Britain’s most decorated diver turned crafting icon arrives on foot to his interview with The Times, a suitcase of homemade creations in tow
Daley took up needles during lockdown – sight many witnessed on the sidelines of this year’s Olympics
“My coach wanted me to find something to chill out with and stop me overthinking”
He shows off his “cosy” – a little woollen home he fashioned for his long-anticipated medal, featuring the Union Jack on one side and the Japanese flag on the other.
But When Daley speaks of the pandemic and its impact, he’s not talking about the Olympics and his diving
In January this year he began to suffer headaches and dizziness, which, initially, he put down to a mild concussion he’d sustained in training on New Year’s Eve
Then the fever took hold, veering from racking chills and chattering teeth to burning heat
He ached, felt faint, couldn’t speak more than two words and his husband, Dustin Black, had to help him walk down the stairs
The next morning, he shuffled the mile and a half to the nearest centre for a PCR test, which proved positive. Black then developed symptoms too, just as Daley’s worsened
A paramedic was dispatched and decided, given Daley’s history with pneumonia, he should be hospitalised
Chest X-rays revealed blotches on his lungs
He was given oxygen and monitored for ten hours before being sent home
He hasn't ever spoken about contracting Covid until now
“You can’t let your competitors think that they’ve got one up on you. I wanted them to think that I was training as hard as them”
There is, he thinks, a lingering 5% reduction in his cardiovascular fitness because of it
Daley says that there were moments where he had flashes of fear about whether he would be put on a ventilator, and his time being up
A year ago, Boris Johnson claimed to be battling Covid-19 to “save Christmas”. Now he is facing a multi-fronted shortage crisis that industry leaders say raises the prospect of scaled-down dinners as demand surges in the festive season thetimes.co.uk/article/fuel-a…
Rising gas prices, a lack of skilled meatpackers and the shortage of HGV drivers now threatens to result in a food shortage
As the army prepares to start driving fuel tankers, a spectacular row has erupted in Whitehall between business leaders and ministers over who is to blame
Industry accuses the government of failing to listen to months of warnings, while ministers take to the airwaves to express absolute confidence that all will be fine.
In an interview with The Times, Boris Johnson has promised that "this Christmas will be considerably better than last" when asked about the risks that worker shortages pose to supplies over the holiday thetimes.co.uk/article/boris-…
In a wide-ranging interview on the eve of the Conservative Party conference, Boris Johnson brushes aside the rising threat of economic turmoil and tells Steven Swinford (@Steven_Swinford) that companies must increase salaries and investment
Johnson reserves his strongest intervention for police following the murder of Sarah Everard
The force, he says, are failing to take violence against women and girls seriously
“I thought that I can’t be autistic, I really care about people. It’s really embarrassing to even say this now because it’s such a mistaken idea.”
When Charlotte’s autistic friend suggested to her that she too could be on the spectrum, she laughed it off at first
As a child, Charlotte was always seen as eccentric and living in her own world, but no one inquired about it. Her brother, who has ADHD, drew more attention because adults wanted to stop what they saw as his disruptive behaviour
#WorldatFive: No longer fought over by the forces that tore Syria, Raqqa has become an unlikely haven for families fleeing problems from all directions. thetimes.co.uk/article/raqqa-…
Paradise Square was once famous as the roundabout where Islamic State crucified and displayed the heads of its victims. Now it has a Nutella House café.
The café, newly built next to one of the bombsites that filled Raqqa four years ago, is just one symptom of the city’s stark change in fortunes.
The lightning-quick development of effective Covid vaccines is one of the great scientific successes of our age. But behind this scientific triumph lies a murkier financial tale
Before the fate of the global economy hung in the balance and the search for immunity became pretty much the most important thing in the world, the giants of Big Pharma didn’t really care about vaccines
Vaccines were seen as a distraction from the vast financial rewards that new drugs for diabetes, cancer and other diseases of the rich could bring
In many respects, Daniel Craig’s 007 has become a real, credible modern man. He has also become a much more believable spy, writes @BenMacintyre1. thetimes.co.uk/article/how-no…
The earlier 007 was not really an MI6 officer at all, although that is what he purported to be. He was an assassin, operating semi-independently, with a limitless supply of weaponry, a bottomless expense account and a drinking problem.
The secret agent-lothario now treats women with respect, even love. Today he would never force himself on a non-consenting Pussy Galore, as he did in Goldfinger.
He doesn’t drink like he used to. He doesn’t kill with quite the same abandon or relish. The casual racism is gone.