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Brendon McCullum brings David Saker back into England camp for Ashes series

about 4 hours ago
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Brendon McCullum has finalised his coaching team for the Ashes, with the Australian David Saker returning to help England in a fourth Test series against his homeland, having been involved during the 2010-11 and 2013 series, both of which England won, and again in the drawn series of 2023.Saker, whose official title is special skills consultant, will be in Australia from the arrival of the England Lions squad at the start of November and will remain with the senior team through all five Tests.Tim Southee, who has had the same title since May and is with the white-ball squad in his native New Zealand, will continue to work with the team until the end of the first Test in Perth, after which he will depart to fulfil playing obligations at the International League T20 in the United Arab Emirates.Another returning face will be Gilbert Enoka, the former All Blacks mental skills coach, who was first brought into the group during the buildup to the Test against India at Old Trafford in July.Enoka, who lives in Christchurch, is also working with the white-ball squad – if only for the few days they are in his home town – and will be involved for the first Ashes Test.

On Friday, Enoka ran an hour-long session for the entire squad and backroom staff, as they finalised preparations for the T20 series against New Zealand that starts on Saturday and looked ahead to February’s T20 World Cup.Harry Brook, who last month promised he would “never have a meeting” as white-ball captain, reasoning they were “a waste of an hour – I’m not very good at sitting there and listening”, emerged to describe Enoka as “awesome”.But Brook refused to divulge any of what was discussed.“It’s something we want to try to keep to ourselves,” he said.“He brings a lot of knowledge about the mental side of the game.

To have him in the ranks, just to be able to have a chat for five or 10 minutes, is awesome.”The long-term batting coach Marcus Trescothick and the spin-bowling coach Jeetan Patel, another New Zealander, will continue in their roles while the assistant coach Paul Collingwood, who has not been involved with the team in recent months, will again be absent.The 59-year-old Saker worked as England’s fast bowling coach between 2010 and 2015, during which time they won the Ashes in Australia, successfully defended them at home and won a series in India for the first and only time since 1984-85.He then fulfilled a similar role for Australia from 2016 to 2019 before returning to work with England in 2023, initially with the white-ball squad.At the time he described England’s Test side as “the best team in the world to watch”.

“I’ve been involved in Ashes with both parties,” he said, “and the cricket is as exciting as it gets.”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 promotionOn Friday, Brook praised Southee’s contribution to the team.“He’s a fountain of knowledge,” the 26-year-old said.“He’s played a lot of cricket over here and a lot of international cricket, so to have him working alongside us will only benefit us.To have guys who’ve got so much experience, playing all over the world and being as good as what they are, we can only benefit from what they’re saying.

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Stephen Colbert on Ice: ‘Terrorizing communities in the Windy City’

Late-night hosts addressed Trump’s role in the ceasefire in Gaza as his administration sends troops to support Immigration and Customs Enforcement (Ice) in Chicago.Stephen Colbert returned to the Late Show with a quick rundown of everything he missed on just one week of holiday. The news last week was “a doozy”, he said. “It’s less ‘we didn’t start the fire’ and more ‘everything’s on fire.’”Colbert provided a partial list of what he missed in a single week: the government shutdown headed into its third week; Trump fired more than 4,000 federal workers; the Department of Justice, under pressure from Trump, charged the New York attorney general, Letitia James, with fraud; Trump sent national guard troops to Chicago and Portland and threatened to invoke the Insurrection Act; Trump imposed a stunning 100% tariff on all goods from China, which caused the stock market to have its worst day in six months; and Taylor Swift released her new album, The Life of a Showgirl, to “merely mixed reviews”

3 days ago
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French woman in mother of all trademark battles with DC Comics over parenting app Wondermum

A French woman is involved in the mother of all battles with DC Comics for naming her family advice app Wondermum.Lise Sobéron received a letter from the superhero comic book company’s French lawyers on 1 April this year demanding she stop using the name because of its alleged similarity to Wonder Woman.“When I got the letter, I rang my close friends and said: ‘Very funny, guys,’ thinking it was an April fool,” she said. “Then I contacted the lawyers’ office and realised it was no joke. They told me DC Comics objected to the name Wondermum

3 days ago
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Louder than Bombs: Joachim Trier’s thorniest film might be his best

Long before Joachim Trier made the Oscar-winning The Worst Person in the World and this year’s festival megahit Sentimental Value, there was 2015’s Louder than Bombs: a far stranger, slipperier film worth watching for Isabelle Huppert’s spectral turn alone. She plays a character also called Isabelle, a renowned war photographer whose secrets haunt her family three years after her sudden death.Her teenage son Conrad (Devin Druid) still daydreams in class about the car crash that claimed her life, imagining her final, panicked moments. His brother Jonah (Jesse Eisenberg) and father Gene (Gabriel Byrne) know (and conceal) the truth: that her fateful, split-second swerve was an act of suicide.The film’s cacophony of grief and anxious romance erupt within upstate New York, 6,000km away from the Nordic, millennial anomie of Joachim’s informal Oslo trilogy

3 days ago
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Creative Australia awards Khaled Sabsabi $100,000 grant months after dumping from Venice Biennale

Creative Australia has awarded a $100,000 grant to artist Khaled Sabsabi, months after he was controversially dumped and then reinstated by the federal arts body as Australia’s representative for the 2026 Venice Biennale.The grant – one of 16 made under Creative Australia’s Visual Arts, Craft and Design Framework – will fund the creation of a new body of work for a solo exhibition opening in March 2027 at Adelaide’s Samstag Museum of Art, which will also include Sabsabi’s Venice Biennale work.In August, Sabsabi was also awarded a grant by Create NSW for a major new work in western Sydney.The two commissions represent a silver lining in a tumultuous year for Sabsabi, a Lebanese-Australian artist from western Sydney. In February, he and curator Michael Dagostino were announced as Australia’s representatives for the prestigious Venice Biennale; less than a week later they were sacked, after criticism by the Australian and the then shadow arts minister, Claire Chandler, over Sabsabi’s use of imagery in previous artworks of the 9/11 terrorist attacks and former Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah

3 days ago
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‘The vocals were on another level’: how Counting Crows made Mr Jones

Our first four records had been mostly made in houses in the hills above Los Angeles. August and Everything After was our first major label album, so it was a pretty big deal. Our advance was $3,000 each; I bought a 1971 cherry red VW Karmann Ghia convertible and drove it to LA.I would get up every morning and listen to Pickin’ Up the Pieces by Poco, which is like the Beatles doing country music. I also had this Benny Goodman album that I was listening to a lot – my dad had picked it up as a free giveaway at a Texaco station when I was a kid

4 days ago
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‘A palette unlike anything in the west’: Ben Okri, Yinka Shonibare and more on how Nigerian art revived Britain’s cultural landscape

To mark a new exhibition at Tate Modern, leading British-Nigerian cultural figures trace the impact of their heritage on their work, and consider its growing influence on the world stageSome primal energy was unleashed among Nigerian artists in the years leading up to independence. The century-long reign of colonialism was nearing its end and the people of Nigeria, with its over 300 tribes, its ebullient energy, were poised for a new future in which they would determine the shape and context of their lives.And the people who most articulated that double position, that paradox of modernity and tradition, were artists in all their stripes. Artists across the country, in constant dialogue with one another, created works that evoked their traditions but in a contemporary context. Artists such as Yusuf Grillo in the north, Bruce Onobrakpeya from the midwest, Ben Enwonwu from the east and Twins Seven Seven from the west were remaking the dream of art in a rigorously Nigerian context

4 days ago
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‘Finances are getting tighter’: US car repossessions surge as more Americans default on auto loans

about 5 hours ago
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Ferrari cuts number of cars it sends to UK after non-dom tax status scrapped

about 8 hours ago
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Banks need stricter controls to prevent romance fraud, says City regulator

about 16 hours ago
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Launch of veteran card will be used to test UK government’s digital ID scheme

about 16 hours ago
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York and Toulouse complete 14-team Super League as London Broncos miss out

about 6 hours ago
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Most athletes have chosen to ‘shut up and dribble’ over Gaza | Nathan Kalman-Lamb and Derek Silva

about 6 hours ago