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TNT Sports secures live rights to England’s Ashes series in Australia

about 21 hours ago
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England’s attempt to regain the Ashes this winter will be broadcast live in the UK by TNT Sports.After ­agreeing a one-year deal with Cricket Australia over the weekend TNT now has the rights for all of England’s winter tours, as the broadcaster had deals in place to cover both white-ball series in New Zealand and Sri Lanka either side of the Ashes.TNT’s predecessor, BT Sport, bought the rights for the past two Ashes tours so the new deal may be inauspicious for Ben Stokes’s side as their viewers have not seen England win a single game.England have lost 13 of the past 15 Tests they have played in Australia, which shows the size of the task for the touring side this winter.TNT has increasingly become the home of England’s winter cricket deals in recent years and has long-term rights in place with New ­Zealand, West Indies and Pakistan, as well as securing a late deal to cover England’s five-Test series in India last winter.

Brendon McCullum accepts England have "room to improve" before the Ashes but the head coach believes the intensity of their dramatic drawn series against India will help them to meet the challenge.McCullum was honest enough to chalk up the 2-2 scoreline as a "fair reflection" on seven weeks of hard-fought, demanding cricket, with India grabbing a share of the new Anderson-Tendulkar Trophy with a thrilling six-run win at the Oval.That meant England were one hit from claiming an outright victory that would have sent them to Australia this winter with the biggest scalp of the Bazball era.Instead, they will travel having last defeated one of their "big three" rivals in Alastair Cook's farewell series in 2018."It's been a magnificent series, as good as I've been involved with or witnessed in my time.

We played some excellent cricket and at times, with the pressure India put us under, we came up a little bit short," McCullum said."You're always learning any time you get to see guys having to dig deep and go to places they've maybe not been before.We'll let this one sit and we'll digest it."We're in the middle now, halfway through what we knew was going to be an unbelievable 12 months of Test cricket.We know we've got some room to improve.

But to be involved in a series of such pressure over a period like this teaches you to be tough and builds resilience within you,A lot of our guys will have learnt a lot and that can only be a good thing,"One thing England may reflect on is their decision to keep the emerging talent of Jacob Bethell in camp for the most of the summer, rather than releasing him to play first-class cricket,He has played just one County Championship match for Warwickshire this year, while travelling as a non-playing squad member with the Test team,When he was called on as Ben Stokes's injury replacement, he made 11 runs in two innings and was dismissed in a pressurised chase playing a wild slog.

McCullum refused to chide him for that, though."Beth will be back and better for the experience, I'm sure he'll learn from it.The good thing was he took the positive option.He got out doing it, but no one ever regretted being positive, right?"Unlike that tour, in which the ­former England players Alastair Cook and Steven Finn provided commentary from a studio in the Netherlands, TNT is planning to send a team to Australia, although it will also use coverage from the host broadcaster.TNT’s dominance follows a decision from Sky Sports to pull back from winter tours due to cost-cutting and its focus on covering Premier League football – it will broadcast 215 matches live this season.

Sky still has the rights to International Cricket Council events, such as the men’s and women’s World Cup and T20 World Cup, but its only ­contract for bilateral series is with Cricket South Africa.TNT’s new Cricket Australia deal also includes men’s white-ball series against South Africa and India, and a multiformat women’s series against India.Todd Greenberg, the Cricket Australia chief executive, said: “We’re pleased to extend our longstanding partnership with TNT Sports and that they will again be instrumental in showcasing the Australian summer of cricket to UK audiences.”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 promotionEngland will be hoping to win the Ashes for the first time since Cook’s side defeated Australia 3-2 at home in 2015.The tourists have not won a Test in Australia since Andrew Strauss’s side triumphed in Sydney in January 2011, which sealed a 3-1 series win, their first down under since 1987.

This article was amended on 5 August 2025.The caption in a previous version said that Joe Root was England’s Test captain in 2015.It was in fact Alastair Cook.
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Jeremy Corbyn warns rules on council asset sales threaten allotments

Jeremy Corbyn has criticised Angela Rayner, the local government secretary, for rules that allow councils to sell allotments to fund day-to-day spending, saying it “makes the future of these precious spaces even more perilous”.Rules on council asset sales mean local authorities can sell off sites to help “deliver transformation and invest-to-save projects” they would otherwise not be able to afford.Corbyn, writing for the Telegraph, said the possible sale of allotments would fill many with “deep dismay”.“Allotments have always been under threat from developers. Now, that threat seems to have government backing, which makes the future of these precious spaces even more perilous,” he said

about 20 hours ago
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Prison system was days from collapse three times under Sunak, review finds

The criminal justice system was within days of collapse on three occasions before being bailed out by “last-minute emergency measures”, an independent review by a former prisons watchdog has found.Dame Anne Owers said the prison system, under pressure from overcrowding, was “in crisis” between autumn 2023 and the summer of 2024, but No 10 under Rishi Sunak refused to cut the numbers in jail until “the next predictable cliff edge”.Former ministers and officials interviewed by Owers “expressed frustration and sometimes anger” at the failure to endorse a plan to avert crises and suspected that this was a deliberate move by Downing Street, she said.“Many believed that the default position was to do as little as possible as late as possible, with the consequence that the system repeatedly reached the brink of collapse,” she said.The 25-page report into the teetering Prison Service, which remains at nearly 97

1 day ago
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Home cooking and minimally processed foods best for weight loss, study finds

People lose more weight if they cook minimally processed food from scratch than if they eat ultra-processed and ready-made foods, according to the first study to establish a clear link between ultra-processed foods (UPFs) and weight.Trial participants were given one of two diets with the same nutritional profile for eight weeks. One diet was made up of UPFs while the other comprised minimally processed foods.When the first group ate breakfast bars and ready-made lasagne, for example, the second ate oats soaked in milk and natural yoghurt and homemade spaghetti bolognese.At the end of the trial, participants on the second diet had lost twice as much weight as those on the first

1 day ago
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Experts express concern for future of Health Survey for England

Public health experts have expressed concern for the future of a “vital” health survey, after the government said it would no longer be run by NHS England.The Health Survey for England, launched in 1991, is an annual study that collects data from about 8,000 adults and 2,000 children across the country, through face-to-face interviews and questionnaires.It gathers data on a range of important health metrics such as height and weight, smoking and alcohol use, with public experts describing it as an “arterial” source of data due it being nationally representative and high quality.At a briefing in July by the UK Data Service, the government said the 2025 edition would be the last one because “NHS England will not be prioritising population health surveys in its long-term strategic work plan”.The news comes amid unprecedented cost cutting within the NHS, as the health service faces a predicted shortfall of nearly £7

1 day ago
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Call to crack down on ‘hooch’ and medicine in prisons after Dorset death

Ministers should draw up a specific policy to reduce inmate access to illicitly brewed alcohol and medication, a coroner has said, after the death of a vulnerable prisoner.An inquest jury found last month that Sheldon Jeans, who was discovered dead in his cell at HMP Guys Marsh in November 2022, had died as a result of consuming illegal alcohol and four different medications that had not been prescribed to him, recording death by misadventure.Rachael Griffin, the senior Dorset coroner, issued a prevention of future deaths (PFD) report in response to findings at the inquest, highlighting national policy and guidance relating to the handling of hooch and medication in prisons as areas for concern.“In my opinion there is a risk that future deaths could occur unless action is taken … There is a lack of national policy, and local guidance at HMP Guys Marsh, to inform staff working in prisons of the dangers of illicitly brewed alcohol, also known as hooch,” she wrote.The report has been sent to the Department of Health and Social Care, HM Prison and Probation Service, HMP Guys Marsh, and Oxleas NHS foundation trust, requesting a response by 19 September 2025 detailing actions to be taken and a timetable for that action

1 day ago
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A Clockwork Orange estate fights ‘art washing’ redevelopment plans

Protesters staged a sit-in at a brutalist 1960s estate featured in Stanley Kubrick’s dystopic film, A Clockwork Orange, to highlight concerns about a development they say amounts to gentrification and art washing.The brief occupation on Saturday of the Lakeside Centre in Thamesmead, an arts centre in south-east London, is part of a wider battle by longstanding residents, who claim that the soul of the community, along with many socially rented homes, will be lost as part of a huge regeneration by the housing association Peabody.Thamesmead was conceived by a group of architects at the former Greater London Council in the 1960s and hailed as “the town of tomorrow”, providing alternative housing to replace dilapidated inner-city homes in London.Lesnes, one of the estates built in the area in the 1960s, was famously depicted in A Clockwork Orange.Sixty years on, improvements are urgently needed and Bexley, like other councils, does not have the cash to do this

1 day ago
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‘The Earl of Sandwich is rolling in his grave’: Tesco’s birthday cake sandwich divides opinion

about 10 hours ago
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Ofwat chief executive to step down ahead of regulator’s abolition

about 12 hours ago
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Lib Dems call for urgent regulation of YouTube ads after wave of scams

about 8 hours ago
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OpenAI takes on Meta and DeepSeek with free and customisable AI models

about 8 hours ago
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Trump announces he will chair White House taskforce for 2028 LA Olympics

about 6 hours ago
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The Hundred returns with star names, tech titans and an intruder who thrilled Lord’s

about 8 hours ago