Harrogate-born Finlay Bean has scored the first century of the county cricket season while playing for Yorkshire.
Bean, 20, made headlines last year when he scored 441 for Yorkshire second XI — the highest score in second X1 championship history.
At the time he didn’t have a professional contract and played for York Cricket Club but he was subsequently signed by Yorkshire and made his first class debut against Lancashire in September.
Bean, who studied at Ripon Grammar School and Queen Ethelburga’s, scored 118 off 149 balls against Leicestershire in the opening day of the first fixture of the year at Headingley.
The four-day match is still ongoing.
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- Harrogate village cricket pavilion destroyed in suspected arson attack
- Harrogate’s most eye-catching cricketers set for another season
Harrogate village cricket pavilion destroyed in suspected arson attack
Arsonists are believed to have destroyed a cricket pavilion in a village near Harrogate.
Firefighters from Harrogate and Knaresborough were called to Weeton Lane in Weeton at 8.40pm last night to reports of a shed fire.
North Yorkshire Fire and Rescue Service’s incident log added:
“On arrival this was found to be a wooden cricket pavilion which was completely destroyed. Crews used one hose reel to extinguish the fire.”
The incident log did not give a cause of fire but villagers have reported seeing youths fleeing from the scene.
The cricket club in Weeton folded years ago and the pavilion had fallen into a state of disrepair.
Some frustrated villagers are keen to mount a campaign to restore the site to community use.

Man’s hand burned
In a separate incident later last night, Harrogate firefighters responded at 10.30pm to a smoke alarm going off in a house on Olive Grove in Harrogate.
The incident log said:
“This involved a candle which is believed to have been left unattended, causing smouldering to surrounding surface.
“One male suffered burns to his hand, received treatment from fire crew and will make his own way to hospital. Crew also ventilated property. Burn pack used.”
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Renewed call to move Harrogate ‘little temple’ to Starbeck
A Starbeck community group has made a renewed call to bring Harrogate’s “little temple” to the area.
An application was tabled by North Yorkshire County Council in November last year to remove the tempietto in Station Square to make way for the £11.2 million Station Gateway scheme.
The proposal was approved by Harrogate Borough Council prior to its abolition on Friday.
The new North Yorkshire Council has said no work on the tempietto will take place until a decision has been made on the gateway project.
However, Andrew Hart, a postmaster, has reiterated a call to bring the structure to Starbeck in order to “rejuvenate” the area.
Mr Hart, who also founded the Starbeck Community Group, wrote to the borough council in November last year requesting that the tempietto be moved to Belmont Field.
He told the Stray Ferret that any move to demolish the structure would be “shameful”.
Mr Hart said:
“When I formally contacted HBC last November I was assured in writing that the Starbeck Community Groups request for the tempietto to be moved to Belmont Field, Starbeck would be taken seriously and discussed with the councillors.
“To demolish it would be shameful. To dismantle and rebuild it in Starbeck would give the community a focal point of pride. The cost would be negligible against the budget for the Harrogate Gateway.
“It would also add to the rejuvenation of Starbeck and reward the whole community for the fantastic effort it makes in carrying out its own projects such as flowers, Christmas lights, street cleaning, and street decorations.”
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The tempietto, which is inside Harrogate Conservation Area, was built between 1988 and 1992 as part of the redevelopment of the area to create the Victoria Shopping Centre.
Made of Jedburgh sandstone, its classical design was based on the work of 16th-century architect Andrea Palladio’s basilica at Vicenza in Italy.
The government-funded gateway scheme would see major changes to the public realm opposite the train station to make the gateway to Harrogate more attractive to visitors and more accessible to cyclists and pedestrians.
It would also see part of Station Parade reduced to single lane traffic to accommodate cycle routes and James Street partly pedestrianised. Business groups and residents have voiced concerns about the impact on trade and traffic.
In an email seen by the Stray Ferret, North Yorkshire Council officials said the relocation of the tempietto had been raised with council contractors. However, the move would need to be costed and require planning permission.
Cllr Keane Duncan, executive councillor for highways at North Yorkshire Council, said the authority was aware of requests to move the tempietto.
He said:
Harrogate teenager to compete in national race at Silverstone“We are aware that there is some interest from other organisations in relocating the tempietto and we are looking to understand if this could be achieved should the decision be taken to implement the Harrogate Station Gateway project.”
Harrogate teenager Greg Marshall is set to compete in the British Junior Supersport Championships at Silverstone today.
The event is a national motorcycling race and will see entrants from all over the UK compete.
Fifteen year old, Greg, began motorcycle racing aged 9 and has progressed through the classes of Mini Motos and MiniGP bikes — he now rides a Kawasaki Ninja 400.
The Harrogate Grammar School pupil only began riding full-sized bikes in 2022, when he raced with Bemsee – the oldest motorcycle racing club in the word – and found his bike on pole position twice in one weekend.

Greg at Brands Hatch earlier in the year.
Greg said:
“I’m very excited to begin my first season with BSB in the Junior Supersport class.
“I’m feeling comfortable with my new bike and I can’t wait to see what this season brings for me”.
Greg has several sponsors supporting his 2023 season, including Knaresborough’s Redline Specialist Cars.
His father Paul said they are “always open to hearing from local businesses” that would wish to support him and have their names on his bike.
Mr Marshall said his son is making excellent progress:
“I’m very proud to see Greg taking the next step in his racing career and am looking forward to supporting him in his 2023 season with British Superbikes.”
The Silverstone race will be televised on Eurosport, with some rounds free to air on Quest TV.
More information about the race can be found here.
Read more:
Harrogate’s most eye-catching cricketers set for another season
As another cricket season gets underway, a team from Harrogate is set to begin its 24th consecutive season with a virtually unchanged line-up.
The players are only about a foot tall and have been in a few scrapes but they remain undefeated.
Thousands of people see them each year in the garden of Kenneth and Lesley Simpson on Knaresborough Road, opposite the One Stop shop.
The statues of eight players, two batsmen, an umpire, a sight screen and a pavilion are often admired by passers-by and have become such a landmark some bus passengers ask for tickets to ‘the cricket pitch garden’ as it’s more memorable than the name of the bus stops.
Kenneth, however, has a confession to make — he’s not a big cricket fan. He’s more of a football man, who supports Leeds United and is a former referee.
He is, however, a canny Yorkshireman who created the design as an easy way to maintain his garden. He said:
“We were going to put a football pitch in but because all the statues of players we could find had balls underneath their arms, it wouldn’t have looked right.”

The view from behind the bowler’s arm
Lesley noticed some statues of cricketers at the Harrogate Flower Show and when she spotted some more on holiday in Skegness they had enough for a display.
Over the years two have been vandalised — one was repaired but the other was too badly damaged and had to be replaced. Kenneth, who has lived in the house for 54 years, said:
“Someone took them down Knaresborough Road and didn’t realise how heavy they are.”
All the statues are now fixed into the concrete. Kenneth paints them every other year but the hardest job is cleaning the green grass that passes as the pitch.
One day a member of Marylebone Cricket Club passed by and was so taken by what he saw that he returned days later with the sight screen, which he made. Many have stopped to take photos and compliment the couple.
Lesley said:
“It’s surprising how many people stop and say ‘what a lovely garden you have’.”
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Harrogate’s Rachel Daly on target as England win Finalissima
Harrogate-born striker Rachel Daly scored in the penalty shootout as England beat Brazil to win the Finalissima last night.
The match, in front of 83,000 fans at Wembley and broadcast live in ITV, saw Euro 22 champions England take on Copa America winners Brazil.
England led 1-0 at half-time but Brazil pounced on a goalkeeping error in injury time to take the match to penalties.
With the score at 1-1, Daly — who came on as a substitute in the 73rd minute — put England ahead with a powerful drive and the Lionesses went on to win 4-2.
They are now unbeaten in 30 matches.
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‘Unforeseen circumstances’ delay Oak Beck Bridge replacement — again
A starting date for a £1 million scheme to replace Oak Beck Bridge in Harrogate has still to be set.
North Yorkshire County Council planned to begin work in January last year after saying the current bridge on Skipton Road was in poor condition.
But in June last year, council bridges manager Philip Richardson said the scheme had been delayed due to “unforeseen circumstances” and it was still in talks with Yorkshire Water.
Ten months on, the Stray Ferret asked North Yorkshire Council, which has replaced the county council, for an update.
In a statement that was identical in parts to the one issued last year, Mr Richardson said:
“We realise the importance of replacing Oak BeckBridge. Unfortunately, we have not been able to progress the scheme as quickly as we would have liked due to unforeseen circumstances.
“We are currently in discussions with Yorkshire Water about diverting a sewer to make way for the project. Please be assured that we will begin work as soon as we are able.”
The volume of traffic using Skipton Road is expected to increase after Tesco was granted planning permission to build a supermarket at the nearby junction of Skipton Road and Ripon Road.
When it was awarded the £1.1 million contract to demolish the bridge and build a new one, Leeds-based Howard Civil Engineering said the project would take 24 weeks.
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- ‘Unforeseen circumstances’ delays start of Oak Beck Bridge scheme
- Harrogate Oak Beck Bridge project to cost £1m
Harrogate sex offender sentenced to two more years in prison
A sexual predator has been jailed again for sexually assaulting a very young girl at a property in Harrogate.
Steven Anthony Jennings, 52, was already serving a 15-year jail sentence for similar offences against two other girls.
Now he’s been handed a further two years’ prison time for the new offences which pre-dated the old ones, but only came to light relatively recently when the victim went to police more than a decade after they occurred.
Daniel Penman, prosecuting at York Crown Court, said that Jennings, who was in his early 30s at the time, sexually assaulted the girl twice between 2005 and 2007.
The girl said she “froze” but such was her young age she didn’t think anything wrong had occurred at the time. She didn’t report the matters at the time and Jennings “got on with life as normal”.
Mr Penman added:
“It took her until 2019 until she felt able to [tell] her partner about these offences and, through that, felt able to report this to police.”
Jennings, who was living in Harrogate before he was given the 15-year sentence at Teesside Crown Court in 2017, was questioned about the offences at Moorlands Prison in Doncaster in May last year when he was coming to the end of his existing jail term.
He initially denied the allegations but ultimately admitted two counts of sexually assaulting a child under 13 years of age. A third allegation was dropped by the prosecution and allowed to lie on court file.
He appeared for sentence today knowing a consecutive jail sentence was all but inevitable.
‘Lost all innocence’
In a statement read out in court, the victim said Jennings’s “cruel” offences had affected her “mentally, physically and emotionally for years”.
She said her self-esteem and mental health were so badly affected that by her mid-teens she was “ready to die”.
She said she used to “cry myself to sleep every night” following the abuse and that she had “lost all innocence”.
Jennings was jailed in October 2017 for the offences against the two other girls, which occurred between about 2008 and 2011.
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The sentence was imposed after Jennings admitting rape and sexual activity with a child in relation to one of the victims, and one count of indecent assault against the other girl.
The victims were two pre-teenage girls, who were abused by Jennings when he was in his mid-to-late 30s.
He sexually assaulted one of the girls outdoors while he was in a relationship with a woman, said Mr Penman.
Jennings plied the other victim with alcopops and played games “like truth or dare” with her. He ultimately raped the girl, who was too young to consent to sex, on “numerous occasions”.
Defence barrister Hussain Rukhshanda said Jennings was remorseful for his actions.
Judge Simon Hickey said the sexual abuse of the new victim had had a “horrendous” effect on her and that her impact statement made for “sobering reading”.
He told Jennings:
“She said that’s a burden she carried from a young age due to your selfish actions.”
Jennings was jailed for two years and placed on the sex-offenders’ register for a further 10 years.
He was also made subject to a sexual harm prevention order, which will run for an indefinite period, to limit his contact with under-age girls. It also bans him from contacting any of the three victims.
Key witness in Trump court case used to run Harrogate media firmA key witness in Donald Trump’s court case used to run a media company in Harrogate.
David Pecker was chief executive of American Media Inc in the run-up to the 2016 US presidential elections. Court documents say he agreed to be the “eyes and ears” for the Trump campaign to prevent negative stories.
AMI owned the tabloid National Enquirer and was at the heart of the ‘catch and kill’ policy in which it paid hush money to bury stories to protect the former president. Trump is alleged to have falsified accounts when paying back the money.
Adult entertainer Stormy Daniels and former Playboy model Karen McDougal, who both claim to have had affairs with Mr Trump, received payments.
AMI acquired Weider Publications, an international fitness and bodybuilding media company with offices at Windsor Court in Harrogate, in 2003.
The Harrogate business, which was run by an American, employed about 30 people and published European and Australian editions of the market-leading magazines Muscle&Fitness and Flex. It also ran a mail order business.
Mr Pecker kept a close eye on developments in Harrogate and often summoned staff from the town to America for business meetings.
He authorised the decision to close the Harrogate office in 2015 and sent a message to staff thanking them on their final day. The building, in the shadow of Windsor House, was later converted to flats.

Windsor Court has been converted from offices to flats.
Despite being a major player in US media circles, Mr Pecker keeps a low media profile so his testimony is eagerly anticipated.
Ryan Goodman, a former special counsel at the Department of Defense, tweeted this week that “David Pecker is going to be a star witness”.
Trump is alleged to have falsified records “to conceal damaging information and unlawful activity from American voters before and after the 2016 election”.
He has pleaded not guilty to 34 counts of falsification of business records and claims Judge Juan Merchan “hates” him.
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Designer kitchen showroom opens in Harrogate
A new kitchen showroom has opened in Harrogate.
Designer Kitchen Direct, which is based in Sheffield, has opened the outlet on Ripon Road.
The company was founded by Mary Major and Dawn Raynor seven years ago and has since expanded to four showrooms and a manufacturing facility in the north east.
It also has showrooms in Staffordshire, Newton Aycliffe and Sheffield.
Gareth Wiseman, a director at Designer Kitchen Direct, said:
“Harrogate was an obvious choice to the directors for a new showroom as Harrogate is a beautiful popular location for retail.
“We chose the location on Ripon Road. It’s a unique spot and building with character with free parking outside.”

A display in the Harrogate showroom.
The showroom will include six displays over two floors.
The Harrogate site will be open seven days a week from 9am until 5pm.
You can find out more here.
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