriers, said Saturday night that “it’s past time for Congress to get to the table and get a deal done.” It also criticized the announcement by saying it was “issued with extremely short notice to travelers, giving them little time to plan accordingly.”
Democrats on the House Committee on Homeland Security criticized Homeland Security handling of airport security after the initial announcement on Saturday night. They accused the administration of “kneecapping the programs that make travel smoother and secure.”
Sen. Andy Kim, a New Jersey Democrat, said Noem’s actions are part of an administration strategy to distract from other issues and shift responsibility.
“This administration is trying to weaponize our government, trying to make things intentionally more difficult for the American people as a political leverage,” he told CNN on Sunday. “And the American people see that.”
Can anyone stop this French procession? Three matches played, three victories – two with bonus points – and only two further matches, against improving Scotland and declining England, to navigate for a second Grand Slam in four years, and a third championship title in the same period.
Italy, arriving on the back of a victory over the Scots and narrow loss in Dublin, gave it a real lash in Lille and, arguably, provided the sternest test yet for France so far in this year’s championship. Les Bleus scored three tries in the opening 28 minutes and led by 11 points at half-time but it was not until the 71st minute that another point was scored, with wing Gaël Dréan sealing the bonus point on debut.
On Sunday, a spokesperson added: “Detectives investigating a stabbing incident in Lurgan on Saturday, February 21 have charged a woman with attempted murder.
“The 25-year-old is expected to appear before Lisburn Magistrates Court on Monday, February 23. “As is usual procedure, the charge will be reviewed by the Public Prosecution Service.”
Red carpet arrivals for the 2026 BAFTA awards are underway, promising a thoroughly stylish night of celebrating the great and good of film and TV.
Films up for nomination this year include current awards season favourites Marty Supreme, Hamnet and One Battle After Another. The BAFTAs also have a separate category for Outstanding British Film, which contains nominations for Harry Lighton’s biker BDSM romance Pillion, Danny Boyle’s 28 Years Later, and Bridget Jones reboot Mad About The Boy.
Chloé Zhao’s Shakespearean-themed tearjerker Hamnet, which has already claimed two Golden Globes and is up for eight Oscars, is nominated in both categories.
Jessie Buckley attends the 2026 BAFTA awards
Getty Images
Advertisement
Hamnet’s leading lady Jessie Buckley has also received a nod. The 36-year-old Irish actress is up against the likes of Rose Byrne (If I Had Legs I’d Kick You) and Kate Hudson (Song Sung Blue) in the Lead Actress category.
For Best Actor, up-and-coming English actor Robert Aramayo (I Swear) will be competing against Hollywood heavweights Leonardo DiCaprio (One Battle After Another), Ethan Hawke (Blue Moon), Timothée Chalamet (Marty Supreme), Michael B Jordan (Sinners) and Jesse Plemons (Bugonia).
BAFTA Rising Star Award nominee Robert Aramayo wearing Dior
AFP via Getty Images
Aramayo is also nominated for the prestigious BAFTA Rising Star Award, which is one of the biggest commendations a newcomer actor can receive. He is nominated alongside Miles Caton (Sinners), Chase Infiniti (One Battle After Another), Archie Madekwe (Lurker) and Posy Sterling (Lollipop).
Advertisement
Leonardo DiCaprio attends the 2026 BAFTA awards wearing Dior
Getty Images
Speaking ahead of the ceremony, Madekwe told this publication: “I haven’t written anything down in case I jinx it. I’m superstitious like that, but I put like something in my head, just in case. But who knows? What will be will be.”
Madekwe’s nomination will reunite him with Saltburn co-star Jacob Elordi, who is nominated in the Best Supporting Actor category for his performance as Frankenstein’s Monster in Guillermo del Toro’s Frankenstein.
The BAFTA 2026 Film Awards are being hosted by beloved Scottish actor and presenter Alan Cumming, who also hosted the 2025 BAFTA Television Awards. They are held at the Royal Festival Hall.
Advertisement
All the best looks from the BAFTA red carpet 2026:
The Princess of Wales was seen cheekily tapping her husband’s bottom as they walked the red carpet for the BAFTAs in 2023, with a body language expert revealing what might have been behind the tactile gesture
The 2026 BAFTAs will see the who’s who of the British entertainment industry gather to celebrate the best of the arts. In recent years, the Prince and Princess of Wales have attended the event, with the royal couple sharing a cheeky moment on the red carpet in 2023.
Advertisement
William and Kate put on a glamourous display with the Princess of Wales wowing in a recycled Alexander McQueen gown and dramatic black opera-style gloves, while William looked dapper in a full tuxedo. As they walked the carpet, Kate was spotted in a ‘blink and you’ll miss it’ moment, tapping William affectionately on his behind.
The clip quickly went viral on social media, with many royal fans loving the cheeky moment in what was described as a rare flirty PDA. And according to body language expert Judi James, it seems the case that Kate performed the gesture following a mistake by William – and she used it as a reprimand.
Advertisement
She told the Mirror: “This bum-tap gesture is part of a swift series of non-verbal signals between the couple, known as tie-signs. They were clearly more tactile than usual for this red carpet appearance and their very glamorous styling gave them the look of an A-list power couple.
“Like all good A-listers, Kate seemed to be using tie-signs or non-verbal cues to help choreograph their movements but there was one small moment when they appeared to fall out of sync, possibly due to the fact that William seemed unable to keep his eyes off his stunning wife.”
Ensure our latest headlines always appear at the top of your Google Search by making us a Preferred Source. Click here to activate or add us as your Preferred Source in your Google search settings.
Content cannot be displayed without consent
“As they walk past the crowds, Kate seems to look back to acknowledge a complimentary comment with a smile. She then pushes her right hand out towards William’s in what looks like a cue to hold hands. William mistakenly leans in to suggest he is expecting more of the flirty whispering they have been doing and raises his hand as his head gets closer, missing Kate’s offer. Kate then ‘rewards’ William with a pat on the bum. So this works as both a sexy ritual or appreciation and a small reprimand for missing her cue.”
Advertisement
During their evening at the BAFTAs, the couple met BAFTA chairman Krishnendu Majumdar, chief executive Jane Millichip and chairwoman of the BAFTA film committee Anna Higgs ahead of the ceremony.
William told the leaders they were doing a “great job” and nodded as Ms Higgs spoke of how important it was to pursue “diversity” in the industry. He praised Ms Millichip for handling her position well despite being made chief executive in a “baptism of fire”.
During the ceremony, a pre-recorded tribute to the late Queen was paid by Dame Helen Mirren, who played the late monarch in the 2006 biopic The Queen. William and Kate watched from the centre of the front row as Dame Helen said: “Cinema at its best does what Her Majesty did effortlessly – bring us together and unite us through a story. Your Majesty, you were our nation’s leading star.”
Prince William, who has been present of BAFTA since 2010, attended the awards solo in 2024, as Kate took a step back from her royal duties while she underwent treatment for cancer. Before that, the couple attended in 2020.
The singer continued to perform with the popular boyband in spite of his injury
JLS singer Aston Merrygold said that ‘it’s killing me’ as he provided a health update after his recent surgery left him ‘bed-bound’.
Advertisement
The 38-year-old is best known for performing in one of the UK’s biggest boy bands alongside Oritsé Williams, Marvin Humes, and JB Gill. JLS rose to fame after finishing second on ITV singing competition The X Factor in 2008, coming in second to Alexandra Burke.
After heading out on the road with their The Club Is Alive: 2025 Hits Tour, Aston underwent surgery in December after suffering an ankle injury during rehearsals. Despite his injury, Ason continued with the tour as he used crutches and sat down during the gigs.
Appearing on Channel 4 series Sunday Brunch on Sunday (February 22), Aston sat down with Simon Rimmer and Tim Lovejoy to discuss what actually happened and how he fared with his recovery journey.
Advertisement
“I broke everything in my ankle, apart from the bone. So, I’m still here. Basically, jumping off a platform to end the show, I vanished through the stage and landed on some crash mats.
“Obviously, I got excited and probably jumped a bit too high, trapped my leg between the crash mats and my body kept going. So I had to have full ankle reconstruction surgery,” he said.
With Tim joking if he had a ‘team of lawyers on that’, Aston went on to talk about his football playing days and how his fitness routine has been impacted by his injury.
Advertisement
He noted “It’s killing me. But everything, even in the week, going away with the kids for a few days is lovely.”
Asked if he can ‘do anything’, Aston replied: “I can’t run yet. So that’s kind of the extent of it. Stairs are good now, for the ankle progression.”
Tim replied: “You know what they say, and this is so true, a well man has 10,000 wishes and an ill man has one.”
Saying that he ‘100 percent’ agreed with Tim, Aston said that the ‘worst part of the whole thing’ was that he ‘had to be bed-bound at one point’.
Advertisement
“Then, when I could stand up, it had to be no weight. So no picking up the kids, no kind of running around. Obviously I didn’t listen.
“You can’t have those special moments just taken away fully, so I was a bit like, ‘No, there are some things,” he said.
According to Aston, the operation took place on December 5 and the doctors said it would be ‘over six months’ until he’s fully recovered.
JLS are set to go back on the road this summer, playing at Derby’s Darley Park before headlining the Colchester Castle Park in August. The boys will be provided support from Dreams singer Grabrielle.
Freestyle skier Zoe Atkin has won a bronze medal in the women’s halfpipe final at the Winter Olympics in Italy.
It means a record-equalling medal tally of five for Team GB, which had already secured three golds, more than at any other winter Games, as well as a silver in the men’s curling on Saturday.
The total haul of five medals was also achieved in 2014 and 2018.
Image: Atkin competing in the women’s freestyle skiing halfpipe in Livigno. Pic: AP
Atkin, 23, whose father is British and has held dual UK-American citizenship since birth, came into the Games having won the superpipe competition at last month’s Aspen X Games.
Advertisement
Halfpipe skiing involves an athlete performing tricks on a U-shaped course made of hard-packed snow.
Atkin, from Massachusetts, qualified in first place but fell behind Eileen Gu, the defending champion, and Li Fanghui in the final. The Chinese pair won gold and silver, respectively.
Image: (L-R) Li Fanghui and Eileen Gu won silver and gold respectively for China, and Britain’s Zoe Atkin got bronze. Pic: AP
She said she was nervous about the final and “played it a little bit safe on my first run” but then “stepped it up a little bit on my third run”.
More on Winter Olympics 2026
Advertisement
“I’ve been working on my run for the past four years, even longer, and to be able to come back to the Olympics and be on the podium means so much to me,” she said.
Last weekend, Team GB made history with two golds: the first for Charlotte Bankes and Huw Nightingale in the mixed team snowboarding, and the second for Matt Weston and Tabby Stoecker in the mixed team skeleton.
Team GB missed out on a gold on Saturday after losing to Canada in a tense final in the men’s curling.
The team, led by Bruce Mouat, had to settle for silver, a repeat of their result from the Beijing Winter Olympics in 2022.
Team member Bobby Lammie told Sky News: “I think we actually felt good pretty much the majority of the game. We felt in control and felt like we were controlling most of the game… and just unfortunately, there were too many mistakes.”
Advertisement
Advertisement
Team GB curlers on how gold ‘slipped away’
They had hoped to become the first British men’s team to claim curling gold for 102 years.
Mouat, Lammie, Grant Hardie, Hammy McMillan and Kyle Waddell had come into this event after winning two World Championships.
Image: Bruce Mouat’s team had to settle for silver in the men’s curling. Pic: PA
Image: Curlers Bobby Lammie, Grant Hardie and Bruce Mouat. Pic: AP
Director of performance at UK Sport, Dr Kate Baker, told Sky News: “It’s absolutely been an historic games for Team GB. It’s incredible to come away with so many Olympic champions to that point.
Advertisement
“We’ve never had more than one gold medal at a games before, and so to come home with multiple is absolutely brilliant.”
Advertisement
‘Historic games’ for Team GB
This evening will see the closing ceremony in Verona as the curtain comes down on the Winter Olympics.
Norway are currently top of the table when ranked by gold medals. It has 18 compared to 11 from the US in second place, and 10 from The Netherlands in third. Italy is ranked fourth, followed by Germany and France.