Laura DevlinNorthamptonshire
Aimee Dexter/BBC
The King and Queen were crowned after six hours of competing
The new King and Queen Conker have been crowned after a closely-fought contest at the World Conker Championships.
Hundreds of competitors went into battle in Northamptonshire for the event's 60th year - which attracted increased attention after last year's cheating scandal.
Men's winner Matt Cross, from Bourne, Lincolnshire, was crowned the overall World Conker Champion after beating women's victor Mags Blake, of Corby, in the ultimate showdown.
"I am absolutely speechless," said Mr Cross, 37, a newcomer to the competition, which sees players and champions return year after year.
Reuters
Competitors take part in the first round of the annual World Conker Championships in Southwick
"I've turned up expecting to go out in the first or second round, but every round I gave it another go, and it just snowballed," Mr Cross added.
Asked about his tactics, he said it was "just force and accuracy".
"A lot of it is a game of chance, and your opponent is in the same boat as you," Mr Cross said.
Aimee Dexter/BBC
Conkers, many of them donated from the royal estate at Windsor this year, are individually stringed ahead of the competition
Reuters
The former King Conker David Jakins was bemused about the "steel conker" furore last year, for which he was exonerated
Among the entrants were sports broadcaster Mark Pougatch, who missed out on a place in the quarter finals "by a thread", losing to Finn Vergalen.
Aimee Dexter/BBC
Mark Pougatch moments before his defeat to Finn Vergalen, whose conker had reduced to a thread
The competition places rapidly filled for the 2025 competition - which organisers put down to the publicity surrounding last year's King Conker, who was accused of cheating with a steel nut.
David Jakins, 84, was eventually cleared and returned to Southwick, near Oundle, on Sunday to defend his crown - only to be knocked out a by a woman dressed as a bee in the first round.
There had been fears the event would be cancelled for only the third time in its history due to the hot, dry summer, which caused conkers to fall from trees early.
A nationwide hunt began, with suitably large nuts eventually being donated by the royal estate at Windsor Castle as well as from locations across the country, Italy and France.
Reuters
Hundreds turned out in the village of Southwick, Northamptonshire, for the 60th annual World Conker Championships