Listen: Exeter Chiefs v Newcastle Falconspublished at 14:54 British Summer Time 28 May 2021
Exeter Chiefs host Newcastle Falcons in the Premiership - listen to BBC Radio Devon & BBC Radio Newcastle commentary.
Read MoreExeter Chiefs host Newcastle Falcons in the Premiership - listen to BBC Radio Devon & BBC Radio Newcastle commentary.
Read MoreThe former Middlesbrough councillor Jon Rathmell admitted forging firework event documents.
Read MoreListen to BBC radio commentary on the final day of the National League season.
Read MoreThe Mouth of the Tyne Festival is rescheduled over concerns around the easing of Covid measures.
Read MoreA man suffered a stab wound in Silloth and has been airlifted to hospital.
Emergency services were called to Pennine Close in the town at 10:30.
A 29-year-old man from Liverpool was found with serious injuries and was airlifted to Newcastle's Royal Victoria Infirmary, Cumbria Police said.
The keys to a new cancer centre at Carlisle's Cumberland Infirmary have been handed over, meaning it won't be long before patients can receive treatment there.
It's hoped the Northern Centre for Cancer Care will improve services for people with the disease across north Cumbria, providing treatment closer to home rather than having to travel to Newcastle.
It is due to open by July offering radiotherapy and a chemotherapy day unit.
Phil Powell, manager for cancer services and clinical haematology at Newcastle Hospitals, which will be jointly running the service, said: “We are sure the environment will be a calming and reassuring place for our patients to receive treatment."
If you want to find out more about your local area, family or community, the Tyne & Wear Archives search room is reopening to the public next week for the first time in more than 15 months.
Based at the Discovery Museum it's home to thousands of documents from the 12th to 21st centuries.
Visits to the search room will have to be booked in advance.
Lizzy Baker, archives lead said: "All documents will be quarantined before and after use and we have modified the search room space to allow social distancing to be in place.
"If people don’t know what they want to see, then they can book a phone consultation with our expert staff before they book their slot.”
Middlesbrough winger Marvin Johnson will leave the club when his contract ends next month.
Read MoreFishing wire is being tied across the popular track, while holes have also been dug in the ground.
Read MoreMountain rescue teams from both sides of the Scottish border helped a woman who injured her leg while walking the Pennine Way.
The group the woman was with called 999 yesterday afternoon from Auchope Cairn, in the Cheviot Hills, after she hurt her lower leg.
The walker was treated and carried down the hillside by stretcher.
Relive the action from day two of seven County Championship matches, including Lancashire against Yorkshire.
Read MoreEssex make inroads into the Durham top order to finish day one on top, despite a batting collapse of their own.
Read MoreLisa Shaw's family say the 44-year-old fell seriously ill days after having the AstraZeneca jab.
Read MoreA new coronavirus vaccination site has opened in North Tyneside which could welcome more than 5,000 people per week.
The centre, at the Cedarwood Trust community charity on the Meadow Well Estate, will operate from 08:00 to 20:00 each day.
Trust CEO Wayne Dobson believes it will make a difference to the 12,000 people who live in the area.
“Lots of people on the estate don’t own a car, and they have to walk or, if they have the money, get buses to get where they need to be.
“It could take some people half a day to get to another vaccination site, especially if they can’t afford bus fare, and that could stop them from going to get vaccinated.
“It is absolutely fantastic that this centre is now running from the Cedarwood Trust and will reach many people who otherwise may not have taken up the vaccine.”
Its opening comes days after the government asked people to minimise travel in and out of North Tyneside to combat the spread of the so-called Indian variant of Covid-19.
Twenty-three people have been arrested as part of a crackdown on county lines drug-dealing gangs.
Northumbria Police said it executed warrants in areas including Ashington, Sunderland, Newcastle, Gateshead (pictured) and South Shields - seizing cocaine, cannabis and ketamine, more than £20,000 in cash and three luxury watches.
The week-long operation was part of a UK-wide effort which saw 1,100 people arrested.
County line gangs are urban drug dealers who sell to customers in more rural areas via dedicated phone lines. It also sees people recruited by organised criminals to work for them in the supply chain.
Det Ch Insp Sue Fryer described it an a "monumental effort", adding: “While we do not see the levels of violence associated with county lines dealing prevalent in other areas here in the North East, we are working hard to keep it that way.”
Politically passionate and one of the first working class reporters at the BBC, Jack Ashley wanted to show the suffering caused by high unemployment in Hartlepool. With no work, no prospects, and little money, Ashley asked how the unemployed reacted to their situation in an increasingly affluent society.
The documentary caused a storm when it was first shown in 1963, bringing Hartlepool’s problems to the attention of a national audience. After the programme aired parcels were sent to the contributors containing food, clothing, presents for the children and even an abundance of Christmas turkeys from people all over the UK. (1963)
Ivan Toney has become the record scorer in a Championship season, so is he ready to make the step-up to the top flight?
Read MoreSpectators are being allowed into Durham County Cricket's Riverside ground for the first time in 20 months.
There is a limit of 4,000 fans for the County Championship game against Essex.
The club is hoping if the government's road map out of lockdown stays on track they could be back to normal for the second half of the T20 Blast and one day internationals.
Durham's chief operating officer Richard Dowson said having supporters back makes all the difference.
"All year with no spectators at the ground has felt very strange and we're looking forward to welcoming them back.
"We'll be following the guidelines, everything from making sure everyone scans in at the gates to wearing face masks in indoor areas."