Netherlands attacking midfielder Simons has been ruled out for the rest of the season after rupturing his anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) against Wolves – and joined a lengthy Spurs injury list.
Striker Dominic Solanke also went off at Molineux with a hamstring injury, while goalkeeper Guglielmo Vicario will also be unavailable against Villa – with Ben Davies, Mohammed Kudus, Dejan Kulusevski, Wilson Odobert and Cristian Romero among long-term absentees.
“I want to keep the focus on ourselves and the quality of my players,” De Zerbi said.
“We go to play against one of the best teams in this moment Premier League, but if Tottenham win at Villa Park it’s not a miracle. Maybe we lose but we have the quality to win this game. It’s not a miracle. We have to be positive.
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“If Xavi and Solanke are injured we can play with [Randal] Kolo Muani, [Mathys] Tel, Richarlison… they are different but very good players. All these things – I don’t have too much time to hear these things.
“We are good enough to win the games and to stay up and then we will see because it’s the unique way. The way I know is to work hard, give my best, to trust in my idea of the players, their confidence and to be realistic.”
However, one player close to returning from a long-term injury is James Maddison.
The England playmaker has not featured this season because of an ACL injury but was named on the bench against both Brighton and Wolves.
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“I would like to play with Maddison because he is a special player but we have to consider physical condition, a lot of things. But I think he can be important in the next three games,” De Zerbi said.
A car exploded outside a PSNI station last Saturday as people were being evacuated
Rob Currell, Rob Currell Live news reporter and Cillian Sherlock
17:54, 01 May 2026Updated 17:58, 01 May 2026
By A 66-year-old man has been charged with several offences following a car bomb attack on Dunmurry police station. On Saturday, a male delivery driver was hijacked in the Twinbrook area of west Belfast. A device was placed inside the vehicle and he was ordered to drive to Dunmurry police station. The car exploded outside the station as people were being evacuated. Nobody was injured. The 66-year-old man was arrested in the Dunmurry area under the Terrorism Act on Tuesday.
He has been charged with a number of offences, including attempted murder, possessing explosives with intent to endanger life or cause serious injury to property, causing an explosion likely to endanger life or cause serious injury to property, possession of articles for use in terrorism and hijacking. He is expected to appear before Lisburn Magistrates’ Court on Saturday. A police spokesman said that as is usual procedure, all charges will be reviewed by the Public Prosecution Service.
Ground was broken on the five-storey site in January, and it is expected to open in the first quarter of 2028.
Drone images released this week show how work is progressing with the concrete frame of the building emerging and a giant crane now dominating the Darlington skyline.
Tees Valley Mayor Lord Ben Houchen said: “Great to see real progress on the new Treasury building on Brunswick Street, with work moving at pace on site.
“When it opens, more than 1,600 civil servants will be based right in the town centre bringing good jobs, more footfall for local businesses and long-term investment into Darlington.
This is exactly the kind of project we fought to bring here – backing our town centres and putting Darlington right at the heart of government outside London.”
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Site cabins, storage areas, and equipment are scattered across the compound.
The Treasury’s move to Darlington, first announced by the Conservative Party in 2021, was seen as a landmark decision to make central government decisions up north.
The facility has been hailed as a “thriving hub” by council leaders, with 1,925 civil service roles currently based in the town across ten major government departments.
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This includes the Department for Education, HM Treasury, Office for National Statistics, Department for Culture, Media and Sport, the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government, the Department for Energy Security and Net Zero, the Department for Science, Innovation and Technology, and the Competition and Markets Authority.
The Labour Government continued the project after receiving planning permission in 2024.
Francesco Farioli is on Chelsea’s managerial shortlist (Getty)
Francesco Farioli has tried to ease concerned Porto supporters after being linked with a move to Chelsea.
Chelsea are looking to appoint a permanent replacement for Liam Rosenior this summer, with Calum McFarlane taking charge on a temporary basis for the remainder of the season.
Reports have claimed that Farioli is also being considered by Chelsea, with Porto on course to win the Portuguese league title this weekend.
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Farioli was greeted by Porto supporters after his press conference on Friday morning and one concerned fan urged the 37-year-old to reject Chelsea’s advances.
‘Don’t go to Chelsea… you’ll be sorely missed,’ the supporter told Farioli.
Farioli, who did not have a professional career as a player, began his career as a manager at Turkish side Fatih Karagumruk.
He then moved to fellow Turkish club Alanyaspor before joining Nice for one season in 2023.
After his time in Ligue 1, Farioli signed a three-year contract with Ajax but left the club after one campaign having lost the league title to PSV on the final day of the season.
Farioli was appointed by Porto last July and the Italian is now set to guide the Portuguese club to their first league title in four years.
Inspectors identified ‘significant shortfalls’ at the NHS hospital wards
Care inspectors have raised concerns about “significant shortfalls” in safety at two Cambridgeshire hospital wards. The Care Quality Commission (CQC) carried out an unannounced visit to the Denbigh and Willow wards at Fulbourn Hospital in Cambridge, as well as Maple one and Maple two wards at the Cavell Centre in Peterborough, on January 28 and 29.
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The wards are overseen by the Cambridgeshire and Peterborough NHS Foundation Trust (CPFT). The CQC carried out an inspection due to the age rating of the wards, which care for people over 65 years old for various illnesses, as well as “concerns about risk”.
Inspectors rated the trust as requiring improvement overall. The trust was rated as requiring improvement for safe and well-led, but good for effective, caring and responsive.
Stuart Dunn, CQC deputy director of mental health in the East of England said inspectors found that leaders had “missed some concerning gaps in people’s safety”. Mr Dunn added: “The trust had a system for reporting safeguarding incidents but, without a centralised log, staff were not always able to provide these records. This limited leaders’ ability to review or learn from them to protect people in future.
“Additionally, many staff felt there weren’t enough of them to do their jobs properly, and we found they couldn’t provide people one-to-one care regularly. At one point, one of the experts by experience supporting our inspection spent nine minutes speaking to people on a ward without seeing any staff.
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“When they sought out staff, they found the nursing office was also unattended.” Mr Dunn recognised that staffing levels resulted in people being able to access limited activities during the week.
He added: “People also told us they didn’t always feel involved in decisions about their own care, and we saw staff didn’t always take all practical steps to support people making their own decisions.
“Most staff were kind, skilled, and respectful. They communicated with people well. When people felt distressed, they de-escalated the situation compassionately.
“However, leaders need to ensure they’re aware of incidents and risks on their wards, so they can guarantee people a consistently safe and high-quality service.” CQC has shared its findings with the trust so they “know where improvements must be made and where there is good care to build on”, added Mr Dunn.
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In the report, inspectors identified a number of shortfalls across the wards. In the care section, inspectors said the service didn’t always have a “proactive and positive culture of safety based on openness and honesty”.
The inspector added: “Lessons were not always learnt to continually identify and embed good practice.” The report also said staff “did not always investigate and report safety events”. It was recorded that in the last three months, 2,138 restraints were carried out on the Denbigh ward, as well as 22 restraints on the Maple one ward.
It was also recorded that “two patients on Denbigh ward had sustained broken bones during the night time due to unwitnessed injuries” and these weren’t reported.
The trust’s safeguarding on these wards was rated a lower score of one, with inspectors identifying “significant shortfalls” in this. The report said: “The service did not work well with people and healthcare partners to understand what being safe meant to them and how to achieve that.
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“They did not concentrate on improving people’s lives or protecting their right to live in safety, free from bullying, harassment, abuse, discrimination, avoidable harm and neglect.”
Staff were also said to “not always treat people with kindness, empathy and compassion” and they didn’t always “respect their privacy and dignity”.
Other concerns found by inspectors were:
Leaders need to address some alarms going off in error on Willow ward, Fulbourn Hospital, which could wake people up and make them feel unsettled
Leaders didn’t ensure all staff had enough training in medicines management and weren’t always recording or storing medicines safely
Inspectors found some breaches of food safety guidelines and staff at the Cavell Centre weren’t always washing cups with soap, which was an infection risk
Leaders had poor oversight of some risks, including safeguarding, potential ligatures, areas staff could not see, and the use of portable heaters.
While a number of concerns were raised, people in the wards and relatives said staff were helpful and supportive. Staff also told inspectors they felt “supported and respected” and inspectors praised the trust’s work to “deliver high quality care within the budgets available”.
A spokesperson for the CPFT said the trust has taken the findings “seriously” and “immediate actions” have been taken to address concerns. These actions include enhancing safeguarding oversight at a team level, addressing areas of safety and reviewing medicine governance arrangements.
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The spokesperson added: “We welcome the CQC’s recognition of the compassionate care delivered by our staff, the positive feedback from relatives and carers, and the services continuing to be rated good for being caring, effective, and responsive.”
The Denbigh ward at Fulbourn Hospital is a 14-bed mixed sex ward for people over 65 years old with cognitive impairment, while the Willow ward is an 18-bed ward for people over 65 years with acute functional illness.
Maple one at the Cavell Centre is an eight-bed mixed sex ward and Maple two is a 14-bed mixed sex ward. Both these wards provide care for people over 65 with cognitive impairment.
The RSPCA has launched an appeal to raise money to treat 12 of the “adorable” dogs which are being looked after at the charity’s branch in Landing Lane, York.
They were found locked in kennels at a property in Whitby last month after the RSPCA said it was called to the home by police.
One of the 14 dogs was cared for by a veterinary nurse but has since died. Another dog is being cared for by another RSPCA branch.
Fleet before and after being treated by the RSPCA (Image: RSPCA)
Four of the dogs – including a Cocker Spaniel mum and son, Shelties, Collies, a lurcher and a Labrador cross – had to be hospitalised overnight and needed intravenous fluids for 24 hours.
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Several of the dogs were also “severely matted in faeces and urine and had to be clipped”, the RSPCA said.
Seventeen birds – a mix of finches, parrots and budgerigars – were also found at the house where conditions were described by rescuers as “extremely challenging”.
The birds are now being looked after at a private boarding facility on behalf of the RSPCA where they are doing well, the charity said.
Patch who was rescued from the Whitby home (Image: RSPCA)
Jerry who was rescued from the Whitby home (Image: RSPCA)
RSPCA animal rescue officer Mollie Masters, one of four officers from the charity who spent hours on the scene, said: “The dogs were found in the house and in various kennels and crates outside.
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“The conditions on site were squalid and extremely challenging and many of the dogs were understandably nervous, so we had to work slowly and patiently with them.
“It was a very sad set of circumstances but we’re really pleased we’ve been able to help these animals and the team at York are doing a fantastic job getting the dogs back to good health so they can go on to find loving new homes.”
She said it was an “upsetting incident for us to deal with”, adding: “I’d like to thank the police and the vet who assisted us.”
Snowy who was rescued from the Whitby home (Image: RSPCA)
Jock who was rescued from the Whitby home (Image: RSPCA)
Animal welfare supervisor Marie Sandall, from the RSPCA’s York Branch, said the animals are “very special dogs who have stolen our hearts already”.
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“They are all making great progress and putting on weight nicely. Initially they were placed on five tiny meals a day and to see them gobble their food in seconds broke our hearts.
“There are a couple of older ones who, despite everything, are also doing well, and we’re hopeful we’ll be able to put them up for adoption very soon.
“They were all very thin, matted and covered in faeces and urine and had to have a lot of veterinary treatment, including blood tests and dental work. Some of them will also need to be neutered prior to being rehomed.”
Paul who was rescued from the Whitby home (Image: RSPCA)
Marie said that as a self-funded charity, the costs of caring for the dogs are “beginning to mount up for us”.
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“We’re appealing to our supporters, who are always so wonderful in these situations, to donate to our fundraising appeal to help us cover the significant veterinary costs and the dogs’ ongoing care.
“They are all absolutely adorable and we can honestly not believe how loving they are considering what they have been through.
“One thing is certain, they can now look forward to a brighter future and we can’t wait to see them in their new homes.”
Saudi boxing chief Turki Al-Sheikh had said Tyson Fury and Anthony Joshua would only end their decade-long rivalry if a strange condition was met for the event
Saudi boxing chief Turki Al-Sheikh had claimed that Fury and Joshua would only end their decade-long rivalry if the singer took to the stage before the pair made their ring walks.
However, according to the BBC, Lipa declined when approached about the opportunity. A venue for the showdown is yet to be confirmed, though Wembley remains the overwhelming favourite to host the contest.
Fury, meanwhile, has instructed his team to arrange a further warm-up fight before he squares off against Joshua.
The encounter stoked excitement ahead of a long-awaited domestic showdown that has been years in the making, and this week Joshua finally put pen to paper on a contract to face Fury.
However, a fresh obstacle has emerged. Joshua was already scheduled for a tune-up contest on July 25 against Albanian heavyweight Kristian Prenga – a bout that Queensberry promoter Frank Warren suggested could “kill” any potential meeting with Fury later in 2026 should an upset occur.
However, Warren has confirmed that Fury also intends to return to the ring before facing Joshua — a development which raises further doubts over the bout and heightens the risk of injury for either British heavyweight.
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“I think he will probably want to be doing something in between, let’s see,” Warren said.
“AJ has got his fight. Tyson, I’m quite sure, will have a fight in between. That’s what he’s asking for and we’ll see where we go from there.”
Warren had previously told the BBC: “If he loses to this guy, it kills the fight.”
When pressed on Wembley as a potential venue, Warren added: “That’s where everybody would like to see the fight.
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“It’s the national stadium – that is where it belongs. We’ve had some great nights there in the past and that makes a lot of sense.”
Sky Sports, HBO Max, Netflix and Disney+ with Ultimate TV package
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Sky has upgraded its Ultimate TV and Sky Sports bundle to now include HBO Max, Netflix, Disney+, discovery+ and Hayu, as well as 135 channels and full Sky coverage of the Premier League and EFL.
Sky broadcasts more than 1,400 live matches across the Premier League, EFL and more with at least 215 live from the top flight alongside Formula 1, darts and golf.
Havertz has said that this season is not what he “expected it to be” and has been “stop and start”.
The 26-year-old also said earlier this campaign that it was a new experience going through a major injury and he “hasn’t really faced a challenge like this before”.
He looked disappointed by the latest setback when he was taken off after just 34 minutes of Saturday’s 1-0 win against Newcastle United.
The Gunners have been criticised for their attacking play this season and their reliance on set-piece goals.
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Havertz is one of Arteta’s favourite players on and off the pitch and they have missed his ability to link play.
Since his return he has played as both a midfielder and a forward, and Arteta has missed having that versatility when Arsenal are trying to break sides down.
Havertz has three goals and one assist in five Champions League games this season and scored the winner in Arsenal‘s Champions League quarter-final first leg against Sporting.
He has only started one game in Europe though, against Kairat Almaty in January, but came off at half-time as he built up match fitness.
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Despite his availability issues, Havertz has five goals and four assists in 20 appearances, giving him a goal involvement of nearly one every two games which highlights how Arsenal miss him when unavailable.
But they have not been able to call on him nearly enough and Havertz has been restricted to just six starts in the Premier League.
As the season has progressed, there have been doubts about whether Gyokeres is the right fit for Arsenal, particularly against elite opposition.
When Havertz was fit, he started and scored against Manchester City, with Gyokeres on the bench in what was a glimpse at what would likely have been Arteta’s strategy for big games if the German was fit more often.
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Havertz scored by pressing City goalkeeper Gianluigi Donnarumma, and without his work-rate and intelligence for large parts of this season, the Arsenal attack has looked clunky at times.
Whilst there will be ramifications across the board, inflation will be “likely to be largest for food prices”.
They were the words of the Bank of England’s governor on Thursday while warning over the risks posed to the UK economy by the surge in global energy costs.
A leading figure in the potato industry told Sky News we won’t see the worst until next year.
Scott Walker, the chief executive of GB Potatoes, said the way the industry works means the impact of war-linked costs will be delayed, with “inevitable” increases in 2027.
Walker explained that the vast majority of UK potato producers work to annual growing contracts with their customers.
This gives both growers and the likes of wholesalers and supermarkets “insurance” – a certainty over incomes and prices ahead.
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“At this moment in time, people shouldn’t be paying any more,” he said.
Fertiliser, for example, was already bought for the current growing year ahead of the outbreak of the war, but Mr Walker said the outlook was bleaker.
For fish, the situation was similar.
Andrew Crook, president of the National Federation of Fish Fryers, told the BBC that part of the reason the price of cod had gone up by so much was the “significant reduction” in cod availability due to restrictions on fishing.
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There is now “only a quarter of the cod available globally that there was six years ago [so] everybody’s fighting for the same fish,” he said.
“Down the line prices will have to rise because we have a lot of costs coming,” he warned.
While growers could attempt to claim “exceptional” costs from their customers in a bid to restore some health to margins this year, Mr Walker warned the 2027 contracts would have to reflect a doubling of red diesel and some fertiliser prices.
“Sadly, rising prices are inevitable… Everyone faces rising prices: the cost of collection, living wage, (the) price of electricity for wholesalers.
“There’s a lot of cost in the system.”
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What’s your go to chippy order? Let us know in the comments
Meanwhile, both Aston Martin cars have made it out on track, even if it’s brief.
Kieran Jackson1 May 2026 17:35
Aston Martin STATEMENT
Why is neither car out of the garage yet?
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Aston: “Both cars’ running is delayed due to a power issue in the garage.”
Kieran Jackson1 May 2026 17:22
George Russell has problems with his car’s ‘turbo’
“It’s making a noise like a steam train, I don’t know exactly what it is.”
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Accompanied with the sound of train. Classic FP1 radio calls early on…
Lando Norris now P1, with Max Verstappen seven-tenths off in second and Charles Leclerc third.
Kieran Jackson1 May 2026 17:18
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Gasly’s Alpine has an issue
“There’s a strange smell on the car,” says Gasly.
Kieran Jackson1 May 2026 17:13
Lewis Hamilton locks up
Early scare for the seven-time world champion, who locks up and goes off-track in sector one. All fine, though.
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His Ferrari teammate Charles Leclerc is P1 early on here – with every driver bar the Aston Martin duo on track.
What is up with Aston this season, eh?
(AP)
Kieran Jackson1 May 2026 17:09
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FP1 underway
The clock – starting at 90 minutes – starts to tick down and we are green in the pit-lane outside the Hard Rock Stadium.
F1 is back. It feels like the start of the season all over again!
Kieran Jackson1 May 2026 17:02
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FP1 in Miami
Here we go then – an extended 90-minute practice session first up in Miami, given the new regulations and the fact it’s a sprint weekend!
Who will have the early upper hand?
Kieran Jackson1 May 2026 16:59
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FIA release statement with thunderstorms forecast for Miami Grand Prix
F1’s governing body says they are “closely monitoring” the situation amid speculation Sunday’s Miami Grand Prix could be rescheduled due to thunderstorms.
While sunny conditions are expected for Friday and Saturday at the Hard Rock Stadium, the latest forecasts for Sunday show heavy thunderstorms hitting the Miami Gardens area.
Sunday’s grand prix is scheduled to start at 4pm local time (9pm BST), but the FIA could move the race forward a few hours, should the weather radar show a risk of lightning.
Kieran Jackson1 May 2026 16:56
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Constructor standings heading into Miami:
7. Racing Bulls – 14 points
11. Aston Martin – 0 points
Kieran Jackson1 May 2026 16:53
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Lewis Hamilton ‘fired up’ ahead of Miami
“Everyone’s had a chance to go over what happened in the first three races.
“Everyone’s had more of an intense time to work on refining the car.
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