Changes to dangerous dogs law - what's your view?
The Rams at Wembley: Some Derby County fans have seats changed after being sold QPR tickets
Kent push ahead of Derbyshire CCC as Groenewald takes 250th wicket
Derby County to wear their home kit for Championship play-off final against Queens Park Rangers at Wembley
Confirmed kit colours for @dcfcofficial v @OfficialQPR in the @SkyBetChamp#PlayOffFinalpic.twitter.com/kMet1SjFmB
— The Football League (@football_league) May 14, 2014
QPR's first-choice strip, which is blue and white, would clash with Derby's.How do you think Derby County will fare in their Championship play-off final against QPR at Wembley?
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Derbyshire actor John Hurt lined up for star role in 'cursed' Don Quixote film
DERBYSHIRE actor John Hurt has told fans in Derby that he has been approached to play the lead role in a film that some say is "cursed".
Film director and Monty Python star Terry Gilliam has repeatedly tried to shoot The Man Who Killed Don Quixote – a movie based on the novel Don Quixote.
But a string of setbacks has meant the project is yet to be completed.
The film began shooting in 2000, with Jean Rochefort as Quixote and Johnny Depp as Toby Grisoni.
But the production was cancelled after Rochefort fell ill and flooding destroyed part of the set and filming equipment.
Gilliam has attempted to relaunch production several times since 2005 – but without success.
He restarted preliminary work in 2008 with Robert Duvall as Quixote.
Depp was still lined up to play Grisoni, but because of his tight schedule he had to leave the project and was replaced by Ewan McGregor.
In 2010, Gilliam again tried to revive the project, this time with Owen Wilson instead of Depp.
But funding collapsed, prompting industry experts to say that the film was "cursed".
Now, the American-born director is having a fourth go at making the movie.
And this time, he has asked Chesterfield-born John Hurt to play Quixote. The veteran star – winner of four Baftas – revealed he had been asked to play the role during a Q&A session at the Derby Film Festival, which is taking place at Quad.
It is an offer the 74-year-old is expected to take up.
Adam Buss, chief executive at Quad, told the Derby Telegraph: "John said Terry Gilliam had spoken to him about the Don Quixote role, as they are old friends, and he was hopeful it would get going soon."
According to reports, this latest attempt to resurrect the project is well under way.
Casting is said to be taking place this week and filming is set to start in the Canary Islands early next year.
It would be the latest in a long list of films that has cast Hurt as the lead.
Beginning with A Man For All Seasons in 1966, he has played leading roles in a string of highly-successful films including Alien, Midnight Express and The Elephant Man.
In recent years he has reached younger generations through his roles in Doctor Who and three of the Harry Potter movies, working with directors such as Steven Spielberg, Alan Parker and Stephen Frears.
Meanwhile, Mr Buss said the 10-day Derby Film Festival was going extremely well. He said: "Derby has really embraced the film festival and critical response has been excellent. In terms of numbers, sales are markedly higher than last year.
"Overall we are really pleased with all key aspects thus far – sales, a global media response and excellent audience feedback. This will be Quad's most successful film festival yet and is a good sign for Derby Film Festival going forward."
For more information on the film festival, visit www.derbyfilmfestival.co.uk.
Bookings can be made by calling Derby 290 606.
Grave robbers steal jewellery from Chaddesden cemetery
On the Boundary: Derbyshire's Scott Elstone and Gareth Cross prove that second chances do come along
SOMETIMES, second chances do come along and, sometimes, they come along just when you think they must have passed by.
Scott Elstone felt like he may never have the opportunity to play first-class cricket after being released by Nottinghamshire. Gareth Cross thought he had played for the last time following a nine-year career with Lancashire.
Yet both made their Derbyshire LV County Championship debuts this week against Kent.
They had to wait around for a day and a half to get on to the field and their first action was to bat in conditions hugely in favour of the bowlers but there were no complaints.
Elstone spent three seasons on the periphery at Trent Bridge. He played 34 times for them in the one-day competitions but didn't get the call to play in the Championship and was not retained at the end of the 2012 season.
The 23-year-old from Burton kept in the loop by playing a handful of YB40 matches for Unicorns last year and played with Derbyshire seconds. He did well enough to earn a couple of first-team calls for the Falcons in the YB40 and an incremental summer contract for 2014.
Yet his name still would not have been one of the first on the list in many people's selection for the Championship opener at Chelmsford. An unbeaten 212 for the seconds, while the first team was struggling at Worcester, pushed his name up the list a place or two.
"The double hundred was very enjoyable," he said, in an under-stated kind of way. "It was tough to start with, as it usually is at Derby, but once I got in I played quite nicely.
"It was a decent Worcester attack, so to get out there and get some good runs was nice."
So, at last, Elstone made his first-class debut against Kent and although it was a difficult first day, the experience was not completely alien to him.
"It was pretty much what I expected, to be honest – tough, a fairly big step up from second team cricket and a challenge – but I enjoyed it," he added.
"With it being quite a long wait, it was a big sigh of relief to get out there at all. It was a earlier than I thought this season but I have come in at a good time with runs behind me.
"I felt I was close at Notts. I scored runs in the second team and did fairly well but didn't get the chance. This is a different bunch of lads and a different coaching staff and they have backed me, which is good and gives me confidence to go out there.
"I do feel better prepared for it now. I suppose I'm relatively experienced, if not in this form, and that has stood me in good stead. Hopefully, I can go on and prove why I am here."
Cross was resigned to a new life after professional cricket as the weeks rolled by following his release by Lancashire at the end of last season.
"There weren't many options because everybody had been signed for two or three years and it was probably the worst year it could have happened for me really," he said.
"All the other counties had two keepers on long deals and so I got to Christmas time and thought I'm not going to play.
"I did a bit of coaching and stuff and looked to the future. Then this came along."
Derbyshire came calling after Tom Poynton's car accident on the eve of the season and asked Cross if he would join them as cover for Richard Johnson.
When the second utterly unpredictable occurrence ruled out Johnson through a "performance-related anxiety" condition, Derbyshire were left without a wicketkeeper. Dan Hodgson was the emergency solution at Worcester and now Cross has signed until the end of the season.
"What happened with Tom and Jonno cannot be helped and it's given me a chance to prove what I can do," he added. "It's not great for the people involved but Derbyshire have given me the opportunity and it's up to me to get on with it.
"I've known John Sadler for a bit. I didn't really know Graeme Welch but I've played against him, that's how old I am. They got in touch and asked if I fancied playing a couple of second-team games because of what happened with Tom."
Cross got his first-team chance at Old Trafford when Warren Hegg was injured towards the end of the 2005 season but only really won the gloves in all forms on a regular basis when Luke Sutton left the club after the 2010 campaign.
There are three hundreds in his 62 first-class appearances for Lancashire and he earned a reputation as a very effective one-day hitter.
He could consider himself unfortunate to be deemed surplus to requirements late last season but Lancashire wanted to lure Jos Buttler from Somerset and Cross was the man to make way.
"They decided to get Jos Buttler, who is obviously a very good player, and that happens in sport," he said. "You have to move on.
"Lancs were looking in other directions and that's up to them. In professional sport, people come along and take your job – I've done it to a few people, so I have to get on with it.
"If I do well, I'm going to play for the rest of the season here, hopefully, so it's up to me to keep doing well and try to impress people and win a few games for Derbyshire.
"I didn't know if I wanted to play again when Derbyshire first called, to be honest, but I started training with the lads, got back into it and enjoyed their company.
"I'm going to give it five months here and see what goes on. The challenge is still there for me to go and do well and prove people wrong.
"At the end of the day, you can only play sport for so long and it's not football, where you can retire after playing. You have to do something and I was quite happy what I was doing this winter.
"I'm quite positive about it, where I know I can finish now and still do stuff after cricket, but I've got five or six years left in me if I do well, so it's up to me now."
Ryanair hits 15m passenger mark from East Midlands Airport
LOW-COST airline Ryanair is celebrating flying 15 million passengers since it started operating routes from East Midlands Airport.
The Irish carrier first started flying from the Castle Donington airport a decade ago with a route to Dublin.
Today, it operates 38 routes from East Midlands. It achieved the 15 million passenger mark yesterday.
Weekend weather: get out your barbecues!
Pollen levels are moderate today because of airborne oak and grass pollen http://t.co/sQg7OXCBVjpic.twitter.com/5434dRuxiR
— Met Office (@metoffice) May 15, 2014
Video: @CR_UK provide some top tips on how to stay safe in the sun http://t.co/Q1p8Z8Cw0w
— Met Office (@metoffice) May 14, 2014
Sir Richard Branson wowed by Derby storage firm
VIDEO: Ceremony marks first of hundreds of new Trent XWB engines leaving Rolls-Royce
All eyes on the #TrentXWB. The team celebrate the 1st production engine being delivered to @Airbus#TrentXWBCountdownpic.twitter.com/WaVkgwaGJ0
— Rolls-Royce (@rollsroyce) May 15, 2014
Its final destination will be Airbus' aircraft manufacturing facility in Toulouse, France.
Once it arrives, it will be attached to an Airbus A350 XWB aircraft that has been ordered by Qatar Airways.
To mark the completion and delivery of the first engine, Rolls-Royce arranged for an open top bus to follow the transporter's progress as it left the factory gates.
Before leaving Derby, it stopped in Victory Road for a short ceremony, which was attended by Rolls-Royce staff.
The ceremony culminated in a reminder of Rolls-Royce's heritage, with the fly-past of a Spitfire.
The dispatch of the first engine is a key moment in the Trent XWB engine programme, which goes back to 2006.
The engine has been designed, developed and built by a team of 2,000 staff right here in Derby.
Despite the Trent XWB not yet being in service, it already holds the distinction of being the fastest selling civil large engine ever.
Over the last few years, Rolls-Royce has racked up orders for 1,600 Trent XWBs from more than 40 airlines.
Qatar Airways is the launch customer for the A350, having ordered a fleet of 80 aircraft.
It hopes to begin commercial flights using the new aircraft later this year.