Amassing 653 appearances in the Premier League takes some doing.
Sign up for the Football newsletter
Thank you!
Advertisement
James Milner is set to equal Gareth Barry’s Premier League appearance recordCredit: GettyIf he plays against Crystal Palace it will be his 653rd in the competitionCredit: Shutterstock Editorial
But even he raised an eyebrow at the dedication shown by James Milner in trying to overhaul his milestone.
Milner, who turned 40 last month, will equal Barry’s Prem appearance record if he plays for Brighton against Crystal Palace on Sunday.
Despite being team-mates at two clubs — Aston Villa and Manchester City — not to mention England, it took a few days away on a golfing holiday to really provide proof of Milner’s commitment.
Advertisement
It was not sufficient for Barry, now 44, to see what his fellow midfielder got up to on a daily basis on the training ground.
No, it was away from the game where the amiable Barry was given his first real insight into how his team-mate was going to wring every last ounce out of his football career.
Barry, along with a few friends and Milner, went for a bit of R & R — playing some rounds of golf and then staying on at the ‘19th hole’.
But teetotal Milner, while happy to tag along, was not there just for the giggles.
Advertisement
Barry told SunSport: “Every footballer who has had any career in the Premier League has worked hard. There aren’t any shortcuts.
“You have to put it in. It takes a lot of effort to maintain any kind of level — especially for so long in the Premier League.
“But I realised just how far James was willing to go when we went on a short golf trip together with a few friends.
Advertisement
“I can’t remember where we went but we would play a round of golf and then head to a restaurant for dinner.
“We’d have a couple of drinks and James would come with us. But he doesn’t touch alcohol.
“Usually, we left him to pick up the tab in the morning when he got up first!
Milner played with Barry at Manchester CityCredit: GettyMilner could break the record while at BrightonCredit: Shutterstock Editorial
“On one of those days, when we came down to breakfast, we couldn’t find him.
Advertisement
“He wasn’t there. So we carried on eating without him.
“Eventually, he turned up in the breakfast room in his running gear with his boots.
“We asked him where he had been because we were all none the wiser.
“It turns out that when we booked the hotel, he had done his research.
Advertisement
“He found out there was a training pitch adjacent to the hotel. So he had taken his boots out there and booked the pitch for an hour to do some running.
“He was doing his exercises — even on holiday — just to keep himself ticking over.”
Despite the prospect of losing his record, Barry remains out on his own in some respects.
He has spent 54,439 career minutes on the pitch in the Premier League — dwarfing the totals of every other outfield player by a country mile.
Advertisement
Milner started his career at Leeds UnitedCredit: Matthew ImpeyDavid James played 51,299 minutes in the Premier LeagueCredit: News Group Newspapers Ltd
Goalkeeper David James is the next cab off the rank with 51,299. Frank Lampard follows on 48,869 minutes.
Milner comes in 13th spot at 40,408 — that’s well over 150 full games fewer than Barry.
The current record-holder has also started 618 games — that’s a gigantic 183 more than the Brighton man.
Milner may soon hold the appearance record — but it is clear who the real leader is in the longevity stakes.
Advertisement
Barry’s career stretched 23 seasons — the same as Milner’s — but he has started more games and played more minutes, although he will have to give way on the appearance record.
He said: “At the time you don’t really think about what you’re doing. I know it’s a cliche but you do take it game by game.
“You aren’t sitting there thinking, ‘Can I get to 600 appearances or will I reach 650?’. You’re just in the moment, trying to prepare as best you can for the club you’re playing for. You don’t realise how big it is until you have finished.
“I’ll be walking around the streets now and that’s, generally, what people talk to you about.
Advertisement
Frank Lampard has played more minutes than MilnerCredit: AFPMilner won the Premier League title with LiverpoolCredit: The Times
“They’re pleased for you. They ask you about it and congratulate you on doing it.
“So, in that respect, I’ll be sad to see it go because it stands there as one of my biggest achievements in football.
“But I will always be proud of it, even if Milly does beat it.”
Barry and Milner played alongside one another at Aston Villa in the noughties and then Manchester City.
Advertisement
It was the former who quit Villa Park first in 2009, with Milner following him to City 12 months later.
Barry added: “I played with him at two clubs and know what type of character it’s taken to get there. I know how hard it is.
“And I have seen how hard James works first-hand.
“If it goes to him, I know it’s going to someone who has worked for it.
Advertisement
“Who knows what it’s like to put in the hard yards and make sacrifices. It hasn’t happened by fluke but by dedication.
“So, congratulations to him — it has taken an enormous amount of hard work.”
What his team-mates say (and his boss right now)
MICHAEL BRIDGES (Leeds)Michael Bridges claimed Milner is drying the aging processCredit: Reuters
STRIKER Bridges was on the bench with James Milner when he made his debut as a 77th-minute sub at West Ham on November 10, 2002.
Advertisement
Bridges said: “It was a really exciting game and one we needed to win.
“Despite all of the tension and it was always hostile at West Ham, I don’t remember him being nervous at all as we sat there. He just got on with it and worked hard once he got on.
“James was a wise head on old shoulders from a young age.
“He’s always been a class act, on and off the pitch. He was a true professional, even back then, who never drank alcohol and always wanted to learn.
Advertisement
“He was so down to earth from the start and he’s loved by all, even all the older guys.
“It’s amazing what he has gone on to do and the career he has had — and it doesn’t surprise me.
“He’s like Cristiano Ronaldo, defying the aging process due to his professional approach. Others need to take a leaf out of their books.”
STEVE HARPER (Newcastle)
Advertisement
Steve Harper helped Milner settle in NewcastleCredit: AFP
KEEPER Harper helped Milner settle on Tyneside after he left cash-strapped Leeds for the Geordies in 2004.
Harper (below) said: “He was the ultimate professional when he moved up to Newcastle — I used to make sure he was all right and go around to his house to play darts.
“He was always a model professional at such a young age. That’s been the case throughout his career. He came here as a teenager and had to play in front of a big, expectant crowd but it didn’t faze him.
“He quickly showed what he could do, scoring some big goals. Off the pitch, which nobody will know, his darts nickname was Machine Gun Milner.
Advertisement
“He was the best in all the darts tournaments we had and I was No 2 seed to him.
“I remember him playing against Phil ‘The Power’ Taylor and he started with 100, 100, 100, which raised some eyebrows.
“I’m absolutely delighted for the career James has had. He’s remained grounded despite his incredible success.”
JORDAN HENDERSON (Liverpool)
Advertisement
Milner played with Jordan Henderson at LiverpoolCredit: Sunday Times
MIDFIELDER Henderson was a team-mate of Milner’s at Anfield, where they won the Champions League and the Prem title.
Speaking in May 2023, Henderson said: “It’s a well-told story now but the night we became European champions in Madrid in 2019, I did try to persuade him to join me in lifting the trophy.
“The reply was two words, the second one ‘off!’
“The reason I wanted to share that with him still stands to this day.
Advertisement
“The guy has been the beating heart of our team. He sets the standards.
He’s relentless. He makes everything about the collective ahead of the individual.
“He is the embodiment of the values a successful team needs.
“Often the focus on his professionalism means there is a lack of appreciation of his quality.
Advertisement
“His attitude is elite but so is his skill level. When you train with him every day, you realise his technical ability is close to perfect.
“With him, age is just a number. His physical condition is outrageous.”
FABIAN HURZELER (Brighton)Fabian Hurzeler is Milner’s current managerCredit: PA
CURRENT boss Hurzeler has paid tribute to Milner’s longevity and confirmed he will be involved in Sunday’s clash with Crystal Palace.
Advertisement
Hurzeler said: “He’ll definitely be in the squad.
“James Milner is a role model, he is a great character to work with.
“Being a Premier League player in this age and still playing on the level he plays and also training on the level he trains, it’s incredible. I’m very pleased to work with him.
“It will be a special thing for him but he’s focused on the ambitions for the club as well.
Advertisement
“He is a driver of this winning mentality and it’s very important to have these kind of players in the squad.
“They know how to win, what it means to win, they know how you need to prepare a game, they know how you react like on bad runs we have at the moment.
“What is definitely special is his body and what is definitely special is his approach and discipline.
“He has proved in his career he has this hunger and desire and that’s what makes him so special.”
The winners of tonight’s play-off semi-final will then be one step closer to qualifying for the 2026 World Cup, facing either Wales or Bosnia and Herzegovina next Tuesday for the right to join Canada, Qatar and Switzerland in Group B at this summer’s showpiece event. Follow the game LIVE below with our dedicated match blog.
Passions and emotions were running high before kick-off in the Welsh capital, with thousands making the pilgrimage from across the country to cheer Bellamy’s charges on in their quest for a place at the competition.
Once again, Wales fans in bucket hats were teed up by an intro track and a lightshow, before being allowed to go it alone with the anthem, and the results were simply spectacular.
The rendition, as ever, was enough to give you goosebumps.
Bellamy was in typical bullish mood ahead of this vital semi-final this evening.
Content cannot be displayed without consent
“We’ve done everything we can,” said head coach Bellamy.
“You always feel a lot calmer as it goes along. The more you tick off something, the more you reassure yourself.
Advertisement
“Imagine if you’re going into an exam and you haven’t put the work in and you’re expecting good results to happen. The players have been top and they’re used to this.”
Should Wales beat Bosnia-Herzegovina this evening, they will face either Italy or Northern Ireland in the final.
That game will also be played in the Welsh capital next Tuesday.
ITV has released the first trailer for a thrilling new competition show, hosted by a BAFTA-winning broadcaster
Sara Baalla Screen Time TV Reporter
20:00, 26 Mar 2026
ITV has offered audiences a first glimpse of its upcoming “high-stakes” competition programme, fronted by an award-winning television personality.
The channel had previously revealed details of a “thrilling” new entertainment format titled The Neighbourhood, which pits families and households against one another in a street-based reality contest that sees them compete for a potentially life-altering cash prize.
Advertisement
Presented by BAFTA-winning broadcaster Graham Norton, the fresh 12-episode series delivers a gameshow unlike anything seen before, combining “high-stakes” rivalry, “epic” tasks and relatable household tensions to create a distinctive brand of reality television.
“The Neighbourhood will see real-life households from all walks of life move in side by side, finding themselves not only neighbours, but also fierce competitors in the ultimate reality showdown,” the official synopsis reads.
“This is a game the households will live as well as play. They’ll be with each other 24/7, sleeping and eating in their houses, socialising between them – and then voting each other out. The challenges they face in public will change the dynamics behind closed doors,” reports the Mirror.
“And to win, they’ll need to defeat their neighbours, while still staying popular on the street. In The Neighbourhood, it’s not about keeping up with the Joneses – it’s about beating them.”
The newly released teaser opens with presenter Graham emerging from the neighbourhood café, announcing: “Hello, I’m TV’s Graham Norton. Welcome to The Neighbourhood.”
“A new community where everyone keeps an eye out for one another. A place where you’ll always have a helping hand,” Graham continues, while neighbours are shown sabotaging one another around him.
Advertisement
The presenter adds: “It’s always a challenge to settle into somewhere new, but it can be really rewarding. Find yourself amongst like-minded individuals. Every household is competing in huge challenges to win a quarter of a million pounds.”
The thrilling teaser concludes with Graham approaching a house to ring the doorbell, declaring: “Bring on the ding dong!”
Fresh photographs have also been unveiled, featuring shots of Graham filming on location in the Peak District, alongside the six colourful households that have been assigned distinct colours for the competition.
Advertisement
That’s not all, as audiences have also been given a sneak peek of the neighbourhood’s local pub, where households can enjoy a pint and challenge their competitors to a casual game of darts, plus the village café – the central meeting point where neighbours conspire and strategise.
Expressing his enthusiasm about the new programme, Graham previously commented in a statement: “Like everyone, I’m always intrigued by what goes on behind closed doors. Add to that some dastardly challenges and a life-changing prize, and I’m hooked. Both Lifted and The Garden are masters at what they do, so I feel confident The Neighbourhood will be the nation’s favourite destination!”
Katie Rawcliffe, Director of Entertainment and Daytime at ITV, added: “The Neighbourhood offers audiences the perfect blend of high-stakes competition and reality drama, with a very relatable cast.
“With the beloved Graham Norton at the helm, it’s going to make for an unmissable entertainment experience.”
Advertisement
The Neighbourhood will premiere on ITV1 and ITVX in April
This is the text from The Conversation UK’s World Affairs Briefing email. Sign up here to receive weekly analysis of the latest developments in international relations, direct to your inbox.
The five-day deadline to open the Strait of Hormuz handed to Iran by Donald Trump on Monday expires some time tomorrow and the Islamic Republic needs to “get serious before it is too late” – or so the US president has announced on his TruthSocial platform.
You’ll recall that this deadline replaced another deadline which was due to expire on Monday night, after which the US and Israel would obliterate Iran’s power plants and plunge the country into darkness. Happily Trump pulled back from this plan, reporting that talks were progressing very well, so he would extend the deadline until March 27.
For their part, Iranian officials denied that negotiations were even underway, while US officials said contacts were at a very early stage. This has prompted speculation that the US president was seizing even the most informal of contacts as an “off ramp” to save face over not following through with his threat.
Advertisement
Certainly Trump’s oft-repeated assurance that the war in Iran has been won and that Iran’s senior officials (whoever remains after Israel’s highly successful campaign of assassinations) are “begging” the US to make a deal looks a rather optimistic assessment from the US president.
Far from collapsing in a heap after the death of the former supreme leader, Ali Khamenei, the regime is showing its resilience. Its targeting of US installations in the region are hurting the Gulf states and there are signs that Israel’s Iron Dome is fracturing in parts under the volume of Iranian missile attacks (this reportedly also happened during the 12-day war last year). Conservative estimates are that the war is costing the US and Israel more than US$1 billion £740 million) a day.
TruthSocial
But it has been Iran’s ability to shut down traffic through the Strait of Hormuz that has arguably turned this into a world war, despite the unwillingness of many of America’s allies, particularly in Europe, to get involved. An estimated 20% of the world’s gas and oil transit the strait each day along with other vital supplies. Or at least it did before the end of February. Now very little is getting through and the consequences are being felt globally.
Advertisement
It’s not as if the US and Israel couldn’t anticipate that Iran would react to their attacks by closing down the strait. Arshin Adib-Moghaddam, an expert in Iranian history at the SOAS, University of London, walks us through nearly five decades in which Iran responded to every crisis by threatening to close the strait. Is is, he argues, a key plan in Iran’s security policy.
Meanwhile, it appears that the US is dusting off a 15-point peace plan it developed in May last year and which has already been rejected by Iran.
Critics say the chances of Iran acquiescing to the plan were negligible then and remain so now. It calls for Iran to give up all its uranium and agree to hand control of its civil nuclear programme to an outside panel. And, controversially, it seeks to control what Iran spends the money it gains if sanctions are relaxed.
Advertisement
This has prompted analysts to ask whether this plan was simply produced to give the US an explanation as to why it changed its mind over hitting Iran’s power plants. Bamo Nouri and Inderjeet Parmar, experts in international politics at City St George’s, University of London, think it the resurfacing of this plan is the strongest indication yet that Washington is beginning to fear that it has become embroiled in an unwinnable war.
Certainly this conflict has not gone the way Trump and his Israeli counterpart Benjamin Netanyahu might have wanted. But – as with the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, this should have been predictable. Jason Reifler, a political scientist at the University of Southampton, asserts that the US in particular, has embarked on this conflict with no clear goals or thought-through strategy.
The Strait of Hormuz is one of the world’s most important waterways, with 20% of the global trade in oil flowing through a narrow maritime channel. Wikimedia Commons
Failing to ask for authorisation via the United Nations (and for America, the the US congress) was a bad start, meaning the war had a legitimacy deficit from the word go. The reason for launching the conflict has veered from halting Iran’s nuclear programme to regime change and back again. And the strategy of assassinating Iran’s leadership has produced a rally-round-the-flag effect that few had anticipated.
Add to that the devastatingly effective use of drones by Iran (which the war planners in the US and Israel must surely have picked up on from the experience in Ukraine), means that the two countries are often forced to counter munitions worth US$20,000 with missiles worth millions of dollars. Meanwhile, the pain from Iran’s closure of the closing the strait will only get worse.
The US defense secretary, Pete Hegseth, held a religious service at the Pentagon yesterday, at which he called on god to “grant this task force clear and righteous targets for violence”. Hegseth appears to see this as a holy war in which he has clearly cast himself as a crusader, even sporting a tattoo reading, “Daus vult” (god wills it) – reportedly the rallying cry for the attempt to “liberate the Holy Land” in the 11th century.
Toby Matthiesen, senior lecturer in global religious studies at the University of Bristol observes here the way in which all parties to this conflict have used religion to garner support. Of course, claiming the approval of one’s chosen deity is a time-honoured tactic that even Nazi Germany tried. But it feels a little incongruous in the 21st century.
Advertisement
The US president, Donald Trump, receives the prayers of evangelical Christian ministers in the Oval Office, March 5. Image courtesy of the White House.
You could be forgiven for thinking that the sight of Donald Trump in the middle of a prayer huddle in the Oval Office was an amusing oddity. But Benjamin Netanyahu’s reference to the Old Testament story of the Amalekites, whom god told the children of Israel to annihilate, “men and women, children and infants, cattle and sheep, camels and donkeys” is frankly chilling. Parts of the Islamic world has flocked to Iran’s defence (although not with particular enthusiasm in the Sunni countries of the Gulf, which Iran is bombarding with ballistic missiles).
Trang Chu and Tim Morris, meanwhile, believe that this conflict has been nearly five decades in the making. Just as Iran has always denied the right of Israel to exist as a Jewish state, many people in the US and Israel have long been committed to the destruction of Iran as a theocracy. Accordingly the way the two sides talk about each other has hardened over the years. Language on each side no longer reflects a criticism of their adversary’s behaviours, it has become a verdict on their moral character.
So to Iranians, the US is the “Great Satan”, while Iran is described in America as part of an “axis of evil”. Our experts believe that, this language “not only describes the enemy, but actively participates in creating it”. The observe that once you start to think these sorts of things about your adversaries, the idea of engaging in negotiation tends to become secondary to the desire to simply defeat or destroy them. Which is terribly dangerous, as we’re seeing.
Sign up to receive our weekly World Affairs Briefing newsletter from The Conversation UK. Every Thursday we’ll bring you expert analysis of the big stories in international relations.
South Park Primary promotes and is guided by Respect, Equity, Ambition, Confidence and Happiness in all that it does after the values were chosen through consultation with everyone connected with the school.
An East Kilbride primary school and nursery that seek to help children to reach for the very best they can do has been recognised for that ethos by inspectors.
Advertisement
South Park Primary promotes and is guided by Respect, Equity, Ambition, Confidence and Happiness in all that it does after the values were chosen through consultation with everyone connected with the school.
When a team from HM Inspectors of Education visited the school, they picked out a range of positive attributes that stem from those core values, including the positive, caring, nurturing relationships between children and staff across the school; all teachers’ commitment to high-quality and ongoing professional development and the positive activities engaged in by the children to achieve success and contribute effectively to the school and local community, which develops their confidence and skills for learning, life and work.
Overall, the primary school was judged in the inspection report to be ‘very good’ in learning, teaching and assessment and ‘good’ in raising attainment and achievement; while the nursery was assessed as ‘very good’ in staff skills, knowledge, values and deployment; learning, teaching and assessment; and children’s progress, and ‘good’ in Nurturing, care and support.
Acting head teacher Yvonne Donaldson said: “We have high aspirations for all of our children and we do our best to challenge and support them in whatever way is needed to let each one flourish according to their own potential, and so it was wonderful to see that the results of this were clear for the inspectors to see.
Advertisement
“I was, of course, delighted that they remarked upon the work of the teachers such as their use of stimulating resources, the ways they enhance and support learning through digital technologies and their drive to continuously improve themselves, which in turn is reflected in the learning and teaching being highly effective.
“However, what was particularly uplifting was what the inspectors saw in the children.
“They commented specifically on politeness, manner and kindness, and on the way they lead developments across the school through pupil leadership groups and are involved in participatory budgeting, improvement planning and leading clubs.
Advertisement
“The primary school and nursery are proud of our friendly, inclusive nurturing ethos where all are valued and have a voice, and we make a point of working closely with our whole school community to provide high-quality, stimulating experiences that foster a love of learning, and so for the inspectors to recognise this is not only reassuring, but it also inspires us to build further upon it.”
*Don’t miss the latest headlines from around Lanarkshire. Sign up to our newsletters here.
And did you know Lanarkshire Live had its own app? Download yours for free here.
A 27-year-old woman has admitted to a string of thefts in a Cambridgeshire city. Charlene Monks began her spree in late February 2026, by stealing from Asda, in Rivergate, Peterborough on three separate occasions.
Advertisement
On March 1, Monks, of no fixed address, entered the Co-op, in Waterhouse Way, Hampton Gardens, Peterborough, and went to the checkout to buy alcohol and cigarettes. However, before paying, Monks grabbed the items, now in a carrier bag, and ran out the shop.
Her final theft was at Sainsbury’s in Oxney Road, Parnwell, Peterborough, on March 2, and she was later arrested on March 19.
Monks admitted the thefts, together with two in Southend-on-Sea in Essex, at Cambridge Magistrates’ Court on Friday, March 20. She was jailed for a year after a suspended sentence imposed in January for shoplifting was activated. The court also ordered Monks to pay £1311.41 in compensation.
PC Sam Malton, who investigated, said: “Monks decided to continue offending after arriving in Peterborough, with no regard for the impact her actions would have on the businesses and their staff.
Advertisement
“I urge businesses to continue reporting offences to us, regardless of value, as it helps us to identify those involved and put them before the courts.”
Marasu’s Petit Fours was founded back in 1986 by “master-patissiers” Rolf Kern and Gabi Kohler.
The aim of the business was to supply “London’s top hotels, restaurants and clubs with premium chocolates and petits fours”.
The company grew to become London’s largest producer of premium chocolates, with annual production of over 300 tonnes from its 25,000 sq foot facilities in Park Royal, according to business experts Odoo.
Advertisement
Marasu’s, which was acquired by Prestat Group Ltd in 2006, has provided chocolates to some big-name brands, including:
Selfridges
Harrods
Fortnum & Mason
Pret a Manger
Marasu’s Petit Fours at risk of closing as it enters administration
After 40 years, Marasu’s Petit Fours is now at risk of closing.
The premium chocolate company entered administration last month, according to Companies House, along with its parent company Prestat Ltd.
Alessandro Sidoli and Jessica Barker of Xeinadin Corporate Recovery Limited have been appointed joint administrators.
Marasu’s collapse follows a tough few years for chocolate manufacturers.
The Grocery Gazette explains: “Global cocoa prices surged to record highs in 2024 after disease and extreme weather hit crops in Ghana and Ivory Coast, which together account for around 60 per cent of global cocoa production.
“For premium chocolate manufacturers, sharply rising ingredient costs, combined with higher energy and operating expenses, have significantly squeezed margins even for established heritage brands.”
Advertisement
What happens when a company goes into administration?
Put simply, when a company enters administration, it means that it is unable to pay expenses, debts, or other liabilities, according to SquareUp.com.
Companies House adds: “When a company goes into administration, they have entered a legal process (under the Insolvency Act 1986) with the aim of achieving one of the statutory objectives of an administration. This may be to rescue a viable business that is insolvent due to cashflow problems.
“An appointment of an administrator (a licensed insolvency practitioner) will be made by directors, a creditor or the court to fulfil the administration process.”
A statutory moratorium is put in place once a company enters administration, giving it “breathing space” to allow for financial restructuring plans to be drawn up free from creditor enforcement actions.
Advertisement
A company can continue to trade while in administration, but daily management and control is handed over to the administrators.
Companies House continues: “Within 8 weeks it is the administrators’ role to formulate administration proposals.
“Creditors are then asked to vote by a decision procedure to approve the administrators’ proposals.
“If the administration involves a sale of all or part of the company’s business, the proceeds (after the costs of the procedure) will be distributed to creditors in a statutory order of priority.”
Advertisement
Administration will end automatically after 12 months unless the administrator asks the court or creditors for an extension.
Through administration, a company can be:
Rescued and passed back to the directors
Enter liquidation
Be dissolved
Other UK companies that have closed or entered administration/liquidation in 2026 (so far)
It has been a rough start to 2026 for the UK high street, with several retailers entering administration and others announcing widespread store closures.
Major high street retailers, including River Island, Primark, and Poundland, have already been forced to close stores in 2026, while Revolution and BrewDog have shut the doors to 21 and 38 pubs, respectively.
Advertisement
Several other retailers have fallen into administration recently, including:
Meanwhile, four UK travel companies have closed in the opening weeks of 2026:
EcoJet Airlines, billed as “the world’s first Electric Airline”, has also entered liquidation after just three years, resulting in the cancellation of all planned flights.
Tesco also recently revealed plans to cut 380 jobs in stores across the UK, while it’s been reported that Morrisons is looking to sell some of its in-store pharmacies as it continues to cut costs.
It’s not been all bad news for the UK high street, with several major brands announcing new store openings for 2026, including Aldi, M&S, and Superdrug.
Advertisement
Have you tried Marasu’s Petit Fours chocolates before? Let us know in the poll above or in the comments below.
Will Wales’ World Cup play-off go to extra time and penalties or semi-final second leg? | Wales Online
Need to know
Wales, Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland are all in action in a World Cup qualifying single-leg semi-final this Thursday
Wales take on Wales vs Bosnia and Herzegovina on Thursday(Image: Kian Abdullah/Huw Evans Agency)
Everything you need to know ahead of Thursday’s World Cup playoffs:
Single-leg knockout format: The play-offs consist of four separate paths (A, B, C, and D), each structured as a four-team mini-tournament with two semi-finals and one final. Every match is a single-leg knockout, meaning there are no second legs or aggregate scores to fall back on.
Extra time and penalties: Since every game must produce a winner this Thursday, matches that are tied after 90 minutes will go to 30 minutes of extra time. If the scores remain level after that extra period, the winner will be decided by a penalty shoot-out.
Wales vs Bosnia and Herzegovina: Wales are playing their Path A semi-final against Bosnia and Herzegovina at the Cardiff City Stadium. As the higher-seeded team in this bracket, Wales earned the right to host this crucial do-or-die fixture in front of their home fans.
Northern Ireland vs Italy: Northern Ireland face a massive challenge in their Path A semi-final away against Italy in Bergamo. Because they are in the same path as Wales, they are effectively on the other side of the same bracket.
The Path A final: If both Wales and Northern Ireland win their respective matches, they will face each other in the Path A final on Tuesday, March 31. The winner of that final secures one of the last remaining tickets to the 2026 World Cup.
Republic of Ireland vs Czech Republic: The Republic of Ireland are competing in Path D and are playing their semi-final away against the Czech Republic in Prague. They must win this difficult away fixture to keep their hopes of a first World Cup appearance since 2002 alive.
Republic of Ireland’s potential final: Should Ireland win, they will advance to the Path D Final on March 31 against the winner of Denmark vs North Macedonia. A draw was held previously to determine that the winner of Ireland’s semi-final will host that final match.
Consequences of losing: If any of these teams lose, their World Cup qualifying journey ends immediately with no chance of redemption. However, the losing semi-finalists are scheduled to play a friendly match against each other on Tuesday to fulfil TV obligations.
The ultimate prize: Only the winner of each path’s final on Tuesday will qualify for the 48-team tournament in North America. For Wales, Northern Ireland, and Ireland, this means they are exactly two wins away from the biggest stage in football.
Wales winger Harry Wilson, ahead of tonight’s match:
“I think so, the Wales games really helped me as well,” he said. “To go away and play for your country puts you in a really good place.
On 7-1 win against North Macedonia: “It was a huge game, the hatr-trick was the cherry on the cake, it was perfect.”
Harry Wilson (PA Wire)
Kieran Jackson26 March 2026 19:29
Advertisement
Wales midfielder Jordan James, speaking to BBC Sport:
“It’s a massive game, we’re ready for it,” he said. “The lads in that dressing room are ready to go.
“You want to play in these big games, it’s what you play football for. We’re a big squad with a lot of quality.”
Kieran Jackson26 March 2026 19:23
Advertisement
Ethan Ampadu on potential World Cup qualification:
“It would be very special to qualify,” he said.
“I think everyone as a kid grows up getting excited for a World Cup and wanting to play there. To have lived through that moment of achieving it gives you that feeling to want to do it again.
“But also, when we got there, we didn’t play as well as we could have. So it’s about wanting to put that right and making sure we deliver the performances. But like I said, we have to make sure we get through Thursday first.”
Advertisement
Ethan Ampadu (left) (Getty Images)
Kieran Jackson26 March 2026 19:11
PHOTOS: Wales arrive at the Cardiff City Stadium
Fans await the Welsh team in the capital!
(Getty Images)
(Getty Images)
Kieran Jackson26 March 2026 19:03
TEAM NEWS – Dzeko and Kolasinac start
The visitors start with 40-year-old captain Edin Dzeko up front, with Sead Kolasinac (formerly of Arsenal) also in the starting XI.
Advertisement
Bosnia and Herzegovina: Vasilj; Dedic, Katic, Muharemovic, Kolasinac; Memic, Tahirovic, Bajraktarevic, Sunjic; Demirovic, Dzeko.
Ethan Ampadu returns after suspension and replaces Josh Sheehan in midfield, with Jordan James replacing Liam Cullen from the line-up who beat North Macedonia in November.
Harry Wilson starts; Ampadu is skipper.
Wales: Darlow; Williams, Rodon, Lawlor, Dasilva; Ampadu, J. James; D. James, Brooks, Wilson, Johnson.
In the United Kingdom and Northern Ireland, the match will be broadcast live on BBC One Wales, BBC Two, BBC iPlayer and the BBC Sport website.
Coverage starts at 7:10pm.
Advertisement
Kieran Jackson26 March 2026 18:33
Craig Bellamy on pressure of the play-offs
“It’s just normal for this group of players. It’s ingrained in them,” said Bellamy.
“It’s not for us to ride the rollercoaster. Everyone in these play-offs wants to get to the World Cup. We completely understand that and our fans will play a big part.
Advertisement
“Their experience in these games will play a big part, but us as coaching staff and the players, we have to be able to separate ourselves at times from it.
“We feed off it when we need to, because there will be moments where we definitely will, but let’s be clear, be calm.”
Wales manager Bellamy (PA Wire)
Kieran Jackson26 March 2026 18:25
QUICK LOOK: Bosnia and Herzegovina
They are ranked 71st in the world (36 places below Wales). Edin Dzeko, with 146 caps and 72 goals in his back pocket, is their captain, aged 40.
Advertisement
Their most recent fixture was a 1-1 draw in Vienna in November, when an away win would have seen the Bosnians qualify. Austria equalised with 13 minutes to go, sealing their place in the US.
Edin Dzeko is Bosnia and Herzegovina’s record scorer and appearance holder (Tim Goode/PA) (PA Archive)
Kieran Jackson26 March 2026 18:17
VIDEO: How Parrott’s Ireland are taking the mentality and momentum of Budapest to Prague and maybe the World Cup
Elsewhere tonight, the Republic of Ireland travel to the Czech Republic tonight in their play-off semi-final, with the winner hosting Denmark or North Macedonia on Tuesday.
Here’s our Chief Football Writer Miguel Delaney with a video preview of tonight’s clash, as the Irish hunt another memorable away-day.
Advertisement
How Parrott’s Ireland are taking the mentality and momentum of Budapest to Prague and maybe the World Cup
A video shared online confirmed that the original cast member will feature
Peter Harris Film and TV Reporter (Screen Time, U35s)
19:20, 26 Mar 2026
Scrubs Cast – then and now
Fans are questioning whether one of the most cherished characters from the original series of Scrubs will feature in the revival.
Advertisement
*Warning – this article contains minor spoilers for the revival series of Scrubs*
A few weeks into the new season, audiences have already been reunited with JD, Turk and Elliott portrayed by Zach Braff, Donald Faison and Sarah Chalke respectively. Early episodes have also included brief cameos by John C McGinley’s Dr Cox and Judy Reyes’ Carla.
Regrettably they are not series regulars for the new version. Although the Todd has made more frequent appearances.
The Janitor was an immediate hit in the original series. He featured throughout the original eight season run and was portrayed by Neil Flynn, reports the Mirror.
Advertisement
Most devoted fans will be aware that the writers initially envisaged the character would actually be part of the protagonist’s imagination but they quickly discarded that concept partway through the first season.
He did not feature in the ninth season, having seemingly resigned as soon as he discovered his rival JD no longer worked at the hospital. Behind the scenes, Flynn’s obligation to starring in the sitcom The Middle simultaneously stopped him from featuring.
Advertisement
But will the Janitor feature in the new series? Here’s what we know thus far.
Is the Janitor in the new series of Scrubs?
The Janitor is set to feature in the series. A video posted on the programme’s official Facebook page back in February confirmed this by sharing a brief clip. The caption read: “Oh, he is SO back. Neil Flynn is scrubbing back in to Scrubs.”
However, the actor was not dressed in his character’s typical outfit. Instead of his maintenance overalls, he is seen donning a suit. The individual behind the camera discards a disposable coffee cup before Flynn enters the frame and declares: “I’m not cleaning that.”
Advertisement
This snippet ignited over 1,000 comments from fans expressing their enthusiasm for the news. One person simply declared: “Best. News. Ever!” Another responded: “Shut the front door!?!!! I cannot waaaait!! I was getting so worried because I hadn’t seen him in any of the sneak peeks.”
Nevertheless, six episodes have been broadcast thus far and Flynn has yet to make an appearance. The show appears in no hurry to provide additional cameos as it takes time to introduce viewers to the new characters. This week, in the sixth episode, we only just saw the return of another cherished role – the stuffed dog Rowdy, who was revealed to now reside in JD’s office.
There are only three episodes remaining of the revival series according to its Wikipedia page, so it shouldn’t be long before Flynn appears. We still don’t know for certain which one it will be though. It could be that the creators of the show are reserving something special for the finale.
You must be logged in to post a comment Login