Five major DWP benefit changes coming in April 2026 | Cambridgeshire Live
Need to know
The DWP is making five key changes to benefits from April 2026, including rate increases for Universal Credit, PIP and State Pension, as well as Easter payment date changes
People under the age of 22 could be barred from claiming the health element of Universal Credit in the proposed change(Image: Getty Images/iStockphoto)
Everything you need to know about DWP changes from April 2026:
From April onwards, millions of people nationwide will see an increase in their bank balances. This is due to the DWP raising benefit rates. Payments set to rise include PIP, Universal Credit, Attendance Allowance, Disability Living Allowance and State Pension.
A major alteration to Universal Credit has been implemented by the Government, effective from April 6 this year. Historic legislation to abolish the two-child benefit limit has now become law. This change eliminates the existing restriction in Universal Credit that limited support to a family’s first two children. The DWP states that families already claiming the benefit will see the update applied automatically with no action required.
Modifications to the health-related component of Universal Credit are scheduled to come into effect from April 6, changing how some claimants qualify for additional payments associated with illness or disability. The DWP stated that the reforms will address “perverse incentives” by introducing a lower Universal Credit health element rate of £217.26 per month for new claimants, compared to the higher rate of £429.80 for existing claimants. This extra support is known as the Limited Capability for Work and Work-Related Activity (LCWRA) element.
Benefit claimants are being urged to check when they will receive their April payments. This is because some benefits will be impacted by the two bank holidays over Easter. If you are due to receive a payment on Friday April 3 (Good Friday) or Monday April 6 (Easter Monday), you should instead receive it on Thursday, April 2. This will be for most benefits, including Universal Credit, State Pension, Pension Credit, Child Benefit, Disability Living Allowance (DLA), Personal Independence Payment (PIP) and others, reports Chronicle Live.
Those making a claim for Personal Independence Payments are being warned about a rule change coming in April. Under the new rules, there will be three years between reviews, once the benefit has been granted. The DWP says the aim of the move is to free up healthcare professionals who can conduct additional face-to-face assessments and complete more Working Capability Assessments (WCA). The current interval between PIP reviews can be as short as nine months. But this interval will be lengthened for most claimants 25 and over, to a minimum of three years for new applications, increasing to five years at review should they continue to qualify.
John Higgins won the Tour Championship in style last season (Picture: Getty Images)
John Higgins is in Manchester to defend his Tour Championship title this week, taking on a player he has been battling it out with for 36 years.
The Wizard of Wishaw brilliantly won the event last year, beating Mark Selby in the final and he is back to face Mark Williams in his opener this time round.
The Scot is not just wielding his cue, but also a microphone as he is on commentary and punditry duty for Channel 5, but defending his title is priority number one.
Just the top 12 on the one-year rankings make it to the Tour Championship, which Higgins says is a key aim at the start of any season.
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‘I think if somebody says to you at the start of every season that you’ll be competing in the Tour Championship, it means it’s a good season,’ Higgins told Metro. ‘That’s your aim and I’d have bitten your hand off, really.
‘It would have been pretty poor coming down, commentating on it and speaking about it and you’re not in the event to defend your title.
‘I can’t wait to get out there and obviously playing your old nemesis, Mark Williams. It can’t be any bigger or better than playing Mark.’
Higgins finished runner-up to Zhao Xintong at last month’s Players Championship (Picture: Getty Images)
Two of the three legendary members of the Class of 92 first met professionally in 1994, but their rivalry goes back even further.
Asked for the first time he met Williams, Higgins said: ‘I’m sure it must have been the Home Internationals at Prestatyn in 1990, I was 15. That was the first time I’d met any players from out of Scotland.’
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35 years on from that first meeting, the pair met in the 2025 World Championship quarter-final, which Williams dramatically won 13-12 on the final black.
Higgins feels he ‘owes him one’ for that painful defeat, but it is now a friendly rivalry that has lost the edge it once had.
‘I think it’s a lot better than it was,’ the Scot said of his relationship with the Welshman. ‘It’s only natural as well, I think, when you see the boys nowadays, the likes of Judd [Trump] and Kyren [Wilson], you just get a feeling that they really feel as if they’re rivals and they want to keep their distance from each other. It was probably exactly the same [for us].
‘Back in the day when me, Mark and Ronnie were playing, you were vying against each other for the same titles. As well it’s been well-documented when I’d left the management stable with Ian Doyle and Mark was still under that banner, there was a bit of rivalry there.
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Higgins and Mark Williams played out a Crucible classic last year (Picture: Getty Images)
‘But nowadays you’re basically smiling walking into these events, knowing that you’re still playing against these guys and still competing. You’ve got to give yourself a pat in the back that you’re still doing it.
‘Listen, we’re dads now, we’re nearly grandads. I think everybody’s got a different outlook on life.’
Higgins felt his meeting with Williams in Sheffield last year was likely their last at the Crucible, but the odds of there being another have been improved this week after the announcement that the World Championship is set to stay at the venue – with a significant revamp – until 2045.
The four-time world champion was thrilled with the news and admits he was stunned by it, feeling a departure from the Crucible was likely when the previous contract was due to end in 2027.
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‘I couldn’t believe it,’ he said. ‘I could not believe it how they got it over the line, especially for the amount of years. Incredible, incredible news.
‘I really thought it was going to be moving, I just didn’t think the Crucible was going to be be big enough for the event. I think it’s great news that it’s going to get upgraded because it certainly needs that.
‘I think obviously you don’t want to lose the uniqueness of the playing arena, which makes the Worlds that special. But behind the scenes it probably hasn’t moved with the times. Now it’s going to get the upgrade and it brings it up to the present day, and it should be a great, great venue going forward.’
Before the Crucible comes Manchester Central and Higgins will be in the commentary box, hoping that the ‘first day of school’ nerves of his Players Championship debut last month will have eased.
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‘In the commentary box I really felt the nerves there,’ he said. ‘Dave [Hendon] was great with me, but that was like being back on the first day of school.
‘In the studio it felt okay because obviously you go into the studio after matches anyway and you’ve got somebody like Katie [Shanahan], who I think is really good, so it was all good. I really enjoyed it.
Tour Championship draw and schedule
Monday March 30
1pm Barry Hawkins vs Thepchaiya Un-Nooh Judd trump vs Mark Allen
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7pm Judd Trump vs Mark Allen Wu Yize vs Chris Wakelin
Tuesday March 31
1pm Mark Williams vs John Higgins Barry Hawkins vs Thepchaiya Un-Nooh
7pm Mark Williams vs John Higgins Wu Yize vs Chris Wakelin
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Wednesday April 1
1pm Neil Robertson vs Hawkins/Un-Nooh Shaun Murphy vs Trump/Allen
7pm Shaun Murphy vs Trump/Allen Zhao Xintong vs Wu/Wakelin
Thursday April 2
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1pm Neil Robertson vs Hawkins/Un-Nooh Mark Selby vs Williams/Higgins
7pm Mark Selby vs Williams/Higgins Zhao Xintong vs Wu/Wakelin
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‘I wasn’t really wanting to talk too much on commentary. But then again, when you listen to the other commentators, they maybe speak a little bit more, so then you think to yourself, am I speaking enough? So, I think it’s just trying to get a balance.
‘I don’t go on any social media, so I don’t know how well I would have been received with it, which is maybe a good thing in a way. So I’m only really going by listening to my wife or my brothers. They thought I’d done okay. So I don’t really know what the wider world’s thinking about it.’
The Wizard of Wishaw will be working on his words of wisdom when the Tour Championship kicks off on Monday afternoon, with his latest clash with his old rival coming up on Tuesday.
KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) — Severe flooding, a landslide and thunderstorms in parts of Afghanistan left 17 people dead and 26 injured over the last 24 hours, with more heavy rainfall predicted, authorities said Sunday, the latest casualties from extreme weather in the country this season.
The number of casualties could increase as crews from the country’s National Disaster Management Authority survey the affected areas, the authority’s spokesman, Yousuf Hammad, said in a statement. Thirteen of Afghanistan’s 34 provinces, mostly in the western, central and northwestern parts of the country, were affected.
The severe weather also left 147 homes either completely or partially destroyed, wiped out 80 kilometers (about 50 miles) of roads and destroyed agricultural land and irrigation canals and businesses, Hammad said. In all, he said, 530 families were affected.
Heavy rainfall was also forecast to affect eastern and central parts of the country Monday, and Hammad warned flooding was also possible in those areas. The disaster management authority warned residents to avoid river banks and areas at risk of flooding in those regions, and ordered local officials to be on standby to provide assistance.
Afghanistan is highly vulnerable to extreme weather events, with snow and heavy rain that trigger flash floods, often killing dozens, or even hundreds, of people at a time. In 2024, more than 300 people died in springtime flash floods.
Decades of conflict, coupled with poor infrastructure, a struggling economy, deforestation and the intensifying effects of climate change have amplified the impact of such disasters, particularly in remote areas where many homes are built of mud and offer limited protection against sudden deluges or heavy snowfall.
The Donegal captain seemed lucky to avoid a red card after several high challenges on Kerry defender Dylan Casey during Sunday’s Division One final at Croke Park
Kerry, who won the League title last term before beating Donegal in the All-Ireland SFC decider last July, were decidedly second best in a game that failed to match the competitiveness of the three other football deciders over the weekend.
Not that Donegal will care as they cantered to a 13-point success. However, David Gough’s decision to show Murphy a yellow, rather than a red, for a couple of closed fist tackles on Dylan Casey in the first half proved a major talking point.
For O’Connor, he agreed with the assessment that the former Donegal captain ought to have been sent off.
When that point was put to him by a reporter after the game, he replied: “I agree with you, and you have better eyesight than a few other lads that were looking at it, let’s put it like that. Yeah, so what can I say? That’s what happened.”
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McGuinness stressed that he didn’t see the incident in question, but he did state that the game had become “very physical” and urged referees to clamp down on so-called “screening” and third-man challenges.
“I didn’t see anything of it, to be honest with you,” McGuinness said of the Murphy incident, before adding: “But the game is very physical out there.
“Going back to the kick-outs, the game is very physical on kick-outs at the moment. There’s an awful lot of blocking going on on kick-outs. There’s an awful lot of physicality going on in kick-outs across all the games.
“There’s an awful lot of screening going on in the attack in third, which I think somebody’s going to get hurt from. I think people are going to people to hand them the ball, and they’re running into people to release people. That’s not in the rule book.
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“People are talking in the media. Coaches are talking about screening. Screening is not in the rule book.
That’s a black card. If you intentionally screen somebody, you’re coming across their path. So I think that’s definitely something that probably needs to be stamped out going into the Championship, because I do see a bad head injury coming from that one.
“But to your point, the physicality, it’s heavy around the middle. It really is heavy around the middle.”
While delighted with his side’s performance, McGuinness swiftly turned his attention to an Ulster SFC quarter-final with Down in Letterkenny at the end of April
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“From our point of view it’s another game, it’s a great game to get under the belt,” he added.
“It was lovely to get back to Croke Park, get a good game and have a good performance level and we go away now and start preparing for Down in the first round of the Championship.”
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Black spots burrow deep into surfaces and can be a nightmare to remove
Those stubborn black spots on your patio are a particularly troublesome form of lichen that burrows deep into surfaces, proving a real headache for homeowners. Even more resilient than slippery moss and persistent algae, these tenacious marks can withstand even the most powerful pressure washing, leaving countless households baffled about how to tackle them.
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However, there’s no need to despair, as Daniel Scholfield, owner of The Expert Gate Company, has revealed a straightforward removal technique requiring no specialist products whatsoever – just a stiff brush, water and white vinegar.
Daniel explained that whilst pressure washing affected areas may eliminate the visible black spots in your garden, “it won’t kill the organisms that are still present” within the surface, and could potentially cause damage to your paving or patio in the process.
The key is to “kill off the black lichen completely”, for which you’ll need the “right product”. He explained, “Household cleaning products won’t do a thing for black lichen, save for one exception — distilled white vinegar is the only household cleaner that works.”
However, before tackling the affected area, proper preparation is essential. Begin by using a brush or your hands to clear away any plant debris and surplus dirt that could interfere with the cleaning solution’s effectiveness, then give the patio a swift rinse with fresh water.
You’ll need a clean, unobstructed surface for what comes next. Highlighting vinegar’s effectiveness, Daniel noted: “This miracle cleaner can be mixed with water at a 50 to 50 ratio, and then poured over the affected area.”
He pointed out that you may want to do a test on a small patch of the patio first to make sure it won’t damage or discolour your slabs.
Allow it to sit for up to one hour, scrub vigorously with a stiff brush to eliminate all residue and debris, then rinse thoroughly with fresh water.
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Should you notice any lingering traces of the dark marks, repeat the cleaning process to ensure they’re “gone for good”.
For particularly persistent stains, try leaving the mixture on for an extended period or marginally increasing the vinegar concentration in your solution.
Nevertheless, he cautioned, “Don’t overdo it as too much may begin to damage the patio surface.”
To stop these dark marks from reappearing, routinely apply a vinegar and water mixture to maintain your paving’s cleanliness.
Made in Chelsea stars Sophie and husband Jamie Laing are set to share their journey as first-time parents in a new reality TV show
21:02, 29 Mar 2026Updated 21:04, 29 Mar 2026
Sophie Habboo has admitted she ‘wasn’t herself’ as she shared the reality of being pregnant whilst filming for her new reality TV show. Former Made in Chelsea stars Sophie, 31, and Jamie Laing, 37, welcomed their first child Ziggy in December last year.
The couple met whilst filming the Channel 4 show Made in Chelsea in 2017, and after initially being friends, a romance eventually blossomed. The pair officially tied the knot at a registry office in Chelsea in April 2023 before holding a larger wedding ceremony in Marbella in May.
Sophie and Jamie are now set to share the highs and lows of becoming first-time parents in their new reality series, Raising Chelsea, with three episodes which will air on Disney+ on April 2.
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During a new Instagram Q&A with fans, Sophie has revealed the harsh reality of being pregnant whilst filming for the show.
One fan asked: “How did you find filming the series? And letting cameras into your personal life,” to which Sophie responded candidly: “I won’t lie I found it challenging at times! It was my 1st pregnancy and I was very anxious about everything and so to have cameras following you was full on at times.
“I was also not myself, my hormones were everywhere, I found pregnancy hard at times Ngl. And even harder to admit that because everyone talks about how magical it is but the reality was for me I was sooo up and down my pregnancy one minute I was floating on cloud 9 next I was savage b***h lol.”
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Sophie continued: “I was also so uncomfortable I had horrific pain in my pubic bone and I was so anxious something was going wrong the whole time and I was EXHAUSTED 24/7. So it’s quite scary to have a camera documenting you probably not at your best but it’s what we signed up for, we always promised we would keep it real and my God we really did!
“Obvs that was not all the time and we captured amazing moments and I loved the whole process and watching it back it’s insane to have that time of my life documented!!!.”
The reality TV star then added: “I also had the best team @dorothystpictures @aliceob and we just made so many memories it’s crazy to think we filmed for over a year and it’s going to air in just 3 days!!! wtf!!!
“Also I will add, it was one camera. Very fly on the wall and docu style which is why it was possible to capture it all I think if it was a huge production every day whilst pregnant maybe it would have been more intimidating! but that’s how we managed to keep it SO real and capture those intimate moments! xxx.”
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has upended long‑standing norms by repeatedly invoking his religious faith, blurring the line between church and state in a way that has become particularly pronounced amid the Iran war, according to a new report.
Hegseth — who has a large Jerusalem cross tattooed across his chest — has long worn his Evangelical faith on his sleeve in a manner that has unsettled some military officials.
The former Fox News host has said that the U.S. was “founded as a Christian nation” and that it “remains a Christian nation in our DNA, if we keep it.” He’s also hosted Pentagon worship services that legal experts have branded “unprecedented,” The Washington Post reports. One faith leader invited to preach to servicemembers has said women shouldn’t be allowed to vote.
Hegseth’s proselytizing has drawn heightened scrutiny in connection with the U.S.–Israeli war against Iran, which has now stretched into its second month and shows no signs of abating, according to the Post.
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During a press briefing on March 19, he encouraged viewers to pray for the success of U.S. troops in the Middle East. “To the American people, please pray for them every day on bended knee with your family, in your schools, in your churches, in the name of Jesus Christ,” he said.
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth keeps invoking religion amidst the Iran war, an approach that some current and former military leaders find ‘terrifying,’ according to a new report (Getty Images)
On Wednesday, while speaking at a Pentagon prayer service, he called for “overwhelming violence of action against those who deserve no mercy,” asking that “wicked souls” be “delivered to the eternal damnation” in the fight against Iran, a Muslim-majority nation.
Some senior military commanders seem to have followed his lead. The Military Religious Freedom Foundation, a watchdog organization, said it had received more than 200 complaints from service members that military commanders had told troops it was all part of God’s plan that they be deployed to Iran.
During a mass on Sunday, Pope Leo appeared to deliver a thinly-veiled rebuke to this line of messaging. “This is our God: Jesus, king of peace, who rejects war, whom no one can use to justify war,” he told worshippers at the Vatican. “He does not listen to the prayers of those who wage war, but rejects them.”
An unnamed senior Army civilian described the current situation as “terrifying.”
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If U.S. troops are trained to believe that “God is on our side,” the person told the Post, “what precludes us from doing anything we want to win? The strength of our military is our people, and their sense of belonging to their unit and their service.”
A Pentagon spokesperson did not immediately respond to a request for comment from The Independent.
Some senior military commanders seem to have followed Hegseth’s lead, invoking Christian “end times” rhetoric to justify the lethal offensive against Iran, according to reports. Pictured here are US troops who were deployed to the Middle East earlier this week (US Centcom)
A group of former high‑ranking military officials, chaplain corps leaders, and current Pentagon officers told the Post that they are troubled by both Hegseth’s overt religious rhetoric and the policy changes he has pursued.
Hegseth has eliminated dozens of military codes for various faith groups and axed the Army’s Spiritual Fitness guide, which he claimed focused on self‑care rather than “truth.” On Wednesday, the Pentagon also announced that U.S. military chaplains will now wear religious insignia on their uniforms, rather than their rank.
Retired Army Maj. Gen. Randy Manner said he has spoken with “dozens and dozens” of military chaplains who said those among them who do not identify with Hegseth “are being marginalized.”
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The defense chief’s changes have undone longstanding efforts to foster religious inclusion in the armed forces, Rachel Laser, the president of Americans United for the Separation of Church and State, told the Post.
“It feels like decades worth of progress has been undone in 12 months,” an unnamed Air Force general added. “It’s heartbreaking and it’s heartbreaking to watch our chaplains try to navigate this.”
“The point was, it didn’t matter, and it shouldn’t have mattered, who you worship, or whether you worship at all. What mattered was doing the job and being mindful that you represent all Americans, no matter what they believe,” a person who served on the leadership team of a former chairman of the Joint Chiefs said. “I don’t approve of cramming your religious faith down people’s throats, and when the top of the chain couches these operations in this hyper-Christian tone, it flies in the face of the freedom of religion that the Constitution enshrines.”
At a service Wednesday, Hegseth prayed for “overwhelming violence of action against those who deserve no mercy.” (Copyright 2026 The Associated Press. All rights reserved)
Earlier this week, Americans United sued the Pentagon for failing to answer public records requests about Hegseth’s prayer services.
“Even if these prayer services are presented as voluntary, there is pressure on federal employees to attend in order to appease their bosses,” the organization wrote in a press release.
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In response to a request for comment from the Post, Pentagon Press Secretary Kingsley Wilson said their office is “proud” to play host to religious services.
“Prayer services at the Pentagon are 100 percent voluntary and are not mandated whatsoever. It is not against the law to worship Christ voluntarily anywhere in the United States,” Wilson added. “The Secretary’s prayer services undoubtedly improve morale for those who choose to attend and are constitutionally protected. No special treatment or punishment is given as a result of one’s choice to attend these prayer services.”
Authorities in Los Angeles deployed tear gas near a federal detention center and made dozens of arrests following one of thousands of “No Kings” rallies held this weekend across the United States and in Europe to protest President Donald Trump’s actions and the war in Iran.
Los Angeles police said Sunday that 74 people were arrested for failing to heed a dispersal order that was given after Saturday’s rally ended. One other person was taken into custody on suspicion of possessing a weapon that police described as a dagger.
The arrests stood out from what otherwise were mostly peaceful protests. Organizers said there were more than 3,100 events registered in all 50 U.S. states.
As hundreds of protesters surrounded a federal complex in downtown Los Angeles, some threw rocks, bottles and broken concrete blocks at officers, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security said in a statement late Saturday night.
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Two officers who were struck by concrete blocks sustained undetermined injuries and received medical attention, DHS said.
Andre Andrews Jr., a Navy veteran and independent journalist, had walked the entire route of the Los Angeles rally and captured video of the event. He said after authorities gave the dispersal order, they deployed tear-gas canisters when protesters didn’t comply. Some protesters wearing shields and gas masks on the other side of a fence at the federal complex picked up the canisters and tossed them back at police. Andrews said some people also smashed concrete barriers into smaller pieces and threw them at authorities.
“Does it make L.A. look bad? No. They’re bad actors causing problems, for sure,” Andrews said. “The peaceful protest was good for the cause. You have the right to do that. But the other people, they were definitely causing problems.”
Police said those arrested included eight juveniles. Also detained was a woman dressed as the Statue of Liberty, smiling as she chatted with an officer who led her away.
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In Denver, the police department said on the social platform X that it declared an unlawful assembly and deployed smoke canisters after a small group of protesters blocked a road and did not leave as asked. At least eight people were arrested, as was a ninth person later who police said was throwing objects.
Nationwide, people rallied from New York City, with almost 8.5 million residents in a solidly blue state, to Driggs, a town of fewer than 2,000 people in eastern Idaho, a state Trump carried with 66% of the vote in 2024. In Minnesota, a flagship event on the Capitol lawn in St. Paul drew Bruce Springsteen as its headliner to celebrate resistance to Trump’s aggressive immigration enforcement.
Demonstrations also were held in more than a dozen other countries, according to co-executive director Ezra Levin of Indivisible, which spearheaded the events.
U.S. organizers have estimated that the first two rounds of No Kings rallies drew more than 5 million people in June and 7 million in October. Levin estimated at least 8 million participants showed up Saturday.
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“It was powerful. It was historic. It was joyful. It was boisterous,” Levin said Sunday. “I’d say it went pretty well.”
Over the centuries different parts of the Christian church used different calendars – the Gregorian and the Julian – which meant that the Easter would not always be on the same date around the world.
Attempts to bring everyone together meant that while many eastern European countries now use the Gregorian calendar for civil events, they use the Julian one to mark Orthodox festivals.
The date of the astronomical equinox also tends to naturally fluctuate between 20 and 21 March. In 2026 it happens on 20 March.
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However, the Christian church decided to ‘set a fixed’ date for it to help regularise its own calculations and always uses 21 March, external.
As the first full Moon after 21 March is the Pink Moon on April 2, it means Easter is the following Sunday – 5 April.
In a year when the full Moon itself rises on a Sunday, Easter will be set for the following one.
The new Moon marks the start of each lunar month of the Jewish calendar, with the full Moon always falling mid-way through.
All that talent at Arizona and Michigan. All that momentum and good vibes at UConn. And somebody has to be play the part of the unheralded “little guy.” At the Final Four next weekend, that role belongs, improbably, to Illinois.
In a sign of the times, the Illinii — a Big Ten team with more wins in the conference over the last seven seasons than any other program — will pass for something resembling Cinderella when college basketball’s biggest party kicks off in Indianapolis on Saturday.
The first challenge for coach Brad Underwood’s team will be stopping a hard-charging UConn juggernaut that came from 19 points down and got a game-winner from the logo with 0.4 seconds left from an Indy native — Braylon Mullins — to make its third Final Four in the last four years.
The last two times the Huskies reached this point, they won the championship.
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“It’s a UConn culture, a UConn heart,” coach Dan Hurley said. “We believe we’re supposed to win this time of year.”
UConn guard Malachi Smith (0) shoots as Duke forward Cameron Boozer (12) defends during the second half in the Elite Eight of the NCAA college basketball tournament, Sunday, March 29, 2026, in Washington. (AP Photo/Abbie Parr)
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UConn guard Malachi Smith (0) shoots as Duke forward Cameron Boozer (12) defends during the second half in the Elite Eight of the NCAA college basketball tournament, Sunday, March 29, 2026, in Washington. (AP Photo/Abbie Parr)
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All these teams do.
Arizona, led by Brayden Burries, and Michigan, with Yaxel Lendeborg, have up to nine NBA prospects between them.
The Wildcats opened as slight favorites — at plus-165 to win the championship, according to BetMGM Sportsbook. That was a shade ahead of the Wolverines, who are plus-180 after their 95-62 romp over Tennessee on Sunday.
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But, in one of a few strange twists on the odds chart, the Wildcats are 1 1/2-point underdogs to Michigan in Saturday night’s second semifinal.
Illinois is a 2 1/2-point favorite over UConn and, in reality, it’s the Huskies, at plus-550, who are the biggest long shot in Indy.
Even so, the fact that Illinois — the flagship university in the nation’s sixth most populous state and a school with an enrollment of nearly 60,000 — feels most like this year’s out-of-nowhere underdog speaks more about the current state of college hoops than the Illini themselves.
They are a No. 3 seed — the highest number at the Final Four in two years. (UConn is a 2. Last season, all four No. 1s made it.)
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Arizona head coach Tommy Lloyd cuts down the net after a win over Purdue in the Elite Eight of the NCAA college basketball tournament, Saturday, March 28, 2026, in San Jose, Calif. (AP Photo/Kelley L Cox)
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Arizona head coach Tommy Lloyd cuts down the net after a win over Purdue in the Elite Eight of the NCAA college basketball tournament, Saturday, March 28, 2026, in San Jose, Calif. (AP Photo/Kelley L Cox)
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This year’s meeting of 1 vs. 1 — Michigan vs. Arizona — is a heavyweight matchup of power teams from power conferences meeting with everything at stake.
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It’s a far cry from a mere three years ago, when mid-majors Florida Atlantic (coached by Dusty May, who now leads the Wolverines) and San Diego State crashed college basketball’s biggest party.
Since then, NIL and the transfer portal have redefined the contours of player movement, another spasm of realignment has made the big conferences bigger (Arizona, now in the Big 12, was in the Pac-12 in 2023), and the high-achieving underdogs that used to make March Madness what it is have gone into a slump.
Double-digit seeds won a total of five games in this tournament (not counting the play-in round). Two years ago, they won 11 and sent one team (N.C. State) to the Final Four.
Not surprisingly, Underwood — the coach who landed on the Illinois radar a decade ago by coaching double-digit seed Stephen F. Austin to a pair of upset wins in the tournament — views his program’s trip to the Final Four more as destiny than a once-in-a-lifetime story.
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It is, however, the first trip for Illinois since 2005, when it lost to North Carolina in the title game.
“I don’t want to sound arrogant,” said Underwood, whose teams have won 96 Big Ten games since 2019-20, two more than Purdue. “I’ve never doubted us getting to a Final Four would happen. I have thought we have had other teams capable. But I also know how doggone hard it is to do it.”
The Big Ten knows all about this. Both Illinois and Michigan have a chance to deliver a title for the conference for the first time since Michigan State won it all in 2000.
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Illinois’ Zvonimir Ivisic (44) dunks the ball against Iowa during the second half of an Elite Eight game in the NCAA college basketball tournament Saturday, March 28, 2026, in Houston. (AP Photo/Eric Gay)
Illinois’ Zvonimir Ivisic (44) dunks the ball against Iowa during the second half of an Elite Eight game in the NCAA college basketball tournament Saturday, March 28, 2026, in Houston. (AP Photo/Eric Gay)
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Michigan’s Yaxel Lendeborg (23) celebrates during the second half in the Elite Eight of the NCAA college basketball tournament against Tennessee, Sunday, March 29, 2026, in Chicago. (AP Photo/Erin Hooley)
Michigan’s Yaxel Lendeborg (23) celebrates during the second half in the Elite Eight of the NCAA college basketball tournament against Tennessee, Sunday, March 29, 2026, in Chicago. (AP Photo/Erin Hooley)
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Illinois vs. UConn
The Illini, led by the so-called “Balkan Bloc” — a cohort of players with roots in Eastern Europe — have a potential NBA lottery pick of their own in guard Keaton Wagler.
Even so, the best-known name on the Illini roster might be Andrej Stojakovic, whose father, Peja, was a three-time NBA All-Star. Illinois is the third school in three years for the younger Stojakovic, who spent one season at Stanford and another at Cal before joining Underwood’s crew.
The task for Illinois: Figuring out who to key on across a roster that has five players who average double figures, led by Tarris Reed Jr.
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UConn forward Tarris Reed Jr. celebrates after the second half in the Elite Eight of the NCAA college basketball tournament against Duke, Sunday, March 29, 2026, in Washington. (AP Photo/Abbie Parr)
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UConn forward Tarris Reed Jr. celebrates after the second half in the Elite Eight of the NCAA college basketball tournament against Duke, Sunday, March 29, 2026, in Washington. (AP Photo/Abbie Parr)
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Michigan vs. Arizona
The Wildcats-Wolverines game is a high-powered matchup of programs that have shown there’s more than one way to amass talent in the era of the unlimited transfer portal and big-money name, image and likeness deals.
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Four of the five starters for Tommy Lloyd’s Wildcats began their careers in Tucson; the fifth, Big 12 player of the year Jaden Bradley, moved over from Alabama and has been with the Wildcats for three years.
Meanwhile, the top four players in minutes played at Michigan — Lendeborg, Morez Johnson Jr., Aday Mara and Elliot Cadeau — all arrived from the transfer portal.
In a twist that makes perfect sense these days, both coaches parlayed roots in the mid-majors to a spot on the sport’s biggest stage. Lloyd spent decades as a top assistant for Mark Few at Gonzaga before heading to Arizona to rebuild the program after the ouster of Sean Miller in 2021.
May led FAU to the Final Four before heading to the Michigan program that had thrived, then collapsed, under former Fab Five star Juwan Howard.
The countdown is on until NASA’s first moon mission in more than half a century, and the quarantined astronauts who’ll be travelling into space have taken part in a Q&A.
Artemis II will take four astronauts – NASA’s Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover and Christina Koch, plus Jeremy Hansen of the Canadian Space Agency – on a 10-day flight around the moon.
The launch date has been set for Wednesday (1 April) and since Friday, the crew has been living in quarantine at the Kennedy Space Center, Florida.
Revealing what life is like at the historic facility, Mr Wiseman described the crew quarters as “an amazing place to be”.
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“The folks who are cooking for us, their shirts are just covered in patches from other missions,” he said in a Q&A via video link on Sunday.
“When you walk down the halls, you see names in foreign languages, you can think about the places they were born, the lives they have lived and the legacy that we’re a part of.
“It’s a very, very special place. This is where humanity began reaching for the stars.”
Image: The Artemis II crew before going into quarantine on Friday. Pic: AP
Image: The Apollo missions also launched from the Florida space centre. Pic: NASA via Reutersv
The Artemis II mission will mark a number of firsts, with pilot Mr Glover becoming the first black astronaut on a lunar mission, while Ms Koch will be the first woman and Mr Hansen the first Canadian.
Mr Glover shared conflicting feelings as he addressed this at the Q&A.
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He explained: “I live in this dichotomy between happiness that a woman can look at Christina and physicalise her passion or her interest. And that young brown boys and girls can look at me and go, ‘he’s doing what?’.
“But I also hope we’re pushing in that other direction that one day, we don’t have to talk about these firsts.”
Ms Koch said: “Something to add, is that although it is something to celebrate, a bunch of firsts, that doesn’t necessarily tell the whole story. It’s not about any one individual.”
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Image: People look at NASA’s next-generation moon rocket ahead of the Artemis II mission launch. Pic: Reuters
NASA was previously aiming for Artemis II to launch on 8 February, but a liquid hydrogen leak during a practice launch forced a delay.
Artemis ‘80% go’ for Wednesday, says NASA
It is now aiming for lift-off on Wednesday 1 April – although the agency has warned that the weather could impact this plan.
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Chris Cianciola, deputy manager of NASA’s space launch system, said on Sunday evening: “We got our latest forecast and the thing we’re watching is cumulus clouds, and also winds. Right now, we’re forecast to be 80% go on Wednesday afternoon.”
This third stage is currently aimed to launch in mid-2027.
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