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

about 23 hours ago
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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”,Key was speaking before unverified social media footage emerged of what appears to be Ben Duckett looking worse for wear during the team’s stay in the Queensland resort town,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.

Speaking some hours before the video alleged to be Duckett began circulating, Key said: “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.“I’m not a drinker.Drinking excessive amounts of alcohol for an international cricket team is not something that I’d expect to see at any stage.“We’ve added security.We’ve got enough ways of finding out exactly what happened.

And everything that I’ve heard so far is that they sat down, had lunch, had dinner and didn’t go out late and had the odd drink.I don’t mind that.”Concerning the video, an England and Wales Cricket Board spokesperson later added: “We are aware of content circulating on social media.We have high expectations for behaviour, accepting that players are often under intense levels of scrutiny, with established processes that we follow when conduct falls below expectations.We also support players that need assistance.

“We will not comment further at this stage while we establish the facts.”Key had already ticked off two players – the white-ball captain, Harry Brook, and Jacob Bethell – after they were photographed drinking the night before the final one-day international of the New Zealand white-ball tour that came before this tour.But the concept of giving the team a mid-series break is something Key has insisted was necessary, citing the packed international schedule and the intense media scrutiny that comes with playing Test cricket in Australia.Key said: “Harry Brook is going to spend six days at home this entire winter.Jofra Archer will go through to the World Cup and the Indian Premier League.

So I think it’s so important that these players, especially multi-format players, can get away and live a normal life,[But] if it goes into where they’re drinking lots and it’s a stag do, that’s completely unacceptable,“I think a drinking culture doesn’t help anyone in any stretch whatsoever,[But] I have no issue with Noosa if it was to get away and just throw your phone away, down tools, go on the beach, all of that stuff,”In terms of the actual cricket played, Key conceded Australia’s vast superiority with the ball – “I don’t think it’s about we took the wrong bowlers on this trip.

I just think they haven’t been consistent enough” – and admitted some players may have been persisted with for too long in the series.No individual was named here, but Ollie Pope may now miss the Boxing Day Test.There was also an acceptance that playing white-ball cricket in New Zealand in early season conditions – despite the need for World Cup qualification ranking points – potentially affected a player such as Duckett.As for preparation in Australia, Key stressed the two options given by England’s hosts were club grounds in Adelaide or Perth – they opted for the latter – but, crucially, there was no access to the Waca Ground that India used as a training base 12 months earlier before winning at Perth Stadium.Not that doing so, Key stressed, would have guaranteed a different outcome.

On his own future, and that of McCullum, Key said: “As far as I’m concerned, that’s out of my hands really.You don’t mind losing, the regret is that you’ve not played anything like your best really.For me, it’s just focusing on that.“The decision really for the ECB will be whether or not they want to rip it up and start again, or whether they want to evolve and whether we’re the right people to do that.Clearly, I believe that Brendon, from a coaching point of view, I think he’s an excellent coach.

I think this is only the third Test series we’ve lost in four years.“Clearly we’ve mucked up on the big occasions, whether that was the home Ashes series [in 2023], or last summer’s [2-2] draw against India where we should have won that series as well.The big ones have eluded us.“I still feel like there’s plenty of life in this whole thing but we have to evolve.We have to make sure that we’re doing things better.

That’s my view on it,As you know, these things are taken out of people’s hands a lot of the time,”
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Jimmy Kimmel on a tumultuous year: ‘Don’t know what the American way even is any more’

Late-night hosts reflected on a rollercoaster 2025 and Donald Trump’s combative, primetime year-end address to the nation.Jimmy Kimmel opened his final monologue of 2025 with an emotional reflection on a tumultuous year. “This has been a strange year. It’s been a hard year,” he said. “We’ve had some lows

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Late-night hosts discussed – or ignored – Donald Trump’s surprise primetime address and dug further into the explosive new interview the White House chief of staff, Susie Wiles.Jimmy Kimmel opened his Wednesday night show with an acknowledgment of the president’s 9pm ET national address, also known as a “surprise primetime episode of The Worst Wing tonight on every channel”.Trump announced only on Tuesday that he would deliver an impromptu fireside chat during the season finales of Survivor and The Floor. “It’s weird to think that had a couple of states just gone the other way, he’d be hosting one of those shows,” Kimmel joked. “Trump shouldn’t be pre-empting The Floor

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The 50 best albums of 2025: No 3 – Blood Orange: Essex Honey

Dev Hynes’ deeply personal response to his mother’s death embodied the many unexpected shades of grief in pastoral hymnals and post-punk The 50 best albums of 2025 More on the best culture of 2025There’s a lot of grief across the best albums of this year. It’s unsurprising: 2025 has felt like a definitive and dismal break with government accountability, protections for marginalised people and holding back the encroachment of AI in creative and intellectual fields, to cherrypick just a few horrors. Anna von Hausswolff and Rosalía reached for transcendence from these earthly disappointments. Bad Bunny and KeiyaA countered colonial abuse and neglect with writhing resistance anthems. On a more personal scale, Lily Allen and Cate Le Bon grappled with disillusionment about mis-sold romantic ideals

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Arts funding in England must be protected from politics, Hodge report urges

Arts Council England must ensure funding is protected from politicisation and simplify its application process in order to regain trust, a damaging report has found.The investigation into the national body for arts funding found there had been a “loss of respect and trust” for ACE among those it backed, in part because of “perceived political interference in decision-making”.The report was written by the Labour peer Margaret Hodge, who recommended that ACE be retained but with the arm’s-length principle strengthened at all levels of government “to ensure that arts funding is protected from politicisation”.She said: “There have been attempts to exert more political control over ACE decisions in recent years and this has to stop. The Arts Council must remain free from political interference

7 days ago
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The Hodge report into Arts Council England: ‘Not exactly a ringing endorsement’

The arts in England are underfunded, and were dealt a blow by Covid from which many organisations have not yet recovered. But that has been only part of the story. The sheer weight of required form-filling, the endless bureaucracy, the impracticable length of time it takes to simply be funded by Arts Council England (ACE) have caused universal frustration among those working in the arts. There is much talk of exhaustion and burnout.Many organisations have felt frustrated, too, by the strictures of ACE’s flagship strategy, Let’s Create, which, though admirable in principle, with its focus on participation in the arts, is perhaps tilted too far from recognising the expertise and individuality of artists and arts institutions

7 days ago
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Jimmy Kimmel on Trump’s Rob Reiner comments: ‘So hateful and vile’

Late-night hosts reacted to the murder of legendary director Rob Reiner and his wife, Michele Singer Reiner, as well as Donald Trump’s 10-minute tangent about Christmas snakes.“This is the kind of weekend that makes you wonder if things will ever feel good again,” said Jimmy Kimmel on Monday evening, after a couple days of horrific news: the terror attack at a Hanukkah celebration on Australia’s Bondi Beach, a mass shooting at Brown University in Rhode Island, and the “murder of one of our greatest directors and patriots, Rob Reiner, and his wife, Michele Reiner”.“What we need in a time like this, besides common sense when it comes to guns and mental health care, is compassion and leadership,” he continued. “We did not get that from our president, because he has none of it to give. Instead, we got a fool rambling about nonsense

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