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Unbeaten England eye place in semis but results have masked woeful batting | Raf Nicholson

about 12 hours ago
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England find themselves in a curious position at the halfway point of their World Cup campaign as they prepare to face the hosts, India, on Sunday.They are unbeaten, sit third in the points table, and – partly because India have already lost twice – have a 98% chance of qualifying for the semi-finals.One more win would seal their progress to the knockouts.Yet their batting has been woeful.With the honourable exception of Nat Sciver-Brunt, England’s top seven have looked desperately lacking in the technique and temperament that is required on tricky batting tracks at Guwahati and Colombo.

Without Sciver-Brunt’s century against Sri Lanka, England’s total would have been a mere 136 and they would almost certainly have lost.On Wednesday they found themselves 78 for seven against Pakistan: they were saved from a historic maiden defeat against Fatima Sana’s team only by a well-timed deluge that forced an abandonment.The numbers speak to quite how poor England’s batting has been.Aside from Sciver-Brunt and Heather Knight, no England batter makes it into the top 30 across all teams for this World Cup.The contributions of England’s Nos 5, 6 and 7 do not make for pretty reading: Sophia Dunkley has scores of 0, 18 and 11; Emma Lamb’s efforts have yielded 1, 13 and 4; while Alice Capsey has hit 20, 0 and 16.

England’s strike rate is not only below that of Australia and India, but also of New Zealand and South Africa, and their boundary percentage is only 8% – by contrast, Australia’s is up at 14%.In a tournament where the trend has been for teams to ramp up their scoring rate in the final 10 overs, England’s death-overs run rate is only 6.5 – Sri Lanka’s is 8.4.By any metric, England are struggling to compete.

Of late there has been a tendency to blame everything on England’s poor fielding, but that hasn’t been an issue at this World Cup.Yet their deep-seated problems with the bat have been overlooked.The legacy of the former head coach Jon Lewis continues to cast a long shadow over this team.Players such as the 21-year-old Capsey lost two years of crucial development at the hands of “Jon-ball” – a philosophy that dictated she should attack every ball in sight with no thought to playing it on its actual merits.Lewis’s successor, Charlotte Edwards, has had only six months to try to reverse the damage – but, as this World Cup demonstrates, hers will be a long-term project.

Her players are no longer playing Jon-ball – they’ve been told, firmly, to put those ideas in the bin where they belong – but they are now caught in two minds about what should replace it.Do I go forward or back? Do I defend or attack? That liminal space in the middle enables the opposition to march through and take wickets.Will England make dramatic changes against India? The short answer is no.The longer answer is that they can’t, because Edwards selected a World Cup squad stacked with bowlers.The only back-up batter is Danni Wyatt‑Hodge, who might well join the XI on Sunday.

Edwards also has the option of rejigging the batting order, which instinctively feels misaligned,Requiring Lamb, who has opened for years for Lancashire, to adopt a new role at No 6 is unfair,There is a strong case for her to open against India in place of Jones,Similarly, Capsey might well do better if trusted to bat in her natural position at No 3 – Knight has enough experience to adjust to slotting in lower down,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 promotionThere is also a good argument for promoting Charlie Dean, after solid scores of 27 not out against Bangladesh and 33 against Pakistan from No 8.

“Putting away high-risk options, trying to attack off the back foot where possible and be solid in defence,” was how Dean described her innings against Pakistan.If there is such a thing as Edwards-ball, this is the closest to a description of it.The matches against Bangladesh, Sri Lanka and Pakistan were meant to be England’s “easy” games.They’ve been anything but.Now, with matches against India, Australia and New Zealand looming large, rain is unlikely to save England a second time.

It’s time for the batters to have a go at doing that for themselves,
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Nearly £11bn wiped off UK banks after US regional banking fears spooked markets – as it happened

Nearly £11bn has been wiped off the value of the largest banks listed in London today.Banks were among the big fallers in today’s sell-off, with Barclays down 5.66%, NatWest losing 2.88%, HSBC down 2.5%, Standard Chartered losing 3

1 day ago
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Bank shares lead global market fall amid jitters over US private credit

European stock markets fell on Friday and gold hit a record high after two US regional banks said they had been exposed to millions of dollars of bad loans and alleged fraud.Signs of credit stress rattled markets across Europe and Asia. In London the FTSE 100 fell 0.9%, Germany’s Dax fell 1.8%, Italy’s FTSE Mib fell 1

1 day ago
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‘A foot out in the cold’: leaders huddle at IMF as icy economic winds blow

“The security blanket is covering us, but maybe we have a foot out in the cold.” That was the typically colourful warning from the International Monetary Fund’s managing director, Kristalina Georgieva, this week to its gathering of finance ministers in Washington.At its spring meetings in April, the IMF said the erratic trade policies emanating from the White House, half a mile away from its glass and steel HQ, amounted to a “major negative shock” for the global economy.Since then, experts’ worst fears have not materialised – global growth has held up; frantic negotiations, agile manufacturers and new trading links have prevented supply chains collapsing.But the US economy has been cushioned against the full effects of the trade shift by the AI mega-boom – and the IMF issued a clear warning this week that it may not last

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What could a Trump deal on critical minerals mean for Australia – and could Maga be a sticking point?

Australia’s rich deposits of minerals used for green energy technologies and military hardware are increasingly prized, especially because of rising anxiety about China’s stranglehold on the global supply chain.That anxiety escalated after Beijing imposed new restrictions on rare earths exports, prompting a furious rebuke from Donald Trump and a warning from his treasury secretary that western allies would need to “decouple” from China if it proved an unreliable supplier.The timing of the latest US-China trade conflict could be good for Anthony Albanese, who will arrive at next week’s White House meeting armed with a valuable bargaining chip to negotiate with the deal-making president.The Australian government is expected to offer the US access to a proposed critical minerals stockpile, amid wider attempts to shield the country from the worst of Trump’s trade strikes and secure the Aukus submarine deal.But one expert thinks the critical minerals fight puts Australia in a “really compromised position”, caught between the competing priorities of its strongest strategic ally and its biggest trading partner

1 day ago
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UK government borrowing costs fall to lowest level since July

The UK government’s borrowing costs have fallen to the lowest level since July as Rachel Reeves considers tax rises and spending cuts before next month’s autumn budget.In a boost for the chancellor, the yield – in effect the interest rate – on 10-year UK government bonds has fallen by about 0.15 percentage points this week, after briefly dipping below 4.5% early on Friday for the first time in three months.Government bond yields have tumbled across advanced economies, as investors scrambled to buy safe-haven assets amid fears over US-China trade tensions and signs of stress in the US banking system

1 day ago
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Gaucho chain to slash waiters’ share of service charge and boost head office pay

The Argentinian steak restaurant Gaucho is slashing the share of the service charge its waiters receive, using some of the funds to bump up the pay package of head office workers.A letter to workers seen by the Guardian says that from 1 October existing waiters would receive between 25.45% and 29.4% of the service charge collected at tables they have served, depending on length of service, down from 37% previously – already a reduction from 45% early last year. Bar staff will get 17% of the service charge, down from 20%

1 day ago
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Ed Miliband needs a plan now to help industry weather UK transition to net zero | Phillip Inman

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What is private credit, and should we be worried by the collapse of US firms?

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Inside San Francisco’s new AI school: is this the future of US education?

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The platform exposing exactly how much copyrighted art is used by AI tools

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Champions Day horse racing at Ascot: shock winners at 200-1 and 100-1 – live

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Australia selector confident Pat Cummins will play major part in Ashes

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