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Henry Pollock can be spark England need but should rein in on-field antics | Robert Kitson

about 13 hours ago
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The sporting gods can sometimes be mischievous.Steve Borthwick’s vision of rugby heaven is a cohesive team that consistently delivers without huge amounts of fuss and squeezes the life out of opponents like a white-shirted python.Control, physicality, tactical acumen and work rate will forever be more central to his vision of Test match success than individual front-page razzle-dazzle.And what happens? With almost comic timing the door to the England dressing room has been flung off its hinges by a 20-year-old rock star forward with the ability to transform games on his own.Henry Pollock has now scored three tries in 61 minutes of international rugby, is all over social media and already has half the rugby world itching to punch his lights out.

Saturday’s game, in which England ultimately eased to a 25-7 win over the Wallabies, will certainly have made an impression on the Australian psyche.On one side of the ledger there was the brilliant one-handed scoop off the deck that preceded the Northampton back-row’s stunning 58th-minute try.On the other were the wind-up antics and boorish roaring in the faces of opponents that, rightly or wrongly, make him look like an arrogant, entitled, private-school-educated prat.To which plenty will respond that, hey, rugby union needs all the publicity it can get and that expectations of grace, class and courtesy from high-profile athletes are so last century.Whatever your personal stance, one thing is certain: Pollock is on course to overtake Stuart Broad and Sir Douglas Jardine in the sporting unpopularity stakes in Australia where the phrase “carrying on like a pork chop” will definitely get an airing.

No one wants emotionless players to match the robot mowers the Rugby Football Union has just signed up to use on its pitches,The exuberant Pollock is not a bad boy at heart,But maybe it would be an idea for someone to have a quiet word and advise the young man to rein it in fractionally, as much for his own good as his team’s,Because as long as referees don’t lose patience with him and he doesn’t get ahead of himself, Pollock can be the once-in-a-generation catalyst capable of taking England from steady Eddies to genuine 2027 World Cup contenders,Whether as a starter or an impact sub – and what a collective impact England’s bench made on the weekend – Pollock has a habit of sparking any team into life.

England are not the world’s biggest pack but in the final half-hour on Saturday there was a glimpse of how compelling they could become if they marry Borthwick’s structural engineering with a touch of go-faster dash and relentless energy.Because, when you think about it, how many other back-rows in world rugby would have had the dexterity, pace and confidence to score Pollock’s try? Aside from New Zealand’s Wallace Sititi or Ardie Savea, it is hard to think of anyone.And when you blend that with Ben Earl’s dynamism and the physical back-five excellence of Tom Curry, Sam Underhill, Ollie Chessum and Maro Itoje, never mind Guy Pepper, Ben Curry, Chandler Cunningham-South, Alex Coles and George Martin, you can begin to see why the estimable Tom Willis has opted to cash in his chips and relocate back to France.The opening leg of this month’s Autumn Nations Series quartet also showcased the stiffening of England’s defence; seven points conceded to an interception try is a far cry from the 42 points conceded in this corresponding fixture 12 months ago.Aerially, too, England were excellent with Tom Roebuck’s high-ball work leading directly to two tries.

Admittedly the body language of a weakened, weary Wallaby team was as flat as outback roadkill but there was no disputing the late effectiveness of the red rose maul nor the sense there is much more to come from a side that has now reeled off eight successive Test victories,Sign up to The BreakdownThe latest rugby union news and analysis, plus all the week's action reviewedafter newsletter promotionThere should be a ninth in store against Fiji this Saturday and, with New Zealand and Argentina still to come, the chance exists for Borthwick’s team to demonstrate they can also attack with more sharpness than was the case for the most part against Australia,Whether that means a recall for Ollie Lawrence or a possible role for Earl at inside-centre – “that’s certainly something I’ve considered for this coming week” the head coach said – remains to be seen but there is a case for further backline experimentation before the All Blacks game,Tommy Freeman is a wonderful player but, for the moment, still looks like a wing playing at centre and it was interesting to hear Roebuck modestly concede that, pace wise, the squad’s three quickest men are Cadan Murley, Immanuel Feyi-Waboso and Henry Arundell,With Marcus Smith also desperate for another chance, Borthwick will surely be tempted to tweak the formula slightly against the Fijians.

Yet whatever the coach decides, Pollock is now front and centre in the public imagination.Having bleached his hair a la Chelsea’s Alejandro Garnacho – “I saw Garnacho was dyeing his hair ages ago so I thought: ‘Yeah, why not?’” – he has an equally uncomplicated attitude when chances arise on the field.“I got the ball and then I obviously see the try line and think: ‘Shit, I’m in here.’” There is, in his view, “definitely more” to come from him and England.“We’re not just a team that can kick the ball and get the ball back.

We want to be a team that can do everything.” If anyone can make it happen, he can.
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From fritters to pizza, there’s more to pumpkin season than soups and carving

G’day! The last time I wrote to you was in the midst of our Australian winter, as the wind tippity-tapped tree-branch morse code on the windows and I tried to summon spring with the might of several tins of summer tomatoes and some inspiration from the Feast recipe archives.Well, allegedly, our spring has sprung, though you wouldn’t be able to tell, seeing as one of the challenges – or joys – of living in Melbourne is that this city’s concept of “seasons” is a little more fluid than most. Blustery winds have kept the trees dancing, wreaking havoc on the darling buds of May – sorry, October – and sending enthusiastically woven “cobwebs” and other Halloween paraphernalia flying.But I can guess which vegetable is going to be on your supermarket shelf, no matter which side of the international date line you are on: pumpkin! This is the time of year when European eaters are reaching for pumpkins to make soups and curries, while many across the Atlantic are mostly just carving them up. So, how to find more things to do with pumpkin than souping or sculpting? It helps to remember that pumpkin is also known as winter squash – and what’s summer squash? Courgettes or, as I say, zucchini

3 days ago
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Benjamina Ebuehi’s recipe for ginger biscuit s’mores | The sweet spot

What’s Bonfire Night without some toasty, gooey marshmallows? And it’s only right to have them in a s’more, the American classic that’s also now part of the festivities over on this side of the pond. Digestive biscuits are typically the go-to, but I like to add extra flavour, depth and texture by using ginger oaty biscuits instead. These are quick to put together and don’t require any chilling. Ideally, the s’mores would be made over a real fire, but a blowtorch or hot grill will do the job, too.Prep 5 min Cook 30 min Makes 9100g unsalted butter 25g honey 130g plain flour 120g caster sugar 45g oats 2 tsp ground ginger ½ tsp bicarbonate of soda ½ tsp salt 9 squares dark chocolate 9 marshmallows Flaky sea saltHeat the oven to 190C (170C fan)/375F/gas 5 and line two oven trays with baking paper

3 days ago
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How to turn pastry scraps into a quick and tasty caramelised onion tart – recipe | Waste not

This is my quick version of pissaladière, and it transforms a small amount of leftover pastry scraps into a spontaneous treat. Keep and combine any trimmings into a ball and re-roll as and when required. Pastry keeps well in the freezer, and by skipping two time-consuming steps in the traditional recipe – that is, making the pastry and caramelising the onions – this one comes together about an hour faster. Instead, the onions are cooked upside down, steaming and caramelising beneath a blanket of pastry with anchovies and black olives for a fast, fun twist on a French classic. And if you have less pastry, you can always halve the recipe

5 days ago
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Australian supermarket chocolate ice-cream taste test: ‘My scorecard read simply: “I’m going to buy it”’

Sweet memory lane or boulevard of broken creams? Nicholas Jordan and friends sample 23 tubs in search of nostalgia, glee and chocolate excessIf you value our independent journalism, we hope you’ll consider supporting us todayGet our weekend culture and lifestyle emailI grew up in a house barren of treats – there was no regular supply of chocolate, snakes, sour lollies or caramels. There was one exception: ice-cream, and I was mostly free to eat it whenever I wanted. That constant, childhood joy was the start of a storied love affair. Later, when I had money to buy my lunch in high school, I would get a one-litre tub, a pair of spoons, and my friend and I would eat the entire thing and nothing else. Sometimes, if we were particularly greedy, we’d split a two-litre tub

6 days ago
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Sweet dreams? Healthy ways to put pudding back on the menu | Kitchen aide

I eat healthily, but my meals are never really complete without pudding. Yoghurt and stewed fruit aside, do you have any suggestions for what will hit the spot without verging too far into the unhealthy? Wendy, by emailThe truth is, you can’t often have your cake and eat it – or not a big piece, anyway. “My main piece of advice, which maybe isn’t all that welcome, is to keep to small portions,” says Brian Levy, author of Good & Sweet, in which his recipes contain no added sugar. “My grandma would keep mini chocolate bars and have just one, but that’s never really worked for me.”’Tis the season for stewed fruit, but have you tried Melissa Hemsley’s banana slices sandwiched together with peanut butter, half-dipped in melted chocolate and put in the freezer? (FYI the same tactic also works like a dream with dates

6 days ago
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José Pizarro’s recipe for pumpkin and spinach with pimenton

I grew up with the taste of pimentón de la vera, the smoky, fiery spice Spain embraced from the New World and made its own. Pimentón gives our food its soul. One of the dishes everyone loves back home is espinacas con garbanzos (spinach and chickpeas), which is it’s simple, nourishing and full of comfort. At this time of year, however, when the markets are overflowing with sweet pumpkins, I love adding them to the mix, too. Their gentle, autumnal sweetness lifts the spinach and chickpeas beautifully, and they combine to create a dish that we’ve been serving all month at my restaurant Lolo in south-east London

6 days ago
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The London consensus is a timely challenge to Trump’s isolationism | Phillip Inman

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‘It’s brutal, they feel very attacked’: budget uncertainty hits Southampton boat show

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Nexperia halts chip supplies to China in threat to global car production

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JP Morgan warned US of $1bn in Epstein transactions possibly related to human trafficking

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Ministers’ claims to have helped JLR in doubt as £1.5bn support left untouched

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Amazon shares surge as AI boom fuels cloud growth; Nvidia boss says selling chips in China is Trump’s call – as it happened

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