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Mark Wood declared fit for first Ashes Test as England seamers ‘lick their lips’ at surface

about 13 hours ago
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Mark Wood is fully fit and available for selection in the first Ashes Test on Friday, having come through an extended spell of bowling at full pace in the Perth Stadium nets without any problems – before emerging with his pads on to have a bat minutes later – as England’s seamers found conditions at the ground so good they were “licking their lips”.Wood’s left leg was heavily strapped throughout, as it has been since he returned after surgery to that knee in March, but the tightness in his hamstring that concerned him during the first day of England’s warm-up against the Lions at Lilac Hill last week has dissipated.It is believed that the scan he had last Friday was primarily intended to alleviate the player’s fitness worries, with the team’s medical staff never hugely concerned.Jamie Smith was one of the batters who faced Wood in the nets on Tuesday.“He was absolutely rapid today, I can tell you that first-hand,” he said.

“He’s near enough full tilt, so it’s good signs for us,It feels like, if he’s good to go and the management feels he’s good to go, I don’t see why [he wouldn’t play],”Tuesday’s training session was England’s first at Perth Stadium, after the players were given two days off to get over the exertions of their warm-up,Though they have had only distant views of the ground’s drop-in pitch, the squad’s seamers found conditions in the nets much more to their liking than the softer ground in last week’s practice game – though Jofra Archer, following his own training plan, did not bowl at all, his involvement restricted to batting and running,Josh Tongue said: “Like any fast bowler I like a bit of pace and bounce in any wicket, especially after last week at Lilac Hill, which obviously wasn’t as quick.

Bowling in the nets, it was a lot more true bounce and a lot more pace in the wicket,I was batting next to Smudge [Jamie Smith] when he was facing Woody and he was definitely getting it through,I think as bowlers, you ­definitely lick your lips,”While English bowlers have ­traditionally struggled in Australia – of those who have bowled at least 25 overs in Ashes matches here this century, the top 12 by bowling average are all Australian – Tongue is convinced the current pack can prosper,“I feel like the group of bowlers we’ve got now, the likes of Jofra and Woody with the X factor of pace and bouncy wickets, the skills we’ve got as a group – I think we can give it a good shot,” he said.

Wood has not played a first-class game since the first Test against Sri Lanka in August 2024 but Australia’s Cameron Green, who has played only three times, and bowled a total of 20 overs, since August, said this should not be a concern.“I probably would prefer a few more competitive overs but at the same time I think it’s a double-edged sword,” he said.“I think you come into a series so fresh, and especially in a five-Test series you want to be as fresh as you can at the back end.”As wicketkeeper, Smith is also looking forward to playing in Australian conditions.“I’m quite excited, hearing about a lot of pace and bounce,” he said.

“I spent a lot of time last summer in conditions that were reasonably slow and low, standing a lot closer than normal.It’d be nice here, hopefully with that pace and bounce, we can stand a little bit further back and that should be an enjoyable challenge.”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 promotionSmith has said that he would “absolutely not” attempt a long-­distance stumping of the type so controversially executed by Australia’s Alex Carey on Jonny Bairstow at Lord’s in 2023, if mainly for practical rather than ethical reasons.“Out here I’d be too far back to hit the stumps,” he said.“When I try to do that stuff in white-ball games I’m useless at it.

I wouldn’t hit the stumps anyway.”Carey himself refused to be drawn into a conversation about his infamous dismissal of Bairstow – “I think the series is shaping up to be a pretty good one, there’s not too much hype that needs to be put on it” – but was prepared to provide an emphatic endorsement for his South Australia teammate Brendan ­Doggett, the 31-year-old seamer in line to make his international debut this week as a result of Josh Hazlewood’s hamstring injury.“He’s a fantastic teammate, really experienced and bowling as well as he ever has,” Carey said.“In his last five first-class games he’s taken four five-fers, so he comes into this squad with great form.If he does get his chance, I think this wicket will suit him.

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Crypto market sheds more than $1tn in six weeks amid fears of tech bubble

More than $1tn (£760bn) has been wiped off the value of the cryptocurrency market in the past six weeks amid fears of a tech bubble and fading expectations for a US rate cut next month.Tracking more than 18,500 coins, the value of the crypto market has fallen by a quarter since a high in early October, according to the data company CoinGecko.Bitcoin has fallen by 27% over the same period to $91,212, its lowest level since April.Investors around the world are on edge as fears mount over an artificial intelligence bubble in the stock market, with even the boss of Google’s parent company warning that “no company” will be immune if the bubble bursts.The UK’s blue-chip FTSE 100 index fell 1

about 10 hours ago
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‘Fear really drives him’: is Alex Karp of Palantir the world’s scariest CEO?

His company is potentially creating the ultimate state surveillance tool, and Karp has recently been on a striking political and philosophical journey. His biographer reveals what makes him tickIn a recent interview, Alex Karp said that his company Palantir was “the most important software company in America and therefore in the world”. He may well be right. To some, Palantir is also the scariest company in the world, what with its involvement in the Trump administration’s authoritarian agenda. The potential end point of Palantir’s tech is an all-powerful government system amalgamating citizens’ tax records, biometric data and other personal information – the ultimate state surveillance tool

about 12 hours ago
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Don’t blindly trust everything AI tools say, warns Alphabet boss

The head of Google’s parent company has said people should not “blindly trust” everything artificial intelligence tools tell them.In an interview with the BBC, Sundar Pichai, the chief executive of Alphabet, said AI models were “prone to errors” and urged people to use them alongside other tools.In the same interview, Pichai warned that no company would be immune if the AI bubble burst.Since May, Google has introduced an “AI Mode” into its search using its Gemini chatbot, which aims to give users the experience of talking to an expert.Google’s consumer AI model, Gemini 3

about 14 hours ago
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UK consumers warned over AI chatbots giving inaccurate financial advice

Artificial intelligence chatbots are giving inaccurate money tips, offering British consumers misleading tax advice and suggesting they buy unnecessary travel insurance, research has revealed.Tests on the most popular chatbots found Microsoft’s Copilot and ChatGPT advised breaking HMRC investment limits on Isas; ChatGPT wrongly said it was mandatory to have travel insurance to visit most EU countries; and Meta’s AI gave incorrect information about how to claim compensation for delayed flights.Google’s Gemini advised withholding money from a builder if a job went wrong, a move that the consumer organisation Which? said risked exposing the consumer to a claim of breach of contract.Which? said its research, conducted by putting 40 questions to the rival AI tools, “uncovered far too many inaccuracies and misleading statements for comfort, especially when leaning on AI for important issues like financial or legal queries”.Meta’s AI received the worst score, followed by ChatGPT; Copilot and Gemini scored slightly higher

about 16 hours ago
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Jeff Bezos reportedly launches new AI startup with himself as CEO

After stepping down as Amazon’s CEO four years ago, Jeff Bezos, the billionaire founder and former chief executive of the online shopping company, is going to be a CEO again. This time, Bezos has appointed himself co-CEO of an AI startup called Project Prometheus, the New York Times reported, citing anonymous sources.The startup, which will focus on developing AI for engineering and manufacturing in various fields, has already received $6.2bn in funding – more than many companies are able to raise in their lifetimes. Leading the company alongside Bezos is his co-founder and co-CEO Vik Bajaj, a celebrity tech executive in his own right

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White nationalist talking points and racial pseudoscience: welcome to Elon Musk’s Grokipedia

Entries in Elon Musk’s new online encyclopedia variously promote white nationalist talking points, praise neo-Nazis and other far-right figures, promote racist ideologies and white supremacist regimes, and attempt to revive concepts and approaches historically associated with scientific racism, a Guardian analysis has found.The tech billionaire and Donald Trump ally recently launched xAI’s AI-generated Grokipedia with a promise that it would “purge out the propaganda” he claims infests Wikipedia, the free online encyclopedia that Musk has often attacked but that has long been a key feature of the internet.Grokipedia, now with more than 800,000 entries, is generated and, according to a note on each entry, “factchecked” by Grok, xAI’s large language AI model.The Guardian contacted xAI for comment. Seconds after the request was sent, there was an apparently automated reply that said only: “Legacy Media Lies

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Ocado’s share price is back where it started. Are its robots just too fancy?

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Visma approaches City grandee to act as chair if €20bn London listing goes ahead

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What is Cloudflare – and why did its outage take down so many websites?

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Cloudflare says ‘incident now resolved’ after outage causes error messages across the internet – as it happened

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England turn to Noah Caluori for Argentina Test after triple injury blow

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I can’t remember ever being so confident at the start of an away Ashes series | Mark Ramprakash

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