Part of this challenge and every time they go past this point near the finishing line, they rotate. Just one of the many steps that have been taken by the organisers to ensure that kipchoge ducks under that two hour mark. Special shoes propelled the kenyan further forward with each pace. They calculated the optimum course and weather, taking into account his biorhythms and even projected a laser onto the road. But all this means it cant be ratified as a world record by athletics world governing body. Hes pointing. Come on, he says. As the finish line approached, the pacemakers stepped away and kipchoge strode into history. Into the final 20 seconds, Eliud Kipchoge. Looks over his shoulder. 1 59 40 the unofficial time. Im the happiest man to run under two hours. In order to inspire many people. To tell people that no human is limited. You can do it. I expect more of that, for all of the world to run under two hours. Already a great athlete with world and olympic titles, kipchoge will now be remembered forever. Ade adedoyin, bbc news, vienna. Saint helens are Super League Champions for the seventh time. They beat Salford Red Devils by 23 points to six in todays grand final at old trafford. Salford were huge underdogs, trying to become only the fifth side to lift the trophy, but st helens were simply too strong. Adam wild reports. Never has a grand final brought such a contrast. St helens, the most dominant side super league has ever seen. Salford, the most remarkable story super league has ever seen. But the romance of the underdog counts a little when faced with the brilliance of saints. Peerless this season, now piercing position. Morgan knowles opened the scoring. When zeb taia added another, moments later, saints it seemed were on the march. Its been nearly half a century since salford won the title. Reawakened here momentarily byjake bibby. But it was only temporary. Mark percival chasing his own kick over the line, touching down, and now st helens within touching distance. Tommy makinsons drop goal in the games closing moments the final fabulous flourish on a fantastic st helens season. Just by reaching the final, salford have upset the games established order. That order has now been at least partially restored. St helens have been the best team all year round. Theyve now proved that on the games biggest stage. They are Super League Champions once more. Adam wild, bbc news, at old trafford. Ireland have booked their place in the quarterfinals of rugby unions world cup after beating samoa by 47 points to five. Irelands bundee aki was sent off in the 29th minute, but seven tries including two from Johnny Sexton gave them a convincing victory. Their opponents in the last eight will be scotland orjapan, but that match could still be cancelled because of typhoon hagibis in yokohama. I think there is a bit more uncertainty this time. The last time we played france, we knew we would be playing argentina, there was some certainty in what we could do to prepare for that. It is a bit awkward because we have to wait until the final game in the pool and find out then exactly who we may be playing. Great britain have claimed a gold, silver and bronze medal today at the world gymnastics championships. Olympic champion max whitlock regained the pommel title his third world gold. Becky downie took silver on the uneven bars, while her younger sister, ellie, got the bronze on the vault. Theres more on the bbc sport website, including news from the republic of irelands goalless draw against georgia in their euro 2020 qualifier. Thats it. From me and the team, have a very good night. Hello, once again, well update you on the weeks weather prospects in the British Isles and a second. First, an update on typhoon hagibis, which, through the course of sunday, should take the very worst of its conditions away from the main islands of japan, but not before its delivered in some areas in excess of 900 millimetres of rain, nearly a metre of rain. Winds in excess of 100 mph. And while this weather system is still around, dangerous waves and still the risk of landslides, too. Coming a little bit closer to home, saturday was not very sparkling, to say the very least, across southern counties of both england and wales. All thanks to this area of cloud. A waving weather front which, during the course of sunday, should make some progress, both to the north and to the east. Such that eventually i think we will see some sunshine returning to parts of wales on the south west of england. And all the while, northern and North Western parts of scotland and Northern Ireland should be in for a pretty decent sort of day, temperatures again, nothing to write home about. Tops of around 15 or 16, if you are lucky. Eventually, the whole system begins to move its way, it would appear, off into the north sea. But heres the rub. Come monday, the trailing portion of the front is still trailing perilously close to the south east quarter of the British Isles. At the same time, it will introduce another feature here, further to the west. So it may well be that we see this rain, and there is some doubt at the moment, coming a little further towards the north and west across the south east quarter of the British Isles. And all the while we got that more westerly system really pepping up the rain across the west of wales, south west of england and, eventually, Northern Ireland and western scotland. Come tuesday, this is the point in which we see the last of that wriggling weather front. Another one out towards the west, rather dying a death. The northern portion is still there to provide a fairly dreich old day across the western side of scotland. Elsewhere, its not a bad day. Once the cloud begins to break up, theres not too much in the way a breeze. A bit of dry weather around. A half decent day if youve got a plan for the outdoors. Temperature, if youre lucky, round about the mid teens also, but do make the most of it, especially so across Western Areas initially on wednesday because we have another set of atlantic fronts, spreading in some heavy pulses of rain at times. Initially in the west, as i say, but at least it is quite a mobile system. I think having introduced some rain, it wont hang around all day in any one location. A pretty damp old end to the day across the north east of scotland. Drier, brighter skies to finish off the day across the west. This pattern becomes really quite well established as we take you through the middle part of the weekend on into thursday. A big area of low pressure dominating the north west of the British Isles. Swinging bands of showery rain at times across northern and Western Areas, trying to make a little bit of progress. But i think again, on thursday, generally speaking, the further east you are the drier and finer that the day will be. All the while, those temperatures come at this stage, not very far from the mid teens also. The secondary lows, as we call them, swing through the British Isles as we move towards the weekend. Then a little edge of high pressure, just for a while those winds will turn into the north west. So what, you say . So it may well be that towards next weekend we have that north westerly, the colours drain away and it looks as though we are going to end up with something a little bit cooler and brighter until it slips back to something, again, more mild. Hello and welcome to our look ahead to what the the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. With me arejoe twyman, whos director of the polling company, deltapoll, and the author and journalist, Yasmin Alibhai brown. Many of tomorrows front pages are already in. The Observer Says support is growing for a second referendum amid fears over borisjohnsons brexit policy. Meanwhile, the mail on sunday says rebel tory mps are planning to force the Prime Minister to delay brexit even if he wins commons support for a deal. The sunday telegraph has an exclusive article by Jacob Rees Mogg in which the commons leader calls for compromise to help mrjohnson reach a deal. The paper also hails superman Eliud Kipchoge, the first person to run a marathon in under two hours. The sunday times reports that boris has given european leaders a stark choice help me get a deal through or britain leaves without one on october 31st. The sunday express says boris wants to make britain the greatest nation on earth but he must fend off what the paper says is a last ditch plot to foil brexit. So, basically, brexit on most of the front pages. We are going to kick off there. But it is the article by Jacob Rees Mogg on the front of the telegraph that we will start with. Yasmin, do you want to go . It is interesting, it is so no Jacob Rees Mogg, who has been part of the erg and pretty in uncompromising, he has written a piece for the telegraph and he has become very conciliatory at the moment, which is interesting and surprising. Did you not find that the tone is different . We must compromise, we must allow him to do this, this is the best deal. I think what this is all about is trying to position the Prime Ministers deal in the eyes of the public, because most people out there, most people at home, wont be awaiting the details of the deal, and reading it very closely and making notes on it, instead, they will be taking their cues from political leaders, from journalists, from people that they trust. Having someone from people that they trust. Having someone like Jacob Rees Mogg, so hesitant and subsequently so against supporting theresa mays deal, as more details came out. He was allowed to get her, my god. From the beginning, before the details even became clear, he said he wasnt sure about this, and then no, definitely not. To reverse that situation and say, well, maybe, perhaps, and further down the line, yes, we are supporting it, iassume it is further down the line, yes, we are supporting it, i assume it is to influence the publics perception about this, particularly when it comes to this issue of a hard border in Northern Ireland, whether there will be a border in the irish sea. Its very interesting, we have all looked at this extraordinary thing, everybody was so het up over the no deal possibility, everybody within parliament, outside parliament, politicians, commentators. I wonder if that was flagged up so that whatever he comes back with, if it is a kind of deal, we will think it is a better thing, and what a clever chap he is. I think there is a kind of. Im very cynical when rees mogg starts talking in these terms, but maybe that was the attention all along. I ama that was the attention all along. I am a conspiracy theorist, call me mad if you will. I wouldnt call you mad. Asi mad if you will. I wouldnt call you mad. As i say, i think all of this is about positioning. We hear time and again about the spartans, how they simply advanced, well, they may be advancing a backwards direction. They call benns act the surrender act, the language they are still using, and you see it in the pro brexit papers, the fight is still flaming away, and then there is this thing being offered. Still flaming away, and then there is this thing being offeredm still flaming away, and then there is this thing being offered. It is a nobodys interests to make this look anything other than extremely difficult, not borisjohnson, not Jacob Rees Mogg, not anyone in europe, the opposition, either side of the border in Northern Ireland, everybody wants to look like they fought until the very last minute, then magnanimously, politically. Talking about over the waters, the dup, whatare talking about over the waters, the dup, what are they thinking . The way that boris was thinking about it, it was like something was happening, but the dup was where it was when they did the deal with the tory party. They are a stubborn bunch, actually. Lets turn to the observer, mentioned on the front of the telegraph, but like you said, also in the observer. Northern ireland must stay in a full uk customs union, presumably to nobodys surprise, they say. Ten dup mps, on which the government relies on for its pseudo majority. Obviously it is well short of that now. How much money . 10 billion . It was extraordinary. Will those ten dup mps,11 extraordinary. Will those ten dup mp5, 11 if extraordinary. Will those ten dup mps, 11 if you count kate hoey who always vote with them for reasons i dont understand, if you count those mps, and wonder if they will compromise on whatever the deal turns out to be, or will they change their mind, stick to their guns . There is a wedge between the labour mps who are going to support boris johnson. It could be the case that enough people are supportive of a deal, opponents of no deal, and they wa nt deal, opponents of no deal, and they want to get something through to ensure that the ten dup mps are not needed. That is an enormous gamble on what is described as super saturday. Super saturday, we got that look forward to. That is when the commons is sitting for the First Time Since the falklands war, it will be very super. That is next weekend. And then we have the erg, saying they are going to wait to see how the dup vote. Even within the erg, there is a spectrum. I am sure there will be people in the erg who will not expect, if boris has just brought back aspects of the may deal, they will not go for it. |j think if it looks like the deal is going to go through, i think a lot of dominoes will fall and people get into line. If it looks like it wont, there is no way those die hard opponents will support it, because it is in their interests to say no. Have you had any indication, joe, through delta pole, about the feeling for a second referendum . There is support, depends on the question you ask, if you ask about a peoples vote or ask if we should revisit the referendum that we have already had and everything in between. There is support for a second referendum, but by no means overwhelming. The key question is one of the question, what question would that referendum ask . A simple repeat of remainer leave as we did la st repeat of remainer leave as we did last time would not work. A three way question would raise all sorts of difficulties, what if the winning option only gets 40 of the public supporting it . Yes, there is public supporting it . Yes, there is public supporting it . Yes, there is public support for it, there is no doubt that we may potentially see 1 Million People marching next week again. But its by no means. Also, one of the questions is what if, and iam one of the questions is what if, and i am absolutely pro eu, if my side wins, but by the same margin, then what do we do . All of this correlates with which side you support. If you supported remain, the likelihood is that you support a second referendum. People supporting a second referendum are not doing it because they are massive fans of representative democracy. Unlike the lazy, ridiculous way that cameron did the first one, the terms, the meaning, what it was meant to do, it needs to be better defined. All right, we will up that point in the 11. 30. Lets stay on the front of the observer. Britain failed families over the beatles trial, acting like a Banana Republic . This is the isis beatles, as they we re this is the isis beatles, as they were unfairly referred to, accused of crimes, acting for isis, i believe in syria. They have now been taken to military custody by the us. The suggestion is that the uk are not pursuing charges against them, so not pursuing charges against them, so they are not tried in this country and they are just left to seek trial in virginia. |j country and they are just left to seek trial in virginia. I think this raises. It is only two people, but we are now talking about a huge number of people from this country and other eu countries, too, that are stuck in this place, where i dont know whats going to happen to them, are they just dont know whats going to happen to them, are theyjust going to rot in a cell . We need to make up our minds if there is a rule of law and take some responsibility. I talked to rwandans. I think the west has a lot to learn about that. Some of the worst killers the world has ever known was reabsorbed into communities. There is no doubt it is usually politically problematic. They should be tried and punished them absolutely. What are we going to do about babies and orphans, we just going to leave them . Definitely heading to the united states. Lets go back to the telegraph. All of the things that i going to be laid out in the much delayed and discussed queens speech coming up. The headline is about the rail franchise system, since its inception under margaret thatcher, it has been a real mess for subsequent governments to deal with. We have tried taking railtrack, as it was, back into a network rail, the franchises that actually run the trains are still in private hands. What the Prime Minister has suggested is a model based on performance and reliability. It means nobody is going to argue with the idea of reliability. Nobody is going to say i think my train is too punctual, and i find it disconcerting. One of these things that has been announced, along with the Withdrawal Agreement bill, of course. Laws to ensure faster access to medicine. Yasmin and i were discussing this earlier, photographic identity at polling stations. What is that about . I think we are the most watched population in the western world, what is this . It is not being discussed, we dont know why they are doing it, i hope there are lots of groups that stand up and mps that fight this. Why should we be watched when we put our boat into a box . |j when we put our boat into a box . think a lot of people would agree thatjust turning think a lot of people would agree that just turning up and saying hello, my name isjohn round. You have to show your address. You dont have to show your address. Its not a perfect system, nobody can agree on what to replace it with. I think photographic identification, given that quite a bit of the population doesnt hav