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Travis Head powers Australia to humbling Ashes Test win over England inside two days

about 20 hours ago
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The news from Perth is that the catalogue of great English calamities in Australia has a brand new entry.For the first time in 104 years an Ashes Test match has been wrapped up inside two days and by the end of this eight-wicket mauling England’s players looked utterly broken.Ben Stokes will doubtless push back at that notion, such is his refusal to ever throw in the towel.But as Travis Head slashed and carved his way to a breathtaking 69-ball century, vaporising a target of 205 in 28.2 overs, the psychological blow landed by the hosts felt greater than a 1-0 lead.

Australia were supreme in the turnaround, Mitchell Starc turning a seven-wicket haul on day one into a 10-wicket Test match and Scott Boland, four for 33, relocating his best length.From 59 for one at lunch – a lead of 99 – England collapsed to 164 all out, a total that would have been far worse save for some thrash from the lower order.By that stage on a bouncy surface, a wicket had fallen every three and a half overs on average.With Australia needing to make the highest score of the match, the England supporters who roared on the 50-run pushback from Gus Atkinson and Brydon Carse still had every reason to believe.Enter Head, opening after Usman Khawaja’s latest back spasm and delivering the kind of innings that will only deepen Australia’s contempt for so-called Bazball.

By the time Head holed out with 13 runs required, he had made 123 from 83 balls – and absolute mincemeat out of England’s bowlers.Assisted by 23 from Jake Weatherald, and with Marnus Labuschagne racing to an unbeaten half-century that was sealed with a six, Head crashed 16 fours and cleared the rope four times.No bowler was spared, even if his 17-run takedown of Stokes’s second over was among the most telling.Twenty-four hours earlier the tourists had taken charge of this first Test after a display of shock and awe from Stokes and his five-pronged pace attack.One session into the second day, Ben Duckett and Ollie Pope having recovered from the completion of Zak Crawley’s first pair, the sense that this greybeard Australia side were there for the taking only increased further.

What followed was every fear about the downside of England’s aggressive approach made flesh: a heinous collapse of five for 23 in 40 minutes.It started with Boland beating Duckett with some bounce and bordered on self-immolation thereafter.Perth is a place to keep the driver in the bag save for dispatching the half-volley.Three senior pros thought they knew better.All it took was half a bat’s width of nip from Boland to snare Pope and Harry Brook in the space of four deliveries, catches flying to wicketkeeper and slip courtesy of reckless ambition.

Root was cooked the other way, castled off the inside edge by Starc when similarly trying to make something of a statement.He is meant to be the sensible one.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 promotionHaving dismissed Crawley with an athletic one-handed caught and bowled, Starc followed Root’s dismissal by prising out Stokes for the second time in the match via a squared-up edge to second slip.For all that Head lit up the chase, the left-armer was rightly named player of the match.With Pat Cummins and Josh Hazlewood on the sidelines and Khawaja struggling physically in the match, this was a golden opportunity for England to make an early statement, but the lesser-known Brendan Doggett held his own on debut with five wickets in the Test.

Among these was the moment that caused the most debate in the chaos when Jamie Smith, on 15, was strangled down leg.Not out on the field, Snicko showed a clear spike when it was sent upstairs.The issue being that the pictures did not tally up, inviting questions as to why the original decision was overturned.But the protocols for these referrals allow two frames of difference owing to the technology used in Australia.The TV umpire, Sharfuddoula Saikat, took an age to make the right decision, with only inconsistency being why a similar review against Labuschagne 24 hours earlier was declined.

From the depths of 104 for seven and a lead of 144, a seemingly defendable target was then mustered.Perhaps the sight of Atkinson making 37 and Carse 20 should have signalled that conditions were easing off.After all, this was the point in the match when India took control 12 months earlier en route to turning 150 all out on day one into a 295-run win.Not that this should detract from Head’s otherworldly display, shrugging off the promotion and unfurling an innings to rank alongside his World Cup final heroics two years ago.Like India’s crestfallen players that day, England will need some time to process this one fully.

That they have, at least, with a 13-day break before the day-night second Test gets under way in Brisbane.Bat as poorly as they did here – 67.5 overs combined a low not seen since 1904 – and all that talk of making history will only result in the unwanted kind.
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Bad season of bird flu in UK hits supply of Christmas turkeys

UK poultry producers are battling a “bad season” of bird flu, with cases much worse than at this point last year, putting a squeeze on supplies of Christmas birds including turkeys, chickens and ducks.Two industry insiders said they expected supplies of all poultry to be tight ahead of the festive season, especially for organic and free-range birds, which are seen as the most vulnerable to infection.There are also likely to be fewer heavier birds available as some producers have started processing them earlier to try to avoid the risk of infection.About 5% of the UK Christmas poultry flock, including turkeys, ducks and chickens, representing about 300,000 birds, are thought to have been culled so far this season.The current avian influenza outbreak has seen higher numbers of cases in the UK than last winter, although it is not yet as severe as 2022/23, which was the largest outbreak the country has ever experienced

about 17 hours ago
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EU and US to restart trade talks as sticking points on July tariff deal remain

The EU and US are set to restart trade negotiations next week after a two-month pause to try to settle unresolved sticking points in their controversial tariff deal struck in July.The US commerce secretary, Howard Lutnick, and trade representative Jamieson Greer will hold high-level meetings in Brussels on Monday with ministers, EU commissioners and industry bosses.The face-to-face meetings are the first talks since the six-week US government shutdown that began at the start of October. In a high-risk move, Lutnick and Greer have been invited to lunch with 27 trade ministers who are gathering for a summit on Monday.One insider said: “We need to keep it focused, what we don’t want is individual countries going up to them and demanding deals on this, this and that

about 18 hours ago
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When the people making AI seem trustworthy are the ones who trust it the least, it shows that incentives for speed are overtaking safety, experts sayKrista Pawloski remembers the single defining moment that shaped her opinion on the ethics of artificial intelligence. As an AI worker on Amazon Mechanical Turk – a marketplace that allows companies to hire workers to perform tasks like entering data or matching an AI prompt with its output – Pawloski spends her time moderating and assessing the quality of AI-generated text, images and videos, as well as some factchecking.Roughly two years ago, while working from home at her dining room table, she took up a job designating tweets as racist or not. When she was presented with a tweet that read “Listen to that mooncricket sing”, she almost clicked on the “no” button before deciding to check the meaning of the word “mooncricket”, which, to her surprise, was a racial slur against Black Americans.“I sat there considering how many times I may have made the same mistake and not caught myself,” said Pawloski

about 16 hours ago
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Bro boost: women say their LinkedIn traffic increases if they pretend to be men

Do your LinkedIn followers consider you a “thought leader”? Do hordes of commenters applaud your tips on how to “scale” your startup? Do recruiters slide into your DMs to “explore potential synergies”?If not, it could be because you’re not a man.Dozens of women joined a collective LinkedIn experiment this week after a series of viral posts suggested that, for some, changing their gender to “male” boosted their visibility on the network.Others rewrote their profiles to be, as they put it, “bro-coded” – inserting action-oriented online business buzzwords such as “drive”, “transform” and “accelerate”. Anecdotally, their visibility also increased.The uptick in engagement has led some to speculate that an in-built sexism in LinkedIn’s algorithm means that men who speak in online business jargon are more visible on its platform

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Formula One: Las Vegas Grand Prix – live

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Wallabies fans are entitled to be frustrated but it’s not all grim for this tired, talented side

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‘Shellshocked’ Stokes urges England to move on from mauling in first Ashes Test

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