The feature, which is one of the town’s “most enjoyed landmarks”, has stood at the top of West Cliff for more than 170 years, but despite being replaced in 2002 the structure is deteriorating.
A plan to find genuine replacement bones has been abandoned, however, after “all realistic avenues for sourcing replacement natural whalebones have now been exhausted”.
“In light of this, the only viable option available is to commission high-quality replicas,” a report by Whitby Town Council states.
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The Mayor of Whitby, Cllr Sandra Turner, said: “North Yorkshire Council has looked at all the avenues, which we knew were remote and difficult, to say the least, and there isn’t a set of whale bones available.
“Obviously, we would never condone any whales being killed so that we could have a set of whale bones, that’s always been the stance from day one.”
“The position is now to go out and look for what would be the best replica set that can be obtained.
“North Yorkshire Council is fully on board with replacing them, and it will be a question of what is going to be the best substitute,” she told the Local Democracy Reporting Service (LDRS).
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The last replacement bones came from Whitby’s twin town of Barrow in Alaska after a worldwide appeal, from a whale that was killed legally by native Inuit in 1996.
It is understood that Alaskan authorities had been “trying to speak to those involved previously at North Slope Borough (Barrow).”
North Yorkshire Council (NYC) is now in the process of seeking quotations for a range of replica options, including consideration of materials, durability, cost, and long-term maintenance implications.
Speaking to the LDRS, Mayor Turner praised NYC for its support and assistance with the project.
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“We’re going to wait now and see what comes back on costings and what possibility there is for a replica set, and then the decision will be taken.
“I know what I would rather have, but it isn’t up to me, it’s up to everyone else.”
Asked what the timeline was for sourcing the replacement, the mayor of Whitby said she hoped “things can move along swiftly enough that we would have a replacement set by the end of the summer at the latest, but I can’t say that’s written in stone”.
North Yorkshire Council will pay for the replacement replica, Cllr Turner said.
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She added: “North Yorkshire Council has been absolutely brilliant and we’ll be getting an updated report very soon, and then we’ll see what the situation is for the replicas.”
Big tech companies are reportedly developing their own isolated, off-grid data centers where they can consume resources to provide the storage and compute needed for AI development and other digital services, according to a new report.
The GW Ranch project will see 8,000 acres of land in West Texas turned into an entirely off-grid data center facility that will consume more energy than the entire city of Chicago, according toThe Washington Post.
The new project will generate all of its own electricity through natural gas and solar panels and—crucially for tech companies—won’t have to wait around for utilities to solve power availability issues.
The GW Ranch project is just one of several off-grid data center undertakings planned at sites in Wyoming, New Mexico, Pennsylvania, Utah, Ohio, and Tennessee, according to regulatory filings, permits, and other documents reviewed by the Post.
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Several of the projects are already under construction. The builds are being pushed by big-name players in the world of tech: Meta, OpenAI, Oracle, and Chevron, to name a few.
Meta’s Stanton Springs Data Center in Georgia. Meta is building off-grid data centers in El Paso and New Albany, Ohio. It’s just one of several big tech companies building supposedly power self-sufficient data center facilities across the countryer (Copyright 2026 The Associated Press. All rights reserved)
Some states have already passed legislation making it easier for data center projects to set up shop.
In West Virginia, a new off-grid data center is being planned near the city of Davis. The project will include a gas plant large enough to produce enough power to fuel every home in the state.
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“They removed local control completely for this speculative gold rush,” Amy Margolies, a resident fighting against the development, told the paper. “Everything is shrouded in secrecy, and the public is removed from the process.”
Some 5,246 data centers are operating in the U.S., according to the most recent information from the Data Center Map project, collectively consuming at least 17 gigawatts of power. A large nuclear power generator produces 1 gigawatt of energy, which can power between 300,000 and 750,000 homes.
In the race for AI dominance, countries are rolling out data centers at breakneck speed to cope with the immense amounts of compute needed.
Though the off-grid centers will incorporate solar power, most will rely on natural gas because more sustainable fuels provide less consistent output. Without an electric grid to act as a backup, natural gas will be the primary power source for the facilities. That will no doubt mean an increase in emissions at a time when human-driven climate change is already causing more frequent severe weather across the country.
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A resident carries a data center protest sign into an East Vincent Township, Pennsylvania supervisors meeting on December 17, 2025, where an agenda item involved a data center proposal at the former Pennhurst state hospital grounds is being discussed. (Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.)
“It is catastrophic for climate goals,” Michael Thomas, founder of Cleanview, an energy industry research group, told the Post. Cleanview has identified 47 off-grid data center projects across the country.
Even though the data centers will be off-grid, that doesn’t mean that typical ratepayers are isolated from the consequences of these developments.
Jigar Shah, an energy entrepreneur who helped manage federal energy investments under the Joe Biden administration, told the Post that tech companies, with their virtually limitless resources, will now be competing for maintenance and equipment against public utilities.
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If it takes longer—or becomes prohibitively expensive—for utility companies or public utility agencies to access equipment, they will have to pour more money into trying to maintain older infrastructure. The cost of those rising maintenance expenses will almost certainly be passed on to ratepayers. In other words, their bills will go up.
“This whole thing feels like a fairy tale concocted on the back of a napkin,” Shah said.
Tech companies trying to build data centers on regional power grids have, in some cases, been throttled by how much energy grid operators can provide to their projects while still serving regular ratepayers.
That’s one of the reasons Elon Musk opted last year to build an entirely off-grid data center in Memphis. Bypassing the local grid allowed him to get the data center—used by his xAI company—running in a matter of months rather than years. His project is powered by dozens of portable gas generators: efficient, but not without environmental costs.
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The Environmental Protection Agency ruled last month that Musk’s setup illegally breached emissions rules and told xAI to obtain permits for its generators.
Elon Musk’s xAI Data Center in Memphis, Tennessee, is fully reliant on dozens of gas power generators (Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved)
When data centers do try to set up shop in populated areas, they’ve faced opposition from locals who do not want the noise and emissions pollution in their neighborhoods or who balk at the massive water and energy use—and the inflated energy bills that come along with the projects.
A large data center can consume up to 5 million gallons of water per day—the equivalent of a town of 10,000–50,000 people—according to the Environment and Energy Institute.
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A group of concerned citizens in Tucson, Arizona, managed to defeat a proposal for a large data center in the city called “Project Blue,” citing water usage in the already parched desert and the potential for increased energy bills.
Data center operators no doubt hope to mitigate some of the public’s concerns by building off-grid.
“As designed, it is intended to operate independently and does not rely on ratepayer-funded infrastructure or impact existing residential customers,” Fundamental Data, the company building the Davis, West Virginia, data center, told the Post.
Though many of the tech companies backing the off-grid data centers have kept their names off the projects until they’ve gone through the permitting and clearance process, Meta has been upfront about its upcoming builds.
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The parent company of Facebook has one project underway called Socrates in New Albany, Ohio, that will use a pair of off-grid gas power plants to provide its energy needs. That site is scheduled to go live later this year.
Meta is also building data centers in El Paso, where it’s working with a local utility provider to build a gas-generating facility through the linking of 813 smaller generators. Local and city officials protested the project, claiming Meta only received approval to build by stating the site would use clean energy.
El Paso Electric, Meta’s local energy partner, wrote in regulatory filings that to power the site using solar panels and battery storage, it “would require thousands of acres adjacent to the Data Center site which are not available,” according to aTexas Tribune report.
Meta said in a statement to the Post that it plans to fulfill its clean energy obligation by buying clean energy and adding it to the grid.
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“As with all of our data centers, including dozens of renewable projects throughout Texas, we work to add energy to the grid and match our data center’s electricity use with 100% clean and renewable energy,” the statement said.
Shah is skeptical about the projects, noting that even with tech companies’ deep pockets, they can’t ensure uninterrupted reliability without the security of a major grid.
“I get that cost is no object for these companies and they just want to get online,” Shah told the Post. “But they have not figured out even with unlimited funds how to make these plants run with 24/7 reliability.”
AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — For more than three decades, the four men and their families had insisted they were innocent of one of Austin’s most gruesome and notorious crimes: the 1991 rape and murder of four teenage girls at a yogurt shop that was set on fire.
No one listened. Not when Robert Springsteen was sent to death row. Not when Michael Scott was sentenced to life in prison. Or when Forrest Welborn and Maurice Pierce, though never convicted, struggled through life under dark clouds of suspicion that they were murderers.
Their pleas were finally heard Thursday. A judge formally declared the men innocent after an emotional court hearing where prosecutors apologized and admitted they were wrongly accused of a crime that haunted the city for decades. Investigators determined last year that the murders were committed by a previously unknown culprit who died in 1999.
Scott and Welborn sat in the crowded courtroom packed with family members to hear state District Judge Dayna Blazey formally tell them “you are innocent.” She called her order “an obligation to the rule of law and the obligation to the dignity of the individual.”
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The hearing included lengthy statements from the men and their families about the struggles of incarceration, broken relationships, constant harassment by investigators and homelessness.
Springsteen did not attend. Through tears, Marisa Pierce addressed her father, who died in 2010 in a confrontation with police after a traffic stop.
“Daddy, you have your name back,” she said. “The world knows what you were trying to say all along.”
Killings shocked Austin and confounded investigators
Amy Ayers, 13; Eliza Thomas, 17; and sisters Jennifer and Sarah Harbison, ages 17 and 15, were bound, gagged and shot in the head at the “I Can’t Believe It’s Yogurt” store where two of them worked. The building was set on fire.
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Investigators chased thousands of leads and several false confessions before the four men, who were teenagers when the girls were killed, were arrested in late 1999.
Springsteen and Scott were convicted based largely on confessions they insisted were coerced by police. Both convictions were overturned in the mid-2000s.
Welborn was charged but never tried after two grand juries refused to indict him. Pierce spent three years in jail before the charges were dismissed and he was released.
Prosecutors wanted to try Springsteen and Scott again, but a judge ordered the charges dismissed in 2009 when new DNA tests that were unavailable in 1991 and the previous trials revealed another male suspect.
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“Let us not forgot that Robert Springsteen could be dead right now, executed at the hands of the state of Texas,” Springsteen attorney Amber Farrelly said.
In a statement his attorney read in court, Welborn said he lost friends, struggled to keep jobs and was at one time homeless. Scott testified that his arrest, conviction and prison sentence ultimately broke up his family.
“I lost my family. I lost my youth. My daughter was 3 years old when I was arrested. We had just celebrated our first wedding anniversary. I lost the chance to build a family,” Scott said. “Every day I have carried the weight of a crime I did not commit.”
The formal declaration of innocence could also be a key step for the men and their families if they seek financial compensation for years they spent incarcerated or struggled to live under a cloud of suspicion.
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“My son’s name has finally been cleared after more than 25 years of being called the monster, the murderer and everything else,” said Phil Scott, Michael Scott’s father. “Son, be proud.”
Connection to a new suspect revealed
After Scott and Springsteen were released, the case effectively went cold until 2025, when an HBO documentary series attracted new public attention to the unsolved crime.
Then investigators made a stunning announcement last September: New DNA science and reviews of old ballistics evidence pointed to Robert Eugene Brashers as the sole killer.
Since 2018, authorities had used advanced DNA evidence to link Brashers to the strangulation death of a South Carolina woman in 1990, the 1997 rape of a 14-year-old girl in Tennessee and the shooting of a mother and daughter in Missouri in 1998.
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The link to the Austin case came when a DNA sample taken from under Ayers’ fingernail came back as a match to Brashers from the 1990 killing.
Austin investigators also found that Brashers had been arrested at a border checkpoint near El Paso two days after the yogurt shop killings. In his stolen car was a pistol that matched the caliber used to kill one of the girls in Austin.
Police also noted similarities in the yogurt shop case to Brashers’ other crimes: The victims were tied up with their own clothing, sexually assaulted and some crime scenes were set on fire.
Brashers died in 1999 when he shot himself during an hourslong standoff with police at a motel in Kennett, Missouri.
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“Over 25 years ago, the state prosecuted four innocent men … (for) one of the worst crimes Austin has ever seen,” Travis County First Assistant District Attorney Trudy Strassburger said. “We could not have been more wrong.”
A two-day inquest was held in January into the man’s death
A family is calling for “lessons to be learned” at a Cambridge hospital after a father died awaiting a heart transplant in 2023. Luke Barnes, from Mapperley in Nottingham, died aged 34 on March 17, 2023, as his life support was turned off at Royal Papworth Hospital.
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Luke was diagnosed with cardiomyopathy – a chronic disease of the heart muscle – in 2018. While awaiting his transplant, he had a BiVad system fitted to help blood pump around his body.
Following a two-day inquest in January, it was concluded that due to an “unexpected” disconnection with the BiVad, Luke suffered a “catastrophic haemorrhage”.
Rothera Bray solicitors, which represented Luke’s wife Isobel Barnes at the inquest, has raised “serious concerns” over the handling of the hospital’s investigation after Luke’s death.
The solicitors are calling for “lessons to be learned” after the tragedy. Abagail Clarke, a solicitor in Rothera Bray’s inquest team said: “The family’s priority now is ensuring that meaningful lessons are learned and that no other family experiences a similar tragedy.
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“The issues highlighted during the inquest raise significant concerns about the trust’s investigative processes and must prompt urgent review and reform. At this time, the family ask that their privacy is respected as they continue to process their loss and navigate life without Luke.”
The family and solicitors raised concerns about how the aortic cannula became disconnected from Luke’s BiVad system. In the inquest, the coroner concluded it was an “unknown” reason why it disconnected, and it was a “rare” event to have happened. The solicitors also raised concerns about how the medical device was discarded of.
A spokesperson for Royal Papworth said it acknowledges the family’s “concerns” and their “thoughts remain with them at this incredibly difficult time”. The spokesperson added: “As explored at the inquest, we can confirm that this tragic event was immediately escalated to the relevant authorities and we also conducted a thorough internal investigation, in keeping with our trust policy.
“Unfortunately neither our internal investigation or the inquest were able to conclusively determine the cause of the disconnection of Mr Barnes’ BIVAD. We appreciate that this will have caused additional distress for Mr Barnes’ family and friends.”
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Following last month’s inquest, Luke’s wife paid tribute to him. She said Luke was her “safest place” and “greatest joy”.
She added: “He was the person who made me feel safe, loved and understood. Being married to him was a privilege I will carry with me for the rest of my life.
“Luke had the biggest heart and loved fiercely. He stood up for what he believed in and protected the people he cared about with everything he had.
“To be loved by him was to know what unconditional love truly meant and to lose him has left a void that can never truly be filled. Life without him feels quieter, heavier, and unimaginably painful. Losing him has shattered my world in ways words will never fully capture. Every day without him is a struggle, and the ache of his absence is constant.”
With the visit of champions Liverpool this weekend, the feelgood factor could evaporate swiftly if results conspire against Forest and dump them nearer the bottom three.
The Europa League has proved a welcome distraction, and this comfortable victory gives them a huge chance of extending their excursions into next month. Forest will face either Real Betis or FC Midtjylland in the round of 16 if they can complete the second leg.
Positive and full of energy, it did feel like the shackles of Dyche’s often cautious approach had been removed.
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In what has been a chaotic and difficult season, this was arguably Forest’s best performance of the campaign.
Forest were dominant from the start against a Fenerbahce team with a number of familiar Premier League faces in N’Golo Kanté, Ederson, Mattéo Guendouzi, Nélson Semedo, Marco Asensio and Caglar Soyuncu.
It was Murillo, the Brazilian centre-back with the build of a boxer, who produced the first moment of magic to reward their pressure. As a ball-playing left-sided defender, he is likely to emerge as a transfer target for heavyweight clubs such as Chelsea in the summer.
He has been threatening a spectacular individual goal ever since his move from Corinthians in 2023. Taking the ball from the halfway line, he evaded challenges from two Fenerbahce players before advancing towards the area and directing a 25-yard shot into the bottom corner.
Roxanne Hamedi, a pharmacist from Aberdeen, said she it felt “like my time was cut short” after she was fired on the BBC business show by Lord Sugar for her poor branding decisions.
The latest instalment of the show saw the teams trying to sell their water brands live on social media, and creating an accompanying TV advert.
The episode also featured a cameo from rapper Big Zuu, who helped to judge the work created by the candidates.
Big Zuu (Image: BBC/Naked)
Hamedi exited the show after Lord Sugar blamed her for her team’s poor branding, due to her responsibility as sub-team leader.
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She was in the firing line alongside team leader Conor Galvin and pharmaceutical sales specialist Rajan Gill, who was brought into the boardroom after a disastrous pitch.
Hamedi said: “It didn’t feel good to be fired, just because I didn’t think that I deserved to be.
“There was a lot going on that day and I feel like other people lacked accountability.”
The Apprentice (Image: BBC/Naked)
Hamedi said she took on the role of sub-team leader because she “wanted to get out of my comfort zone and take that risk”.
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She added: “I don’t regret being a sub-team lead, but I just feel like my time was cut short in the process.”
She said Galvin should have been fired instead, adding: “I feel like he did throw me under the bus because I was just an easy scapegoat.”
Asked if she would have done anything differently, Hamedi said: “I guess I could have fought more in the boardroom, you know, called Rajan out on his lack of input, or reminded Lord Sugar that I’d taken creative risks and didn’t hide in the background.
“But I didn’t want it to come down to begging or being the loudest or most apologetic person in the room. I stayed true to myself and that takes integrity.”
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Hamedi would have expanded her business, a beauty brand specialising in combatting hair loss, if she had won the programme.
The winner of the latest series of The Apprentice will be awarded £250,000 of investment into their company and the opportunity to go into business with Lord Sugar.
The Apprentice returns on BBC One next Thursday at 9pm.
A beloved Bridgerton star has been cast in the lead of a highly-anticipated rom-com adaptation
Lucas Hill-Paul Content Editor
22:28, 19 Feb 2026
Bridgerton star Phoebe Dynevor has secured the leading role in Beach Read, the forthcoming adaptation of the bestselling romance novel by Emily Henry.
First published in 2020, the novel charts the journey of two writers and former university rivals who unexpectedly reunite and challenge each other to a write-off, promising each other that they won’t become romantically entangled.
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Dynevor, who is most recognised for her portrayal of Daphne Bridgerton in the first series of Netflix’s popular period drama, will take on the role of romance novelist January Andrews.
Throughout the book, January competes with and eventually develops feelings for Gus Everett, whose casting has yet to be announced.
Fans of Henry have reason to be hopeful about the upcoming adaptation as it’s being directed by Yulin Kuang, who co-wrote Netflix’s recent adaptation of People We Meet on Vacation starring Emily Bader and Tom Blyth, reports the Express.
Kuang is also writing the script, with 20th Century Studios producing the adaptation, so fans can look forward to a release on the big screen.
A full synopsis for the film via Deadline reads: “Beach Read is a romantic comedy following January Andrews, a successful romance novelist who struggles with grief and writer’s block after her father’s death and the discovery of secrets he’s long kept hidden.
“While spending the summer in his Michigan beach house to prepare it for sale, she unexpectedly reconnects with Gus Everett, an author who was once her rival in college.
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“Both creatively stuck, they agree to a writing challenge over the summer, swapping literary genres while promising that there will be no romance between them. Of course, you know what they say about the best-laid plans.”
Readers are sure to be thrilled to see January and Gus’s heart-fluttering romance come alive, as Henry’s original book has garnered glowing reviews from critics and fans over the years.
A five-star review from an Amazon user proclaimed: “I’ve read this book at least six times now, and somehow, I love it more with each reread.
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“Everything about this story is perfect. It’s heartwarming, smart, and emotionally rich, but still manages to have me giggling, kicking my feet, and fully rooting for these two. This is such a comforting read I keep the audiobook on standby for whenever I have the chance to replay it.”
Another person enthused: “Together Gus and January have managed to chip away a piece of my heart to call their own. No romance book has had me screaming, crying, smiling and laughing as much as Beach Read.”
And a final fan said: “Oh my word, I loved this book so much. I can’t stop recommending it to people, even my guy friends. I’m not sure how anyone can consider this anything but a masterpiece.”
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Are you prepared to be captivated by another sensational Emily Henry adaptation? Stay tuned for more updates.
Beach Read does not currently have a release date.
Everything you need to know as health bodies demand minimum unit pricing | Belfast Live
Need to know
More than 60 health bodies and charities have written to the First Minister and deputy First Minister calling for minimum unit pricing to be introduced
More than 60 health bodies and charities have written to the First and deputy First Minister calling for minimum unit pricing to be introduced(Image: Dan Kitwood/Getty Images)
Everything you need to know:
More than 60 health bodies and charities have written to Northern Ireland’s First Minister Michelle O’Neill and deputy First Minister Emma Little-Pengelly urging them to introduce minimum unit pricing (MUP) for alcohol.
Alcohol-related deaths in Northern Ireland have risen by 81% in a decade, from 219 in 2014 to 397 in 2024. The Alcohol Health Alliance says Northern Ireland’s alcohol deaths have now “overtaken both Scotland and the North East of England”.
In Scotland, where MUP was introduced in 2018, alcohol-specific deaths decreased by 7% in 2024 to the lowest annual total since 2019. The Department of Health says alcohol misuse costs Northern Ireland up to £900 million every year.
“We hope these troubling figures will prompt renewed focus on addressing alcohol-related harm, which continues to affect far too many families and communities across Northern Ireland,” the letter states.
Health Minister Mike Nesbitt has repeatedly stressed his commitment to MUP but claims he is experiencing a “blockage” from Executive colleagues. He has warned that time is running out to implement the policy before the end of this assembly mandate.
The letter was signed by major health organisations including the Royal College of Psychiatrists in NI, Cancer Research UK, and the British Medical Association Northern Ireland Council.
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Scotland, ailing after being upset by Italy in their own tournament opener, stunned England with a dominant performance to retain the Calcutta Cup, though the Red Rose were not helped by Henry Arundell’s brace of yellow cards, which forced them to play 30 minutes with only 14 men.
There is plenty of room for England to improve on return to Twickenham, then, as they are thrown straight back into the deep end against Ireland.
They too have one win and one loss to their name. Owen Farrell’s men were handed a disheartening defeat at the Stade de France to open the tournament, but got back to form with a narrow victory over Italy last weekend.
They trailed at half-time at the Aviva but roared back in the second-half, with Robert Baloucoune’s try sealing the turnaround.
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France remain the only side in the tournament with a perfect record, leaving the rest of the table separated by only two points. Saturday’s result could prove pivotal for either side’s hopes of challenging the defending champions.
Here is everything you need to know about the match…
England vs Ireland date, kick-off time and venue
England vs Ireland takes place on Saturday February 21, 2026, at the Allianz Stadium Twickenham.
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Kick-off is scheduled for 2.10pm GMT.
How to watch England vs Ireland
TV channel: In the UK, England vs Ireland is being shown live and free to air on ITV1, with coverage beginning at 1pm GMT.
Live stream: Fans can also watch the game live online via the ITVX website and app, which is free with a registration.
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Live blog: You can follow the action as it happens with Standard Sport’s dedicated live blog.
England vs Ireland team news
England were far from their best at Murrayfield last weekend, but Borthwick has shied away from making wholesale changes to his side.
In fact, he has made just three, and in doing so, he has handed a full debut to one of his squad’s brightest talents: Henry Pollock comes into the side at No8 in place of Ben Earl, making his first Test start almost a full year after debuting for the Red Rose.
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He appeared off the bench at Murrayfield and injected much-needed vim and vigour into the side, and Borthwick will hope he can have a similar effect in TW1.
England’s other two changes see Ollie Lawrence and Tom Curry introduced, meaning Guy Pepper drops to the bench. Tom Roebuck is out of the matchday squad entirely, with Lawrence taking his place on the wing opposite Tommy Freeman, while Freddie Steward is in at full-back.
Henry Arundell was dismissed against Scotland
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Maro Itoje will continue in his role as captain, and is set to earn his hundredth England cap at the match. He will become just the ninth man to do so.
Arundell keeps his place in midfield, having dodged a suspension for being sent off against Scotland.
Andy Farrell has gone bold with his Ireland team, making the surprise decision to drop fly-half Sam Prendergast.
The Leinstar star, who celebrated his 23rd birthday last week, was far from his best as Ireland narrowly beat Italy last time out, missing two conversions before being hooked.
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Prendergast has been given the week off, with Ciaran Frawley taking his place on the bench.
Sam Prendergast endured a difficult afternoon against Italy
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He was replaced by Jack Crowley in Dublin, and the Munster half-back will start at Twickenham. He will be partnered by No9 Jamison Gibson-Park, who replaced Craig Casey.
Fit-again prop Tadhg Furlong returns in front of a rotated back row featuring Tadhg Beirne, Josh Van der Flier, and Caelan Doris. Jack Conan and Cormac Izuchukwu make way to accommodate them.
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While Borthwick was stuck with a 6-2 split between forwards and backs on the bench, Farrell has rolled the dice on a 5-3.
Replacements: George, Rodd, Davison, Coles, Pepper, Underhill, Van Poortvliet, Smith
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Ireland XV: Osborne, Baloucoune, Ringrose, McCloskey, Lowe, Crowley, Gibson-Park, Loughman, Sheehan, Furlong, McCarthy, Ryan, Beirne, Van der Flier, Doris
Replacements: Kelleher, O’Toole, Bealham, Timoney, Conan, Casey, Frawley, T. O’Brien
England vs Ireland head to head (h2h) history and results
Ireland have won five of the last six Test meetings between these two nations, coming out on top in last season’s Six Nations 27-22.
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Ireland got the better of England at the 2025 Six Nations
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England vs Ireland prediction
There was plenty wrong with England’s performance at Murrayfield last weekend, and do not have the benefit of a fallow week to iron out the wrinkles.
The Red Rose were slow to start against Scotland and, arguably, never quite got going, despite trimming the deficit somewhat in the second-half.
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Facing an Ireland side on winning form, England will need to be at their best – with all 15 men on the pitch – if they are to come away with a result.
Saturday’s visitors have shown a knack for winning at Twickenham in recent years, and can be confident of getting one over on their long-time rivals here.
North Yorkshire Police say they are appealing for witnesses and footage after a light aircraft crash yesterday (February 18) in Hutts Lane in Grewelthorpe.
A spokesperson for the force said: “At 12.21pm, we received a report that a light aircraft had crashed within the grounds of the Himalayan Garden and Sculpture Park, which was closed to the public at the time of the incident. Emergency services responded immediately.
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“On arrival, they located a single occupant, a man in his 20s inside the aircraft. The man remains in hospital in a serious condition. No-one else is believed to have been on board the aircraft.”
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A North Yorkshire Fire and Rescue Service spokesperson said that crews from Leyburn, Thirsk and Ripon were called to the incident– with emergency services helping to free the pilot from the aircraft.
A spokesperson from Yorkshire Ambulance Service NHS Trust confirmed that they attended the scene.
They said: “We received a call from police colleagues at 12.24pm to report a light aircraft crash in the Masham area.
Man seriously injured after aircraft crashes into North Yorkshire sculpture garden (Image: North Yorkshire Weather Updates)
“A number of ambulance resources were dispatched to the scene, including an ambulance, a team leader and a Yorkshire Air Ambulance, and one patient was airlifted to hospital.”
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The Air Accident Investigation Branch (AAIB) has confirmed that it has started an investigation into the incident, with their officers attending the scene today.
North Yorkshire Police are appealing for anyone who witnessed the incident, or who saw the aircraft prior to the incident, to come forward.
If you have any footage of the incident – including mobile phone or dashcam footage of the aircraft while airborne, please contact matthew.wilkinson@northyorkshire.police.uk or call North Yorkshire Police on 101, ask for Matthew Wilkinson.
Please quote reference 12260030318 when providing information.