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Thames International Entrepreneurs School Student Portal Login -thames.edu.ph

Official Thames International Entrepreneurs School Student Portal – New Login Homepage, Student Account, Mail, Application System, e-learning and lots more- Access the Thames International/Entrepreneurs School – Quezon City Website below We(zainfo.co.za Team) are pleased to inform you about How to login to the Official Thames International Entrepreneurs School Student Portal Login, Sign up,  create Students […]

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Meet the seven Man Utd wonderkids in England age-group squads after Thomas Tuchel snubbed senior stars for fourth time

MANCHESTER UNITED academy stars have made significant progress in breaking into England’s age groups.

This follows the fourth international break in a row where Thomas Tuchel hasn’t called up a single United first-team player.

Manchester United player Ayden Heaven (26) running on the field during a Premier League match.
Manchester United’s academy is well represented in England’s youth ranks
Shutterstock

United’s academy is still regarded as one of the finest youth institutions in the world – but Sir Jim Ratcliffe revealed that “standards have slipped” in his bombshell interview with the Times this week.

Here SunSport runs the rule over the seven Carrington representatives who were included in England’s youngster sides for the upcoming October international fixtures.

Shea Lacey – U20s

Lacey was called up to England U20s for the first time and was given the chance to impress Tuchel in training with the senior England squad on Wednesday.

The 18-year-old is one of the most promising young talents emerging at United having also trained with Ruben Amorim’s first-team.

Players from England’s various youth teams are regularly called into train with the senior group to bolster numbers, but Lacey has now formally introduced himself to Tuchel.

The left-footed winger has progressed rapidly through the youth ranks, making his U18 debut at age 15.

Lacey has had to overcome persistent injury problems, including a torn thigh muscle, over the last two years but there is huge excitement over his potential.

Blessed with exceptional dribbling ability, the Merseyside-born youngster has drawn early comparisons with Phil Foden and Wayne Rooney.

Shea Lacey of Manchester United dribbles the ball during the EFL Vertu Trophy match.
Shea Lacey, 18, is touted as one of the next names to break into the first-team setup
Shutterstock Editorial

Elyh Harrison – U20s

Harrison, a promising young goalkeeper who joined from Stevenage in 2022, has been called up to face Belgium and Wales’ U19s.

His outstanding performances in goal for United’s U18s and U21s saw him win the Denzil Haroun Reserve-Team Player of the Year award for the 2023/24 season.

He is currently on a season-long loan with Shrewsbury Town in League One.

Harrison was first included in Amorim’s matchday squad in United’s 3-0 win at Leicester in February.

Elyh Harrison of Shrewsbury Town.
Getty
Elyh Harrison, 19, is currently plying his trade on loan at Shrewsbury[/caption]

Ethan Wheatley – U20s

Fans have already been introduced to Wheatley, who progressed through the academy after joining at the age of nine.

The Stockport-born striker’s prolific goalscoring at the U18 and U21 levels in the 2023/24 season led to him being named the Jimmy Murphy Young Player of the Year.

He made his Premier League debut in April 2024, becoming the 250th academy graduate to play for the first team.

The 19-year-old is currently enjoying a loan spell with Northampton, where he has scored once in 10 starts for the League One side this season.

Ethan Wheatley playing for Northampton Town.
Jake Kirkman
Ethan Wheatley, 19, has already had the chance to impress in the Premier League[/caption]

Ayden Heaven – U20s

Another one who doesn’t need an introduction. Heaven is a left-footed centre-back who joined from Arsenal in February 2025 as one of Amorim’s first signings.

Despite being in his teens at the time of signing, he was immediately handed the number 26 shirt and joined the first-team squad.

Heaven quickly made his senior debut for United, first in the FA Cup, and then in United’s 1-1 draw against former club Arsenal in the Prem in March.

Ayden Heaven of Manchester United in a red and white uniform on a soccer field.
Matt West
Ayden Heaven, 19, also spent time with Arsenal and West Ham’s academies[/caption]

Jack Fletcher – U19s

Jack is the son of United legend and former Scotland international Darren Fletcher.

Like his dad, Fletcher is a highly touted central midfielder but has filled in at left-back this season, starting there against Athletic Club and Crystal Palace..

He and his twin brother, Tyler – who represents Scotland – signed for United from City’s academy in 2023 for a significant combined fee.

Fletcher has quickly established himself in the U18 and U21 squads, demonstrating his potential with eye-catching goals – most recently against Everton last Friday.

First-team sources speak highly of Jack, who is seen as the closest to breaking into the first team group alongside Lacey.

Jack Fletcher of Manchester United looking on during the FA Youth Cup match.
Getty
Jack Fletcher, 18, is hoping to follow in the footsteps of his midfielder father[/caption]

Harry Amass – U19s

Despite the chaos unfolding at Sheffield Wednesday, Amass has enjoyed an encouraging start to his loan spell at Hillsborough since joining on deadline day.

The left-back has quickly become a starter for the Owls, making five appearances in the Championship.

After making a name for himself on United’s pre-season tour of the United States in the summer of 2024, Amass appeared to be a shoo-in to become the latest graduate to make his competitive debut for the club.

Instead, he had to wait until March to make his official bow, stepping off the bench at the King Power Stadium on what was his 18th birthday.

He also made the bench for United’s 1-0 defeat to Tottenham in the Europa League final.

Harry Amass of Sheffield Wednesday applauding fans after a football match.
Shutterstock Editorial
Harry Amass, 18, featured in the first team towards the end of last season[/caption]

Bendito Mantato – U18s

Former United academy coach Neil Ryan has included Mantato, 17, in England’s U18s friendlies for a double-headed friendly against France.

The versatile player, who joined aged nine, has experience operating in multiple roles, including as a right-sided winger and at full-back.

Mantato is known for his pace, high intensity, and exceptional dribbling ability – all leading to comparisons with Arsenal star Bukayo Saka.

He has been a consistent goal threat at the U18 level and has since moved up to the U21s.

Mantato has represented England at various youth levels and was notably included in the senior squad for the Tour 2025 in the USA.

Bendito Mantato of Manchester United U21 in a black and yellow uniform.
Getty
Bendito Mantato, 17, is rated for his explosive physical attributes and technical dribbling[/caption]

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Woman whose daughter-in-law ‘depicted her as an uncaring monster’ in Facebook post loses court battle

Collage of a woman with white hair sitting in a wicker chair wearing a blue dress, and a woman with gray hair wearing a black and white patterned shirt and black coat, holding white folders.
Champion News Service Ltd news@championnews.co.uk Tel: 07948286566 / 07914583378 Yvonne Tattersall outside the High Court after hearing in dispute with mother-in-law Lynette Tattersall

AN award-winning Peaky Blinders costumier has won a £40,000 libel battle, after being accused of portraying her late husband’s mum as a “cruel, uncaring monster-in-law” on Facebook.

Yvonne Tattersall, 64, an Emmy-winning designer and costumier who supplied outfits for the hit BBC show, fell out with mother-in-law Lynette Tattersall after Mick Tattersall – Yvonne’s husband and Lynette’s son – died in 2019.

Yvonne Tattersall outside the High Court.
Yvonne Tattersall outside the High Court after hearing in dispute with mother-in-law Lynette Tattersall
Champion News Service Ltd news@championnews.co.uk Tel: 07948286566 / 07914583378 Lynette Tattersall who accused daughter-in-law Yvonne Tattersall of libel.
Lynette Tattersall who accused daughter-in-law Yvonne Tattersall of libel

It led to a legal battle over money, and spilled into the High Court after Lynette, 81, – an interior designer to the stars – accused her daughter-in-law of trashing her reputation in a Facebook post.

She claimed she was portrayed as a “cruel uncaring monster-in-law,” ruining her standing in the local community and making her feel uncomfortable in the small Lancashire community where they had both lived.

The pensioner sued Yvonne for libel, demanding £40,000 damages, but has now seen her case thrown out by a judge, who said it was “unreal” for her to think she could prove any “serious reputational damage” was caused by the post.

Rejecting her claim, Mrs Justice Collins-Rice said: “The present claim is not… a proper vehicle for the claimant’s pursuit of her grievances against the defendant,” adding that it was “not in the public interest” for Lynette to be allowed to continue with it.

A member of BAFTA, Yvonne Tattersall spent two decades as a costume designer and supervisor in film and TV, winning an Emmy for her efforts on Great Expectations, as well as working on Bridget Jones: The Edge of Reason and the 2012 movie version of Les Miserables.

After moving back to her native north west, she set up the 20th Century Costume Hire Company, which enjoyed great success, being hired for productions including Peaky Blinders, Sexy Beast and the Sex Pistols biopic Pistol.

Yvonne and Mick Tattersall were married in 2015, but he died in November 2019, with his grieving mum and widow then falling out bitterly over the couple’s family home in Billington village, near Clitheroe.

Lynette claimed she had provided her son and his wife with “financial assistance” throughout their relationship, including taking out a mortgage to allow them to purchase the house in 2012, subject to them making the repayments.

In 2021, around 18 months after her son’s death, she sued her daughter-in-law and her son’s estate, seeking an order for sale of the property so she could recoup loans and payments owed for the mortgage.

But during the county court row, which led to Yvonne paying her mother-in-law about £20,000, she made the Facebook post which led to her being sued again at the High Court.

In it, Yvonne wrote: “Went out tonight in my village for the first time in nearly two years since my husband died, I have not been able to go out because people who used to be my friend have decided to support my mother in law, a women who has tried to make me homeless and continually told lies about me.

“Anyone who really knows me knows I am not capable of what she is accusing me off.

“I no longer want anything to do with anyone who is friends with her so goodbye I shall be deleting you.”

Lynette claimed Yvonne had blackened her reputation by wrongly accusing her of trying to make her homeless, causing her to be ostracised and claiming she had lied about the younger woman.

Her barrister, Lily Walker-Parr, said: “Allegations that a mother-in-law would endeavour to make her daughter-in-law homeless, continually tell lies about her and ostracise her in her local community are particularly grave and made even worse by the fact that she has recently been widowed.

Champion News Service Ltd news@championnews.co.uk Tel: 07948286566 / 07914583378 The late Mick Tattersall, husband of costume designer Yvonne Tattersall.
The late Mick Tattersall, husband of costume designer Yvonne Tattersall
Yvonne Tattersall outside the High Court.
Champion News Service
Yvonne Tattersall has spent two decades working as a costume designer and supervisor in film and TV[/caption]
Lynette Tattersall, accused of libel, sitting in a blue chair and smiling.
Champion News Service
Lynette accused Yvonne had blackening her reputation[/caption]

“It echoes the derogatory ‘monster-in-law’ trope of the cruel uncaring mother-in-law.

Such an allegation is therefore sufficient to give rise to an inference of serious reputational harm.”

Lynette, who has since moved to Italy, claimed the September 2021 post – which was reacted to 57 times – resulted in her becoming an outcast in her home village of Billington.

One of her friends, Stephen Atkinson, gave evidence to back her account of serious reputational harm, telling the judge that Lynette was a “highly regarded interior decorator.”

“She had worked for David Moores, the former chairman of Liverpool Football Club, Richard Chamberlain from out of the Thornbirds and also All Saints, the pop group,” he said.

“She told me she used to get text messages from David Moores.

“She had also had done a lot of work for David Moyes and his wife and told me all about the parties she used to go to with them.

“She was celebrated by people who wanted to be associated with her.”

However, that all changed because of Yvonne’s Facebook post, with Mr Atkinson telling the judge that after Lynette set up home in Italy following the Facebook controversy she was shunned by her former celebrity circle.

The libel case originally went before Mr Justice Julian Knowles last year, but after he fell ill was re-listed before Mrs Justice Collins Rice, who gave judgment yesterday.

Granting Yvonne’s application to strike out the claim, she said Lynette had not shown that she suffered “serious harm” as a result of the Facebook post.

Online responses to the post were not “capable of materially supporting an inferential case that reading the allegations complained of caused the responders to think less well” of Lynette, she said.

The post had been made in the context of a “private Facebook account” and was not a mass publication, while close friends and family of Lynette would be unlikely to have had their views of her changed on the strength of it.

“The claimant testifies that, more generally since finding out about the post, she has felt ‘like people do not contact me as much as before, like they prefer to stay away or not get involved’.

“She has not wanted to return to the village in England, and has been there on only two occasion since.

“On one of those occasions she had felt uncomfortable and insecure, and describes a feeling of being stared at and not spoken to by some individuals from whom she might have expected a greater degree of warmth.

“The burden is on the claimant to establish that any of that, if accepted, can properly be attributed to readership of the words complained of to a degree capable of being described as serious reputational harm.

“The prospects of her discharging that burden on the basis of inference from this evidence can fairly, in my judgment, be described as ‘unreal’.”

Other factors – including Lynette’s loss of social confidence as a result of the row and people simply wanting to avoid becoming involved in a family dispute – were more likely explanations of her perception of how she was treated in the village, she added.

“In all these circumstances, it is my conclusion that the prospects of a court being persuaded to infer serious reputational harm from the facts and evidence before it are also unreal,” she continued.

“The inherent gravity of the words complained of is not, in context, more than modest.

“The reasonable maximum extent of primary publication is no more than moderate.

“It was to a limited class of potentially identifiable family and friends in a polarised context and there is no evidence from – or materially about – any of them.

“The immediate commentary on the post is not capable of materially supporting an inference of serious reputational harm to the claimant as a result of reading the words complained of.

“The present claim is not, for the reasons I have given, a proper vehicle for the claimant’s pursuit of her grievances against the defendant.

“It is not in the interests of justice, or the public interest, for it to proceed.”

Lynette’s claim was struck out.

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