tournament football can be and wants to avoid any mistakes. to avoid any mistakes. thank you, alex. whenjack grealish scored his sixth goalfor england it was a special moment for 12 year old manchester city fan finlay. the pair met last week, after finlay, who has cerebal palsy, wrote a letter to the england star whose sister hollie also has the condition. when they met, jack promised finlay that he d do whatever celebration he wanted when he next scored which happened to be yesterday. this morning finlay told bbc breakfast how he was jumping forjoy when he saw that goal. iwasjumping around. well, trying to jump. and then he did the celebration that you d asked for. when you saw him do it, the fact that he d remembered, that must have been. what did you think? firstly, i thought that he wouldn t remember. but then when he did it, i was like, oh, my god, he s done the worm! i love it. that s lovely. the king is hosting his first state visit as monarch as he welcomes south africa
whenjack grealish scored england s sixth goal yesterday, he didn t do a backflip like the saudi player instead, he did this. like the saudi player and this is why last week, 12 year old manchester city fan finlay met jack grealish after writing to him. finlay has cerebral palsy as does jack grealish s sister hollie. and when they met jack promised finlay that if he scored finlay could choose how he celebrated so he chose this. today the 12 year old told bbc breakfast how he was jumping forjoy when grealish scored. iwasjumping around. well, trying to jump. and then he did the celebration that you d asked for. when you saw him do it, the fact that he d remembered, that must have been and done what you. that must have been. what did you think? firstly, i thought that he wouldn t remember. but then when he did it, i was like, oh, my god, he s done the worm! he s done the worm!
FUNDRAISERS held in memory of an inspirational Stourbridge woman have raised an incredible £17,000 for Stourbridge s Mary Stevens Hospice where she spent her final days. Kate Turner (nee Winning), aged 47, passed away at the hospice on December 1 after a re-occurrence of the acute myeloid leukaemia that she had so bravely and successfully battled as a young woman more than 20 years ago. Much-loved Kate courageously fought a three-year battle against the deadly disease in the late 1990s during which she endured chemotherapy, radiotherapy, a bone marrow transplant thanks to sister Sarah, then a second ground-breaking transplant of stem cells after a relapse.