Tom Brady plays coy on Super Bowl pick after coming under fire for lack of Patriots' support




© Chris J. Ratcliffe/Reuters







Kick-off at Amex Stadium 2pm (GMT)
Email Daniel with your thoughts
I’ll probably end up looking silly, but I quite fancy Palace here. Brighton lack a reliable scorer – though Katsoulas’ brilliant goal against Bournemouth tells us he knows where the goal is – and I think Palace have the speed of foot and of pass to cause them problems.
So where is the game? Brighton will expect – and probably allowed – to have more of the ball, with Mitoma and Rutter staying narrow and Kadioglu and De Cuyper keeping width outside them – especially useful when facing a three-at-the-back system. The space will be in behind the wing-backs and down the sides of the centre-backs, though I’d also expect Katsoulas to target the space in behind.
Continue reading...
© Photograph: Paul Childs/Action Images/Reuters

© Photograph: Paul Childs/Action Images/Reuters

© Photograph: Paul Childs/Action Images/Reuters
Arrests follow discovery on Friday of magistrate and her mother in a garage in south-east of country
French authorities have arrested five suspects after a magistrate and her mother were held captive last week for about 30 hours in a cryptocurrency ransom plot.
Four men and one woman were detained, three overnight and two on Sunday morning, the Lyon prosecutor Thierry Dran told Agence France-Presse.
Continue reading...
© Photograph: Alex Martin/AFP/Getty Images

© Photograph: Alex Martin/AFP/Getty Images

© Photograph: Alex Martin/AFP/Getty Images
Olivia Smith’s strike ends the WSL leader’s wining run
3 min: Caitlin Foord turns Kerstin Casparij inside out on the left. She drives towards the byline before crossing the ball across the box. Nobody’s there to tap the ball in though.
1 min: Former Arsenal player Vivianne Miedema has an early opportunity. Manchester City win the ball off Arsenal shortly after kick off and Miedema strikes from about 25 yards out. It travels comfortably past the post.
Continue reading...
© Photograph: Andrew Couldridge/Action Images/Reuters

© Photograph: Andrew Couldridge/Action Images/Reuters

© Photograph: Andrew Couldridge/Action Images/Reuters
Sam Curran bowls final over to deny minnows
England were given a major scare at the beginning of their Men’s T20 World Cup campaign, but Sam Curran held his nerve to deliver a four-run win over minnows Nepal at a raucous Wankhede Stadium.
With Nepal needing 10 from the final over to secure a famous victory in the first-ever meeting between the two sides, Curran nailed his lines and lengths to get England out of jail in a breathless contest.
Simon Burnton’s match report will follow
Continue reading...
© Photograph: Francis Mascarenhas/Reuters

© Photograph: Francis Mascarenhas/Reuters

© Photograph: Francis Mascarenhas/Reuters
With the end of the New Start treaty, we face a potentially catastrophic arms race. It can still be prevented
The risk of nuclear war is greater now than in decades – and rising. The Bulletin of Atomic Scientists recently set its famous Doomsday Clock closer to midnight, indicating a level of risk equivalent to the 1980s, when US and Soviet nuclear stockpiles were increasing rapidly. In those years, massive waves of disarmament protest arose in Europe and the United States. Political leaders responded, the cold war ended, and many people stopped worrying about the bomb.
Today, the bomb is back. Political tensions are rising, and nuclear weapons have spread to other countries, including Israel, India, Pakistan and North Korea. China is rapidly increasing its nuclear arsenal. The US-Russia arms competition may accelerate soon with the expiration on 5 February of the last remaining arms control agreement, the New Start treaty. To prevent the growing nuclear threat, we need a new global peace movement.
David Cortright, a visiting scholar at Cornell University’s Reppy Institute for Peace and Conflict Studies, was the executive director of Sane, the Committee for a Sane Nuclear Policy, during the 1980s
Continue reading...
© Photograph: Jamie Christiani/Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists/AFP/Getty Images

© Photograph: Jamie Christiani/Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists/AFP/Getty Images

© Photograph: Jamie Christiani/Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists/AFP/Getty Images
This unofficial diagnosis describes the anxiety-driven, compulsive obsession with living as long as possible. While it might seem healthy to monitor your diet, exercise and biomarkers, it can come at a huge emotional cost
It was a pitta bread that finally broke Jason Wood. It arrived with hummus instead of the vegetable crudites he had preordered in a restaurant that he had painstakingly researched, as he always did, weeks before he and his husband visited. “In that moment, I just snapped,” he recalls. “I hit rock bottom, I got angry … I started crying, I started shaking. I just felt like I couldn’t do it any more, like I had been crushed by all this pressure I put on myself.”
Today, Wood, 40, speaks calmly. Neat and groomed, he seems orderly by nature. But at that time, his attempts to control every aspect of his life had spiralled. He painstakingly monitored what he ate (sometimes only organic, sometimes raw or unprocessed; calories painstakingly counted), his exercise regime (twice a day, seven days a week), and tracked every bodily function from his heart rate to his blood pressure, body fat and sleep “schedule”. He even monitored his glucose levels repeatedly throughout the day. “I was living by those numbers,” he says.
Continue reading...
© Photograph: Sarah Rice/The Guardian

© Photograph: Sarah Rice/The Guardian

© Photograph: Sarah Rice/The Guardian
Tens of thousands of artefacts were unearthed not by careful excavation but by the 2011 floods. Now, students are piecing together Queensland’s history
Get our breaking news email, free app or daily news podcast
In a white and sterile office that could belong to any one of the warehouses that dot this industrial strip between Brisbane’s airport and horse-racing precinct, a young woman is engrossed in a puzzle.
Only this puzzle comprises, perhaps, three different sets, each almost (but not quite) identical to the other – and none likely to be completed.
Continue reading...
© Photograph: David Kelly/The Guardian

© Photograph: David Kelly/The Guardian

© Photograph: David Kelly/The Guardian










