Andy – Latest News https://latestnews.top Sat, 09 Sep 2023 12:47:14 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.2 https://latestnews.top/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/cropped-licon-32x32.png Andy – Latest News https://latestnews.top 32 32 Ireland vs Romania – Rugby World Cup LIVE: Johnny Sexton returns to Andy Farrell’s side a https://latestnews.top/ireland-vs-romania-rugby-world-cup-live-johnny-sexton-returns-to-andy-farrells-side-a/ https://latestnews.top/ireland-vs-romania-rugby-world-cup-live-johnny-sexton-returns-to-andy-farrells-side-a/#respond Sat, 09 Sep 2023 12:47:14 +0000 https://latestnews.top/2023/09/09/ireland-vs-romania-rugby-world-cup-live-johnny-sexton-returns-to-andy-farrells-side-a/ By Samuel Draper For Mailonline Published: 08:31 EDT, 9 September 2023 | Updated: 08:43 EDT, 9 September 2023 Advertisement Follow Mail Sport’s live blog for all the latest as Ireland get their Rugby World Cup campaign underway against Romania Romania team news This is the team chosen by Romania Head Coach Eugen Apjok for the […]]]>


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Follow Mail Sport’s live blog for all the latest as Ireland get their Rugby World Cup campaign underway against Romania

Romania team news

This is the team chosen by Romania Head Coach Eugen Apjok for the test of trying to topple the world’s best team. He’s made three changes from their heavy defeat to Italy three weeks ago. Cristi Chirica captains the side in Bordeaux.

Ireland team news

Ireland have confirmed their previously announced team, with one change among the replacements. Mack Hansen comes into the 23, replacing Robbie Henshaw, who misses out as a precaution.

Jonny Sexton captains the side in his first outing since March, while forwards Dan Sheehan, Jack Conan and Dave Kilcoyne remain absent through injury.

Hello and welcome to Ireland vs Romania

Hello, and welcome to Mail Sport’s live coverage of the first match in Group B of this year’s Rugby World Cup, seeing Ireland – the world’s leading team by ranking – take on Romania.

After France’s win yesterday, and Italy dominant in action right now, Andy Farrell’s side will also want to get off to the best possible start.

Action in Bordeaux begins at 3.30pm local time, which is 2.30pm in Ireland and the UK, or about an hour away. We’ll have all the build-up and action right here.

BORDEAUX, FRANCE - SEPTEMBER 09: Andy Farrell, Head Coach of Ireland, arrives prior to the Rugby World Cup France 2023 match between Ireland and Romania at Nouveau Stade de Bordeaux on September 09, 2023 in Bordeaux, France. (Photo by Adam Pretty - World Rugby/World Rugby via Getty Images)

Andy Farrell, Ireland’s Head Coach, arrives at the stadium ahead of the match





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‘I’m scared to hug women… maybe I’m too damaged to have a new relationship’: Andy https://latestnews.top/im-scared-to-hug-women-maybe-im-too-damaged-to-have-a-new-relationship-andy/ https://latestnews.top/im-scared-to-hug-women-maybe-im-too-damaged-to-have-a-new-relationship-andy/#respond Mon, 07 Aug 2023 06:30:17 +0000 https://latestnews.top/2023/08/07/im-scared-to-hug-women-maybe-im-too-damaged-to-have-a-new-relationship-andy/ When Andy Malkinson learned that he could be charged for his ‘bed and board’ during the 17 years he served in prison for a crime he did not commit, he was ‘apoplectic’.  For him it crystallised the idea that something was rotten – inhumane, even – at the heart of the British justice system. ‘I […]]]>


When Andy Malkinson learned that he could be charged for his ‘bed and board’ during the 17 years he served in prison for a crime he did not commit, he was ‘apoplectic’. 

For him it crystallised the idea that something was rotten – inhumane, even – at the heart of the British justice system.

‘I don’t think even the Chinese do that to their prisoners. I remember thinking I’d like to sit down with the architects of that rule and say, “You are not chimpanzees. You are human beings. Can you not see this is morally, ethically, wrong?” It cemented something for me – a complete ignorance of the pain they have caused. The lack of empathy.

‘For all those years that was something they accused me of. Because I would not accept guilt I was told “you have no empathy”. “You must be a psychopath”. All those things they threw at me — and they were guilty of them.’

After Prime Minister Rishi Sunak heard about the bed and board rule potentially being applied in Malkinson’s case, he asked for a meeting with the Ministry of Justice (MoJ). 

Andrew Malkinson In Holland on August 3, 2023

Andrew Malkinson In Holland on August 3, 2023

Andrew Malkinson and ex-girlfriend, Karin Schuitemaker

Andrew Malkinson and ex-girlfriend, Karin Schuitemaker 

Yesterday, there was an astonishing volte-face, with the MoJ announcing that the wrongly convicted will no longer face having ‘saved living costs’ deducted from their compensation. Justice Secretary Alex Chalk said: ‘This common-sense change will ensure victims do not face paying twice for crimes they did not commit.’

A battle won then, for Andy, and for those who will come after him? ‘It says a lot about our justice system that this perverse rule was introduced in the first place,’ he says. 

‘I hope the minister will now meet with me to discuss the many other reforms needed to stop others having to fight for 20 years to get justice.’

It is just over a week since Andy – victim of one of the greatest miscarriages of justice this country has seen – had his rape conviction quashed. 

Yet his fight for what he calls ‘true justice’ – namely, for those who put him behind bars to be held to account, and for the system that allowed an innocent man to be treated thus – continues.

When you meet him you sense that, although several of his fights may be over and won, the war has barely begun. 

What does two decades of being wrongly branded a sex offender – a rapist – do to a man? Where to start?

Let’s begin with geography. The fact this softly-spoken, intelligent, articulate man isn’t in the UK when he tells me of his ordeal is significant. 

As soon as he could, he left Britain for the Netherlands, where he is staying with friends. He is disgusted with how he was treated. We should all be.

Wrongly convicted in 2004, Andy served 17 years, four months and 16 days in jail before being released in 2020 – over twice as long as he needed to spend behind bars because of his steadfast refusal to accept that he was guilty.

On the day he walked from prison his lawyer drove him to a beach and he marvelled at the fresh air. 

Andrew Malkinson, who served 17 years in prison for a rape he did not commit, outside the Royal Courts of Justice in London, after being cleared by the Court of Appeal. Picture date: Wednesday July 26, 2023

Andrew Malkinson, who served 17 years in prison for a rape he did not commit, outside the Royal Courts of Justice in London, after being cleared by the Court of Appeal. Picture date: Wednesday July 26, 2023

Andrew Malkinson, 57, (pictured) was found guilty of the 2003 attack on a woman in Greater Manchester and the following year was jailed for life with a minimum term of seven years but remained in prison for a further 10 because he maintained he was innocent

Andrew Malkinson, 57, (pictured) was found guilty of the 2003 attack on a woman in Greater Manchester and the following year was jailed for life with a minimum term of seven years but remained in prison for a further 10 because he maintained he was innocent 

‘You don’t get wind in prison. The stale air of institution seeps into your very being,’ he says. 

But he knew that he wasn’t really free. He was facing the rest of his life on the sex offenders’ register, probably unemployable, certainly a pariah to the rest of society.

‘Branded,’ as he puts it today. Only last week was true freedom his, in law at least. His long-fought appeal was upheld, and his conviction quashed. An innocent man, then, who had committed no crime at all.

From the moment he was first questioned by police, Andy had always argued his innocence. 

He did not match the initial description of the attacker given by the victim, a young woman dragged down a motorway embankment, raped, strangled to the point of unconsciousness and left for dead.

There was not a single piece of forensic evidence to link him to the crime. Indeed, when DNA evidence did emerge, after years of digging by a small legal charity (‘and even then with the help of pure luck because of the wanton destruction of evidence,’ he points out), it exonerated Andy.

That it could take so long for the truth to be acknowledged is horrifying. ‘I was 38,’ says Andy. ‘I am 57 now. Those years are gone.’

Even at the stage where there was clear evidence that something had gone terribly wrong in this case, the police doubled down. 

‘They fought my legal team every inch of the way,’ says Andy. Last month Sarah Jackson, the Assistant Chief Constable of Greater Manchester Police, acknowledged that ‘the justice system failed’ and offered an unequivocal apology. She offered to meet Andy to say sorry in person.

He says: ‘I do not want to be in the room with anyone from that police force, of whatever rank. 

I do not want to see their faces. Those people are not my friends. Your friends do not kidnap you, gag you, hold you hostage in a tiny concrete box that makes you feel you are suffocating. 

They don’t imprison you for the best part of two decades. To suddenly show contrition now, at the 11th hour, seems very hollow. I do not believe them. And I do not think they care about me, or about the truth.’

He says he is doing this interview because, in his airless cell, he made a promise. ‘I told myself that if I ever managed to get the evidence that I was innocent, I would stand on the rooftops and shout about it. 

‘I want everyone to know what can happen and what does happen. It was a terrible, terrible thing they did.’

Quite how Andy – now jobless and homeless, having spent the past two years of ‘freedom’ trying and failing to regain a foothold in society – will be compensated for those lost years is unclear. 

The most likely next step is a claim to the MoJ. The maximum amount of compensation payable under the miscarriage of justice compensation scheme is £1 million for ten or more years’ imprisonment.

He could sue for malicious prosecution or negligence, but this route would be fraught with issues. Either way, it could be years before Andy will be recompensed, if at all.

One of the saddest things is that before his arrest, Andy was a gentle free spirit who always saw the best in human nature. 

His ordeal did its best to destroy that. ‘The worst that could happen did happen,’ he says. ‘I don’t know how you get over that.’ 

Mr Malkinson's mother Trisha Hose outside the Royal Courts of Justice last month after he was cleared

Mr Malkinson’s mother Trisha Hose outside the Royal Courts of Justice last month after he was cleared

Mr Malkinson's half-sister Sarah embraces him after he was cleared of rape after 17 years

Mr Malkinson’s half-sister Sarah embraces him after he was cleared of rape after 17 years

He says he has been called ‘the worst things possible’. Like? ‘F*****g nonce, dirty rapist, women hater. All of the negative, most spiteful things human beings come out with.’

Little wonder that he contemplated suicide in jail. ‘Without going into the gory details, yes, I’d planned how I would do it.’ He didn’t, partly because it would be taken as evidence of his guilt. 

‘I knew they’d think, “Oh, you see, he couldn’t live with himself because of what he had done.”‘ His family, whose efforts to support him have been heroic, were a factor. ‘I didn’t want to hurt them. 

Particularly my mother. I knew if someone had to go to the door to tell her, that would destroy her.’

Andy’s ordeal began in 2003 when he had moved back to Grimsby after temporarily working as a security guard in a Manchester shopping centre. 

Two officers had remembered pulling him over when he was riding on the back of a motorbike weeks before the attack, but there is no logical reason why they should have connected him with this attack.

Although he was alarmed to be tracked down like this, he was confident the system would support him. 

‘How could it not, since I knew I hadn’t done what they said I had done. I could never have done that. I have always respected women. I am a pacifist. Even the idea of hurting someone is alien to me.’

His mum Trish was horrified, ‘but never doubted me, never’. Ditto, his Dutch ex-girlfriend Karin, who has stood by him throughout. ‘She knew there was no way on this Earth.’

Andy’s conviction hinged on the fact the victim and two other witnesses picked him out of an identity parade, and placed him at the scene. 

A key part of his appeal hinged on the fact that both witnesses had long criminal histories. One had been arrested on the night he claimed to have seen Andy.

But there were inconsistencies from the off. The victim had claimed she had broken a nail while scratching her attacker’s face, but a doctor testified (incorrectly) that the nail was not broken, leaving the jury in doubt. 

Photographs have since emerged supporting the victim’s account.

How does Andy feel now about the victim, who clearly made a mistake in identifying him? 

‘At first I was confused. I couldn’t understand why she would say that, but now, having studied these things, I know more about how the human brain works. It is not a video that accurately replays what happens. 

‘What happened to her was not her fault. The blame lies with the police.’

In 2004, he was sentenced to life imprisonment with a minimum term of seven years.

At first he thought that someone – a kindly prison officer, perhaps – would be able to see from his demeanour, from his account of his life story, that he was innocent. How naive. 

‘The sex offenders are the lowest of the low. [Prison officers] treat you as something they have found under their shoe.

‘The female officers treated me, well, there was just no humanity there at all, no kindness.  

‘Not from the male ones either. I shouldn’t single out the female ones. They have total mastery over you. 

‘It’s like being in a North Korean totalitarian state with Big Brother watching over you. They are creative in making your life a living hell. 

E-fit of the suspect in the rape case for which Andrew Malkinson was convicted

Mugshot of Andrew Malkinson shortly after he was arrested

E-fit of the suspect in the rape case (left) and a mugshot of Malkinson shortly after he was arrested (right) 

‘Everything is about causing suffering. Even the food, which is despicably bad. They boil all the nutrients out of everything, and it doesn’t have to be that way.’

As a person convicted of a sex offence, he was on a VP (Vulnerable Prisoners) wing. 

‘You’d think that would offer some protection, but in fact there are prisoners who have been transferred from the mains.’ You were scared of being attacked? ‘All the time. I spent a lot of the time being terrified. 

‘You know when you are on the bus and there is one lunatic who wants to sit beside you, and everyone tries to avoid him? It’s like that, but you can’t get off the bus. There was a murder on the wing. 

‘There were people who hanged themselves. You feel you could easily be stabbed. Someone could come in at any moment and shank you.’

He wasn’t physically attacked, but the threat was there. ‘There is this thing where they add boiling water to sugar and it goes gloopy. 

‘When it’s thrown over you it sticks like napalm. Or they cut you with a double-bladed knife so you can’t be sewn up again easily. It’s horrific, a war zone.’

For the first seven years, the focus was on getting him to confront his ‘crime’. He refused to take part in soul-baring group sessions, which scuppered his chance of an early release. ‘I couldn’t, wouldn’t, confess, because I did not do it.’

His coping mechanism was to ‘retreat inward’. He read voraciously, science books to start with, but then books about law. 

He did an Open University degree in maths. Then there were the letters he wrote, begging for help. 

His mum Trish, who didn’t even have a laptop, would troop to the library to research legal matters.

Initially, he banned his mother from visiting him because it was too distressing. It wasn’t until towards the end of his sentence, when he was in ‘open conditions’ that his mother was able to visit him. 

He has vivid memories of the day, in 2017, that he received a letter from a small legal charity called Appeal saying they would take on his case. ‘That was the breakthrough,’ he says. ‘I knew I couldn’t do it on my own.’

It still took years. Twice, he applied to the Criminal Cases Review Commission, the body charged with investigating miscarriages of justice, but his case was rejected. 

There has been no apology from them yet, but Andy deems them ‘not fit for purpose’. ‘My conviction was quashed in spite of them, not because of them.’

He despaired when he learned key evidence — underwear — had been destroyed, despite this being unlawful. 

The big breakthrough came when fragments were found in the forensic archive. 

Testing revealed evidence of another man’s DNA. ‘If it hadn’t been for that, I would not have had my conviction quashed,’ says Andy.

We return to the subject of him being ‘branded’ a sex offender. Isn’t branding permanent? ‘It will never go away,’ he nods. 

‘It’s a historical fact that I was once branded like that. You can heal, to a point, but I will never forget it. And I think it will always be there.’

Of course it will. His professional life has been trashed. Ditto his personal life. 

He has a grown-up son (understandably, he’d like to keep him out of the limelight), but says he would have liked a daughter, a family life. ‘That’s gone.’

What of a relationship? He admits he has struggled with how to deal with women since his release. 

To hug or not to hug? ‘I’ve had this weird thing of being observed, feeling under surveillance, but… I can’t never speak to a woman again. That would be absurd.’

Does he feel he can ever have a relationship again? ‘I don’t know if I’m too damaged, because I am damaged. It would be nice to think that I could, but I can’t see it yet. 

The most precious things in life are time, liberty and love, and those are the things they took from me.

Mr Malkinson said it has been 20 years since he was arrested and it has 'taken a huge toll on his life'

Mr Malkinson said it has been 20 years since he was arrested and it has ‘taken a huge toll on his life’

‘Prison is loveless. Joyless. To the point where you just can’t bounce out and say “hey ho” .’

On the court steps last month, Andy had another supporter, his lawyer’s excitable spaniel Basil. 

He pops up on a Zoom screen as we are doing our interview, tail wagging furiously at the sound of Andy’s voice.

The joke among the legal team was that if they could have called Basil as a character witness, the case would have been over long before. Andy calls him ‘the best trauma dog ever’.

‘Dogs don’t judge you. They love you unconditionally. They snuggle up to you when you need warmth. They are so… human, in a funny way.’ More so, perhaps.

Andy has a petition seeking an apology and accountability from the Criminal Cases Review Commission, the body that is supposed to identify miscarriages of justice: change.org/p/help-me-get-accountability-for-the-years-i-spent-wrongly-imprisoned or visit appeal.org.uk.



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Republican Rep. Andy Biggs to challenge Kevin McCarthy https://latestnews.top/republican-rep-andy-biggs-to-challenge-kevin-mccarthy/ https://latestnews.top/republican-rep-andy-biggs-to-challenge-kevin-mccarthy/#respond Sat, 01 Jul 2023 20:08:08 +0000 https://latestnews.top/2023/07/01/republican-rep-andy-biggs-to-challenge-kevin-mccarthy/ Republican Rep. Andy Biggs becomes FIRST in party to announce he is running for leadership against Kevin McCarthy Republican Rep. Andy Biggs announced he will challenge Kevin McCarthy for leadership of the House GOP Elections are Tuesday afternoon Biggs acknowledged it would be an uphill climb McCarthy is working to shore up support among GOP […]]]>


Republican Rep. Andy Biggs becomes FIRST in party to announce he is running for leadership against Kevin McCarthy

  • Republican Rep. Andy Biggs announced he will challenge Kevin McCarthy for leadership of the House GOP
  • Elections are Tuesday afternoon
  • Biggs acknowledged it would be an uphill climb
  • McCarthy is working to shore up support among GOP after disappointing midterm election results
  • Republicans are one seat away from winning the House 

Rep. Andy Biggs announced he will challenge Kevin McCarthy for leadership of the House GOP when elections are held on Tuesday.

‘We have a new paradigm here,’ Biggs told Newsmax. ‘And I think the country wants a different direction from the House of Representatives and it’s a new world. And yes, I’m going to be nominated tomorrow to the position of speaker of the House. We’ll see if we can get the job done.’

He acknowledged it will be tough to beat the California Republican. 

‘It’s going to be tough,’ he said. ‘Kevin has raised a lot of money and done a lot of things, but this is not just about Kevin. I think it’s about institutional direction and trajectory, and that’s where we’re going to see if we have enough people who agree that we need to change the trajectory of this place and open it up.’

Biggs, a Republican from Arizona, is a close ally of Donald Trump and supported his objections to the 2020 election results. 

But the former president is backing McCarthy’s leadership bid although his level of influence on the party in the wake of the midterms remains unclear

Republican Rep. Andy Biggs (above) announced he will challenge Kevin McCarthy for leadership of the House GOP

Republican Rep. Andy Biggs (above) announced he will challenge Kevin McCarthy for leadership of the House GOP

Republicans were shaken when a red wave failed to appear in last week’s election, a move that endangered the leadership of McCarthy and Senate GOP Leader Mitch McConnell.

Democrats retained their control of the Senate. Republicans, however, are one seat away from winning the 218 seats necessary for the majority in the House.

McCarthy is working to shore up his support among House Republicans ahead of Tuesday afternoon’s meeting, particularly among the right flank, which is where Biggs has his strength.

He needs only a simply majority to win the GOP leader spot. But he would still need to win the speakership in a vote of the entire House when the new Congress meets in early January.

In order to do that he will need conservatives in his pocke. He’ll also need them in order to move any legislation through the House. Republicans are expected to have a narrow majority when they are in power and McCarthy will need every GOP vote. 

Any faction of dissent would have substantial influence to block legislation or otherwise defy the Republican leadership. The right wing appears to be ready to exert their influence – much as liberals did to Speaker Nancy Pelosi when she had a narrow majority.

Conservative Freedom Caucus lawmakers are demanding concessions from McCarthy before giving him their backing. 

They have have a long list of asks – from prime positions on House committees to guarantees they can have a role in shaping legislation. 

Republican Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia has thrown her support behind McCarthy who has promised her spots on the House Judiciary and Oversight committees – two powerful panels if Republicans carry through on their threat to investigate President Joe Biden and his administration. 

On Monday, McCarthy met with House GOP lawmakers for two hours in the Capitol to make his pitch. 

‘The one thing you got to think about is it´s going to be a tight majority so everyone is going to have to work together,’ he said afterward.  

‘We’ll be successful as a team and we´ll be defeated as an individual if we don’t all work together,’ he said. 

It’s not just McCarthy’s leadership that is in question ahead of the party election – his entire team, including Rep. Tom Emmer of Minnesota, the campaign chairman, faces blowback from the disappointing midterm election results.

Kevin McCarthy is working to shore up support among GOP after disappointing midterm election results

Kevin McCarthy is working to shore up support among GOP after disappointing midterm election results

Some in the House GOP Conference have made it clear McCarthy does not have their support. 

‘There are definitely at least five people, actually a lot more than that, who would rather be waterboarded by Liz Cheney than vote for Kevin McCarthy for Speaker of the House. And I am one of them,’ Rep. Matt Gaetz of Florida said on Charlie Kirk show.



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MasterChef’s Andy Allen to pay tribute to Jock Zonfrillo in first TV interview since his https://latestnews.top/masterchefs-andy-allen-to-pay-tribute-to-jock-zonfrillo-in-first-tv-interview-since-his/ https://latestnews.top/masterchefs-andy-allen-to-pay-tribute-to-jock-zonfrillo-in-first-tv-interview-since-his/#respond Sun, 07 May 2023 03:25:06 +0000 https://latestnews.top/2023/05/07/masterchefs-andy-allen-to-pay-tribute-to-jock-zonfrillo-in-first-tv-interview-since-his/ MasterChef judge Andy Allen to pay tribute to late co-star Jock Zonfrillo in first TV interview since his shock death By Jimmy Briggs For Daily Mail Australia Published: 23:15 EDT, 6 May 2023 | Updated: 23:16 EDT, 6 May 2023 MasterChef judge Andy Allen will pay tribute to his co-star Jock Zonfrillo during a special […]]]>


MasterChef judge Andy Allen to pay tribute to late co-star Jock Zonfrillo in first TV interview since his shock death

MasterChef judge Andy Allen will pay tribute to his co-star Jock Zonfrillo during a special episode of The Project on Sunday.

The esteemed chef, 35, was left heartbroken after his beloved co-star Zonfrillo tragically died last week aged 46.

It will be Allen’s first interview since the shock news broke on Monday that Zonfrillo was found dead in Melbourne, just hours before MasterChef was set to premiere. 

Channel Ten said in a statement that Allen will be one of ‘many of the world’s most famous chefs’ paying tribute to Zonfrillo on The Project.

Zonfrillo’s death on April 30 hit Andy particularly hard as it was supposed to be a day of celebration for him, as it was his 35th birthday.

MasterChef judge Andy Allen will speak out about the shock death of his co-star Jock Zonfrillo (pictured together) during a special episode of The Project on Sunday

MasterChef judge Andy Allen will speak out about the shock death of his co-star Jock Zonfrillo (pictured together) during a special episode of The Project on Sunday

The interview will air at 6.30pm in the slot prior to the rescheduled MasterChef premiere on Sunday.

Andy paid tribute to Jock on Instagram last week, writing: ‘You’ve taught me so much about food, but it’s the lessons I learnt about what it means to be a great father, husband and friend that I’ll take away from our time together and will last forever.’

Season 15 of the show had been due to launch on May 1 but it was pushed back after the Scottish chef was was found dead by police at a Melbourne hotel at 2am on Monday.

‘With the full support of Jock Zonfrillo’s family, MasterChef Australia will air at 7.30pm on Sunday, 7 May,’ read a Channel 10 statement shared to Instagram on Wednesday.

‘It is with Jock in our hearts that we cherish this season and remember the charismatic and big-hearted Judge and Chef who we knew and loved,’ it went on. 

‘Jock will be remembered in the MasterChef Australia kitchen for years to come.’

The esteemed chef, 35, was left heartbroken after his beloved co-star Jock, 46, tragically died last week

The esteemed chef, 35, was left heartbroken after his beloved co-star Jock, 46, tragically died last week 

Season 15 of the show had been due to launch on May 1 but it was pushed back after the Scottish chef was was found dead by police at a Melbourne hotel at 2am on Monday

Season 15 of the show had been due to launch on May 1 but it was pushed back after the Scottish chef was was found dead by police at a Melbourne hotel at 2am on Monday

The network added that a special edition of The Sunday Project will pay tribute to Jock from 6.30pm on Sunday before the new series airs. 

‘With contributions from friends, he held closely, the show will honour Jock by reflecting on his personal and professional life in a celebration of his incredible achievements,’ the statement continued.

Production wrapped on the 62-episode season at MasterChef HQ in Flemington, Melbourne, last month.

MasterChef Australia premieres Sunday, May 7 at 7:30pm on Channel 10 

'With the full support of Jock Zonfrillo's family, MasterChef Australia will air at 7.30pm on Sunday, 7 May,' read a Channel 10 statement shared to Instagram on Wednesday

‘With the full support of Jock Zonfrillo’s family, MasterChef Australia will air at 7.30pm on Sunday, 7 May,’ read a Channel 10 statement shared to Instagram on Wednesday



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