The behaviour of Argentina players was especially contemptible given how many of them earn fortunes at English clubs. They are happy to take the wages and applause, yet used victory to deny wishes of Falkland Islanders. Argentina earned their place in the World Cup final on the pitch. Their players then disgraced themselves by turning what was a sporting showpiece into a crude political stunt.
Contemptible Conduct
Their behaviour was especially contemptible given many of them earn fortunes at English clubs, cheered every week by English supporters and richly rewarded by the English game. They are happy to take the wages, applause and adulation. Yet, when the cameras were rolling, they used victory to parade a banner denying the democratic wishes of the Falkland Islanders.
Those islanders voted overwhelmingly to remain British. Their voices carry infinitely more weight than any slogan waved by millionaire footballers thousands of miles away. The 1982 war - during which none of the players were alive - cost hundreds of lives on both sides.
FIFA Must Act
That history demands sensitivity, dignity and respect, not exploitation as a prop in a victory parade. FIFA must act. Argentina won the match, then stained the occasion with conduct that was arrogant, inflammatory and wholly unworthy of the beautiful game.
Price of Power
Politics is a demanding business, but so is family life. After six and a half years rebuilding Labour and leading the country for the past two, Keir Starmer leaves believing he has put his party in a position to win again under Andy Burnham. Time will decide whether history agrees. What cannot be doubted is the personal price paid by the Prime Minister and those closest to them. Life inside Downing Street brings relentless pressure, long hours and constant scrutiny that no family escapes. Mr Starmer's decision to step aside and put his wife and children first is a reminder that even the highest office comes with sacrifices beyond politics. Public service matters, but so does being there for the people who matter most.
School's Out
Britain's smallest school may be closing its doors, but its 144 years of memories will live on. Generations learned, laughed and grew up at Ysgol Y Garreg. Its final two pupils deserve a proud send-off - proof that even the smallest school can leave the biggest mark.



