'I am SICK of looking at these bums and listening to their excuses': Frustrated Tyson Fury rips into 'COWARDS' Anthony Joshua and Dillian Whyte, and demands to know if AJ will step aside for him to fight Oleksandr Usyk as he waits for his next bout but legendary midfielder shut down the chat after just 30 seconds Gary Neville reveals his 'full-on assault' to persuade Steven Gerrard to leave Liverpool for bitter rivals Manchester United while on England duty in 2004. Meet the very glamorous - and controversial - poster girl of the Winter Olympics: Eileen Gu was born in the USA but has switched to represent China, smashed skiing records and graced Vogue's front cover as a model.
The last of the large Humbers were finally sold in 1968. The Suez Crisis and rising oil prices meant owners couldn’t haggle a part-exchange – not even for the new, fuel-efficient car of the era, the Mini. With thirsty, six-cylinder engines they guzzled fuel at just five miles per gallon. Humbers fell out of favour in the late Fifties. The car is still affectionately known by the nickname he gave it, Old Faithful. His 4.5-litre model covered 60,000 miles around Europe in less than a year. The most famous, staff car No M239485, was used by Field Marshal Montgomery from the D-Day landings until the end of the war. Specially modified Super Snipe models were turned into field cars during World War II. The car’s robust build quality and reliability attracted the attention of the Army too. Every prime minister of the day arrived at Downing Street in a Humber Winston Churchill boasted a fleet of five Humber Pullmans. He was so impressed by the limousines that after the war he ordered 47 to be sent to British embassies around the world. The future King George VI took delivery of his first Humber in 1935. I’ve even used it to tow a 16-ton lorry from York to Hull.’
Once I took the back seats out to deliver spuds to fish and chip shops. She used it in London and kept the car garaged at Claridges hotel. It was a 1954 Pullman built for Baroness Rothschild. ‘My father, Reg, bought his first one 51 years ago for £90. The bonnet of a 1951 seven-seater Humber Pullman, with 30,000 miles on the clock the badge is a snipe, a game bird famous for being fast and agileĪllan Marshall, 55, keeps 27 Humbers in a 10,000 sq ft building next to his lorry depot.