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Chelsea v Tottenham: Premier League – live | Premier League
Key events
88 mins: A triple change for Chelsea, now. On comes Garnacho, Mheuka and Essugo and off goes Palmer, Delap and Pedro Neto.
“We’re going down, I’m !00% percent sure,” writes Dom in Florence, a Spurs fan. “Arsenal winning the title just confirms it. We only needed one point from two games, sure, but it’s never going to happen. This team couldn’t win a one ticket raffle. They would lose a game of noughts and crosses to a duck. It’s written in the stars, Hammers dig in and get a result against an in form Leeds. We meekly surrender to an out of form Everton at home. I leave football behind to become a yak herder in Uzbekistan, but the guy I share a yurt with reveals he wears an Arsenal shirt at night. My face is pressed up to its badge as our shared hammock forces us together. He snores loudly. Ultimately, You can’t change the future.”
87 mins: This is really chaotic now. A long, bouncing ball is contested by Delap and Spence. Delap carefully watches Spence’s positioning before jumping into the player, and is booked for the foul.
87 mins: The corner is eventually taken, and Sanchez fumbles his catch but gathers at the second attempt.
85 mins: All sorts of pulling and tugging inside the penalty area as the corner is taken. The referee blows his whistle, and books Cucurella. VAR checks the incident, and decides the foul took place before the ball was in play.
84 mins: Spurs should equalise! Richarlison tees up Maddison, who sets himself, takes aim, and waits just long enough for Hato to come across and block!
82 mins: Before they take the free-kick Chelsea bring on Sarr for Fofana. Palmer takes the free-kick, but sends it into the wall.
80 mins: A long pass from defence releases Delap down the right. Fernandez is available in the middle but instead Delap delays for a while. The crowd shouts angrily at the lack of impetus, but eventually he passes to Fernandez, who has run towards him to offer an easy option, and Sarr sticks out a leg for the Argentinian to fall over.
70 mins: Hato is booked. He looks bemused by it, and Sky certainly didn’t show TV viewers whatever caused it, but apparently it was for delaying a restart.
77 mins: Richarlison arrives late to bump into Caicedo, and then goes down clutching various bits of his anatomy and rolling about. It’s all a bit odd. Eventually he gets up.
75 mins: Chelsea make their first substitution, bringing Chalobah on for Acheampong.
GOAL! Chelsea 2-1 Tottenham (Richarlison, 74 mins)
A lifeline for Tottenham! Pedro Porro pulls back to Sarr, whose backheel was presumably intended to fly into the net but instead bobbles to Richarlison, who turns it in!
72 mins: Save! Spurs end up crossing from the right, and Gallagher volleys pretty tamely at Sanchez.
72 mins: Spurs attack, and for a while they have seven players inside the Chelsea penalty area. The downside of which being they get in each other’s way, and are forced to turn back.
69 mins: Spurs were readying a triple change before the goal, and they’ve gone ahead with it: Sarr, Maddison and Spence have come on, with Udogie, Joao Palhinha and Kolo Muani going off.
68 mins: The ball is presented to Palmer in the centre circle, and he passes right to Pedro Neto, who crosses beyond the far post to Enzo Fernandes, and his cushioned volleyed pass leaves Andrey Santos with an easy task!
GOAL! Chelsea 2-0 Tottenham (Andrey Santos, 67 mins)
And that should seal it! Spurs give the ball away, and Chelsea punish them!
65 mins: Kolo Muani has the ball on the right, and sends in a rubbish low centre. I’ve not seen a huge number of Spurs games this season but I have watched them several times recently and have found the French forward a source of constant perplexity.
63 mins: Udogie sprints 60 yards to offer Tel an option and is so frustrated by the quality of the pass sent, at least in theory, towards him that he brings down Fofana and gets himself booked.
61 mins: Delap hassles Danso, who flirts with giving the ball to him in what would be, for Spurs, a disastrous position but just about avoids actually doing so.
58 mins: Richarlison wins the header from a Porro corner, but Sanchez saves it pretty easily. It is Tottenham’s first shot on target.
57 mins: Spurs are having a decent period. The last time they exerted this level of control for any length of time, Chelsea went and scored.
56 mins: Pedro Neto is found in space on the right flank. With crushing inevitability he carries the ball into the area, cuts onto his left foot and shoots towards the far post, but straight into a defender.
Arsenal are Premier League champions
54 mins: The final whistle blows at Bournemouth, where it has ended 1-1. Haaland’s equaliser, in the fifth minute of stoppage time, has improved Manchester City’s record after being behind at half-time, but has not extended the title race. A single point for City means Arsenal now cannot be caught!
51 mins: Tel sends in a fine cross from the right that gives Richarlison a superb scoring chance with a header, about eight yards out. The Brazilian heads it way, way wide and turns out to have also been way, way offside.
50 mins: The game is stopped for a while, because Cole Palmer has a minor issue with a boot.
47 mins: Spurs have been trailing at half-time in 16 games this season. They’ve lost 12 of those, and not won any. It’s not a great record. The worst record in the Premier League this season? Manchester City, who have been losing at half-time twice and lost both games. Tonight they’re set to make it three out of three.
46 mins: Peeeeeep! Game back on!
Right then, players back out. No halftimely changes to report.
Meanwhile at Bournemouth, Manchester City are 10 minutes away from defeat and Arsenal thus 10 minutes away from the title. Tonight is not going Tottenham’s way at all.
Half time: Chelsea 1-0 Tottenham
45+2 mins: And that’s half-time! A really interesting half but not a great one: just one really good chance, which Tel headed onto a post, and a goal from nothing from Fernandez.
45+1 mins: Space and time for Palmer on the edge of the D, but on this occasion it’s D for Drags his shot wide.
45 mins: Now Caicedo goes down clutching his face like he’s been assaulted, after Gallagher touches him gently on the shoulder. Again, no cards, but the referee gets both captains together for a word.
44 mins: Pedro Neto takes the free-kick, from wide on Chelsea’s right. I don’t know if he intended to shoot but it looks like it’s also heading barwards until Kinsky catches it.
43 mins: But now Van de Ven gets a yellow one, for holding back Delap and then, when that doesn’t achieve much, giving his shirt a good yank.
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Britain ‘sleepwalking into a food crisis’ without urgent action, experts say | Environment
Britain is “sleepwalking into a food crisis” caused by extreme weather, inflation and the impacts of the Iran war – and the government is failing to take the threat seriously, food experts have said.
Farmers are facing severe strain from the current heatwave following a dry spring, with many crops likely to yield less as temperatures rise beyond their tolerance. Livestock are also suffering heat stress and there is a rising risk of wildfires. Economic losses are likely to be measured in the hundreds of millions of pounds.
Food prices were already on track to be 50% higher this November than they were five years ago, and the current weather – with more heatwaves likely to follow in the summer, when temperatures could top 40C – is adding to the inflationary pressure.
Even if the Iran war is resolved soon, fuel and fertiliser prices will stay high until the supply crunch through the strait of Hormuz can be eased. Last week, Rachel Reeves, the chancellor, floated the idea of voluntary price caps on staple foods, but was knocked back by supermarkets and opposition parties.
A group of food experts have written to ministers this week calling for the national food strategy to be updated to take account of the risks and prepare the UK for a future of higher temperatures and more severe weather.
The nine signatories to the letter include Mike Barry, the former director of sustainable business at Marks & Spencer, Anna Taylor, the executive director of the Food Foundation, and Lee Stiles, the secretary of the Lea Valley Growers’ Association. They highlighted three priorities on which they said ministers should concentrate: resilient domestic production of healthier food; greater preparedness for supply chain shocks; and access for all to safe, affordable and healthy food.
Tim Lang, a professor emeritus of food policy at City St George’s, University of London, said the government’s current strategy amounted to little more than “business as usual” and that warnings were not being heeded.
“This government has received serious scientific, intelligence and policy advice that it should take significant action on food security, but it keeps signalling all is OK. It’s not,” Lang told the Guardian. “Whether we see food security as an issue of escalating food poverty and deepening cost of living squeeze or as the ‘hard’ version of security as defence, there are no grounds for complacency.”
Ministers have failed to make the connections and are behind the public in awareness and readiness to act, according to Lang. “Volatility is the new normal. We are in escalating trouble from climate heating, geopolitics, [the cost of] living squeeze and more,” he said. “I find the public ready and willing but need leadership and support. What’s more important a state responsibility than ensuring the population can and will be fed in all circumstances?”
Richard Nugee, a retired general, who also signed the letter, told the Guardian that food security should be a top-level national security concern. “There’s the potential for food to be reduced in quantity through heat domes over grain baskets [in Europe and around the world]. The food chain is also being more damaged by war and the inability of people to export to us and us to import food. Farmers in the UK are also struggling really hard,” he said.
Nugee said civil unrest was still unlikely, but people would start to blame the government for problems with food supplies. There is potential for people “being extremely stressed by not being able to afford food and therefore taking matters into their own hands”, he said, adding: “There is the potential for disruption, of supply chains and of supply, and [the UK may not be able] to provide the sufficient food at the right price for its people. That is a national security issue.”
A report by the UK’s spy chiefs – revealed by the Guardian last year and so far only published in part – told ministers that the collapse of key ecosystems overseas was a national security risk for the UK that could lead to conflict, migration and competition for resources.
The Climate Change Committee advised government last week not to allow domestic food production to drop below 60% of the UK’s food needs, and said the damages inflicted by climate change on food production could reach more than £2bn a year in the 2030s, from about £200m today.
Jez Fredenburgh, a senior analyst for food and climate at the Energy and Climate Intelligence Unit thinktank, who was not a signatory to the letter, said: “Farmers and consumers cannot afford this pressure.”
The Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs was approached for comment.
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