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International cricket gets first woman match referee

The International Cricket Council on Tuesday (14) named GS Lakshmi as the first woman on the international panel of match referees, making her eligible to take control of men's games.

The 51-year-old Lakshmi, who first officiated as a match referee in domestic women's cricket in 2008-09, has overseen three women's one-day internationals and three Twenty20s.


Her appointment came just after Australia's Claire Polosak became the first woman umpire in a men's ODI last month.

"To be selected in the international panel by the ICC is a huge honour for me as it opens up new avenues," Lakshmi said in an ICC statement. "I have had a long career as a cricketer in India and also as a match referee."

"I hope to put my experience both as a player and as a match official to good use on the international circuit."

Meanwhile, Australia's Eloise Sheridan has joined Polosak on the ICC's umpires development panel, taking the number of women on the body that provides umpires for all internationals to eight.

Lauren Agenbag, Kim Cotton, Shivani Mishra, Sue Redfern, Mary Waldron and Jacqueline Williams are the other women on the panel.

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Leon to close restaurants and cut jobs as home working hits sales

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  • Leon considering closures among its 54 restaurants following shift to home working.
  • Chain appoints Quantuma administrators after 10 outlets already shut since October buyout.
  • Sales fell nearly 4 per cent to £62.5m in 2024 with pre-tax loss of £8.38m.

Fast food chain Leon is planning to close restaurants and cut jobs less than two months after being bought back from Asda by co-founder John Vincent, as the shift to home working continues to impact demand for takeaways.

The chain announced on Wednesday it had appointed administrators from Quantuma to lead a restructuring programme, though it did not specify how many of its 54 restaurants would close or how many staff would be affected.

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