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Six balls in Perth to Harry Brook’s drop: 10 moments that decided the Ashes

about 21 hours ago
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Lilac Hill warmup, Alex Carey’s glovework and Pat Cummins’ control of Joe Root are key parts of the storyIt’s not a complete exaggeration to say that Australia won the 2025-26 Ashes on 15 October 2024.That was when Cricket Australia announced the schedule for the series: Perth first, Brisbane second.Starting the series on the bounciest, most Kryptonicious pitches in Australia – and the only major venues where England haven’t won a Test since 1986-87 – was a masterstroke, especially as Australia also had a day-night advantage at the Gabba.By the time England reached more batting-friendly climes, many of their batters already had scrambled brains.We may never know the whole truth about whether England could have used the Waca in Perth ahead of the first Test.

But even the most fervent disciple of Bazball would surely concede that warming up for an Ashes series in Australia with a two-day intrasquad game at Lilac Hill was like preparing your ears for a Slipknot gig – front row, no earplugs – by listening to Brian Eno’s Ambient 1: Music for Airports on loop.By scoring at unprecedented speed, England have redefined Test batting in the Bazball years.In the first Test they redefined the alphabet of batting by turning the ABC of playing at Perth (don’t drive on the up, ever) into the FFS.England were effectively 116 for two in their second innings when Ollie Pope, Harry Brook and, most FFS-inducingly of all, Joe Root all played loose drives in the space of six deliveries.It was over in the space of an over: England lost three wickets for no runs and have not been in control of a game since.

One of the most startling things about Travis Head’s mind-blowing rampage at Perth was how controlled it was.But every play and miss is a wicket that might have been and there is a parallel universe in which Head nicks the second ball of the innings, a beauty from Jofra Archer, instead of missing it.Given the nervous passivity of Australia’s batting in the first innings, the early dismissal of Head could have changed everything.We’ll never know.A sweet on-drive for four by Zak Crawley isn’t an obvious Ashes-losing moment.

But that shot, played off Michael Neser at the start of the second session on day one at Brisbane, came just after Alex Carey had moved up to the stumps for the first time.Carey subsequently stood up to Neser and Scott Boland for long periods after discussions with the fielding coach Andre Borovec.It kept the batters in their crease, creating a claustrophobia and a danger that not even England could run towards.Carey’s stunning catch to dismiss Ben Stokes in the second innings will be replayed forever; even without that wicket, the tactic had borne plentiful fruit.England were 210 for four at Brisbane when Josh Inglis brilliantly ran out Stokes, who we now realised had arrived at the Gabba in over-my-dead-body mode.

Given how well Root played in that innings, he and Stokes could have batted England into a position of complete control.Instead they struggled to reach a nothing score of 334.In literal terms, Jamie Smith dropping Head at Brisbane only cost 30 runs: Head, on three at the time, was dismissed for 33 soon after.But it ramped up the pressure on Smith to almost unbearable levels, set the tone for a costly fielding display – and, most importantly, sparked an instant change in momentum.For the rest of that morning session on day two, aided by some lamentable bowling, Australia scored exactly 100 runs in 12.

4 overs,It was an obscene rate of scoring; by the time England regained some control, it was too late,Brook dropping Usman Khawaja on the first morning at Adelaide – a tough chance but one he would probably take eight times out of 10 – had a similar impact,Khawaja, who wasn’t in the last-chance saloon so much as the post-career saloon, should have been out for five from 28 balls, with Australia 50 for three,The reprieve liberated him and he hit a vital 82 from 126 balls.

Head also added another 71 after being dropped on 99 by Brook in the second innings.We don’t have the will to discuss Snicko again, so let’s just present the facts of Carey’s controversial reprieve on day one at Adelaide.He added another 34 runs to his score of 72, and Australia – who would have been 245 for seven – eventually made 371.Root’s dismissals are sliding doors that close quietly.They are usually significant but, bar one infamous reverse-scoop off Jasprit Bumrah, rarely stand out because of the restraint with which he plays.

By Root’s standards of risk management, his dismissal in the first innings at Adelaide, pushing at a delivery from his nemesis Pat Cummins that he could have left, was a loose stroke.Root’s head-to-head average v Cummins of 22.6 is lower than David Warner’s against Stuart Broad, and both innings at Adelaide confirmed Cummins was still in his head.Root’s dismissal on day two reduced England to 71 for four in the best batting conditions of the series.Despite an admirable fight thereafter, they never quite recovered.

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Four-day week may be considered a sign of failure, England councils told

The secretary for local government has written to all councils to warn that adopting a four-day week for staff puts them at risk of being declared a failing authority, according to reports.Twenty-five councils have discussed a four-day week policy and one, South Cambridgeshire district council, has already moved to the pattern.While councils are free to set their own policies, the government has the power to take control if an authority is deemed to be failing.In a letter to councils seen by the Daily Telegraph, Steve Reed said that staff doing “part-time work for full-time pay” could be an indicator of “failure”.He said: “The provision the current guidance makes in relation to the four-day week remains in force … I take this issue very seriously, in particular that ‘council staff undertaking part-time work for full-time pay without compelling justification’ would be considered an indicator, among a wide range of factors, of potential failure

about 5 hours ago
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Tesla’s EU sales slump continues as Chinese rivals thrive

Tesla continued a run of weak sales in the EU in November, with new car registrations of Elon Musk’s brand down a third, while Chinese carmakers’ sales soared.Tesla sold 12,130 new cars across the EU last month, down from 18,430 in November 2024, shrinking its market share from 2.1% to 1.4%, according to data from the European Automobile Manufacturers’ Association (Acea), a lobby group.The Chinese carmaker BYD recorded by far the fastest sales growth, with registrations across Europe almost tripling year on year up to November, to 42,500

about 5 hours ago
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MPs question UK Palantir contracts after investigation reveals security concerns

UK MPs have raised concerns about the government’s contracts with Palantir after an investigation published in Switzerland highlighted allegations about the suitability and security of its products.The investigation by the Zurich-based research collective WAV and the Swiss online magazine Republik details Palantir’s efforts, over the course of seven years, to sell its products to Swiss federal agencies.Palantir is a US company that provides software to integrate and analyse data scattered across different systems, such as in the health service. It also provides artificial intelligence-enabled military targeting systems.The investigation cites an expert report, internal to the Swiss army, that assessed Palantir’s status as a US company meant there was a possibility sensitive data shared with it could be accessed by the US government and intelligence services

1 day ago
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Extremists are using AI voice cloning to supercharge propaganda. Experts say it’s helping them grow

While the artificial intelligence boom is upending sections of the music industry, voice generating bots are also becoming a boon to another unlikely corner of the internet: extremist movements that are using them to recreate the voices and speeches of major figures in their milieu, and experts say it is helping them grow.“The adoption of AI-enabled translation by terrorists and extremists marks a significant evolution in digital propaganda strategies,” said Lucas Webber, a senior threat intelligence analyst at Tech Against Terrorism and a research fellow at the Soufan Center. Webber specializes in monitoring the online tools of terrorist groups and extremists around the world.“Earlier methods relied on human translators or rudimentary machine translation, often limited by language fidelity and stylistic nuance,” he said. “Now, with the rise of advanced generative AI tools, these groups are able to produce seamless, contextually accurate translations that preserve tone, emotion, and ideological intensity across multiple languages

2 days ago
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Pat Cummins out of rest of Ashes series as Australia make two changes for MCG Test

Australia coach Andrew McDonald has revealed the extreme risk selectors took with captain Pat Cummins, who starred in the third Ashes Test in Adelaide on his return to the side, but has now been ruled out for the rest of the series.McDonald and the other selectors named a 15-player squad on Tuesday for the Boxing Day Test, which includes back-up pace trio Jhye Richardson, Brendan Doggett and second Test hero Michael Neser, as well as Victorian off-spinner Todd Murphy as a replacement for the injured Nathan Lyon.The coach said although Cummins “pulled up fine” in his first match since July following a serious back injury, it was not worth exposing him to possible injury again given the series has now been won.“We were taking on some risk [with his return] but we’ve now won the series and that was the goal,” the coach said. “To position him for further risk and jeopardise him long term is not something that we want to do, and Pat’s really comfortable with that

about 11 hours ago
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Rob Key to investigate England’s ‘stag do’ drinking habits on Noosa mid-Ashes break

Rob Key has defended England’s mid-tour break in Noosa but confirmed he will look into reports that excessive drinking by players in between the second and third Ashes Tests turned it into a “glorified stag do”.Sitting 3-0 down to Australia, the Ashes having gone, the team director, Key, has followed the head coach, Brendon McCullum, in stating that his future now rests in the hands of senior figures at the England and Wales Cricket Board.Among the questions that will be asked in a post-series review is whether the four-night break on Queensland’s Sunshine Coast best prepared them for the pivotal Adelaide Test. According to the BBC, a number of players spent six days drinking, having begun after the eight-wicket defeat in Brisbane.“If there’s things where people are saying that our players went out and drank excessively then of course we’ll be looking into that,” Key said

about 11 hours ago
politicsSee all
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More than 75% of Labour, Lib Dem and Green voters think PM should open talks on joining EU customs union – as it happened

about 21 hours ago
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Rachel Reeves sets early March date for spring statement as OBR prepares forecast

about 22 hours ago
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Britain’s economy has been damaged by Brexit. But what should ministers do about it?

about 24 hours ago
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Streeting urges closer trading ties with Europe to grow UK economy

2 days ago
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Starmer will ‘absolutely’ still be prime minister by next Christmas, says Labour chair – as it happened

2 days ago
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UK failure to seal EU tax exemption hands industry mountain of paperwork

2 days ago