Canelo and Crawford clash in true super-fight in Las Vegas
Canelo Alvarez and Terence Crawford will square off in one of the biggest fights of the century tonight, as they clash at Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas.
So much is on the line in the 71,000 capacity venue, home to the Raiders NFL team: Canelo’s undisputed super-middleweight titles are up for grabs, while Crawford risks his unbeaten record, and each man wagers his legacy.
Mexico’s Canelo (63-2-2, 39 knockouts) is seen by many as this generation’s face of boxing, while American Crawford (41-0, 31 KOs) is arguably the pound-for-pound best boxer in the world.
In tonight’s main event, which streams live on Netflix along with the undercard, Crawford ambitiously goes two divisions above his career-highest weight so far, challenging Canelo at 168lb. If Crawford can triumph, he will become the first three-weight undisputed champ of the modern era.
Like 35-year-old Canelo, Crawford is a four-weight world champion already, but the 37-year-old could confirm himself as this era’s greatest boxer with a victory in Vegas. Meanwhile, Canelo’s pride is on the line against the naturally smaller man, along with all the major belts in the super-middleweight division.
Follow updates and results below, as The Independent provides live coverage from Las Vegas.
Mike Tyson among celebrities and fight stars to attend Canelo vs Crawford
Serhii Bohacuk and Brandon Adams in gruelling prelim bout
A truly gruelling preliminary fight is taking place as we speak.
Adams and Bohachuk are both producing brutal offence, to the head and body, as their middleweight clash ticks into the final few rounds.
Incredible endurance and resilience from both, so far.
Canelo vs Crawford and the biggest fights of the 21st century
Tonight in Las Vegas, Crawford and Canelo will clash in one of the biggest fights of the century.
It is the latest megafight to come to fruition in boxing, as two genuine stars and pound-for-pound talents go head to head in an undisputed-title fight at Allegiant Stadium, which has a capacity of 71,000.
Fans and pundits are split on their predictions, the odds are close with the bookies, and the fight will reach a significant audience – live and free on Netflix. So, Saturday’s main event has all the makings of a classic, colossal clash.
With that in mind, here are 10 of the biggest fights this side of the millennium (not including the first entry: Canelo vs Crawford!)…
Canelo vs Crawford and the biggest fights of the 21st century
The moment Canelo vs Crawford transformed into something else entirely
Thursday was the day fight week changed. Thursday was the day Canelo vs Crawford went from being a fanciful match-up to a material fight.
As the protagonists partook in a customary press conference, Crawford and Canelo finally felt what this fight needed: the energy of the fans.
The aircon of the T-Mobile offered a merciful respite from the searing Las Vegas sun, and just inside the venue’s side entrance, the voice of Max Kellerman was audible above the distant murmurs from the arena floor.
Kellerman, a fan-favourite boxing pundit, has been brought back into the fold for Saturday’s super-fight after a long absence from the sport.
With the broadcaster facing the other way, all that was visible of him was the back of a sharp suit and an even sharper haircut. You don’t need to see the face, though: his voice is unmistakable. That, in part, is why he is back.
Here are The Independent’s observations from Thursday’s press conference:
The moment Canelo vs Crawford transformed into something else entirely
What Canelo vs Crawford means for a complicated Las Vegas tradition
You needn’t spend much time in Las Vegas to find yourself entangled in the extensive strands of fighting history, or to feel their tensile strength.
This unique, bizarre city in the middle of the desert was built on one key agenda, making money, and boxing has brought almost as much of that to “Sin City” as gamblers have. And within minutes of being enveloped by the balmy, late-summer evening air, it could be that your very first interaction with a local draws out this topic.
“The last time I actually went to a fight was when Lamon Brewster knocked out Wladimir Klitschko,” Curtis, a 63-year-old taxi driver, tells The Independent. “When was that? 2013, 2012? No, way earlier, right? 2005 maybe…” Even further back, in fact, in 2004.
That result at the Mandalay Bay Hotel, a major upset, gave way to conspiracy – another tenet of boxing. An FBI investigation was launched, with late odds changes, Klitschko’s blood-sugar level, and an accreditation switch all points of discussion.
That is not to say every Vegas fight has brought such drama, but they always bring glitz.
I spoke to fight fans and Independent columnist Steve Bunce about the complex heritage and future of big-time boxing in Vegas:
What Canelo vs Crawford means for a complicated Las Vegas tradition
Steve Bunce: Don’t let hype and glam of Canelo vs Crawford distract you
Here’s a snippet of Steve Bunce’s preview of tonight’s main event, which you can read in full at the bottom of this post:
Crawford has not fought in over a year and has, instead, slowly transformed his body from being a big welterweight to pushing the limits on the scales at super-middleweight. He is unrecognisable now, no longer the lean lightweight.
The danger is that he will have lost some speed, and that will be crucial against Canelo, who has been a full super-middleweight since 2018. The truth is that no amount of instant and impressive muscle gain can match the natural strength of an opponent who has been at the weight for so many years.
Still, Crawford will not be thrown all over the ring by Canelo, that is for sure. It’s boxing, and not wrestling.
It is a fine fight, still a fight with a lot of unknowns, which seems strange considering they have fought a combined total of 108 fights. Canelo has so often breezed through a fight when it was thought he would struggle, and conversely made hard work of easy nights. Crawford did have to work hard against Madrimov last summer and that, on reflection, looks like a bad form guide for the showdown against Canelo.
Full article:
Don’t let the hype and glam of Canelo vs Crawford distract you from the truth
How much is Canelo earning for Crawford fight and Saudi bouts?
Saudi boxing matchmaker Turki Alalshikh has suggested that Canelo will make more than $100m as part of his deal with the Kingdom.
Tonight’s bout is Canelo’s second on a four-fight deal with Saudi Arabia, with the Mexican having faced and beaten William Scull in May, and with two more contests set for 2026.
While it is unclear exactly how much Canelo will earn from the deal, or specifically for his super-fight against Crawford, the contract overall seems to be worth more than $100m.
At Thursday’s pre-fight press conference, a reporter asked how Canelo feels about being “the first Mexican sports figure with a guaranteed purse of at least $100m”.
However, Alalshikh cut in: “No, you get the number wrong. The contract between us and Canelo [is] more than that.”
It is unclear whether the reporter believed that Canelo will be earning nine figures at Allegiant Stadium on Saturday, or whether he was referring to the champion’s wider deal with Saudi Arabia. It is also unclear whether Alalshikh was referring to Saturday’s purse or Canelo’s longer contract, but it seemed to be the latter.
Turki Alalshikh reveals Canelo’s eyewatering pay for Crawford clash and Saudi fights
Crawford provides update on injury rumours: ‘Don’t tell Canelo!’
Crawford had a tongue-in-cheek response to rumours that he was battling a shoulder injury this week.
The American, 37, seemed to dismiss any worries while playfully addressing the topic at Wednesday’s media day.
“Yeah, my shoulder’s messed up everyone,” Crawford told reporters. “Don’t tell Canelo!
“Maybe the left, maybe the right, maybe both of them. I’m having problems with my shoulders.
“Shhh, keep that under wraps.”
Terence Crawford provides fresh update on injury rumours: ‘Don’t tell Canelo!’
What were the weigh-in results? How much did Crawford and Canelo weigh?
Crawford hit the scales at the same weight as Alvarez on Friday.
For this fight, Crawford is venturing two divisions above his previous career-highest weight, and he tipped the scales at 167.5lb at Friday’s weigh-in – 0.5lb inside the limit, and weighing the same as Canelo.
The main-event weigh-in took place behind closed doors, with footage later released online and weights confirmed to reporters.
Super-middleweight has been Canelo’s preferred division for some time, and he is now a two-time undisputed champion at 168lb. Meanwhile, Crawford was previously undisputed at super-lightweight and welterweight.
Each man has held world titles at four weights, in fact, with Crawford previously being as light as 135lb. But with a little over 48 hours before their fight, the 37-year-old American ceded no size advantage to Canelo, 35.
That said, with Crawford claiming there is no rehydration clause for tonight’s showdown, there was time for each boxer to bulk up; this is where the naturally bigger Canelo might have benefited, although Crawford is the taller man.
Canelo Alvarez and Terence Crawford weights confirmed ahead of undisputed title fight
Canelo vs Crawford fight card in full – main event and undercard
‘C’ denotes champion:
Canelo Alvarez (C) vs Terence Crawford (undisputed super-middleweight titles)
Callum Walsh vs Fernando Vargas Jr (super-welterweight)
Christian Mbilli vs Lester Martinez (super-middleweight)
Mohammed Alakel vs John Ornelas (lightweight)
Serhii Bohacuk vs Brandon Adams (middleweight)
Ivan Dychko vs Jermaine Franklin (heavyweight)
Reito Tsutsumi vs Javier Martinez (super-featherweight)
Sultan Almohammed vs Martin Caraballo (super-lightweight)
Steven Nelson vs Raiko Santana (light-heavyweight)
Marco Verde vs Marcos Osorio Betancourt (super-middleweight)
Trump could deploy 1,000 troops to Louisiana cities until 2026: report
The Trump administration has reportedly drafted plans to activate roughly 1,000 Louisiana National Guard troops and send them to the state’s “urban centers” like New Orleans, the latest potential expansion of the unprecedented White House effort to use military troops in law enforcement in Democratic-led cities around the country.
In an undated memo obtained by The Washington Post, the Department of Defense described a potential plan, lasting through September 2026, to activate such troops if the Republican governor of Louisiana requests them.
The documents described the plan as having a “unique advantage” of working with the state’s Republican Governor Jeff Landry, whose support could allow the federal government to invoke Title 32 of the U.S. Code, allowing the National Guard to operate under state control with federal funds, avoiding running afoul of a bedrock federal law stopping the military from being involved in domestic law enforcement.
“Leaked documents should not be interpreted as policy,” the Pentagon said in a statement to the paper, affirming the documents’ authenticity. “We will not discuss these plans through leaked documents, pre-decisional or otherwise.”
The Independent has requested comment from Landry’s office.
The president has been floating sending troops to New Orleans, a Democratic-led city in a Republican state, since earlier this month, following deployments of troops in Washington and Los Angeles, as well as so-far-unrealized threats to send the military into Chicago.
Landry recently wrote on X that Louisiana wanted Trump’s “help from New Orleans to Shreveport!”
Trump claimed this week that New Orleans is in “really bad shape,” though the police department there in May reported a 20 percent decrease in violent crime so far this year compared with the same period last year.
The president has also said troops will be sent to Memphis, another blue city in a red state. Murder in the city is currently at a six-year low.
“We’re gonna fix that just like we did Washington,” Trump told Fox and Friends on Friday of Memphis. “I would’ve preferred going to Chicago.”
The mayor of Memphis, Paul Young, has said he opposes a federal military action in the city to fight crime.
“I did not ask for the National Guard and I don’t think it is the way to drive down crime,” he said at a news conference. “However, that decision has been made.”
Last week, the District of Columbia sued the Trump administration over sending the Guard into the capital, arguing the operation was an illegal “military occupation” which violated federal prohibitions on using troops for law enforcement.
A federal judge ruled in early September that the administration “willfully” broke the law by sending National Guard troops into Los Angeles over the objection of state officials to respond to anti-immigration raid protests, writing that the operation raised the specter of “creating a national police force with the President as its chief.”
The administration has appealed the ruling.
Met Office weather warning for 80mph winds expanded
The Met Office has issued a yellow weather warning for wind across most parts of England and Wales from Sunday evening into Monday.
Forecasters say most of England and all of Wales could see strong winds and thunderstorms.
The high winds could lead to disruption and delays to road, rail, air, and ferry transport, with a chance that some roads and bridges may close, the forecaster has said.
There is also a chance that power cuts may occur, with the potential to affect other services, such as mobile phone coverage.
Some communities near coastal routes and sea fronts may be affected by large waves.
The yellow weather warning is in place from 8pm on Sunday until 6pm on Monday, across London and South East England, the East of England, East Midlands, West Midlands, Yorkshire and Humber, North East England, North West England, South West England and Wales.
Gusts of around 50mph to 60mph are likely around coasts and hills, and 70mph to 80mph is possible in the most exposed locations, with the windiest conditions expected on Monday morning.
Forecasters said those affected should prepare to protect their property and people from injury. They recommend checking for loose items outside the home and planning how to secure items such as bins, garden furniture, trampolines, tents, sheds and fences.
They also advise checking road conditions and bus and train timetables, and amending travel plans if necessary to have the best chance of avoiding delays.
Despite the unpredictable conditions, forecasters said they are not expecting a named storm to hit the country.
Paul Gundersen, chief meteorologist at the Met Office, said: “We have been monitoring a deepening area of low pressure over the North Atlantic that might bring impactful weather to the UK, most likely on Sunday and Monday. At present, a named storm is unlikely.”
Met Office outlook:
Saturday
A day of sunny spells and scattered blustery showers, some heavy or thundery and merging into longer spells of rain at times. Breezy and gusty for most, but a little less so than on Friday. Temperatures near average for September.
Saturday evening
Showers mostly dying out and winds easing. Turning chilly under clear spells, particularly in the North, with rural grass frost and isolated fog patches. Clouding over in the South West later.
Sunday
A fine start for many but with rain then spreading northeastwards, heavy at times. Turning increasingly windy with gales developing widely across England and Wales into the evening.
Monday to Wednesday
Staying windy for many on Monday with sunny spells and blustery showers, possibly heavy and thundery. Showers and winds gradually easing on Tuesday, but turning unsettled again on Wednesday.
Celebrated Pretty Things drummer Viv Prince dies aged 84
The Pretty Things drummer Viv Prince has died at the age of 84.
Known for his rowdy and eccentric on-stage behaviour, Prince enjoyed a controversial 18-month stint in the rock group from 1964 to 1965, and is said to have influenced Keith Moon, The Who’s legendary drummer.
News of Prince’s death was shared on Instagram by the White Stripes frontman Jack White, who described the late musician as “wild and full of abandon”.
“I’ve received word through my friend John Baker, who knew the man well, that the great Viv Prince has just passed on,” he wrote.
“Viv was an incredible drummer, wild and full of abandon. He played for the band the Pretty Things, and he influenced many other musicians like Keith Moon.”
Continuing his tribute, White wrote that he had met Prince personally “some years ago” while the drummer was working on his farm in Portugal.
“He was an inspired and eccentric rock and roller, and maybe I’ll have to put together a team to work on a documentary about this man one day,” White added.
“Safe travels into the sweet beyond Viv, you were one of the real ones.”
Born in Loughborough in 1941, Prince started as a jazz drummer, performing in several local groups throughout the early 1960s.
He also worked as a session musician and earned a burgeoning reputation for his distinctive and charismatic drumming style.
Having joined the Pretty Things in 1964, Prince recorded two albums with the counter-cultural rock group: 1965’sThe Pretty Things and Get the Picture?
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The drummer’s unruly antics became the focus of much of the media coverage of the band. He would engage in brazen pranks onstage, such as laying carpeting during other artists’ performances. Prince was expelled from the band towards the end of 1965.
In the years after his work with Pretty Things, Prince performed with artists such as the Honeycombs, the Who, and Hawkwind, and recorded with artists including Chris Barber.
Later in life, he reportedly joined the Hells Angels Motorcycle Club, only to be ejected for misbehaviour.
In 1999, the Pretty Things recorded a song called “Vivian Prince” as a tribute to their former bandmate, included on the album Rage Before Beauty.
Ellen DeGeneres accused of causing California car crash in new lawsuit
Ellen DeGeneres is accused of causing a 2023 car collision in California, according to a new lawsuit.
The former talk show host, who moved to the British countryside last year, is being sued for negligence.
In court documents obtained by multiple outlets, a woman claims that on October 16, 2023, DeGeneres, 67, ran through a stop sign while driving in Santa Barbara County and “t-boned” her car.
DeGeneres’s lawyer did not immediately respond to The Independent’s request for comment.
According to the lawsuit, seen by People magazine, the “intersection [where the incident occurred] is controlled by stop signs in all directions.”
The plaintiff claims she stopped at the intersection and “made sure there were no other vehicles” before driving forward; however, she claims DeGeneres then “suddenly and without any warning” collided into her vehicle.
“Ellen DeGeneres entered the intersection without stopping at the stop sign,” the lawsuit alleges.
The lawsuit further accuses the comedian of exhibiting “negligent conduct [that] fell below the standard of care of a reasonable person,” adding that DeGeneres “negligently caused, or contributed to causing plaintiff’s vehicle to be collided with by the defendants’ vehicle.”
The woman says she has suffered “multiple serious personal injuries and damages” as a result.
The woman says she has lost wages and incurred hospital and medical expenses, in addition to “loss of enjoyment of life, emotional distress and anxiety.” She is suing DeGeneres for general negligence and seeking an unspecified amount in compensatory damages.
After her long-running eponymous talk show ended in 2022 following allegations of a toxic workplace environment, DeGeneres went on a final comedy tour around the U.S., which ended in August that year. Shortly after that, she and her wife, Portia de Rossi, bought what DeGeneres described as a “part-time house” in the Cotswolds, where they intended to spend around four months a year.
However, the couple made the move permanent in November last year, around the time Donald Trump won the U.S. presidential election.
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In July, DeGeneres confirmed their decision was influenced by Trump’s victory. “Yes. We got here the day before the election and woke up to lots of texts from our friends with crying emojis, and I was like, ‘He got in.’ And we’re like, ‘We’re staying here,’” she said.
“We’re just not used to seeing this kind of beauty,” she added of her new life in rural England. “The villages and the towns and the architecture — everything you see is charming, and it’s just a simpler way of life. It’s clean. Everything here is just better — the way animals are treated, people are polite. I just love it here.”
I wish my mum had contacted Macmillan Cancer Support
I wasn’t at my mum’s side when she learned she had breast cancer, but that made me determined to be there the day she was getting the all-clear 18-months later. However, things didn’t go to plan that day.
Mum’s cancer journey started over a decade ago, a few months after a routine mammogram – when she developed “a pain”. She told herself it was probably nothing, because the scan she’d just had was fine. When she mentioned it to her GP – a small lump that didn’t feel quite right – she convinced herself that she was just being silly. The biopsy begged to differ.
In the list you keep in your head of the cancers you worry your mum might get, breast wasn’t that high on mine. Yes, it’s long been the number one cancer affecting women, with Macmillan Cancer Support reporting that about 55,000 women are diagnosed with breast cancer in the UK each year – the risk factor only increasing with age. But my mum had other health concerns to contend with.
As a schoolgirl in swinging London, she’d been a back-of-the-bikeshed smoker, which had graduated into a lifelong habit. Lung cancer seemed like a possibility.
Mum’s also the biggest sun worshipper I know. Long before any of us had heard of SPF, she would think nothing of spending an afternoon in the garden, stretched out on a blanket, slathered in baby oil. So, given what we know now about UV radiation, I wondered about skin cancer too.
Mum went on to have a series of lumpectomies to get rid of three spots of malignant tissue. She would also have lymph nodes removed as a precaution, as well as undergo extensive chemotherapy.
For me, her diagnosis was as though a stopwatch had been started. How long might she have left? She did her best to be stoic. Which was just as well, given what government austerity measures at the time were doing to the NHS: budget cuts, hapless reorganisations, and an end to the “gold-standard” two-week referral from detection to the start of treatment.
All mum could do was wait for the brown envelopes to drop on the doormat detailing appointments at unfamiliar hospitals many miles away, sometimes after the appointment had been and gone.
If she felt let down by the bureaucracy of our health service, the same could not be said for the army of individuals involved in her care. On a human level, she found her nurses and doctors to be uniquely composed and compassionate throughout her treatment.
When the day finally came for her oncologist to tell her that all the signs of her cancer had gone, I was invited along to hold her hand. “The scans are back,” he began. “And I need to discuss your options for the next course of action.” It seemed the cancer hadn’t quite gone after all. She had fought so hard to get to this point, she was expecting good news, and was unprepared for the knockback.
But she did go on to beat cancer – and has been in remission for more than five years, which we couldn’t be more grateful for. However, should it ever come back, there’s one thing we’d do differently from the off: make a call to Macmillan Cancer Support.
Only with hindsight, did we realise how much help Macmillan would have been. Someone to provide her with a calming companion for the journey, someone to help with the cancer admin – the appointments, the prescriptions, the test results – and someone to explain what all the scans and tests were for, what the results might mean, and what to expect next.
I couldn’t always be around while mum was living with cancer, and that’s where Macmillan steps in. Now, enjoying a slice of cake at a Coffee Morning, which is raising money to fund the work they do, seems like the least I can do.
Find out how you can help raise vital funds by hosting a Macmillan Coffee Morning. Sign up now on the Macmillan website
Macmillan Cancer Support, registered charity in England and Wales (261017), Scotland (SC039907) and the Isle of Man (604). Also operating in Northern Ireland.
Lawyer for Air India families says one key theory has emerged
A lawyer representing families of those killed in June’s devastating Air India crash has dismissed claims that the pilots may have deliberately or mistakenly shut off fuel controls before the aircraft plunged into a building, killing 260 people.
Mike Andrews, who is pursuing lawsuits against Boeing on behalf of more than 100 families, said in an interview with The Independent that the suggestion of “self-sabotage” or gross pilot error is not only unsupported by evidence but also unjust to the dead.
Flight AI171, a Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner operated by Air India, took off from Ahmedabad on 12 June bound for London. Less than two minutes into the journey, the aircraft lost power, veered off course and struck a medical college building near the runway.
All 229 passengers, 12 crew members and 19 people on the ground were killed. Among the victims were 52 British citizens. Only one man, Leicester resident Vishwashkumar Ramesh, survived after being thrown clear of the fuselage.
It was the first fatal crash involving the Dreamliner, Boeing’s flagship long-haul aircraft introduced in 2011 and hailed for its fuel efficiency and modern design. The carbon-fibre twin-engined 787 was designed partly as a replacement for Boeing’s veteran 767 – but also to introduce passenger-friendly benefits such as larger windows and higher cabin pressure.
The Dreamliner was also friendly to airlines’ bottom lines, burning about 20 per cent less fuel than the 767, and allowed airlines’ network planners to dream of ultra-long routes.
But Mr Andrews argues that the aircraft had been dogged by technical concerns, particularly involving its potable water system – that supplies safe, drinkable water for passengers and crew – and its proximity to sensitive electronics.
He pointed to a trail of Boeing bulletins to airlines dating back years and recent regulatory warnings from the US Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), all raising alarms over water leaks.
“Going back to 2016, 2017 and 2018 there were bulletins to air carriers in the United States to perform waterproofing maintenance,” Mr Andrews said.
“In particular, it speaks to couplings that join water lines underneath lavatories and galley areas. I’ve purchased some of these couplings myself – they’re simple clamshell devices that hold two lines together.
“But the way the final shroud is fitted can loosen the latch, and over time that leads to leaks. We know from FAA notices and directives that water has been found on 787s leaking into equipment bays, and in some cases equipment had to be replaced.”
The compartment he refers to is the aircraft’s electronics equipment bay, or EE bay. It sits beneath the cabin floor and houses the computers that control almost every aspect of the flight, including the full authority digital engine control, known as Fadec.
The Fadec is essentially the aircraft’s engine brain. Unlike older jets, where pilots manually controlled fuel flow, modern engines depend on this computer to regulate thrust, fuel injection and performance.
Fadec is a sophisticated digital computer system in aircraft that automatically controls all aspects of engine performance by receiving data from sensors, calculating optimal settings, and adjusting fuel flow and other engine parameters to maximise efficiency and performance while ensuring safety.
According to the FAA, “if the Fadec fails, the engine fails”.
Mr Andrews said a water leak does not have to destroy equipment outright to be dangerous. “Even if it doesn’t ruin the component, it can trigger a reset. And that cascade can initiate an engine shutdown. In Ahmedabad, we saw both engines shut down or lose thrust within seconds – that is extraordinarily unlikely without a common cause. Water reaching those systems is one plausible explanation.”
The FAA itself highlighted the risk only weeks before the crash.
On 14 May, the regulator issued an Airworthiness Directive – an order that requires mandatory checks – warning that “water leakage from the potable water system due to improperly installed waterline couplings” had been reported, and that such leaks could cause “equipment in the EE bays to become wet resulting in an electrical short and potential loss of system functions essential for safe flight”.
The directive ordered inspections of Dreamliners for missing sealant and moisture barriers.
Yet Mr Andrews said the directive lacked urgency.
“My understanding is that this directive wasn’t due to take effect until about six days after our crash. Obviously there’s insufficient urgency when something has apparently been known by Boeing for years. Aviation safety affects everyone.
“And one concern is that the FAA has authority inside the United States, but outside the US things often lose urgency, whether it’s political protection or simply a breakdown in communication.”
The Independent has reached out to Boeing seeking a response on the allegations.
India’s Aircraft Accident Investigation Bureau has floated a different possibility.
A preliminary report, published in July, said both of the plane’s fuel switches moved to the “cut-off” position “immediately” after take-off, stopping fuel supply to the engine.
“In the cockpit voice recording, one of the pilots is heard asking the other why did he cut-off. The other pilot responded that he did not do so,” the report read.
That has fuelled theories of self-sabotage by pilots, or that one of them mistakenly switched the fuel supply off.
Mr Andrews cautioned against drawing such a conclusion.
“We don’t know what that exchange refers to. If there has been a reset of the Fadec or the electrical bus – essentially the main breaker system – then in that moment one pilot’s panel could shut down. Is it possible he was saying, ‘Why did you turn it off?’ about his own controls? We don’t know. That’s the point. It is premature conjecture to solely blame the pilots when we don’t yet have all the data.”
He said such insinuations are deeply damaging for victims’ families.
“The way the preliminary report was issued, the way it leaves out critical data, the way it insinuates rather than calls out what happened, has caused our clients to all question transparency.
“They are not convinced by the pilot error narrative. And I have cautioned them all to be patient, because it is just as wrong to blame the pilots without information as it would be for me to unequivocally blame Boeing without data. What we are saying is: wait for the full evidence.”
Part of that evidence may come from whistleblowers. Mr Andrews confirmed that four individuals with what he described as “vital technical and engineering information” have contacted his team since the crash.
While he declined to identify their backgrounds, he said they included individuals from “different layers of the aerospace industry”.
“That doesn’t necessarily mean they are inside Boeing,” he said. “The aviation industry has layers – subcontractors, maintenance engineers, suppliers. We’ve been contacted by people who’ve done their own analysis as well as people with direct aerospace experience. What’s important is to keep our field of view broad so we don’t miss something by focusing too early on one theory.”
While Mr Andrews confirmed that they have not yet filed a lawsuit in court, his legal team is gathering evidence and has filed a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request in the United States to obtain data from the flight recorders.
The Indian authorities have so far said they intend to keep the analysis within India.
There are also other concerns. Mr Andrews said his team is curious about whether leaks could have affected the lithium-ion batteries located in the tail section of the Dreamliner.
Those batteries, already known for their susceptibility to “thermal runaway” – an uncontrollable heating event – could pose additional hazards if exposed to moisture. “We’re curious whether water leaking into that area could trigger problems,” he said.
The sole survivor’s account has also shaped Mr Andrews’ thinking. In an interview with the BBC, he said that lights inside the aircraft “started flickering” moments after take off. Within five to 10 seconds of being airborne, it felt like the plane was “stuck in the air”.
“The lights started flickering green and white…suddenly [we] slammed into a building and exploded,” he said.
Mr Andrews said the accounts of lights flashing and changing colour “are all data points suggesting electrical issues”.
“Once we receive the timeline for why the ram air turbine deployed – a small emergency windmill that only comes out in certain electrical failures – we’ll be in a better position to know what precipitated this.”
For families, the legal battle is about more than money.
Mr Andrews said they have two overriding goals: “One is to learn what happened, why it happened, how it happened. The second is to prevent this from ever happening again. Every client has told us that. They want transparency and accountability. They want to know whether this tragedy could have been avoided.”
Some are also facing frustration regarding compensation from Air India. Mr Andrews said disputes within families over entitlements, combined with delays, have left some with “no answers, no compensation, no nothing – just a loss”.
As lawsuits take shape, Mr Andrews said manufacturers must not be allowed to push blame downstream. “If a coupling is defective, that’s on the subcomponent maker. If Boeing sells a completed aircraft that allows water to drip into flight computers, that’s on Boeing. What they cannot do is release defective equipment and expect airlines to engineer their way around it. That is not right.”
He said reforms will depend on the eventual findings, but the broader issue is oversight. The Dreamliner, like other US aircraft, was partly certified under a system known as ODA, where Boeing itself had authority to approve designs on the FAA’s behalf.
“A big question is whether this should have been caught during certification,” Mr Andrews said asking, if Boeing knew of leaks, “why wasn’t there more urgency about water dripping into flight computers? That to me is a serious issue.”
The Independent put these concerns to Boeing in a detailed questionnaire. The airline said it would “defer to the AAIB to provide information about [Flight] AI171”, citing international protocols around crashes.
For now, families are still waiting. Mr Andrews said their patience is not infinite. “They’ve earned the right to know what happened here and each of them… wants to prevent this from ever happening to any other family.”