“But, in saying that, watching him, his energy, his intensity of how he pressed and ran for the team and defended, they are all really, really good signs in terms of his fitness. And if he stays in that place, his quality will take over and he’ll be massive for us between now and the end of the season.”
Whether you are getting together with friends for a catch up, are looking for an early morning treat or even a hangover cure, there is nothing that beats a good fry up
Abigail Nicholson Content Editor
12:16, 17 Apr 2026
Ely locals have all come to the same conclusion after being asked where to get the best fry up in the city. There are some mornings that can only be remedied by a delicious English breakfast.
Whether you’re celebrating the start of the weekend, some time off work, or are trying to cure a hangover, a fry-up is one of the most perfect ways to start the day. The dish often includes pork sausages, bacon, fried eggs, fried or grilled tomatoes, mushrooms, and baked beans.
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It is commonly served with black pudding, hash browns, fried bread or buttered toast, and served with tea or coffee.
But when one visitor to Ely asked locals on the R/Ely community where the best place in the city to get a fry up was, everyone couldn’t help but come to the same conclusion.
The user asked: “Hey everyone. I am currently on a quest to visit every Anglican cathedral in England, to try and find my favorite and to explore my faith, and Ely is next on the list.
“But equally important is my quest to find the diocese with the best fry up! Where I know people in the area, I will ask them, but Cambridgeshire is uncharted territory for me – so what’s your favourite place for a fried breakfast?”
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From the outside, the café may just look like another average place to get food, but some have argued that the location has the best breakfast in the city.
Streetcafe on Ely high street offers the ‘best’ cooked breakfast with the option of tables outside next to the Cathedral under the trees.
However, one of the main draws for people visiting the greasy spoon, is that the breakfast menu includes bubble and squeak, pan-fried vegetables, primarily potatoes and cabbage.
The cafe has a four out of five star rating on Trip Advisor, with one person claiming it was the “best cooked breakfast” they had eaten in decades.
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They said: “Possibly the best cooked breakfast I’ve eaten out in decades, with properly cooked black pudding, eggs over easy still runny in the yolk and a portion of “bubble” that was the most interesting and delicious brekky side I think I’ve ever tasted.
“Great atmosphere and amazing efficient service l. such that no other cafe option for miles around is even worth trying.”
A second said: “Great venue, very well presented and a friendly atmosphere, but no airs and graces. It is what it says on the tin. Excellent, efficient and friendly service and great food, what else could you ask for..”
A third added: “Great breakfast for 3 hungry guys. Portions were huge and the had everything in god quality for a full English!”
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Other recommendations included The Yard, Market Cafe, Ely Griddle Bar and Meat house, and Tamarin Bay.
There’s nothing like comfort food to really make you feel better – and there’s one spot in Cambridge that has really nailed it. The Grill Plug, which can be found in a tiny unit on the Barnwell Business Park in Cambridge, has perfected indulgent dishes such as smash burgers and loaded fries.
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Loved by many people on TikTok, I knew I had to try out the Grill Plug after its videos kept popping up on my feed. The food spot has its own van for hire and offers delivery as well as collections from its kitchen. I decided to trek through the business park to pick up my order and was surprised to find the thriving business in such a small unit when it had orders flying from its kitchen.
One of the best things about the Grill Plug has to be its combo meals where you can pick from a range of things from its menu to create your perfect night in. I picked the midweek comfort deal that allows you to choose from any two dishes out of the loaded fries, hot dogs, rice bowls or mac and cheese for just £15.
I chose the classic hot dog and buttermilk chicken loaded box for the ultimate indulgent meal. While waiting for my order, I could hear how bustling the little kitchen was with people cooking and packing the many deliveries going out.
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After heading home, I took out the loaded fries first and was pleasantly surprised to see how packed the box was with toppings and fillings. To get to the fries, I had to dig through the layers of buttermilk chicken, cheese sauce, jalapenos, crispy onions, ranch, and chives.
The crispy fried chicken was spiced perfectly and was complemented by the strong garlic taste of the ranch. Despite the copious toppings, the fries were still crispy on the outside and fluffy in the middle.
With so many flavours going on thanks to the powerful chives and aromatic onions, somehow they all worked really well together to create a warming and comforting dish to get you through any midweek slump. The jalapenos added a lovely little kick but could easily be removed for those who don’t love spice.
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The hot dog might not be the prettiest meal to look at but for those craving an American classic, this should be your go-to. It was definitely big enough to feed two people and was topped with melted American cheese, grilled onions, and plenty of ketchup and mustard.
The all-beef hot dog worked well with the classic combination of condiments that would transport anyone back to simpler days walking around a theme park. However, I would’ve liked more grilled onions to give the dish a bit more of a punchy flavour.
On their own, the loaded fries cost £10.99 and the hot dog cost £8.50, which meant I saved £4.49 by using the deal. However, the Grill Plug’s menu features plenty of dishes that cost £15 or under to test out, including its popular smash burgers and a range of desserts.
If you are looking for a takeaway to help you through the long work week or something special for the weekend, the Grill Plug should be a go-to for anyone in Cambridge, especially if you love loaded fries. The Grill Plug can be found on Barnwell Drive and is available for both collections and deliveries.
The Grill Plug is open from 4pm to 10pm on Sundays to Thursdays, from 4pm to 11pm on Fridays and Saturdays.
CamBites is a series that sees our reporters go around Cambridgeshire in search of the best food at a reasonable price. All of our food reviews are paid for by the writer. The establishments do not know we will be reviewing their food, allowing us to make fair judgements on each place.
Topping the table with essentially the same squad highlights Lampard’s powers of recovery. It has allowed him to finally feel like a manager first, rather than player, for the first time when he has been speaking with staff.
To observers Lampard seems more comfortable in his skin at Coventry, not carrying the weight of expectation and his legend at Stamford Bridge, where he is Chelsea’s 211-goal record scorer.
His move to the Sky Blues has also been viewed as smart, being allowed to repair any possible scars from Everton and Chelsea away from the Premier League glare.
Some inside Coventry feel the club needed him, and Lampard needed the club, a statement which is hard to disagree with given the end result.
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Forward Jack Rudoni is one who has flourished under Lampard, having joined Coventry from Huddersfield for £5m five months before the head coach arrived.
He has scored five goals in his past seven gamesand 15 of his 17 strikes for the Sky Blues have come under Lampard.
“People just see him as a gaffer because they don’t know him as a person but he’s more than just a gaffer,” he told BBC Sport. “He has a great relationship with everyone – he’s a good person as well.
“You can come to him with anything and he will sit there and talk to you and give you advice whether it’s football or not. There’s no-one better to learn from – he’s been brilliant with me on and off the pitch.
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“He and I have a good relationship, and we talk closely. He’s always helping me with little bits and pieces, timing of runs, areas to get into, even down to shooting techniques and stuff we spoke about.
“He’s been brilliant, and it’s great to have someone of that quality that can guide me and give me tips, and I’m just happy it’s worked out for me on the pitch, which then kind of repays him working with me with the results.”
Now Lampard’s attention will turn to building a Coventry squad that is capable of competing in the Premier League, ensuring the Sky Blues’ return to the top flight for the first time in a quarter of a century is not short-lived.
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart is arguably the most celebrated child prodigy in history, composing his first pieces of music aged five, his first symphony at eight and his first opera at 11. After a study in 1993 found that listening to Mozart could improve spatial IQ – prompting headlines such as “Mozart makes your brain hum” – he became a symbol for intelligence and brain training.
The study was no doubt interesting. The scientists found that performance on spatial ability tests was improved when their study participants had listened to a Mozart sonata, compared with a relaxation tape or silence. The increase in performance translated to an astounding difference of up to nine spatial IQ points.
Although the effects were temporary, lasting less than 15 minutes, the idea exploded in popular culture. The “Mozart Effect” ignited a lucrative empire of parenting books, self-help manuals and CDs promising to harness the power of Mozart’s music to foster children’s cognitive development. That was despite the fact that the study had been carried out in adults and the evidence for the effect was later overtuned.
The hard fall for the Mozart Effect ultimately highlights the value that society places on intelligence as measured by cognitive tests (like the IQ test). The global market for cognitive assessment and training was valued at about $6.87 billion in 2024 (£5.18bn) but is projected to rise to $35.30 billion by 2032.
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Mozart went on to compose over 600 outstanding works in his brief lifetime. But can we reliably predict future success from a child’s performance? Today, IQ tests are often used to spot early academic talent. But are they a good measure? A growing number of scientific studies suggest that IQ measured in childhood might tell us less than we think. Scientists are discovering that children’s IQ scores aren’t as stable as adults’ – they fluctuate substantially.
So why are schools using cognitive assessments? And what other factors can help predict children’s future success?
The rise of cognitive tests to identify potential
Fostering talent is central to human progress. Exceptionally talented individuals drive scientific and cultural innovation and push the boundaries of human knowledge. For over a century, scientists have therefore sought to understand and measure intelligence. This has been partly driven by countries gradually shifting away from mass production and towards becoming knowledge economies.
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The Insights section is committed to high-quality longform journalism. Our editors work with academics from many different backgrounds who are tackling a wide range of societal and scientific challenges.
One of the largest and longest running studies of giftedness, the Study of Mathematically Precocious Youth, has followed the lives of intellectually gifted people for over half a century. Over 1,600 talented 13-year-olds were invited to take part in the study if they had scored in the top 1% of ability on a standardised test, the SAT, widely used for US college admission. And indeed, four decades later, many of these young talents had achieved outstanding accomplishments. Some 4.1% had achieved tenure at a major university and 2.3% were top executives at Fortune 500 companies. They had published 85 books and secured 681 patents.
However, it is worth noting that these children were fairly old, already teenagers – and at the absolute top end of achievement. Cognitive tests, however, are taken by a much wider range of children today. Since the 1980s, cognitive ability tests have gradually replaced traditional academic subject exams as school entrance screeners. This was motivated by the idea that a cognitive test could be a more objective assessment of aptitude and potential than a child’s knowledge of the curriculum. Performance on cognitive tests is viewed by many as independent of external influences, such as a more resourceful school or a nurturing home environment.
Schools worldwide, from the US and the UK to Singapore and Vietnam now use standardised tests of cognitive abilities to select students at intake. Admission to many prestigious independent and selective high schools in the UK is often at least partly based on a cognitive ability test, such as the infamous CAT4, that hopeful ten-year-olds sit in the autumn term of their last year of primary school. The CAT4 test is also used in many state secondary schools to help determine sets, predict grades and allocate support and provisions.
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One kind of IQ test item, modelled after items in the Raven’s Progressive Matrices test. wikipedia, CC BY-SA
The CAT4 takes around 2.5 hours to complete and is divided into four sections. There is verbal reasoning (thinking with words), non-verbal reasoning (thinking with shapes), quantitative reasoning (thinking with numbers) and spatial ability (thinking with shapes and space). Children who score exactly as expected for their age group would be given a score of 100. Scoring between 89 and 111 is considered to reflect “average” performance, while scores of 112 and above or 88 and below indicate above and below average performance, respectively.
Child IQ fluctuates
We know that the human brain is plastic, or changeable, particularly in childhood. It is the only organ in our body that isn’t fully developed when we are born. A newborn’s brain is about a quarter of the size of an adult brain, doubling in the first year of life. By age seven, it reaches 90% of its adult size. Beyond physical growth, our brains refine and consolidate the network of connections between neurons during this time.
Refining and whittling these connections is key to supporting cognitive and behavioural developmental milestones. Recent research shows that it’s possible to identify key “eras” of brain structural change over the life course. The first milestone – the transition from childhood to adolescence – happens at around age nine. From a brain perspective, adolescence lasts for a little over two decades and is defined by greater efficiency of connections across regions. This coincides with a steady increase in cognitive functions, including vocabulary, complex reasoning and learning.
We’ve known for some time that there is a link between intelligence, as measured by cognitive tests, and school achievement. Research from 2015 that combined data from over 100,000 students across 240 different studies did find a substantial association between intelligence and school grades. However, the magnitude of the link differed depending on children’s age. Intelligence was a much better predictor of school performance in secondary school than it was in primary school. This suggests that cognitive abilities might not be stable during the first decades of life, but vary significantly.
A 2024 analysis that combined data from 205 different studies including over 85,000 participants across 29 countries supports this view. The researchers set out to investigate how stable cognitive abilities are (whether they fluctuate) across the human lifespan and whether stability changes with age.
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They discovered that the stability of cognitive abilities increased exponentially with age – and was low in the first decade of life. This means that each child’s positioning compared to their peers changes significantly in childhood. So a child’s IQ score might indeed change substantially during this time. The stability, however, increased throughout childhood and adolescence, plateauing around age 20 and remaining high throughout adulthood and old age.
But even when IQ starts stabilising, in adolescence, it can still fluctuate by up to 20 points. Somebody increasing their IQ score from 100 to 120 would move from the 50th percentile to about the 91st percentile – a 41% improvement. Indeed, one study, albeit with a small sample of students, could link such fluctuations to physical changes in the brain over time.
This means that it can be tricky to infer long-term consequences, such as later grades, from cognitive tests. Basing school intake, or more broadly selection into educational programmes on a single, unstable metric is likely to lead to systematic errors and unreliable decisions.
Worryingly, it may also result in attempts to manipulate the metric, potentially perpetuating systemic inequalities. This may be true of other tests too, but IQ tests are often seen as an exception. But research shows that you can actually train yourself to boost your IQ test score by roughly eight IQ points, for example by retaking the test. Parents with a lot of resources might be better placed to help prepare their children.
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The myth of the child prodigy
Recent research has backed all this up by questioning the widely accepted myth of the child prodigy as someone destined for greatness, like Mozart. One 2025 study, which combined data from over 34,000 elite performers, from Nobel laureates and chess players to music composers and athletes, found that exceptional performance in childhood was a limited predictor of elite performance in adulthood.
In fact, about 90% of those who achieved elite performance in youth did not achieve equivalent adult status. Similarly, 90% of top performing secondary school students were no longer top performers at university. And even more strikingly, several Nobel laureates and elite athletes actually had lower childhood performance than their peers.
Mozart might have gone from strength to strength, but research shows that is unusual. neurobit/Shutterstock
The routes leading children and adults, respectively, to world-class performance also differed. Exceptional talent early in development was associated with intensive, discipline-specific progress at a young age. But adult world-class performance was more often achieved through extensive multi-faceted practice and gradual advancements.
This means that educational and talent programmes that prioritise early identification of intelligence may overlook a large proportion of future world-class innovators.
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Environmental exposure
The idea behind identifying talent as early as possible so that it can be nurtured is founded on the belief that exposure to an enriched environment can impact ability and vice versa. Half a century of scientific discovery supports this proposition. Perhaps the most famous example is a study published in 1979 by paediatrician Herbert Needleman and his colleagues. This study provided the first robust evidence that exposure to the metal lead, even at levels previously considered negligible, could significantly impair a child’s cognitive performance.
By comparing children with high and low lead levels in baby teeth, while controlling for potentially confounding factors – such as the mother’s IQ and socio-economic status – the study showed that children with higher lead levels scored roughly four points lower on IQ tests. The evidence presented influenced major public health policies, including the removal of lead from gasoline and interior paint in the US.
A large number of other environmental exposures have been positively linked with cognitive development, from walking in nature to exercise and nutrition, albeit with mixed results. However, arguably the most successful environmental intervention to improve cognitive ability is administered every year to more than 85% of children worldwide: education.
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By combining data collected across multiple studies from over 600,000 individuals, researchers found that education has a direct effect on the development of cognitive abilities. The study found that each year of education results in a gain of about one to five IQ points. These effects were remarkably robust, appearing across different cognitive domains and persisting throughout the lifespan. In fact, significant benefits were still measurable into people’s 80s and 90s. While a few IQ points per year may seem small, their cumulative impact at a societal level has been shown to be of great consequence.
Environmental factors that shift population IQ even modestly — like lead exposure, nutrition or education — carry enormous economic consequences. Economists have calculated that each gained IQ point is associated with roughly a 2% increase in lifetime earnings.
In the year 2000, a single IQ point gained or lost across the US population translated to between $110 and $319 billion in aggregate economic output. More recent analysis of the global economic impact of lead exposure on childhood IQ estimated the total cost of IQ loss at US$1.4 trillion globally in 2019, mainly affecting low and middle-income countries.
The role of parents
From the moment a child is born, parents invest vast amounts of energy, time and resources to promote their children’s physical and cognitive development. Not all parenting practices are supported by scientific evidence, nor is the Mozart Effect the sole parenting myth that has been busted. However, research has shown that parenting can nevertheless have profound effects on children’s early cognitive development.
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Studies have found that the environment that parents provide for their children by reading to them, engaging them in stimulating activities and conversation, and maintaining a warm and organised household, has a significant positive effect on early cognitive development. This is particularly the case for the first five years of life. What makes early investment especially powerful seems to be that the benefits compound. Fostering a child’s early cognitive competence makes it easier for children to acquire new skills down the line.
However, the pathways to parental investment are complex. Reflecting on my own childhood illustrates this point. I was born in the mid-80s to parents in their early twenties. At the time, my mother was in medical school and my father designed and produced bespoke furniture. As a child, I had several ear infections which meant that I had to have regular checks with a specialist. One warm, sunny morning in early April, my mum and I set off for my otolaryngologist appointment, just the two of us. As the eldest of four children, this was a rare and special occasion.
After my check-up, we took a tram to Milan’s State University, where we attended a conference on HIV infections in vulnerable populations – the topic of my mother’s thesis. I remember sitting in the beautiful auditorium, admiring the frescos on the ceiling, and slowly adjusting a pair of disposable headphones to listen to the real-time translation of the talks. The panel of female scientists discussed the topic so eloquently and clearly that even a ten-year-old girl could grasp their main message.
I was hooked. It must be the best job in the world, I thought. It was only a quiet thought then, one that I never had the courage to privately contemplate or publicly share. That came much later, when I found the confidence to admit that a career in scientific research was for me. But this specific episode in my childhood was not an isolated peak. It was the pinnacle of many simpler, everyday moments when my parents invested time and effort to provide us with a nurturing and stimulating environment.
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However, seeing these as merely environmental exposures would only provide part of the picture. Perhaps, the science-enriched environment that my mother created for us depended, at least in part, on her own, partly genetically driven, scientific aptitude.
The nature of nurture
Scientists have named this amalgamation of nature and nurture gene-environment correlation, or more intuitively, the nature of nurture. Parents who provide their children with intellectually stimulating environments may also pass on a greater disposition to doing well in school or performing well in cognitive tasks. Research has shown that accounting for genetic effects shared between mothers and children resulted in a reduction in the effect of parenting on educational attainment.
However, cognitively stimulating parenting remained a significant predictor of children’s educational outcomes beyond direct genetic inheritance and socio-economic status. It ultimately contributes to channelling children’s dispositions and translating them into academic outcomes.
Randomised control trials have demonstrated that early interventions are likely to lead to the greatest returns. Investing in children early — through parenting, stimulating environments and good nutrition — pays back far more than trying to catch up later. Every year of delay makes it harder to close the gap.
Interventions created to bridge this gap in groups of disadvantaged children through high-quality preschool education, such as the Perry Preschool Project, can lead to meaningful gains in cognitive performance. Interestingly, while the benefits on children’s cognitive performance faded over time, their long-term educational, economic and social benefits were remarkably far-reaching. So a high quality school education could indeed lead to better job prospects and higher salaries, regardless of IQ.
It follows that boosting cognitive ability may not be the only way to lasting educational, economic and health benefits. Non-cognitive skills — such as motivation, curiosity, self-regulation and social skills — are equally important.
What IQ tests fail to capture
Cognitive tests have never been viewed as instruments to capture the entire set of skills necessary for succeeding in school and life. In 1916, Alfred Binet and Theodore Simon, the inventors of the first IQ test, wrote that things other than intelligence also mattered to academic success, arguing “one must have qualities which depend especially on attention, will and character”.
Decades of research have shown that children who are emotionally stable, motivated and capable of regulating their attention and impulses do better at school, regardless of their level of cognitive ability. These important characteristics have been broadly described as “non-cognitive skills”.
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Recent research by my own team shows that the importance of non-cognitive skills for learning also changes over the school years. We analysed data collected from over 10,000 children born in England and Wales who were followed throughout compulsory education, from age seven to 16. Non-cognitive skills not only predicted academic achievement at every developmental stage, but their role increased as the children got older. Still, at all ages, skills such as curiosity, creativity, motivation and self-efficacy predicted success in school in addition to what was predicted by cognitive abilities.
Similar to cognitive ability and learning, differences in non-cognitive skills are a complex product of nature and nurture. Partly based on their genetic dispositions, children encounter and select environmental experiences that contribute to the development of their motivation and curiosity. This in turn leads to differences in school achievement.
Ultimately, cognitive tests are thought to offer an objective measure of a child’s natural ability, one that is largely unaffected by upbringing or circumstances. But research shows that a range of factors, from environmental exposures to toxic agents, nutrition, differences in parenting and educational interventions, can change cognitive performance, particularly as the brain develops.
During childhood, when the brain is rapidly growing, cognitive test scores can fluctuate considerably from one year to the next. This means that a single test taken on a single day in primary school is not a reliable enough indicator for decisions as consequential as which school a child attends or which academic track they are placed on. These are decisions that can shape the entire course of their education.
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Even later on, cognitive tests only capture part of what it takes to do well in school and in life. Curiosity, motivation and the belief that you can improve with effort are crucial to educational success, yet most education systems pay them little attention. Rather than treating a test score as a fixed marker of a child’s future, mounting evidence invites us to treat it as one factor among many. The best approach would be to invest in all children’s cognitive and non-cognitive development alike.
So don’t read too much into Mozart’s journey. He may have been a child prodigy destined for greatness, but chances are he was an exception rather than the rule.
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Members of Gibfield Preservation Group will be joining the national day of action for nature to highlight what they claim could be lost if a planning proposal is approved.
Still in the pre-planning application stage, Gibfield Park, between Daisy Hill and the Wigan Road area of Atherton, would see 500 homes and an industrial park built.
Peel Land said the area in question had long been earmarked for development and that if the community had any queries or concerns, they would be ‘addressed through the consultation process’.
Part of the land has been used by dozens of horses for decades.
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The horses on the Gibfield Park land earmarked for development (Pic: Caroline Wilson – Gibfield Park Protest Group) (Image: LDR)
Horses from a livery yard at Hindley’s Farm, off Wigan Road in Atherton, have delighted passers by and walkers over the years and can often be seen from nearby main roads.
Today, Saturday 18 April the group, along with horses and ponies, will be calling for protection of the Gibfield Park space.
They will meet at 10am on Gibfield Park Way before walking into Atherton town centre to raise awareness of what they claim is ‘the potential devastation of local nature’.
Chair of Gibfield Preservation Group, Amanda Coleman, said: “This is one of the last remaining green spaces in what is becoming a rapidly over-developed area. We want to make sure it is here for years to come.
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“We are not just protecting land — we are protecting the air we breathe, the wildlife that depends on it, and what makes this community our home.”
The day of action is organised by the Community Planning Alliance (CPA) with more than 170 groups taking part.
Rosie Pearson, chair of the Community Planning Alliance (CPA). “There is overwhelming evidence about the value of nature and green space to people’s physical and mental wellbeing, as well as to a thriving economy. Yet time and time again we see politicians of all parties deride its importance to our communities.
“This day of action is an opportunity to bring people together in activities to celebrate and protect what we have and demonstrate to decision-makers why we look to them to protect and improve it.”
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A Peel Land spokesperson said: “Hindley Farm has a licence to use some of the land owned by the Peel Land Group for horse grazing.
“This land has been identified for future development in the Greater Manchester Places for Everyone Plan, which was approved by Wigan Council in 2024.
“The development of this land will not be immediate as we are currently consulting on a masterplan, which is at an early stage, and a planning application has not yet been submitted.
“Future plans will be subject to further engagement with the local community and any queries or concerns, will, of course, be addressed through the consultation process.”
Iron deficiency anaemia has previously been linked with a string of serious health issues like heart disease and kidney failure
Being low in iron could increase your risk of dementia and accelerate symptoms, research suggests.
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Anaemia has previously been linked to serious health problems including heart disease and kidney failure. But now researchers have discovered a link between the two conditions. They found low iron reserves may not only increase the risk of getting the disease but also reduce the brain’s resilience to it. It is particularly pronounced in men, according to the findings.
Some eight per cent of women and three per cent of men in the UK have anaemia, which is caused by a lack of resources in the blood used to carry enough oxygen around the body. Symptoms typically include tiredness, shortness of breath and heart palpitations. Iron deficiency anaemia can be the result of a lack of iron in the diet, but heavy periods and pregnancy are also common factors.
The study, conducted by researches at Stockholm University and published in the journal JAMA Neurology, followed 2,300 over-60s who did not have dementia for nine years, tracking how changes in iron levels influenced Alzheimer’s risk. Blood was collected at the start of the study and analysed for levels of tau, a protein which gathers and tangles in the brain, thought to be behind Alzheimer’s symptoms.
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Levels of haemoglobin, a protein in red blood cells that carries oxygen around the body and which iron helps to make, were also recorded. Anaemia was defined as blood haemoglobin levels of 120g per litre or less for women and 130g per litre or less for men.
Those with anaemia were 66 per cent more likely to develop Alzheimer’s than those with normal haemoglobin levels. Low haemoglobin was also associated with higher levels of the tau protein p-tau217 – believed to be the most specific blood marker for Alzheimer’s.
Anaemia was associated with higher dementia risk in men than women, despite more women being affected by the deficiency. Researchers said: “While females tend to have lower haemoglobin levels and higher anaemia prevalence in early life due to reproductive factors, anaemia in males is less common, frequently driven by disease, inflammation or deficiencies. Females’ lower baseline haemoglobin levels might confer greater tolerance to anaemia, buffering its impact on brain health. Our findings suggest anaemia is a factor in dementia risk and is possibly a modifiable target in dementia prevention strategies.”
Police stopped a red Mitsubishi Evo that had been travelling at nearly double the speed limit for the road
A driver caught travelling over 135mph reportedly told officers they were “heading for a Chinese takeaway” and will soon have to explain their actions in court.
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Police stopped a red Mitsubishi Evo after they were recording driving at speeds of over 135mph on the A26 Lisnevenagh Road and have said they were told the explanation for this was that the driver was going to a takeaway restaurant. Officers warned that the driver could face losing their licence when they later appear in court.
The incident took place as officers from the PSNI Road Policing Interceptors team were heading to the Kilrea area for a patrol on Friday, April 17, where they seized two other vehicles, a BMW and a Seat.
The blue BMW was seized after police systems showed it had no insurance and later discovered the driver was currently banned from driving.
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The black Seat Leon was seized close to the BMW after it was shown not to have valid insurance with the driver later telling officers they only had a provisional driving licence.
A PSNI spokesperson said: “Tonight officers from Road Policing Interceptors (Sprucefield) on patrol in the Kilrea area stopped the Blue BMW (pictured) as there were no policies of insurance showing on Police systems, on speaking with the driver it became apparent they were currently serving 2 periods of disqualification as well as driving without insurance. The driver will now have their day in Court to explain their actions. Their BMW was seized.
“Whilst waiting on recovery for the seized vehicle the Black Seat Leon was stopped in the same area as it also had no valid Insurance policies shown on our systems, in this instance the driver admitted no insurance and they also admitted only holding a Provisional driving licence, they’d also neglected to display any L plates on the car.
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“They’ll also have a day in Court to explain their actions. This vehicle was also seized.
“Whilst travelling up to the Kilrea area earlier in the evening, one of our crews was passed by the pictured Red Mitsubishi Evo, the Evo’s speed was measured along the A26 Lisnevenagh Rd and at times the vehicle was travelling in excess of 135 mph, this is nearly double the permitted speed for the A26 dual carriageway – the drivers explanation . . . . they were heading for Chinese takeaway!!
“This driver will also have their day in Court and could possibly face disqualification.”
WrestleMania weekend is here as the two-night event begins in Las Vegas tonight.
The most anticipated WWE Premium Live Event (PLE) of the year is shaping up to be an unforgettable one.
Debuting on March 31 1985, WrestleMania is WWE’s annual flagship event and since 2020, the event has grown into a two night spectacle.
This year, WWE’s top superstars and a handful of celebrities are set for two memorable nights where legacies will be cemented and history will be made.
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That means the main event on night one is Rhodes putting the undisputed WWE championship on the line against former friend and mentor Randy Orton. A rather convoluted build to this match now has the added stipulation that Pat McAfee must leave professional wrestling for good if Orton fails to capture the gold.
In the other world title matches, the women’s 2026 Royal Rumble winner Liv Morgan hopes to dethrone Stephanie Vaquer, while Jade Cargill defends the WWE women’s championship against Rhea Ripley.
AJ Lee, making her first WrestleMania appearance in well over a decade, must knock back the challenge of Becky Lynch to keep hold of the WWE women’s Intercontinental championship.
AJ Lee has had the upper hand against Becky Lynch since returning to WWE
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WWE
Nia Jax and Lash Legend (The Irresistible Forces) are at a major disadvantage in their defence of the women’s tag team championships, facing Charlotte Flair & Alexa Bliss, Bayley & Lyra Valkyria and The Bella Twins in a fatal four-way.
Trick Williams has taken Smackdown by storm since debuting on the main roster at the beginning of the year and will look to mark his WrestleMania debut by ending Sami Zayn’s second United States title run after less than a month.
The six-pack ladder match for the WWE Intercontinental championship has the potential to be the best match across both nights as champion Penta defends against Je’Von Evans, Dragon Lee, JD McDonagh, Rusev and Rey Mysterio.
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Meanwhile, there are several intriguing matches on the undercard including an unsanctioned match between Drew McIntyre and Jacob Fatu as they aim to settle a personal rivalry.
Dominik Mysterio has summoned ‘The Demon’ Finn Balor for a one-on-one match, Seth Rollins faces Gunther and the most anticipated battle of the weekend, arguably, sees Oba Femi and Brock Lesnar collide.
Oba Femi has answered Brock Lesnar’s open challenge for a WrestleMania showdown
WWE
This year’s celebrity involvement will be popular influencer and online streamer IShowSpeed as he will compete in an official match at WrestleMania for the first time, teaming up with Logan Paul and Austin Theory of ‘The Vision’ in a six-man tag match against The Usos and LA Knight.
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Here’s everything you need to know about WWE WrestleMania 42…
Date, start time and venue
In the UK, WWE WrestleMania 42 is scheduled to start tonight at 11pm BST on Saturday April 18, 2026 and Sunday April 19, 2026.
The Premium Live Event will take place at the Allegiant Stadium in Paradise, Nevada.
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Where to watch WWE WrestleMania 42
Live stream:In the UK, WWE WrestleMania 42 can be watched and streamed live on Netflix.
A standard subscription costs £5.99 per month and it can be cancelled at any time.
WWE WrestleMania 42 night one match card
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Jacob Fatu vs. Drew McIntyre
Logan Paul, Austin Theory and IShowSpeed vs. The Usos and LA Knight
The tag team titles are on the line at WrestleMania 42
WWE
WWE women’s tag team championship: Nia Jax and Lash Legend (c) vs. Charlotte Flair and Alexa Bliss vs. Bayley and Lyra Valkyria vs. The Bella Twins
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WWE women’s Intercontinental championship: AJ Lee (c) vs. Becky Lynch
WWE women’s world championship: Stephanie Vaquer (c) vs. Liv Morgan
Undisputed WWE championship: Cody Rhodes (c) vs. Randy Orton (with Pat McAfee)
*Card is subject to change.
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WWE WrestleMania 42 night two match card
Oba Femi vs. Brock Lesnar
‘The Demon’ Finn Balor vs. Dominik Mysterio
WWE United States championship: Sami Zayn (c) vs. Trick Williams
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WWE Intercontinental championship (six-pack ladder match): Penta (c) vs. Je’Von Evans vs. Dragon Lee vs. JD McDonagh vs. Rusev vs. Rey Mysterio
WWE women’s championship: Jade Cargill (c) vs. Rhea Ripley
World heavyweight championship: CM Punk (c) vs. Roman Reigns
Two pedestrians were hit, with one declared dead at the scene and the other suffering life-threatening injuries (Picture: Nine News)
One person has died and another is fighting for their life after a car swerved in Comic Con fans in Melbourne.
Fans standing outside the Supanova Comic Con at Melbourne Showgrounds were hit by a grey Toyota after it mounted the pavement at 5pm.
Two pedestrians were hit, with one declared dead at the scene and the other suffering life-threatening injuries.
A witness, Tom, told The Age: ‘I heard a screech and a guy (allegedly) mounted the kerb at an erratic speed, hit a couple people.’
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The car reportedly did a U-turn and drove back down the street, stalled and a group of witnesses tried to apprehend them.
Tom said: ‘He was erratic. ‘I said, “you’re not going anywhere mate”.’
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Tom’s wife is a paramedic who worked on one of the victims for 20 minutes before ambulances arrived.
Melbourne Police said: ‘Major Collision Investigation Unit detectives are investigating a fatal collision in Ascot Vale this afternoon.
‘Police have arrested a man who will be interviewed by police. The circumstances surrounding the collision are yet to be established and the investigation remains ongoing.’
WrestleMania season is in full swing, with WWE’s showpiece event arriving at last.
This weekend, for the 42nd edition of WrestleMania, the professional-wrestling company is making the rare move of returning to the city that hosted last year’s event. That means WrestleMania 42 will take place at Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas, with two nights of action scheduled in Sin City once more.
There will be significant celebrity involvement, too, with wrestler-turned-actor John Cena hosting proceedings and IShowSpeed among several famous faces to feature.
Here’s all you need to know.
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When is WrestleMania 42?
WrestleMania became a two-night event in 2020, and this year it will take place on Saturday 18 and Sunday 19 April at Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas. In the US, each evening of action will begin at 4pm PT / 5pm CT / 6pm ET. In the UK, that works out to 11pm BST.
How can I watch it?
WrestleMania 42 will stream live on Netflix in the UK and most territories worldwide, as part of subscribers’ existing plans (at no additional cost, in other words). In the US, however, the event will air live on ESPN.
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Confirmed matches
Night 1
Jey Uso, Jimmy Uso and LA Knight vs Logan Paul, Austin Theory and IShowSpeed
Drew McIntyre vs Jacob Fatu (Unsanctioned Match)
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Lash Legend and Nia Jax (Women’s World Tag-Team Champions) vs Charlotte Flair and Alexa Bliss vs Bayley and Lyra Valkyria vs Nikki Bella and Brie Bella
AJ Lee (Women’s Intercontinental Champion) vs Becky Lee
Seth Rollins vs Gunther
Stephanie Vaquer (Women’s World Champion) vs Liv Morgan
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Cody Rhodes (Undisputed WWE Champion) vs Randy Orton
Cody Rhodes (centre) lost last year’s Night 2 main event to John Cena (Getty Images)
Night 2
Penta (Intercontinental Champion) vs Rey Mysterio vs JD McDonagh vs Rusev vs Je’Von Evans vs Dragon Lee (Ladder Match)
Brock Lesnar vs Oba Femi
Sami Zayn (United States Champion) vs Trick Williams
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Jade Cargill (Women’s WWE Champion) vs Rhea Ripley
YouTubers Logan Paul and IShowSpeed will compete, even teaming up together, while music star Jelly Roll will also feature in some capacity. The same applies to rapper Lil Yachty, while wrestler-turned-actor John Cena will act as the host of WrestleMania. NFL kicker-turned-sports analyst Pat McAfee is also expected to feature.
Cena will host this year’s ‘Mania, having retired from wrestling in December (Getty Images)
How much do WWE stars earn at WrestleMania?
The specifics of WWE contracts have long been hard to ascertain. However, WWE star-turned-executive Triple H (real name Paul Levesque) told The Athletic in 2022 that $250,000 is the minimum base salary for wrestlers in the company. That figure might have risen since, of course, and it reportedly only applied to members of the Smackdown and Raw rosters – not wrestlers on NXT, which is WWE’s developmental show.
However, wrestlers’ wages are boosted by merchandise sales and, it is believed, by cuts of pay-per-view sales as well. Of course, merchandise sales are likely to be significant on a WrestleMania weekend, as well as pay-per-view sales, so 18 and 19 April could be the most lucrative days of the year for most WWE wrestlers.
In 2023, The Mirror reported some of the highest WWE wages as these: Roman Reigns $5m per year; Randy Orton $5m per year; Seth Rollins $3.5m per year; Cody Rhodes $3m per year; Logan Paul $2m per year. These figures reportedly don’t include bonuses.
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