Second and charles return policy11/29/2023 Also there is the Queen’s doctor, GP Douglas Glass. The duke says in his memoir that he tells his father “Don’t ever speak about my wife that way”.Ĭharles says only immediate family will be there, and not Kate.Ģ.39pm: A Royal Air Force flight takes off from RAF Northolt in South Ruislip, west London, carrying William, Andrew, Edward and Sophie.ģ.10pm: Elizabeth II – the nation’s longest reigning monarch – dies at the age of 96 in her bedroom in the castle, surrounded by Charles, who immediately accedes to the throne as the new King, Camilla and Anne. Harry texts William to ask whether he and Kate are flying up, but receives no reply.īehind the scenes, Charles calls Harry again to ask him not to bring Meghan. Charles has phoned Harry earlier to tell him of the Queen’s worsening health. ![]() The Duchess of Cambridge remains in Windsor where her children, Prince George, Princess Charlotte and Prince Louis are starting at a new school.ġ.38pm: Palace sources say the Duke of York and the Earl and Countess of Wessex are also on their way to the Queen’s Scottish home.ġ.54pm: The Duke and Duchess of Sussex announce they are going to Balmoral. It reads: “Following further evaluation this morning, the Queen’s doctors are concerned for Her Majesty’s health and have recommended she remain under medical supervision.”The Queen remains comfortable and at Balmoral.”Ĭlose family have been informed, the Palace says.īBC One interrupts Bargain Hunt at 12.39pm to deliver the statement and suspends its regular programming.ġ2.46pm: Clarence House confirms Charles and Camilla have travelled to Balmoral, and a minute later Kensington Palace say William, then-the Duke of Cambridge, is to head north. In her last race of the season, European U23 1500m champion Sophie O’Sullivan finished second in the 800m in 2:01.43 and won the 2000m in 6:00.44.12.32pm: Buckingham Palace then issues a concerning statement, confirming the Queen is under medical supervision. The pair went to second and fifth respectively on the European U20 all-time list although they were both shunted down a place after Grahn clocked 7:43.38 in Zagreb on Sunday evening. Only 17, Halvorsen won silver medals in the 1500m and 3000m behind Niels Laros at the European Athletics U18 Championships in Jerusalem last year but had the misfortune of falling in a tactical 3000m final at the European Athletics U20 Championships last month.Īnother silver medallist behind Laros in the last month, Austria’s Kevin Kamenschak finished one place behind Halvorsen in 7:48.57. ![]() In a race won by Luxembourg’s Charles Grethen in a national record of 7:43.41, another Nordic distance running prodigy Andreas Fjeld Halvorsen finished sixth in 7:47.04 to break Jakob Ingebrigtsen’s Norwegian U20 record of 7:51.20. There was also a fast 3000m race in Trier, Germany on Friday (8) evening. Halvorsen breaks Ingebrigtsen’s Norwegian U20 3000m record Other highlights in Zagreb included home favourite Sandra Perkovic delighting a capacity crowd with victory in the discus with a season's best of 67.71m and British victories for double world silver medallist Laviai Nielsen (50.93 in the 400m) and Dan Rowden (1:44.96 in the 800m). The European all-time list in the rarely-contested 2000m steeplechase underwent revision as well.īehind Kenya’s Beatrice Chepkoech who revised the world best with 5:47.42, Slovenia’s Marusa Mismas-Zrimsek and Albania’s European champion Luiza Gega moved to second and third on the list with 5:53.38 and 5:56.79 respectively. I really felt that I had the European record in me," he said as reported by Swedish broadcaster SVT. European U20 3000m champion Jonathan Grahn, 18, ran a lifetime best of 7:43.38 in 11th, just missing the 46-year-old European U20 record held by Ari Paunonen by a mere 0.18. However, one of the longest standing records in the books survived - but only just. There was a Serbian record for Elzan Bibic in seventh in 7:37.03 while Croatian Dino Bosnjak took ownership of the Croatian record on home soil, finishing 13th in 7:48.50 to eclipse the previous record of 7:48.72. In third, Jonas Raess smashed Markus Ryffel’s 34-year-old Swiss record of 7:41.05 to 7:35.12 while another Norwegian Ferdinand Kvan Ekman was fifth in a lifetime best of 7:36.32. There were national records and fast times aplenty in the 3000m at the Boris Hanžeković Memorial in Zagreb, a World Athletics Continental Tour Gold meeting, on Sunday (10) evening.īehind the Swiss-based Sudanese-born Dominic Lobalu, who will be eligible to compete for his adopted nation from April 2026, who won in 7:33.95, Norway’s Henrik Ingebrigtsen continued his return to form after injury with a second-place finish in a lifetime best of 7:34.80.
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