Sports
Naughton gets Connacht start for Benetton visit
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Full-back Sean Naughton will make his first start for Connacht in tomorrow’s BKT United Rugby Championship season opener against Benetton.
Paul Boyle captains the side from blindside flanker in his 117th appearance for the province, with academy back Naughton also making his first appearance in the URC.
Fellow academy player Fiachna Barrett could also make his URC debut, with the Mayo native named among the replacements for the season opener at a sold-out Dexcom Stadium.
Boyle features in a back row that includes Shamus Hurley-Langton with Sean Jansen at number 8.
Niall Murray and Josh Murphy make up the second row partnership, while the pack is completed by props Peter Dooley and Sam Illo, and hooker Dylan Tierney-Martin.
In the backs, Naughton makes up a back-three with wingers Chay Mullins and Irish international Shayne Bolton, while Cathal Forde and Byron Ralston form the centre pairing.
Completing the side is scrum-half Caolin Blade and out-half Josh Ioane.
Head coach Stuart Lancaster, ahead of his first competitive game with the club, said: “It’s been a really pleasing pre-season for us.
“I’ve enjoyed getting to know all the players and backroom staff, and we had two good wins against Bristol and Sale followed by a camp in Westport, so I believe we’re set up well to hit the ground running on Saturday night.
“Benetton are a strong side full of internationals, and the URC has become such a competitive league so every point is vital.
“I know there’s lots of excitement around the province so I’m sure the fans will harness that energy into getting behind the group for this opener, and I’m looking forward to experiencing that atmosphere for the first time as head coach.”
Connacht: Sean Naughton; Chay Mullins, Byron Ralston, Cathal Forde, Shayne Bolton; Josh Ioane, Caolin Blade; Peter Dooley, Dylan Tierney-Martin, Sam Illo; Niall Murray, Josh Murphy; Paul Boyle (capt), Shamus Hurley-Langton, Sean Jansen.
Replacements: Dave Heffernan, Jordan Duggan, Fiachna Barrett, David O’Connor, Joe Joyce, Ben Murphy, Jack Carty, Cian Prendergast.
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Watch the Women’s Rugby World Cup final between England and Canada on Saturday from 3.15pm on RTÉ2 and RTÉ Player.
Sports
Liverpool’s Leoni out for the season after ACL injury
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Giovanni Leoni is facing a year on the sidelines after Liverpool boss Arne Slot announced the teenage defender has torn his anterior cruciate ligament.
The 18-year-old, a £26million (€29.8m) summer signing from Parma, made his Reds debut in Tuesday’s Carabao Cup third round tie against Southampton but suffered the knee injury in a tackle late on in the 2-1 win.
Leoni has pledged to return as soon as possible but Slot issued a grim prognosis ahead of Saturday’s trip to Crystal Palace, where Alexander Isak is poised for his first Premier League start for the Merseysiders.
Leoni’s setback – which leaves Liverpool with just three fit centre-backs in Virgil van Dijk, Joe Gomez and Ibrahima Konate – means he has been replaced in their Champions League squad by Federico Chiesa.
Slot said: “He is not in a good place because he tore his ACL so he will be out for around a year.
“Being so young, coming to a new country, playing so well in your first game, it is very hard to take a positive.
“There is no positive side but he is still so young, has so many years to go after he recovers from a terrible injury like that.”
Sports
DeGale on ADHD, bare-knuckle debut and boxing return
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6 minutes ago
For many fighters, the hardest battle is not in the ring but knowing when to walk away.
History is littered with boxers who could not resist one more shot, one more fight, one last chance to silence the doubts.
Olympic gold medallist and former two-time IBF super-middleweight champion James DeGale is no different.
On Saturday in Manchester, the 39-year-old will step into one of the most brutal arenas in combat sports: bare-knuckle boxing.
He meets Australian Matt Floyd at the AO Arena, six years on from the punishing loss to Chris Eubank Jr that ended his career – a memory that still gnaws at him.
“The way I went out against Eubank, it plays in my head every day,” he says. “I want to go out with a good win and show people how injured I was.”
DeGale knows his decision will raise eyebrows but believes attention and redemption could pave the way back to traditional boxing.
“The last couple of years of my career I was riddled with injuries,” he tells BBC Sport.
“I need to right the wrong and have a couple more fights just to show how handicapped I was.”
Although world titles are behind him, DeGale feels the modern boxing landscape – shaped by crossover shows and influencer bouts – offers new opportunities.
“Boxing at the very top and winning world titles again, that’s done,” he says.
“But boxing has changed. There’s [YouTuber KSI’s promotional company] Misfits, shows in Qatar, money everywhere.
“Jake Paul, Darren Till, Ty Mitchell, KSI, Tommy Fury – there are so many people I can fight.”
‘It impacted me a lot’ – DeGale on ADHD
DeGale made history as Britain’s first boxer to win both Olympic gold and a professional world title, capturing the IBF super-middleweight crown in 2015 and defending it against top names.
But injuries and underwhelming performances took their toll. Defeat by Caleb Truax in 2017 was salvaged by a messy rematch win, while the Eubank loss in 2019 felt final.
DeGale says towards the end of his career he discovered he was neurodivergent.
One in five people are neurodivergent, an umbrella term for the range of differences in how our brains function, which includes ADHD, autism, dyslexia and synesthesia among others.
“At the end of my career, I got diagnosed with severe ADHD. Proper ADHD,” DeGale says.
“It impacted me a lot. I used to worry about what people would think, what they would say.
“I was probably a bit mentally weak at that time.”
ADHD challenges vary from person to person, but they can include hyperactivity, impulsivity and difficulty regulating focus.
DeGale believes ADHD contributed to poor decisions he made, but with medication and experience, he now feels grounded.
“I didn’t want to take that year and a half out of the ring to repair and heal,” he says.
“I was too impatient. But I’ve been medicated for the past five years, and I’m in a very good place. I’ve learned how to deal with my ADHD.”
‘Boxing with no gloves’ – why bare-knuckle?
DeGale left boxing with his health intact and has no desire to fight into his 50s.
Yet a comeback still called to him and bare-knuckle offered a route.
“I had such a good career, people said, ‘James, leave it, you smashed it’. There weren’t many opportunities, but then this came up,” he says.
“This is a way to get attention. Come back in the most brutal sport in the world and put on a performance.”
His immediate task is Floyd, a Perth fighter with a 15-2 professional record and a past as a former gang member who served time in prison.
The fight headlines a card for Bare Knuckle Fighting Championship.
“It’s boxing but with no gloves,” DeGale explains.
“There are some different rules: when you’re in a clinch you can hold the back of their neck and punch.”
Preparation has meant adapting familiar routines. Sparring bare-knuckle would be too damaging, so he has leaned on experienced specialists to guide him.
“I’m training with bare-knuckle fighters giving me all kinds of tips. I’ve been strengthening my hand and forearm,” the Londoner says.
“You don’t realise how weak your hands are until you start punching the bag and pads bare-knuckle.”
DeGale knows this comeback is a gamble for a man who has already achieved so much.
But for a fighter whose career ended with regret, this “organised straightener”, as he puts it, might allow him to walk away on his own terms.
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Sports
GB rowers add two golds to World Championships haul
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25 minutes ago
Great Britain won two gold medals at the 2025 World Rowing Championships in Shanghai, with victory in the men’s four and PR1 men’s single sculls.
Competing as a combination for the first time at this regatta, the impressive form of Daniel Graham, James Robson, Douwe de Graaf and George Bourne continued as the new-look quartet beat Romania and the Netherlands to top the men’s four podium.
Benjamin Pritchard’s dominance continued as the Paralympic and European champion led the PR1 single sculls field from start to finish, adding another gold to his collection.
The awards come a day after Great Britain claimed silver in both the men’s and women’s quadruple sculls on the first day of the finals on Thursday.
“We came here thinking we could do it, but we wanted to focus on progressing through the regatta and to get better each time we hit the water,” Robson said after the race.
“We had a great row in that final. It was quite a battle and we’re just really happy to have got that over the line and get it done!”
Pritchard set a new Paralympic record at Paris 2024, before becoming a European Champion for the first time in Plovdiv earlier this year.
Of his form, the Welshman said: “This project is an undisputed success.”
“I’m a Paralympic, European and world champion. I’ve broken European records, Paralympic records and world championship records. I’ll take it all to be honest!
“I wanted to get off quick and hold the lead, and towards the end I was holding on for dear life. I was dying in those last five strokes, that’s for sure.
“The temperature here is wild. It’s genuinely like rowing in an inferno! I’ve done a lot of heat preparation back home in the UK with our support staff, who have been fantastic. But it just doesn’t prepare you for these conditions. This is something else!”
Elsewhere, Lauren Henry is through to the women’s single sculls final after winning her semi-final.
In the PR3 mixed double sculls, Sam Murray and Annie Caddick also progressed to the final with a first-place finish.
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