Chelsea fans may opt for perspective for their own sanity. Unlike their north London rivals Tottenham, their club is not facing the real prospect of relegation – things could always be worse. But the reality is Tuesday night’s spineless display at Brighton took Chelsea to a low not suffered since the sinking of the Titanic. This is a club in crisis.
Anguish at the Amex was only the latest blow in a cataclysmic run of form, one that has occurred at the most important stage of the season. A run of five league losses on the bounce, all without scoring a goal, has all but ended the Blues’ hopes of finishing inside the top five.
The drop-off under Liam Rosenior, dismissed from his role on Wednesday, in recent weeks has coincided with the ramping up of fan protests against Chelsea’s ownership. “This is not about short-term results,” a Chelsea Supporters’ Trust spokesperson said. “It is about trust, and at this moment in time, that trust has not been earned.”
There are now more fractures than ever within a team that has had £1.87bn pumped into it since the arrival of BlueCo four years ago. A second manager this season has been moved on. Top players are opening the door to moves away as the club nears another dismal finish in this maligned era, which has only delivered Champions League qualification once. So who is to blame?
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When assessing Chelsea’s failings of recent years, most will point the finger straight to the top.
BlueCo’s strategy has been nothing short of disastrous since taking over, as first evidenced solely by performance. A team that was once branded the “blue billion-pound bottle jobs” are close to becoming the two-billion-pound bottle jobs. For all their investment in players, Chelsea should now be fighting for the title – but after four years, they still can’t safely secure a place at Europe’s top table.
Central to their transfer shortcomings is the heavy emphasis on acquiring young talent. More than £1bn has been spent on players 24 and under, having splashed out more on teenagers than the rest of the Premier League’s “big six” combined. It’s a strategy harnessed by many a Fifa Career Mode player over the years – buying footballers with high potential under the assumption it will be reached – but in the real game, BlueCo has proved it as largely ineffective.
Chelsea owner Todd Boehly has come under fire from supporters (PA Wire)
Of the 52 signings sanctioned by Todd Boehly since the summer of 2022, just four have gone on to become indispensable: Moises Caicedo, Enzo Fernandez, Marc Cucurella and Cole Palmer. Brazilian sensation Estevao looks set to become a fifth rare success story for the ownership once he’s fully unleashed – the 18-year-old is still currently having his minutes managed. This hit rate does not justify the five sporting directors – primarily Paul Winstanley and Laurence Stewart, supported by Joe Shields, Sam Jewell and Dave Fallows – that formulate the club’s recruitment.
And from the wheat, there’s a whole lot of chaff. A raft of big-money signings have simply gone on to become fringe players; a trend that again shows issues with recruitment rather than the players themselves. The likes of Wesley Fofana and Romeo Lavia – signed for a combined £124m – almost instantly became glued to the treatment table, raising questions about how either of them passed their medicals. And when it comes to all that youth investment, the majority are shipped out without making a dent on the team; their only real impact being a collective one, as managers have wrapped their heads around an unbelievably bloated squad. It’s something that Enzo Maresca was vocal about, leading to the creation of a “bomb squad”.
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Some of these youngsters are admittedly sold for a profit despite barely playing, which you could call good business. But when taking a glance at the books, you can’t really give BlueCo much credit in that regard.
Chelsea fans protest their owners BlueCo (PA)
A report by The Athletic highlights that Chelsea’s operating losses under BlueCo over the past three years total £689m – or £692,000 every single day. BlueCo has taken on £1.39bn in debt to fund its activities. Crucially, the return on investment just doesn’t seem to be there, either on or off the pitch – Chelsea’s commercial income of £200.9m trails their nearest “big six” rival by over £60m. Behdad Eghbali has previously made the point that the club were poorly managed from a commercial point of view under Roman Abramovich. Stones in glass houses.
The pitfalls of Chelsea’s operation warrant the protests that have intensified in recent weeks. It is undeniable that this is the root cause of their long-term problems. But for this particular crisis in performance, other individuals must be subject to accountability.
Some of the club’s top stars have not exactly helped the cause with their off-field antics. Fernandez wound up with a two-match internal ban for courting Real Madrid in an interview. The Argentinian, who cost Chelsea £106.8m and could very well leave for significantly less than that in the summer, is back with the squad but looked despondent with the club’s state of affairs after full-time against Brighton. He was shrugging his shoulders to the away fans, almost as if to ask: “What more can I do?” BlueCo may argue that toeing the line would have helped.
Enzo Fernandez shrugs his shoulders at the away fans after defeat to Brighton (Reuters)
Cucurella, meanwhile, has publicly questioned the project, namely the club’s decision to fire Maresca mid-season, and is this week facing further scrutiny after reports that his barber leaked the team news for the Brighton trip. “[Cole] Palmer and Joao Pedro injured tonight. There’s your exclusive,” he posted on X, accompanied by an image of the left-back getting his hair cut.
Blame also must lie in the dugout. Rosenior is a young manager at 41 and feels a victim of being groomed for this role by BlueCo – from the outset, it seemed this step up had come way too soon. He was thrown into the deep end thanks to the petulance of his predecessor, with Maresca’s press conference rants putting his bosses in a very difficult position. For all his managerial prowess, the Italian left having created instability.
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But despite a promising start in the hot seat, Rosenior’s inexperience has been shown by how his team have responded to adversity. Past weeks have been defined by muddled tactics and a lack of fight. There had been speculation, denied by the club, that he has lost the dressing room, something which may have coincided with him ditching his policy of defending his players no matter what. “To be even accused of throwing the towel in is unacceptable,” he fumed after the fateful Brighton loss.
Liam Rosenior fumed at his players after an ‘indefensible’ display against Brighton (PA Wire)
The decision of Chelsea’s hierarchy to part ways with Rosenior just four months after he was brought in as BlueCo’s own pet project was, in a way, understandable. But that’s inherently what it comes down to – Chelsea are in this mess because of the decisions of their owners.
This is their making, this is their fault – and the project has reached breaking point. BlueCo is already fighting a civil war against an enraged fanbase in Strasbourg, whose supporters loathe their perceived “pawn of Chelsea” status under multi-club ownership. A similar mutiny is brewing at Stamford Bridge.
The force said they are looking for Valdez Brown, born 10/12/1996, as he is wanted on recall to prison.
Officers said the 29-year-old has links to Radcliffe, Bury, Stockport and Bolton and anybody with information should get in touch.
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A spokesperson, via social media, said: “Can you help us find Valdez Brown (10/12/1996), who is wanted on recall to prison?
“He has links to the Radcliffe, Bury, Stockport and Bolton areas of Greater Manchester.
“Anyone with information of his whereabouts is asked to contact us on 0161 856 8079 / 9594 or contact the independent charity Crimestoppers, anonymously, on 0800 555 111.”
The back to back Masters champion is in a stellar group alongside fellow major champions Jon Rahm and Jordan Spieth for rounds one and two
One major played in 2026, and one major won for Rory McIlroy. On Thursday, he begins the second leg of golf’s major trail for the season at the USPGA in Aronimink in Philadelphia.
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The back to back Masters champion is in a stellar group alongside fellow major champions Jon Rahm and Jordan Spieth for rounds one and two.
McIlroy was struggling with a foot problem during his first practice round ahead of the US PGA Championship. The Holywood man revealed during last week’s Truist Championship that he had a blister on the small toe of his right foot.
He arrived at the course on Monday and addressed the media on Tuesday morning, appearing in good spirits, but reportedly ripped the nail off his toe earlier this week.
The 37-year-old ended his practice round after a few holes, having been seen limping and at one point taken his shoe off to assess the problem, but had previously done extensive range and short-game practice.
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Earlier, McIlroy had underlined his motivation after landing successive Masters titles, saying: “Coming into this tournament feels a lot different than what it did last year.
“I feel like I’ve got some nice clear road ahead to try to get some more of these majors.”
Fellow Holywood golf club man Tom McKibbin is also in action at the USPGA and tees off early at 12.40pm UK time.
Here is everything you need to know about round one:
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Where is the USPGA tournament?
The PGA Championship returns to Aronimink Golf Club, Pennsylvania for the first time in 64 years.
What time does Rory McIlroy tee off on Thursday?
1.40pm (UK time)
Who is in his group?
Jon Rahm and Jordan Spieth
Who is defending champion?
Scottie Scheffler
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Who are the favourites?
Scottie Scheffler is 11/2 favourite. Rory McIlroy is 10/1, Cameron Young 14/1, Jon Rahm 14/1, Xander Schauffele and Ludvig Aberg are 18/1 with Bryson DeChambeau 20/1.
Is the USPGA being televised?
Subscribers can catch every shot on Sky Sports Golf, who will be live from 12.30pm on Thursday and Friday. They will be live until at least midnight, when the final groups complete their rounds.
At the weekend, live coverage will begin at 3pm on Saturday and 4pm on Sunday and the PGA Championship will remain on air for some time after the winner is crowned.
England have ended Ollie Robinson’s two-year international exile and called up uncapped trio Emilio Gay, James Rew and Sonny Baker for the first Test since the dismal Ashes campaign.
Sussex seamer Robinson, 32, returns after being dropped in 2024 as England look for an attack leader to take on New Zealand at Lord’s from 4 June.
As expected, opener Zak Crawley pays the price for his disappointing tour of Australia and is left out for the first time since captain Ben Stokes and coach Brendon McCullum took charge of the England Test team in 2022.
Crawley’s place in the XI is likely to go to Durham 26-year-old Gay, who has the advantage over fellow left-hander Rew, 22, by virtue of being a specialist opener.
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Shoaib Bashir is named in the squad despite being ignored for the entire Ashes series and will vie for the spinner’s spot with Rehan Ahmed. Leg-spinner Ahmed could play in a home Test for the first time.
England have also confirmed the appointment of Australian Marcus North as the new national selector. The Durham director of cricket replaces Luke Wright, who stepped down for personal reasons after the Ashes, and becomes the first foreigner to chair England’s selection panel.
The greatest intrigue from North’s first squad is provided by the recall of Robinson in a pace-bowling department in need of rebuilding after the retirements of Stuart Broad, James Anderson and Chris Woakes in successive years.
Robinson has a hugely impressive Test record, with 76 wickets at an average below 23 from his 20 matches. He was long seen as the new-ball heir to Anderson and Broad.
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But he fell out of favour and was dropped following the tour of India more than two years ago. England grew frustrated with, among other issues, problems around fitness – Robinson suffered back injuries in each of his past two Tests: against Australia at Headingley in 2023 and against India in Ranchi in 2024.
Wes Streeting is set to resign from cabinet and challenge Keir Starmer for the Labour leadership.
The health secretary is expected to quit on Thursday, triggering a fresh crisis for the prime minister.
Allies of Streeting said he has enough support from Labour MPs to launch a leadership campaign.
It comes after showdown talks between Streeting and Starmer lasted barely 15 minutes in Downing Street on Wednesday morning.
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More than 80 Labour MPs – many of them Streeting supporters – have so far publicly called on the PM to quit in the wake of the party’s drubbing in last week’s elections.
Four ministers have also resigned, including junior health minister Zubir Ahmed, who is a former aide to Streeting.
The health secretary has made no public comments since Starmer told his cabinet rivals to put up or shut up at their weekly meeting on Tuesday amid mounting speculation he was set to face a leadership challenge.
Starmer said: “The country expects us to get on with governing. That is what I am doing and what we must do as a cabinet.”
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Streeting is not expected to say anything on Wednesday so as not to overshadow the King’s Speech laying out the government’s plans for the next parliamentary session.
However, it seems increasingly unlikely that Starmer will still be the prime minister to deliver that programme.
Under Labour’s rules, any leadership challengers must have the support of 20% of MPs, which is currently 81.
Labour’s ruling national executive committee (NEC) will decide on the timetable of any leadership contest, and will come under intense pressure to delay it long enough for Andy Burnham to return to Westminster.
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The Greater Manchester mayor is looking for a safe Labour seat to stand in, but faces a race against time as he cannot run to be leader unless he is an MP.
One of his supporters told HuffPost UK: “The NEC decides the timetable so wes triggering doesn’t stop Andy contesting. It would be outrageous for them to try and block the most popular politician in the country from standing.”
If Burnham does not stand, another soft-left candidate such as Ed Miliband or Angela Rayner will almost certainly run against Streeting.
Starmer will also automatically be on the ballot paper as the sitting Labour leader, although it is unknown whether he would want to take part.
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Emergency services shut off the M61 in both directions at junction eight near Millennium Way, Chorley.
The closure was implemented just after 10pm.
There were delays of up to 20 minutes in both directions, with congestion stretching back over a mile.
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At the time, limited details were shared, with National Highways stating the closure was due to a police-led incident.
This morning, a spokesperson from Lancashire Police confirmed to The Bolton News that the incident was a “concern for welfare that was safely resolved”.
The spokesperson said: “We got the call at 8:56pm last night.
“The M61 was closed at Junction 8 for a short period.”
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After around 40 minutes, the road was reopened in both directions, and National Highways thanked drivers for their patience.
If there is such a thing as righteous anger, surely it’s that of a mother after the senseless snatching away of her child’s life. Joan Scourfield lived that experience. Her son died from a single punch on a night that began like thousands of others across the UK.
Her son James had been on an ordinary Saturday night out in Nottingham in 2011, when a dispute kicked off over something as small as a pair of snatched sunglasses. But it quickly escalated. Someone threw a punch, James went down, hitting his head on the ground, and that was it: nine days later, James – a 28-year-old volunteer and aspiring paramedic – was pronounced dead.
For a long time afterwards, Joan simply wanted answers. A way to make sense of it all. How could this horrible person do this to her son? Why James? Had he provoked his assailant? Did he hit him first? She knew nothing: just a name – Jacob Dunne – and a mugshot. Nothing else.
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“In court, we didn’t even get to hear Jacob’s side. We had no idea why he’d done it or anything… so you end up more angry and bitter because you’ve not got any of your questions answered,” says Joan, a retired assistant nurse who now lives in Derby.
Fast forward to today and Joan can be found sharing public platforms with her son’s killer, advising young people how to avoid the same fate as her boy. The story of that fateful night has even made its way onto the stage, in a play called (what else?) Punch.
Despite the title, the show, which is based on a book written by Jacob and has played on both Broadway and in London’s West End, turns out to be less about the punch itself and more about the events that followed it. The most visible of these is the remarkable life transformation in Jacob, a gang member who, after serving 14 months in prison (less than half the 30-month custodial sentence he was given for manslaughter), went on to study criminology. Today, he advocates for criminal justice reform.
The first time he walked into that room, it was a vulnerable young man that met me, not that evil mugshot we’d seen
But at its heart, Punch is a story of forgiveness. About five years on from James’s death, Joan found it in her heart to forgive the man who took his life. It was a gradual process, she admits. It started with her and her former husband reaching out to Jacob after his release from prison. Back then, all she wanted was answers.
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Over time, however, she began to learn more about him, to see the man beyond the crime. Their contact was coordinated through the restorative justice charity The Forgiveness Project. Initially, Jacob provided them with written responses to their questions, but eventually they began meeting in person through mediated sessions.
“The first time he walked into that room, it was a vulnerable young man that met me, not that evil mugshot we’d seen,” Joan remembers. “He was very calm, very placid, and he wanted to speak to us, to answer our questions.”
Seeing Jacob slowly turn his life around was part of her own journey to forgiveness. If he’d proved unrepentant, the outcome would probably have been different. As important to Joan, however, was her desire to move on in her own life. Her anger, she realised, was in danger of morphing into bitterness; bitterness at Jacob for what he did, but also bitterness towards a justice system that she felt had let them down (Joan and her husband appealed Jacob’s 30-month sentence, but lost). Holding onto that bitterness, she resolved, “would not end well”.
Most of all, though, it was thoughts of James that got her to that point of saying “I forgive you”. She recalled the joy he took from doing voluntary work, especially with children from tough backgrounds. If working alongside Jacob could build on that legacy, she figured, then it would bring “something positive” out of her terrible loss and pain.
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We had no idea why he’d done it so you end up more angry and bitter because you’ve not got any of your questions answered
The process since hasn’t been plain sailing, she admits. She’s been trolled online for “betraying” her son, for instance, a sentiment that she confesses to having battled with herself at certain points. Nor is her forgiveness absolute: she talks very deliberately of forgiving Jacob for killing James (“he didn’t mean to do it”), but not for throwing the punch (“because he went with intent”).
And for those who are struggling to forgive someone: what would be her advice? If at all possible, find a way to talk it out, she says. It’s hard. She’s been there: she knows. But really, it’s the only way. Bringing in a third party can certainly help, she adds. Both sides can then feel listened to and heard, which is crucial to working through the hurt.
One aspect of forgiveness she didn’t expect was how it keeps giving. Not only has Jacob turned his back on violence, but one of his former gang mates has followed him. “So that’s two lives that I know about that have been turned around,” she reflects.
Their story is now told on stages in London and New York in the play Punch, but for Joan the real work happens away from the theatre lights. And James, the aspiring paramedic who spent his short life helping others: what would he think? Joan smiles: “I think he’d be amazed.”
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Main image: David Severn
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Workers employed by Go North West in Bolton, Denton, Heywood, and Wigan are being balloted for strike action by the union Unite.
The dispute centres around claims of ‘significant’ pay disparities with Bee Network drivers working for other operators under the same network.
Sharon Graham, general secretary of Unite, said: “Go North West can more than afford to close the huge pay disparity these workers are suffering despite doing exactly the same job as their Bee Network colleagues.
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“Unite never stops fighting for our members’ jobs, pay and conditions and the Go North West drivers will receive their union’s full support.”
Bee Network drivers working for Metroline and Stagecoach currently earn £19.06 per hour, while Go North West drivers are paid £15.51.
The workers have rejected a 3.8 per cent pay offer.
Go North West, part of the Go Ahead Group, reported revenues of £3.8 billion in the 18 months to December 2024 and paid out £80 million in dividends.
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The strike ballot runs until June 2.
Industrial action could cause widespread disruption to bus services across Greater Manchester.
John O’Neill, regional officer for Unite, said: “Go North West will be totally responsible for any disruption caused to passengers because it is refusing to offer a fair deal.
“There is still time for industrial action to be avoided, but that will require the company tabling a deal that is acceptable to its drivers.”
A paedophile who pretended to be mute and wheelchair-bound in a bid to evade prosecution has been jailed for 15 years after his ‘not-so-covert double life’ was finally rumbled.
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John Siddell, 41, convinced psychiatrists he was unfit to take part in a criminal trial by fabricating a severe illness while being investigated over sexual offences against three young boys between 2018 and 2021.
He ‘presented as wheelchair-bound, refused to open his eyes and was unable to hold his own head up’, prosecutor Claudia James told Leicester Crown Court.
But she told the court Siddell and his 44-year-old brother James’s ‘busy social lives in part unravelled their deception, as documented by social media, photos taken on their phones and their own home CCTV’.
John Siddell was recorded attending Elvis Presley nights at a social club, going to watch a Newcastle United match and walking around unaided.
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He also took selfies in which he was able to smile and pose with his head up and eyes open, and in one photo was drinking a pint of Guinness.
One clip even caught him using his wheelchair like a ‘trolley’ to move household items over a mile in June 2022.
Siddell being pushed in the wheelchair he didn’t need (Picture: Leicestershire Police)
John Siddell out socialising abd drinking Guinness while supposedly unable to even hold his own head up (Picture: Leicestershire Police/SWNS)
The ruse continued through the police investigation (Picture: Leicestershire Police/SWNS)
A statement provided by someone who cared for him in hospital in July 2024 said he was ‘the most verbal non-verbal person I have ever seen’.
After being charged with perverting the course of justice, the defendants did not attend a plea hearing in July last year, when it was claimed that John Siddell had suffered a seizure and was taken to hospital.
In September, he pleaded guilty to five counts of sexual assault of a child under 13, five counts of sexual assault, one count of causing or inciting a child to engage in sexual activity, and four counts of causing or inciting a child under 13 to engage in sexual activity.
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Both brothers admitted perverting the course of justice between November 2021 and August 2025.
In his sentencing remarks, Judge Keith Raynor said the brothers’ behaviour was ‘scheming and devious’.
He said: ‘They misrepresented John Siddell’s mental and physical abilities, the behaviour of both of them entirely corrupting and undermining the course of justice.’
A statement read to court on behalf of the victims, who cannot be identified, said they are ‘still dealing with the effects of the abuse’.
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The brothers, of Ashington, Northumberland, did not attend their sentencing hearing on Tuesday.
John Siddell was jailed for 15 years at Leicester Crown Court (Picture: Leicestershire Police/SWNS)
Defending John Siddell, Jamie Adams said the defendant is a ‘very vulnerable and disadvantaged human being’ who has been diagnosed with epilepsy, autism and learning disabilities.
Mr Adams added that Siddell’s relatives have ‘exaggerated John’s ill-health throughout his life to get some financial benefit’.
James Siddell’s barrister, Nicholas Peacock, told the court his client was in a ‘generationally dysfunctional family who largely survived on the benefits system’.
Nicola Potts, of the Crown Prosecution Service, said: ‘While much of the attention in this case will be the lies and antics of the Siddell brothers, at the heart of this are three sexual abuse victims who had their childhood snatched from them by John Siddell’s cruel manipulation.
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‘His cynical lies and the support he received from James was a further insult to these victims.’
Strictly Come Dancing: It Takes Two presenter Fleur East was among the favourites to take over on the main show, but reports this week emerged saying another star had landed the role
Fleur, 38, took part in the twentieth series of Strictly in 2022, making it to the final with Vito Coppola. A year later she was unveiled as the new presenter of companion show It Takes Two, along with former Strictly pro Janette Manrara.
Fleur has now addressed missing out on the role during her Hits Radio show with Will Best and James Barr. She said: “I did say initially, after Tess and Claudia announced they were leaving Strictly you know, it’s probably not going to happen [for me] and I’m happy for whoever gets it.
“And we were just talking about Emma Willis being announced and I was like, yeah, great, amazing and I’ve kind of lied to myself that I’d be all right with not doing it or not being considered for the job. But I’m kind of bothered…”
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The Sax singer went on to say that it was “okay” to be disappointed by not getting the job. She explained that she never “allowed” herself to “fully go there” by thinking she would get it.
Fleur continued: “I think it’s okay to admit that being faced with the opportunity of such an incredible job. I mean, it’s an amazing show. I’ve not only had the privilege and pleasure of being on it, but then also hosting It Takes Two and being part of the family, it’s been an incredible job to be a part of.
“So, when you’re within touching distance of something like that, and even considering it for a minute, I never allowed myself to really go fully there, but I did think about it. I was like, that would be amazing.”
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She confessed that she had been “lying to myself” by trying to say she was fine. Fleur however is now “coming to terms” with missing out on the role.
She added: “Until it was confirmed, I was like, well, they might call me one day. They might do all the tests and they go, actually, yeah, we haven’t seen Fleur. Let’s give her a little call. But it’s gone to the right person.”
Former BBC Radio 2 star Zoe Ball also confirmed this week that she had missed out on the Strictly job. Zoe also competed on the show before presenting Strictly Come Dancing: It Takes Two between 2011 and 2020.
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In the latest episode of her Dig It podcast, Zoe put on a brave face as she said she was thrilled to be “in the mix” of presenters who were invited to audition.
“I didn’t get it, but it’s okay,” said Zoe. “I have worked through the seven stages of grief and rejection over the last couple of days. I was so chuffed to even be in the mix. There were some pretty amazing people who didn’t even make it into the mix.
“So I made it in the mix, and I had a really fun time having one last little play at a show that I love and adore. And I’m so thrilled for the gang that has got it. I think there’s been so many eyes on this whole process, everyone’s quite relieved now that a decision has been made and the right decision has been made.”
The Junction Foundation, based in Redcar and operating across the Tees Valley, was awarded £1,500 by Barratt and David Wilson Homes through the Barratt Redrow Foundation.
The foundation donated as part of its commitment to supporting national and local charities across the UK.
Barratt Homes Community Fund donation to The Junction Foundation (Image: Supplied)
Since 1991, The Junction Foundation has delivered specialist services to children, young people, and families—covering emotional wellbeing, youth support, and help for young carers.
Rebecca Jones, fundraising and events manager at The Junction Foundation, said: “It is always uplifting when a local business recognises the work we do and wants to support it.
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“This funding will allow us to keep offering the support that so many young people rely on, especially those dealing with difficult circumstances at home or challenges with their mental health.
“Every donation helps us to reach more young people and families who are struggling and without this kind of generosity, many wouldn’t get the help they need.”
The charity also runs the Junction Multibank, launched in 2024 to address rising poverty in the region.
It has distributed more than three million essential items to families, including toiletries, clothing, bedding, and baby items.
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Ms Jones said the latest donation will have a lasting impact.
She said: “We would like to say a huge thank you to Barratt and David Wilson Homes for its donation.
“Its support will have a real, lasting impact on the children, young people and families we work with.
“It means a great deal to us to know they stand alongside our charity and are helping us make life a little brighter for young people across the Tees Valley.”
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The contribution is part of the wider work of the Barratt Redrow Foundation, which will celebrate its fifth anniversary in 2026.
Since launch, the foundation has pledged £20 million to good causes, supported over 2,000 charities, and is estimated to directly benefit 100,000 young people annually.
Joanne Ainsley, managing director at Barratt and David Wilson Homes North East, said: “We are honoured to be able to donate towards the vital work of The Junction Foundation.
“They are an essential resource for young people and families across the Tees Valley, and as a homebuilder, we are dedicated to supporting the communities in which we build to thrive.”
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The donation will directly support The Junction Foundation’s core services, helping more young people feel safer and more confident, and offering hope for their future.
The charity is known for its safe, supportive spaces and targeted programmes, including those focused on emotional wellbeing and practical support.
It continues to work towards its mission of ensuring no child, young person, or family is left to face their struggles alone.
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