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Team GB doctor and physio help save life of Uzbekistan boxing coach | World News

It is not only Team GB’s athletes who are getting their “Olympic moment” at the Paris Games.

Team GB boxing doctor Harj Singh and physio Robbie Lillis have emerged as heroes after helping to save the life of the head coach of the Uzbekistan boxing team.

Tulkin Kilichev was celebrating Uzbek boxer Hasanboy Dusmatov’s gold medal win over France’s Billal Bennama in the warm-up area of the Roland Garros on Thursday evening when he suffered a cardiac arrest.

Fortunately for the coach, Dr Singh and Mr Lillis were able to dash to his aid and perform CPR and administer a shock using a defibrillator, respectively.

“The [Uzbek] coaching team came back into the warm-up area and they were all celebrating, and then shouting came from that area that wasn’t celebrations at all,” Mr Lillis said.

“There was a cry for a doctor, for help. Harj was the first person who responded and I followed with the emergency trauma bag that we carry with us.”

Paris 2024 Olympics - Boxing - Men's 51kg - Final - Roland-Garros Stadium, Paris, France - August 08, 2024. Hasanboy Dusmatov of Uzbekistan in action against Billal Bennama of France. REUTERS/Maye-E Wong
Image:
Dusmatov (right) beat Billal Bennama of France to take the Olympic title. Pic: Reuters

The physio said a lot of coaches were “pretty visibly distressed” by the ordeal but it did not stop him putting the pads of the defibrillator on Kilichev and administering an advised shock.

“Initially he didn’t come back but, about 20 to 30 seconds later, after Harj continued doing CPR, all of a sudden he came back conscious with us, which was great,” Mr Lillis said.

The boxing coach was then taken to hospital by the venue’s medical staff, where it is understood he is in a stable condition.

Paris 2024 Olympics - Boxing - Men's 51kg - Victory Ceremony - Roland-Garros Stadium, Paris, France - August 08, 2024. Gold medallist Hasanboy Dusmatov of Uzbekistan celebrates with his medal. REUTERS/Maye-E Wong
Image:
Hasanboy Dusmatov. Pic: Reuters

The secretary general of Uzbekistan’s boxing federation Shohid Tillaboev later posted on Instagram to say the gold medal win was the “happiest moment” but celebrations were not the same with the coach missing.

Mr Tillaboev wrote: “He’s the best mentor! He is a true hero!”

Read more:
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Sky talks to Team GB Olympians

Dr Singh said he and Mr Lillis will hopefully visit Kilichev while he recovers, adding that the entire ordeal really “puts things into perspective”.

“Everything happened so quickly,” he said. “At some stage we will endeavour to go to the hospital. If it could be arranged, I think that would be quite emotional for both of us.”

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Team GB medical staff all do regular training at the UK Sports Institute, including a pitch-side trauma course to prepare for extreme circumstances.

Mr Lillis admitted the adrenaline from the experience meant he could not sleep that night, but he is grateful to have played a part in helping someone stay alive.

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“It’s definitely not my day-to-day job, and I wouldn’t like to make a routine of doing it, but thankfully having had the training I was able to carry that out,” he said.

“My mum said a really nice thing, she said: ‘That’s your Olympic moment’. It’s something obviously I’ll definitely remember, I don’t think I’m going to be forgetting that any time soon.”

Hackney stabbing: Public warned not to approach man wanted over death of 49-year-old on Boxing Day | UK News

Police have appealed for the public’s help in finding a suspected knifeman after a fatal stabbing on Boxing Day – but warned people not to approach him.

Jurejs Vankovs, 38, is wanted over the death of Michael Murphy, 49, who was attacked and killed in Hackney, east London, in the early hours of Tuesday.

A row between a group of up to 10 people happened in the run up to the stabbing, according to the Metropolitan Police.

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Detective Chief Inspector Kelly Allen, leading the investigation, said: “We have been working tirelessly to locate Jurejs Vankovs but have yet to find him.

“We are now asking for the public’s help to locate him.

“I would ask people in the Shoreditch and wider Hackney area to keep a lookout for him.

“If you see Vankovs, please do not approach him but call 999 immediately.”

Four people – two men, 49 and 42, and two women, 35 and 44 – have been released without charge after being arrested on suspicion of murder.

Soap star Gary Lucy jokes he has ‘nine lives’ after Boxing Day car crash | Ents & Arts News

The actor Gary Lucy believes “somebody was watching over him” after he survived an apparent Boxing Day car crash that mangled the car.

The soap star, 41, posted two pictures of a wrecked Range Rover on his Instagram story.

“Someone was watching over me today,” he wrote.

He captioned the second photograph: “Gary nine lives”.

The images showed the wrecked car by the side of a snowy road, with the front bumper destroyed and caved in and front wheels gone.

Mr Lucy is known for playing Luke Morgan in Hollyoaks, Danny Pennant in EastEnders and Kyle Pascoe in Footballer’s Wives.

He also acted as the character Will Fletcher in The Bill.

Lucy’s representatives have been approached for comment.

Calls for crackdown on hunting ‘loophole’ ahead of Boxing Day parades | UK News

The government is facing calls to crack down on a hunting loophole after figures suggested that hundreds of suspected illegal incidents took place in just five weeks.

The League Against Cruel Sports said there were 303 combined incidents of hunt havoc (trespass, road interference and disturbing animals) and illegal fox hunting between 1 November and 7 December.

It said there were 78 reports of a fox being visibly pursued, eight reported kills and three suspected kills during that period.

Fox hunting was banned in England and Wales under the Hunting Act 2004, which came into force in 2005, but hounds are allowed to follow a scented cloth instead – called trail hunting.

Labour said that this is being used as a “smokescreen” for the illegal hunting of foxes.

The league’s figures were released to coincide with Boxing Day, the biggest day in the hunting calendar, with more than 200 hunts expected to parade through UK high streets before they head out to the countryside.

Spokesperson Emma Judd said it was time the government “came on board with public opinion”, adding: “Only by strengthening the law on hunting can communities, wildlife and rural values be protected.”

‘Extremely warped priorities’

Revealing figures showing that 438 convictions – including 42 last year – were secured since 2010 under the Hunting Act, shadow environment secretary Jim McMahon said the government must “consign hunting to the history books”.

But Polly Portwin, the head of the Countryside Alliance’s Campaign for Hunting, said: “There have been hundreds of thousands of days of legal trail hunting carried out by hunts since the Hunting Act came into force.

“Only someone with extremely warped priorities could think that with the country facing a cost of living crisis, the consequences of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and political instability that now is a good time to start discussing hunting legislation.”

Read more:
Emotions run high as annual Boxing Day hunt met with jeers and cheers

A UK government spokesman said: “The Hunting Act 2004 makes it an offence to hunt a wild mammal with dogs, and anyone who believes that an offence has taken place should report the matter to the police.

“Those found guilty under the act are subject to the full force of the law.”

In Scotland, environment minister Mairi McAllan said loopholes around hunting will be closed as the Hunting With Dogs Bill goes through its final stage in 2023.

Usyk v Joshua: Boxing world reacts to AJ’s ‘out of character’ outburst after losing rematch | UK News

Anthony Joshua has split the boxing community after delivering an impromptu outburst following his defeat to Ukrainian Oleksandr Usyk.

After the split decision was announced in the ring, Joshua grabbed two of the heavyweight championship belts and dumped them over the side of the ropes, before storming off towards the changing room.

However, he did return to the ring and grabbed the microphone to deliver an impromptu, impassioned speech.

He told the stadium in Jeddah: “If you knew my story, you would understand the passion.

“I ain’t no amateur boxer, from five years old that was an elite prospect from youth. I was going to jail, I got bail and I started training my a*** off, I wanted to be able to fight.

“This guy beat me tonight, maybe I could have done better, but it shows the level of hard work I put in, so please give him a round of applause as our heavyweight champion of the world.”

Joshua came in for criticism in the aftermath for failing to let his opponent speak first and dumping the belts over the side of the ring.

Professional boxer Frazer Clarke said Joshua’s outburst was “out of character” for him, telling Sky Sports: “As a gym friend and a friend in general, for anyone offended in general by what happened, I think I can apologise on his behalf for the outburst.

“His team might be mad at me for saying this, but I feel he was hung out to dry there. Somebody should have saved him from himself.

“It’s words, but in the true reflection of boxing, that was Usyk’s time to celebrate that victory, and he didn’t get to do it straight away, and I don’t think that was right.

“Anthony is a great person and has done a lot for a lot of people, a lot for me, but I feel like he had a bit of a bad one there, and it was out of character.”

He added: “Someone should have jumped in there. Someone should have stopped him and saved him from himself. It was only words, but it was the wrong time.”

Meanwhile, former middleweight champion Carl Froch defended Joshua, saying: “He didn’t say anything that would have offended anybody too much.

“He was just trying to speak off the cuff. He put his heart on his sleeve and hopefully didn’t offend anybody, but he did steal Usyk’s moment, and it was a bit strange.

“I think he was so emotionally built up to win that fight, the way in which he lost… I didn’t like the way the belts got thrown. It was a great boxing match, I thought it was a great performance.”

Oleksandr Usyk celebrates after winning the World Heavyweight Championship WBA Super IBF, IBO and WBO fight against Anthony Joshua at the King Abdullah Sport City Stadium in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia. Picture date: Saturday August 20, 2022.

Addressing the speech in the post-match news conference alongside promoter Eddie Hearn, Joshua said: “When you try and do things from your heart, not everyone’s going to always understand.

“It was just from the heart, I knew I was mad at myself… and I thought ‘I’ve gotta get out of here’.

“Then I realised – this is sport.

“I’m a hustler, so I try and put things together… but it comes at a cost, and it’ll never break me, and it takes real strength not to break me, and tonight there’s a little crack in the armour because I took a loss.

“Let’s not forget about the champ… credit to him.”