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World Cup-winning captain Johnson urges England to think about summer break for players

about 4 hours ago
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England’s legendary World Cup-winning captain Martin Johnson says the current management should consider resting key players this summer to boost the chances of history being repeated in Australia next year.Johnson was among several senior squad members who did not tour Argentina in the buildup to their 2003 global triumph and suggests a similar policy could assist England’s 2027 campaign.In 2002 England beat the Pumas 26‑18 in Buenos Aires with only eight of their subsequent World Cup-winning squad involved.Johnson is fully aware that post-game recovery and conditioning techniques have moved on significantly but believes the current captain, Maro Itoje, and others require careful handling if they are to prosper in 2027.“If it’s the right thing for a guy who’s just had a big Lions tour to have a summer off and not go on the trip, that’s just managing your player with the World Cup in mind,” said Johnson, who also led a British & Irish Lions squad to Australia in 2001.

“Who comes into that category is up to the coaches to decide but, yeah, that could be a possibility depending on where people are.Guys are always carrying something injury-wise, particularly later in your career.“The rugby season’s just non‑stop.You don’t get a two‑month block of training which would put a lot of people in a good place.If they can manage some guys to get that it would work for them, I’m sure.

We had a summer off in 2002, the year before the World Cup, although that [Argentina] game was played so late the rest of us were already back in pre‑season training for the next year.“With experienced players who have been around and have the appetite to go to another tournament then maybe you can manage them.I don’t like saying ‘a good summer off’ because what you want as a player is a good off season in which to train.It’s the only time you can really make physical fitness gains and improvements.”Johnson, in training for the Race to the Slater Cup on Saturday in aid of Ed Slater, Lewis Moody and motor neurone disease research, was also England’s head coach at the 2011 World Cup in New Zealand and knows from personal experience that balancing future tournament planning with, in this case, the shorter-term imperatives of July Tests against South Africa, Fiji and Argentina is not easy.

“I love it when people talk about planning – ‘we’re aiming to peak for the final’ isn’t much good if you get knocked out beforehand.You can plan all you like but then you get three phone calls one weekend telling you that three of your best players are injured.Where are your plans now?“We all know how it works.Some guys who we think are going to be key won’t be there because they’ll be injured or lose form.And some guys who we’ve never really heard of will have great World Cups and become stars.

”In common with many others Johnson is unsure what conclusions to draw from England’s Six Nations campaign which delivered four defeats and a fifth-placed finish.“We know they can play well but they just didn’t for three games.They’ve got to work out what that’s about and sort it out.” The final fixture in Paris, however, fuelled his sense Les Bleus are a rising threat.“That last game … wow.

I’ve not seen a game played at that pace, ever,“You watch the way the French play and I think they’re changing the game a little bit,If you didn’t get them under pressure their transition game just ripped teams to pieces,And they won the title despite conceding 96 points in their last two games,Is something changing there? It was interesting to see the game being played slightly differently.

You’ve got to play to your strengths, not just do the same as everyone else does.”Johnson’s son Henry was part of the England Under-18 squad beaten 63-33 by France U18s this month – “My lad came off the bench and said France did all their damage from kick returns and transitions” – and, at 56, the former Lions captain’s competitive nature still burns.In the Race to the Slater Cup two teams of cyclists, captained by Johnson and Mike Tindall, will try to be the first to reach Villa Park from Leicester and Gloucester respectively before the Big Match Bonanza weekend Prem game on Saturday.In support of Slater and his former teammate Moody, Johnson is committed to helping fund more research into MND and its potential causes.“I don’t think we know enough about these things.

That’s partly why we’re doing the ride.We live in an age when we think we have the answer to everything but we don’t.I’m all for research and science trying to give us the answers.The more we can do to find out the truth the better.”Tickets for the Slater Cup at Villa Park on Saturday 28 March start at £10 here.

£1 of every sale goes to 4ED to support families affected by MND,
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Let them eat 1,600 cakes: inside Australia’s first Cake Picnic

Baker Alice Bennett, also known as Miss Trixie Drinks Tea, is the self-proclaimed queen of cakes in Melbourne. She assumes her cheeky email signature is why she was tapped as an assistant judge at Australia’s inaugural Cake Picnic. When the global phenomenon descended on Kings Domain in Melbourne last Saturday, 1,600 cakes were artfully presented and then summarily devoured as part of the Melbourne Food and Wine Festival (MFWF).Created in San Francisco in 2024 by amateur baking enthusiast Elisa Sunga, the first Cake Picnic was conceived as a way for the Californian to eat more cake than she could be bothered to bake. Her event has now toured nine cities, and will be visiting Sydney on Saturday 28 March

about 14 hours ago
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Joe Woodhouse’s recipes for orecchiette with chickpeas, and polenta chips with saucy chickpeas

I love pasta sauces that come together while the pasta is cooking. This one is lovely and wholesome, great for when the weather starts to warm up a little, and one of those that you can make pretty much year-round. The polenta chips, meanwhile, came about when I wanted to bulk up a plate of beans without the mess (and the pan of hot oil) that comes with making chips. The polenta can be made and set ahead, either during the day or the night before, or it will sit happily in the fridge for a couple of days.Sub in other green veg, such as shredded cavolo nero or even sliced courgettes

about 16 hours ago
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Fewer eggs, higher prices: Cadbury ‘doubled down’ on Easter chocolate shrinkflation, Choice finds

This year’s Easter baskets may be under-egged, as boxes of the festive chocolate treats become smaller and more expensive. An annual price comparison by Australia’s consumer watchdog has found that the cost of “pretty much all chocolate products” in the Easter egg category has gone up, said Choice journalist Liam Kennedy. But while most products have stayed the same size, some have been hit by shrinkflation as well.Cadbury are “definitely our main culprit”, Kennedy said. In 2025, Choice found that the brand’s largest pack of hollow Easter eggs reduced from 408g to 374g, while increasing in price from $12

1 day ago
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Welcome to the United States of Mancunia

A new wave of hyper-regional hoagies, subs and pizzas are taking over Manchester’s food scene. But are they really as American as apple pie?It’s just after midday, on a chilly, wind-whipped Friday in central Manchester, and an ever-growing crowd of people in puffer jackets is spilling out from a Chinatown service alley. A few yards away, there’s another huddle of bundled-up figures, dipping into capacious paper bags to set up an improvised picnic on the junction boxes outside a corner pub. Fistfuls of crinkle-cut chips are snaffled, cans of pop are sipped, and, despite the pervading scent of bin juice and fried chicken, enormous, truncheon-sized sandwiches are unwrapped and messily dispatched.It looks a little like a staged re-enactment of Covid-era dining practices

1 day ago
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How to make the perfect cheese khachapuri – recipe | Felicity Cloake's How to make the perfect …

The first time I encountered what Tiko Tuskadze describes as “perhaps the most iconic of all Georgian dishes” was in her London restaurant, Little Georgia, back in the days when it was a tiny space on Broadway Market. If “traditional cheesebread … baked to order” sounded good on the menu, the reality of khachapuri was even better: a golden round of fluffy, buttery bread spilling forth frills of hot, salty dairy on to the plate (this is the kind of thing that passes for fast food in Georgia, according to Silvena Rowe, which makes me feel as if we’ve been slightly short-changed.)Tuskadze goes on to explain in her book Supra that there are “as many variations … as there are families in Georgia” – the boat-shaped, open adjaruili that Polina Chesnakova notes has “taken the internet by storm”, the Ossetian mashed potato variety and the Gurian take with hard-boiled eggs and a “supremely fluffy, slightly oniony, soufflé-like cheese filling”, which inspires Caroline Eden to share with readers of her book Green Mountains the glorious Georgian word shemomechama, “which loosely translates as, ‘I accidentally ate the whole thing’”. Here, however, I’m going to concentrate on what Chesnakova says is “by far the one most commonly consumed in Georgia itself”, and also the one that reminds Tuskadze most of home, namely imeruli khachapuri, originally from the west-central region of Imereti, which is “essentially a flat bread stuffed with buttery imeruli cheese curds and cooked on the stovetop”. Need I say more?After noting that the shape and filling varies according to region, Darra Goldstein writes in her book The Georgian Feast that, similarly, “the dough can be yeasty with a thick crust, many-layered and flaky, or tender and cake-like”, but “at home, khachapuri is more often made without yeast, with baking soda (a European import) or yoghurt used to tenderise the dough”

2 days ago
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Cooking with Angela Hartnett: ‘I love food, but I don’t need to talk about it 24/7’

Angela Hartnett’s home kitchen isn’t a place you could recreate, however much Le Creuset you bought. A basement in east London, it has the relaxed timelessness of a villa in a Sally Rooney novel, but the embedded knowledge of a Michelin-starred chef who’s been cooking since she worked in her family’s chippy 40 and a bit years ago (she’s now 57) – every utensil exactly where your hand would be looking for it, everything mysteriously the right size.Today she’s making a poached chicken with spring vegetables. It sounds simple, and it’s maybe the fundamental paradox of food that the simpler a dish – the fewer the ingredients, the less fussing about – the easier it is to screw up. Poached chicken can come out the colour of over-washed underpants, although, to be fair, still taste delicious

3 days ago
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Royal Mail owner pushes back against criticisms that service has declined

about 4 hours ago
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Crispin Odey: I can’t remember telling female employee ‘I could attack you now’

about 5 hours ago
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Baltimore sues Elon Musk’s AI company over Grok’s fake nude images

about 3 hours ago
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Protect men and boys from manosphere influencers, Labour MPs tell Ofcom

about 5 hours ago
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World Cup-winning captain Johnson urges England to think about summer break for players

about 4 hours ago
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Ben Duckett pulls out of £200,000 IPL deal in bid to save England Test spot

about 6 hours ago