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tv   Victoria Derbyshire  BBC News  July 15, 2019 10:00am-11:00am BST

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officers said they would come and see a facility found the result. they came at ten o'clock one evening and sat us down and said we need to tell you this, the reports we've been given, i'm sorry to tell you it was not a ricochet but the pellet hello, it's monday, it's 10 o'clock, i'm victoria derbyshire. enter to stomach at close range in a look at this! downward motion. therefore it could not have bounced off any surface or he's got it, england have won the anything. at sentencing in court world cup by the barest of margins! when he was jailed for three years after pleading guilty to england's men are celebrating manslaughter by gross negligence, after winning the cricket world cup for the first time ever. thejudge said no eoin morgan's team beat new zealand manslaughter by gross negligence, the judge said no sentence but i impose can bring stanley back, can at lords in the most nail—biting and close fought final in history. undo what you have done and heal the will this achievement spur rift and your family. on the next generation of players? it was like really amazing, undo what you have done and heal the rift and yourfamily. in undo what you have done and heal the rift and your family. in all circumstances what you did was a it was a miracle and then dangerous thing to do and why on earth did you do it. i readily it was such a wonderful game. accept your remorse what you did to i'm not sure it could happen again in, like, finals. your great—grandson is genuine and profound although you have not cheering. succeeded in conveying that to your and, this was the scene granddaughter. and her family. in trafalgar square last succeeded in conveying that to your night, as fans celebrated granddaughter. and herfamily. he england's historic achievement. actually i understand was given an
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opportunity to address the court and we'll have loads of reaction you thought he is going to tell us throughout the programme. let us know where you were watching. what happened, to say sorry.” you thought he is going to tell us how you are watching, how you coped what happened, to say sorry. i did think he had his opportunity then to with the nerves and tension if you tell us exactly what happened and to are an england supporter. say sorry. i just stood there and also today, labour mps will pushjeremy corbyn to make the process for handling just looked and he didn't, he got anti—semitism complaints independent of the party. his barrister to weed out what it said and again ijust could not get we're talking to the actress and writer tracey ann oberman who quit the labour party my head around that. now you're complaining for stanley's law. over anti—semitism. sta nley‘s and, "why have you complaining for stanley's law. stanley's law is aiming to change shot me, grandad?" the licensing laws around air rifles those were the words of six—year—old stanley metcalf and not just that we want to after his great grandad shot him introduce training and education with an air rifle. around that because not many people stanley died, and albert grannon who killed him, has been jailed for three years. understand the laws surrounding air rifles, that you need a licence for we'll talk to stanley's mum a rifle that is below 12 pounds. he who is fighting to change the law on control of air rifles will do not know where you should keep them but i want to have the law
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hello, welcome to the programme. we're live until 11 this morning. the same as in scotland that it is an offence to obtain and use an air how was that cricket rifle without a proper certificate. world cup final for you? have you ever seen anything like it? and your grandad did not have a was it a miracle as that little girl licence. it also modified it so the said in our opening sequence? gun had become more powerful and he tell us how you watched would not have got a licence had that final super over, what were you thinking explained to someone that it had and could you belive it when england won? been modified. so the same licensing use the hashtag victorialive, send us an email victoria@bbc.co.uk. we're also going to be talking law effectively are scotland and about e—scooters — here is one — should the law be relaxed northern ireland. best wishes for so they can be used that campaign. thank you so much for on pavements and roads? coming on the programme and talking to us. a government minister we will talk about that later on. is meeting manufacturers and vendors of e—scooters today, asking them to be clear first, carrie gracie has the news. about their legal status england's men's cricket team when they sell them. will celebrate winning their first it is currently illegal to ride world cup with fans at a special scooters on pavements event at the oval in and on roads, but the government south london today. is considering whether they could be they became world champions after a nervewracking final used safely in public. at lord's, when they beat new zealand by the narrowest possible margin. on friday, emily hartridge — a tv presenter and youtuber — both teams drew level twice, was killed in what is thought to be with england only clinching
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the title by virtue of scoring more the first electric scooter fatality in the uk. sixes and fours. stars including davina mccall and captain eoin morgan praised his team and revealed his secret to keeping calum best paid tribute to emily. them calm under pressure, the trend for e—scooters is growing, cracking jokes. but it is currently only legal to use them on private land. i encouraged them to smile, laugh, enjoy, because it was such so are e—scooters safe, a ridiculous situation. and what sort of restrictions should be put be in place if they are to be there was quite a lot of pressure in that particular moment of the day, never mind the rest used in public? of it, and the fact it got to a super over and we had that we can speak now to itzik ben to defend, it was a matter of trying ahrol — ceo and founder to put smiles on the guys‘ faces, of scooting limited — to release a bit of tension. he has brought his e—scooter with him today. the foreign secretary, jeremy hunt, will use a meeting of eu ministers and to olivia rudgard — a telegraph in brussels today to try another bid to prevent the iran tech reporter in san francisco nuclear deal collapsing. and also to arnaud kielbasa — who is campaigning to have scooters it follows a joint statement regulated in paris after his wife issued by the uk, france, and seven week old daughter were hit and germany calling for a dialogue by someone on an e—scooter. and an end to the escalation over iran's nucear programme, thank you for talking to us. how do as tensions between tehran and washington increase. they work? the electric scooters in around two million low paid workers could receive statutory sick pay for the first time as part of proposed reforms. the government say the plans aim general, there are many in the
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market and they have two breaks and to support people with health conditions in the work place. currently employees must earn a back motor. there are limited to at least the equivalent 01:14 hours a week on the minimum 60 miles an hour. and the wage to qualify. accelerator is on the handle? there isa there could also be more accelerator is on the handle? there is a controller that shows you how help for those returning much battery you have. how much to work after sick leave. president donald trump has been accused of racism after suggesting a group would that be? £1200. do you have to of ethnic—minority congresswomen, should "go back" to where they came from. in a series of tweets, wear a helmet? it isjust festival the president said they should fix the "catastrophic" governments in their countries of origin instead of criticising the us. to be used on private land. we have three of the congresswomen were born in the united states, while another came to the country a shop and we recommend everyone who as a young child. comes to wear a helmet and to behave the spanish airline, vueling has the worst punctuality carefully, not to ride on the of major carriers flying pavement because the pavement from uk airports. the civil aviation authority found belongs to the people who walk. that the airline's flights last year were delayed on average pavement because the pavement belongs to the people who walkm is illegal to ride on the pavement? by 31 minutes. it is illegal to write on the thomas cook was next worst pavement and on the cycle lanes. but with an average delay of 2a minutes.
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1.5 tonnes, my son two years ago those are our top stories this morning. back to victoria. asked me what is horsepower because thank you very much. was it the best they said they had 200 horsepower, game of cricket ever? if you're an england supporter, how amazing and tense and thrilling andi and subline was that cricket world c they said they had 200 horsepower, and i said it is 200 horses carrying final yesterday? were you trying to watch cricket, wimbledon and the formula one voice. so he said why would you one at the same time? england vs new zealand, at lords, had everything — need that much to carry one person. drama, nerves, luck, mistakes and not one but two tie breaks before england were declared winners. soi need that much to carry one person. so i decided to build this company the first tie break led to a super over, where both teams got to bat to develop the future of for a single over to break the deadlock. transportation and to change the law that also ended in a draw, so england won because they had scored more boundaries over the course of the game. in the uk, you need to decide who is just incredible. we'll have loads of going to write them where and who reaction in the next hour, will control them. let we'll be talking to former players — going to write them where and who including monty panesar will controlthem. let me bring in and mike gatting, cricket commentators and fans. olivia, these are becoming really popular now but where did the trend meanwhhile, the england team are heading to oval this morning — begin? it began at the end of 2017 they're expected there around 11:30. first, here's how the final was won. when some company started to launch england's men, world champions in san francisco and companies, the for the very first time. front runners in the sector, and proving it on the biggest stage,
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by the tightest of margins. thenit front runners in the sector, and after seven weeks of then it exploded from there and most compelling cricket, of these firms are less than three who would've predicted this? years old and multibillion—dollar companies at this point. they're oh, no! but we did it! spread out across the us and have we did it! oh, jofra delivered! and we were brilliant. become popular and i think the jofra delivered! jofra delivered. he's the boy! england — world champions! have you ever seen public and regulators are struggling a game that tight? to catch up because it has become so nah. england! popular so quickly. what are they england made a history today. no... welcome home. like to ride? they are fun to ride, that is the greatest one—day especially if you are somewhere that cricket match of all time. to win it, england needed 15 runs feels safe, on a good road surface from the final six balls. with not too many bumps and potholes and you are not writing for too long step forward ben stokes. for that if you're going quick ten after smashing a six, or 15 minutes zip than they are a lucky break, having run two, really fun. do they feel safe? if this throw caught his bat and england had four more. you're ona really fun. do they feel safe? if you're on a road has a lot of two needed, then, traffic on it or any kind of uneven for world cup glory. one short. areas on the road it can feel unsafe the scores were tied. pretty quickly. if you aren't a a super over would settle it — the penalty shoot—out psychopath which in san francisco it of cricket, six balls each. back came buttler and ben stokes, is legal to do, they do feel safe as england made 15. now, new zealand's turn. andl is legal to do, they do feel safe
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and i think the hardware is needing two to win, improving and some of the new and a desperate dash... more solid models are a bit heavier and they feel much safer. but the commentator: an historic end to this contest. problem is the proximity to traffic by virtue of having scored more boundaries throughout the match, and poor road conditions. you live the win was england's. in paris, oliver, and you have been everyone went in the direction ofjos buttler trying to catch it. campaigning to stop these being used to me and to the team and everybody because someone who's been involved over campaigning to stop these being used because someone riding one collided with your wife and daughter. what the past four years, would you like changed? what we want to see changed is to have a it means absolutely everything — regulation. we did not have any kind of regulation in france about these in the planning, the hard work, the dedication. after such tension, means of transportation. so there's time to cool off — just as these fans did watching in trafalgar square. england world cup winners shirts...! it was still sinking in at lord's. a magical match, a fitting finale. multi—billion dollar companies england — world cup winners. mentioned before. they had just john watson, bbc news. arrived in the country a year ago. and no one control them at all, so england starjos buttler, who was the bowler we just saw who stumped new zealand batsman martin guptill to finally seal for instance today in paris we have the victory, gave his reaction after the game, and was asked what it was
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like playing in such a dramatic match. around 37,000 e—scooters in the it's harder watching, you know? roads. and of course with these kind when you're actually in the middle, you feel like you're in the game of numbers and quantities you cannot and you actually have some impact control anything so what we are on the game and you can sort asking for is to have much stricter of control it a bit. but, yeah, certainly regulations about these. something watching it very tough. that last over was bizarre! like a licence, do you mean? it to then get to that position. could be a licence, it is also all these are the understatement of the about the scooters themselves. they year! bowlerjofra archer was only brought into the england team can be taken by anybody that has a in april, after a rule change allowed him to be fast—tracked. he had never played at international level before, he is 24. credit card and a name and there is and he was picked to bowl for england in that no control about who is taking deciding super over. this was his reaction these, if they are under 18, if, we to the victory. it's hard to think, hard to remember. ijust know everyone was running, jumping, screaming and throwing would also like to have some rules stuff. so... i think the boys really, about the helmet. and also one of really deserved it today. we held in there, even though it probably didn't the big problems that you have with look like we'd win scooters on the pavements, parked on in the last 2—3 overs. but i'm really proud of the boys the pavement everywhere. so disabled
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for still sticking at it. people and blind people, elderly people, are smashing against these right, let's talk to former members of the england men's cricket team. e—scooters and falling down. monty panesar, gladstone small, and mike gatting. people, are smashing against these and also in a moment, e-scooters and falling down. i'll be, michael ellis the transport we hope to talk to michael vaughan, minister is meeting the various they've all played in world cups. groups today and they will review the laws and he said that does not and also to the england women's player ebony rainford—brent mean that anything will change, who was in the world cup winning potentially it will still be illegal team in 2009 will be to use them on roads and pavements joining us, and the cricket commentator alison mitchell in this country but are we heading is here. for some kind of controls, a all of you, what a game. can you licensing system, or not?” just please e—mail it for about a for some kind of controls, a licensing system, or not? i believe that they need to have a quality minute each, if you don't mind, control because each one is going shall i start with you, gladstone small? good morning, victoria. i'm online to import a vehicle with no regulation. it needs to breaks. most ona small? good morning, victoria. i'm on a sports field here in feltham. of them in the share scheme has one break. if they are damaged, you die the youngsters have been out all morning. it is exactly what the size and the willpower to be yesterday was all about. it's about strong enough and not fall, there what a great advert for the game. are seven paris scooters now that you can book in the uk. thank you
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the england team, these guys worked all so much. really ha rd the england team, these guys worked really hard for that moment. it's about guys like me and my old back to the cricket! the england team are arriving skipper, is about these guys behind at the oval cricket ground in about half an hour. let's have a quick look at some me going on i'm playing the game of of the best reaction on social cricket. that is what yesterday's media. result has done. i'm here with england bowler jofra archer chance to shine this morning, they who bowled that final super over tweeted an image go out to schools, they have visited from last night and said, "memories to last a lifetime." over1 million go out to schools, they have visited over 1 million school children go out to schools, they have visited over1 million school children who have got involved in this campaign. it is really inspiring them and showing them what sport is about, the friendship, team—mate ship, and when you win the like yesterday, meanwhile jimmy neasham summed meanwhilejimmy neasham summed up what it was like to be on the losing side. he said... that brings everyone, the whole country, the whole nation gets behind it. it's been a long time coming but a brilliant bunch of cricketers. absolutely. what did you take up baking or something. die at 60 really fat and happy." make of that game? unbelievable joining me now is the former england cricketer, scenes. i was there for the whole ian bell, and saima khan —
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match. i couldn't believe the game a pakistan fan who saw her team playing in the tournament. we nt match. i couldn't believe the game went to a super over and even then she is from the cricketing charity it was tired and we won on more the shahid afridi foundation. ian bell is joining boundaries. it was just ian bell isjoining us on the phone. it was tired and we won on more boundaries. it wasjust brilliant for cricket in this country. to be how are you? very good, thank you honest, i think throughout the world cup, cricket is dying in this for the tired and i did not do country and it was a brilliant anything! how late did you get to result for the ecb and the england cricket team, that they have won the bed? not too bad, i had some pretty world cup. it has brought cricket energetic kids again afterwards and alive again in this country and thatis hopefully we can make it grow from energetic kids again afterwards and that is part and parcel of it. grass root levels onwards. you said obviously the english little boys cricket was dying in this country, and girls were going to bed doesn't do you mean the long form of the last night and wanting to be ben stokes. have you ever played game, one day cricket are cricket yourself in a super over? not in 50 generally? i think cricket generally. throughout this world cup, iwent generally. throughout this world cup, i went to quite a few of the over cricket but i cannot remember games. the indian and pakistan fans, evenin over cricket but i cannot remember even in t20. that was an incredible the england and australia game, it was all blue. in india against day, seriously intense. it could have gone either way. new zealand did not deserve to lose but it is england, all indian fans. it felt like the subcontinent teams were buying the tickets and without them incredible and lucky that we got the that atmosphere, that colourful right side of the result. with a bit
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colour they bring to the game, of luck as well. simon, how was it for you! watching the game yesterday without them then i think the world cup would have been quite a subdued was amazing. i was back in england tournament. we will talk more about for the final. but it was a the potential reasons behind that moment. alison, the game yesterday, situation where your heart was in your mouth for the entire game you have been commentating on cricket for goodness knows how is especially when it reached the super long and have been too many matches, over part. you just did not know you have never seen long and have been too many matches, what way it was going to go until you have never seen anything like that? never, ever. 44 years of men's the last ball sojust an what way it was going to go until the last ball so just an amazing cricket world cup history alone and day. anybody feeling that your heart the best, most dramatic world cup was beating 100 miles an hour? what final, but the most dramatic one—day cricket match that the world has we re was beating 100 miles an hour? what were you doing? i think you can tell ever seen. cricket match that the world has ever seen. there's been nothing like that my voice is a little bit it, to be tied twice over. the course! i was screaming but i think further inside the ground and the course at several times i was outside the ground as well was just curled up in abort what would reminiscent of 2005, which was the happen next. we are just coming to last real glory time in men's the end of the programme but thank cricket we experienced euphoric you so much. thank you for your scenes in 2017 when the women's team won the world cup but this time i was taken back to trafalgar square company today. we are back tomorrow in 2005. we saw the big screen there at ten o'clock. bbc newsroom life is
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and the people that were crowded around. i'm sure they would have next. have a lovely day. been many people in that crowd who otherwise would not have been watching the game but for the fact of the occasion of the visibility of it. they had been drawn in and i was taken back to 2005, where i was perched on the plinth of nelson's column. reminiscent of winning the ashes. it doesn't matter if you are young, old, man or woman, ashes. it doesn't matter if you are young, old, man orwoman, youjust had to have a heart to love that game yesterday and to love the sport. michael, i will be game yesterday and to love the sport. michael, iwill be with game yesterday and to love the sport. michael, i will be with you ina sport. michael, i will be with you in a moment. i have to talk to ebony, who has to catch a train. in a world cup winning team yourself. what did you make of it yesterday? unbelievable. first of all, what is amazing, just here, you can see some of the screen is behind us, world little going on really tonight. a champion is plastered everywhere. it few showers through northern ireland into the south west of scotland. one really has been world cup fever. i think the nature of the game, in or two mist and fog patches into
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some ways i was expecting or hoping tomorrow morning. overnight for a big 300 score. actually, in temperatures about 8—13. throughout tuesday, a dry day for most of us hindsight, a low scoring thriller with some sunny spells. a few more which emotionally engages people to showers coming into scotland and the wire is exactly what we needed. northern ireland throughout the day. montyjust mentioned the wire is exactly what we needed. temperatures around 21 degrees. monty just mentioned cricket the wire is exactly what we needed. montyjust mentioned cricket needs a boost in this country and it does. elsewhere warmer than today with participation levels haven't been as highs getting up to about 25 celsius high as they need to be. viewing in the south—east. goodbye for now. figures, they need to be up. i think what we just saw with the exposure through free to air is going to change the game. i'm excited from a cricket fan perspective and also for the legacy of what this could do for cricket in the country. mike gatting, your take on yesterday, we saw you on tv and in some particular box enjoying it, how was it for you? you're watching bbc newsroom live. it was fantastic. we had a great it's11am and these are the main position in the ground. watching stories this morning. from a very privileged position. but after england's astonishing victory the game itself, the one thing that in the world cup final fans prepare to hail their heroes i found amazing was new zealand's at the oval in south london. the men's team lifted attitude towards the game, because the trophy after beating new zealand with the final ball one or two things didn't go their way but the sportsmanship they
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of the tournament. showed, for any youngster watching the game, it must have been a fresh bid to stop the iran nuclear deal unravelling. hopefully in education for them. the foreign secretaryjeremy hunt because with all the things that joins eu counterparts to discuss ways to respond to recent tensions. we re because with all the things that were going on, certainly the catch, the guy stood on the rope and well, it isn't dead immediately the field are next to yet and we are totally him said six. at the time ben stokes committed to keeping was diving full length and the ball the middle east denuclearised. we nt was diving full length and the ball went for four, at no stage did they senior democrats accuse show anything other than that was a president trump of racism, game of cricket and they got on with after he tweeted that four it. it was a great advert from that congresswomen should "go back" point of view. the match itself, the skill level that were there, the excitement. i have never seen so many grown—ups start jumping excitement. i have never seen so many grown—ups startjumping up and down. for me, it was a wonderful scenario, to see the team finally wina scenario, to see the team finally win a tournament that we have never won before. they deserve to win it. they are the best team i had seen play for england and they deserved it very much so. all the hard work they had done. i hope, as all the guys and girls have said, it will be great for cricket and let's make sure we can do it. i am off to a
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taverners meeting now to try and help raise some more money for the kids to play as gladstone is doing. hopefully we can build on this and push forward. monty might be right about the lack of people playing cricket, but there are so many volunteers out there that do so much good work and for them i think it was a great day. hopefully, it will help push things like all stars, great invention from the ecb and i know lots of kids enjoy round our way. let's hope we can build on it and give people a bit of positivity in the country. yes. michael vaughan is joining in the country. yes. michael vaughan isjoining us now. i think ebony had to go. thank you. michael, can you hear me ok? i am yes. i am at the station stoplight you are also at the station! 0k. just your take on yesterday afternoon, michael?
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remarkable. cricket hasn't been on free to airfor 15 remarkable. cricket hasn't been on free to air for 15 years and then it got back on free to air yesterday, the world cup final. to produce a match like that, with a dramatic ending, to see two teams neither tea m ending, to see two teams neither team freezing under the pressure of the final, both teams playing with such skill and character. to see 30,000 people at lords singing and dancing, i never thought! 30,000 people at lords singing and dancing, i never thought i would see that at the home of cricket. and in an england side, we have a team that is young, dynamic, a group of players that are really going to inspire the next generation. i would like to say that cricket is like that every single time that we go out onto the pitch and for all those new followers that watched yesterday will be inspired, cricket is great every day! cricket is always dramatic and always goes down to the wire so keep following the game.|j wa nt to wire so keep following the game.|j want to ask you about the decision of the captain, eoin morgan, to give that ball to jofra of the captain, eoin morgan, to give that ball tojofra archer for the
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final super over. 24—year—old. before this tournament, never played an international match but that kind of decision is defined the captaincy, can define a captaincy and what a decision it was. yeah. you look atjofra archer over the course of the last few years, he has been playing under a huge amount of pressure in the indian premier league. huge audiences, bowled the last over for the rajasthan royals. playing in front of big crowds for the hobart hurricanes, who knows how to bowl that over. i think we are the first to admit he didn't quite get the skills absolutely spot on. that he won the game for england. that he won the game for england. that throw from jason roy, the calmness he showed on the boundary fuzzed up to deliver any kind of skill under that kind of pressure, it takes a calm, composed mind. that is what england did. also new zealand, you have to look at the way they played. they didn't deserve to lose that game. the captain kane
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williamson, i'm delighted he won man of the tournament. he is the kind of person you want kids to follow. he is very understated, he plays the game the right way and he can be very proud of his team.|j game the right way and he can be very proud of his team. i will let you go, michael, i know you have to catch that train but thank you for talking to us. one viewer said, great to see we could view the cricket on terrestrial tv yesterday for maggie said, exciting stuff and i don't like cricket. meg said, i need to lie down in a darkened room, it was beyond grouping. this tweet, great that an irishman will lift the trophy. hannah said, got to be the greatest cricket match on earth, ever. jenny said, couldn't watch most of it too tense. monty, as a bowler, what with the pressure have been like on jofra bowler, what with the pressure have been like onjofra archer? we had michael vaughan say he has got some experience, he has played in front of very big crowds and clearly has a cool head but still unbelievable pressure on him when he takes that ball for the final over? yes, that
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was unbelievable, how archer got his composure right for the last three balls. when i was watching the game, the first ball was a wide, second went for a six and i thought, this is it, game over. being there in the crowd, being an ambassador, the people's ambassador for cricket, it just kind of, it was great to be there, to actually see how eoin morgan, under such intense pressure, came up to mr archer now, because he has won us the world cup! and just talk to him, calmed him down and delivered, executed his plans. next thing you know, england have won the world cup. huge credit goes to eoin morgan, because of the way, the calmness he brings into that, into the team when they are under pressure, how to deliver that skill.
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how to win those key moments. not many captains can do that in world cricket. i think kane williamson and eoin morgan are of that similar mould, where they are very calm under pressure and seem to know how to make the right decisions. alison and mike and gladstone, ben stokes, match winning performance. he looked mentally drained. physically as well! before he then went back out. how would you describe his performance? the story, his journey, everyone knows the court case he we nt everyone knows the court case he went through, to come to this. he is one of the hardest trainers. that was one of the things going through my mind when i was watching him bursting through for those singles in the superover, bursting through for those singles in the super over, down on his haunches and visibly panting but still able to get up and keep going. that is where all those extra hours in the gym, that intensity of training, that is when it is really neededin training, that is when it is really needed in those crunch moments. when the super over was announced and i
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thought, the fact that ben stokes is out thought, the fact that ben stokes is our in batterand thought, the fact that ben stokes is our in batter and he was on 80 odd and gets to turn himself around and keep going, that was an england's favour that they were able to continue batting and had someone well set at that point. he had to marshal things, well set at that point. he had to marshalthings, marshalled well set at that point. he had to marshal things, marshalled the strike, get back and put in the dive on the ball deflecting off his bat. he showed that sportsmanship that happens in cricket, where there is an unwritten rule that if the ball deflect an unwritten rule that if the ball d efle ct off an unwritten rule that if the ball deflect off the body of the batter as they are making the ground, the batter doesn't run. they have every right to, every right to get down the other end. stokes was flat on his front anyway but he wouldn't have run. if the ball hadn't been fielded, there would be an extra run. the ball went to the boundary and it was four. there was a technicality in the laws which people are highlighting now, it's onlyjust coming to light, that the umpire in the middle technically got it wrong when he awarded six runs at that point, four for the boundary plus the two run. a very tiny detail
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stoplight what should it have been? five by the letter of the law rather than sex but it is a law nobody on the ground would have known about. commentators went aware of it. commentators went aware of and everything decided on the one moment is difficult because there were many are moments, the wide, then the wide when trent boult stood on the rope, the mis—field which allowed new zealand to come back for another one in the superover. zealand to come back for another one in the super over. but it will be another element adding to a dramatic final. but ben stokes, a peoples hero. the kind of guy, you listen to his team—mates, they say if you want someone his team—mates, they say if you want someone to bat for your life, for a world cup, its ben stokes and he absolutely did stoplight transformation of this team in the la st transformation of this team in the last four years. they didn't qualify from the knockout stages in the last world cup. now to be world number one and world champions, what do you put it down to? i think a lot must be given credit to all the people
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concerned. someone like andrew strauss, who decided when he was in charge to make sure this was their project. they had to be better. eoin morgan has been a great leader and i think he has found, fortunately for him, some really talented cricketers. they have worked so hard and jofra archer has been the icing on the cake. but there is no team i have seen play, including all the great australian teams and west indian teams, that have the skill and the ability to turn games from about one to six in their own way. they just have a about one to six in their own way. theyjust have a great mix of players. that all have the ability to wina players. that all have the ability to win a game on their own in whatever conditions they need to. that, to me, is down to hardware, down to training. you don't just turn up and be world champions. it isa turn up and be world champions. it is a lot to do with keeping your cool is a lot to do with keeping your cool, as ben stokes did in the final, and many other games during the tournament, to be fair, where he was always guy there were whether he
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had to stay there or whether he had to get runs, he could get both. sol am just really so, so pleased for them all. had we lost yesterday, it would have been, it wouldn't have beena would have been, it wouldn't have been a waste of effort or anything because they did so well in the tournament, but to win it, they deserved to. absolutely. finally brief one to you, just butler could walk down the street and probably he wouldn't be marked. that is an outrage. —— and he wouldn't be mobbed. is at because it has been on pay per view are not terrestrial? absolutely. it has got something to do with it. it is brilliant that yesterday's game was able to be enjoyed by families up and down the length and breadth of the country watching it on tv. but listen, there's been lots of... lots of support, chance to shine showing
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there has to be the resources in the game to support and get programmes like this initiative off the ground and then reach it has, that has to be supported. and that comes from money. yes, so yes, it's great. we all, i learned the game from watching and listening on bbc radio. now it is obviously much more, much more technical, technology. i'm talking to you on my phone in the middle of a field! we noticed! laughter mike is on a phone in his car somewhere. i will pause you there, thank you so much gladstone, good luck with the children and chance to shine. mike gatting, appreciate it. alison mitchell, so lovely to see you, hadn't seen you for a few yea rs. you, hadn't seen you for a few years. monty panesar, thank you. karen said i was driving in majorca and nearly crashed, what an
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achievement! many more messages, i will try and get through some of them in the rest of the programme to stop thank you very much. still to come... we'll talk to the mum of 6—year—old stanley metcalf. injuly last year, he died after his great—grandfather shot him with an air rifle. and... should electric scooters be allowed on the roads? today, there's a meeting between a government minister and manufacturers of e—scooters. it comes after youtube star emily hartridge was killed in what is thought to be the first electric scooter fatality in the uk. labour mps are going to use the regular meeting of the parliamentary party today to call forjeremy corbyn to make the process of handling anti—semitism complaints totally independent. it comes after the bbc‘s panorama programme last week revealed claims from a number of former party officials that some ofjeremy corbyn's closest allies tried to interfere in disciplinary
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processes involving allegations of anti—semitism. the party has insisted the claims are inaccurate and made by "disaffected" former staff. yesterday, the actress, writer and now online activist, tracy ann oberman, who quit labour over anti—semitism, and several other leading jewish figures wrote to the observer, calling for the "draining" of the "poison" of anti—semitism from the party. and we can talk to her now. thank you for coming on our programme. in your letter, you said that trust between jeremy corbyn's labour and most of the jewish that trust between jeremy corbyn's labour and most of thejewish people in britain seems fractured beyond repair. does that mean you don't think it can ever be repaired whilst he is the leader? i think that is the over lining headline. i think if you look at the signatories of that
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letter, these are people who don't normally put their heads above the parapet so widely. the fact it has come to that, desperate people including myself that we had to put our name to that letter to say what that letter, which was thought out very carefully, i do think we mean it. i have to say, as an actor and asa it. i have to say, as an actor and as a writer, the fact i'm here to have to talk about being jewish in the labour party and the activism i felt i have had to take on i find incredible. i am felt i have had to take on i find incredible. iam normally felt i have had to take on i find incredible. i am normally on programmes to promote my work but so little has been done about abuse people like myself have faced online and in real life, i've ended up coming on talking to you. what is it like when you put your head above the parapet? for a long time, i hadn't. then twitter, my medium, it was a fun place to be, it was a very witty platform. then i started to notice things changing around 2015.
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i started to watch a lot of the abuse, anti—semitic and misogynist abuse, anti—semitic and misogynist abuse against mps like luciana berger and margaret hodge. i don't why am berger and margaret hodge. i don't whyami berger and margaret hodge. i don't why am i seeing jews are rich, zionists control the media, alljews are anti—jeremy corbyn because they don't want to pay higher taxes, these things were going around that nobody from the labour party was challenging them. the final straw for me came when a woman spray—painted the warsaw ghetto wall with the words free gaza. my family and a lot of other peoples families died in that warsaw ghetto, that is like spray—painting an open grave. i put on social media, why is this woman being dignified, a proper legitimate platform? woman being dignified, a proper legitimate platform ? i woman being dignified, a proper legitimate platform? i put it out on twitter and said i thought it was wrong. the response i got online from labour members, labour
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councillors, people with their red rose twitter feed who said they were ha rd core rose twitter feed who said they were hardcore members of the labour party was unprecedented. abuse beyond imagining. ithen was unprecedented. abuse beyond imagining. i then sat in the car and cried because i couldn't believe what people were saying and what they were sending to me, under the guise of being labour supporters and jeremy corbyn supporters. so what like is everyday wanting to silence you. people smearing you and calling you. people smearing you and calling you a prostitute, a i have been told iam hiding you a prostitute, a i have been told i am hiding due money. that i am a grooming paedophile. and notjust against me but about anyone who speaks out on anti—semitism. a lot of it is misogynistic as well. when i approached the labour party, jennie formby‘s of this with my own
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complaints. the general secretary. and people like rachel riley and frances barber, we didn't get anything back. watching the programme, watching panorama the other night, it was clear why we hadn't, because in my opinion, under jeremy corbyn present leadership, the labour party and his core group of organisers don't want to deal with it. they say the labour party take all the counts of anti—semitism extremely seriously and all complaints are fully investigated and any appropriate disciplinary action is taken. i've heard that being read out many times. i do not buy it because it is never followed up buy it because it is never followed up by buy it because it is never followed up by any action for the party can get rid of alistair campbell within 15 hours before because of his
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fighting tactics. programme showed they want to protect people they will take those complaints and lose them ina will take those complaints and lose them in a black hole and a party thatis them in a black hole and a party that is supposed to be an anti—racist party and a safe place for women and anyone in the workspace, to have these brave whistle—blowers come out, a party that supports whistle—blowers, who seejulian that supports whistle—blowers, who see julian assange that supports whistle—blowers, who seejulian assange as a hero, they bullied and frightened these people, decent people. within hours of the programme going out these young people who were so brave and went to say that this is a culture of fear and secretary, they were called disgruntled playwrights. most of them were not even born when tony blair was prime minister. and the one mp who reached out to me, tom watson, the deputy leader of the labour party, who was trying to do something more than anyone else, he was equally turned into the
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traitorous tom watson, he has to resign. instead of labour turning round and admitting, and the leadership of the saint we have a problem and we have not dealt with it properly, we are hiding complaints against people who we would like to protect as well. they came out the next day all guns blazing and saying it is everyone else's problem but our own. on the television yesterday the shadow foreign secretary emily thornbury said it was not right to shoot the messenger and it was right to look at the message. tom watson is pushing for automatic expulsions, along with another, with other labour mps for along with another, with other labourmps fora along with another, with other labour mps for a totally independent complaints system. is that the only way now to stamp out anti—semitism? i think the anti—semitism has been allowed to flourish underjeremy corbyn's leadership. i do not think
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they have stamped down and it hard enough, people say on social media how do you know that person is labour, they might just how do you know that person is labour, they mightjust be using the banner. the very fact they think they can hide under thejeremy corbyn banner says it all in my opinion. so there does need to be an independent body looking into this. the equality and human rights commission have not investigated a party since the british national party, they're doing a full investigation into the labour party andi investigation into the labour party and i think the other day should legal letters because they felt the information was not forthcoming. there has to be more transparency and there has to be an independent body going in there to look at what is really going on and root it out from the top down. what is it like simply, to be abused simply because you are jewish? in the old days of twitter someone would send you something not very nice, a picture of their genitals which would
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something that happened to women, and you would just press block. but twitter has become politicised and nasty place and an indicator of what is going on in their life. i cannot believe i'm getting the sort of abuse in 2019! think my family would have got in the 1920s and 1930s in germany and russia. it is unbelievable to me that i am called the things that i'm called for being jewish. feel free to, filthyjewish person, lying, working for a cabal. all of it being done to silence me and in many ways made me work out who i am. made me work out where it defining lines are, that this is my identity and i will stand tall and proud for myself and the 96% of our community that are horrified by what is going on in labour. it is
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upsetting. you were at an event and an actor came up and said what do you? i thought these peoplejust existed behind a twitter sphere or social media sphere or facebook page. i was at a party and an actor was very drunk and kept looking at me eventually came over and said, i know you, i know you. you're one of that lot. your lot to make your days are over. i said what you mean by my lot. aggressively spitting in my face. i said what you mean, a woman, an actor, jewish‘s and he said he had said it now, the north london cabal, your days are over, change is coming. i asked cabal, your days are over, change is coming. iasked i had the cabal, your days are over, change is coming. i asked i had the kind of supporter thatjeremy coming. i asked i had the kind of supporter that jeremy corbyn would like and he said that i knowjeremy very well and your days are
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numbered. it was very frightening. laura says on twitter, i'm choked up listening to tracy talking about labour and anti—semitism and it is clear how upset she is and rightly so clear how upset she is and rightly so for the horrific example in the real world as opposed to the online world, do you think the kind of things you have received online is reflective of broader society?” think there is an enormous amount of the sport and the heartening thing is it has, i speakfor media circles, a lot of people i did not even know whatjewish are now starting to come out and are horrified. we have a lot of support and many good people. bad things happen when good people do nothing as the past is predicated and there are some really good people. but just last week on this show you had a woman on a panel accusing sam matthews who had talked about wanting to kill himself because of the culture pressure and bullying, she called him a wimp with mental
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health problems and told him he had to man up. this woman was a core jeremy corbyn supporter and we need to ask why doesjeremy corbyn attract these kind of supporters. why do they feel that they can be as bullying as they are because i do not believe any other minority group would be told it is a load of rubbish, it is all politically motivated. and alsojewish people i think i had the canary in the coal mine cana think i had the canary in the coal mine can a society are shown in the past that once society has a problem with anti—semitism that is just the start and it is a bigger sickness in society and if this culture in the labour party of fear and bullying and orwellian intimidation carries oni and orwellian intimidation carries on i think we will have a major problem with the one party that should represent the good people in my opinion. thank you very much for coming on the programme.
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"why have you shot me, grandad?" these are the words uttered by six—year—old stanley metcalf on 26th july last year after his great grandfather, albert grannon, shot him at point blank range with an air rifle. stanley died in hospital that afternoon. stanley's parentsjenny dees and andy metcalf say they feel hurt that albert, also known as sam to his loved ones, has never said sorry to them for what happened. two weeks ago, the 78—year—old was sentenced to three years in jail after pleading guilty to manslaughter, but the sentence has divided the once close family. now stanley's parents say they want to use what happened to him to fight for a change to the law on air gun control. and stanley's mum jenny dees is here. so is his 19—year—old sister, ellie brown. thank you for coming on. can you
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tell the audience about stanley, what was he like? i was blessed to have stanley. he was a very loving, happy and normal little boy. hejust made everyone smile and wanted to make everyone laugh. he is to get up every morning and would want to go out and say what can we do today, he a lwa ys out and say what can we do today, he always wanted to do something different, something new. just a happy boy. for my mum, there myself and my elder brother and stanley. we alwaysjoked to and my elder brother and stanley. we always joked to state you are the favourite but stanley really was the favourite. he wasjust favourite but stanley really was the favourite. he was just so different, you cannot put it into words, just something about him, he just shone out. one day last summer you took sta nley out. one day last summer you took stanley and his twin amount about
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great grandads. and did he know that he was going to show him the air rifle ? he was going to show him the air rifle? he did, stanley played for a tea m rifle? he did, stanley played for a team that he adored and the night before he was going to his training and stanley had bumped into my grandad and he mentioned it to sta nley grandad and he mentioned it to stanley that when you come tomorrow to come and see us, granddad will show you his gun. stanley said ok and he mentioned to me that evening that granddad has got this gun and he wants to show it to me i said let's talk about that later on and thatis let's talk about that later on and that is how it was left. when you're at the house the next day you were outside when you heard what? stanley had asked me, he said, go and look at the gun so i said yes, that is fine, go look at the gun. he followed my grandad into the kitchen, i was still outside and i heard this loud bang going off and
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my instinct straight straightaway, i knew it did not sound right and something was wrong. i sort of jumped up and went straight into the kitchen and i saw stanley with his hand over his tummy and he said, i said what is the matter and he said, granddad shot me. i said he would not do that. he looked at my grandad and said why would you shoot me, granddad? i thought ok, i lifted his top up and initially could not see anything. my mum had picked up to ta ke anything. my mum had picked up to take them outside and i saw his eyes rolling to the back of his head and he went floppy and then i knew that something was wrong. i said put him down and then we lifted up his top andi down and then we lifted up his top and i noticed a small 5p wound in his tummy from the air rifle pellet. obviously call the ambulance and tragically stanley died from cardiac
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arrest because there was massive internal bleeding. air rifles have safety catches on them, why was it not on? i do not know and i still do not on? i do not know and i still do not know, i've not spoken to my grandad or estimate question. he has not spoken to you to express remorse? not to me directly, no. i have not had any kind of conversation or apology, reason why he did what he did. what think of that? very upset and let down because i looked to my grandad, i looked up to him as head of the family. we always, you know we a lwa ys family. we always, you know we always did bring together all the time and when this happened i automatically just time and when this happened i automaticallyjust presumed time and when this happened i automatically just presumed that time and when this happened i automaticallyjust presumed that he would come to me and he would be sorry and tell me exactly what happened but he didn't come at all. did he say anything to you? when it first happened i was not there but thenl
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first happened i was not there but then i will was at the hospital and i was the first person and he said that it was a ricochet. he wasjust panicking. he said the gun had ricocheted, the pellet had ricocheted, the pellet had ricocheted somewhere else and gone into his tummy but that was not to and how did you find out it wasn't to? stanley had to go for a postmortem in sheffield and the
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