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Tendulkar v Anderson: two master craftsmen who gave more than anyone to Test cricket | Andy Bull

about 23 hours ago
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Spring 2006 and India are batting against England at the Wankhede in Mumbai,The series is all square, one Test each with one to play,England, batting first, have made an even 400, thanks in large part to a century by Andrew Strauss and 88 from his Middlesex teammate Owais Shah, who is making his debut,It is just past tea on the second day and India’s openers are already gone, bounced out by Matthew Hoggard,Sachin Tendulkar is at No 4 and England’s captain, Andrew Flintoff, has just thrown the ball to his first-change bowler, Jimmy Anderson.

Anderson is 23.He has already played 12 Tests; the last of them was 14 months earlier, against South Africa in Johannesburg, the other side of the 2005 Ashes, which he spent carrying drinks.It was, he told me last month, “a hard time” in his life.England’s coaches had been trying to rebuild his action and he had been sent on an England A Tour of the West Indies to work on it.He was playing in India only because Simon Jones had gone home, injured.

Now here he is, ball in hand, with Tendulkar, who Anderson grew up watching on TV, waiting at the other end and the series in the balance.Coming up on two decades later, the Board of Control for Cricket in India and the England and Wales Cricket Board have renamed the Pataudi Trophy for the two of them.Some people are upset they are so quick to overwrite the game’s history.Iftikhar Ali Khan Pataudi was the only man to play for England and India; his son, Mansoor Ali Khan, played for Oxford University and Sussex and went on to become one of India’s best captains after being given the job when he was 21.The decision to get rid of the Pataudi family name was quick, and careless, but we can at least be glad they chose Anderson and Tendulkar.

They first played against each other in a World Cup, in Durban in 2003, but this match, in 2006, was the first time that they had squared off in a Test.Anderson’s first ball slid down the leg side, his second was blocked to cover, his third thumped straight to point, his fourth went through to the wicketkeeper Geraint Jones, his fifth was dropped down by Tendulkar’s feet, his sixth was driven to gully, and his seventh, well, his seventh was the one that got him.It was short, and wide, and Tendulkar, who had scored one off 20 balls up to that point, decided he needed to punish it.He leaned back in his crease and flicked his bat out to punch the ball through cover.But the ball had been moving away from him all the while and it flew, instead, off his outside edge through to Jones.

Tendulkar c Jones b Anderson 1.The moment is best remembered because as Tendulkar was walking off a group of home fans booed him.Anderson finished with four for 40 in the innings and England went on to win the match and draw the series.It gets forgotten among all the happy memories of what they did in the 2005 Ashes, but their head coach Duncan Fletcher always said it was one of their finest victories.Anderson would take Tendulkar’s wicket eight more times in 13 Tests.

By the time Tendulkar retired in 2013, he had got out to Anderson more often than he had any other bowler.Often as not, Anderson would have him caught behind or do him lbw.It was as if he had found a crack in Tendulkar’s batting and he played on it, pitilessly.Tendulkar would say Anderson was the first bowler he had faced who seemed to be able to bowl a reversed version of reverse swing.There is a video, when Tendulkar explains it to Brian Lara, full of nerdy enthusiasm for Anderson’s technical ability.

It is one master craftsman appreciating another.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 promotionThey were two greats passing each other on the slope of their careers, Anderson was at the end of the beginning, Tendulkar the beginning of the end.While age gave the compensation of experience it was not enough to cover for what he had lost along the way.Tendulkar scored one century against England while Anderson was playing, although it was one of his best, and most famous, in the fourth innings at Chennai in 2008, when India made 387 to win a game they had been trailing for three days.But their records against each other are not the point.

They are the two most-capped Test players.Tendulkar played 200 games, Anderson 188, and their careers spanned almost a quarter of the history of Test cricket, 35 years from Tendulkar’s first match in 1989 to Anderson’s last in 2024.It is hard to think of two men who gave more to Test cricket.
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UK inflation eases to 3.4% amid falling fuel and air fare prices

Inflation in the UK eased to 3.4% last month after rises in the cost of food and furniture were offset by a steep fall in air fares and petrol prices.May’s decline in the consumer prices index (CPI), down from the official figure of 3.5% for April, complicates the Bank of England’s interest rates decision on Thursday, although policymakers are still almost certain to hold interest rates at 4.25%

about 7 hours ago
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Optus agrees to $100m penalty for selling phones to customers who couldn’t afford them or were out of range

Optus has agreed to pay a $100m penalty after conceding it engaged in unconscionable conduct when selling phones and contracts to hundreds of customers that could not afford them, did not want them, or didn’t even have coverage to use them.The negotiated penalty, if approved by a federal court judge, came after court action taken against Optus by the consumer regulator. If imposed, it would be the largest ever for the telco sector.The Optus chief executive, Stephen Rue, said the misconduct was inexcusable.“I would like to sincerely apologise to all customers affected by the misconduct in some of our stores,” Rue said

about 10 hours ago
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How AI pales in the face of human intelligence and ingenuity | Letters

Gary Marcus is right to point out – as many of us have for years – that just scaling up compute size is not going to solve the problems of generative artificial intelligence (When billion-dollar AIs break down over puzzles a child can do, it’s time to rethink the hype, 10 June). But he doesn’t address the real reason why a child of seven can solve the Tower of Hanoi puzzle that broke the computers: we’re embodied animals and we live in the world.All living things are born to explore, and we do so with all our senses, from birth. That gives us a model of the world and everything in it. We can infer general truths from a few instances, which no computer can do

about 21 hours ago
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Universities face a reckoning on ChatGPT cheats | Letters

I commend your reporting of the AI scandal in UK universities (Revealed: Thousands of UK university students caught cheating using AI, 15 June), but “tip of the iceberg” is an understatement. While freedom of information requests inform about the universities that are catching AI cheating, the universities that are not doing so are the real problem.In 2023, a widely used assessment platform, Turnitin, released an AI indicator, reporting high reliability from huge-sample tests. However, many universities opted out of this indicator, without testing it. Noise about high “false positives” circulated, but independent research has debunked these concerns (Weber-Wulff et al 2023; Walters 2023; Perkins et al, 2024)

about 21 hours ago
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‘She’s going to be the boss’: Alcaraz reveals US Open request for Raducanu

Carlos Alcaraz has revealed that he made a special request to Emma Raducanu to be his partner at this year’s US Open mixed doubles – and the British No 1 will be the boss when they play together in New York.“I was thinking that I couldn’t play better if it wasn’t with Emma,” the Spaniard said after defeating the Australian Adam Walton 6-4, 7-6 in the first round at Queen’s Club. “I just asked Emma if she wants to play doubles with me – I made that special request.”However, Raducanu did not give an immediate yes to the partnership, which is already being named “Alcaranu” by enthusiastic fans. “She took a while,” he said, laughing

about 19 hours ago
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Royal Ascot: Field Of Gold strikes to deliver performance worthy of occasion

Royal Ascot’s uncanny ability to deliver performances to suit the occasion was to the fore once again on Tuesday as Field Of Gold, the odds-on favourite, overwhelmed his rivals in the St James’s Palace Stakes with a sustained burst of speed a quarter of mile out that put the result beyond doubt well before the furlong pole. If there is a better performance over a mile by a three‑year-old later on in the season, it feels long odds‑on that Field Of Gold will be the horse to produce it.John and Thady Gosden’s grey colt was one of three Classic winners in the field, though his winning performance was further evidence that, had Ruling Court not been allowed first run in the 2,000 Guineas at Newmarket, the fast-finishing Field Of Gold would surely have taken that too. Ruling Court was only third here, nearly four lengths behind Henri Matisse, the French 2,000 Guineas winner, who was in turn three and a half adrift of Field Of Gold at the line.Kieran Shoemark shouldered the blame for Field Of Gold’s defeat at Newmarket and Colin Keane, newly appointed as the Juddmonte operation’s retained rider in Europe, enjoyed one of the smoothest rides of his career in his saddle on Tuesday

about 20 hours ago
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‘A giant parenting group’: how online comedians are making a living by laughing about the chaos of kids

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Speaking out on Gaza: Australian creatives and arts organisations struggle to reconcile competing pressures

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Adam Hills: ‘I knew I should have gone to the King’s birthday but I really wanted to go to rugby training’

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Andrew Lloyd Webber is ‘hot again’ –with help from new kids on musicals block

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How to Train Your Dragon to Neil Young: your complete entertainment guide to the week ahead

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British Library to reinstate Oscar Wilde’s reader card 130 years after it was revoked

5 days ago