Members of the British Press Photographers' Association are showing off some of their best work from the past year at the Bargehouse gallery, central London.
Adrian Dennis caught the moment France's Caroline Garcia dived across the court at Wimbledon 2023 in an attempt to return the ball to Marie Bouzkova during their women's singles tennis match. [Adrian Dennis]
Weather warnings were in place ahead of Storm Ciarán. In Bosham, West Sussex, photographer Peter Macdiarmid was on hand to capture people leaving the Shoreside Café as they waded through a flooded street. [Peter Macdiarmid]
Nigel Roddis photographed cheerleaders as they arrived in fancy dress to support those taking part in the Ironman UK triathlon in Bolton. [Nigel Roddis]
King Charles III and Queen Camilla were captured by Justin Tallis as they passed through the Royal Gallery during the State Opening of Parliament. [Justin Tallis]
The Queens Park Rangers mascot Spark the Tiger was pictured near the club's ground by Dave Shopland. [Dave Shopland/Shutterstock]
Jonathan Buckmaster's picture shows England fans reacting to a missed goal opportunity during the Women's World Cup final against Spain. [Jonathan Buckmaster]
Competitors from the opposing teams, the Up'ards and the Down'ards, competed for the ball during the annual Royal Shrovetide Football Match in Ashbourne. The game dates back for hundreds of centuries where the two teams compete to score a goal at one of the two milestones, miles apart, Ryan Jenkinson was there to record the moment. [Ryan Jenkinson/Story Picture Agency]
Thomas Bowles photographed a climate activist from Just Stop Oil who was propped up by a police officer after he was arrested for slow marching on Whitehall in London. [Thomas Bowles ]
The Princess of Wales was photographed by Samir Hussein during a visit to Nottingham Trent University in October. [Samir Hussein]
Richard Pohle was at Crufts dog show in Birmingham when he caught this moment between Anna Fisher and her freshly coiffured standard poodle Henry VIII. [Richard Pohle]
Eddie Mullholland photographed climate activist Greta Thunberg at Westminster Magistrates' Court. Along with four co-defendants she was found not guilty of breaking the law when they refused to follow police instructions to move on during a climate protest. [Eddie Mullholland for The Telegraph]
Fans of Fred Again were captured by Maja Smiejkowska during their performance at the Glastonbury Festival. [Maja Smiejkowska]
After a long and distinguished career, jockey Frankie Dettori retired from horse racing, Marc Aspland took this picture of him as he departed Royal Ascot for the final time. [Marc Aspland]
The exhibition was curated by photojournalist David Burnett, Reuters UK and Ireland Chief Photographer Suzanne Plunkett, photojournalist Steve Back, Press Association photographer Jane Barlow, and Getty Images sports photographer Justin Setterfield and covers stories from March 2023 through to the spring of 2024.
It can be seen at the Bargehouse gallery until Sunday 2 June.
Erik ten Hag aimed a minor dig at Gareth Southgate’s “vision” as he said England were left “relying on moments” in their Euro 2024 opener against Serbia.
Greedy for the ball no more, Spain has won a game by playing unlike Spain. After La Roja's 3-0 victory over Croatia 3-0 at Euro 2024 on Saturday, the match statistics showed something extremely rare: Spain had only 46% possession. Stats analyst Opta said it was the first time in 136 competitive matches that Spain had less of the ball than its opponent.
Bryson DeChambeau asked officials why he had not seen Rory McIlroy in the aftermath of his dramatic one-shot victory in the US Open on Sunday night, before being told that the runner-up left the course immediately without congratulating the victor.
Dereck Lively II drained the first 3-pointer of his career, forced a missed layup at the other end and ping-ponged back down the court to slam home an alley-oop pass. Never mind the unmistakable imprint from Lively on a franchise that tanked to try to preserve the first-round draft pick that landed him — but wasn't really expecting this much this soon. “I think people forget he’s a rookie,” superstar Luka Doncic said after the 122-84 blowout in Game 4 that kept Boston from sweeping.
Collin Morikawa woke up Saturday nine shots off the lead and figuring he would have to get back to even par to have any chance of winning the U.S. Open. What Morikawa wasn’t counting on was big Bryson DeChambeau manhandling the sun-drenched course a few hours later, shooting a 67 and leaving him seven shots behind with a round left. Now Morikawa needs some Arnold Palmer-type magic to win his first U.S. Open title.
The Boston Celtics’ catastrophic performance in Game 4 of the NBA Finals gave them a chance to clinch another championship on Monday night under the 17 banners already hanging in the TD Garden rafters. “We don’t like to lose,” Celtics guard Jaylen Brown said before practice on Sunday. The Celtics cruised through the regular season with the best record in the NBA and then did even better in the playoffs, never trailing in a series while winning 15 of their first 17 games.