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‘We’re ready for the All Blacks’: Maro Itoje builds belief in improved England

1 day ago
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England have endured plenty of agonising near misses against New Zealand in recent years but there is no shortage of belief this time around.The home captain, Maro Itoje, says he believes his side are “ready” to secure a first victory over the All Blacks since 2019 and suggests they now have the rising confidence and mental clarity to extend their winning run to 10 games.Itoje knows from personal experience what it takes to beat New Zealand, having tasted success for the British & Irish Lions in 2017 and again for England in the 2019 Rugby World Cup semi-final in Yokohama.On three occasions last year he was part of teams narrowly edged out in the final stages by the All Blacks in Dunedin, Auckland and London but says England are now significantly better placed to seal the deal on Saturday.“I think we’re ready,” said Itoje as England put the finishing touches to their big game preparations at their hotel base in Bagshot.

“New Zealand are a good team, no doubt about that.They possess enough talent, accuracy and power to hurt any team but I think we’re ready to take that next step.“I think we have a clearer understanding of how we want to play and more belief in what we do and how we do it.The quality of the playing squad has improved and with the experiences we’ve all had over the last year or so we’re just more equipped to take advantage of opportunities at hand.”Itoje’s optimism is also based on England’s growing strength in depth, particularly off the bench, compared with 12 months ago.

They were leading in the second half of all three of their Tests against New Zealand last year, only to fail to score a point in the final quarter of all those contests.In Dunedin they lost 16-15 after Marcus Smith’s goalkicking radar deserted him, while in Auckland they were in front 17-13 before going down 24-17, missing out on a possible late penalty try which might have secured them a draw.Then there was the frustrating 24-22 home reverse this time last year when George Ford narrowly missed a late penalty and a drop-goal opportunity which could have yielded a first triumph over the All Blacks at Twickenham since 2012.Add everything together and there is no escaping England’s desire to go one better now.Itoje, though, is fully aware there will inevitably be twists and turns along the way: “Playing against the All Blacks, you need to be sharp mentally and you need to execute when you get your opportunities because you don’t get many of them.

So when they come we need to make sure we execute.We need to have a physical intensity as well as an accuracy to what we do.“I think we had the belief we could do it last year and if maybe one or two things went the other way, it could have been a different conversation we’re having now.But throughout this year we’ve had a number of challenging games and a number of challenging experiences, and I think we’re beginning to learn from them.”England, however, have managed only eight wins over New Zealand in the long history of this fixture.

In Japan they famously stood in a V-for-victory formation to face the All Blacks’ pre-game haka but what Itoje remembers most is the pre-match feeling of certainty in the winning dressing room,Sign up to The BreakdownThe latest rugby union news and analysis, plus all the week's action reviewedafter newsletter promotion“At that stage of the journey of the team we were ready for that sort of challenge,” he said,“We felt that if we were aggressive and accurate we would be able to get them,It was one of those weird games where they had periods on top but it felt like there was only one outcome,Hopefully we can do something similar this weekend.

”To that end, England’s focus in camp has been on keeping as calm as possible at pivotal moments.More broadly, it would also underline the progress Steve Borthwick’s side have been making this year, which has so far yielded nine successive wins – several of them secured late on – since their loss to Ireland in Dublin in February.“For me, it’s all about mental clarity,” stressed Itoje, who is set to win his 96th cap for England.“If you’ve played the whole game there’s a fatigue element in there but the ones who are able to see it through … there’s a toughness, there’s a mental clarity which gives you the ability to execute.“A number of Test matches are going down to the last quarter or the last 10 minutes, if not even less than that.

In the last 15 minutes it’s the teams that can execute, keep their composure, don’t do erratic things, stick to task but also do all that at an incredibly high intensity that tend to be the ones that follow through and win.”
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China voices ‘extreme disappointment’ with Dutch minister at centre of car chip row

The Chinese government has expressed “extreme disappointment” with the Dutch minister at the heart of a row over chip supply to the car industry.A spokesperson for the ministry of commerce was responding to a Guardian interview with Vincent Karremans on Thursday in which the politician described the standoff between China and the European Union as a “wake-up call” for western leaders.The spokesperson said: “China has noted the recent remarks made by Dutch minister of economic affairs Karremans in media interviews. China expresses extreme disappointment and strong dissatisfaction with such remarks that confuse right and wrong, distort facts and persist in a single-minded course.“The profound lesson this semiconductor supply chain crisis has taught the world is that administrative measures should not be used to improperly interfere with corporate operations

about 2 hours ago
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People in the US: how are your holiday shopping plans being affected by Trump’s tariffs and the cost of living?

We’d like to find out more about your holiday spending plans this year. The New York Times reported on Friday that the Trump administration is pivoting to an affordability message and considering lowering some tariffs rates.The administration has floated policies that would lower prices for coffee and fruit, spoken about a 50-year mortgage proposal, and Trump has mused on social media about giving Americans $2,000 funded by tariff revenue.A Harris poll from September found that 74% of Americans said their monthly household costs had gone up by more than $100.We want to hear from you

about 2 hours ago
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Personal details of Tate galleries job applicants leaked online

Personal details submitted by applicants for a job at Tate art galleries have been leaked online, exposing their addresses, salaries and the phone numbers of their referees, the Guardian has learned.The records, running to hundreds of pages, appeared on a website unrelated to the government-sponsored organisation, which operates the Tate Modern and Tate Britain galleries in London, Tate St Ives in Cornwall and Tate Liverpool.The data includes details of applicants’ current employers and education, and relates to the Tate’s hunt for a website developer in October 2023. Information about 111 individuals is included. They are not named but their referees are, sometimes with mobile numbers and personal email addresses

about 2 hours ago
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AI firm claims it stopped Chinese state-sponsored cyber-attack campaign

A leading artificial intelligence company claims to have stopped a China-backed “cyber espionage” campaign that was able to infiltrate financial firms and government agencies with almost no human oversight.The US-based Anthropic said its coding tool, Claude Code, was “manipulated” by a Chinese state-sponsored group to attack 30 entities around the world in September, achieving a “handful of successful intrusions”.This was a “significant escalation” from previous AI-enabled attacks it monitored, it wrote in a blogpost on Thursday, because Claude acted largely independently: 80 to 90% of the operations involved in the attack were performed without a human in the loop.“The actor achieved what we believe is the first documented case of a cyber-attack largely executed without human intervention at scale,” it wrote.Anthropic did not clarify which financial institutions and government agencies had been targeted, or what exactly the hackers had achieved – although it did say they were able to access their targets’ internal data

about 4 hours ago
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Alexander Zverev v Felix Auger-Aliassime: ATP Finals tennis – live

First set: Zverev* 1-2 Auger-Aliassime (*denotes next server)On Wednesday against Shelton, AA didn’t seem bothered by the left calf injury he suffered in his opening match against Sinner, and he’s moving well here too as he sprints to 30-0. Both AA and Zverev are such strong servers and they’ve barely given each other a look at any second serves so far. AA advances to 40-15 – that’s three aces already for him – but a wild cross-court backhand gives Zverev a glimmer. But the glimmer does not turn into deuce. AA nudges ahead once more

43 minutes ago
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Sean Bowen looks real McCoy at Cheltenham in emulating legend’s never-say-die ride

On an afternoon for the National Hunt diehards here on Friday, as Storm Claudia battered racegoers and runners alike, one rider’s refusal to be cowed by either the elements or circumstance was a beacon in the gloom.There were distinct echoes of Tony McCoy’s famous never-say-die ride on Wichita Lineman as Sean Bowen niggled, coaxed and cajoled the novice chaser Wade Out around two circuits of Cheltenham, and it was only in the final moments of a race that took nearly seven minutes to run that Bowen’s mount appeared to have any realistic chance of winning.Wade Out was last of the four remaining runners heading out onto the final circuit, and from there he scarcely jumped a single fence with any fluency or speed. Several times, he appeared to be dropping away, only for Bowen to roust him back onto the coattails of his three rivals.His final flat spot came on the run down the hill, and this time, it seemed that it was surely all over for Wade Out, as One Big Bang and Isaac Des Obeaux were clearly going much better as they eased clear

about 3 hours ago
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UK firms can win a significant chunk of the AI chip market | John Browne

1 day ago
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EU investigates Google over ‘demotion’ of commercial content from news media

1 day ago
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Anthropic announces $50bn plan for datacenter construction in US

2 days ago
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Waymo announces that its robotaxis will drive freeways for the first time

2 days ago
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A tax roadmap for electric cars | Letters

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Tech companies and UK child safety agencies to test AI tools’ ability to create abuse images

3 days ago