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  • Dominic Matteo: 'Basically, I played my whole football career with a brain tumour'
    DUKAS_163822447_EYE
    Dominic Matteo: 'Basically, I played my whole football career with a brain tumour'
    Former Liverpool and Leeds player Dominic Matteo on losing his memory, hitting ‘rock bottom' with a gambling addiction and his road to recovery.

    Matteo, 49, is sitting with Jess reflecting on his recovery from November 2019 surgery on a cancerous brain tumour. The day their lives changed forever began relatively calmly. Matteo had experienced a headache here, a bout of sickness there, but it was all easily attributable to other sources.
    His GP had referred him for an MRI scan.
    Matteo the footballer had had many scans. "Usually, they take a while, but I was in for what felt like a minute," he says. "They must have seen something straight away." He was not allowed to leave hospital that Monday night. By Wednesday, he was in a wheelchair, his vision blurred and his face distorted.

    Dominic Matteo photopraphed at his home near Halifax in West Yorkshire. Dominic Matteo is a Scotish former professional footballer who played as a defender and midfielder in a 17-year professional career from 1992 to 2009. Matteo played for Liverpool, Sunderland, Leeds United, Blackburn Rovers and Stoke City. In November 2019, Matteo underwent surgery on a brain tumour, and was declared fully recovered in April the following year.

    © Richard Saker / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • Dominic Matteo: 'Basically, I played my whole football career with a brain tumour'
    DUKAS_163822451_EYE
    Dominic Matteo: 'Basically, I played my whole football career with a brain tumour'
    Former Liverpool and Leeds player Dominic Matteo on losing his memory, hitting ‘rock bottom' with a gambling addiction and his road to recovery.

    Matteo, 49, is sitting with Jess reflecting on his recovery from November 2019 surgery on a cancerous brain tumour. The day their lives changed forever began relatively calmly. Matteo had experienced a headache here, a bout of sickness there, but it was all easily attributable to other sources.
    His GP had referred him for an MRI scan.
    Matteo the footballer had had many scans. "Usually, they take a while, but I was in for what felt like a minute," he says. "They must have seen something straight away." He was not allowed to leave hospital that Monday night. By Wednesday, he was in a wheelchair, his vision blurred and his face distorted.

    Dominic Matteo and his wife Jessica photographed at their home near Halifax in West Yorkshire. Dominic Matteo is a Scotish former professional footballer who played as a defender and midfielder in a 17-year professional career from 1992 to 2009. Matteo played for Liverpool, Sunderland, Leeds United, Blackburn Rovers and Stoke City. In November 2019, Matteo underwent surgery on a brain tumour, and was declared fully recovered in April the following year.

    © Richard Saker / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • PEOPLE - Formel 1: GP von Bahrain
    DUK10089809_051
    PEOPLE - Formel 1: GP von Bahrain
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Michael Memmler/Sutton Images/REX/Shutterstock (9570504g)
    The car of race retiree Daniel Ricciardo (AUS) Red Bull Racing RB14 is recovered during the Bahrain GP at Bahrain International Circuit on April 08, 2018 in Bahrain International Circuit, Bahrain.
    2018 Bahrain GP - 08 Apr 2018

    (c) Dukas

     

  • Dominic Matteo: 'Basically, I played my whole football career with a brain tumour'
    DUKAS_163822437_EYE
    Dominic Matteo: 'Basically, I played my whole football career with a brain tumour'
    Former Liverpool and Leeds player Dominic Matteo on losing his memory, hitting ‘rock bottom' with a gambling addiction and his road to recovery.

    Matteo, 49, is sitting with Jess reflecting on his recovery from November 2019 surgery on a cancerous brain tumour. The day their lives changed forever began relatively calmly. Matteo had experienced a headache here, a bout of sickness there, but it was all easily attributable to other sources.
    His GP had referred him for an MRI scan.
    Matteo the footballer had had many scans. "Usually, they take a while, but I was in for what felt like a minute," he says. "They must have seen something straight away." He was not allowed to leave hospital that Monday night. By Wednesday, he was in a wheelchair, his vision blurred and his face distorted.

    Dominic Matteo photopraphed at his home near Halifax in West Yorkshire. Dominic Matteo is a Scotish former professional footballer who played as a defender and midfielder in a 17-year professional career from 1992 to 2009. Matteo played for Liverpool, Sunderland, Leeds United, Blackburn Rovers and Stoke City. In November 2019, Matteo underwent surgery on a brain tumour, and was declared fully recovered in April the following year.

    © Richard Saker / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • Dominic Matteo: 'Basically, I played my whole football career with a brain tumour'
    DUKAS_163822441_EYE
    Dominic Matteo: 'Basically, I played my whole football career with a brain tumour'
    Former Liverpool and Leeds player Dominic Matteo on losing his memory, hitting ‘rock bottom' with a gambling addiction and his road to recovery.

    Matteo, 49, is sitting with Jess reflecting on his recovery from November 2019 surgery on a cancerous brain tumour. The day their lives changed forever began relatively calmly. Matteo had experienced a headache here, a bout of sickness there, but it was all easily attributable to other sources.
    His GP had referred him for an MRI scan.
    Matteo the footballer had had many scans. "Usually, they take a while, but I was in for what felt like a minute," he says. "They must have seen something straight away." He was not allowed to leave hospital that Monday night. By Wednesday, he was in a wheelchair, his vision blurred and his face distorted.

    Dominic Matteo photopraphed at his home near Halifax in West Yorkshire. Dominic Matteo is a Scotish former professional footballer who played as a defender and midfielder in a 17-year professional career from 1992 to 2009. Matteo played for Liverpool, Sunderland, Leeds United, Blackburn Rovers and Stoke City. In November 2019, Matteo underwent surgery on a brain tumour, and was declared fully recovered in April the following year.

    © Richard Saker / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • Dominic Matteo: 'Basically, I played my whole football career with a brain tumour'
    DUKAS_163822439_EYE
    Dominic Matteo: 'Basically, I played my whole football career with a brain tumour'
    Former Liverpool and Leeds player Dominic Matteo on losing his memory, hitting ‘rock bottom' with a gambling addiction and his road to recovery.

    Matteo, 49, is sitting with Jess reflecting on his recovery from November 2019 surgery on a cancerous brain tumour. The day their lives changed forever began relatively calmly. Matteo had experienced a headache here, a bout of sickness there, but it was all easily attributable to other sources.
    His GP had referred him for an MRI scan.
    Matteo the footballer had had many scans. "Usually, they take a while, but I was in for what felt like a minute," he says. "They must have seen something straight away." He was not allowed to leave hospital that Monday night. By Wednesday, he was in a wheelchair, his vision blurred and his face distorted.

    Dominic Matteo photopraphed at his home near Halifax in West Yorkshire. Dominic Matteo is a Scotish former professional footballer who played as a defender and midfielder in a 17-year professional career from 1992 to 2009. Matteo played for Liverpool, Sunderland, Leeds United, Blackburn Rovers and Stoke City. In November 2019, Matteo underwent surgery on a brain tumour, and was declared fully recovered in April the following year.

    © Richard Saker / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • Dominic Matteo: 'Basically, I played my whole football career with a brain tumour'
    DUKAS_163822449_EYE
    Dominic Matteo: 'Basically, I played my whole football career with a brain tumour'
    Former Liverpool and Leeds player Dominic Matteo on losing his memory, hitting ‘rock bottom' with a gambling addiction and his road to recovery.

    Matteo, 49, is sitting with Jess reflecting on his recovery from November 2019 surgery on a cancerous brain tumour. The day their lives changed forever began relatively calmly. Matteo had experienced a headache here, a bout of sickness there, but it was all easily attributable to other sources.
    His GP had referred him for an MRI scan.
    Matteo the footballer had had many scans. "Usually, they take a while, but I was in for what felt like a minute," he says. "They must have seen something straight away." He was not allowed to leave hospital that Monday night. By Wednesday, he was in a wheelchair, his vision blurred and his face distorted.

    Dominic Matteo photopraphed at his home near Halifax in West Yorkshire. Dominic Matteo is a Scotish former professional footballer who played as a defender and midfielder in a 17-year professional career from 1992 to 2009. Matteo played for Liverpool, Sunderland, Leeds United, Blackburn Rovers and Stoke City. In November 2019, Matteo underwent surgery on a brain tumour, and was declared fully recovered in April the following year.

    © Richard Saker / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • Dominic Matteo: 'Basically, I played my whole football career with a brain tumour'
    DUKAS_163822448_EYE
    Dominic Matteo: 'Basically, I played my whole football career with a brain tumour'
    Former Liverpool and Leeds player Dominic Matteo on losing his memory, hitting ‘rock bottom' with a gambling addiction and his road to recovery.

    Matteo, 49, is sitting with Jess reflecting on his recovery from November 2019 surgery on a cancerous brain tumour. The day their lives changed forever began relatively calmly. Matteo had experienced a headache here, a bout of sickness there, but it was all easily attributable to other sources.
    His GP had referred him for an MRI scan.
    Matteo the footballer had had many scans. "Usually, they take a while, but I was in for what felt like a minute," he says. "They must have seen something straight away." He was not allowed to leave hospital that Monday night. By Wednesday, he was in a wheelchair, his vision blurred and his face distorted.

    Dominic Matteo and his wife Jessica photographed at their home near Halifax in West Yorkshire. Dominic Matteo is a Scotish former professional footballer who played as a defender and midfielder in a 17-year professional career from 1992 to 2009. Matteo played for Liverpool, Sunderland, Leeds United, Blackburn Rovers and Stoke City. In November 2019, Matteo underwent surgery on a brain tumour, and was declared fully recovered in April the following year.

    © Richard Saker / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • Dominic Matteo: 'Basically, I played my whole football career with a brain tumour'
    DUKAS_163822442_EYE
    Dominic Matteo: 'Basically, I played my whole football career with a brain tumour'
    Former Liverpool and Leeds player Dominic Matteo on losing his memory, hitting ‘rock bottom' with a gambling addiction and his road to recovery.

    Matteo, 49, is sitting with Jess reflecting on his recovery from November 2019 surgery on a cancerous brain tumour. The day their lives changed forever began relatively calmly. Matteo had experienced a headache here, a bout of sickness there, but it was all easily attributable to other sources.
    His GP had referred him for an MRI scan.
    Matteo the footballer had had many scans. "Usually, they take a while, but I was in for what felt like a minute," he says. "They must have seen something straight away." He was not allowed to leave hospital that Monday night. By Wednesday, he was in a wheelchair, his vision blurred and his face distorted.

    Dominic Matteo and his wife Jessica photographed at their home near Halifax in West Yorkshire. Dominic Matteo is a Scotish former professional footballer who played as a defender and midfielder in a 17-year professional career from 1992 to 2009. Matteo played for Liverpool, Sunderland, Leeds United, Blackburn Rovers and Stoke City. In November 2019, Matteo underwent surgery on a brain tumour, and was declared fully recovered in April the following year.

    © Richard Saker / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • Dominic Matteo: 'Basically, I played my whole football career with a brain tumour'
    DUKAS_163822436_EYE
    Dominic Matteo: 'Basically, I played my whole football career with a brain tumour'
    Former Liverpool and Leeds player Dominic Matteo on losing his memory, hitting ‘rock bottom' with a gambling addiction and his road to recovery.

    Matteo, 49, is sitting with Jess reflecting on his recovery from November 2019 surgery on a cancerous brain tumour. The day their lives changed forever began relatively calmly. Matteo had experienced a headache here, a bout of sickness there, but it was all easily attributable to other sources.
    His GP had referred him for an MRI scan.
    Matteo the footballer had had many scans. "Usually, they take a while, but I was in for what felt like a minute," he says. "They must have seen something straight away." He was not allowed to leave hospital that Monday night. By Wednesday, he was in a wheelchair, his vision blurred and his face distorted.

    Dominic Matteo and his wife Jessica photographed at their home near Halifax in West Yorkshire. Dominic Matteo is a Scotish former professional footballer who played as a defender and midfielder in a 17-year professional career from 1992 to 2009. Matteo played for Liverpool, Sunderland, Leeds United, Blackburn Rovers and Stoke City. In November 2019, Matteo underwent surgery on a brain tumour, and was declared fully recovered in April the following year.

    © Richard Saker / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • Dominic Matteo: 'Basically, I played my whole football career with a brain tumour'
    DUKAS_163822444_EYE
    Dominic Matteo: 'Basically, I played my whole football career with a brain tumour'
    Former Liverpool and Leeds player Dominic Matteo on losing his memory, hitting ‘rock bottom' with a gambling addiction and his road to recovery.

    Matteo, 49, is sitting with Jess reflecting on his recovery from November 2019 surgery on a cancerous brain tumour. The day their lives changed forever began relatively calmly. Matteo had experienced a headache here, a bout of sickness there, but it was all easily attributable to other sources.
    His GP had referred him for an MRI scan.
    Matteo the footballer had had many scans. "Usually, they take a while, but I was in for what felt like a minute," he says. "They must have seen something straight away." He was not allowed to leave hospital that Monday night. By Wednesday, he was in a wheelchair, his vision blurred and his face distorted.

    Dominic Matteo and his wife Jessica photopraphed at their home near Halifax in West Yorkshire. Dominic Matteo is a Scotish former professional footballer who played as a defender and midfielder in a 17-year professional career from 1992 to 2009. Matteo played for Liverpool, Sunderland, Leeds United, Blackburn Rovers and Stoke City. In November 2019, Matteo underwent surgery on a brain tumour, and was declared fully recovered in April the following year.

    © Richard Saker / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • Dominic Matteo: 'Basically, I played my whole football career with a brain tumour'
    DUKAS_163822438_EYE
    Dominic Matteo: 'Basically, I played my whole football career with a brain tumour'
    Former Liverpool and Leeds player Dominic Matteo on losing his memory, hitting ‘rock bottom' with a gambling addiction and his road to recovery.

    Matteo, 49, is sitting with Jess reflecting on his recovery from November 2019 surgery on a cancerous brain tumour. The day their lives changed forever began relatively calmly. Matteo had experienced a headache here, a bout of sickness there, but it was all easily attributable to other sources.
    His GP had referred him for an MRI scan.
    Matteo the footballer had had many scans. "Usually, they take a while, but I was in for what felt like a minute," he says. "They must have seen something straight away." He was not allowed to leave hospital that Monday night. By Wednesday, he was in a wheelchair, his vision blurred and his face distorted.

    Dominic Matteo and his wife Jessica photographed at their home near Halifax in West Yorkshire. Dominic Matteo is a Scotish former professional footballer who played as a defender and midfielder in a 17-year professional career from 1992 to 2009. Matteo played for Liverpool, Sunderland, Leeds United, Blackburn Rovers and Stoke City. In November 2019, Matteo underwent surgery on a brain tumour, and was declared fully recovered in April the following year.

    © Richard Saker / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • Dominic Matteo: 'Basically, I played my whole football career with a brain tumour'
    DUKAS_163822446_EYE
    Dominic Matteo: 'Basically, I played my whole football career with a brain tumour'
    Former Liverpool and Leeds player Dominic Matteo on losing his memory, hitting ‘rock bottom' with a gambling addiction and his road to recovery.

    Matteo, 49, is sitting with Jess reflecting on his recovery from November 2019 surgery on a cancerous brain tumour. The day their lives changed forever began relatively calmly. Matteo had experienced a headache here, a bout of sickness there, but it was all easily attributable to other sources.
    His GP had referred him for an MRI scan.
    Matteo the footballer had had many scans. "Usually, they take a while, but I was in for what felt like a minute," he says. "They must have seen something straight away." He was not allowed to leave hospital that Monday night. By Wednesday, he was in a wheelchair, his vision blurred and his face distorted.

    Dominic Matteo and his wife Jessica photographed at their home near Halifax in West Yorkshire. Dominic Matteo is a Scotish former professional footballer who played as a defender and midfielder in a 17-year professional career from 1992 to 2009. Matteo played for Liverpool, Sunderland, Leeds United, Blackburn Rovers and Stoke City. In November 2019, Matteo underwent surgery on a brain tumour, and was declared fully recovered in April the following year.

    © Richard Saker / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • Dominic Matteo: 'Basically, I played my whole football career with a brain tumour'
    DUKAS_163822440_EYE
    Dominic Matteo: 'Basically, I played my whole football career with a brain tumour'
    Former Liverpool and Leeds player Dominic Matteo on losing his memory, hitting ‘rock bottom' with a gambling addiction and his road to recovery.

    Matteo, 49, is sitting with Jess reflecting on his recovery from November 2019 surgery on a cancerous brain tumour. The day their lives changed forever began relatively calmly. Matteo had experienced a headache here, a bout of sickness there, but it was all easily attributable to other sources.
    His GP had referred him for an MRI scan.
    Matteo the footballer had had many scans. "Usually, they take a while, but I was in for what felt like a minute," he says. "They must have seen something straight away." He was not allowed to leave hospital that Monday night. By Wednesday, he was in a wheelchair, his vision blurred and his face distorted.

    Dominic Matteo and his wife Jessica photographed at their home near Halifax in West Yorkshire. Dominic Matteo is a Scotish former professional footballer who played as a defender and midfielder in a 17-year professional career from 1992 to 2009. Matteo played for Liverpool, Sunderland, Leeds United, Blackburn Rovers and Stoke City. In November 2019, Matteo underwent surgery on a brain tumour, and was declared fully recovered in April the following year.

    © Richard Saker / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • Dominic Matteo: 'Basically, I played my whole football career with a brain tumour'
    DUKAS_163822443_EYE
    Dominic Matteo: 'Basically, I played my whole football career with a brain tumour'
    Former Liverpool and Leeds player Dominic Matteo on losing his memory, hitting ‘rock bottom' with a gambling addiction and his road to recovery.

    Matteo, 49, is sitting with Jess reflecting on his recovery from November 2019 surgery on a cancerous brain tumour. The day their lives changed forever began relatively calmly. Matteo had experienced a headache here, a bout of sickness there, but it was all easily attributable to other sources.
    His GP had referred him for an MRI scan.
    Matteo the footballer had had many scans. "Usually, they take a while, but I was in for what felt like a minute," he says. "They must have seen something straight away." He was not allowed to leave hospital that Monday night. By Wednesday, he was in a wheelchair, his vision blurred and his face distorted.

    Dominic Matteo and his wife Jessica photographed at their home near Halifax in West Yorkshire. Dominic Matteo is a Scotish former professional footballer who played as a defender and midfielder in a 17-year professional career from 1992 to 2009. Matteo played for Liverpool, Sunderland, Leeds United, Blackburn Rovers and Stoke City. In November 2019, Matteo underwent surgery on a brain tumour, and was declared fully recovered in April the following year.

    © Richard Saker / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • Dominic Matteo: 'Basically, I played my whole football career with a brain tumour'
    DUKAS_163822435_EYE
    Dominic Matteo: 'Basically, I played my whole football career with a brain tumour'
    Former Liverpool and Leeds player Dominic Matteo on losing his memory, hitting ‘rock bottom' with a gambling addiction and his road to recovery.

    Matteo, 49, is sitting with Jess reflecting on his recovery from November 2019 surgery on a cancerous brain tumour. The day their lives changed forever began relatively calmly. Matteo had experienced a headache here, a bout of sickness there, but it was all easily attributable to other sources.
    His GP had referred him for an MRI scan.
    Matteo the footballer had had many scans. "Usually, they take a while, but I was in for what felt like a minute," he says. "They must have seen something straight away." He was not allowed to leave hospital that Monday night. By Wednesday, he was in a wheelchair, his vision blurred and his face distorted.

    Dominic Matteo and his wife Jessica photographed at their home near Halifax in West Yorkshire. Dominic Matteo is a Scotish former professional footballer who played as a defender and midfielder in a 17-year professional career from 1992 to 2009. Matteo played for Liverpool, Sunderland, Leeds United, Blackburn Rovers and Stoke City. In November 2019, Matteo underwent surgery on a brain tumour, and was declared fully recovered in April the following year.

    © Richard Saker / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • Dominic Matteo: 'Basically, I played my whole football career with a brain tumour'
    DUKAS_163822450_EYE
    Dominic Matteo: 'Basically, I played my whole football career with a brain tumour'
    Former Liverpool and Leeds player Dominic Matteo on losing his memory, hitting ‘rock bottom' with a gambling addiction and his road to recovery.

    Matteo, 49, is sitting with Jess reflecting on his recovery from November 2019 surgery on a cancerous brain tumour. The day their lives changed forever began relatively calmly. Matteo had experienced a headache here, a bout of sickness there, but it was all easily attributable to other sources.
    His GP had referred him for an MRI scan.
    Matteo the footballer had had many scans. "Usually, they take a while, but I was in for what felt like a minute," he says. "They must have seen something straight away." He was not allowed to leave hospital that Monday night. By Wednesday, he was in a wheelchair, his vision blurred and his face distorted.

    Dominic Matteo and his wife Jessica photographed at their home near Halifax in West Yorkshire. Dominic Matteo is a Scotish former professional footballer who played as a defender and midfielder in a 17-year professional career from 1992 to 2009. Matteo played for Liverpool, Sunderland, Leeds United, Blackburn Rovers and Stoke City. In November 2019, Matteo underwent surgery on a brain tumour, and was declared fully recovered in April the following year.

    © Richard Saker / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • NEWS - Ukraine-Krieg:  Zerstörter Flughafen Gostomel, Lviv
    DUK10149097_012
    NEWS - Ukraine-Krieg: Zerstörter Flughafen Gostomel, Lviv
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by David Peinado/Pacific Press/Shutterstock (12893552l)
    The Gostomel airport in Ukraine was taken by the Russians at the beginning of the war and recovered by the Ukrainian army on April 1, the airport is completely destroyed including the plane that was considered the largest in the world, used weapons were also found and unused explosives. Men and women enter to pray for the end of the war in a church in Lviv Ukraine
    Gostomel airport, Lviv, Lviv Oblast, Ukraine - 05 Apr 2022

    (c) Dukas

     

  • PC Stuart Outten
    DUKAS_108371674_EYE
    PC Stuart Outten
    PC Stuart Outten, Britain's bravest police officer who was stabbed in the head and arm with a machete as he tried to stop a van suspected of having no insurance in Leyton August 2019. Pc Stuart Outten — unveiled today as the first recipient of the Evening Standard’s Progress 1000 London Hero Award — he wants to go back on the beat to protect Londoners so they aren’t afraid to walk the streets.
    © Natasha Pszenicki / Evening Standard / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Evening Standard / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • FEATURE - Pix of t Day: Bilder des Tages
    DUK10093328_003
    FEATURE - Pix of t Day: Bilder des Tages
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Joel Goodman/LNP/REX/Shutterstock (9695629bn)
    Flowers and tributes left at the scene outside The Salisbury Club on Truro Avenue in the Brinnington area of Stockport, Greater Manchester, where a car collided with pedestrians late last night, killing one man and injuring others. A murder investigation has been launched. Police later recovered a black Audi A4 which fled the scene.
    Nightclub murder investigation, Stockport, UK - 28 May 2018

    (c) Dukas

     

  • Eric Lusito - Traces of the Soviet Empire
    DUKAS_44090412_REX
    Eric Lusito - Traces of the Soviet Empire
    MANDATORY CREDIT: Eric Lusito/Rex Features. Only for use in story about Eric Lusito's "After the Wall: Traces of the Soviet Empire" photo project. Editorial Use Only. No stock, books, advertising or merchandising without photographer's permission
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Eric Lusito/REX (4033703x)
    Document recovered from a Soviet military base abandoned after the collapse of the USSR.
    1976 poster. Text reads 'Soviet officers are the loyal sons of the people'.
    Eric Lusito - Traces of the Soviet Empire
    FULL COPY: http://www.rexfeatures.com/nanolink/p8ug

    These haunting photographs show the remnants of the once all-powerful Soviet empire.

    They are the work of Eric Lusito, who spent six years travelling throughout the former Soviet world from East Germany to Mongolia, from Poland to Kazakhstan to seek out remains of the military installations that embodied the ambition and the might of the USSR.

    Describing himself as working like an archaeologist, the French photographer says his project "Traces of the Soviet Empire" is a photographic record of the land and architecture - haunted by the symbols and history of a once powerful Empire.

    The on-going project takes the form of three series: exteriors, interiors, and found photographs "images from another time, another space and another world".

    What he found was colourful propaganda wall art, faded frescos of Lenin, discarded gas masks, and huge monuments, including those in the shapes of a soldier and a sword.
    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • Bodies of Neil and Kazumi Puttick and their son Samuel recovered from cliffs at Beachy Head, Eastbourne, Britain - 01 Jun 2009
    DUKAS_10102512_REX
    Bodies of Neil and Kazumi Puttick and their son Samuel recovered from cliffs at Beachy Head, Eastbourne, Britain - 01 Jun 2009
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Ciaran McCrickard / Rex Features ( 937344h )
    The bodies are taken away

    GRIEVING PARENTS LEAP TO DEATH WITH BODY OF SON

    A grieving couple have committed suicide following the death their son.

    Neil Puttick, 34, and his wife Kazumi, 44, leapt to their deaths at Beachy Head in Eastbourne, while carrying the body of their five-year-old son Sam.

    The desperate act came just hours after the youngster, who had been paralysed from the neck down in a car crash as a baby, died from meningitis.

    The three bodies were found by coastguards around 400ft down the cliffside.

    Sam's body was found in a rucksack near to his parents. A second rucksack was found to contain children's toys.

    Chief Inspector Dick Coats of Sussex Police said officers were not looking for anyone else in connection with the deaths.

    Sam was left paralysed when he was 16 months old after his baby chair was thrown out of a car during a crash.

    Charity worker Neil and translator Kazumi - originally from Japan - gave up their jobs in order to care for their son.

    They went on to raise around GBP 30,000 in order to adapt their home - a cottage in Brokerswood, Wiltshire.

    However, tragedy struck when Sam contracted viral meningitis. After being told by doctors that there was no way to save him the Puttick's took him home to die, which he did on Friday (29 May).

    Less than 48 hours later, on Sunday (31 May), Neil and Kazumi drove to Beachy Head with the body of their son as part of a suicide pact.

    The cliffs at Beachy Head reach up to about 600ft (180m) high and are a suicide black spot.

    According to Coastguard Stuart McNab, who recovered the three bodies, an average of 20 people jump from the cliffs every year.

    The Beachy Head Chaplaincy Team was set up in 2004 to patrol the area in an attempt to prevent suicides.

    MUST CREDIT PHOTOS BY: Ciaran McCrickard / Rex Features

    For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/HWSBDHKGB (F

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • NEWS - Ukraine-Krieg:  Zerstörter Flughafen Gostomel, Lviv
    DUK10149097_011
    NEWS - Ukraine-Krieg: Zerstörter Flughafen Gostomel, Lviv
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by David Peinado/Pacific Press/Shutterstock (12893552m)
    The Gostomel airport in Ukraine was taken by the Russians at the beginning of the war and recovered by the Ukrainian army on April 1, the airport is completely destroyed including the plane that was considered the largest in the world, used weapons were also found and unused explosives. Men and women enter to pray for the end of the war in a church in Lviv Ukraine
    Gostomel airport, Lviv, Lviv Oblast, Ukraine - 05 Apr 2022

    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Ukraine-Krieg:  Zerstörter Flughafen Gostomel, Lviv
    DUK10149097_006
    NEWS - Ukraine-Krieg: Zerstörter Flughafen Gostomel, Lviv
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by David Peinado/Pacific Press/Shutterstock (12893552h)
    The Gostomel airport in Ukraine was taken by the Russians at the beginning of the war and recovered by the Ukrainian army on April 1, the airport is completely destroyed including the plane that was considered the largest in the world, used weapons were also found and unused explosives. Men and women enter to pray for the end of the war in a church in Lviv Ukraine
    Gostomel airport, Lviv, Lviv Oblast, Ukraine - 05 Apr 2022

    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Ukraine-Krieg:  Zerstörter Flughafen Gostomel, Lviv
    DUK10149097_001
    NEWS - Ukraine-Krieg: Zerstörter Flughafen Gostomel, Lviv
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by David Peinado/Pacific Press/Shutterstock (12893552b)
    The Gostomel airport in Ukraine was taken by the Russians at the beginning of the war and recovered by the Ukrainian army on April 1, the airport is completely destroyed including the plane that was considered the largest in the world, used weapons were also found and unused explosives. Men and women enter to pray for the end of the war in a church in Lviv Ukraine
    Gostomel airport, Lviv, Lviv Oblast, Ukraine - 05 Apr 2022

    (c) Dukas

     

  • PC Stuart Outten
    DUKAS_108371673_EYE
    PC Stuart Outten
    PC Stuart Outten, Britain's bravest police officer who was stabbed in the head and arm with a machete as he tried to stop a van suspected of having no insurance in Leyton August 2019. Pc Stuart Outten — unveiled today as the first recipient of the Evening Standard’s Progress 1000 London Hero Award — he wants to go back on the beat to protect Londoners so they aren’t afraid to walk the streets.
    © Natasha Pszenicki / Evening Standard / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Evening Standard / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • PEOPLE - Formel 1: GP von Bahrain
    DUK10089809_048
    PEOPLE - Formel 1: GP von Bahrain
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Michael Memmler/Sutton Images/REX/Shutterstock (9570504f)
    The car of race retiree Daniel Ricciardo (AUS) Red Bull Racing RB14 is recovered during the Bahrain GP at Bahrain International Circuit on April 08, 2018 in Bahrain International Circuit, Bahrain.
    2018 Bahrain GP - 08 Apr 2018

    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Salisbury: Russischer Ex-Spion Sergei Skirpal nach Giftangriff immer noch im kritischen Zustand
    DUK10087295_036
    NEWS - Salisbury: Russischer Ex-Spion Sergei Skirpal nach Giftangriff immer noch im kritischen Zustand
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by REX/Shutterstock (9452956g)
    The Bench Where the Couple Were Found Exposed After the Wind Blew the Police Tent Off is Recovered by Firemen in Chemical Protection Clothing
    Former Russian spy critically ill after suspected poisoning, Salisbury, UK - 08 Mar 2018

    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Salisbury: Russischer Ex-Spion Sergei Skirpal nach Giftangriff immer noch im kritischen Zustand
    DUK10087295_035
    NEWS - Salisbury: Russischer Ex-Spion Sergei Skirpal nach Giftangriff immer noch im kritischen Zustand
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by REX/Shutterstock (9452956k)
    The Bench Where the Couple Were Found Exposed After the Wind Blew the Police Tent Off is Recovered by Firemen in Chemical Protection Clothing
    Former Russian spy critically ill after suspected poisoning, Salisbury, UK - 08 Mar 2018

    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Salisbury: Russischer Ex-Spion Sergei Skirpal nach Giftangriff immer noch im kritischen Zustand
    DUK10087295_034
    NEWS - Salisbury: Russischer Ex-Spion Sergei Skirpal nach Giftangriff immer noch im kritischen Zustand
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by REX/Shutterstock (9452956o)
    The Bench Where the Couple Were Found Exposed After the Wind Blew the Police Tent Off is Recovered by Firemen in Chemical Protection Clothing
    Former Russian spy critically ill after suspected poisoning, Salisbury, UK - 08 Mar 2018

    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Salisbury: Russischer Ex-Spion Sergei Skirpal nach Giftangriff immer noch im kritischen Zustand
    DUK10087295_033
    NEWS - Salisbury: Russischer Ex-Spion Sergei Skirpal nach Giftangriff immer noch im kritischen Zustand
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by REX/Shutterstock (9452956e)
    The Bench Where the Couple Were Found Exposed After the Wind Blew the Police Tent Off is Recovered by Firemen in Chemical Protection Clothing
    Former Russian spy critically ill after suspected poisoning, Salisbury, UK - 08 Mar 2018

    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Salisbury: Russischer Ex-Spion Sergei Skirpal nach Giftangriff immer noch im kritischen Zustand
    DUK10087295_032
    NEWS - Salisbury: Russischer Ex-Spion Sergei Skirpal nach Giftangriff immer noch im kritischen Zustand
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by REX/Shutterstock (9452956c)
    The Bench Where the Couple Were Found Exposed After the Wind Blew the Police Tent Off is Recovered by Firemen in Chemical Protection Clothing
    Former Russian spy critically ill after suspected poisoning, Salisbury, UK - 08 Mar 2018

    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Salisbury: Russischer Ex-Spion Sergei Skirpal nach Giftangriff immer noch im kritischen Zustand
    DUK10087295_031
    NEWS - Salisbury: Russischer Ex-Spion Sergei Skirpal nach Giftangriff immer noch im kritischen Zustand
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by REX/Shutterstock (9452956j)
    The Bench Where the Couple Were Found Exposed After the Wind Blew the Police Tent Off is Recovered by Firemen in Chemical Protection Clothing
    Former Russian spy critically ill after suspected poisoning, Salisbury, UK - 08 Mar 2018

    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Salisbury: Russischer Ex-Spion Sergei Skirpal nach Giftangriff immer noch im kritischen Zustand
    DUK10087295_030
    NEWS - Salisbury: Russischer Ex-Spion Sergei Skirpal nach Giftangriff immer noch im kritischen Zustand
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by REX/Shutterstock (9452956m)
    The Bench Where the Couple Were Found Exposed After the Wind Blew the Police Tent Off is Recovered by Firemen in Chemical Protection Clothing
    Former Russian spy critically ill after suspected poisoning, Salisbury, UK - 08 Mar 2018

    (c) Dukas

     

  • Eric Lusito - Traces of the Soviet Empire
    DUKAS_44090376_REX
    Eric Lusito - Traces of the Soviet Empire
    MANDATORY CREDIT: Eric Lusito/Rex Features. Only for use in story about Eric Lusito's "After the Wall: Traces of the Soviet Empire" photo project. Editorial Use Only. No stock, books, advertising or merchandising without photographer's permission
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Eric Lusito/REX (4033703h)
    Document recovered from a Soviet military base abandoned after the collapse of the USSR. Official portrait of Politburo member Vadim Andreievich Medvedev, Party secretary in charge of Ideology 1988-1990.
    Eric Lusito - Traces of the Soviet Empire
    FULL COPY: http://www.rexfeatures.com/nanolink/p8ug

    These haunting photographs show the remnants of the once all-powerful Soviet empire.

    They are the work of Eric Lusito, who spent six years travelling throughout the former Soviet world from East Germany to Mongolia, from Poland to Kazakhstan to seek out remains of the military installations that embodied the ambition and the might of the USSR.

    Describing himself as working like an archaeologist, the French photographer says his project "Traces of the Soviet Empire" is a photographic record of the land and architecture - haunted by the symbols and history of a once powerful Empire.

    The on-going project takes the form of three series: exteriors, interiors, and found photographs "images from another time, another space and another world".

    What he found was colourful propaganda wall art, faded frescos of Lenin, discarded gas masks, and huge monuments, including those in the shapes of a soldier and a sword.
    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    DUKAS/REX