Kangaroos made to sweat before class tells and wounded England kiss Ashes goodbye | John Davidson


Gezora wins Breeders’ Cup 2025 after Ethical Diamond’s triumph for Willie Mullins
The 28-1 success of Ethical Diamond in the Turf for the legendary National Hunt trainer, Willie Mullins, was the highlight of a memorable and historic afternoon at Del Mar on Saturday which also saw Forever Young become the first ever Japanese-trained winner of the meeting’s showpiece event, the Breeders’ Cup Classic.Mullins has won everything there is to win in National Hunt racing, including the British trainers’ championship and the Grand National for the past two seasons, but Ethical Diamond’s victory in the $6m Turf was a match for anything he has achieved over jumps.Dylan Browne McMonagle was deliberately slow to stride on the five-year-old, who can race too freely if he is close to the lead, and he made steady progress down the back stretch before unleashing an irrestible run five-wide around the home turn. Ethical Diamond swept past Minnie Hauk, the Oaks winner, and Rebel’s Romance, the Turf winner in two of the last three years, to win by a comfortable length-and-a-quarter.“My assistant, David Casey, came up with the plan,” Mullins said

Ireland 13-26 New Zealand: rugby union Test – as it happened
The report has landed and that’s my cue to leave.Thanks for joining me. Well done to New Zealand who got their revenge across a scrappy game. Still, a win is a win.See you all next week

Sacha Feinberg-Mngomezulu lights up South Africa’s nine-try rout of Japan
A dark, wet evening in Brent is a long way from the sun and sea of Brighton. And, boy, there were not many echoes here of rugby’s greatest upset – quite possibly sport’s – bar the names of the teams and the inimitable fellow sitting in Japan’s coaching box, Eddie Jones. South Africa were 43-point favourites in 2015 and a mere 37 this time, but the reality of lopsided rugby was all too formidably asserted.Instead, it was Wembley that echoed, the lower tier around two-thirds full. South Africa, nine of whose squad play their rugby in Japan, wanted to organise this run-out to bring together their squad from around the world before the big one next Saturday against France

‘Great blend’: Borthwick praises England’s character after beating Australia
Steve Borthwick praised his team’s resilience and composure as England secured their eighth Test win in a row, beating Australia 25-7 in a soggy contest. England bossed the match, scoring four tries to one, and dominated the skies as both teams reverted to a kicking battle.Even though Borthwick lamented a lack of accuracy in the wide channels, citing numerous line-breaks that were left unconverted, he was pleased with the control his players maintained. “There was a period where the game was tight in very difficult conditions against an Australian side that are tough and really well drilled,” he said.“But as I watched our team, I thought they were really composed, really composed and knew what to do next

Suaalii’s struggles sum up an Australia side searching for fluency | Daniel Gallan
When even Joseph-Aukuso Suaalii is beaten in the air you know that things aren’t going well. It was here, last autumn, that the rugby league convert made his Wallabies debut and immediately established himself as one of the code’s hottest prospects. He left Twickenham with a highlights reel stacked with NBA-style tip-ons and athletic leaps, having played a leading role in a remarkable smash-and-grab triumph.But in the 20th minute of a stodgy show that felt like watching the Wallabies during the bad old days under Eddie Jones, Australia’s rising star failed to get off the ground. Perhaps Suaalii hadn’t noticed that Tom Roebuck was hot in pursuit of Alex Mitchell’s box kick

Kangaroos made to sweat before class tells and wounded England kiss Ashes goodbye | John Davidson
Fans arrived at Everton’s resplendent Hill Dickson Stadium to the sound of Black Eyed Peas’ 2009 hit I Gotta Feeling, the lyrics “I’ve got a feeling that tonight’s gonna be a good night” reverberating around Liverpool’s docks. And boy was it for the Kangaroos, but only just.The green and gold won their 14th Ashes series in a row, the first since 2003, with a solid second-half response that decided the second Test in their favour. But a display for the ages from Australia – a routine or one-sided victory most expected – it was not. England played with fire, matching the Kangaroos and frustrating them at every stage in an eye-catching first half

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