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Harry Kane only has to think back to the past two tournaments to ease any doubts about not scoring so far at the World Cup, as England prepare to face Senegal in the last 16.

The captain did collect the Golden Boot as the top scorer on the last world stage in Russia with six goals, but they all came in his first three games. There was only frustration in front of goal in the next three, as England finished fourth.

The script was flipped at Euro 2020: No goals in the group stage, then four in the run to the final.

So the Tottenham striker enters the game against African champions Senegal at Al-Bayt Stadium later today encouraged by the displays at the Euros, on reflection, more than those at Russia 2018.

He said: “I started the tournament [Russia 2018] with loads of goals, used a lot of energy and as the tournament went on, I felt like my performances dipped in the latter stages.

“I was conscious before the Euros of trying to make it the other way. Of course, I still wanted to start well, but I was trying to make sure that physically, and mentally, I was in the best place for the knockout stages.”

Now the 29-year-old does feel clear of any ankle problems – after a worry early on in Qatar – and in good shape.

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He said: “I feel as match-fit as I’m ever going to feel. Only time will tell. Hopefully I can do well and come into the best form in these knockout games.

“Form-wise I feel like I have been playing well, goals are what I’m going to be judged on most but as always I’m a calm individual and always try to focus on the team and do my best for the team.”

Soccer Football - UEFA Nations League - League A - Group 4 - England v Spain - Wembley Stadium, London, Britain - September 8, 2018 England's Harry Kane poses with the FIFA golden boot trophy before the match Action Images via Reuters/Carl Recine
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Kane with his World Cup Golden Boot trophy

His teammates assumed the scoring burden in the group stage, netting nine goals – the most by an England team by this stage.

And he still set up three goals – the most by an England player at a World Cup since David Beckham 20 years ago.

Senegal are a ‘very dangerous’ team – and know they could win

Senegal are not a side to be underestimated.

The West African nation are the current African Cup of Nations champions, and many of the side play for major European clubs, including 11 in England.

Star player, former Liverpool and now Bayern Munich forward Sadio Mane, didn’t make the World Cup because of a knee injury, but the Lions of Teranga still scored goals and encouragingly, for them, from positions all over the pitch.

Gareth Southgate has described them as “a very dangerous team”.

This is only their second World Cup, the previous two in 2002 and 2018, and they have reached the quarter-finals once before in Japan, eventually losing to Turkey.

Watch out for Chelsea goalkeeper Edouard Mendy and club teammate Kalidou Koulibaly, who captains his country.

And in the absence of the injured Mane, there has been a greater expectation placed on the Watford forward, Ismaila Sarr.

His only goal so far has come via a coolly taken penalty, having won the spot-kick himself, and he has the pace and movement to trouble any opposition.

England will go into the match favourites, but Senegal feel the pressure is off them, and know they have the ability to win the match.

Without doubt, Senegal will be the toughest team England have faced in the tournament so far.

Kane said: “I would love to be sitting here with two or three goals now, for sure, but I think the group stage has gone well.”

He only needs two goals to match Wayne Rooney‘s record 53 goals for England. The priority is, of course, leading The Three Lions into another final – and landing their first trophy since 1966.

England will be favourites going into the match, but manager Gareth Southgate will not be taking Senegal lightly.

“We have been very impressed with Senegal,” he said.

“We know they are African champions and are very proud and have great spirit and belief in their team. They have some excellent individual players who can cause problems, but a good structure as well.

“(Aliou) Cisse has done a fantastic job. They were very unlucky not to qualify from the group in Russia and they have deservedly done it this time. We know the size of the job ahead of us.”

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Southgate says England are ‘ready for penalties’

Southgate believes England are “mentally and physically” ready for another penalty shootout if the showdown with Senegal goes down to the wire.

The national team’s spot-kick issues are well documented, with all three World Cup shootouts ending in defeat before beating Colombia in the last 16 four years ago in Russia.

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Who are England’s opponents Senegal?

England followed that by winning bronze on spot-kicks at the Nations League finals against Switzerland in 2019, only for penalties to prove their undoing in last year’s European Championship final.

“We’re aiming to win the game and to avoid extra time if you can, and to avoid penalties if you can, because you’d like to get a victory in 90 minutes,” Southgate said.

“But if we need to go 120 minutes, if we need to go beyond that, then we’ve got to be ready for that mentally and physically. And I believe we are.”

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How ‘red mist’ led Paul Doyle to plough into Liverpool parade crowd – as violent past revealed

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How 'red mist' led Paul Doyle to plough into Liverpool parade crowd - as violent past revealed

The dashcam footage from Paul Doyle’s Ford Galaxy, as he ploughs his way through the crowd at the Liverpool parade, is chilling.

Bodies are thrown left and right, people disappear under the front of the car, for a few seconds some appear to be clinging to the bonnet, terror on their faces.

The sound is equally graphic. The screaming and the shouting from outside of the car. And the thumps: as people bang on the car to get Doyle to stop, and as people are hit by it.

Men, women and children hit. A bike, a baby’s pram.

Paul Doyle was seen on CCTV driving into the crowd. Pic: Merseyside Police
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Paul Doyle was seen on CCTV driving into the crowd. Pic: Merseyside Police

Throughout those couple of minutes, Doyle lays on the car’s horn, the parking sensors beep constantly, and he shouts.

“F***ing hell, move,” he repeats. “Get out the f***ing way”, “f***ing move”, “get off the f***ing road, you f***ing p***k”.

Those words, prosecutors say, reveal the truth – that Doyle knew he was driving at people.

He was jailed for 21 years and six months – with Judge Andrew Menary KC telling Doyle he acted in an “inexplicable and undiluted fury” when he drove into the crowds.

The judge told him his “disregard for human life defies ordinary understanding”.

“Your actions caused horror and devastation on a scale not previously encountered by this court,” he said.

“The footage is truly shocking… it shows you, quite deliberately, accelerating into groups of fans time and time again.

“You struck people head-on, knocked others onto the bonnet, drove over limbs, crushed prams and forced those nearby to scatter in terror.”

Follow latest as Paul Doyle is sentenced


Liverpool parade attack explained

“In my 20 years of policing, this is the most graphic and distressing footage I have ever encountered,” said Detective Chief Inspector John Fitzgerald, the senior investigating officer for Merseyside Police.

“Doyle’s total disregard for the safety of others – particularly the many young children present on Dale Street and Water Street that day – is beyond comprehension. It is sheer luck that no lives were lost.”

In the end, that dashcam footage was never shown to a jury as Doyle pleaded guilty on the day his trial was due to begin. The footage will not be released to the public due to its graphic nature.

Paul Doyle after his arrest. Pic: Merseyside Police
Image:
Paul Doyle after his arrest. Pic: Merseyside Police

What motivated his rampage?

“I think Doyle was just determined to get to where he wanted to get to, and there was no stopping him no matter who was in his way,” said DCI Fitzgerald.

“He clearly got angrier and angrier as the dashcam footage rolls on. He was yelling profanities at the people in his way.

“He just clearly got red mist.

“I do not believe that Doyle deliberately set out his journey to injure people on that day, but his actions were deliberate.”

Ex-soldier helped stop attack

Doyle was only stopped by the bravery of former soldier Dan Barr. He managed to climb into the back seat of the car when Doyle briefly paused.

Dan Barr helped stop Doyle
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Dan Barr helped stop Doyle

“It was desperation to get him stopped, determination to stop him by whatever means, I think that’s what was going through my head,” Mr Barr said.

“He accelerated off, the door slammed shut and I’d gone from the total chaos of panic and screaming to the relative silence as he’s accelerated off and you can just hear the people being hit and run over.

“It was horrendous, and I could see people’s faces. I could see the looks of them trying to plead but wasting their time, that’s all they could do because there was nowhere to go to get out of the way.

“I do remember seeing he had an automatic and therefore P for park was right at the end so I thought I’ll just jam that forward as far as I could that should stop him, and it did.”

Without Mr Barr’s actions, police say, Doyle would have carried on. They have described him as a hero.

Dan Barr says he hasn't been the same since the incident
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Dan Barr says he hasn’t been the same since the incident

“I don’t think I am,” Mr Barr said. “I think it is standard.

“Who wouldn’t, if they could have, done what I did? I can’t think of anyone, especially on that street.”

It has come at a cost.

“I don’t think I have processed it, to be honest with you,” Mr Barr said.

“I’m not the same since that day. I’m not doing great but I’m getting there.”

By the time it was all over, 134 people had been injured, including two babies and six other children.

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Liverpool parade victim tells of ‘carnage’


Liverpool parade attack victim recalls ‘carnage’

Tens of thousands of Liverpool fans had been on the streets of the city on that spring bank holiday Monday to celebrate the club’s Premier League triumph.

Doyle had driven to the parade to collect a friend he had earlier dropped off there. On his way into the city, his dashcam had recorded him driving erratically, undertaking other cars and running a red light.

But police say there had been no sign earlier that day of what could have triggered his rage.

Doyle’s violent past

It can now be revealed that Doyle has previous convictions for assault.

In the early 1990s, while serving in the Royal Marines, he was convicted of biting off part of someone’s ear during a fight in a pub. He was discharged from the military at that time.

Police say they believe Doyle is a fan of Liverpool’s city rivals Everton, but that this was not a factor in what happened on 26 May.

Paul Doyle has previous convictions for assault
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Paul Doyle has previous convictions for assault

In police interviews, Doyle claimed he acted in fear and panic because someone in the crowd with a knife had opened his car door. Investigators say they spoke to 1,500 witnesses and no one else mentioned seeing a knife.

He also claimed he stopped when he hit the first person. In fact, he had hit more than 100 before stopping. His claims, prosecutors say, were lies.

As the incident unfolded, many of those who were there shared their first thoughts.

Debbie Blair said: “People were just screaming, ‘It’s a terrorist, it’s a terrorist, he might have a gun, he might have a knife’.”

“Next minute people were all screaming, ‘kill him, kill him’,” she said.

Debbie Blair and her son Mike, who was injured
Image:
Debbie Blair and her son Mike, who was injured

Her son Mike was with her. Images of car attacks on Christmas markets in Europe, he said, flashed through his mind. His greatest concern was the number of children there.

“It was carnage, total carnage,” he said.

He was treated in hospital for injuries that still affect him.

“It shouldn’t have happened. But for someone to intentionally do that, it’s quite sick really.”

Mike was treated in hospital after the Liverpool parade incident
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Mike was treated in hospital after the Liverpool parade incident

Police say Doyle has never shown any remorse for his actions. He told officers: “I’ve ruined my family’s lives.”

What he did on 26 May, prosecutors say, devastated lots of people’s lives.

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‘Hero’ pedestrian climbed into car of Liverpool parade attacker to stop him, court hears

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'Hero' pedestrian climbed into car of Liverpool parade attacker to stop him, court hears

A “hero” pedestrian climbed into the car of Liverpool parade attacker Paul Doyle and stopped him, a court has heard.

Doyle, who used a car as a “weapon” to plough through more than 100 people celebrating Liverpool’s Premier League title win, told officers “I’ve just ruined my family’s life”, the court heard.

The sentencing hearing was told the 54-year-old was “in a rage” and his “anger had completely taken hold of him”.

Doyle is due to be sentenced on Tuesday after pleading guilty to 31 offences relating to seriously injuring people during the victory parade on 26 May.

Doyle, described as a “family man” by prosecutors, wept as footage of the horrific rampage was shown to the city’s crown court several times on Monday.

Paul Greaney KC, prosecuting, described the actions of Daniel Barr, who he called the “hero” of the day.

Emergency services at the scene. Pic: AP
Image:
Emergency services at the scene. Pic: AP

Mr Barr, an ex-soldier, had “bravely” jumped into the back of Doyle’s Ford Galaxy and placed the vehicle into park.

He was walking up Water Street when he noted the defendant’s Ford Galaxy in the distance, said Mr Greaney, noting the crowd’s attitude changed from “joyous to desperate”.

Doyle’s vehicle then stopped next to Mr Barr “all of a sudden”.

“Daniel Barr instinctively pulled open the rear passenger-side door and climbed in. He did so with the intention of stopping the driver,” the prosecutor said.

Mr Barr leaned forward and moved the gear into “park” and “held it as hard as he could”.

Mr Greaney added: “The Galaxy did not stop immediately, but in the end it did.”

The prosecutor said police officers forced Doyle into a police van after the attack.

This, he said, was done “in the midst of a hostile crowd”, adding that officers’ behaviour was both “brave and effective”.

When Doyle was securely in the van, Mr Greaney said police body-worn camera footage picked up him saying: “I’ve just ruined my family’s life.”

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Doyle admitted dangerous driving, affray, 17 charges of attempting to cause grievous bodily harm (GBH) with intent, nine counts of causing GBH with intent, and three counts of wounding with intent last month.

He had previously denied the offences, which relate to 29 victims aged between six months old and 77 years old.

Forensic officers at the scene in Water Street.
Pic: PA
Image:
Forensic officers at the scene in Water Street.
Pic: PA

The court was shown dashcam footage taken from the defendant’s car showing the attack.

Mr Greaney warned the court: “What we are about to display on the screens is truly shocking.”

There were audible gasps in the courtroom as the footage played.

Doyle could be heard repeatedly shouting at pedestrians to “move out the f****** way” as he drove through crowds.

Consistently using his vehicle’s horn, people could be seen trying to jump out of the way, with some forced on to the bonnet of the car.

“F****** pr****,” Doyle shouts as the footage continues.

By the end of the footage, people begin to attempt to run up to the vehicle.

When the car stops, one man shouts, “get the f*** out of the car”.

Pic: Reuters
Image:
Pic: Reuters

Mr Greaney also detailed some of the injuries sustained by victims on the day of the attack.

One woman, aged 66, spent four nights in hospital after breaking six ribs and suffering fractures to her fingers on her left hand and her left wrist.

Another woman, aged 77 at the time, spent 27 days in hospital.

The prosecutor said she suffered a fractured left forearm, fractured left collar bone, three fractured ribs, a fractured pelvis, a broken nose, as well as multiple abrasions and bruising to her head, knees and back.

Another victim, who was 17, suffered bruising to their legs, shoulder and had a small fracture to their tibia.

After suffering wound infections, it took two months before the victim regained mobility, the prosecutor added.

Victims of parade attack speak of ‘psychological injury’ and ‘flashbacks’

The victims of Paul Doyle’s attack during Liverpool’s Premier League victory parade have spoken of how they have suffered from “emotional and psychological injury” as well as “frequent flashbacks”.

A total of 78 people submitted victim statements to the court, in which they described how the “best day ever” soon became the worst.

Doyle sobbed as the words of one victim, a 12-year-old boy, were read out by prosecutor Philip Astbury at Liverpool Crown Court.

The child, who cannot be named for legal reasons, said: “I found myself on the floor having been hit by a car I did not see coming, I have never felt so scared before in my life.”

The boy’s mother said in her statement her heart sank when she saw her child inert on the floor.

She said the incident “caused me much anxiety having to watch my son deal with the pain, the frustration, him feeling down and isolated from his friends in school, the nightmares and the after-effects on him”.

The boy’s mother added: “The sight of my son lying motionless on the road, not moving for those few seconds, and the sound of the car hitting people will live with me forever.”

Another mother said she thought her baby son had died after his pram was catapulted into the air after being struck by Doyle’s vehicle, adding that she thought she would “be next”.

Sheree Aldridge, 37, said her partner Dan Eveson had proudly dressed their six-month-old son Teddy Eveson in his Liverpool FC shirt that day and “was excited to share this moment” with him.

She said in the statement: “In that moment I thought I was going to die. I didn’t know where Dan and Teddy was.

“I felt an overwhelming pain in my leg and looked up to see Teddy’s pushchair on its side further up the road. I thought my Teddy was dead.

“I thought I was next. I thought my children would grow up without a mother.”

The court also heard how a third mother, whose 13-year-old son was injured, said she has trouble sleeping due to flashbacks and has visions of her son’s “terrified face”.

Mr Greaney said some people at the scene on 26 May “thought that what was taking place was a terrorist attack”.

However, the prosecution ruled out that the defendant’s actions were “driven by ideology”.

Police investigations showed there was no problem with the vehicle, and Doyle was completely sober and “free of all drugs”, Mr Greaney said.

“The truth is a simple one – Paul Doyle just lost his temper in his desire to get to where he wanted to get to.

“In a rage, he drove into the crowd,” he added.

Doyle was arrested at the scene in Water Street just after 6pm and charged later that week.

The youngest victim was six-month-old Teddy Eveson, whose parents later told media he was thrown about 15ft down the road in his pram when the crash happened.

Doyle, of Croxteth, Liverpool, admitted attempting to cause grievous bodily harm to the baby.

Five other children, whom Doyle either injured or attempted to injure, cannot be named for legal reasons.

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Russia trying to ‘bully’ UK and allies with attacks under threshold of all-out war, MI6 chief says

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Russia trying to 'bully' UK and allies with attacks under threshold of all-out war, MI6 chief says

Russia is trying to “bully, fearmonger and manipulate” the UK and its allies with attacks under the threshold of all-out war, the new head of MI6 has said.

Blaise Metreweli, the first female chief of the Secret Intelligence Service (SIS), said Britain was “operating in a space between peace and war” and that everyone has a responsibility to understand the dangers because “the frontline is everywhere”.

In her first big speech on Monday, she also focused on Vladimir Putin’s devastating war in Ukraine, accusing him of “dragging out negotiations” on a peace deal and warning that Kyiv’s fate is “fundamental not just to European sovereignty and security but to global security”.

Offering her view on the evolution of global security threats, Ms Metreweli underlined the transformative role of technology, from artificial intelligence to quantum computing.

She said control over such advanced technologies is shifting from states to corporations and even individuals, making the balance of global power more “diffuse, more unpredictable”.

The spymaster did not name anyone.

Blaise Metreweli. Pic: PA
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Blaise Metreweli. Pic: PA

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Is time running out for peace plan?

However, innovators such as Elon Musk are becoming increasingly influential, with their technologies such as his Starlink satellites and his social media site X.

The boss of MI6 was speaking at her agency’s headquarters in London, though she said that the main work of her spies was carried “many miles away from this place – out of sight, hidden from the world, undercover, recruiting and running agents who choose to place their trust in us, sharing secrets to make the UK and the world safer”.

She warned the world was “more dangerous and contested now than it has been for decades”.

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Who were the suspected gunmen in Bondi Beach terror attack?
Jimmy Lai found guilty of national security offences in Hong Kong

The spy chief said: “Conflict is evolving and trust eroding, just as new technologies spur both competition and dependence.

“We are being contested from sea to space – from the battlefield to the boardroom. And even our brains as disinformation manipulates our understanding of each other and ourselves… We are now operating in a space between peace and war.

“This is not a temporary state or a gradual evolution. Our world is being actively remade with profound implications for national and international security.”

Breaking with a tradition by previous chiefs of offering a view on a range of threats when speaking publicly, Ms Metreweli said she was choosing to focus on Russia.

“We all continue to face the menace of an aggressive, expansionist and revisionist Russia, seeking to subjugate Ukraine and harass NATO,” she said.

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Ukrainian MP: Who will stop Putin?

On the conflict, she said Putin was “dragging out negotiations and shifting the cost of war on to his own population”.

Her comments come as Donald Trump is attempting to broker a peace deal between Moscow and Kyiv.

General Oleksandr Syrskyi, the head of Ukraine’s armed forces, told Sky News in an interview earlier this month that he believed Putin was using the US push for negotiations as “cover” while Russian troops attempted to seize more land by force.

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The Wargame returns with new episodes

The MI6 boss said the UK’s support for Ukraine would endure regardless of Moscow’s stalling actions.

She also flagged a growing wave of “grey zone” hostilities – deliberately carried out under the threshold of conventional armed conflict – that she attributed to Moscow.

“It’s important to understand their [Russia’s] attempts to bully, fearmonger and manipulate because it affects us all,” she said.

“I am talking about cyber attacks on critical infrastructure. Drones buzzing airports and bases. Aggressive activity in our seas, above and below the waves. State-sponsored arson and sabotage. Propaganda and influence operations that crack open and exploit fractures within societies.”

Germany's President Steinmeier with President Zelenskyy in Berlin on Monday. Pic: Reuters
Image:
Germany’s President Steinmeier with President Zelenskyy in Berlin on Monday. Pic: Reuters

While she did not specify any particular incidents, there have been a spate of mysterious drone sightings in Denmark, Germany and Sweden; while a Russian spy ship was spotted off the coast of Scotland and acts of arson and sabotage have been carried out in the UK, such as a blaze at a warehouse in east London that was providing aid to Ukraine.

Drawing attention to another method to attack a country and its people, Ms Metreweli underlined how information is being weaponised, with falsehoods spread online that are designed to erode trust in a society and amplify divisions.

“The export of chaos is a feature not a bug in this Russian approach to international engagement and we should be ready for this to continue until Putin is forced to change his calculus,” she said.

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NATO boss: ‘Conflict is at our door’

MI6, she said, is adapting to respond to the evolving threats.

But unusually Ms Metroweli also said the wider British public had a role to play, such as with schools helping to educate children to spot disinformation on social media and to check sources of news “and be alive to those algorithms that trigger intense reactions like fear”.

She added: “It also means everyone in society really understanding the world we are in – a world where… the frontline is everywhere. Online, on our streets, in our supply chains, in the minds and on the screens of our citizens.”


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Sky News’ Deborah Haynes will guide the conversation with Sir Ben Wallace, Robert Johnson, Jack Straw, Amber Rudd, Keir Giles and General Sir Richard Barrons – real-life military chiefs, former government officials and leading experts. Together, they will unpack their experiences inside The Wargame, revealing the uncertainty, moral dilemmas and real-world pressures faced by those who must make decisions when the nation is under threat.

Join us for this unique event exploring how the UK might respond in a moment of national crisis and get a rare, unfiltered glimpse into how prepared the country truly is for war.

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