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Schools do not have enough staff to make SEND reforms work, union warns
The National Education Union says schools need more funding to be able to make all classrooms inclusive.
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Igor Tudor leaves Tottenham after just seven games in charge
Tudor was a left-field gamble that went wrong from the start.
His unique selling point, in an appointment that smacked of panic from Tottenham’s hierarchy, was that he had a chequered coaching career but a record of having the sort of instant impact the club required.
This never materialised. He became the first man in charge of Spurs to lose his first four matches, starting with that heavy 4-1 home defeat by Arsenal.
Tudor’s brusque, plain speaking style got no more out of the Spurs squad than Frank’s more empathetic approach. It never made any connection with the Spurs players, while a welter of tactical shifts hinted that he was struggling to work out how to get the best out of the shambles he had inherited.
The low point came in the Champions League last 16 first leg at Atletico Madrid where he gambled on selecting Antonin Kinsky in goal ahead of first-choice Guglielmo Vicario, only to remove the young Czech after just 17 minutes following two catastrophic errors that left Spurs 3-0 down in an eventual 5-2 defeat.
Tudor was also criticised for the manner in which he ignored Kinsky when he went off, comfort being left to his colleagues on the pitch, as well as Conor Gallagher and Dominic Solanke, who followed him down the tunnel to console him.
Improvement could be detected in the deserved draw at Liverpool before an honourable win in the Champions League exit to Atletico – but normal dismal service was resumed in last Sunday’s highly-damaging 3-0 home defeat by fellow strugglers Nottingham Forest.
In Tudor’s defence, he took over a shell-shocked and struggling squad decimated by injuries and stripped of confidence. There is no guarantee anyone else would have done markedly better.
In this emergency situation, Spurs had to act, but the whole episode reflects more badly on those at the top of the club than it does on Tudor.
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Goal-shy Leicester rooted to bottom of WSL but manager and fans not giving up | Leicester Women
The sight of two unwaveringly optimistic young girls waving their “Foxes never quit” flags proudly in the air – despite the swirling rain at the King Power Stadium – summed up the never-say-die attitude required for a relegation battle that Leicester are going to need now more than ever, after their chances of staying up decreased significantly with this defeat on Sunday.
Even before losing against Brighton, Leicester’s hopes had sustained a big blow with the sight of Oona Siren hitting a superb, looping volley into the net to secure a valuable point for 11th‑placed West Ham in the lunchtime kick-off. The 1-1 draw at home against London City Lionesses edged West Ham further away from the bottom side Leicester, who went on to be deservedly beaten 1-0 by Brighton and find themselves four points adrift with four games remaining.
There is, at least, a potential lifeline this season: the one-leg playoff fixture, scheduled for 23 May, against whoever finishes third in the second tier is now beginning to loom large for Leicester.
The only Women’s Super League side affiliated to an EFL club, Leicester’s current predicament can be attributed largely to their operating on what is believed to be the lowest budget in the top tier, and to having lost important players such as Ruby Mace and the Japan duo Saori Takarada and Yuka Momiki last summer. Pre‑season concluded with Amandine Miquel leaving her role as manager 11 days before the opening matches.
They are on a seven-match losing run in the league and that has coincided with a significant upturn in results for Liverpool, who now look all but safe, after their impressive January transfer activity.
The latest of those seven successive WSL defeats came on a soggy afternoon when Brighton showed their class on the ball, especially in the first hour, with Fran Kirby’s movement and creativity causing plenty of problems. After the hosts resisted their first-half pressure, Kiko Seike broke the deadlock by tucking home Rosa Kafaji’s unselfish pass, after Kirby had threaded open the backline with a sublime through ball.
The travelling fans, including one wearing a seagull outfit, celebrated as their team flew up to sixth in the table. A satisfied Brighton head coach, Dario Vidosic, said: “I was very happy with the first half [and then] we managed the game out well and it was a very deserved three points.”
There were a few moments to perhaps give Leicester’s supporters some cause for hope, not least a heroic block from Julie Thibaud, whose last-ditch defending helped to keep Leicester in the contest, but the standout statistic of the game was that the home side did not have any shots on target. They are really lacking quality in the final third.
“You can see the players are in the trenches together, there’s never a lack of effort,” the Leicester manager, Rick Passmoor, said. “We know that we’ve got a run-in where we’ve got to produce and stay together.”
It will be nearly a month until Leicester play again, on 26 April, owing to the extra length of the international window, which follows the Women’s FA Cup quarter-finals next weekend. When they eventually return to action, Leicester’s remaining fixtures are away against London City Lionesses and Arsenal, before a home fixture against Chelsea on the penultimate weekend. They conclude their regular season with a trip to Everton.
If Passmoor’s team do end up contesting the dreaded playoff, the identity of their opponents from the second tier still remains difficult to predict. Pivotal wins for Crystal Palace and Birmingham on Sunday kept the automatic promotion race on a knife-edge with the leaders, Charlton, missing the chance to clinch a top-two spot. Newcastle and Bristol City are still in contention but their hopes are fading.
The top two will be promoted automatically while the third-placed team will host whoever finishes bottom of the WSL and that looks increasingly likely to be Leicester.
It comes at an uncertain and worrying time for the football club more widely, with the Leicester men’s team in the Championship relegation zone, a point from safety after being deducted six points for overspending. It could yet be a campaign to forget for the men’s and women’s sides.
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Teenagers charged after attack on rescue volunteer and his dog
Three boys, one aged 13 and two aged 15, and a girl aged 16, have been charged with various offences including assault.
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