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‘Bats out for Benny’: teenager killed by cricket ball honoured amid debate over neck guards

about 19 hours ago
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Australia’s cricket community have begun to put their bats out in a gesture to remember teenage cricketer Ben Austin after he was killed by a ball hitting his neck in a practice session, in an incident in Melbourne on Tuesday described as similar to the death of former Test player Phillip Hughes in 2014.The 17-year-old was wearing a helmet but not a neck guard, and while the incident is likely to trigger calls to make such protection mandatory at the community level – as it already is among elite players – cricket officials said the priority must be around supporting Austin’s family and the boy who threw the ball with a training tool known as a sidearm or “wanger”.Austin’s cricket club, Ferntree Gully, posted on Facebook on Thursday calling on people to “put your bats out for Benny”, replicating the gesture that followed Hughes’ death.Dozens of other posts under the hashtag #batsoutforben have followed, highlighting the impact the incident has had on Australia’s cricket community.Cricket Victoria’s chief executive, Nick Cummins, was emotional in addressing media on Thursday.

“He is the classic Australian child that we’re all very proud of,” he said.“An active, terrific boy, highly engaged in his team, very popular.And that’s what just makes it so hard, is it’s a very bright light that has been dimmed.”This article includes content provided by Facebook.We ask for your permission before anything is loaded, as they may be using cookies and other technologies.

To view this content, click 'Allow and continue',Jayce Austin, Ben’s father, said in a statement that the family was “utterly devastated” by the passing of “our beautiful Ben”,“This tragedy has taken Ben from us, but we find some comfort that he was doing something he did for so many summers – going down to the nets with mates to play cricket,” he said,“He loved cricket and it was one of the joys of his life,We would also like to support his teammate who was bowling in the nets – this accident has impacted two young men and our thoughts are with he and his family as well.

”Cummins said the details were still “fairly scant” given the trauma suffered by the people involved.“A group of boys were having a practice session and a boy was hit with a ball that was thrown with a sidearm and hit him in the neck, in a similar sort of accident like Phil Hughes suffered,” Cummins said.This article includes content provided by Instagram.We ask for your permission before anything is loaded, as they may be using cookies and other technologies.To view this content, click 'Allow and continue'.

In addition to the move for people to leave cricket bats at their doors, memorials are planned for Friday’s T20 against India at the MCG and coming Sheffield Shield matches, and some grassroots cricketers around the country intend to wear black armbands out of respect to the keen cricketer from Melbourne’s east.Cummins said after the blow, Austin was treated on site by members of the club with first aid experience, emergency services arrived promptly and he was quickly taken to Monash hospital.“He got care very quickly, unfortunately he was on life support and obviously is in a situation where he was unlikely to recover,” he said.Cummins confirmed Austin was not wearing a neck guard, which has become a contentious issue in cricketing circles since Hughes’s death.Cricket Australia considered but decided against mandating neck protectors for community cricket in 2023.

The cricket executive said a full investigation into the incident would occur, but now was not the time for kneejerk decisions.“The temptation in moments like this is to move to solution modes,” Cummins said.“At the moment, our focus is around providing support and counselling for those people who experienced the trauma.”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 promotionThis article includes content provided by Facebook.We ask for your permission before anything is loaded, as they may be using cookies and other technologies.

To view this content, click 'Allow and continue',“It’s often a response to a tragedy that people feel like they need to do something straight away,There will be a time to do something, we just need to make sure that we focus on the people who are directly impacted in the immediate time,”Safety measures have been introduced since Hughes’s death that now require all batters facing fast or medium-pace bowling in Cricket Australia-sanctioned competitions to wear both a helmet that meets the latest standard and a neck protector,While the same rules apply for helmets in community cricket, junior and grassroots competitions have avoided the mandate for neck protectors, which are seen within some circles as restrictive and uncomfortable.

There are also no explicit requirements for safety equipment when facing sidearms.The governing body issued guidelines for community cricket in 2023, “strongly recommending” that everyone wear a neck protector alongside a helmet, however it stopped short of a mandate.Its own frequently asked questions document covered why there was no mandate.“CA recognises that there needs to be a transition period for participants to develop understanding about how to play with neck protectors, fit and measure them so they are appropriate to play in, and the potential cost associated with them,” it stated.A leading neck protector known as Stemguard costs $70 for adults and $45 for children and clips on to the back of helmets.

Cricket Australia chair, Mike Baird, flagged on Thursday that the rules would be reviewed.“Clearly there are things that we have to learn from this, but right now we are concerned about the family and trying to support them in every way,” he said.
societySee all
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Almost all children in 73 areas of England live in low-income households

Almost 100% of children in 73 neighbourhoods in England are living in income-deprived families, according to new measures that factor in the impact of soaring rents.Changes to official measures reveal the neighbourhoods where in effect all children live in low-income households. Of these, 31 are in inner London boroughs with high housing costs such as Tower Hamlets, Hackney, Haringey and Westminster.The new indices of multiple deprivation confirm that attempts at levelling up have failed to shift stubbornly high levels of deprivation in so-called left-behind towns and cities in the Midlands and north of England.Blackpool, Middlesbrough, Burnley, Manchester and Birmingham are the top five most deprived local authority areas

about 8 hours ago
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UK woman who booked Oslo flight but did not fly loses child benefit ‘because she emigrated’

A woman who booked a flight from London to Oslo but never checked in or travelled has had her child benefit stopped by the UK government. Tax authorities told her their records showed she had emigrated.Lisa Morris-Almond is one of thousands of people who have had their child benefit frozen as part of a botched crackdown on benefit fraud.She was due to travel to Norway in April 2024 for a wedding but her friend called it off just days before and Morris-Almond did not check in for her British Airways flight.But three weeks ago she noticed her child benefit had not arrived as usual and rang the child benefit helpline where she was told to check with her bank, a routine request

about 18 hours ago
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Only full abolition of two-child benefit cap will substantially cut poverty, thinktank says

Failure to abolish the two-child benefit limit would wreck the government’s child poverty ambitions and risk creating levels of hardship not seen under a Labour government for more than half a century, an analysis warns.The Resolution Foundation said political courage was required for ministers to show they are serious about reversing trends that, if not addressed, would push the rate of child poverty to a historic high by the end of the decade.It advised the government against introducing half-measures that would dampen the impact of the two-child limit – such as lifting the limit for families in work – saying this would have little or no meaningful effect on overall child poverty rates.The thinktank’s analysis concludes: “In one fell swoop, the government could reduce the number of children growing up in poverty by 330,000 today and save a further 150,000 children from that fate by 2029-30 if it were bold enough to scrap the two-child limit in full.”Aside from the economic and moral case, the Resolution Foundation suggests failing to emulate some of its Labour predecessors by reducing child poverty will tarnish the government’s social justice legacy

1 day ago
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Patients go to court to stop embryos being destroyed after admin error

A group of at least 15 fertility patients are taking legal action to prevent their frozen embryos being destroyed as a result of administrative errors that could deny them a chance to have children.The group, which includes people with cancer and fertility problems, froze gametes or embryos to improve their chances of conceiving later on, but were informed by their clinics that owing to administrative errors they had not renewed their consent in time and would not be able to access their embryos or extend their storage without a court order.In some cases, people only learned of the errors when they approached the clinic about their plans to have a child and for some it is their only hope of conceiving naturally. In other cases, clinics approached couples after internal audit processes and apologised for their errors but notified them that they could only extend storage through a court order.The errors relate to two changes in law

1 day ago
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Robert Wilkinson obituary

My father, Robert Wilkinson, who has died aged 73, was employed for more than 30 years in local government, mostly as a community worker for the London borough of Waltham Forest, but also managing lottery funding bids in nearby Camden.Outside his career, Robert’s main passion was oral history, which he believed was a way of giving voice to ordinary people who would otherwise have left behind just birth and death certificates.In 1983 he co-founded the Waltham Forest Oral History workshop, whose members interviewed hundreds of local people; it also published books and pamphlets on subjects such as school strikes, childhood health and local pubs. He later became a long-serving committee member and treasurer of the national Oral History Society.Later in life he worked as a freelance, including as the oral historian in residence for two years at Kettle’s Yard in Cambridge and for the British Library

1 day ago
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Councils in England face clampdown on four-day working weeks

The local government secretary, Steve Reed, is seeking to clamp down on councils introducing four-day working weeks after writing to South Cambridgeshire warning that the policy had damaged performance.Reed told the council, which is the only local authority to formally trial a four-day week for staff, that they risked worsening public services and value for money.His letter, first seen by the Telegraph, marks the first intervention by the Labour government on shortened working weeks in local government in England.Reed wrote to Bridget Smith, the council’s Liberal Democrat leader, noting there had been a deterioration in rent collection and repairs by the council.“The independent report shows that performance declined in key housing-related services including rent collection, reletting times and tenant satisfaction with repairs, especially where vulnerable residents may be affected,” he wrote

1 day ago
businessSee all
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Volkswagen indicates shortage of Chinese chips would hit profits

about 11 hours ago
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Virgin Media O2 teams with Musk’s Starlink to offer improved UK rural mobile coverage

about 15 hours ago
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Shell’s profits pass $43bn after production hits new highs in Brazil and Gulf of Mexico

about 16 hours ago
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Virgin Trains on track to challenge Eurostar cross-Channel monopoly with access to key depot

about 16 hours ago
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Benefits of a four-day week are ever clearer, despite Steve Reed’s stance

about 18 hours ago
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Business and charity leaders urge ministers to lead England’s transition to four-day week

about 18 hours ago