UK News
Hunt for gunman who fled on e-bike after shooting
A man in his 20s suffers potentially life-changing injuries in a shooting in Bristol.
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FA Cup buildup, Championship action and latest on Italian turmoil: football news – live | Championship
Key events
FA Cup: Southampton v Arsenal (Saturday, 8pm)
Eleven Arsenal players withdrew from their respective international squads. How many will be in action at St Mary’s tomorrow?
Women’s Champions League
Arsenal will face OL Lyonnes in the semi-finals for the second season in a row. OL Lyonnes overcame a 1-0 first-leg deficit to beat Wolfsburg 4-0 after extra-time in France.
Last season, OL were strong favourites to go through after winning 2-1 at the Emirates, only for Arsenal to run riot in France.
There’s a full EFL programme today, starting with Middlesbrough v Millwall and Doncaster v Walsall at 12.30pm. I won’t type all the fixtures because that would be an arthritic mistake when I can just direct you to our live scores page. But there are some big games, with Boro v Millwall probably the pick.
The race for the second automatic promotion spot in the Championship is spandex-tight. Fifth-placed Hull go to Oxford, while third-placed Ipswich have the day off. They were due to meet Southampton, who are otherwise engaged in the FA Cup.
In other Championship news, Roy Hodgson, 78, begins his second spell as Bristol City manager with a trip to Charlton.
The FA Cup quarter-finals
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Manchester City v Liverpool (Saturday, 12.45pm)
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Chelsea v Port Vale (Saturday, 5.15pm)
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Southampton v Arsenal (Saturday, 8pm)
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West Ham v Leeds (Sunday, 4.30pm)
Phil Foden made two starts for England over the international break as Thomas Tuchel experimented with how the Manchester City attacking midfielder could be used at the World Cup. He played in a couple of positions but was ineffective in two collectively subpar performances from the Three Lions. It means he has one assist and no goals in his past 22 appearances for club and country in what has been an underwhelming campaign for the 25-year-old. He has dropped below Rayan Cherki in Pep Guardiola’s pecking order and has not completed a full 90 minutes since January. In the Carabao Cup final, Foden was permitted a late cameo, and it feels like this is the time when he should be making a difference in the final stages of the season.
There are still trophies to be played for, even if winning the Premier League title would involve a huge turnaround against Arsenal. This means the FA Cup is the most promising prospect and Foden should be desperate to start and remind everyone of the world-class player he could be, especially against a Liverpool side who often struggle against smart No 10s. The next six weeks could be make or break for Foden’s City and international career, so he must seize every opportunity.
Preamble
Hello, good morning, good Good Friday and welcome to our rolling football news blog. Our attention will soon turn to the weekend’s action, including the FA Cup quarter-finals and a full EFL programme today, but first let’s have a recap of the week in international football.
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Bosnia and Herzegovina, Sweden, Turkey, Czech Republic, DR Congo and Iraq completed the 48-team line-up for this summer’s World Cup.
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Italy failed to qualify for the third World Cup in a row, an “unacceptable disgrace” that prompted recriminations and resignations.
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A largely second-string England team lost at home to Japan.
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Ghana, who are in England’s group, sacked their manager Otto Addo.
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Scotland followed a 1-0 defeat to Japan with a 1-0 defeat to Cote d’Ivoire.
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Fifa raised the highest ticket price for the World Cup final from $1,600 in 2022 to $10,990 in 2026.
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And most importantly of all, France moved to the top of our World Cup power rankings.
UK News
NHS Wales major repairs backlog nears £1bn
The cost of fixing the most serious repairs at major hospitals alone is more than £600m, figures show.
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Artemis II astronauts rocket towards the moon after breaking free of Earth’s orbit | Space
The four Artemis astronauts have fired up their spacecraft’s engine to break away from Earth’s orbit and zoomed towards the moon, a milestone that commits Nasa to the first crewed lunar flyby in more than half a century.
With enough thrust to accelerate a stationary car to highway-driving speed in less than three seconds, the Orion capsule engine blasted on Thursday the astronauts on their trajectory towards the moon, which they now will loop as part of the 10-day Artemis 2 mission.
The burn lasting just under six minutes propelled them on their three-day voyage towards Earth’s natural satellite, the first since 1972.
“Looks like a good burn, we’re confirming,” mission control in Houston said.
“The crew is feeling pretty good up here on our way to the moon,” said astronaut Jeremy Hansen. “Humanity has once again shown what we are capable of.”
The burn came one day after the enormous orange and white Space Launch System (SLS) rocket carrying the Orion capsule blasted off flawlessly from Kennedy Space Center in Florida for the long-anticipated journey around the moon.
Now the astronauts are moonbound, there’s no turning back: they are on a “free return” trajectory, which uses the moon’s gravity to slingshot around it before heading back towards Earth without propulsion.
In the event something goes wrong, the astronauts wear suits that also serve as “survival systems” – in the unlikely case of a cabin depressurisation or leak, they’ll maintain oxygen, temperature controls and the correct pressure for up to six days.
The astronauts – Americans Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover and Christina Koch, and Hansen, a Canadian – spent their first hours in space performing checks and troubleshooting minor problems on the spacecraft that has never carried humans before, including a communications issue and a malfunctioning toilet.
They began the second day of their mission by playing Green Light by John Legend and Andre 3000, Nasa said – a reference to the go signal they would soon get to fire up the engine and move towards the moon.
They also had their first workouts on the spacecraft’s “flywheel exercise device” – each astronaut will carve out 30 minutes a day for fitness to minimise the muscle and bone loss that happens without gravity.
The 10-day Artemis 2 mission is aimed at paving the way for a moon landing in 2028.
The mission marks a series of historic accomplishments: sending the first person of colour, the first woman and the first non-American on a lunar mission. If all proceeds smoothly, the astronauts will set a record by venturing further from Earth than any human before – more than 250,000 miles (402,336km).
It is also the inaugural crewed flight of SLS, Nasa’s new lunar rocket.
SLS is designed to allow the US to repeatedly return to the moon with the goal of establishing a permanent base that will offer a platform for further exploration. It was meant to take off in February after years of delays and massive cost overruns. But repeated setbacks stalled it and even necessitated rolling the rocket back to its hangar for repairs.
The current era of US lunar investment has frequently been portrayed as an effort to compete with China, which aims to land humans on the moon by 2030.
During a post-launch briefing, Jared Isaacman, the Nasa administrator, said competition was “a great way to mobilise the resources of a nation”.
“Competition can be a good thing,” he said. “And we certainly have competition now.”
The Artemis program has come under pressure from Trump, who has pushed its pace with the hope that boots will hit the lunar surface before his second term ends in early 2029. But the projected date of 2028 for a landing has raised eyebrows among some experts, in part because Washington is relying heavily on the private sector’s technological headway.
The crew wrapped up their press conference, in which they spoke about the significance of the mission, adapting to life in space, and the “spectacular” view of Earth.
The Artemis II commander, Reid Wiseman, describing the moment the crew saw Earth as a whole, said: “You can see the entire globe from pole to pole, you can see Africa, Europe, and if you look closely, the northern lights. It was the most spectacular moment and it paused all four of us in our tracks.”
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