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Stockholm marathon winner Alene dies aged 30

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Ethiopian runner Shewarge Alene has died aged 30, the organiser of the Stockholm marathon has confirmed.

Alene won the race – her most recent competition – in the Swedish capital in May.

She competed in 27 marathons as a professional between 2011 and 2025, recording 12 victories.

“It is with deep sorrow that we have received the news of the passing of Shewarge Alene, winner of adidas Stockholm Marathon 2025,” the Stockholm marathon posted on Instagram.

“Shewarge Alene became unwell during a training session and was taken to hospital, where sadly, her life could not be saved.

“Our thoughts are with her family and loved ones.”

Alene recorded a personal best time of 2:27:26 in Cape Town, South Africa in 2023.

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Notts win first County Championship title since 2010

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Rothesay County Championship Division One, Trent Bridge (day two)

Warwickshire 258: Barnard 48, Young 48; Hutton 4-46

Nottinghamshire 302-6: Hameed 122

Nottinghamshire 5 pts, Warwickshire 3 pts

Match scorecard

Nottinghamshire have won the County Championship title, denying Surrey a fourth straight crown.

Division One leaders Notts picked up the two points they needed for the title by scoring 300 in their first innings against Warwickshire.

It is a first County Championship for Nottinghamshire since 2010 and ends three years of dominance by Surrey in the competition.

The East Midlands side, led by a rejuvinated Haseeb Hameed, took a huge step towards the title when they beat Surrey in the previous round of fixtures.

Hameed has enjoyed a superb 2025 with the bat and starred once again at Trent Bridge in bringing up his fourth century of the season.

Once the 28-year-old fell for 122 to leave them 218-5, South Africa wicketkeeper Kyle Verreynne made sure the hosts would not have to wait until Friday to be crowned champions.

Verreynne’s composed fifty took Notts past the 300 they required for two batting bonus points and ensured they could not be caught by second-placed Surrey.

Hameed leads from the front

Haseeb Hameed celebrates centuryRex Features

Nottinghamshire’s turnaround this campaign has been somewhat remarkable.

In Hameed’s first year as captain in 2024, they only avoided relegation in the final round of fixtures

Five years earlier they had gone down without a victory.

However, this season’s achievements have been a team effort under the guidance of coach Peter Moores who has now won County Championships with three different clubs.

Hameed’s hundred against the Bears took him to 1,253 runs in red-ball cricket this year, second only to Surrey opener Dom Sibley’s 1,274.

Lyndon James, Ben Slater and Jack Haynes have also made vital contributions with the bat and average above 40.

The bowlers have shared the wickets around.

Seamer Brett Hutton leads the way with 35, but England’s Josh Tongue, Mo Abbas, Dillon Pennington, James and Liam Patterson-White have all taken more than 25.

‘A fantastic feeling’ – Newell

Nottinghamshire director of cricket Mick Newell coached the county to their previous title win 15 years ago.

He has been in his current role since Moores became head coach in 2016.

“We always knew this run of three games [in September] was going to be key because when we played the Kookaburra ball games in June and July, nothing really happened for us,” Newell told BBC Radio Nottingham.

“We didn’t win any, we didn’t lose any, we just held our position, tucked in behind Surrey.

“We’ve been blessed with good weather to enable us to get on the field and get the points we need.

“Anyone who comes ahead of Surrey has played some really good cricket because they’re really good. For us to come ahead of them is a great tribute to our players.”

He added: “It means a lot to win it at Trent Bridge and it’s still the competition that the players and the coaching staff want to win the most, so we will enjoy it knowing we’ve had to work really hard over a period of 12 months to get here.”

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Trump’s Ryder Cup appearance will show his warm embrace from a world that once shunned him

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THE RYDER CUP is the week in which golf briefly loosens its upper lip and makes a compromise with the more base instincts of the sports fan. 

In this respect, the competition makes a good bedfellow for Donald Trump, America’s president but also America’s preening and boorish id.

At least golf suspends its normal terms of engagement for a week every two years. We’re into year six of the same in American politics. 

Trump will become the first sitting president to attend a Ryder Cup on Friday, necessitating the kind of mass security organisation that explains why sitting presidents haven’t previously attended a Ryder Cup.

Trump has at least reportedly been convinced not to arrive for the very first tee shot, and so will likely arrive for the start of the fourball matches in the afternoon.

So beyond the usual security checks that will meet 40,000 fans at arrival, there will be airport-style scanners set up around the clubhouse and the enormous grandstand erected behind the first tee and the 18th green. Everyone passing through will have to be scanned as often as they pass, and given this is the primary access point to the rest of the course, we are expecting people to be moving around at a pace even Patrick Cantlay would find slow. 

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Police officers on site at Bethpage Black. Alamy Stock Photo


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Justin Rose told the media on Wednesday that the European team have been told that Trump is not expected to roam about the course, which would cause the kind of disruption that would make it very difficult to actually stage the competition.  

Trump, mind, has claimed credit for the whole thing going ahead in the first place, with the White House press secretary this week saying the president had signed an executive order to ensure a threatened Long Island rail strike did not go ahead. He is therefore limiting the mass logistical upheaval to his own attendance. 

When asked about Trump, the Europeans have said that his presence reflects the status of the Ryder Cup nowadays, while Robert MacIntyre was thrown a curveball by a questioner who sang about Trump’s “proud” Scottish heritage.

“I’m not bright enough to be worrying about politics”, he said while insisting he was focused only on competing. Then asked if Trump would be a distraction, MacIntyre replied, “just another spectator.” 

These are not the answers that will get you ahead in Trump’s America. 

Hence the American players have generally lauded him when given the opportunity. 

“I hope he will inspire us to victory”, said Bryson DeChambeau. “I think he’ll be a great force for us to get a lot of people on our side.” 

Scottie Scheffler meanwhile praised Trump’s love of golf before paying his homage. “One of the things I noticed a lot with the little bit of time I spent with him, is he treats everybody the same and treats people with the utmost respect.

“Whether you’re the person serving us lunch or the caddie on the golf course or the guy who’s the president of the club that we’re at, he treats everybody like they’re the greatest person in the world.” No doubt the world leaders at the UN this week told by Trump that their countries are “going to hell” are nodding furiously in agreement. 

But then again Scottie Scheffler spends most of his life on America’s private golf courses, which exist as wealthy silos from the real world. 

Scheffler had earlier made an oblique but apparent reference to the murder of Charlie Kirk, in referencing “a tough few weeks for our country with some of the stuff that’s been going on”, but what ha s been notable this week is how lightly the atmosphere has worn the turmoil of America’s present political moment. 

MAGA nationalism has been easily folded into the kitsch Americana we routinely see at Ryder Cups: there are fans roaming about wearing MAGA hats, while others are wearing mocked-up football and baseball jerseys bearing TRUMP 47 on the back. At Wednesday’s opening ceremony, host Kara Dixon thanked “all six branches of our military service”, including Space Force, the military arm inaugurated by Trump to be ready to defend American interests in outer space. 

This went to underline how the Trump movement has now been as easily coded into displays of American pride and identity as the military, who continued a long tradition of superfluous appearances at sporting event by providing three army helicopters to fly across the golf course during the final bars of the American national anthem at yesterday’s opening ceremony. 

That the New York governor Kathy Hocul was repeatedly jeered at said ceremony showed this a politically engaged crowd happy to voice their protest, so we await the reaction that greets Trump among the crowd. 

But his mere presence here today is another reminder of how quickly America’s concientious Trump objectors have tossed away their morals at the first moment of trouble. The PGA of America, who organise this event, reacted to the 6 January insurrection by taking the 2022 PGA Championship away from Trump’s course in Bedminster.

Tomorrow, Trump will be the guest of honour at their marquee event and at their own invitation. 

The PGA of America are far from the most consequential body in America suddenly yielding to Donald Trump, of course, but tomorrow they will be the most visible. 

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Liverpool teenager Ngumoha signs professional deal

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Liverpool teenager Rio Ngumoha has signed his first professional contract with the Premier League champions.

Ngumoha, 17, scored a 100th-minute winner against Newcastle on his Premier League debut last month.

Liverpool have not confirmed the length of Ngumoha’s new deal.

The forward left Chelsea’s academy to join the Reds in September 2024 and has made five senior appearances for the club.

In January, Ngumoha became the youngest player to start a match for Liverpool – aged 16 years and 135 days old – in a 4-0 win over Accrington in the FA Cup.

He was also handed a Champions League debut this month when the Reds beat Atletico Madrid at Anfield.

Ngumoha has featured for England at various junior levels and made his debut for the under-19s on 3 September.

He was regarded as the best player in his age group at Chelsea but moved to Liverpool because he believed there was a better pathway to first-team football.

This was despite attempted assurances and several significant future contracts having been offered by the Blues.

Liverpool manager Arne Slot included Ngumoha in his first-team picture in pre-season this year, starting him against Athletic Club in August.

Playing from the left wing, Ngumoha scored just two minutes into the encounter and he left the field to a standing ovation midway through the second half.

That performance came on the back of an assist against AC Milan and goal against Yokohama F. Marinos in Asian friendlies.

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