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Jordan Henderson leads the Liverpool celebrations in Madrid. PA Wire/PA Images

Henderson's emotional embrace, the loneliness of tennis's 'snitch', and more of the week's best sportswriting

Stick on the kettle and catch up with some of our favourite pieces from the last week.

1. โ€œIt was just before Christmas in 2013 when Brian Henderson, a retired police officer from Washington, Tyne and Wear, went to have a cyst removed from his neck only to be told it was cancer and that there was no guarantee, as there never is with that cruel, indiscriminate disease, that he would see it off. At first he did not want to tell his son, Jordan, because he was worried about how it might affect the performances of a player, then 23, who was already finding it hard enough to prove he was worthy of succeeding Steven Gerrard at Liverpool.โ€ 

An emotional embrace between Liverpool captain Jordan Henderson and his father, Brian, was one of the enduring images from the Redsโ€™ Champions League final win. Daniel Taylor tells the Hendersonsโ€™ story in the Guardian.

2. โ€œIn July 2017, Tonosa arrived on these shores with the intention of running a couple of races, at the Morton Games and Cork City Sports, and returning home. Paying his own airfare and being left with just a quarter of the โ‚ฌ800 prize money due to him by an agent was the latest challenge in his career. He had just recovered from calf and Achilles problems which had sidelined him for six months after being flogged with road races by his club in Japan. After that negative experience, he returned to Ethiopia. This time, it was not an option.โ€

The Irish Sunโ€™s Neil Oโ€™Riordan meets Hiko Tonosa, the Irish national 10k champion, to learn about his life in Direct Provision and his 2020 Olympic dream.

3. โ€One Ohio winterโ€™s night, somebody stuck four sticks of dynamite in the front wheel well of Don Elbaumโ€™s โ€˜67 Pontiac in the car park of the Highlander Motor Inn in Warrensville Heights. As the police sifted through the wreckage from the explosion, a detective started to ask Elbaum the type of questions usually posed to a person whoโ€™d just avoided assassination. Was there anybody he owed money too? Did he know of a particular individual with a reason to want him dead? Perhaps he could name possible suspects? The boxing promoter looked at the cop, smiled and said, โ€œYouโ€™re going to need a bigger notebook.โ€โ€

As Don Elbaum is inducted into the International Boxing Hall of Fame, Dave Hanniganโ€™s Irish Times column looks back on the legendary promoterโ€™s life and legacy.

4. โ€The synergy between player and city cut still deeper. Naples exists on a faultline and in the shadow of a volcano, in close proximity to the cults of death and after-life, replete with what northern Europeans and Protestants call superstition. โ€œYou donโ€™t know what you missed,โ€ read graffiti on a cemetery wall after the second championship in 1990, when celebrations lasted three nights. โ€œHow do you know we missed it?โ€ came a retort.โ€

Ed Vulliamy was the Guardianโ€™s Italy correspondent from 1989-1994. As Asif Kapadiaโ€™s new Diego Maradona documentary hits cinemas, Vulliamy looks back on the โ€˜unearthly and sometimes dark magicโ€™ that the magician and the city of Naples combined to produce. 

5. โ€œMarco Trungelliti was the feel-good story of last yearโ€™s French Open. A last-minute spot in the main draw had become available to players who had lost in qualifying, and Trungelliti, ranked 190th at the time, claimed it after driving back to Paris from Barcelona with his mother and his 88-year-old grandmother in the back seat. When he upset Bernard Tomic in the first round, reporters clamored to hear the tale of his 650-mile journey. Two weeks ago, Trungelliti was back in Paris. This time he was alone, physically and emotionally broken after a year of isolation and ostracization.โ€

The New York Timesโ€™ Ben Rothenberg meets Argentine tennis player Marco Trungelliti, a whistleblower whose testimony has been central in the sportโ€™s fight against match fixing.

6. โ€Shaw plays down Jamaicaโ€™s violence but, in all, she lost four brothers. A fourth died in a car accident, while a second nephew was electrocuted on a football pitch. The hardest thing, for her, was not being able to say goodbye. The deaths of her nephews came while she was studying and playing football in Florida and, understandably, she wanted to quit and go back home. โ€œSoccer is a way for me to forget a lot of things,โ€ she says.โ€

As the Womenโ€™s World Cup kicks off, Alistair Magowan tells the story of Khadija โ€˜Bunnyโ€™ Shaw for BBC Sport.

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    Mute Gillian Scully
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    Feb 1st 2018, 9:03 AM

    Oh well that is okay then.

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    Mute Alois Irlmaier
    Favourite Alois Irlmaier
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    Feb 1st 2018, 11:35 PM

    @Gillian Scully: They were proved innocent, what about Western Athletes on TUEโ€™s from Wada?

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    Mute PJ Connolly
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    Feb 2nd 2018, 10:00 AM

    @Alois Irlmaier: not proved innocent, just not proved guilty. Big difference.

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    Mute Dave O Keeffe
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    Feb 1st 2018, 9:10 AM

    Is the wording relevant? They found that they hadnโ€™t benefited from it, does that mean they didnโ€™t do it at all or they did it and failed?

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    Mute John Joseph Barry
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    Feb 1st 2018, 9:51 AM

    Have lost interest in Olympic sport a long time ago. Donโ€™t trust anything I see.

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    Mute Joe O'riordan
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    Feb 1st 2018, 9:39 AM

    Great news !

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    Mute Austin Rock
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    Feb 1st 2018, 10:43 AM

    Life bans are ridiculous they are hard to maintain in real courts of law, CAS/DRA once sports rulings impinge on natural justice they are in trouble. Blanket bans are politically motivated decisions, athletes are entitled to serve a time ban. Not that it means anything any way look at the persecution of the Munster Rugby player โ€“ crazy

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    Mute David O'Brien
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    Feb 1st 2018, 1:39 PM

    Lee Evans said it best. Just let them all take drugs. Do the bobsled event by running down the track in about 4.5 seconds. Iโ€™d watch That!

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    Mute Shawn O'Ceallaghan
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    Feb 1st 2018, 7:49 PM

    @David Oโ€™Brien: yep . Just have 2 seperate events juiced vs clean and have a big event after to see if clean can beat juiced naturally.

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    Mute Alois Irlmaier
    Favourite Alois Irlmaier
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    Feb 1st 2018, 11:36 PM

    @David Oโ€™Brien: They are as they are called TUEโ€™s once that country pays a wad of cash to the right organisation, which Russia hasnโ€™t.

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    Mute Chris Finn
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    Feb 1st 2018, 12:40 PM

    Not sufficient evidence?? The head of the lab said there overwhelming amount. Of doping lol

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    Mute Alois Irlmaier
    Favourite Alois Irlmaier
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    Feb 1st 2018, 11:42 PM

    @Chris Finn: Is that the same head who got US citizenship for saying that the Russian athletes took drugs and was set up in his own lab in the US. Why give him his own lab??? The same man who told athletes to drink the steroids in Martinis, that was funny as steroids are injected not mixed in alcohol that can change the steroid chemically. As well as sticking bottles in and out of holes in a wall where there was never any evidence of holes in the wallโ€ฆ But who cares about factsโ€ฆ They are Russian so they must have done something bad because the US tells us what to believeโ€ฆ

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    Mute Alois Irlmaier
    Favourite Alois Irlmaier
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    Feb 1st 2018, 11:34 PM

    IOC in my view trying to save face, if Russia doesnโ€™t play by U.S. political rules dictated by their own business lobbyists the U.S. will turn the West against Russia. The US has turned the Olympics into a political battle field while Western Athletes continue with their TUEโ€™s where asthmatics are being used to win gold medals for countries over healthy athletes. The corruption in my view just blows my mindโ€ฆ

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