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Mitchell Starc has got England’s number as Ben Stokes faces a dirty dozen in Brisbane

about 7 hours ago
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A while ago there was an advert in England for directory enquiries that featured two runners in vests with droopy handlebar moustaches.“118, Got Your Number!” the two would holler from various mise en scene.It was big for a while, puncturing the zeitgeist before drifting away as these things tend to.After Mitchell Starc pocketed Zak Crawley for a first-over duck for the second time in the Perth Test with a sinew stretching caught and bowled the retro catchphrase sprang to mind – “695, Got Your Number!”.Not much later, Ben Stokes nicked a Starc laser beam to Steve Smith at slip.

It gave Starc his 10th wicket in the match, a feat not achieved by an Australia bowler in an Ashes Test since Shane Warne in 2005,You have to go even further back to the last time a fast bowler got double digits, Craig McDermott over the river at the Waca in 1991,Starc is making a habit of breaking records these days, and needs only three more wickets to pass Pakistan great Wasim Akram as the left-arm bowler with the most Test scalps,Back to 2025 and Perth Stadium, Stokes also perished to Starc in the first innings, a fast in-jagger slicing through him and knocking back his poles,In total, Starc has got Stokes out 11 times in Tests, more than any other fast bowler.

The left-arm quick has also splattered Stokes’ stumps five times in Tests, more than anyone else.“658, Got Your Number!”There’s an emphatic nature to the Starc and Stokes dismissals which make them stick in the memory.Different format, sure, but the 2019 World Cup yorker that Starc scudded under Stokes’ blade at Lord’s goes a long way to epitomising their head to head.Stumps scattered to the breeze, Stokes bent double as if in supplication having dropped his bat, kicking the turf before dragging himself from the middle with the game all but lost.Whilst Stokes isn’t quite in the territory of Starc “Bunnydom” just yet he could well be by the end of this series.

Stokes averages a lowly 17.36 runs against the 35-year-old for those 11 dismissals as we head to the second and crucial Test of the series in Brisbane.About that, it’s a pink-ball Test under lights.Guess who is a maestro with the pink ball? That’s right – Mitchell Starc.Australia might play more pink-ball Tests than any other country but the lissom limbed seamer’s record stands alone, with 81 wickets at an average of 17.

08.He has more pink hued Test scalps than any other bowler.On the evidence we’ve seen, there’s every chance Starc runs amok at the Gabba and his hold over Stokes heads into the final pages of Watership Down territory.In Australia, Starc has pocketed Stokes five times for 70 runs.Somewhere, Art Garfunkel is clearing his throat.

Off stump, burning like fire.Starc won’t discriminate though.Crawley had 155 runs for two dismissals in his head-to-head with Starc before the Perth Test, but after bagging a pair the England opener’s mind might well be headed over the ditch and last year’s three-Test series against New Zealand where the King of Clapham saw his robes turned into rags six times out of six by Matt Henry.Had there been a fourth Test, Crawley would have surely been put out of his misery.Like an earthy brie or tired toddler, Crawley doesn’t travel well.

Since his 78 in the first Test against Pakistan in Multan last October he has played 12 innings and scored 113 runs at an average of 9.4.His highest score is 29.Starc now has him well and truly in his sights, and, is it me or is that Crawley’s nose twitching?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 promotionMichael Atherton famously fell to Glenn McGrath 19 times during the course of his Test career, as well as 17 times apiece to Curtly Ambrose and Courteney Walsh.Sometimes it just sucks to be an opening batter.

“If McGrath bowled to Michael Atherton” Ricky Ponting once said, “you just knew Atherton would be absolutely shitting himself.”With the passage of time these individual records lose their hold and dissolve into the lore of the game.And yet, Stuart Broad and David Warner, currently working for rival Australian broadcasters for this series seem keen to keep their on pitch tussles alive.You fear Warner might come off second best to Broad in the war of words as he did on the pitch (17 times, if you were wondering.)Alec Bedser dismissed the great Australian opening batter Arthur Morris 18 times in Test cricket but refused to grasp the bunny ears and engage in slighting his opponent.

In 1953, Bedser winkled Morris out in the first innings of every Test match.“Again the cry went up that Arthur was my ‘rabbit’,” wrote Bedser.“Personally I have never seen fit to minimise Arthur’s skill because I have had the fortune to get his wicket a few times...

We have been the best of pals since we first met in 1946.”Indeed at the end of that 1953 series the two men left their respective teams quaffing champagne to head off for a beer together to chat about life outside cricket.Ahead of the Perth Test, Stokes was asked if the two sides would share a beer after the series.“Probably, yeah” the England captain said.At the moment, it is Starc and Australia who are getting the jugs in.

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UK to extend sugar tax to cover bottled milkshakes and pre-packaged lattes

Sweet-toothed consumers face paying more for bottled milkshakes and some fizzy drinks after the government confirmed plans for a tougher sugar tax.Designed to tackle obesity, the levy currently applies to drinks with a sugar content of 5g per 100ml. However, after a public consultation this is being cut to 4.5g per 100ml, meaning it could cover hundreds more products.The health secretary, Wes Streeting, told the Commons on Tuesday that an exemption for milk-based drinks would also end

about 5 hours ago
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Peak pizza? Domino’s boss who launched shift towards chicken ousted

The boss of Domino’s Pizza Group who suggested the UK may have reached peak pizza as he expanded the chain into fried chicken has been ousted after tensions with its board.Andrew Rennie is leaving after just two years at the helm and will be replaced on an interim basis by the company’s chief operating officer, Nicola Frampton, while Domino’s searches for a new leader.Rennie, who worked for Domino’s for more than two decades, has sought to shift Britain’s biggest pizza delivery company towards fried chicken, telling the Financial Times earlier this month there was not “massive growth” left in the UK’s pizza market. He said chicken was “the fastest-growing protein” in the world.It is understood that there was friction between Rennie and the board over his focus and approach to the business, although the statement from Domino’s said he was stepping down “by mutual agreement”

about 7 hours ago
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AI could replace 3m low-skilled jobs in the UK by 2035, research finds

Up to 3m low-skilled jobs could disappear in the UK by 2035 because of automation and AI, according to a report by a leading educational research charity.The jobs most at risk are those in occupations such as trades, machine operations and administrative roles, the National Foundation for Educational Research (NFER) said.Highly skilled professionals, on the other hand, were forecast to be more in demand as AI and technological advances increase workloads “at least in the short to medium term”. Overall, the report expects the UK economy to add 2.3m jobs by 2035, but unevenly distributed

about 21 hours ago
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‘It’s hell for us here’: Mumbai families suffer as datacentres keep the city hooked on coal

As Mumbai sees increased energy demand from new datacenters, particularly from Amazon, the filthiest neighbourhood in one of India’s largest cities must keep its major coal plantsEach day, Kiran Kasbe drives a rickshaw taxi through his home neighbourhood of Mahul on Mumbai’s eastern seafront, down streets lined with stalls selling tomatoes, bottle gourds and aubergines–and, frequently, through thick smog.Earlier this year, doctors found three tumours in his 54-year-old mother’s brain. It’s not clear exactly what caused her cancer. But people who live near coal plants are much more likely to develop the illness, studies show, and the residents of Mahul live a few hundred metres down the road from one.Mahul’s air is famously dirty

1 day ago
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England warned ‘wickets fall in clumps’ with pink ball under lights at the Gabba

As they lick their wounds after defeat in the first Test, during which they lost five wickets for 12 runs in their first innings and four for 11 in their second, England have been warned to prepare for conditions where “wickets fall in clumps” when the Ashes resume next week in Brisbane.David Sandurski, curator at the Gabba, is preparing for a second day‑night game in quick succession after the Sheffield Shield match between Queensland and Victoria, which ended on Monday with the home side winning by seven wickets inside three days.Xavier Bartlett took five wickets in that game, while scoring 72 runs in the first innings. “Just on twilight the pink ball talks a little bit more and the game goes through massive ebbs and flows,” Bartlett said. “You see wickets falling in clumps

about 9 hours ago
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Undercooked England will not play for a year until Rugby League World Cup

England’s rugby league team will go into next year’s World Cup without playing a fixture for almost an entire year after it was confirmed there was no room in the 2026 Super League schedule to give the national team a mid-season international break.Following their whitewash defeat by Australia in the Ashes this month, the England coach Shaun Wane – whose own position is under review – insisted there needed to be more opportunities and priority given to the national team if they are to bridge the gap to the all-conquering Kangaroos.t next year’s World Cup in Australia, they will have a team severely underprepared. ­England will have no mid-season training camp or international games of any kind before their opening fixture in the tournament against Tonga in Perth next October.By then it will be almost a year to the day since England last took to the field for a match

about 9 hours ago
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Reform’s ‘Trumpian’ legal threats hint at more aggressive approach to media

about 15 hours ago
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Nigel Farage’s shifting answers on school-days racism claims – a timeline

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Nigel Farage responds to racism claims saying he never ‘tried to hurt anybody’

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BBC finds its happy place inflicting latest round of self-harm | John Crace

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UK politics: Risk of Maccabi Tel Aviv facing antisemitic attacks not ‘predominant’ reason for match ban, police tell MPs – as it happened

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Political corrrectness that made me laugh | Brief letters

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