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Are England actually honest with themselves? If they are, they’ll know they have to change | Mark Ramprakash

about 4 hours ago
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It’s not over yet.There is still hope.Before the Ashes started I had plenty of it, because of England’s fantastic array of fast bowlers and because I felt they had improved on their crash‑bang‑wallop, one-size‑fits‑all approach to batting.Then the series got under way, and while the bowlers did their bit, the batters failed badly.After the two-day humiliation in Perth they are inevitably under the microscope – but while everyone is questioning England’s approach, how much are they challenging themselves?I based my optimism on some of what I had seen over the summer.

In the first innings against India at Lord’s Joe Root and Ollie Pope put on 109 runs at almost exactly three an over, staying calm and building a foundation that eventually won their side the match.I watched that and admired the way they had refined their attitude, becoming more adaptable to the match situation, the surfaces they were playing on and the challenges presented by the opposition – in that case, in particular, the need to negate the brilliant Jasprit Bumrah.I thought that India series, five tough matches against excellent opposition, would have really helped prepare the side for the Ashes.This England team have absolutely battered some teams, who haven’t been able to cope with their quality and their approach, but in their most recent Test series they faced a group that had the resilience and the skill to cope with it – ideal preparation for what they were going to face in Australia.Then they won the toss in Perth, chose to bat, came out and got absolutely mauled by Mitchell Starc.

The emotional intelligence, the situational awareness, that impressed me at times over the summer was nowhere to be seen.Instead England, pumped up on adrenaline and the desire to “put the bowlers under pressure”, surrendered to their attacking instincts.To some degree I can understand it: on a pitch with pace, bounce and movement, a lot of players will feel the need to be proactive, feeling that sooner or later they’ll get a ball with their name on it.But in that second innings none of Pope, Root or Harry Brook faced that killer delivery: they were all out driving away from their body, at balls that were a good length.Australia cannot have believed how easy it was.

After the match Ben Stokes said he thought the players who made runs on that wicket had been very proactive, and to an extent he was right – Travis Head certainly had been in his match-winning knock.But sometimes you’re up against good bowling on a helpful pitch and you just need to get through it.A team that never want to back off, that just keep throwing the bat, will find their approach pays off on some days, and on others leads to complete meltdown.At times it feels their approach is a total lottery, and not one you would expect from an elite, winning side.England were very vocal about getting matches into players before this series, and I thought their chances of winning the Ashes were really boosted by the fact they look a very settled unit – nine or 10 players in that team pretty much pick themselves.

They have the experience, the continuity of selection, and they have a lot of quality.So how did it all go so wrong?When it came to it, they seemed to get dragged into this gladiatorial thing, where they walked into the arena, with all this noise and hype, and felt they had to go out from the start and show Australia that they felt no fear, that they were going to play their own game, and that it would be better than anyone else’s.Every batter in that team has been selected because they are very aggressive.No one with any other method – and there are some brilliant batters who have had great success in the County Championship and been completely ignored – has a chance of getting in.So what happens when aggression is not the best approach?In my experience the best teams have a blend of batters.

It’s great to have someone who can take the game away from the opposition very quickly, but you also need people who are capable of playing an innings over many hours, or even many sessions,Stokes and Root have both played that kind of innings in the past, but now seem to prefer a different approach,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 promotionThe thing is, from 105 ahead and one wicket down, the position they found themselves in just after lunch on the second day, the aggressive option is to be completely ruthless,One way to do that is to attack, and there are occasions when that is the right approach,One other way, which has been accepted for about 150 years, is to give nothing away, provide no encouragement, be remorseless, and bat yourselves into complete dominance.

They are both ways of putting the bowlers under pressure.The pitch was getting better, the ball was getting older, several of their opponents appeared to be injured – what an opportunity, in the first Test of the series, to make a statement.But the world of cricket has seen how England play, and Australia knew there was no need to panic – they would probably just get themselves out.At Lord’s in the 2023 Ashes they just kept bowling short and batter after batter fell into their trap.In Perth they went wide of off stump and it happened again.

England’s batters wanted to keep going at five an over and within half an hour they’d lost the match.Now they have to use this extended break before the second Test.They may not be using it to get match practice, but they must take this opportunity for reflection.They have to be completely honest with themselves.It’s hard to know how much of this actually goes on within that batting unit, because when he speaks in public Stokes always talks about blocking out the external noise, doubling down, knocking them off their lengths, being proactive.

The thing is, sometimes that’s bloody difficult.Something has to change over the next 10 days, because if the pink ball moves around at the Gabba in the second Test they’ll be faced with the same situation, and the same answers are likely to produce the same outcome.And then it surely will be over.
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Analysts back British gambling firm stocks despite tax rises for sector

Financial analysts have advised buying shares in British gambling companies, despite the sector’s biggest players being hit with tax rises that forced them into issuing £1bn of profit downgrades.Duty rises announced in Rachel Reeves’s second budget as chancellor, targeted at online betting and gaming, are set to cost the industry an extra £8.3bn by 2030-31, according to the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR).Firms have responded by warning of job losses and an exodus of punters to illicit websites, which will be able to continue offering bonuses to woo punters, even as the licensed sector hacks back such incentives to cut costs.But a flurry of City analysts defied the gloom on Thursday as a mixed picture began to emerge of the likely impact on the sector

1 day ago
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Severe asthma can be controlled by a monthly injection, trial finds

A monthly injection could allow people with severe asthma to stop taking daily steroid tablets, a clinical trial has found.More than 260 million people are thought to have asthma worldwide. While most can control their asthma with inhalers to treat immediate symptoms and preventive ones to reduce inflammation, those with the most severe asthma often take daily doses of oral corticosteroids as well.But long-term use is associated with serious health conditions, including osteoporosis, diabetes and increased vulnerability to infections. Now an international clinical trial has found that participants who received injections of tezepelumab every four weeks were able to reduce or even stop taking their steroids entirely with no ill effects

1 day ago
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Peers are just doing their job in scrutinising the assisted dying bill | Letters

Simon Jenkins is right that the Lords should not kill legislation by procedural manoeuvre (Unelected Lords are blocking assisted dying: that’s a democratic outrage) . But peers are not playing games with the assisted dying bill; they are finally providing the independent scrutiny it has so far lacked. And the carefully crafted campaign slogans collapse under examination.Rather than addressing suffering, the bill makes no mention of it – let alone requiring, as most assisted dying laws do, that a person be experiencing suffering that cannot otherwise be relieved. And, rather than respecting autonomy, as the Swiss do, under this bill the state – not the individual – decides the circumstances in which ending your life is acceptable, and makes doctors the agents of that judgment

2 days ago
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Shortfall in return on investment in health | Brief letters

Lord Hutton writes of the NHS health centres that have been built thanks to private finance (Letters, 23 November). In Didcot we’ve been waiting more than 10 years for the Great Western Park health centre. The return on investment required by the developer is greater than the NHS will reimburse. The local integrated care board fears that at that cost they’ll not get a GP practice to take on the health centre.Cllr Sarah JamesVale of White Horse district council Congratulations on the print-edition headline “Lights, Canberra, no action”, about England’s beaten cricketers not playing in the Australian capital (24 November)

2 days ago
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‘I didn’t even know this type of attack existed’: more than 200 women allege drugging by senior French civil servant

When Sylvie Delezenne, a marketing expert from Lille, was job-hunting in 2015, she was delighted to be contacted on LinkedIn by a human resources manager at the French culture ministry, inviting her to Paris for an interview.“It was my dream to work at the culture ministry,” she said.But instead of finding a job, Delezenne, 45, is now one of more than 240 women at the centre of a criminal investigation into the alleged drugging of women without their knowledge in a place they never expected to be targeted: a job interview.An investigating judge is examining allegations that, over a nine-year period, dozens of women interviewed for jobs by a senior civil servant, Christian Nègre, were offered coffees or teas by him that had been mixed with a powerful and illegal diuretic, which he knew would make them need to urinate.Nègre often suggested continuing the interviews outside, on lengthy strolls far from toilets, the women say

2 days ago
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Horrific death of Kardell Lomas sparks urgent calls for new independent oversight of police

Members of the federal government’s own expert advisory panel on sexual violence have called for “urgent” independent national oversight of police after new revelations about Queensland police failures before the killing of the First Nations woman Kardell Lomas.Guardian Australia’s Broken trust investigation revealed that Lomas, a 31-year-old Kamilaroi and Mununjali woman, had sought help from police and other agencies in the months before she was killed.Her family has applied for an inquest to examine, among other things, failures by police to help Lomas, protect her from her dangerous partner, or investigate evidence of domestic violence.A statement signed by 16 of the 20 members of the expert panel selected to advise the federal government about sexual violence law reform has called on the attorney general, Michelle Rowland, to take “urgent, decisive action” in relation to the case.They said the case highlighted issues they had raised throughout the Australian Law Reform Commission’s inquiry into justice responses to sexual violence but that the inquiry’s recommendations had not gone far enough

3 days ago
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OBR challenges claims Reeves dropped income tax rise due to rosier forecasts

about 4 hours ago
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Germany to urge EU to soften 2035 ban on sale of new petrol and diesel cars

about 4 hours ago
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One in 10 UK parents say their child has been blackmailed online, NSPCC finds

about 11 hours ago
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Small changes to ‘for you’ feed on X can rapidly increase political polarisation

about 22 hours ago
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From value-adds to networking superconductor: how the weird language of tech dulled sport | Aaron Timms

about 7 hours ago
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Cummins out of Australia Ashes squad as Khawaja lays into state of Perth pitch

about 7 hours ago