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India’s World Cup win can set a new world order in women’s cricket – if it spends money wisely | Raf Nicholson

about 11 hours ago
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Sunday was a long day for the India captain, Harmanpreet Kaur,It began with a two‑hour rain delay; it concluded with a catch at cover, taken on the stroke of midnight, which sealed a 52-run victory against South Africa and a maiden World Cup title,But amid the fireworks, tears, hugs, a lap of honour at the DY Patil Stadium, and rumours of a forthcoming winners’ parade in Mumbai, Kaur found time to deliver an important message to the media,“We’ve been waiting for this moment,” she said,“The celebration will go on all night.

And then let’s see what BCCI is planning for us … this is just the beginning.”The implication was clear.A World Cup win in a country which is cricket obsessed, which has a population of 1.46 billion and yet which has historically been slow to embrace the women’s game, could be epoch‑defining.But this is no time for anyone to rest on their laurels.

India are the first non-western nation to win the Women’s World Cup – only England (four times), Australia (seven times) and New Zealand (once) have previously lifted the trophy.Nobody aside from Australia and England have managed it in 25 years.The reason? A global title requires sustained investment and that money has not been forthcoming in any nations outside the Big Two.Really, the first act of the Board of Control for Cricket in India towards Kaur and her team should be an apology: we are sorry that we were so slow to believe in the enormous potential of women’s cricket.(Good luck with that one.

)Australia’s dominance in women’s cricket was grounded in the introduction of the world’s first franchise league, the Women’s Big Bash League (WBBL), creating an infuriatingly deep player pool which is still the envy of the world.So what did the BCCI do between the first season of WBBL in 2015‑16 and finally introducing the Women’s Premier League in 2023? Dragged their feet and fiddled around with a half-hearted three‑team “T20 Challenge”.Even now, there is a sense that had India not beaten South Africa on Sunday, their board could have continued to make excuses about their far from equal support of the women’s game.“We’ve been playing good cricket, but we had to win one big tournament,” Kaur said.“Without that, we couldn’t talk about change.

”Partly, this is a reflection of the broader status of women within Indian society.According to the World Economic Forum’s Global Gender Gap Report, India is one of the worst-performing countries in the world when scored on key gender equality benchmarks (ranked 131 out of 148).The main decision-makers and shakers in Indian cricket – as across the world – are men: the products of a society where women are still seen as the ones whose defining role in cricket is to make the tea.Change is coming.The BCCI has already announced a reward of 510m Indian rupees for Kaur and her team, to go alongside the $4.

5m (£3.4m) prize money which they will receive from the International Cricket Council as tournament winners.Smriti Mandhana’s image has already filled billboards across India – now she will be joined by Jemimah Rodrigues, Deepti Sharma and Shafali Verma, new national heroes who proudly proclaim different religious faiths in a nation torn apart by sectarianism.Cricket really can change society.But if you want a permanent shift, then the BCCI’s money shouldn’t just be used to make a handful of current players richer.

It needs to trickle down: it is about time that girls all the way across India, from Mumbai shanties to the parched fields of Bihar, were encouraged to pick up a bat in the same way as their brothers are,A nation of millions of girls, all playing cricket? That’s the real way to build a cricketing dynasty,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 promotionAustralia will bounce back,That’s what they do,Meg Lanning’s team lost one semi-final in 2017 and went on to win the next three world titles and Commonwealth Games gold.

Alyssa Healy’s side lost against South Africa in a T20 World Cup semi-final last year and three months later whitewashed England 16-0 in the Ashes.South Africa, too, will fight on.“We’re the team that consistently is making finals now,” their captain, Laura Wolvaardt, said.“I’m really proud that we were able to reach three in a row.Hopefully, we can keep reaching finals and one day we can win one.

”What of Kaur’s India? They have ambition,That was made clear on their tour of England in July, when they sealed their first ever T20 series victory in Manchester and Radha Yadav told the media that her team were “going to dominate, no matter what – we want to create something big”,But while winning a World Cup is big, changing an unequal society is even bigger,If we are to talk of a new era for women’s cricket, then let’s aim high,
politicsSee all
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What would UK economic policy look like under Nigel Farage’s Reform?

Nigel Farage has delivered a speech on his economic priorities. While it did not announce any new policies as such, it marked the most detailed explanation yet of what a Reform UK government might prioritise. Below are six areas he discussed.As recently as the buildup to May’s local elections, Reform was pledging to raise the threshold at which people start paying income tax from £12,570 to £20,000, bringing many thousands out of tax but costing the exchequer more than £40bn a year.Amid increasing scrutiny about how or if this could be paid for, Farage has rolled back

about 10 hours ago
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Nigel Farage to promise business deregulation in economic policy speech

Nigel Farage will promise a bonfire of business regulation as he spells out his party’s economic policies in more detail than ever in an attempt to bolster its reputation for fiscal credibility.The Reform leader will give a speech in London putting deregulation at the heart of his economic agenda, while also dropping a commitment made at the last election to deliver £90bn of tax cuts.The message is designed to bolster his party’s reputation for fiscal credibility after experts warned that his promises to cut £350bn from government spending over the next parliament did not add up.Farage will say: “When it comes to Brexit … we have not taken advantage of the opportunities to deregulate and become more competitive. The harsh truth is that regulations and regulators, in many areas, are worse than they were back in 2016

1 day ago
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Tory patience wears thin as Badenoch’s critics count down to May elections

At an opulent speakeasy-style event at the Raffles hotel on Whitehall this week, the great and the good of what is left of the Conservative party marked the Spectator’s parliamentarian of the year awards.With the magazine’s editorial line still just about backing the Tories, despite the party facing an existential crisis from Reform UK, it was unsurprising that much of the gossip at the champagne-fuelled event was about whether Kemi Badenoch’s job was at risk.James Cleverly, who unsuccessfully ran against her for the leadership, couldn’t resist a dig from the stage at the naked ambition of his shadow cabinet colleague, Robert Jenrick – who is Badenoch’s biggest threat.“Am I after her job? Am I going to stick the knife between her shoulder blades and steal the crown? No, of course I’m not,” the veteran Tory cabinet minister told the laughing audience as he opened the awards ceremony.“You know that I’m not

2 days ago
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Rachel Reeves considers 20% tax on assets of people deciding to leave UK

Rich people quitting the UK could be required to pay a 20% tax on their business assets as part of plans reportedly being considered by the chancellor, Rachel Reeves.The Treasury has drawn up plans for a “settling-up charge” on assets; a move that would bring the UK into line with most other G7 nations and raise a predicted £2bn for the public coffers, according to the Times.While expat status does not provide an exemption from 20% capital gains tax on the sale of UK property and land valued at £6,000 or more, it does on the sale of some other assets, such as shares in many companies.Under the new plans, the 20% charge would be levied on the value of these assets when exiting the country.A government source said the settling-up charge was one of several tax options being modelled by the Treasury before the budget – but stressed that no decisions had been taken

2 days ago
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HMRC likely to have breached privacy laws in stopping child benefit – experts

Ministers may have breached privacy laws when they suspended the child benefit of thousands of families on the basis of flawed Home Office information, legal experts have said.At the same time, the UK’s data watchdog, the Information Commissioner’s Office, has contacted the national tax authority, HMRC, over the issues raised.Pressure on the government to reveal the reason incomplete Home Office travel data was used by HMRC as part of a benefit crackdown has mounted as the Liberal Democrat spokesperson for work and pensions, Steve Darling, said what had happened was “unacceptable”.“After the carers allowance repayments scandal, this news raises fresh concerns that things are seriously wrong within our welfare system, with people paying the price through no fault of their own.“Ministers must come clean on how exactly this error was allowed to happen in the first place, support affected families, and ensure that action will be taken to stop such mistakes from ever happening again

3 days ago
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Reform councillor defects to Tories after party’s policies left him ‘uncomfortable’

A Reform UK councillor has defected to the Conservatives, saying he became uncomfortable in Nigel Farage’s party.James Buchan, who sits in the borough of Dartford in Kent, said he had struggled with the idea of facing his relatives while a member of a party whose anti-immigration policies spread fear.“I stood for election with the sole aim of working for my community and getting things done for local families. Having had the opportunity to see Reform from the inside, I’ve concluded that the party doesn’t really have the experience or ambition to do that,” he said.Buchan said he wanted to be able to “look my family in the eye and say, ‘that’s not who I am’” after Nigel Farage’s party announced plans to end indefinite leave to remain status

3 days ago
foodSee all
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Crispy chicken and pancetta with a nutty apple salad: Thomasina Miers’ Sunday best recipes

3 days ago
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From fritters to pizza, there’s more to pumpkin season than soups and carving

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

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

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

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

7 days ago