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The Spin | Women’s cricket team of the year: from Jemimah Rodrigues to Alana King

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The Spin’s annual selection marks a history-making World Cup triumph for India, and work to do for EnglandIndia’s mission to build a global women’s cricket dynasty advanced apace in 2025.Few will forget the sight of Harmanpreet Kaur’s team converging joyously on the field at the DY Patil Stadium to celebrate a fairytale World Cup win that was five decades in the making.That final was the highlight of a year that included only one Test match – the Ashes affair at Melbourne at the end of January.As ever, therefore, the Spin’s team of the year is cross-format, though we gave substantial weight to performances at crunch moments in the aforementioned World Cup.And if anyone is wondering why there are only two England players in this team, you must have forgotten how 2025 started.

Fair enough – most English fans are still trying to forget it, too.Top of Nat Sciver-Brunt and co’s Santa wishlist is a brighter year ahead.1.Smriti Mandhana (India) In June, Mandhana’s teammates berated her for having never scored a Twenty20 hundred.“You are not doing justice to your talent,” Radha Yadav told her.

Smriti’s response, three days later at Trent Bridge, was to nail down the three-figure milestone in 51 balls,She celebrated by pointing up at Radha on the balcony,It was all presumably a bit tongue-in-cheek, given that Smriti was enjoying the most prolific year of any female cricketer in history,She scored 1,362 ODI runs in 2025 – the previous record was Belinda Clark’s 970 from 1997 – and now has 17 international hundreds across all formats, more than anyone bar Meg Lanning,RCB recently retained her for the 2026 Women’s Premier League for 3.

5 crore – the maximum price, but still somehow a bargain when it buys you the services of a player this classy.2.Laura Wolvaardt (South Africa) – captainDuring South Africa’s recent T20 against Ireland, an awestruck fan was interviewed after watching Wolvaardt strike her fourth international century of the year.“She’s Miss 360,” he said.“That’s the best hundred I’ve seen at Newlands.

”For the second year in succession, Wolvaardt captains the Spin’s XI, and for good reason.If everyone could have played like Wolvaardt, South Africa would have won a World Cup this year.First, she had to pick up her team from the doldrums of 69 all out against England and convince them they were potential tournament winners.Then she batted her heart out with back-to-back hundreds in the semi-final and final.It wasn’t to be this time, but on the day it does happen you can bet that Wolvaardt (and her cover drive) will be at the heart of the action.

3,Jemimah Rodrigues (India) Rodrigues bookended 2025 with two hundreds – against Ireland in January and Australia in October – but the real story is what happened in between,She had to battle the uncertainty of the selectors – she was dropped midway through the World Cup – and her own crippling self-doubt,All the more remarkable, then, that she managed to play one of the all-time great innings in the tournament semi-final, shepherding an exhausting run chase against the defending champions while reciting psalms to herself between overs,Three days later, India won a World Cup final – but it was Rodrigues who landed the killer blow.

4.Beth Mooney (Australia) – wicketkeeper A day after Jon Lewis sidestepped questions about the unfit nature of his team and pontificated about the nice weather in Bondi, a ruddy-cheeked, sweaty Mooney showed him exactly what the difference was between the two teams.First, she scored an unbeaten 94 in the Adelaide T20 – mostly in sprinted singles.Then she kept wicket, seamlessly stepping in for a creaking Alyssa Healy (as she did numerous times across the year).Mooney’s eventual series run tally was a phenomenal 409.

5,Nat Sciver-Brunt (England) What did you do in those heady newborn days, when life was a haze of nappy changes, milky feeds and snatched bursts of sleep? Sciver-Brunt decided that she would take on one of the hardest jobs in cricket: the England captaincy,As well as attempting to pick up the pieces of the Ashes debacle, she somehow also continued to be England’s best batter, bailing them out of trouble more than once during the World Cup as they staggered through to the knockout phase,6,Ash Gardner (Australia) At the start of 2025, Gardner hadn’t struck a hundred in 175 internationals for Australia.

Batting at No 6, her task had generally been big-hitting cameos, after those above her scored the bulk of the runs,Over the past 12 months, though, Australia’s top order floundered enough times that Gardner had to find a different role: she still smashes sixes, but she bats long, too,Twice in the World Cup, against New Zealand and England, she dug her side out of a substantial hole, scoring crucial hundreds which turned wobbles into winning situations,She has maintained her ICC No 1 all-rounder ranking, finishing the year with 19 wickets – and if you haven’t watched her “mayo on it” juggle-parry catch at Hobart, go and take a look: you’re in for a treat,7.

Deepti Sharma (India) Sometimes the cricketing gods write a fitting ending to a World Cup.So it was in 2025, when the last South Africa wicket to fall in the final was claimed by thetournament MVP and leading wicket-taker (22 scalps), Sharma.India’s death-overs hero also stepped up her batting a notch this year, scoring three half-centuries in the World Cup – including a crucial one in the final – and considerably upping her strike-rate.8.Annabel Sutherland (Australia) In the year’s single Test at the G, Sutherland’s 163 runs earned her the player of the match award.

During the World Cup, her main contribution was with ball in hand, taking 17 wickets and dazzling opponents with her variations.England are struggling with a dearth of all-rounders; meanwhile, Australia possess two of the world’s best: Sutherland is currently locked in a battle with her teammate Gardner over who should be considered the world’s leading jill-of-all-trades.File that one under “nice problem to have”.9.Sophie Ecclestone (England) It hasn’t been the easiest of years for Ecclestone.

During the Ashes she was thrust into the limelight when Alex Hartley revealed Ecclestone had refused to do a pre-match interview with her former teammate.The social media backlash was so intense that Ecclestone considered quitting cricket altogether.She had to sit out the early English summer due to a dual battle with physical injury and mental health.And yet when she was bowling, all of that baggage fell away, as the wickets continued to fall: 42 of them for England in 2025, including 16 in the World Cup.The key for those around her is to make sure she continues to enjoy her cricket – which might mean staying away from social media the next time something goes wrong.

10.Alana King (Australia) King started the year tormenting England in the Women’s Ashes and ended it by unleashing one of the best spells of bowling ever seen in a World Cup, finishing with seven for 18 against South Africa.The 30-year-old leg-spinner has honed her craft over many years, and now at last has mastery of the trickiest art in the game: Australia continue to reap the rewards.11.Marufa Akter (Bangladesh) Akter hasn’t had the opportunities that others have had – she played just 14 ODIs in 2025, and no T20 Internationals – but this was a breakthrough year for the 20-year-old fast bowler.

She was the poster girl of Bangladesh’s World Cup campaign, during which they beat Pakistan and almost toppled the heavyweights of England and South Africa,Her hooping in-swing has to be seen to be believed – her dismissal of Omaima Sohail was, frankly, laws-of-physics-defying – but now she’s showcased it on the global stage, let’s hope some franchise gigs might be in the pipeline,This is an extract from the Guardian’s weekly cricket email, The Spin,To subscribe, just visit this page and follow the instructions,
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Motor neurone disease patients in England die waiting for home adaptations, campaigners say

People with motor neurone disease (MND) are dying waiting for grants to make their homes fit to live in due to a huge backlogs in applications, campaigners have said.The MND Association has found it takes an average of 375 days for people in England to get essential home adaptations through the government’s disabled facilities grant (DFG) due to growing delays in the system.But a third of people with MND die within a year of diagnosis, and about half die within two years, meaning they are spending the last months of their lives fighting for support, with many dying in unsafe and unsuitable homes.The charity’s chief executive, Tanya Curry, said: “For someone whose condition may progress dramatically in a matter of months, waiting a year or more for vital adaptations is equivalent to being denied them altogether.”Nicole Foster, 56, was diagnosed with MND in May and has spent her entire life’s savings, as well as money fundraised on her behalf, replacing her bathroom with an accessible one after she was told she faced a two to three-year year wait for DFG funding

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People in poorest areas of England ‘more likely to need emergency care for lung conditions’

People from the poorest backgrounds in England with serious lung conditions are more likely to be admitted to hospital for emergency care than their more affluent counterparts, according to research.Analysis of NHS admissions data for November by Asthma + Lung UK found people from the most deprived backgrounds in England were 56% more likely to be admitted for emergency care, while 62% were more likely to be readmitted within 39 days of an emergency admission, which is linked with an increased chance of dying.The research also found that people in deprived areas were almost twice as likely to be admitted to hospital for a respiratory condition.One expert said the findings should act as a wake-up call to end the “postcode lottery”.The highest rates of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) admissions per population are in deprived areas including Blackpool, Manchester, Hastings and Burnley

3 days ago
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Prosecutions for strangulation in England and Wales increase sixfold in three years

The number of suspects charged for strangulation and suffocation in England and Wales has increased almost sixfold in the three years since the offence was first introduced, Crown Prosecution Service data has revealed.Brought in under the Domestic Abuse Act, which came into force in 2022, the legislation closed a gap in the existing law, giving courts much greater sentencing powers.Kate Brown, the CPS’s lead prosecutor for domestic abuse, said that previously there had been “a lot of cases for which it didn’t seem like we had the right offence”, and the new legislation marked “a significant shift in recognising the serious nature of the offence”.“There were some thoughts that it might not be necessary and that the act of strangulation or suffocation could be covered by other offences,” she said, but added that the options previously open to prosecutors “didn’t really hit the mark in terms of the seriousness, because strangulation is a really serious offence”.Suffocation and strangulation carries a maximum sentence of five years’ imprisonment, whereas previously, except for the most serious cases which could be charged as grievous bodily harm or attempted murder, prosecutors were having to charge offenders with common assault, which carries a much lesser maximum sentence of six months

3 days ago
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Britons reported to be drinking less, as data shows consumption at record low

People in Britain are drinking less alcohol than in previous years, according to reports.The average UK adult consumed 10.2 alcoholic drinks a week last year, the lowest figure since data collection began in 1990 and a decline of more than a quarter from the peak of 14 two decades ago, according to figures published in the FT from research company IWSR.However, total abstention is not on the rise despite the decline in consumption, which suggests more moderate drinking habits have driven the trend.“The population is ageing and older consumers physiologically can’t drink as much,” Marten Lodewijks, the IWSR president, told the newspaper

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Resident doctors say they will resume talks to avoid further strikes with ‘can-do spirit’

Resident doctors have said they will approach talks with Wes Streeting with a “can-do spirit” to avoid further strikes in the new year, as their five-day action ended on Monday morning.The British Medical Association called on the health secretary to come to the table with the same “constructive” attitude, saying the tone of 11th-hour talks before their stoppage had been encouraging but too late to avoid the strike in England.Streeting also signalled his determination to get back to the talks, saying he did “not want to see a single day of industrial action in the NHS in 2026”, and that he would “be doing everything I can to make this a reality”.“My door remains open, as it always has done, and I’m determined to resume discussions with the BMA in the new year to put an end to these damaging cycles of disruption,” he said.Streeting and Keir Starmer have taken a tough line towards the strike, with the prime minister saying it was “beyond belief” that it should go ahead when the flu-hit NHS was facing its worst crisis since Covid

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One in eight of 14- to 17-year-olds in Great Britain say they have used nicotine pouches

One in eight teenagers aged 14 to 17 have used nicotine pouches, a survey has found, adding to health experts’ concern about their growing popularity.Users hold the small sachets, which look like mini-teabags and are often flavoured, in their mouths to enjoy the release of the nicotine they contain. They are also known as “snus”.Unlike smoking the pouches do not raise the risk of cancer, but they have caused alarm because of the fear that users could become addicted to nicotine and suffer mouth and dental problems.A survey of 500 teenagers aged 14 to 17 in England, Scotland and Wales found that 13% have used a nicotine pouch, of whom 30% said they did so at least once a week

4 days ago
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3 days ago
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A meat-free Christmas: Chantelle Nicholson’s French mushroom pie, caramelised pear pud and more

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10 of the best Australian sparkling wines for every budget

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Cosmopolitan Christmas: Stosie Madi’s French-African-Lebanese Christmas lunch – recipes

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From a showstopping pavlova to a £7 sherry: what top chefs bring to Christmas dinner

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7 days ago