Ice-hockey: Streatham win major silverware – and this time their supporters are there to enjoy the big moment

Streatham demolished Invicta Dynamos 16-1 on Sunday night to clinch the NIHL South Britton Cup in style.

The South Londoners had a 7-1 advantage after a big first-leg victory on Saturday night.

The six-goal advantage ahead of the return leg in Streatham ensured a party atmosphere, with the doors of the arena having to be closed after capacity was met for only the second time since it opened in 2013.

Streatham ended a 38-year wait for a trophy just prior to the pandemic, then a few weeks later

Sutton United contact the EFL in hope of expanding their academy

Sutton United are working to expand their academy structure in the wake of achieving a maiden promotion to the English Football League in May.

The academy is currently operating at category four level, offering playing contracts to the under-18s and above, and an application has been filed with the EFL’s Youth Development Department for them to be category three status.

This would enable Marvin Williams, the academy director at Sutton United, to register players from the under-nines upwards.

Former British tennis star runs one of world’s biggest coaching platforms

Former British number four Alex Slabinsky hated tennis when he started out.

He would leave sessions at the age of seven in tears, but he persisted with the sport and now runs one of the biggest online tennis coaching platforms in the world.

Slabinsky co-founded Top Tennis Training with fellow coach Simon Konov in 2014, aiming to provide accessible training strategies to a worldwide tennis-playing audience.

As it stands the company has over 150 million online views and 307,000 subscribers to i

Millwall Romans marching forwards since joining forces with Lions

Millwall Romans are on the march since their rebranding, quickly becoming the premier LGBTQI football team in London.

The side was created in 2006 and began playing their football in the newly established London Unity League, a competition which provides LGBTQI individuals and their allies with a friendly sporting environment.

Originally named the London Romans, the club went through a rebranding in early 2020 after Sean Daly, the Millwall Community Trust chief executive, offered to bring the

A labour of love – Blackheath’s medic was first in 40 years to skipper Cambridge for two seasons

For Stephen Leonard, rugby has helped ease the pressure of life in the laboratory.

The back row forward, who plays in National League 1 for 12th-placed Blackheath, featured in his side’s tight 30-36 loss to Plymouth Albion last Saturday.

Alongside his rugby career, Leonard is completing a PhD in medicine at Cambridge University and enjoys having multiple avenues of interest.

“I’ve always strived to have different things going on,” he said. “You can easily get wrapped up in the lab so Saturday

Otto Wallin: Dillian Whyte has never faced a southpaw as good as me

Otto Wallin has questioned the ingenuity of Dillian Whyte’s fighting style in the build up to their heavyweight bout at the O2 Arena later this month.

The Swedish boxer, who holds a record of 22-1, is planning on damaging Whyte’s long-held status as mandatory challenger when they enter the ring together on Saturday October 30.

Whyte’s reputation had been marred after he was knocked out by Alexander Povetkin in August 2020. The Brixton puncher defeated the Russian by technical knockout in their

Frost on Film: The Cliff’s Edge- Thelma & Louise’s finale and its influences

By 1991, director Ridley Scott was well accustomed to taking risks and yet, even for him, the finale of Thelma & Louise proved to be an outlandish proposition so immediate and surprising that its cultural impact can still be viewed today. The image of two women screaming jovially in the front seats of a convertible as they freefall off a cliff is an unforgettable one. At the time, this ending was a huge risk but it payed off considerably as Thelma & Louise became one of Scott’s biggest critical