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No Writer
Apr 2
Storm Dave - Met Office names latest storm as it warns of 'damaging winds and disruptive snow' over Easter weekend

A warning for very strong winds that could cause damage and travel disruption was issued for parts of the UK over the weekend. It is set to bring damaging winds across northern parts of the UK later on Saturday and into Easter Sunday, with some disruptive snow possible as well in northwest Scotland. Check for your latest forecast here The Met Office said delays to road, rail, air and ferry transport were likely from 6pm on Saturday until midday Sunday for Scotland, Northern Ireland, North Wales and an area of northern England stretching from Liverpool to Newcastle. It has issued a number of medium impact yellow severe weather warnings for wind across these areas. Winds of up to 90mph - the strongest forecast - could be possible in western Scotland, with gusts of 70mph more widely. Snow is also forecast, with a 12-hour yellow warning issued for northwest Scotland starting at 3pm on Saturday, with up to 5-10cm (2-4ins) possible in areas over 200m (656ft) in northern Scotland. Forecasters added that there was a chance of power cuts, with the potential to affect other services such as mobile phone coverage. Dave is the fourth named weather system of the year and the name was chosen after being nominated for "my beloved husband who can snore three times louder than any storm". Read more on Sky News: Skies turn blood red in Crete200 year-old tortoise 'still alive' Deputy chief forecaster Tom Crabtree said the storm will form and rapidly deepen on Saturday as it approaches the UK from the west. "By Saturday afternoon winds will strengthen significantly, with gusts of 60-70mph expected at times across parts of Scotland with the potential for gusts of 80-90mph in exposed coastal locations in Scotland. Gusts of 50-60mph are likely more widely in northern Britain," he said. Blizzards are possible over the hills of northern Scotland as heavy snowfall of up to 10-20cm combines with strong winds. Elsewhere, there will be heavy spells of rain as the system moves through eastwards across the UK, he said. With the worst of the weather system a few days away, he advised those in the firing line to "prepare their property for the strong winds". There is a divide between the north and south of the UK, as further south it will be "breezy" and "much drier", with "some good sunny spells, particularly on Sunday afternoon and at times on Monday", the forecaster added. Very strong southerly winds are forecast for parts of Ireland on Saturday.

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No Writer
Apr 2
BBC sacked Scott Mills 'after discovering alleged victim in police investigation was under 16'

The 53-year-old, who hosted the Radio 2 breakfast show, had his contract terminated last Friday over an allegation relating to his "personal conduct". It emerged the Metropolitan Police had launched an investigation into Mills in December 2016 over "allegations of serious sexual offences against a teenage boy", said to have taken place between 1997 and 2000. However, the Crown Prosecution Service ultimately decided "the evidential threshold had not been met to bring charges", and the case was closed in May 2019, the police force added. The BBC confirmed on Wednesday that the organisation was aware of the investigation in 2017, but dismissed him after receiving "new information" in recent weeks. The broadcaster reported on Thursday that the corporation had sacked the presenter "after learning the alleged victim in the police investigation was under 16". "It is not clear if BBC managers at the time of the investigation in 2017 knew the age - but current management only became aware in recent weeks and took action," it said. Outgoing BBC director general Tim Davie said in a leaked recording of what seems to be an internal exit interview obtained by Sky News that new information had "quite recently" come to light, which made the decision the broadcaster needed to make "very clear". "It has been a tough week with Scott Mills and it's been a real shock to the organisation," he said. Rhodri Talfan Davies, who is taking over the Mr Davie's position, said in the interview there are "lines and when individuals cross across the line, irrespective of the seniority or their profile, there are consequences". On Wednesday Mills issued his first public statement since news broke of his dismissal. "An allegation was made against me in 2016 of a historic sexual offence which was the subject of a police investigation in which I fully cooperated and responded to in 2018," he said. "As the police have stated, a file of evidence was submitted to the Crown Prosecution Service, which determined that the evidential threshold had not been met to bring charges. "Since the investigation related to an allegation that dates back nearly 30 years and the police investigation was closed seven years ago, I hope that the public and the media will understand and respect my wish not to make any further public comment on this matter." Read more from Sky News:Resident doctors lose jobs package and will strikeMother who lost sight after birth has vision restored Mills' final show before he was taken off-air by the BBC was on Tuesday 24 March. He signed off by saying "back tomorrow", but the following day's show was presented by Gary Davies, who did not give a reason for Mills' absence. Mills took over from Zoe Ball on Radio 2's breakfast show in 2025 after a long career at the BBC and regional radio. He was paid between £355,000 and £359,999. Earlier on Wednesday, a BBC spokesperson said the corporation "spoke directly" with Mills before terminating his contract. The statement went on: "The BBC has made a significant commitment to improve its culture, processes and standards. "Last year, following an independent culture review, we set out the behavioural expectations for everyone who works with or for the BBC and we were clear action would be taken if these were not met."

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No Writer
Apr 2
Resident doctors lose jobs package and will strike next week

Sir Keir Starmer issued an ultimatum on Tuesday, saying the government would withdraw its offer of thousands of NHS jobs, extra training places, and pay reforms if the walkout wasn't called off within 48 hours. With no agreement reached, the medics – formerly known as junior doctors – will strike for six days from 7 April. The British Medical Association's (BMA) resident doctors' committee has maintained the government's pay rise offer does not go far enough to deal with the cost of living. Sir Keir has pointed out the 3.5% proposal is above inflation and would take their total raise over three years to 35%. Writing in The Times earlier this week, he said strikes would be "reckless" and damage the NHS. But the committee's chair, Dr Jack Fletcher, said the government's approach was "extremely disappointing". Using the offer of more training places as a "pawn" in negotiations was "simply wrong", he said. "We have consistently maintained that we are willing to postpone industrial action should a genuinely credible offer be provided. This remains the case now, up to, and throughout any period of industrial action," he added. More from Sky News:Scott Mills breaks silenceClaims of sex scandal 'cover-up' A Department of Health and Care spokesperson maintained the deal on offer was "generous". "Because the BMA resident doctor committee has not agreed to call off these strikes and put an offer to members, we will now not be able to deliver the 1,000 extra training places which the BMA asked for," they said. "These posts would have gone live this month, but as systems now need to prepare for strikes and more uncertainty, it simply won't be operationally or financially possible to launch these posts in April in time to recruit for this year. "This won't impact the overall number of resident doctors, and the NHS will be there for patients when they need it." They said attention must now turn towards protecting patients by minimising disruption during the walkout. It will be the 15th round of strikes by resident doctors in England since 2023.

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No Writer
Apr 2
Tottenham: Premier League relegation to Championship possibility put into perspective by Spurs transfer spend, stadium size and trophies

For all the analysis of what has gone wrong to leave Spurs in this perilous position, the sheer scale of the club makes a possible demotion to the second tier hard to comprehend... Squad cost Tottenham have the sixth most valuable squad in the Premier League. Yet, here they are, 17th in the table. Back where they finished last season - but this time in real danger of the drop. Live Premier League table | Watch FREE PL highlightsGot Sky? Watch Premier League games LIVE on your phone📱Not got Sky? Get Sky Sports or stream with no contract on NOW 📺 The £747.8m combined valuation of Spurs players is so far in excess of the squad cost of other sides battling relegation it will leave fans questioning whether their players are really worth such astronomical figures. It's no surprise they are the biggest underperformers when that ranking is stacked against league position. Wages When it comes to value for money, it's also worth noting Spurs rank seventh in the Premier League for wages paid, according to Capology. Their gross annual payroll for this season is estimated at £136.8m - that's £49.3m more than Nottingham Forest and £62.6m more than West Ham, two teams they are battling with for top-flight survival. If Spurs were relegated, the below chart hints at the enormity of cost-cutting they may have to undergo. Currently their wage bill is more than three times that of the most highly-paid Championship squad - Leicester City. Their new boss Roberto De Zerbi doesn't have a relegation release clause in his contract. Transfer spending The transfer market is another big point of difference between where Spurs are and where they could be headed. They spent almost as much in the two transfer windows this season as the entirety of the Championship combined. Spurs' transfer spending over the past five seasons is equivalent to 67 per cent of transfer fees paid by the three teams relegated (or currently in the relegation zone) combined across those seasons. Revenue and debt Tottenham ranked ninth across Europe in the Deloitte Money League 2026. Their revenue for the 2024/25 season was 672.6m Euros - that was £565m at the exchange rate in January when the report was published - placing Spurs just behind Man Utd and ahead of fellow heavyweights Chelsea and Inter Milan. Championship clubs had a combined revenue of £958m for the 2023/24 season, although that figure fluctuates substantially season-on-season depending on which clubs are in the league. Spurs also had a net debt of £772m in June 2024, which was mainly made up of loans used to finance the building of their stadium. Championship net debt in 23/24 was £1.5bn. Stadium size 'Tottenham away, ole, ole,' sang Lincoln City fans gleefully last month. The prospect of the Imps going to Spurs' £1bn stadium as Championship rivals next season has frequently been noted to highlight the enormity of Tottenham's potential tumble out of the top flight. But perhaps it would be the reverse match which would really underline the point - Lincoln's LNER Stadium can host 10,130 fans in contrast to the 62,850 capacity at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium. It's a world away from the venues Spurs' multi-millionaire footballers are used to playing at. The smallest stadium in the Championship right now is Oxford United's Kassam Stadium, with a 12,500 capacity. Season ticket prices A change of league could also hit Spurs in the pocket when it comes to what they could charge for tickets. Adult season tickets this season at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium cost between £856 and £2,223. At Championship side QPR you could get a season ticket for £262. Training ground When it comes to facilities, the magnificent Spurs training centre is another point of contrast. The state-of-the-art venue, which boasts its own on-site accommodation, cost £45m to build and opened in 2012. If you adjust that for inflation that is the equivalent of £65.6m - dwarfing the £10m Championship side Stoke City spent on their training ground which opened in February 2026. Honours So would Tottenham be the biggest team ever to be relegated from the Premier League? While their finances would suggest so, there may be other clubs rivalling them for that unwanted accolade when it comes to honours. The below table shows the number of titles a team had when they were first relegated from the Premier League. Seven-time champions of England Aston Villa went down in 2016. If Spurs were to drop, last season's Europa League triumph means they would be the first side to go down having won the Champions League or Europa League (European Cup/UEFA Cup) on three occasions. Leeds and Huddersfield have also been relegated from the Premier League and have both won more league titles than Spurs (three each). Social media following In the modern world, we can also measure the size of a club by their social media following. Spurs have almost 10 million more followers on Instagram than the Championship's most-followed club Leicester City. The Foxes account for a major chunk of the 18.67 million followers of Championship clubs combined on that platform, which only just surpasses the 17.38 million who follow Spurs. Counting the cost for Spurs... Relegation from the Premier League would be a big hit to the prestige of Tottenham Hotspur. As the figures above show, they are a behemoth of English football in so many areas. But their enormity would also mean a drop to the Championship would hit them substantially on the balance sheet. Relegation would cost around £100m. Unless they win the Champions League, they will be substantially worse off for not playing in Europe's elite club competition. They pocketed £45.5m in prize money alone this season for reaching the last-16, with broadcast revenue to be added to that figure. Will attendances remain as strong in the second tier? Currently, 22 per cent of Spurs' income is from matchday revenue. They would receive a Premier League parachute payment of around £50m, though, if they spend one season in the Championship. The figures across the board are enormous - and highlight the scale of a potential relegation for Spurs. Sky Sports News special: Inside Spurs On Thursday at 7pm, Sky Sports News will be airing a special programme about Spurs' issues with their ever-present Premier League status under serious threat. 'Inside Spurs' will feature special guests, including Jamie O'Hara, to dissect and examine the club's predicament as they aim to avoid a first relegation in 49 years. The programme will also analyse the appointment of Roberto De Zerbi, who has just become the club's third head coach of the season.

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Katerina Vittozzi, north of England correspondent
Apr 2
Hull funeral director Robert Bush admits preventing 30 burials - as families say he should 'rot in jail'

Dozens of bodies and ashes from different people were recovered from a funeral home in Hull in March 2024. Some of the remains had been stored in varying states of decay for nearly a year after relatives thought they had been buried or cremated. Robert Bush initially denied all the charges, but changed his pleas at Hull Crown Court on Thursday to admit preventing the lawful and decent burials of 30 bodies. The 48-year-old was charged after police found human remains at his premises, including those of four unborn babies. Standing in the dock, the funeral director pleaded guilty to each of the allegations one by one. He was bailed until his sentencing hearing on 27 July. Bush also previously denied one charge of theft from 12 charities - including the Salvation Army, RNLI, Dogs Trust and Macmillan Cancer Support - and has now pleaded guilty to this offence, too. At a hearing in October 2025, Bush admitted 35 counts of false representation and one count of fraudulent trading in relation to funeral plans. Thirty-four of the false representation charges relate to human remains. The offences span more than 10 years and relate to more than 300 victims. Humberside Police began its inquiry into Legacy Independent Funeral Directors after a report of "concern for care of the deceased" in March 2024. Bush was initially charged in April 2025. In a statement after Bush's change of pleas, Detective Superintendent Alan Curtis said: "The utter devastation and emotional harm Robert Bush has caused to hundreds of victims and families cannot be underestimated. "They trusted he would look after those who meant the most to them, and that he would treat their loved ones with dignity, respect and in accordance with their wishes. This did not happen." Read more from Sky News:Vision restored to mother blinded after birthWoman, 88, dies after being hit by lorry Hull City Council described what Bush did as "unprecedented". The East Riding of Yorkshire Council said the past two years had been "distressing and intense" for affected families, as well as council workers dealing with the aftermath. Karen Dry, whose parents' funerals were organised by Bush, spoke for some of the other families outside court, noting there are still "many unanswered questions" following the guilty pleas. "When this ordeal started, we were blindsided. We had no idea of the level of repulsive and sickening findings inside that funeral directors' building," Ms Dry told reporters. "There is an enduring sense of deep betrayal, emotional stress and damage caused by this individual, to many families right across the city." Deputy chief crown prosecutor for the Crown Prosecution Service Laura Tams said treating families with a lack of decency and dignity "caused them additional trauma". She said: "The impact on the families and wider community has been profound. At their most vulnerable time, when seeking dignity and closure for their loved ones, these families were subjected to appalling violations of trust. "At the heart of this case is the absolute lack of dignity shown by Robert Bush to the loved ones in his care and to their families." Bush had previously admitted other charges; including one count of fraud in relation to human ashes - involving more than 50 victims - and one count of fraudulent trading in relation to funeral plans - covering more than 200 victims. Families had paid him in advance for the funerals, only for him to use the money for his own purposes. Four of the fraud counts relate to mothers who had lost babies in pregnancy and asked Bush to arrange the cremation of their stillborn child. His crimes at Legacy Independent Funeral Directors were uncovered after police received reports the deceased were not being properly looked after at one of the three homes he operated. Many families will never know for sure if they received the right ashes, while others thought their loved one had been cremated when their body was still at the funeral parlour. Humberside Police say it was impossible to identify any of the ashes using DNA testing. The body of Michaela Baldwin's stepdad, Danny Middleton, was found at Legacy several months after his funeral. She told Sky News the family had joked in the pub after the service that the coffin looked too small as he was a "big guy". "We don't reckon he was in that coffin," says Ms Baldwin. "It was too small for him to fit in it." The family believed Legacy cremated Danny after the funeral, with his son going to pick up what they believed were Mr Middleton's ashes. "My nieces were planning on using the ashes to make into bits of jewellery, things like that." It wasn't until about four months later that police informed the family that Mr Middleton's body was still at the funeral home, wearing his hospital band with his name and details on. "The first thing is, whose [ashes] have we got?" says Ms Baldwin. "Why have they still got his body? Have they done anything to his body? What was he [Bush] gonna do? And the questions keep going and going." Ms Baldwin believes Bush was driven by "pure greed" and should "rot in jail". "He's a monster, he's got no empathy, no compassion, no nothing." The family initially felt they had let Danny down and say discovering how his body had been treated was like "losing him all over again". "It's horrible to think of him just laying there, forgotten, because that's not the sort of guy he was. We all loved him," says Ms Baldwin. Mr Middleton's body was later cremated - with his son staying with him to make sure it was done properly. The family are now urging more oversight of funeral services: "You have to have more regulations to open a sandwich shop than you do a funeral parlour," says Ms Baldwin. 'How could he destroy so many lives?' Jo Moody's father, Peter, died in November 2023. The family also used Robert Bush's services, holding a small ceremony at Legacy's on-site chapel. They thought Bush had taken Peter's body to an off-site location shortly afterwards for cremation, paying for that service with the money the family had, in turn, paid him. "I thought I'd sent my dad to where he needed to be," Ms Moody tells Sky News. She says she was "bewildered" when police came to her door months later to say her father's remains had been found. Describing Bush as "evil", Ms Moody says his actions robbed her of "happy" memories of her dad: "Yes, I have some, but they always come back to [Bush's] face and that Legacy building." The family held a second funeral but were still traumatised by what happened at his first. "I stood there by the coffin," Ms Moody says, "and I looked the vicar in the eye and asked her: 'Is that my Dad in there?'" She couldn't believe she was having to ask - but says the vicar replied: "I promise you, that's him in there." "How could [Bush] be so cold, to destroy so many lives as he's destroyed? I just want to know why," she adds. 'You felt you could totally trust him' Karen Dry was also affected by the Legacy scandal. Her parents weren't included in the police case but she's still uncertain if she has the right ashes for her mum and dad. She told Sky News that Bush came across as "professional but charming" and that he worked from a clean and tidy office. Mrs Dry says both funerals for her parents, Allan and Betty Griffin, also appeared well organised to the extent she'd even put a provision in her will for Legacy to do her own funeral. "He [Bush] was there to console... He was the one that was guiding you, making sure everything you wanted for your parents' funeral was taken care of. You felt you could totally trust him," she says. When the horrific situation appeared in the media, Mrs Dry phoned victim support and was asked if her parents had any distinguishing features. "That's the point at which you know that what they've found in there is really horrific and really quite shocking," she says. "To be asking for distinguishing features is not something you're going to expect to be asking six and eight years after they've died." Despite her parents not being among the bodies, the nightmare was not over. Police revealed they had also found "a quantity of ashes" from dozens of different people at the business. "They can't do any DNA on the ashes because obviously it's cremated, there's no DNA to be had," says Mrs Dry. "So we'll forever wonder if we have the right ones or not." Bush's motive remains unclear, but she says if it was greed then "no sentence will be long enough". "It makes me sick to my stomach," she adds. Mrs Dry is calling for major reform of the funeral industry, including the following: measures to ensure a funeral director isn't holding a body for an abnormal amount of time; procedures for when a funeral home leaves a premises and moves elsewhere; a ban on firms moving bodies around the UK to a cheaper crematorium. She warns: "If regulation doesn't happen - and doesn't happen soon - there will be another Legacy."

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No Writer
Apr 2
Jesy Nelson celebrates plans for rollout of SMA screenings for newborn babies

The former Little Mix star has campaigned for all newborn babies to be screened for the rare condition after her twins, Ocean Jade and Story Monroe Nelson, were diagnosed. They were found to have the condition, which causes progressive muscle wastage, which Nelson says means they will probably never walk, after being born prematurely last year. The 34-year-old launched a petition for more health checks for babies, appearing on Sky News to promote her campaign, and it reached 100,000 signatures. Health Secretary Wes Streeting has now announced the checks will be rolled out as part of in-screening evaluations from this October, rather than January 2027. These are used to test proposed screening programmes before they are adopted nationally. In a letter to Nelson and Giles Lomax, the boss of the SMA UK charity, Mr Streeting said he was keen on a full rollout and promised to keep them updated. Nelson, a patron of the charity, celebrated the news in a post on Instagram. "I am so proud, as this is a major milestone for the SMA community," she said. More from Sky News:Watch historic moon launchTrump says war aims 'near completion' Early treatment can help prevent some of the most devastating consequences of her twins' condition. They have had a one-off infusion that puts a missing gene back into their body to stop other muscles from dying, however, they will not be able to regain any muscles that have already died. Mr Lomax said his charity would continue to work towards a UK-wide rollout of SMA screening, adding: "No baby should be left behind based on where they live."

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No Writer
Apr 2
Reform UK housing chief sacked over 'deeply dehumanising' Grenfell comments

Sir Keir Starmer and opposition parties had called for Simon Dudley to be sacked as Reform's new housing spokesman after he said the 72 deaths were a "tragedy and a failure" but "everyone dies in the end". Politics latest: UK to host virtual summit to discuss 'viable plan' for reopening Strait of Hormuz Reform leader Mr Farage revealed on Thursday morning Mr Dudley had been sacked, adding: "He's no longer a spokesman for the party." Mr Farage added that his comments were "frankly rather shocking to many people". An inquiry into the 2017 blaze in west London found the deaths were avoidable and preventable, while safety concerns were regularly ignored by local and national politicians. Grenfell United, which represents some of the survivors and bereaved, said in a statement on Thursday: "Our loved ones did not simply 'die.' They were failed. "They were trapped in their homes, in a building that should have been safe, in a fire that should never have happened. Reducing their deaths to an inevitability strips away the truth: this was preventable. "To speak about Grenfell in this way is to erase responsibility. It suggests this was just fate, just 'how it goes,' rather than the result of years of ignored warnings, poor decisions, and a failure to value the lives of residents, and is deeply offensive and ill-informed. "Everyone deserves the right to a safe home. But this attitude clearly shows Simon Dudley is not the man to ensure that happens." In an interview with industry magazine Inside Housing, published on Wednesday, Mr Dudley said the building safety regulations introduced after the Grenfell fire were not working. "That was a tragedy, it was a failure," he said. "Sadly, you know, everyone dies in the end. It's just how you go, right? "Extracting Grenfell from the statistics, actually people dying in house fires is rare. Many, many more people die on the roads driving cars - but we're not making cars illegal, so why are we stopping houses being built?" On Thursday morning, the prime minister called on Reform leader Nigel Farage to sack Mr Dudley over his comments. Read more: Farage no longer wants a deal with the Tories, he wants to destroy themWill new donor rules hit Reform's finances? Mr Farage brought Mr Dudley, a former head of Homes England, in as an expert to advise the party after he joined Reform in February. He is a former Conservative leader of Windsor and Maidenhead Council, when he called for "aggressive begging" to be tackled in Windsor ahead of the Duke and Duchess of Sussex's wedding. Mr Dudley retweeted a post quoting his "everyone dies in the end" comments on Wednesday. But after calls came for him to be sacked, Mr Dudley said Grenfell was "an utter tragedy and quite rightly prompted a wholesale review and tightening of fire regulations". He added: "In no shape or form am I belittling that disaster or the huge loss of life. It must never happen again. "I reiterate that, and am sorry if it was not sufficiently clear.

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No Writer
Apr 2
Mikaela Mayer targets Chantelle Cameron unification fight and Claressa Shields by early 2027

Mayer, who signed with Jake Paul's Most Valuable Promotions last month on a three-year contract, is the reigning WBC and WBA super-welterweight world champion and also holds the WBO welterweight title. However, she was forced to vacate the WBO title which Cameron will fight Michaela Kotaskova for this Sunday night, live on Sky Sports, as part of an exciting all-women's bill which also sees Caroline Dubois take on Terri Harper. Caroline Dubois reacts to Terri Harper shove: 'Now I'll knock her out in four rounds'Buy tickets for Caroline Dubois vs Terri Harper billNot got Sky? Get Sky Sports or stream with no contract on NOW "I want big names only. This is probably the last contract I'll sign so this might be it. I only want the biggest super fights that I can get," Mayer told Sky Sports News. "Chantelle Cameron is up there, Lauren Price is definitely up there, Claressa Shields. If I could get those three back to back, that would be ideal. But you never know what's going to happen in boxing. You have got to roll with the punches. Things always change." Asked if Caroline Dubois would also be an option, or if Cameron is more likely, she said: "Chantelle Cameron. She's fighting this weekend for the belt that I just vacated at 154lbs. I still have two other belts at 154, so assuming she gets the win this weekend, we can fight for a big unification fight. "I'm not opposed to Caroline Dubois. Right now, she's at 135 and I do have some big names on the horizon for me that I really want to get done. Lauren Price being one of them, as she's undisputed at 147. I'm here to make the fights the fans want to see, so never say never." Nakisa Bidarian, co-founder of MVP, added: "Mikaela's a phenomenal superstar in the US, so bringing the two of them together is going to be electric. "If that's what Chantelle wants and that's what Mikaela wants, we'll do everything we can to make it happen." Mayer wants Shields by early 2027 Another target for Mayer is a super-fight with US compatriot Claressa Shields, who is the undisputed heavyweight champion. Mayer and Shields were team-mates on the 2016 USA Olympic squad, with the former boxing at lightweight and the latter winning middleweight gold for a second time in Brazil. After becoming a unified professional world champion at super-featherweight, Mayer moved through divisions to win the WBO welterweight title. Shields has had a stellar unbeaten professional career, winning world championships at super-welter, middle, super-middle and most recently heavyweight. She became the first undisputed heavyweight champion in women's boxing when she beat Danielle Perkins in February. Mayer said: "We've been friends for a long time, so I don't know how close we'll be if that fight gets done. You never know, we're both fighters at heart, so we'll see how that affects our friendship. "It would be a great fight. I have the work rate, the size now and the skill, so I really hope to get that done, hopefully by early next year." Mayer: Dubois to beat Harper on points This Sunday's all-female card is headlined by Dubois fighting Harper for the WBC and WBO lightweight world titles at London's Olympia. The build-up has been heated with the pair exchanging verbal jibes and Harper pushing her rival during a photo shoot earlier this week. Mayer, no stranger to tense fight weeks, said women's boxing "needs rivalries" to continue to grow and expects Dubois to win. "It's going to be a great fight. If I had to pick a winner, I might have to go with Caroline Dubois, just because of her amateur pedigree. She's a really good boxer but Terri Harper has always given us the fights we want to see. "She has never been scared to step in the ring with challenging good opponents. We see it in her resume, and so you can't you can't look past it, you can't count her out. "It'll definitely go to decision. Caroline is probably the better, more technically sound boxer. I don't see her stopping Terri Harper." Watch Caroline Dubois vs Terri Harper live on Sky Sports on Sunday April 5. Stream with no contract on NOW

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