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Brief shades of Boxing Day 2010 but Australia’s 2025 bowling cohort were always in control | Geoff Lemon

about 16 hours ago
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Given how parlous England’s batting has been, there was the strong chance that 152 for the home team in Melbourne presaged worse to come,So it turned out,For a while, Boxing Day 2025 felt like a re-enactment of Boxing Day 2010,We’re talking an amateur historical re-enactment, given the lower intensity and higher number of participants with private lives under investigation, but still, the broad shape of the thing was much the same,You had England choosing to bowl on a cloudy morning and finishing off the hosts in time for an early tea.

The original instance lasted 42.5 overs, this repeat lasted 45.2, only 15 deliveries between them.Yet this year’s edition felt different for more reasons than just a higher scoring rate that yielded 152 all out versus 98 all out last time around.In 2010, England owned the day, a Jimmy Anderson swing masterclass ripping out a paralysed middle order, Chris Tremlett lopping off top and tail like a légumier preparing string beans.

The rehash was a less complete bowling effort that drew a strangely faltering batting response: chop-ons and leg-side nicks and run outs, occasionally the bowling team via Josh Tongue remembering to pitch the ball up before rocketing through someone’s defences.The biggest difference was the scoreline: a fourth Test played at 3-0 rather than 1-1, meaning a series decided rather than one thrumming with life like Frankenstein’s creation on the slab.England’s morning blast (which is not one of their electrolyte drinks) meant that as holders of the Ashes trophy 15 years ago, their bowling destruction left them one good batting innings away from keeping it, and this was a team that had declared on 517 in Brisbane and 620 in Adelaide.That’s why the Boxing Day crowd in 2010 sat in shellshocked silence at the change of innings: the danger of a series loss stared 84,000 attendees in the face.For the current England team, a couple more catches taken or a couple fewer daft shots played in any of Perth, Brisbane or Adelaide might have had them 2-1 down coming to Melbourne, ready to make Australian players and spectators alike nervous at the prospect of levelling up the series with one to play.

But they had already blown those chances, so this time the record crowd of 94,000 mostly spent the tea break elbowing their way cheerfully to the bar in search of refreshment rather than worrying about the state of the game,With the Ashes secured, an England win here would be a sidebar,In truth, given how parlous England’s batting has been all series, there was the strong chance that 152 for the home team presaged something worse to come for their guests,So it turned out,The heartbreaker for Australia in 2010 wasn’t the 98 all out on day one, it was the 157 without loss that followed it by stumps.

That day, the clouds passed, the sun was out, and England’s openers bedded in.This time, the clouds passed, the sun was out, and England’s openers followed suit.Then the middle order.Then the rest.In a single elongated session, they lost the lot inside 30 overs, making the top 10 for England’s fewest deliveries to get bowled out in an Ashes match.

Australia simply put it on the spot and waited for the seaming pitch to give an assist.Mitchell Starc began the roll, Michael Neser continued it, Scott Boland all but finished it off, acting as a collective that drew edges behind, nipped balls in toward the stumps, and took catches to finish each other’s work.Jhye Richardson’s comeback match consisted of four containing overs in between watching the show.There will be the usual palaver about whether to castigate a pitch that dared to offer movement, or the modern player for a feckless approach, or coaches for corroded defensive techniques, and nobody will produce a decisive answer.The carnage of 20 fallen wickets with a gap of 46 runs between the teams means that both remain in the match, with the result depending on who can find a way to a score of substance.

It still feels emblematic, though, of England’s benighted tour, that even reprising one of their most famous Ashes performances through two furious sessions has still ended up with them the worse off by the end of the day.
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The Apartment: Billy Wilder’s Christmas classic is the blueprint for romcoms everywhere

For romantic comedies and Christmas movies alike, a little misery can go a long way. No one understood this balancing act more than Billy Wilder, whose films ran the gamut from bottomless cynicism (Ace in the Hole) to gender-bending farce (Some Like it Hot). His 1960 film, The Apartment, splits the difference.Like another yuletide classic, Carol, the film finds inspiration in David Lean’s Brief Encounter, which depicts an extramarital affair briefly consummated in the bed of a friend’s apartment. In an old interview, Wilder says he was compelled by a character “who comes back home and climbs into the warm bed the lovers just left”, and so The Apartment’s hero, CC “Bud” Baxter, was born

4 days ago
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John Updike’s best books – Ranked!

Inspired by and drawing on three British novels (HG Wells’s The Time Machine, George Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty-Four and Henry Green’s Concluding), Updike’s debut imagines a near future where the residents of a care home stage a revolt in which two antagonists, John Hook and Stephen Conner, struggle for supremacy. A curio.Updike tropes Religion, deathOver the course of a single day, 79-year-old painter Hope Chafetz endures the determined attention of Kathryn D’Angelo, a young, ambitious art journalist. Updike had by this point been on the receiving end of many such encounters and the novel, told almost entirely from Hope’s perspective, bristles with resentment at the presumptions and blind spots inherent in the situation.Updike tropes Art, religionAn epistolary novel that draws on Nathaniel Hawthorne’s 19th-century story of adultery and hypocrisy, The Scarlet Letter, to ironise faith and fidelity in the 1980s

5 days ago
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Unseen Tennessee Williams radio play published in literary magazine

As one of the 20th century’s most successful playwrights, Tennessee Williams penned popular works at the very pinnacle of US theater, including A Streetcar Named Desire and Cat on a Hot Tin Roof.Years before his almost unparalleled Broadway triumphs, however, the aspiring writer then known simply as Tom wrote a series of short radio plays as he struggled to find a breakthrough. One is The Strangers, a supernatural tale offering glimpses into the accomplished wordsmith that Williams would become, and published for the first time this week in the literary magazine Strand.It is a “significant find” according to scholars of Williams’s early days and upbringing in Missouri.“The play incorporates all the theatrical elements of early radio horror,” said Andrew Gulli, the publication’s managing editor

7 days ago
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My cultural awakening: Love Actually taught me to leave my cheating partner

Emma Thompson’s quiet suffering in the hit Christmas movie helped me to realise that I didn’t need to stay with someone who had betrayed meI was 12 when Love Actually came out. In the eyes of my younger self it was a great film – vignettes of love I could only imagine one day feeling, all coloured by the fairy lights of Christmas. And there was even a cameo from Mr Bean himself, Rowan Atkinson. The film captured the romance I craved as a preteen, the idea that maybe a kid I fancied in my class would learn the drums for me and run through airport security to ask me out.I was young enough to think it was sweet for Keira Knightley’s husband’s best friend to turn up on her doorstep declaring his quite obviously unrequited love

7 days ago
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The Guide #222: From Celebrity Traitors to The Brutalist via Bad Bunny – our roundup of the culture that mattered in 2025

It’s time to look back on a year of Traitors and Sinners, of Bad Bunnies and Such Brave Girls, with the Guide’s now annual roundup of the year’s best culture. As ever, the Guardian is already knee-deep in lists – of films (UK and US), albums (across rock and pop, and classical), TV shows, books and games, and theatre, comedy and dance. Some of those have already counted down to No 1, others will reach their respective summits in the coming days, so keep an eye on the homepage.Our list meanwhile is entirely, unapologetically partial, and definitely not as comprehensive as The Guardian’s many top 50s: there are numerous albums we never got around to hearing, and TV shows we’re still only halfway through. (Pluribus, Dope Thief and Blue Lights, I will return to you, I promise!) But hopefully it should give a flavour of a year that, despite so many headwinds, was a pretty strong one for culture

7 days ago
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From Avatar to Amadeus: your complete entertainment guide to the week ahead

Avatar: Fire and AshOut now James Cameron comes down with a case of the Christmas blues, so to speak, as the director’s record-breaking franchise epic returns once more to planet Pandora for more internecine strife and respecting of the splendour of the natural world, rendered in dazzling motion-capture glory.Silent Night, Deadly NightOut now Actor Rohan Campbell graduates from Michael Myers wannabe in the fairly dire Halloween Ends, to main bogeyman Billy Chapman in the latest instalment of the Silent Night, Deadly Night franchise (second remake, seventh film overall, fact fans). Per franchise lore, he witnessed his parents’ murder-by-Santa aged five, and the rest is grisly history.Fackham HallOut now Jimmy Carr turns his hand to screenwriting with this parody of Downton Abbey-type films. Given the actual Downton Abbey films already play as a parody of Downtown Abbey-type films, there may not be much to add, but a cast including Thomasin McKenzie, Katherine Waterston, Damian Lewis and Anna Maxwell Martin are here to give it their best shot

7 days ago
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Shoppers shun UK high streets despite lure of Boxing Day sales

about 10 hours ago
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AI boom adds more than half a trillion dollars to wealth of US tech barons in 2025

about 13 hours ago
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Apple seeks to appeal against £1.5bn ruling it overcharged UK customers

about 9 hours ago
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‘Undermines free speech’: Labour MP hits back at US government over visa ban on UK campaigners

2 days ago
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Boxing Day Test 2025: Australia v England fourth Ashes Test, day two – live updates

about 2 hours ago
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Scandal-rocked Michigan to hire Kyle Whittingham as next football coach

about 4 hours ago