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Jake Weatherald in contention for Test debut after being named in Australia’s Ashes squad

about 7 hours ago
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Opener Jake Weatherald has won a place in Australia’s Ashes squad and is the leading contender to partner Usman Khawaja at the top of the order for the first Test in Perth.But the Tasmania batter has not yet secured a spot in the XI for the series opener, with chief selector George Bailey saying he would wait until the end of the coming round of Sheffield Shield matches before making a decision on the final line-up.“I think if you look at [Weatherald’s] performance over 18, 24 months, it’s been really solid,” Bailey said.“There’s a method there that I think we like and is complimentary to those other players around him in the squad.He scores at a good rate, the way he goes about building his innings has been impressive.

”Weatherald averages almost 38 in first class cricket, but has scored three half centuries in his three Sheffield Shield matches this season.Marnus Labuschagne has also been recalled after he was left out of the tour of the West Indies earlier this year, and Bailey confirmed the Queenslander had the “capability” of opening.The selector said Labuschagne has made some adjustments and is in a “good place”.The 31-year-old has scored five centuries already this season.“As soon as he was left out of that West Indies [tour] team, his first question is, ‘well how many runs do you need for me to come back?’,” Bailey said.

“It was a very clear message that the runs would be a byproduct of some of the other things that we wanted to see, and part of that was – not getting back to the old Marn – but a method and a way of batting and some technical things that we wanted to see.”The decisions at the top of the order will be influenced by the fitness of Cameron Green, the all-rounder who can bat up and down the order.Bailey said he wanted to see 15 to 20 overs in the coming Shield match from the 26-year-old, who has battled side soreness this season.However, he didn’t rule out selecting Green as a specialist batter again, after he was deployed as a non-bowling No 3 as recently as July against the West Indies.“If someone’s an all-rounder, you want them to be able to, in an ideal world, be capable of performing their skills, so it’s a nice piece of the puzzle,” Bailey said.

“But if it’s not the case, then it ends up being the another Test and that’s OK, we’ll work through it.”Beau Webster has deputised ably in the all-rounder role.He has averaged almost 35 with the bat and 23 with the ball since coming into the side for the New Year’s Test.Sean Abbott and Brendan Doggett provide the squad’s bowling depth, and both have a chance of playing at some point during the series given captain Pat Cummins’s estimated return for the second Test is not yet confirmed.Sign up to The SpinSubscribe to our cricket newsletter for our writers' thoughts on the biggest stories and a review of the week’s actionafter newsletter promotionBailey said neither was clearly ahead of the other, and decisions on the bowling line-up will consider the mix of who is available.

“It’s a complementary skillset around where that role might be, what surface you’re on, and all those sorts of different things, but it’ll be the best fit again,” he said.Weatherald’s inclusion dashes hopes of recalls for Sam Konstas and Matt Renshaw.Bailey said he “feels for” Konstas, the 20-year-old opener who starred on debut at the MCG last year but has now dropped down the list of options.“At the moment if he farts, it’s a headline,” Bailey said.“There’s a handful of young guys his age playing Shield cricket around the country, and they’re all learning, and they’re all going through a journey of becoming the best cricketer they can be, and Sammy’s no different to that.

He just happens to be doing it under what seems to be immense scrutiny at the moment.”Steve Smith will captain the side in Cummins’s absence, though the paceman will be with the squad in Perth as he continues his rehabilitation.The first Ashes Test begins on 21 November at Optus Stadium.Australia squad: Steve Smith (captain), Sean Abbott, Scott Boland, Alex Carey, Brendan Doggett, Cameron Green, Josh Hazlewood, Travis Head, Josh Inglis, Usman Khawaja, Marnus Labuschagne, Nathan Lyon, Mitchell Starc, Jake Weatherald and Beau Webster.
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Nige is no longer laughing at himself as he ‘performs’ yet another big speech | John Crace

The scene: an old banking hall in the heart of the City. The music: first, Richard Clayderman plays Bach. Then Pachelbel’s Canon, followed by the Adagio from Mahler’s 5th. Death in Venice, Live in London. Not the usual venue or playlist for a Reform press conference

1 day ago
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UK politics: MPs spar over response to Cambridgeshire train attack – as it happened

Max Wilkinson, the Lib Dem home affairs spokesperson, said within hours of this attack happening, social media was full of speculation about this attack, inciting racist and Islamphobic reaction.He accuses “figures on the hard right, including members of the Reform party” of trying to “exploit the incident for political gain”.Desperate to involve themselves in the tragedy, they reached for their dog whistles. They threw around baseless opinions on levels of crime when facts were available. They were shamelessly trying to turn tragedy into yet another excuse to whip up fear and sow division

1 day ago
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What would UK economic policy look like under Nigel Farage’s Reform?

Nigel Farage has delivered a speech on his economic priorities. While it did not announce any new policies as such, it marked the most detailed explanation yet of what a Reform UK government might prioritise. Below are six areas he discussed.As recently as the buildup to May’s local elections, Reform was pledging to raise the threshold at which people start paying income tax from £12,570 to £20,000, bringing many thousands out of tax but costing the exchequer more than £40bn a year.Amid increasing scrutiny about how or if this could be paid for, Farage has rolled back

1 day ago
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Nigel Farage backtracks on Reform UK’s promise to cut £90bn of taxes

Nigel Farage has rowed back from his party’s election promise to cut £90bn of taxes, accusing Labour and the Tories of “wrecking the public finances” and saying Reform UK would need to get public spending under control first.The Reform leader rejected suggestions he had been forced to break manifesto promises in order to gain economic credibility, suggesting the proposal had only ever been an “aspiration”.As well as backtracking on the party’s 2024 pledge to raise tax-free thresholds to £20,000, he refused to guarantee that the pensions triple lock – estimated to reach £15.5bn by 2030 – would remain under a Reform government.Farage’s speech in the City of London laid bare the tensions at the heart of his project, as he attempts to improve his party’s economic credibility, which political opponents regard as a weak point, while at the same time retain the electoral benefits of political insurgency

1 day ago
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Nigel Farage to promise business deregulation in economic policy speech

Nigel Farage will promise a bonfire of business regulation as he spells out his party’s economic policies in more detail than ever in an attempt to bolster its reputation for fiscal credibility.The Reform leader will give a speech in London putting deregulation at the heart of his economic agenda, while also dropping a commitment made at the last election to deliver £90bn of tax cuts.The message is designed to bolster his party’s reputation for fiscal credibility after experts warned that his promises to cut £350bn from government spending over the next parliament did not add up.Farage will say: “When it comes to Brexit … we have not taken advantage of the opportunities to deregulate and become more competitive. The harsh truth is that regulations and regulators, in many areas, are worse than they were back in 2016

2 days ago
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Tory patience wears thin as Badenoch’s critics count down to May elections

At an opulent speakeasy-style event at the Raffles hotel on Whitehall this week, the great and the good of what is left of the Conservative party marked the Spectator’s parliamentarian of the year awards.With the magazine’s editorial line still just about backing the Tories, despite the party facing an existential crisis from Reform UK, it was unsurprising that much of the gossip at the champagne-fuelled event was about whether Kemi Badenoch’s job was at risk.James Cleverly, who unsuccessfully ran against her for the leadership, couldn’t resist a dig from the stage at the naked ambition of his shadow cabinet colleague, Robert Jenrick – who is Badenoch’s biggest threat.“Am I after her job? Am I going to stick the knife between her shoulder blades and steal the crown? No, of course I’m not,” the veteran Tory cabinet minister told the laughing audience as he opened the awards ceremony.“You know that I’m not

3 days ago
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Ashford’s ghost terminal could be brought back to life by Richard Branson | Letters

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China accuses Dutch of prolonging chip war that threatens to halt car factories

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Apple Watch SE 3 review: the bargain smartwatch for iPhone

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Experts find flaws in hundreds of tests that check AI safety and effectiveness

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NFL trade deadline: Jets trade away All-Pros Gardner and Williams in franchise teardown

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LIV Golf backtracks from short format to 72-hole tournaments after pressure from players

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