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Ecclestone guides England to consolation win in final-ball thriller against India

about 19 hours ago
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England scraped a consolation five-wicket win in the final T20 at Edgbaston on Saturday evening, chasing down their 168-run target off the final ball.England needed six runs off the final over, but Tammy Beaumont was bowled playing across the line to the first ball of Arundhati Reddy’s 20th over, before Amy Jones fell to a spectacular flying catch by Radha Yadav at deep midwicket.But with five runs needed from three balls, Sophie Ecclestone sprinted three after an Indian fumble in the deep, Paige Scholfield managed a single out into the off side, and the Indian shy at the stumps went wide and allowed Ecclestone to make her ground for the necessary single.The platform had been set after Danni Wyatt-Hodge celebrated becoming only the second woman (after Charlotte Edwards) to claim 300 caps for England by scoring 56 from 37 balls and sharing another century partnership with Sophia Dunkley.Off-spinner Charlie Dean claimed the player of the match award for her three wickets, which helped England peg India back after a dominant opening 10 overs.

“It was a pretty tense game,” Dean said.“It’s a good way to show our character and what we’re about as a team.“I took my shoes off pretty early [in the chase], three overs in, and I was like, ‘Oh, brilliant.We’ve got this.’ And then as the overs ticked down and runs were still there, I was like, ‘Oh, I might have to stay in kit here.

’ But chases are tricky and sometimes it doesn’t matter how you get there, it matters that you get over the line.”But the narrow margin, and the 3-2 series loss, has revealed the scale of the task facing the head coach, Charlotte Edwards, if she is to change her team’s fortunes in time for the home World Cup next summer.England’s middle order once again wobbled perilously in pursuit of their target, replicating the panic of the third T20, as what should have been an easy run chase turned into a desperate one and was only successful thanks to some lethargic Indian fielding.This time it was India who shelled crucial catches, putting Wyatt-Hodge down at short fine leg on five.Then, after the opener miscued Deepti Sharma to midwicket in the 12th over, Shree Charani dropped a sitter at short third off Jones at a crunch point in the run chase.

Earlier, with Lauren Filer and Lauren Bell rested before the ODIs, Warwickshire’s Em Arlott and Issy Wong were tasked with opening the bowling on their home ground but both took a hammering, conceding more than 40 runs apiece as India reached 167 for seven after being put in to bat.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 promotionWong suffered particularly at the hands of Shafali Verma, who smashed 20 of her 75 runs off one over by the seamer.For Verma, it was a welcome comeback: her first international half-century since being dropped by India last year.England were grateful to have Maia Bouchier back in the fold: she has always been one of their best outfielders, and showed it here, clasping on to a brilliant running catch at wide long-on to see off Verma in the 13th over, and another in the 19th which got rid of Richa Ghosh.But Bouchier’s inclusion came at the expense of Alice Capsey, who now faces an uncertain path back to the England T20 side.

England have no official T20 internationals in the calendar until May of next year – a feat of scheduling which seems both bizarre and counterproductive, given the yawning gap between their current output and their desire to feature in a home final at Lord’s next July,Dean described the schedule as “a bit weird”,“Our winter calendar feels a little sparse,” she said,“We’re playing a lot of cricket at the moment – the girls can go and play in the WBBL, the WPL,[But] it would be good for us to play as many games as possible as a team.

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Fundamental flaws in the NHS psychiatric system | Letters

I am disappointed to read such a scathing review of Bella Jackson’s book Fragile Minds (A furious assault on NHS psychiatry, 30 June). It is a difficult read, and yet I thought that Jackson wrote about her experiences with compassion for both patients and staff unwittingly caught up in erratic and overstretched services.I am a doctor, with experience as a psychiatric patient and as a senior “staff grade” doctor on an acute psychiatric ward. My memoir, Unshackled Mind: A Doctor’s Story of Trauma, Liberation and Healing, confirms Jackson’s claims that abuses do happen in these places. More subtly, there is a continued reliance on the disease-centred model of biomedical psychiatry without sufficient attention paid to the circumstances and adversities suffered by patients before they ever came in contact with psychiatry

2 days ago
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The toxic effect of poverty on children’s health | Letters

In the last 18 months I’ve found myself having to respond to claims that mental health culture has gone too far, that we’re over-diagnosing mental health problems and that we’re simply medicalising the ups and downs of life. I hope the children’s commissioner’s report (Children in England ‘living in almost Dickensian levels of poverty’, 8 July) is a moment for everyone to reflect on what the “ups and downs” of life look like for too many young people: going without food, cold and mouldy homes, and not feeling safe in the area you live.There is a toxic relationship between poverty and mental health. A fact reinforced by the latest NHS data, showing that mental health problems among adults are at record levels, with people in the most deprived areas hardest hit.As the report itself cites, young people are understandably concerned about waits for mental health treatment

2 days ago
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Pain relief is available for gynaecological procedures – so why isn’t it used? | Letters

Your article about oesophageal cancer (NHS pharmacies to pilot ‘sponge on a string’ test to spot cancer precursor, 9 July) reminds me of the recent one about poor uptake of cervical screening (One in three across UK are overdue for cervical cancer screening, 20 June). You cite embarrassment and pain as major barriers to improving screening, but the misogyny of healthcare is of crucial importance.Women wait months to see gynaecologists then are given no pain relief for painful procedures. They put up with this as they don’t want to be put back in a queue. There is access to topical lidocaine spray and entonox, and it should be routine

2 days ago
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Doctors in England: what are your views on the planned strike action?

Resident doctors in the NHS in England are planning to strike for five days later this month from 25 to 30 July, as they push for a 29% pay rise over the next few years.The doctors’ union, the British Medical Association (BMA), says it will not accept a lower figure than 29% – because it says that’s the extent of the real-terms loss of earnings resident doctors, formerly known as junior doctors, have suffered since 2008.The health secretary Wes Streeting has said the industrial action is “completely unreasonable”, and the government will not revisit the 5.4% salary increase it gave resident doctors for 2025-26.Turnout in the ballot was 55%, with 90% of those who took part backing strike action

2 days ago
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Church must ‘turn back’ public opinion on assisted dying, says archbishop

Members of the Church of England should work to “withstand and even turn back” the forces of public opinion “that risk making … assisted dying a reality in our national life”, the archbishop of York has said.Speaking to the church’s General Synod on Friday, Stephen Cottrell said permitting assisted dying would change “forever the contract between doctor and patient, pressurising the vulnerable and assuming an authority over death that belongs to God alone”.MPs voted last month to pass a bill giving some terminally ill adults in England and Wales the legal right to be assisted to end their lives. It will now pass to the House of Lords, where 26 Anglican bishops sit by right, for further scrutiny.Cottrell is in the second most senior clerical position in the Anglican church and is currently its de facto leader after the resignation of Justin Welby as archbishop of Canterbury last year

2 days ago
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Resident doctors’ 29% pay claim is non-negotiable, BMA chair says

Resident doctors’ 29% pay claim is non-negotiable, reasonable and easily affordable for the NHS, the new leader of the medical profession has said.Strikes to ensure resident – formerly junior – doctors in England get the full 29% could drag on for years, according to Dr Tom Dolphin, the British Medical Association’s new council chair.The doctors’ union will not negotiate on or accept a lower figure because that is the extent of the real-terms loss of earnings resident doctors have suffered since 2008, which they want restored – in full – Dolphin told the Guardian in his first interview since taking over last month.The 29% demand is not up for negotiation “because it’s based on a principle”, said Dolphin, a consultant anaesthetist. “If we picked a different number, that wouldn’t achieve the pay restoration

3 days ago
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World must be more wary than ever of China’s growing economic power | Phillip Inman

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‘The Co-op won’t defeat me’: Brighton shop owners fight against eviction

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Teach First job applicants will get in-person interviews after more apply using AI

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‘Workforce crisis’: key takeaways for graduates battling AI in the jobs market

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Tour de France 2025: Tim Merlier wins stage nine as Van der Poel break falls short – as it happened

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Fremantle are easy targets but deserve respect for hitting back | Jonathan Horn

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