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Usman Khawaja’s retirement farewell shows how cricket can be an expression of character | Gideon Haigh

about 8 hours ago
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There is no gainsaying Usman Khawaja’s significance as an Australian Test cricketer; an additional mark of his stature is that he almost made you take him for granted.Think on it for a moment, and run your eye up and down the palely conventional list of Australia’s highest Test scorers, where he ranks 15th, between Mike Hussey and Neil Harvey – so various in methods yet so similar in origins.There was a recognition through the 1990s and into the 21st century that the face of Australia was being changed by immigration, while the face of Australian cricket remained eerily unaltered.Then, all of a sudden, 15 years ago, Khawaja’s darkly slim figure emerged from the shadows of the Sydney Cricket Ground to pull his first Test delivery for four, and the axis of the game tilted ever so slightly.Yet he wasn’t there for looks.

He wasn’t your affirmative action pick; he wasn’t your diversity hire.He amassed big runs, and in Test cricket too.Playing no international white ball cricket after the 2019 World Cup, he became one of the dwindling band of specialists in a multi-format world, moving at his one-man tempo with his singular technique.His contemporaries Steve Smith, a batting wonk, and David Warner, a polychrome pioneer, were uncompromising moderns.In a world in thrall to power, Khawaja remained a touch-playing treat to watch, throwing back to the ancient idea of the minimum of effort for maximum of effect, even as he partook of batting’s new possibilities.

As others’ check drives rocketed to mid-off, nobody in our era defended like Khawaja, his soft hands easing the ball to the ground as though comforting a patient.At the same time, he popularised the reverse sweep so understatedly it ceased to seem outre.Sydney is a ground used to farewells, including of great triumvirates in 1984 and 2007.Khawaja’s public valediction today, however, will stand alone: it was frank, moving, wide-ranging, well-judged, and went places one can hardly recall a press conference going in a long time, including into his relationship with his own God, and about his country’s present dividedness.Was Khawaja a hugely outspoken athlete? By historic standards, perhaps not; by contemporary standards, which are predicated on corporate telegenia and pitched into chaos by anything other than “the boys done well”, he was made to seem like Ali and Jackie Robinson rolled up together.

Viz Boxing Day two years ago, when a gesture of the utmost inoffensiveness was fanned into the flames of a bizarre cause celebre,Not one to avoid a point, however, Khawaja this morning went into the sensation of feeling racially stereotyped for his approach to the game – he felt judged harshly on his dedication, his resilience, his attitude to training,He had a point of course,Every player who lasts any length of time attracts cliches like a magnet does iron filings,Sometimes, this is a form of essentialism.

How much were Warner, or Ricky Ponting and Darren Lehmann before him, apprehended by their working-class origins? Friend of Et Al Ed Cowan, meanwhile, seemed impossible to describe without mention of his Cranbrook education.In part this is because of a profound belief that cricket is bred in the bone and expresses character.But with Khawaja, it is true, it had an additional orientalist edge; he was evaluated by standards peculiar to him, an exotic in a straitening time, a man of faith in a secular age.It still seems staggering that, in an Australian era not overendowed with batting talent, Khawaja has played in only 87 of the 153 Tests since that aforementioned debut.Inside every player lurks a secret stat: Khawaja today clearly relished the final symmetry of his career, its cleaving into 44 Tests either side of his 2019 omission.

The difference scarcely sounds so great, that in the former he averaged 40.66 and in the latter 46.1.Yet Khawaja gave an insight into how profound were the influences of his religion and his marriage on the player he became after that hiatus – providing, in fact, some empirical support for the idea of cricket as an expression of character, by articulating how he became a better cricketer as he became a better man.He also provided a terrific exposition of the challenges of opening the batting, of the permanent pressure, of the psychological attrition.

“It’s not just tough on the field, it’s tough on the brain.” I’ve heard other cricketers on retirement insist that they’ll “never forget how hard it is”; they always do, because, in part, they must, in order to testify objectively.But there was a hint here of a formidable commentator in the making.In recent times, Khawaja has been judged against another stereotype – that of age.He is in his 40th year.

Only Bradman, Lindsay Hassett and Bob Simpson before him commanded Australian Test places so old,It’s not being unkind to observe that his record has attenuated in the last two years,It’s evidence, in fact, of the same attrition he described, while his irritation about this was an outcome of the kidology in which all athletes indulge towards the end while striving to convince themselves they remain up for the fight,In Tom Brown’s Schooldays, the boy hero timelessly observes: “The goddess who presides over cricket likes to bring down the most skilful players,” Just occasionally, too, that divinity winks.

In Adelaide, Khawaja, dropped on 5, went on to the gorgeous 82.It was like watching him convince himself, as he did others, that the spark still burned.It is a truism that athletes die twice, the first time when the sporting days that defined them end, even if very seldom is that retirement accompanied by a sense of something greater lying ahead of the surviving individual.Of Khawaja, however, that is assuredly true.He has done good work already.

He will not go gentle,There will be hits and misses along the way, one fancies,But for that, cricket will have provided a sound preparation,Gideon Haigh writes at cricketetal,substack.

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High blood pressure: who is at risk and why UK children are getting it

High blood pressure was long considered a health problem of middle age, but rates are increasing in children and adolescents, with doctors reporting a surge in strokes among people of working age.Hypertension is the medical name for high blood pressure. It arises when blood pressure in the arteries, the vessels that carry blood from the heart to the brain and around the body, is consistently above a healthy level. It is often called a silent killer because it causes damage throughout the body without producing obvious symptoms.Blood pressure is usually measured with a blood pressure monitor, which wraps an inflatable cuff around the arm

about 19 hours ago
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Call for routine high blood pressure testing of UK children as cases almost double

Leading doctors have called for a national UK programme to monitor schoolchildren for high blood pressure amid concerns that rising rates in adolescents will increase cases of organ damage, strokes and heart attacks.Rates of high blood pressure have nearly doubled among children in the past 20 years, but no routine testing is performed in the UK, leaving doctors in the dark about the extent of the problem and which children need most help.Identifying teenagers with high blood pressure would enable GPs to intervene early and reduce the risk of organ damage and potentially life-threatening cardiovascular disease as people reach their 30s and 40s, doctors said.“We need to find out how bad the problem is, and that means finding a way to measure blood pressure in children who are still at school,” said Prof Manish Sinha, a consultant paediatric nephrologist at the Evelina London children’s hospital, Guy’s & St Thomas’s foundation hospitals NHS trust.“The fundamental issue is that people don’t recognise that hypertension can be a childhood problem

about 19 hours ago
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UK ministers face increased pressure to restrict gambling ads

Ministers will come under mounting pressure to introduce curbs on gambling advertising this year, as MPs and campaigners latch on to polling that indicates widespread public support for tougher restrictions.Policies affecting gambling have been the subject of fierce debate over recent years, leading to stricter regulation of the £12.5bn-a-year sector and higher taxes announced in November’s budget, despite intensive lobbying by the industry.But, while successive governments have brought in measures such as lower stake limits on online slot machines and a statutory levy to fund addiction treatment, gambling advertising has remained largely unaffected.New polling, shared with the Guardian, indicates strong public backing for a much less permissive approach to gambling ads, which have exploded in volume since deregulation by Tony Blair’s Labour government in 2005

about 23 hours ago
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Hundreds of Blackpool families to be evicted in ‘mass dispersion’ of vulnerable people

Hundreds of families in one of England’s poorest neighbourhoods will be evicted under a £90m plan described by critics as a “mass dispersion” of vulnerable people.Four hundred homes in Blackpool will be bulldozed this summer and replaced with 230 new properties under levelling up proposals signed off by Rishi Sunak’s government. The area has more than 800 people – about 250 of them children – who are in the poorest 10th of the population of England, according to official documents.The Rev Matthew Lockwood, the leader of Beacon church, said residents were “bewildered, angry and distraught” and risked being made homeless in a “mass dispersion of statistically some of the most vulnerable people in the country”.Chris Webb, the Labour MP for Blackpool South, is understood to have raised concerns about the scheme after an angry and emotional public meeting last month

1 day ago
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Ethnic minorities in England less likely to have access to diabetes tech – study

People from ethnic minority backgrounds in England are less likely to have access to the latest diabetes technology, despite being more likely to live with the condition, according to analysis.Devices such as a continuous glucose monitor (CGM) can help people check their blood glucose levels in order to better manage the disease.Without this technology, people with diabetes are left with much less efficient and inconvenient ways of managing their blood sugar levels, such as through finger pricking.The study, published in the journal Diabetic Medicine, found significant disparities in access to continuous glucose monitors, with people from black and south Asian backgrounds facing lower prescribing rates per 1,000 people.People from ethnic minority backgrounds made up 17

1 day ago
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Children in England to be offered vaccines in their own homes

Health visitors will be sent door-to-door to deliver vaccines to children in England amid alarm that one in five start primary school with no protection against deadly diseases, the Guardian can reveal.The World Health Organization (WHO) recommends that at least 95% of children should receive vaccine doses for each illness to achieve herd immunity. However, not a single one of the main childhood vaccines in England hit the target in 2024-25. There were also sharp differences in uptake across the country.In an effort to tackle the crisis, health visitors will begin offering a range of life-saving jabs to children in their own homes as part of a £2m pilot scheme starting in January

1 day ago
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‘An Arab in a post-9/11 world’: Khalid Abdalla’s one-man play about belonging comes to Australia

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Tension on the streets, the mushroom trial circus and a devastating terrorist attack – looking back on Australia’s turbulent 2025

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The best films of 2025 … you may not have seen

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‘I once Bogarted a joint from a Beatle’: Stewart Copeland of the Police

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From Central Cee to Adolescence: in 2025 British culture had a global moment – but can it last?

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The best songs of 2025 … you may not have heard

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