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    Jack Grealish & girlfriend Sasha Attwood forced to move out of Manchester flat after fans worked out where he lived

    JACK Grealish has been forced to move out of his swanky Manchester apartment after fans discovered his location.The winger, who made history this summer with his £115million transfer to Man City, moved over concerns for the safety of himself and his girlfriend Sasha Attwood.
    Jack Grealish has moved out of his flat amid safety concerns for him and his girlfriend SashaCredit: Splash
    The Man City star had a swanky apartment in ManchesterCredit: Getty
    A source said: “Jack had been living in a nice apartment in Manchester but recently fans have started to congregate outside.
    “It’s all very innocent at the moment and those who have been waiting around are people who adore Jack and want to get pictures and autographs.
    “However looking at the bigger picture, it’s not ideal that people know his building – especially given the threats Sasha has endured.
    “For safety he has now relocated and is no longer at the property he has been living in.
    “It is hoped that while he remains in Manchester this will remain under wraps.”
    Following his transfer from Aston Villa, Three Lions ace Jack, 25, has seen his star status turn meteoric.

    He is now one of the most searched for sportsmen in the UK, with recent research showing there are over 200,000 Google searches of his name every month.
    Sasha, 23, who has been dating Jack since her teens, is a model and recently signed a big money deal with Boohoo.
    The Sun revealed earlier this year how she had been inundated with death threats – receiving 200 vile messages a day on Instagram during the 2020 Euros.
    Jack and Sasha have been dating since their teensCredit: Tim Stewart
    Jack Grealish’s girlfriend slams trolls who sent her vile abuse during Euros – claiming she was sent ‘200 death threats a day’ More

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    Everton star Jean-Philippe Gbamin fined £25,000 and banned from roads after 5am drink-drive smash

    EVERTON midfielder Jean-Philippe Gbamin has been fined £25,000 and banned from the roads after a 5am drink-drive smash.The injury-hit star, 26, collided with a Jaguar in his Audi RS Q8 as he left the M56 near his home in Hale Barns, Gtr Manchester, on August 8, a court heard.
    Jean-Philippe Gbamin has been fined £25,000 and banned from the roads after a 5am drink-drive smashCredit: Getty
    A breath test revealed he had 52mg of alcohol in 100ml of breath.
    The legal limit is 35mg.
    Gbamin, from the Ivory Coast, who earns £100,000 a month, admitted drink-driving at Manchester magistrates’ court and got a 14-month driving ban and fine.
    JP Susanne O’Connell told him: “You are very fortunate no serious injuries were caused.
    He said: “I am sorry.”

    Premier League star Ashley Barnes arrested for drink-driving following 4-hour booze up after avoiding relegation More

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    Jack Grealish and girlfriend Sasha Attwood forced to move out of Manchester flat after fans worked out where he lived

    JACK Grealish has been forced to move out of his swanky Manchester apartment after fans discovered his location.The winger, who made history this summer with his £115million transfer to Man City, moved over concerns for the safety of himself and his girlfriend Sasha Attwood.
    Jack Grealish has moved out of his flat amid safety concerns for him and his girlfriend SashaCredit: Splash
    The Man City star had a swanky apartment in ManchesterCredit: Getty
    A source said: “Jack had been living in a nice apartment in Manchester but recently fans have started to congregate outside.
    “It’s all very innocent at the moment and those who have been waiting around are people who adore Jack and want to get pictures and autographs.
    “However looking at the bigger picture, it’s not ideal that people know his building – especially given the threats Sasha has endured.
    “For safety he has now relocated and is no longer at the property he has been living in.
    “It is hoped that while he remains in Manchester this will remain under wraps.”
    Following his transfer from Aston Villa, Three Lions ace Jack, 25, has seen his star status turn meteoric.

    He is now one of the most searched for sportsmen in the UK, with recent research showing there are over 200,000 Google searches of his name every month.
    Sasha, 23, who has been dating Jack since her teens, is a model and recently signed a big money deal with Boohoo.
    The Sun revealed earlier this year how she had been inundated with death threats – receiving 200 vile messages a day on Instagram during the 2020 Euros.
    Jack and Sasha have been dating since their teensCredit: Tim Stewart
    Jack Grealish’s girlfriend slams trolls who sent her vile abuse during Euros – claiming she was sent ‘200 death threats a day’ More

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    Troy Deeney says dad drove him around as a child with a bloke locked in the boot

    THREE people made me who I am today.My mum, Emma Deeney, the strongest person I know.
    Troy Deeney says: ‘I am wary of saying I had an unhappy childhood because there were a lot of great things in it, but there was alcohol and there was ­violence’Credit: The Sun
    Deeney as a young player at WalsallCredit: PA:Empics Sport
    My dad, Paul Anthony Burke, who decided I take my mum’s surname because of his reputation around Birmingham.
    Even though my dad could be ­violent and abusive towards me and Mum and was in and out of jail most of his life, he looked after me, taught me how to be a man, how to play football and I knew he loved me and I loved him.
    Colin Hemmings is my biological father.
    He left me and Mum when I was a baby and I’ve had very little to do with him since.
    Until recently, just hearing his name made me feel angry.
    Rejection like that leaves a mark on a kid and on a man — and I’ve been trying to deal with it most of my life.

    In the period of my life when I drank too much, a decade or so ago, I thought I drank because I couldn’t deal with death
    But the root of my unhappiness actually came a lot ­earlier.
    I think of Colin Hemmings as a sperm donor. Nothing more.
    That was the only contribution he made to my life.
    And when my father passed away, from cancer at 47, who was the DJ at his wake? Colin Hemmings.
    It was incredibly weird.
    He came up to me a couple of times and I was thinking, “This is really not the time.”
    A lot of things I’ve done are because of rejection.
    I put this hard mask on, this tough guy who fights and brawls and went to prison and says the Arsenal players don’t have “cojones”, all because I don’t want to be rejected again.
    I am wary of saying I had an unhappy childhood because there were a lot of great things in it, but there was alcohol and there was ­violence.
    I was lucky because the man who I will always call “Dad” took care of me when my biological father rejected me.
    My dad was also a career ­criminal and, yes, there were ­occasions when he was violent towards Mum and me.
    Dad spent his life in and out of jail.
    When I was a young player at ­Walsall, Dad came to watch me play at Northampton Town.
    My dad could be ­violent and abusive towards me and Mum and was in and out of jail most of his life, he looked after me, taught me how to be a man, how to play football and I knew he loved me and I loved him.Troy Deeney
    When I came out of the ground he was waiting for me in a blue Mercedes.
    I knew he didn’t have a blue Mercedes.
    He didn’t have a car. He didn’t even have a licence. He had never passed his test. He had never taken his test.
    I assumed the Mercedes was ­“borrowed” but I got in and we set off down the M1.
    He had the music turned up loud and everything was cool and we chatted about the game.
    Then we stopped to get ­petrol. The music went off and I heard this banging coming from behind.
    “Don’t worry about that,” he said.
    “What do you mean?”
    “Look,” he said, “there’s someone in there but I’m going to drop him off in a bit.”
    He mentioned the name of a bloke who was a small-time drug dealer on the estate, Chelmsley Wood, eight miles east of Birmingham city centre.
    “What?”
    “He owes my pal some money so I’ve taken him on a little journey for the day,” Dad said.
    “I’ve fed him and that and he’s fine. We’ll drop him off later and I bet he pays.”
    There was me trying to make a career at Walsall and we are driving around with a bloke in the boot of the car.
    Rejection like that leaves a mark on a kid and on a man — and I’ve been trying to deal with it most of my life.Troy Deeney
    To him that was normal.
    I’ve seen him referred to as a drug dealer in some of the profiles written about me and maybe he did do a bit of that, but if he did it was only small-time.
    He sold knock-off stuff here and there, I think he probably acted as a kind of enforcer for people now and again.
    He didn’t care about the law.
    He ignored it and then, every so often, it caught up with him.
    He never wanted money. He enjoyed a tear-up. He enjoyed creating fear.
    But, despite everything, he was still my superhero. And he looked after me when I needed it.
    When my mum was 17 she worked as a carer at East Birmingham ­Hospital.
    There was a social club there and one Friday night a friend persuaded her to go to the disco there. That’s when she met Colin Hemmings.
    He was a hospital porter and a part-time DJ. He asked her to a party afterwards.
    He already had a baby with someone else but Mum didn’t know that until much later.
    After they had been going out for some time, Mum found out she was expecting me, and while she was pregnant he was offered a job as a DJ in Ibiza.
    There was me trying to make a career at Walsall and we are driving around with a bloke in the boot of the car.Troy Deeney
    Mum took me over there to see him for my first birthday but she soon found he had been ­seeing other women so she split up with him.
    I have only had two or three encounters with Colin Hemmings in my 33 years. He left my mum when she was 19 to fend for herself. That’s not a man to me.
    Has it caused me pain over the years? 100 per cent.
    I have spoken to psychologists about how that has impacted my life in regard to my children and why I used to drink so much.
    Some months later, Mum met Paul Anthony Burke at a house party.
    His way of chatting her up was taking her hand, ­putting a Rizla in her palm and making a spliff. Really romantic.
    He had only been out of jail for a few weeks after serving time for GBH.
    My dad did some bad things.
    And he did some bad things to me too but he took me on when my ­biological father didn’t want me.
    He looked after me, taught me how to play football, taught me how to defend myself, taught me right from wrong, taught me how to ride a bike, how to swim.
    Mum and Dad stayed together for eight years until eventually Mum had had enough. I don’t think it was the life of crime that wore her down, more the continued absences.
    When she tried to end the ­relationship he didn’t take it well.
    He looked after me when my biological father rejected me. He was a career criminal and he was violent. But he was still my superhero.Troy Deeney
    He told her that if she took me and my brother, Ellis, and sister, Sasha, he’d batter her in front of us. We were living at my nan’s in Stechford.
    One day, when I was nine, Mum came to pick me up from school but when I came through the gates I realised something was wrong.
    Dad was there and he was shouting and yelling. I hurried over to Mum’s car and got in the back seat with Ellis.
    She pulled away but Dad jumped in a white van and first tried to block us in then followed us, right on our back bumper the whole way.
    As we pulled up outside my nan’s, Dad leaped out of the van, ran over to our car and flung the doors open.
    He grabbed me and my brother and sister, marched us over to the van and locked us inside it.
    All we could do was stare out of the window at what was unfolding.
    Mum told me some of the rest. Dad jumped into her car and threatened her.
    He thought she had been laughing at him at the school. She had been smiling to a friend.
    Dad put his thumbs in the ­corners of her mouth and started pulling them so it stretched her face. “I’ll give you a f***ing smile,” he said.
    “You can have a Joker’s smile.”
    Then he got hold of her head and slammed it against the window. Mum’s brother, Uncle David, came out and remonstrated with Dad.
    He got out of the car and fronted up to Uncle David, who said he didn’t want to fight him.
    He grabbed me and my brother and sister, marched us over to the van and locked us inside it.Troy Deeney
    He got my mum and walked her to the house.
    It was a traumatic time for all of us.
    The council allocated us a new house.
    Mum was terrified Dad would find out where. We kept it a secret.
    About six months after they split, she went out with someone else.
    I stayed over at Nan’s with Ellis and Sasha.
    Dad came round in a taxi. He was wired, like he was hopped up on something.
    He loaded the three of us into the back. He had somehow managed to find out where we were living.
    We pulled up outside our flat.
    Mum opened the door and her expression turned to pure fear.
    He started going from room to room. “Who were you with last night?” he asked.
    “Have you spent the night on your own?”
    “Yeah, I have,” Mum said.
    “You’re a liar,” he shouted.
    He called Mum all the names under the sun. I was crying my eyes out.
    I told him to calm down but he was out of ­control.
    “I’m going to kill your mum,” he said to me and pointed to each of us kids in turn, “and then I’m going to kill you and I’m going to kill you and I’m going to kill you.”
    He began flinging punches at my mum.
    I tried to get between them and he punched me and knocked me over and hit Mum again.
    I got up and he punched me again.
    He said to Mum she had to take him back.
    Every time she said no, he hit her.
    I jumped up, getting in front and he hit me.
    That seemed to go on forever. It was mayhem
    Dad was wired. He said: ‘I’m going to kill your mum’ and pointing to us kids in turn: ‘Then I’ll kill you and I’ll kill you and I’ll kill you’Troy Deeney
    He picked Sasha up and flung her on a chair. It was mayhem.
    A friend of mine knocked on the door. That saved us.
    Dad let Mum answer the door but he was ­holding on to her hair to stop her running away.
    A woman next door called the police. They arrived quickly.
    One of the policemen pushed the door ajar.
    Dad slammed the door on his arm.
    Loads of police vehicles pulled up outside — two riot vans and four police cars, all for my dad.
    They forced their way in and ­wrestled him to the floor.
    “Look what these b******s have done to your dad,” he was saying. “All I wanted to do was see you.”
    It was an end of innocence for me. It destroyed my relationship with my dad for a few years.
    I forgave him for it but I never forgot.
    The first time he came to our house after he had beaten us up, I p***ed myself because I was so ­frightened.
    A year or so later I was chasing some kid because we’d had an argument.
    He climbed up on to a shed. As I was pulling myself up he kicked me in the face and I went flying backwards and landed hard on my elbow.
    I was in hospital for a week and every time I woke up Dad was ­sitting in the chair by my bed.
    He was there with me constantly.
    All the other stuff had gone because when I needed him most he was there.
    It was a strange dynamic. It’s probably why I’m so messed up now.

     Troy Deeney – Redemption: My Story is out on Thursday (Hamlyn, £20, ­octopusbooks.co.uk).

    Baby Troy aged oneCredit: Troy Deeney / Octopus Books
    Troy, his brother Ellis and dad Paul
    Footie star Troy’s hero is his hard-working mum Emma and he says she is the strongest person he knows
    Troy Deeney – Redemption: My Story is out on Thursday (Hamlyn, £20, ­octopusbooks.co.uk)
    Troy Deeney posts emotional message to Watford fans after 11-year stay ends More

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    Charlie Webster: ‘I was abused by coach from 14 – later on I found my friends were victims too & one took her own life’

    WHEN Charlie Webster joined a running club at 12, she found an escape from her troubled homelife and dreamed of becoming an Olympic athlete.But over the next few years her dream turned to a nightmare as the Sheffield club’s respected coach groomed her and subjected her to horrific sexual assault.
    Charlie Webster was groomed by her coach after joining a running club at 12
    The teen athlete was abused by coach Paul North
    Now a successful journalist and broadcaster, 38, covering the biggest events in world sport for Sky Sport and BBC1, this was one story she has been unable to tell – until now.
    Ahead of her powerful BBC documentary Nowhere To Run, which airs tonight, Charlie tells The Sun how coach Paul North arranged “private training sessions” before “massaging” her breasts and groin and penetrating her with his fingers.
    After campaigning for abuse victims with the charity Women’s Aid, and encouraging victims to speak about their experiences, she decided she had to reveal her own trauma to help others. 
    “How could I encourage others to talk about it, and say there’s no shame, when I felt horrifically ashamed myself,” she says.
    “It felt hypocritical. I really struggled with it but I now realise how important it is to speak your own truth.”

    It was only when North was jailed for 10 years, when Charlie was 19, that she realised she was not his only victim and, in the course of the documentary, she discovers her closest friends at the club were also abused – with one being raped multiple times.
    An email from the mother of a former best friend, who had been raped multiple times by Charlie’s abuser, spurred her on to make the programme.
    She also contacted the mother of another club member, who had tragically taken her own life at 18. 
    Charlie kept silent about the abuse for 20 years and says she was too ashamed to speak out, blaming herself.
    “That blame and guilt dominated me, and left me with low self-esteem, struggling in relationships, struggling with trust,” she says.
    “I felt ashamed and isolated and sank into depression. I always felt I’d be judged, like I was broken and people would immediately think, ‘she’s a bit messed up,’ so I held it in. 
    “Throughout my career, I tried to be what I thought I should be – a smiley, confident person – but inside there was a part of me which didn’t like myself.
    “You can’t live your life like that because it’s exhausting, it’s chaotic and it’s damaging.”
    Groomed from the age of 12
    Living in Sheffield with a violent and controlling stepdad, who terrorised Charlie and mum, Joy,  she was a talented athlete at school and, at 12, she was encouraged to join the all-girls running club in her hometown.
    She soon found a close network of friends as well as a passion for running which took her mind off her problems, and she looked up to North as a man who could help achieve her Olympic dream.
    “I was very guarded about saying anything that was going on at home, I didn’t tell anyone,’ she says. 
    “But when I ran, it felt like a safe place to let the emotion spill out in frustration, anger, or upset and the coach would put his arm around me to console me. 
    “He befriended me and I opened up about some of my struggles at home so when the abuse started, it was confusing.” 
    After a while, North suggested private training sessions in the hall of the primary school where he worked as a caretaker.
    It was there that the regular ‘massages’ began. 
    I trusted him completely, so when the abuse began, I was scared, confused and embarrassed.Charlie Webster
    “The physical abuse started when I was 14, but there was a lot of manipulation and grooming before that,” she says.
    “I was so embedded and ingrained in the club. I relied on him. I wanted to win, I wanted to be the best.
    “I trusted him completely, so when the abuse began, I was scared, confused and embarrassed.”
    Charlie and her running club friends as teenagers
    Charlie tracked down her old clubmates and Georgina’s mum Jean for the programme
    ‘Massages’ lead to shocking assault
    After each training session, the coach would take Charlie into a classroom where he made her lie on a table for the massages, telling her it would help her on the track.
    “It started with massages for a tight hamstring, then he began massaging the groin and the breasts, telling me I was really tight in the chest area and needed to loosen up my lungs,” says Charlie.
    “I was a child, I wasn’t sexualised, so I didn’t understand what was going on. 
    “He smiled at me the whole time and reassured me that it was the best for me which is really confusing for a young girl who absolutely trusts that person.”
    Charlie was so afraid of her stepdad that she would sometimes wet herself in her bedroom rather than go to the toilet, because he would explode with rage if she made a noise. 
    As a result she developed a bladder problem – which North used as an excuse to take the abuse further.
    “My issues with going to the loo became a problem in training and my coach told me the muscles around my bladder were weak and he could help’,” she says.
    “That was the first time he told me to take my pants off, he moved my knickers with one hand, with quite a lot of pressure, and put his fingers inside me. 
    “I remember feeling really uncomfortable but I desperately wanted the problem to go away.”
    Girls abused on Spain trip
    North’s harsh training methods and pitting the girls against each other also created such a competitive environment that tears and vomiting were common after races. 
    In shocking footage from a training trip to Spain, shown in the documentary, teenage runners lie, collapsed and crying, around the track as he bends down to comfort them.  
    Charlie, then 17, was among several runners North abused on that trip, but his skill at isolating the girls and setting them against each other meant they never shared their secret.
    “There were always girls crying and it was normalised to be sick after a race,” she says. “If I wasn’t sick after a training session, then I wasn’t good enough. 
    If I wasn’t sick after a training session, then I wasn’t good enough. Charlie Webster
    “He would also play me off against my best friend, wrapping his arm around her and pulling her away, saying things to split us up because he realised we were getting close.
    “Everything he did was to get to the physical act of abuse.”
    North was finally brought to book in 2002, after a 15-year-old victim who he stripped and assaulted told her father, who reported him to the police.
    He was jailed for 10 years, and has since been released. 
    Charlie is calling for action to stop abuse in sportCredit: The Sun
    The presenter had a troubled home life
    ‘I’ll never forgive him’
    Charlie’s best friend at the time, who isn’t named in the documentary because of ongoing mental health struggles, was one of two girls who finally testified against North about being raped multiple times, including in her own home.
    Her mother tells Charlie: “She never got over it. She’s not had a life for 20 years. 
    “He got a prison sentence but he still came out and lived his life. My daughter’s had none of that. I’ll never forgive him, I’ll take it to my grave and my daughter will take it to her grave.”
    Another of the group, Georgina, left the club shortly after the Spanish camp and took her own life at 18. 
    She never told her family of any abuse but mum Jean says she became withdrawn and said she’d had an argument with North. 
    “For her to give up running, I always thought something had happened because she loved it,’ she says.
    “I lost her at that point. You couldn’t get to her any longer. She got more and more depressed and she overdosed.”
    Victims scared to speak up
    Even after North’s arrest, Charlie was not approached by either the governing body, UK Athletics, or the police and she believes the system is still failing to support girls today by refusing to take tougher action on perpetrators.
    “There were allegations about another coach, nine years ago, who got a rap on the knuckles and was allowed to carry on coaching,” she says. 
    “I have a whistle blower in my film, Martin Slevin, who was chair of a Coventry running club and a serving police officer and was completely ostracised when he raised the issue of a coach and his relationship with a 15-year-old. 
    “How do we expect a child to speak out when a grown man in a position of power gets bullied out because he’s raised a red flag?
    “Coaches who are found to have abused one young athlete are often given a temporary ban which means the DBS checks are rendered useless, and they can often return to coach again. 
    “Abuse is a pattern of behaviour and there’s rarely one victim – they keep on abusing until somebody stops them.
    “Even a lifetime ban in one sport doesn’t prevent them coaching in another, because there is no universal register.
    “There is a person today who was banned for life from an education setting, but is now coaching young kids at a sports club, because there’s no information sharing.”
    Charlie says the recent case of US gymnastics doctor Larry Nasser, whose abuse of 330 women and girls is currently the subject of a hearing in the Senate, brought her memories flooding back.
    “When I read the testimony of the first girl that came forward, it was like reading my own experience,” she says. 
    “It gave me goosebumps and I felt sick. It demonstrates the common patterns of behaviour that abusers use to manipulate their victims.”
    For the documentary, Charlie spoke to members of her former club – including some who were not abused – and learned that, like her, most carried a sense of guilt that they didn’t speak up at the time, or didn’t know their friends were being harmed. 
    But she says the film helped her shift the blame onto the real perpetrator.
    “This is not my guilt to carry, this is none of our guilt to carry,” she says. “This is his guilt and finally I’m starting to recognise that.
    “I’m actually proud of everything I’ve gone through that I’m still here today rather than ashamed of it. I’ve turned it on its head.”
    Charlie, backed by the NSPCC, is now calling for a major overhaul of the safeguarding system across all sports.
    She is calling for an overhaul of the DBS check system, to allow all potential employees and clubs to be informed of previous allegations and mandatory reporting by governing bodies when allegations of abuse arise.
    Charlie’s campaign for change
    In her campaign, backed by the NSPCC, Charlie is calling for:

    The creation of a central register/licensing scheme for coaches across all sports, informing employees and clubs if allegations of misconduct have been made about coaches. 
    A Government review of the criminal record and intelligence checking system, to address flaws in the current DBS checks which allow coaches and former teachers with temporary or lifetimes bans to coach in a different sport or setting.
    A resource for young people to query signs and red flags and read anecdotes that may relate to what is happening to them, so they can understand when behaviour is inappropriate or abusive.
    An extension of Position of Trust legislation to make any sexual contact between a coach and a 16 and 17 in their care illegal. 

    Sir Peter Wanless, CEO of the NSPCC said:
    “We commend Charlie for bravely opening up about the abuse she experienced at the hands of her sports coach, in this powerful new documentary.
    “To protect children, we need to see a major change to how coaches are registered across all sports and Governments of the UK must review the criminal record checking, known as the DBS in England.
    “Children and young people need a place where they can query signs and red flags, and understand what good coaching is, versus what is abuse and must be reported.”

    After 20 years of repressing her memories, Charlie worked with a psychologist to help her come to terms with her trauma and has recently been diagnosed with PTSD. 
    “I’ve now got perspective, which I didn’t have before, and I would urge anyone who’s ever experienced anything like this to talk to a trusted person or a professional, because it’s the best thing that I ever did in my life,” she says.
    “It made me realise that what I was feeling was normal because of what I’ve been through and that none of it was my fault. I was a child. It’s given me some peace and understanding that he didn’t target me because I’m not good enough, I’m worthless. I was just another person he chose to abuse.”
    Charlie now hopes the BBC documentary, and her ongoing campaign, will help protect the athletes of the future. 
    “People often say ‘if it just helps one person….’, but that’s not enough,” she says. 
    “We need to implement real change, because I’m sick of telling stories about abuse and I don’t want to be talking about more cases of abuse in another 20 years.”
    Nowhere To Run: Abused By Our Coach is on BBC3 and airs on BBC1 tonight at 10.35pm.
    WHERE TO GET HELPWhenever it happened to you, it’s never too late to get support.
    If you’ve ever experienced sexual violenceor sexual abuse, you can get confidential support from specialists who will listen to you, believe you and understand how hard it is to talk about.
    As a victim, you’re entitled to support whether you report the crime or not. Your rights are set out in full in the Victims’ Code. 
    Visit gov.uk/sexualabusesupport to see the support on offer.

    Charlie with teammate Becky, who appears in the documentary
    Charlie has joined forces with the NSPCCCredit: BBC More

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    West Ham legend Tony Cottee hails David Moyes as Hammers boss ‘gets’ the club

    WEST HAM legend Tony Cottee says boss David Moyes ‘gets’ the club.And that is why the Hammers are flying high and should aim for Champions League football.
    David Moyes has earned rave reviews at West Ham since returning to the club in December 2019Credit: Reuters
    Hammers icon Tony Cottee has heaped praise on Moyes after their impressive start to the season
    Former England striker Cottee said: “West Ham is a very special football club and the fans want something unique.
    “West Ham fans want to see a certain brand of football, a certain amount of effort from the players.
    “David Moyes understands that and as a result we’ve seen the sort of performances we’ve seen over the last 15 months. The biggest thing is he gets it.”
    Cottee was impressed at how Moyes bounced back after his tough experience with today’s opponents, Manchester United, and further setbacks at Real Sociedad and Sunderland.
    He said: “I have the utmost admiration for him as a person and a professional for what he’s done to prove people wrong.
    “After doing such a fantastic job at Everton, there’s no way anyone could turn down that Manchester United role.

    BETTING SPECIAL – GET RONALDO TO SCORE VS WEST HAM AT 30/1
    “I felt they let him go far too soon. There was a panic button pressed.
    “Once you have that bad experience, you can make calls on where you go to next.
    “It happens to players, coaches and managers.
    “But even after all that, he still had that inner belief in himself as a manager that he could prove people wrong.
    “He had a first spell at West Ham and now he’s returned for what’s becoming a glorious second spell.”
    Cottee, 56, was part of the 1985-86 West Ham side that finished third in the old First Division, the highest league placing in the club’s history.
    He said: “As a club, we’ve not won anything since the FA Cup win 41 years ago, which is far too long for a club like West Ham.
    Every Premier League club’s most-affordable season ticket, ranked from most to least expensive
    “You don’t support West Ham because they will win the Premier League every year. Fans are realistic.
    “West Ham want to compete with the big London clubs. Chelsea, Arsenal and Spurs are all trying to get in the Champions League, so why shouldn’t West Ham?
    “If David can do for West Ham what he did for Everton, there won’t be too many unhappy Hammers in five years’ time.”
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    Fans of Brighton and Hove Albion are highest up the exam table with most GCSEs

    FANS of Brighton and Hove Albion are highest up the exam table as they have got most GCSEs, research found.After Brighton, Premier League’s second smartest supporters are Southampton’s who average ten passes.
    Fans of Brighton and Hove Albion are highest up the exam table as they have got most GCSEs, research foundCredit: Rex

    Further down are fans of Aston Villa and Newcastle, who have an average of five GCSEs. As well as Premier League fans, analysts studied the exam results of 2,000 followers of other sports.
    They were knocked for six by cricket supporters, who came out top with 11 GCSEs.
    Tennis lovers were second with nine GCSEs followed by Formula One obsessives on eight and rugby union and rugby league fans on seven. Football and horse racing supporters averaged six passes.
    Boxing fans were the lowest achievers with an average of five GCSEs to their name.
    Ben Warren, of betting site cricketbetindia.com, which carried out the study, said: “Brighton may be one of the smallest clubs but Seagulls’ fans seem to have the biggest brains.
    “But overall football fans don’t fare too well in comparison to other sports fans.”

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    Football fans will be allowed to stand at top-flight games after 27-year ban

    FOOTBALL fans will get standing areas at top-flight games for the first time in nearly 30 years, ministers are to reveal.Premier League clubs will be told they can register to open safe standing sections in their grounds in the second half of this season.
    Fans will be able to stand at top-flight football games for the first time in nearly 30 years, ministers are to revealCredit: Getty
    Several will be chosen to act as pilot schemes before a decision is made on whether to introduce it across the top two divisions next year.
    Standing has been illegal in the top division since all-seater stadiums were introduced in 1994 following the Taylor report into the Hillsborough disaster.
    But ministers will this week give the go-ahead for Premier League and EFL clubs to add seats with barriers so fans can stand. It will be the first major decision made by new ­Culture Secretary Nadine Dorries, a Liverpool fan brought up half-a-mile from Anfield.
    A source said: “The Government has proceeded with caution on this issue and gathered robust evidence that the safety of fans will not be compromised.
    “We’ll ensure any changes will have the backing of supporters’ groups.”

    Safe standing sections have been successfully installed in Germany.
    Liverpool, Chelsea, Manchester City, Spurs and Manchester United have already constructed similar sections.
    The Sports Grounds Safety Authority is expected to set out more details in London tomorrow.
    The Government will then make a formal announcement later this week.
    The move will be the first major decision made by new ­Culture Secretary Nadine DorriesCredit: Rex
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