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    Arsenal ace Ben White and wife Milly Adams walk hand in hand as they enjoy romantic honeymoon in Ibiza

    ARSENAL’S Ben White and new wife Milly Adams enjoy their honeymoon in Ibiza. The player, 25, and model Milly, 26, walked hand in hand on the White Isle.
    Arsenal’s Ben White and new wife Milly Adams enjoy their honeymoon in Ibiza.Credit: Splash
    They were able to celebrate their nuptials after White was left out of the England squad for this month’s Euro 2024 qualifiersCredit: Splash
    While White was topless, Milly was looking stunning in a white crop-top and skirtCredit: Splash
    The pair have been seen soaking up the sun on the romantic getaway. 
    They were able to celebrate their nuptials after White was left out of the England squad for this month’s Euro 2024 qualifiers.
    While White was topless, Milly was looking stunning in a white crop-top and skirt. 
    The couple announced on Instagram that they had tied the knot last month.
    READ MORE ON BEN WHITE
    She claimed that she had “married her best friend” in the touching post.
    The two wed at the Old Marylebone Town Hall in London.
    Milly, who is 26 years old, was born in Hertfordshire.
    The model, who boasts 18,700 followers on Instagram, also graduated from Nottingham Trent University in 2019.
    Most read in Football
    She originally hinted at a relationship with the Arsenal ace after posting pictures holding a hand displaying the defender’s distinctive tattoos.
    White wasted very little time before popping the question on a luxury holiday in May.
    The happy couple shared pictures of their engagement on social media, including one of their matching ‘I love you’ wrist tattoos.
    White wasted very little time before popping the question on a luxury holiday in May.
    The happy couple shared pictures of their engagement on social media, including one of their matching ‘I love you’ wrist tattoos.
    Despite missing out on a place in the England football squad, the pair look blissfully happy as they stroll beside the seaCredit: Splash
    The two wed at the Old Marylebone Town Hall in London, ahead of jetting off to Ibiza to celebrateCredit: Splash
    The happy couple take a walk in the sun as they honeymoon on the White IsleCredit: Splash
    Milly claimed that she had ‘married her best friend’ in a touching social media post.Credit: Splash
    Ben turning out for ArsenalCredit: Getty
    Model Millyboasts 18,700 followers on Instagram More

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    Tickets for West Ham’s European final being sold for 50% more than those for Man City’s Champions League clash

    TICKETS for West Ham’s European final were last night being sold for 50 per cent more than those for Manchester City’s Champions League clash.Hammers supporters hoping to see their team win the Europa Conference League on Wednesday face paying at least £1,500 online for a seat in their side’s end.
    West Ham fans heading to the final in Prague face paying at least £1,500 online for a seat in their side’s endCredit: PA
    Even West Ham superfan Chesney Hawkes, who was invited by the club to perform at the live fan zone in the Czech Republic’s capital, is having to barter for a final seat
    City fans — whose team could complete the Treble — can get a ticket for their final for £925 from the same website, Livefootballtickets.com.
     West Ham take on Italian side Fiorentina at Prague’s Fortuna Arena, which has a capacity of just 19,370.
    Even West Ham superfan Chesney Hawkes, who was invited by the club to perform at the live fan zone in the Czech Republic’s capital, is having to barter for a final seat.
    The One and Only singer, 51, said: “We still don’t even have tickets yet. We are hoping the club are able to help us out but if we have to pay, we will pay.
    READ MORE ON WEST HAM
    “A friend of ours paid four-and-a-half grand for some tickets — it’s getting crazy.
    “I spoke to another guy who has paid a couple of thousand. There will probably be more people in the fan zone than in the stadium at this rate.”
    Manchester City face Italian side Inter in their big final in Istanbul, Turkey on Saturday.
    Pep Guardiola’s men are set to become only the second English club in history to scoop the Premier League, FA Cup and Champions League titles in one season — matching the 1999 feat of rivals Manchester United.
    Most read in Football More

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    Crippling rail strikes fail to stop fans from attending first all-Manchester FA Cup final

    FOOTIE fans were jubilant yesterday after crippling rail strikes failed to stop them attending the first all-Manchester FA Cup final.Supporters crammed into cars and piled on to coaches as trains were axed due to ­drivers walking out on the biggest day of the season.
    Manchester City supporters queued round the block to board a coach to the FA Cup finalCredit: EPA
    Manchester United fans leave Old Trafford by coach to travel to Wembley Stadium ahead of the FA Cup finalCredit: PA
    Many got up at the crack of dawn to embark on the 200-mile pilgrimage from the North West to Wembley to beat the traffic.
    The six-hour drive proved worthwhile for Man City fans who kept treble dreams alive by claiming a 2-1 victory over United in the first Manchester derby final in the competition’s 151-year history.
    The Red Devils, who secured their own ­trophy trio in 1999, were chasing their second silverware of the year.
    United fan Marty Harris, 46, woke at 4am for a £300 flight from Edinburgh to Birmingham before car-sharing to Watford and then getting the Tube to Wembley with his young son.
    READ MORE FOOTBALL NEWS
    He said: “I’m here now so that’s the main thing. It’s been torture, absolute torture. I think people watching will be tired because they’ve got up so early to be here.”
    Sharon and Mark Ralph, drove for seven hours from Cheshire on Friday night to avoid the strikes — staying in a hotel for two nights before watching their beloved United yesterday.
    Sharon, 44, said: “We don’t mind the extra cost. It was definitely worth it.”
    FA Cup expert Phil Annets, who wrote in the official matchday ­programme, needed a lift back to Oxfordshire after being driven to the match by a friend.
    Most read in Football
    The 58-year-old said: “I think it’s vindictive by the strikers to try to impact as many people as possible.”
    Hundreds of coaches and cars set off from the North West in the early hours for the usual four-hour trip down the M6 and M40 motorways towards North West London.
    But the journey took more than six hours for many who got stuck in two huge tailbacks on the M1.
    Manchester United fan Ralph Cooper, 56, said: “Even if it would have taken me two days to get there and two days to get back, it wouldn’t have made any difference. I wouldn’t have missed this.”
    Police patrolled service stations along the route despite fans being allocated separate stop-offs depending on whether their loyalties were red or sky blue.
    Both Manchester clubs provided return coaches at a subsidised price of £50 a seat to meet the exceptional demand.
    The FA also put on 120 special bus services — 60 for each club leaving from different locations — at £60 per fan.
    Extra car parking was also made available 25 minutes’ walk away from the stadium in Fryent Park.
    Event day parking at the 90,000-capacity stadium had sold out two weeks ago.
    Tom Legg, head of external operations at the FA, had said of the two-day travel carnage: “This additional strike action will severely impact fans who might have been considering travelling to London from Manchester the night before the final.”
    Fans battled for parking spaces in sleepy, suburban Stanmore in North West London — at the very northern end of the Jubilee line — after the Metropolitan line was temporarily suspended due to ­signal failure.
    Manchester City fans were fierce during their historic FA Cup Final win against bitter rivals Man UnitedCredit: Getty
    Hundreds of motorists from ­Manchester had come off the M1 to park up in Stanmore, filling up side streets normally used by ­residents and shoppers.
    Others made deals with enterprising locals to park their cars on their driveways.
    Mary, 60, travelling with godson Oliver, 21, said: “There’s no choice really.”
    James, who travelled to Bushey, Herts, on Thursday to avoid the rush, said: “I’ve got a friend from Manchester who left at half past six in the morning and five hours later he’s still stuck in traffic on the motorway.”
    Strikes coincided with other huge events like the Epsom Derby, England’s test match at Lord’s and Beyonce’s concert at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium.
    Usually busy railway stations across the capital have been left looking like ghost towns as around 12,000 Aslef and RMT members walked out in industrial action for the second day in a row.
    After helping to cripple around 40 per cent of train services, Aslef general secretary Mick Whelan said: “We are determined to get a resolution and remain in this for the long haul.”
    The Department for Transport claimed the action had been deliberately coordinated to target major events for maximum disruption.
    A spokesman added: “Not content with impacting the hundreds of thousands of people who have looked forward to these events all year round, unions are also targeting their own members’ pockets by forcing them to miss out on pay every time they strike.
    “The Government has facilitated a fair and reasonable pay offer.
    “Now union leaders must do the right thing and put this to their members.”
    Aslef’s chaotic rail strike was designed to affect those wanting to travel to the FA Cup Final at Wembley and The Derby at Epsom this weekendCredit: Paul Marriott
    Stars are in crowd
    STARS from both sides of Manchester were spotted in the crowd at Wembley.
    Ex-Red Devils favourite David Beckham, 48, looked glum as he watched his beloved side lose with sons Brooklyn, 24, and Cruz, 18.

    Liam Gallagher celebrates Man City’s success with his boys Lennon and GeneCredit: Pixel8000
    David Beckham was also spotted in the Wembley standsCredit: Richard Pelham / The Sun
    But ex-Oasis singer Liam Gallagher, 50, pumped his arms in the air watching City’s win with his kids.
    Prince William, president of the FA, presented the medals and trophy after the game, tweeting: “A derby like no other today.”
    Erling Haaland of Manchester City, receives his FA Cup winners medal from Prince WilliamCredit: Getty More

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    Tyson Fury sends message of support to boy, 11, as he comes out of coma after being hit by police van

    BOXING champ Tyson Fury has sent a message of support to an 11-year-old boy as he comes out of a coma after being hit by a police van.Tom White was left in a critical condition when run down by the vehicle responding to a 999 call.
    Tom White, 11, was left in a critical condition after he was hit by a police vanCredit:
    Fury also pledged ‘see you soon’ to Tom, who is still in a critical conditionCredit: Getty
    After spending nearly a week on life support, Tom began waking from the coma yesterday and was moved to the high dependency unit.
    Tom’s family posted on Facebook: “Thanks to the amazing care teams, he’s now out of a coma and is in a High Dependency Unit.
    “Until he wakes up fully, we won’t know Tom’s long term outlook, only that it’ll be a very long road ahead for him.
    “The aim of this page is to flood it with celebrity videos, surrounded by positive messages of support from the community.
    READ MORE TYSON FURY
    “We’re hoping that when Tom eventually wakes up, he’ll be able to see, hear and read the various messages to help motivate and inspire him on the long road ahead.
    “Thanks to all of the celebs who have taken the time to help and send us video clips.
    “Please feel free to add your own ‘You can do it Tom!’ messages so Tom can eventually see them.
    “If you can help us source any more celeb videos please get in touch! You can do it Tom!”
    Most read in Boxing
    World heavyweight champ Fury said: “Keep fighting, Tom. All the best. See you soon buddy.”
    Ex-England footballer Gary Neville also sent a message to Tom, from Lancaster, saying: “I’m sending all my love and best wishes to you.”
    Tom was injured just before 8.30pm on May 25 in Lancaster, Lancs, when he was hit by a marked police Peugeot 308 hatchback.
    He was taken to the Royal Lancaster Infirmary and later transferred to Alder Hey Children’s Hospital, Merseyside.
    The Independent Office for Police Conduct will be carrying out an independent investigation. More

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    Leicester City supporter trolled by rival fans after his dad’s phone number’s exposed on TV

    RIVAL supporters let rip when they spotted a fan of relegated Leicester City listening to a radio with his dad’s phone number on it.They bombarded Paul Parwaiz with jokey calls after seeing son Asim on TV at the Foxes’ final game of the season.
    Rival supporters let rip when they spotted a fan of relegated Leicester City listening to a radio with his dad’s phone number on it
    Asdim Parwaiz and his dad Paul, 70, a retired GPCredit: Roland Leon
    Asim, 33, was using the radio to follow Everton v Bournemouth — crucial to whether his team stayed in the Premier League.
    He was seen on Sky Sports and Match of the Day reacting with horror at Everton’s goal, which meant Leicester would be going down, despite their 2-1 home victory over West Ham.
    Dad Paul, 70, a retired GP, had written his mobile number prominently on the digital radio in case he misplaced it.
    Asim had borrowed it and said: “When Everton scored, you can imagine my reaction, a bit four-lettered. I’d no idea the cameras had caught it until after.
    READ MORE ON LEICESTER CITY
    “My dad called and said he was being bombarded with calls from fans of other clubs.
    “They had seen his number on the radio. One was asking for help to repair his because it was going down, down, down.”
    Asim, also a GP, added: “Ironically, Dad isn’t even a Leicester fan — he supports Chelsea.” More

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    West Ham legend Julian Dicks reveal eye-popping scrapes including 21-man brawl, Gazza chaos & day Harry Redknapp flipped

    HARDMAN footballer Julian Dicks doesn’t do regrets or apologies.Branded an “animal” by former Tory minister David Mellor and red-carded eight times, the legendary West Ham defender was never one to shy away from trouble in the 1990s.
    Hardman footballer Julian Dicks, in action for West Ham in 1997, doesn’t do regrets or apologiesCredit: Rex
    Julian, at a cafe near West Ham’s ground in 2018, was branded an ‘animal’ by former Tory minister David Mellor and red-carded eight timesCredit: Times Newspapers Ltd
    Julian is applauded at his 2000 testimonial game between West Ham and Athletic BilbaoCredit: Getty
    While other players from that era talk about toxic dressing rooms or bemoan its boozy culture, Julian prefers the no-nonsense approach of the past — and pulls no punches in his new memoir Hammer Time.
    It’s an ode to the days when ­football had a rough edge, and he has no problem with his old boss Harry Redknapp throwing a plate of sandwiches against the wall in rage, ex-manager Lou Macari calling him “fat” or for players getting into punch-ups in training.
    About his former teammate John Hartson kicking his colleague Eyal Berkovic in the head during training, ­Julian says “these things can happen.”
    Off the field he ran naked through a hotel corridor on England duty after being pranked by Paul Gascoigne, branded a team mate with a hot iron and had the plaster cast on his leg cut off so he could get into a nightclub.
    READ MORE ON WEST HAM
    Julian, 54, doesn’t even regret playing on through a knee injury which has left him in so much agony that now he can’t ride a bike with his little daughter.
    Ahead of the release of his book, Julian, who also played for Liverpool and Birmingham City, tells The Sun: “Back then you were concussed, it was, ‘It’s OK, carry on’.
    “You got cut, you got elbowed, my eye socket was cracked in four places. Nowadays it isn’t like that.
    Sly elbow
    “When I played it was the best time. We could go out, we could drink, we had fun.”
    Most read in Football
    Julian, originally from Bristol, learned from a young age that the football pitch was no place for whingers.
    In a youth game when he was 12 he told his dad Ron he was coming off due to a swollen hand, and was ordered to get back on the pitch.
    Just a couple of years later the talented youngster was living in digs in the West Midlands away from his family, and at 16 he started training with senior pros at Birmingham City, who would “kick s*** out of you”.
    Having joined West Ham in 1988, Julian became an instant fan favourite on his debut for pole-axing a winger with a “sly elbow”.
    In the same year he was called up by England’s under-21s — and made the mistake of offering to be Gazza’s room mate during a tournament in Toulon, France, when Dave Sexton was manager.
    Julian says: “No one put their hand up and I went, ‘Yeah, I’ll share with him’. F***ing wrong decision.
    “He would wake up in the night and put his a**e on my face.
    “He put about 20 firecrackers around the rim of the toilet and they started going off and I thought it was a bomb.
    “I’m naked and I am running down the corridor and he’s just stood in the door, laughing his head off.
    “It was funny, although it wasn’t at the time because I was standing in front of Dave Sexton and other people.”
    Julian, who married in the same year and had twin daughters Katie and Jessica, didn’t obey the rule of being in bed by 10pm when he was on international duty. He says: “I was 21 years old. F*** off, leave me alone. I was never going to be that person.”
    Instead, Julian recalls, he would be drinking Jack Daniel’s whiskey and smoking cigarettes the evening before a game.
    He says: “I trained when I was p***ed sometimes. But not during the game, because I loved football too much.”
    On a stop-over in Singapore on the way to a pre-season warm-up in Australia with West Ham, Julian was barred from a nightclub for having his leg in plaster.
    He was undeterred, and recalls: “I went all the way back to the hotel and got the club doctor to cut it off with a carving knife so I could get in the nightclub.
    “From what I can remember it was a good night.” And it turns out Julian wasn’t a much better room mate than Gazza.
    He confesses to scalding team mate Mark Ward with an iron so hot that bits of his skin were left behind.
    Julian suspects it was his reputation for being too aggressive on the pitch that cost him the chance of winning a senior England cap.
    Former England boss Glenn Hoddle had been in charge of Chelsea in 1995 when Julian was accused of stamping on the head of his player John Spencer during a match.
    Julian insists it was an accident.
    He says: “I remember John coming back on with a bandage and he said to me, ‘Did you mean it?’ I said, ‘Mean what?’
    “And he said, ‘Julian, I’ve got eight stitches in my head’, and I said, ‘If I meant it you’d have f***ing 28’.” The public outrage was so intense that even Julian’s daughters were affected.
    He says: “My kids got bullied at school. That crossed a line.
    “What I did on the football pitch shouldn’t interfere with my family life, they were six or seven years old.
    “It’s wrong. I went down to the school and sorted it out.”
    There are very few lines that are uncrossable for the West Ham stalwart. As far as he is concerned, John Hartson was unfortunate to have Sky TV cameras recording the Hammers training session when he kicked team mate Eyal Berkovic in the head in 1998.
    Julian says: “These things can happen. Players have a fist fight in training.
    “There were fisticuffs and people throwing punches in five-a-side. John regrets it, but unfortunately Sky was there.” He also accepts managers giving players the hairdryer treatment — a furious telling off — with Harry Redknapp showing a tougher side than the one viewers saw when he was on I’m A Celebrity in 2018.
    Julian says: “We came in, we’d got beat 4-0 by Southampton. Don Hutchison went, ‘Who wants salmon sandwiches after a game of football?’
    Physically sick
    “And Harry went, ‘F***ing salmon sandwiches’, and he just lugged them at the wall.
    “The managers back then threw pots of tea, cups of tea, stuff like that. It was a common thing.
    “These days you’d probably lose your job for that. But if you lose 4-0 you should be able to b*****k the players and they should be man enough to take it.”
    Unsurprisingly, Julian has little time for players rolling around after receiving the slightest touch, or being booked for thundering into tackles in the modern game.
    He says: “I remember playing against the Crazy Gang (Wimbledon FC) and we had a 21-man brawl.
    “It’s a passionate game. A lot of the passion has gone out of the game. Now you can get booked for using too much force.
    “To me, that’s the biggest load of b*****ks in the world.”
    Julian says he would have been “embarrassed” to have been floored by another player and would have got up as quickly as possible, even if he had been in agony.
    But in 1990 that proved to be a mistake when he went against the advice of a medical assistant and played in a game, despite carrying a serious knee injury.
    He lasted for just 38 minutes of the match and recalls: “When I done my knee the first time and I was told I was going to be out for 14 months I felt physically sick.
    “I could have threw up all over the surgeon.
    “I ended up bordering on being an alcoholic, I felt sorry for myself. I’m going down the pub drinking, going home, going down the pub drinking and doing it all over again.”
    A young Julian at Birmingham City in 1986Credit: BPM
    Julian was accused of stamping on the head of Chelsea player John Spencer during a match, aboveCredit: Sky
    A cheeky Sun Sport headline during Julian’s playing daysCredit: .
    In 1997 came a recurrence of the knee injury — and when Julian was ruled out for the rest of West Ham’s season, The Sun’s then Sports Editor Paul Ridley couldn’t resist writing Swollen Dicks Out as the headline.
    The injury led to Julian’s retire-ment aged just 31 a couple of years later, as well as permanent pain.
    He says: “Basically my legs are f***ed. It stops you doing everything. I can’t ride a bike. I can walk into town with my daughter, but I can’t go on long walks.”
    Julian, who was divorced from wife Kay in 2001, became a dad for the third time two and a half years ago when his partner Lisa gave birth to daughter Eliyanah Grace.
    He says of her arrival: “It was a shock because my partner was told she could never have children. But it was a good shock.” Julian says he never felt down about losing the routine of training, mainly because he hated running.
     Since his playing career ended he has tried dog breeding, owning a pub, playing pro golf and managing other football teams — until a few months ago he was assistant manager at Watford.
    But he admits he would prefer to be playing than standing on the touchline yelling at footballers.
    Even so, he insists he wouldn’t turn back the clock to escape that crippling injury.
    Read More on The Sun
    He says: “People say, ‘Would I change anything?’ but no, everything I got, I got through football. This might be the down side of that, but it is what it is.”

     Hammer Time: Me, West Ham And A Passion For The Shirt, by Julian Dicks, is published on Thursday.

    Since his playing days ended he has tried dog breeding, owning a pub, playing pro golf and managing — until a few months ago he was assistant manager at WatfordCredit: PA:Empics Sport
    Julian pictured at the pub he ran for a whileCredit: News Group Newspapers Ltd
    Hammer Time: Me, West Ham And A Passion For The Shirt, by Julian Dicks, is published on Thursday. More

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    Footie fan on the run for 20 years over brutal racist attack brought to justice

    A FOOTBALL fan on the run for 20 years over a racist attack has finally been brought to justice.Gordon Colquhoun, 39, battered Dale Clark after Celtic beat Liverpool 3-1 in the 2003 Uefa Cup quarter-finals.
    Football fan Gordon Colquhoun has been brought to justice after 20 years on the run over a racist attackCredit: Supplied
    He left the victim with a split lip and black eye in the attack in Bracknell, Berks.
    Colquhoun asked Mr Clark “are you English” before laying into him with a friend.
    Prosecutor Sarita Basra said: “An ambulance was called but just after the assault they continued to shout abuse.”
    Colquhoun admitted his guilt to the police.
    READ MORE BEAUTIFUL GAME
    But he evaded justice by going into hiding in Scotland in 2004.
    Reading Crown Court heard his co-defendant had been convicted over the racially-aggravated assault soon after the attack.
    Although the race-hate assault case was abandoned, he has now been given 21 days behind bars for failing to surrender.
    Passing sentence at Reading crown court, Judge Sarah Campbell said: “You are now a grown man and have had nearly 20 years in effect to resolve the situation but you have chosen not to do so.
    Most read in Football
    “You buried your head in the sand.” More

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    Luton Town fans celebrate team’s Premier League promotion with open top bus parade

    HUNDREDS of Luton Town fans celebrated their team’s promotion to the Premier League yesterday as the players rode through the town on an open top bus.The Hatters beat Coventry City in the Championship Playoff Final at Wembley on Saturday to mark a return to the Premier League after a 31-year absence.
    Luton Town boss Rob Edwards sang to fans as he celebrated the Hatters’ promotionCredit: Reuters
    Luton clinched promotion to the Premier League with a penalty shootout victory over Coventry CityCredit: AFP
    Boss Rob Edwards sang Bon Jovi’s Always to the fans.
    Then he said: “Anyone and everyone, let’s bring them all on.”
    Skipper Tom Lockyer watched from hospital after collapsing during the match.
    He wrote on Instagram: “Well not quite where I thought I’d be celebrating at the final whistle!
    READ MORE LUTON TOWN
    “I would just like to say a massive thank you to the amazing physios and doctors at @ltfc_official and Wembley for the swift and thorough response.
    “A much scarier moment for everyone else than myself I am sure!
    “Commiserations to @coventrycityfcofficial a fantastic opponent over 3 games which had to be decided by penalties.
    “I am currently in hospital under precaution and will stay here overnight for further tests in the morning.
    Most read in Football
    “I am feeling very much myself, helped by the way the lads left it all out on pitch! It’s such an honour to be part of this team.. premier league baby.” 
    Luton won the final on a penalty shootout with Coventry’s Fankaty Dabo missing the decisive spot-kick.
    Luton star Tom Lockyer appeared to collapse at Wembley and watched spot-kicks from a hospital bedCredit:
    A large crowd of Luton fans turned out to congratulate the team’s achievementCredit: Reuters More