Hospitals to share waiting lists under Labour plans for quicker care
Hospitals would have to share waiting lists and pool resources under Labour’s plans to reduce waiting times by delivering up to 40,000 extra NHS appointments
Bigger, yes, but better? Pep Guardiola tweaks template for latest City kick to line | Jonathan Wilson
Familiarity inevitably breeds, if not contempt, then at least discernment. When Leicester won the Premier League what mattered was not how they had done it
Arsenal should have no crisis of faith if they miss out on title
It was a one-word answer to a question and, at its heart, cut through every variable or imponderable Sunday’s title deciders may throw up. Mikel
Jürgen Klopp’s Liverpool rescued the league from brand-busting monotony
“I am, how can I say it, running out of energy.” It is, in its own way, the saddest of managerial farewells. Not to mention
Emma Hayes ‘hasn’t got another drop to give’ after Chelsea WSL title triumph
Emma Hayes said she doesn’t “have another drop to give” after bowing out as Chelsea manager with a fifth Women’s Super League title in a
Iga Swiatek maintains hold over Aryna Sabalenka to win Italian Open
World No 1 Iga Swiatek brushed aside the No 2 Aryna Sabalenka to win the Italian Open in Rome. The 22-year-old Pole needed just one
Emilia Perez review – Jacques Audiard’s gangster trans musical barrels along in style
Anglo-progressives and US liberals might worry about whether or not certain stories are “theirs to tell”. But that’s not a scruple that worries French auteur
Toxic ‘forever chemicals’ ubiquitous in Great Lakes basin, study finds
Toxic PFAS “forever chemicals” are ubiquitous in the Great Lakes basin’s air, rain, atmosphere and water, new peer-reviewed research shows. The first-of-its-kind, comprehensive picture of
Sex, rape, cannibals: what Yorgos Lanthimos did after Poor Things
Joe Alwyn, the British star of one of the most disturbing films to compete at the Cannes festival this year, has given his verdict on
Netflix’s One Hundred Years of Solitude brings fame to Gabriel García Márquez’s Colombian hometown
In sweltering mid-afternoon heat, children splash in the clear water of the canal that threads through town as elderly neighbours look on from rocking chairs