Some of these games are available through cloud streaming but that’s not ideal for those with poor internet connections (Sony/Metro)
With Metal Gear Solid 4 finally leaving the PlayStation 3, GameCentral names the other games that should follow suit and get a proper re-release.
During the recent State of Play, Konami announced the long awaited follow up to its Metal Gear Solid: Master Collection Vol. 1. The second volume includes re-releases of PlayStation Portable game Metal Gear Solid: Portable Ops, the little-known Game Boy Color spin-off Metal Gear: Ghost Babel and, most importantly, Metal Gear Solid 4: Guns Of The Patriots.
That last one is significant because Metal Gear Solid 4 only ever released for the PlayStation 3, in 2008, and has otherwise been unavailable ever since. As the finale to the entire Metal Gear Solid saga (at least chronologically), fans have demanded a re-release for years and come August, their patience will be rewarded.
But this has us thinking what other PlayStation 3 exclusives could do with a re-release, especially ones from Sony itself, many of which are already in danger of being forgotten.
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Sony does have a sizable list of PlayStation 3 games available through its PlayStation Plus service, but only via cloud streaming, which isn’t ideal if you don’t have an optimal internet connection. It also doesn’t include all the games below and is only rarely updated.
God Of War: Ascension
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It’s going to be a long time until those God Of War remakes come out and while fans do have Metroidvania prequel Sons Of Sparta to whet their appetites, it’s not exactly a traditional God Of War experience.
A God Of War: Ascension re-release would be a smart follow-up since it’s chronologically the next game after Sons Of Sparta and sets up the original trilogy, with a decently interesting story about Kratos’ attempt to free himself from his bond with god of war Ares, after he was tricked into killing his family.
It’s also just a very solid action game and though its gory violence can be tasteless, it’s one of the best-looking PlayStation 3 games, having launched towards the end of its lifecycle.
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inFamous 1 and 2
Sucker Punch is unlikely to ever go back to inFamous when samurai games Ghost Of Tsushima and Ghost Of Yōtei have been far more financially successful, but it wouldn’t hurt to make the original PlayStation 3 games more readily available, alongside the PlayStation 4 sequels.
There are admittedly better superhero games out there, but the first two inFamous games are still enjoyable to play and double as supervillain power fantasies if you’re tired of goody-two-shoes heroes like Spider-Man.
Protagonist Cole McGrath is too much of a boring grump for our liking, although not necessarily any worse than the unfunny and overly enthusiastic Delsin from inFamous: Second Son.
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Killzone Trilogy
Guerrilla Games is far too busy pumping out new Horizon games (including the new multiplayer spin-off) to ever revisit Killzone. That only makes it more surprising that only PlayStation 4 entry Shadow Fall and the PlayStation Portable spin-off are on PlayStation Plus.
Re-releasing the Killzone Trilogy compilation from 2012 would prevent the original PlayStation 2 game from being left out. That said, it is the weakest of the bunch and one you could probably skip in favour of its two PlayStation 3 sequels.
Killzone 2 is most fan’s favourite and it’s the only one that has something close to a memorable character, in villain Colonel Radec. The one downside is that any re-releases would obviously lack the online multiplayer.
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MotorStorm Apocalypse
If Gran Turismo is like a sophisticated, professional race car driver, who can land sponsorships and cut a winning smile for photo opps, MotorStorm is its grungy cousin, that isn’t afraid to get his hands dirty.
For a series that is now all but forgotten there are an awful lot of entries, with MotorStorm Apocalypse being the best of the bunch. We’d take MotorStorm: RC as well, which launched for the PlayStation Vita and is the best Micro Machines game never made.
At the very least, a MotorStorm re-release would be a nice throwback, since developer Evolution Studios is long gone, having joined Codemasters in 2016, who themselves aren’t in a good place nowadays.
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Puppeteer
Even if they weren’t always successful, you could count on Japan Studio to craft some memorable and unique video games, which is why it was so tragic to see Sony gut the studio in 2021.
Of all its PlayStation 3 releases, Puppeteer was one of their best, if only for its phenomenally whimsical puppet show presentation. The combat wasn’t particularly impressive, but it had plenty of interesting gimmicks to make up for it, such as the magic scissors that let you fly as long as you had something to cut through.
It might have fared better if Sony had held it back for the PlayStation 4 (maybe even as a launch title) as it’s arguably the most forgotten, but highest quality, game on this list.
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Ratchet & Clank Future trilogy
Considering its status as one of the main PlayStation franchises – one that has lasted since the days of the PlayStation 2 – it’s surprising Sony hasn’t made more of an effort to make the older Ratchet & Clank games readily available, beyond cloud streaming.
When it comes to the first three games, most fans would probably prefer the original PlayStation 2 versions than their PlayStation 3 remasters, but the Future trilogy of games made specifically for the PlayStation 3 still hold up well and, tonally, would be a hit with newer fans who joined the series with Rift Apart.
Playing Tools Of Destruction, Quest For Booty, and A Crack In Time back-to-back would risk being exhausting, given how similarly they look and play, but they have some amusingly unique weapons and solid platforming. New fans would also appreciate the interconnecting storyline, with some plot threads continued in Rift Apart.
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Siren: Blood Curse
The tonal opposite of the aforementioned Puppeteer, Japan Studio’s Forbidden Siren series has quite the pedigree, having been directed by Silent Hill creator Keiichiro Toyama long before he set up his own studio and released the far inferior Slitterhead.
Unlike that game, the Forbidden Siren series is pure horror through and through. All three entries are of similar quality so, frankly, all of them deserve a second lease at life, and stand to thrive thanks to how popular survival horror games are at the moment.
Since this is a list about PlayStation 3 games, we must highlight Siren: Blood Curse, which is essentially a reimagining of the original game, but with a reworked story structure and gameplay improvements from the second game.
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SOCOM 4 U.S. Navy SEALs
SOCOM always seemed like a good fit for Sony’s live service games obsession, given it was a series of tactical shooters and one of the company’s first attempts at running online multiplayer.
The series saw two entries on PlayStation 3, but if one were to come back, it’d have to be SOCOM 4 U.S. Navy SEALs as the other – SOCOM U.S. Navy SEALs: Confrontation – was a purely online game and Sony’s not going to establish new servers for a nearly 20-year-old title.
Multiplayer was a big part of SOCOM, but SOCOM 4 at least has an enjoyablesingle-player campaign, that should appeal to those nostalgic for the older Call Of Duty campaigns.
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Tokyo Jungle
Although it’s not entirely a first party game, since it was a joint project between Japan Studio and a little-known studio called Crispy’s, Tokyo Jungle is still seen as one of Sony’s cult classics from the PlayStation 3 days.
Its premise is certainly novel, being set in a post-apocalyptic Tokyo devoid of human life. Rather than some grizzled wanderer, you play as a wide variety of different animals – from Pomeranians and chickens to lions and even dinosaurs – and struggle to survive as long as you can.
Tokyo Jungle makes the most of this premise and what it lacks in graphical flair, it makes up for with an entertaining gameplay loop, some interesting survival mechanics, and a tongue-in-cheek tone that keeps it from being too morose.
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White Knight Chronicles 1 and 2
We wouldn’t blame you for not remembering this, but Sony really wanted White Knight Chronicles to take off and pushed it hard as one of the PlayStation 3’s big exclusives. Obviously, that didn’t work, but it was still a competently made action role-player with some neat ideas.
Like Tokyo Jungle, this was another Japan Studio joint project, although the main developer was Level-5, better known nowadays as the studio responsible for Professor Layton and the Yokai Watch series.
White Knight Chronicles 2 also did the Mass Effect thing where you could carry over your character from the first game, along with all your money and equipment, creating a welcome sense of continuity. Not only were there two games but also a PSP spin-off, and yet the franchise never made it out of the PlayStation 3 generation.
Policy chairman of the City of London Corporation, Chris Hayward, said: “Record demand for high‑quality, amenity‑rich office space is reinforcing the City’s position as one of the world’s most resilient and attractive business districts, with vacancy in the City Core continuing to fall, prime supply remaining exceptionally tight, and leasing activity reaching its strongest annual performance since 2019. As global capital becomes increasingly selective, the City of London is a place able to deliver complex schemes at scale while adapting to changing patterns of work and occupier expectations.
A South Korean court has sentenced former president Yoon Suk Yeol to life in prison after he imposed martial law in the country in 2024.
Yoon was found guilty of abuse of authority and masterminding an insurrection, stemming from his mobilisation of military and police forces in an illegal attempt to seize the liberal-led National Assembly in December 2024, in a case that meant he also faced the death penalty.
The 65-year-old staunch conservative had defended his decree as necessary to stop liberals, whom he described as “anti-state” forces, from obstructing his agenda with their legislative majority.
Image: Supporters of Yoon react after the guilty verdict.
Pic: Reuters
The emergency rule triggered a national political crisis.
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Martial law lasted for around six hours, before being lifted after politicians managed to break through a blockade by hundreds of heavily-armed troops and police, unanimously voting to lift the measure.
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From 2024: How six hours of martial law unfolded in South Korea
Prosecutors sought the death penalty in January, saying “his unconstitutional and illegal emergency martial law undermined the function of the National Assembly and the Election Commission… actually destroying the liberal democratic constitutional order.”
South Korea has not executed anyone since 1997 – a move widely seen as a de facto moratorium on capital punishment.
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Image: Yoon’s supporters staged a rally outside the Seoul Central District Court.
Pic: AP
The court also convicted and sentenced several former military and police officials involved in enforcing the martial law decree.
Former defence minister Kim Yong Hyun received a 30-year jail term for his central role in planning the measure and mobilising the military.
Yoon was sentenced last month to five years in prison for resisting arrest, fabricating the martial law proclamation and sidestepping a legally mandated full cabinet meeting before he declared martial law.
The Seoul Central Court has also convicted two of Yoon’s cabinet members in other cases, including former prime minister Han Duck-soo, who received a 23-year prison sentence for attempting to legitimise the decree by forcing it through a cabinet council meeting, falsifying records and lying under oath. He has appealed the verdict.
A Scottish lesbian group has criticised Olivia Colman for identifying as a “gay man”, describing her comments as “deeply painful” in a public letter.
Earlier this month, the Oscar winner said that she’s “always felt sort of non binary” and “never felt massively feminine” while promoting her upcoming film Jimpa. The 52-year-old has been married to husband Ed Sinclair since 2001, with the pair sharing three children.
Colman’s admission has prompted backlash from Scottish lesbian group The Fantastic Lesbians, who claimed that her comments “diminished [their] struggle” in a letter on social media.
“When someone who has lived openly and comfortably as heterosexual speaks about identifying as gay, it can be deeply painful for those whose lives have been shaped by the realities of actually being gay or lesbian,” a spokesperson for the group wrote in a two-page letter on X on Wednesday (18 February).
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“For many people in the lesbian and gay community, sexuality has not simply been a label but a journey marked by confusion, fear, self-interrogation, and often profound alienation from family, faith communities or societies at large.
“Heterosexuality, in contrast, exists within an inclusive heteronormative framework. It is affirmed in media, celebrated in family structures, and reinforced by social expectations.”
The spokesperson highlighted that “many heterosexual people never have to question their orientation” or “come out”. They continued: “They are not typically asked to justify their relationships or prove the legitimacy of their families.”
Concluding the letter, they insisted that their intention is “not to accuse or attack”, but to “express the hurt” around Colman’s comments.
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“For many, being gay has required courage, resilience, and sacrifice in ways that heterosexual life simply has not demanded,” they added.
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The 52-year-old currently stars in upcoming drama Jimpa as a mother who travels with her non-binary child (Aud Mason-Hyde) to visit her gay father (played by John Lithgow) in Amsterdam.
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Speaking about the film, Colman opened up to Them about her gender identity. “Throughout my whole life, I’ve had arguments with people where I’ve always sort of felt non-binary,” she said.
Olivia Colman with the cast of Jimpa (Getty Images for Vox Media)
“I’ve never felt massively feminine in my being female. I’ve always described myself to my husband as a gay man. And then he goes, ‘Yeah, I get that.’”
Earlier in February, Colman’s Jimpa co-star Mason-Hyde called Lithgow’s decision to star in the new Harry Potter series as “vaguely hurtful” and “difficult”. Lithgow is set to play Albus Dumbledore in HBO’s adaptation of the hit novels.
“I never felt invalidated or questioned or doubted in my identity or in my transness by him,” they told OUT. “I consistently felt that he was a very loving and a very guiding co-star, and so there’s an element of this that feels vaguely hurtful.”
North Restaurant, along Whitburn Bents Road in Seaburn was named the Good Food Guide’s Best Local Restaurant 2025, and the seafront venue has developed a loyal following, earning praise online for its “beautiful location”.
Estate agents, Rook Matthews Sayer, have listed the restaurant for sale.
North is yet to confirm the reason for the closure and did not respond to The Northern Echo’s request for comment in time for publication.
North in Seaburn is up for sale. (Image: ROOK MATTHEWS SAYER)
The agents say the venue has a ‘prime seafront location’, with ‘uninterrupted sea views and direct access to the golden sands’ of Seaburn Beach.
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The restaurant currently offers 32 internal covers and 12 external seats.
North in Seaburn is up for sale. (Image: ROOK MATTHEWS SAYER)
The North Restaurant also features an open-plan, fully-equipped kitchen and a dedicated bar area.
The restaurant has a leasehold tenure with six years remaining on the lease, at an annual rent of £21,000.
North in Seaburn is up for sale. (Image: ROOK MATTHEWS SAYER)
On Facebook, the restaurant boasts 6,400 followers and on Instagram, it is followed by 12,700 users.
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North in Seaburn is up for sale. (Image: ROOK MATTHEWS SAYER)
North’s menu comprises of brunches, evening dining, and traditional Sunday lunches, complemented by a wide variety of drinks.
A frustrating 2-2 draw at Leeds, in which the Blues were two goals up, saw Liam Rosenior’s side miss the chance to leapfrog Manchester United into the top four.
And the new head coach will be aiming to avoid a similar disappointment when the Clarets come to town.
Burnley are licking their wounds after a humiliating FA Cup exit at the hands of Mansfield Town, bringing them crashing back down to earth after a remarkable 3-2 win at Crystal Palace.
Date, kick-off time and venue
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Chelsea vs Burnley is scheduled for a 3pm GMT kick-off on Saturday, February 21, 2026.
The match will take place at Stamford Bridge.
Where to watch Chelsea vs Burnley
TV channel: In the UK, the game will not be televised live as it lands during the 3pm Saturday blackout.
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Free highlights: The Sky Sports app and YouTube channel will show highlights from 5.15pm with Match of the Day broadcasting on BBC One at 10.30pm GMT.
Live blog: You can follow all the action on matchday via Standard Sport’s live blog, featuring expert insight and analysis from Dom Smith at the ground.
Chelsea vs Burnley team news
Cole Palmer is expected to return to the Chelsea matchday squad after being left out against Hull City, with Liam Rosenior confirming the midfielder is having his “minutes managed.”
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Romeo Lavia is also back in contention, but Marc Cucurella will miss out the hamstring injury picked up against Leeds. There is currently no timeframe on a possible return for the left-back. Elsewhere, Jamie Gittens, Filip Jorgensen and Dario Essugo are not expected back before the end of the month, and Levi Colwill is a long-term absentee.
It is a case of as you were for Burnley, with Axel Tuanzebe, sidelined until March, the only player approaching a return from injury.
Chelsea vs Burnley prediction
A blip against an impressive Leeds side will have deeply frustrated Liam Rosenior, but there is no cause for alarm. Burnley will offer far less threat, especially on the road, and this should be another straightforward victory for Chelsea.
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Rosenior will hope to have the result wrapped up early in the second half, allowing him to rest some of his stars – including Cole Palmer – ahead of facing Arsenal eight days later.
The couple are being held at Tehran’s Evin prison.
Caroline Barry and Simon Hamalienko
08:00, 19 Feb 2026Updated 08:00, 19 Feb 2026
A British couple, from East Sussex, have been sentenced to 10 years in Iran on charges of spying while their worried family plead with the UK government to step in.
Lindsay and Craig Foreman have denied the spying charges and their family have been highlighting concerns about their trial and prison conditions. The couple were arrested in January 2025 while travelling the country as part of a world motorbike trip, reported The Star.
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They are being held at Tehran’s Evin prison. Joe Bennett. The couple will appear before a court in Tehran in the coming days.
Lindsey’s son confirmed they were only told last week about the sentence. The family are “deeply concerned” for their welfare in prison, and “lack of transparency” in the judicial process.
“My parents have now been sentenced to 10 years following a trial that lasted just three hours and in which they were not allowed to present a defence,” he said.
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“They have consistently denied the allegations. We have seen no evidence to support the charge of espionage.”
“We were previously told that once sentencing occurred, further action would follow. We now hope the UK Government will act decisively and use every available avenue to secure their release.”
Craig asked the UK Government for help as he is kept in a hellhole prison. “One word would be: help. Full stop,” he told ITV News.
“I don’t understand why we have been here for 13 months, being held hostage in 2026. In what day and age does this (happen)? When does this end?”
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He described being held in an “eight-foot cell with a hole in the floor and a sink.” He said the effects of 57 days in solitary confinement had: “Emotionally and physically, it broke me to pieces”.
Craig said the infrequent meetings with his wife are what sustain him.
“I know her prison is just 70 metres away, and I get to see her once a month. For me and for Lindsay, seeing each other is the only thing that’s keeping us going right now. I love my wife dearly. She’s the love of my life.”
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The Foreign Secretary said the 10-year jail sentence for Lindsay and Craig Foreman in Iran was “totally unjustifiable”.
“This sentence is completely appalling and totally unjustifiable,” said Yvette Cooper. “We will pursue this case relentlessly with the Iranian government until we see Craig and Lindsay Foreman safely returned to the UK and reunited with their family.
Joe Foreman, Lindsay’s son, launched a campaign and is joined by former detainee Anoosheh Ashoori and Richard Ratcliffe who fought a public campaign that involved two hunger strikes to have his wife freed from Iran.
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They have delivered a 70.000 signature petition calling on the Government to do more to help. During his ITV news Interview, Joe added: “We were previously told that once sentencing occurred, further action would follow.
We now hope the UK Government will act decisively and use every available avenue to secure their release.”
Russell Bowen, a visual effects supervisor who studied creative digital media at Teesside University, has been nominated for Best Visual Effects for his work on The Lost Bus.
It is a survival drama based on a true rescue mission during the devastating 2018 Californian wildfires.
Mr Bowen said: “To be Oscar-nominated alone, regardless of a win, is quite incredible.
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“The four of us named as nominees for The Lost Bus represent hundreds of artists who poured their hearts and souls into the creation of the visual effects.”
The film tells the story of a heroic bus driver who saved 22 children from the blaze and includes 1,400 visual effects, with some proving so real that one viewer was reported as saying they could “almost smell the smoke.”
Mr Bowen is part of a four-strong team nominated for the award.
He said: “After joining, I realised it was also the staff that made the place pretty special.
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“When guest speakers used to come up to do talks for students about their work in film, from DNEG, MPC, and Framestore, I knew I’d found my career and Teesside was going to help me get there.”
Originally from Pembrokeshire, he graduated from Teesside University in 2009.
Mr Bowen spent 14 years at leading visual effects company DNEG, working his way up from runner to visual effects supervisor.
During his time there he contributed to major films such as Venom, The Fate of the Furious, and Star Trek Beyond.
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He now works for beloFX, where his credits include Star Wars: The Acolyte.
Typically based in Vancouver, Mr Bowen is currently working in Dublin on the forthcoming supernatural horror film The Mummy with Blumhouse and Warner Brothers, scheduled for release in April.
The Oscar ceremony will take place in Hollywood on March 15, where he will attend alongside team members Charlie Noble, David Zaretti, and Brandon McLaughlin.
He said: “For me, those are the artists at beloFX, our VFX house based in Vancouver, Montreal, and London.
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“I’m proud to represent them at the most prestigious film awards night on the calendar.”
The Lost Bus is directed by Paul Greengrass and is currently streaming on Apple TV following a limited theatrical release.
The film was chosen for the shortlist from a submission of 371.
Other nominees in the visual effects category include Avatar: Fire and Ash, Jurassic World Rebirth, and the vampire horror film Sinners.
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Mr Bowen said: “Amazingly, we’re up against some of the very people who inspired me to go into the industry.
“When I heard we’d been nominated, I went through the motions of shock which turned into overwhelming joy.
A woman has told of the terrifying moment boiling sugar water was poured over her as she lay in bed after she tried to help a man in distress. Sarah Tragner, 49, was also hit around the head with a hammer.
Sarah had taken Christopher Gillham into her home in Whitstable, Kent, as h e had nowhere to stay. But he turned on her just before 5.30am on Sunday, July 27 – throwing the kettle full of sugar water on her. The dangerous blend is commonly used by prison inmates, with the mixture creating a paste that sticks to the skin, causing deep, severe and long-lasting injuries.
She believes he attacked her because he realised she wanted him to move out. Bleeding, burnt, and dazed, Sarah went outside and managed to call the emergency services.
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The ordeal has left her with scars from her knee to her bottom. She also had to have her head “glued back together”.
Mum-of-one Sarah said: “I’m lucky. I’m lucky to be alive. It burned so much. I can’t explain it. I just jumped up and was thinking, what’s this? Then he threw the kettle itself at me as well. I went downstairs and was in shock. I reached for my bag and turned around, and then I felt a whack on the back of my head from a hammer.”
She added: “All I kept saying to the paramedics was that I didn’t know what had happened. I didn’t realise how much my blood was down the back of my T-shirt.”
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Gillham had already left the scene when armed police and ambulance crews arrived at the house. W hile Sarah was being treated at the QEQM Hospital in Margate, her doorbell camera alerted her that he’d returned to the property. He then attacked the police officer, who had been left at the scene.
She was also taken to hospital with serious injuries. It is understood she subsequently left the force. Appearing at Woolwich Crown Court, Gillham, of Willow Road, Dartford, was sentenced to 10 years’ imprisonment for grievous bodily harm with intent. Other charges, including assault causing actual bodily harm and criminal damage, were dealt with at the same hearing but did not increase the overall sentence.
Two criminal damage charges and an allegation of escaping from lawful custody attracted no additional penalty. The court also imposed a 15-year restraining order. Sarah explained how she’d initially met Gillham on Facebook, where he claimed he was struggling and in need of a place to stay.
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She had just lost her mum and split from her partner, and said she wanted to be able to help someone. “We’ve all been struggling before, and I’ve got a spare room in my house,” she said. “There was nothing sexual in it. I thought he looked and seemed okay. It was for just a week, but I wasn’t thinking right. I’m embarrassed to admit it; he played me and he saw my vulnerability.”
What was supposed to be one week then became three. Sarah says she discovered that Gillham had gone through her personal belongings, selling her watches and taking money without her knowing. She added: “He had kept himself to himself. I was at a stage where any company was good company, regardless. I didn’t think anything of it until my sister came around and told me that he was really odd. He was very manipulative.”
Sarah says that she has struggled with mental health issues since the attack and her life has been on hold. “It’s awful when you have to sit and listen to it in court,” she said. “It just plays on my mind every single day. I’ve had to wait so long. No daughter should have to watch her mum be bandaged up from burns. If he comes out, he will kill someone. He’s just got that mentality.”
Team GB have their work cut out at Milano-Cortina though, with both the men and women requiring other results in the closing matches of the round robin to go their way in order to advance to the play-offs.
Bruce Mouat’s rink are now hopingfor help from elsewhere to seal a top-four spot, needing either Norway or Italy to lose their final match on Thursday morning. Italy face unbeaten Switzerland, while Norway take on already-qualified Canada, so things are looking promising for Team Mouat.
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Team GB’s women also face an uphill battle to finish inside the top four, but they snatched the most remarkable of 8-7 victories against the USA on Wednesday morning before thrashing Japan 9-3 in the evening to keep their hopes alive heading into the final set of round robin matches.
Here’s the schedule, results and current standings:
Men’s Winter Olympics curling schedule
Round robin fixtures
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All times GMT
19 February: Italy v Switzerland, 08:05
19 February: Norway v Canada, 08:05
Round robin results
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11 February: China 4-9 Great Britain
12 February: Great Britain 6-3 Sweden
13 February: Great Britain 7-9 Italy
14 February: Czech Republic 4-7 Great Britain
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15 February: Germany 4-9 Great Britain
15 February: Great Britain 5-6 Switzerland
16 February: Great Britain 6-7 Norway
17 February: Canada 9-5 Great Britain
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18 February: USA 2-9 Great Britain
Top 4 advance to play-offs; Switzerland and Canada have already qualified
Team
Pld
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W
L
Switzerland (Q)
8
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8
0
Canada (Q)
8
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7
1
Great Britain
9
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5
4
Italy
8
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4
4
Norway
8
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4
4
USA
9
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4
5
Germany
8
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3
5
China
8
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2
6
Sweden
8
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2
6
Czech Republic
8
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2
6
What do Team GB need to qualify?
After Team GB beat USAin their final round robin game yesterday to end with a 5-4 record they now need either Norway to lose their final match to already-qualified Canada or Italy to lose their final match to unbeaten Switzerland. Both those games are on this morning from 8.05am GMT.
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If either of those two teams get a win, they will finish on 5-4, the same as GB, and would move above the Brits as they hold the head-to-head advantage.
Play-off round
February 19 – semi-finals
February 20 – bronze medal match
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February 21 – gold medal game
Squad in full
Skip: Bruce Mouat
Third: Grant Hardie
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Second: Bobby Lammie
Lead: Hammy McMillan Jr.
Alternate: Kyle Waddell
Women’s Winter Olympics curling schedule
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Round robin fixtures
All times GMT
19 February: Great Britain v Italy, 13:05
Round robin results
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12 February: China 7-4 Great Britain
13 February: Great Britain 3-9 Republic of Korea
14 February: Great Britain 7-6 Canada
15 February: Great Britain 7-10 Sweden
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16 February: Denmark 2-7 Great Britain
16 February: Switzerland 10-6 Great Britain
17 February: Switzerland 10-6 Great Britain
18 February: USA 7-8 Great Britain
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18 February: Great Britain 9-3 Japan
Top 4 advance to play-offs; Sweden and Switzerland have already qualified