The incident escalated quickly from there, and hill thinks there are plenty of lessons to be learnt. I could have. I could have let down my window in that instant but the thing about me is, man, i do not want attention, i do not want to be cameras out phones on you in that moment cameras out phones on you in that moment but at the end of the day, you know, iam human and i have to follow rules. I have to do what everyone else would do. Get out of the car. Get out of the car right now. Not playing this game. Get out. Get out! now does that give them the right to literally beat the dog out of me? absolutely not. At the end of the day. . . I wish i could go back and do things a bit different. When we tell you to do something, you do it. It is shocking, man. It is really crazy to know that you have officers in this world who would literally do that, hands—on. It is really sad. And that brings up another conversation and leads into what would they do if they did not have body cams. That is even crazier. There is a lot to unpack, and there is a lot we can learn. In football how we get better from things is that we watch the tape and we get betterfrom it, you know? and in this instance we should do the same. A lot of people want to critique and a lot of people want to criticise but i think this can be a learning tool for everybody. Civilians, officers around the world, like, how to do conduct when you pull people over. We can all learn, man. We are all in this thing together. We are all on earth together. The only way we get better is to hold ourselves accountable and get betterfrom it. That is how i get better at football. England's cricketers fell to a 28—run defeat against australia in the first t20 international in southampton. Travis head smashed 59 from 23 balls, he and matthew short put on 86 in the first six overs. Australia were 118—2 in the 10th but england's bowlers impressed late on to remove the tourists for 179. Liam livingstone taking 3—22. However, england's chase was in trouble early as three wickets went down in the powerplay. Livingstone and sam curran gave them hope with a 54—run stand for the fifth wicket but when they went in quick succession, the tail was exposed and they were bowled out for 151 in the final over. The second match is in cardiff on friday. Ireland's women came through a chaotic batting collapse to earn a consolation three—wicket victory in the rain—affected third and final one—day international, their first win over england in the format since 2001. With eight needed from the final over, ireland lost three wickets in three balls to leave four runs required from the last ball, from which alana dalzell struck the winning boundary. Let's have a quick look at some of the other stories making the headlines. Kylian mbappe has failed to obtain an orderforcing his former club paris st—germain to pay him 55 million euros in what he claims are unpaid wages and bonuses. The french league ruled the real madrid star should enter mediation with his old club on the issue. Manchester united announced losses of $147 million for last season where they finshed eighth and failed to progress beyond the group stage in europe. United hope to save money through losing staff and cutting non—essential activities. And bad news for arsenal with captain martin 0degaard out for at least three weeks with an ankle injury picked up playing for norway. He'll miss the north london derby against tottenham on sunday. Rory mcilroy says he's hopeful the fracture in men's professional golf will be resolved after news of the latest meeting in new york between the pga tour and saudi arabia's public investment fund. The northern irishman is back home ahead of the irish 0pen at royal county down. Mcilroy recently voiced frustration at the lack of progress in negotiations which began more than a year ago and is hoping things go well off and on the course in the coming days. Because there are different interests and people want different things and i think there will have to be compromise on both sides to get a deal done but hopefully they are the things they are talking about in those meetings and, again, i am hopeful and hopefully we will get to hear some good news hopefully in the foreseeable future when things start to come back together. Your previous competitive visits in northern ireland have not gone the way you wanted. How confident are you that it will be better this time? i have had to learn how to manage my week when i come home because i am trying so hard to perform in front of home fans but if i push too hard then that is detrimental to my game. I think it is just trying to manage all those emotions of getting lost in my own little world a little bit, not trying to do anything that i would not normally do and just going to try and play the best golf that i can, not get frustrated if things do not go my way. The solheim cup starts on friday, europe are on a great run, winning it in 2019 and �*21 and retaining the cup last year in spain after a thrilling draw against the usa. This year's tournament is in gainsville, virginia, with competition getting under way with four foursomes matches followed by an afternoon session of four four—balls. Suzanne pettersen and stacey lewis will again be captaining the two teams. It is been the motto of the team this year, unfinished business. And some people ask me what one word would be to describe team usa this year and i will say hungry because being on the same number of solheim cups and not getting thejob last year does not leave a good taste in your mouth. We had this year to get back at it and i can tell you hungrier than ever. I think playing away you are always the underdog. I think that is how we have always looked at it. If you look at the previous three times we have come out at the highest and we are going to try and keep that going, certainly. At the same time being away, i am very happy to leave the pressure to americans to say they are the home favourites. 0ur golf correspondent iain carter is at the course in virginia. He thinks this year's solheim cup is set up perfectly for yet more sporting drama. You look at the experiences that the europeans have had, they are the more experienced of the two teams and the experiences they have had have by and large been a great success, the fact that they won two of the last three matches and the most recent contest was a draw meaning the trophy has remained in european hands for an unprecedented three matches in a row and they are looking to extend that now to four. The fact that it is the two same captains resuming hostilities so soon feels appropriate. It is part of the compelling nature of these contests and neither side really gives an inch. We had moments of high controversy in the course of the history of the solheim cup more significantly we have seen close matches. It is rare that you get what you might call a blowout. It will be fascinating to see whether this more experienced team can keep pace with the americans who boast the top two players in the world as the three days of competition unfold from friday. And finally king charles found himself in something of a royal scrum at buckingham palace. He was hosting the women's new zealand rugby team ahead of their match against england this weekend. He apologised to them for not visiting new zealand this autumn on his first major tour since his cancer diagnosis — when he travels to australia and samoa. No hard feelings it would appear. He thanked them for the hugs and says it was very healing. Remember you can find all the latest sports news on the bbc sport app, orfrom our website — loads on the davis cup — that's bbc. Com/sport but from me will perry and the rest of the team at the bbc sport centre, bye for now. Hello. On wednesday, we had a chilly, northwesterly airflow across the uk and that brought us a mixture of sunshine and showers, some of those showers really dramatic. A beautiful strike of foot lightning there in nottinghamshire, and in the same county, so much hail, late afternoon, that it completely covered the roads and pavements in newark—on—trent. The showers then were particularly widespread. I'm showing you this because we've got a similar look to the weather forecast as we head into thursday. So here we go. We've got that chilly flow of northwesterly air coming down from polar regions, and as that cold air gets heated by the seas, well, that's what makes the showers. So as long as this cold feed of air continues to work in, so, too, will the showers. For the time being, though, most of the showers are actually draped around coastal areas, inland areas at the moment largely dry with clear spells and it's cold. Temperatures starting off the day in the coldest spots down to around about two degrees celsius, cold enough even for a nip of ground frost. So a really cold start for a september morning, thursday morning, but loads of sunshine, showers from the word go around coastal areas. As we go through the day, and those temperatures rise, so the showers will start to break out across inland areas from the late morning and into the afternoon. Some of the showers will be heavy with hail and thunder and they'll be very widespread, so most places will see a downpour or two through the day. Temperatures about ten to 16 degrees and probably the heaviest showers come the afternoon, i think, across the midlands and eastern england. By friday, we see an area of high pressure build across the uk, so that's going to kill the showers. It's going to be another very cold start to the day, lots of morning sunshine, but this time we're going to start to see some rain move into northern ireland towards the end of the day. Another cold day for the time of year. Temperatures about four degrees celsius below average for september. All change, though, into the weekend. An area of low pressure is going to be bringing some wet and windy weather. Could get gusts of wind of around 50 to 60 miles an hourfor the north west of scotland, with the rain piling in here and really accumulating. Southern and eastern areas should stay dry with some sunshine, and with the winds coming in from a south—westerly direction across the uk, so temperatures are going to leap upwards, closer to average for the time of year, with highs of 16 to 19 degrees, and it looks as we head into next week, high pressure is going to dominate. So loads of dry weather around next week, with temperatures close to or perhaps even running a little bit above average, with some warm sunshine. Live from washington, this is bbc news. Early polls suggest us vice president kamala harris won her first presidential debate against donald trump, a day after they faced off philadelphia. Alberto fujimori, the former president of peru, who was convicted of human rights abuses, has died. And, on a trip to kyiv, the us and uk's top diplomats say they're considering allowing ukraine to use long—range western weapons for strikes inside russia. Hello. I'm lucy hockings. We start in the us, where kamala harris�*s campaign is riding the favourable momentum from tuesday night's presidential debate in the battleground state of pennsylvania. Her team posted a photo of newspaper clippings praising her performance, with the caption winner. The vice president's republican rival, former president donald trump, said he did a greatjob but accused the abc news moderators of bias in what he called a rigged deal. A yougov poll of more than 2,000 registered voters who watched at least some of the debate found that 54% say harris won the debate, compared to 31% who say trump won. Some trump supporters have also criticised the debate�*s moderators, saying the handling of the night was unfair. Here's more from our analysis editor ros atkins. Donald trump says the tv debate was rigged against him, and he was asked this in the spin room afterwards.