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Foakes to the rescue for Surrey as County Championship makes its earliest start

1 day ago
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The County Championship whirred back into life on Good Friday, with 3 April its earliest start in history,By extension, Rory Burns claimed the record for its earliest dismissal, with Surrey’s captain run out 10 minutes into the day’s play at Edgbaston in a scene usually reserved for the village green,Cricket really can be a sod sometimes,All that pre-season graft, all those hours dreaming big, only to plink a drive early on, think it has beaten mid-off, and set off for the run in good faith,The throw from Warwickshire’s Ed Barnard may have been wild but Kai Smith mopped up smartly at the stumps.

Talk about sick Burns.Not that the 800 or so punters inside the ground – or the 4,000 watching via YouTube – could gripe about the quality overall.The English season getting under way when chocolate eggs are still in foil may be par for the course these days but there are nine Test cricketers playing in this Division One clash.Surrey’s entire top six has worn the whites of England; the kind of strength that explains all the predictions of winning a fourth title in five.And of the nine, only Chris Woakes would call himself a former Test cricketer – even if Brendon McCullum’s continuation as head coach may mean there are more in practice.

For the two England players wondering where they stand after featuring in the winter’s Ashes defeat, it was not an ideal start,Jamie Smith walked out at No 3, curiously, and walked back shortly after with nine to his name,It may not have been on a par with that howling dismissal in Sydney in January, but a thick edge driving Ethan Bamber on the up was inauspicious all the same,Ollie Pope got his head down for a spell at No 4 but failed to cash in on a couple of lives,The first was a tight lbw, leg stump-ish and thus inviting doubt.

But the second saw a crooked defensive shot edged and dropped while Pope was also on the walk.Soon after he fell to an inswinger from Bamber, lbw for 20.For all the recent public relations work, only McCullum and England know how much credence they will actually give to such performances at this time of year.Although contrary to the narrative, April is not a lottery month.Runs tend to flow, with the pitches fresh and bowlers still blowing off cobwebs.

There was a bit in the surface early on here, however.And as well as the class of Woakes at one end, Bamber is another a canny medium-fast seamer who moves the ball both ways.That said, Dan Lawrence triggering to a guard outside off stump and edging him to slip before lunch made for a bad misjudgement.The most accomplished in the morning was Dom Sibley with a watchful, unbeaten 21 from 81 balls.However, one suspects he would need an avalanche of runs at a far greater lick to win a Test recall.

The same may well go for the bulk of the recently discarded across the country, given McCullum’s penchant for a shiny new toy.Perhaps there was one here.When Woakes finally teased a nick from Sibley, and castled Ralphie Albert second ball, Surrey had stumbled to a worrying 65 for six.But over the next two and a half hours came a stirring fightback worth 155 runs – a club record for the seventh wicket against Warwickshire.Ben Foakes, a known quantity to England and seemingly on the outer, was one half of this, with Tom Lawes the other.

Lawes is an interesting cricketer: a three-time title winner at 23, a new ball bowler showing signs of more pace, and one who can clearly hold a bat.His career-best 83 from 121 balls involved repelling a pretty relentless attack and putting the pressure back on it too – things that tend to catch the eye.Either way, with Foakes pushing on to a fine 128 and steering Surrey to 328 all out in the process, day one at Edgbaston made for a hard-fought contest; a blend of seasoned pros and young hopefuls going at each other from very outset.It may start too early, it may be flawed in some aspects, and there may be outliers like Jacob Bethell who almost leapfrog it entirely.But for all of that, and a slapstick first wicket, the County Championship remains the nursery for English cricketers.

societySee all
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Calling us Auntie or Uncle is no insult | Letters

Re Lola Okolosie’s article (Is calling a woman ‘auntie’ ageist harassment – or a mark of respect? It’s a trickier question than you think, 31 March), I was interested to read uncle/auntie described as honorifics. Growing up (I’m 60-plus years old, Scottish), I think it operated as a familiar term. I was taught to call close friends of my parents Aunt Jane or Uncle John. Otherwise Mister/Miss.Clearly, there is an honorific element – if I am (as a child) calling you Aunt, you are close to my parents, but it was not related to age – I would never have dreamed of calling anyone Aunt/Uncle on an age basis

1 day ago
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Young people ‘more likely to leave for health reasons when in low-paid, insecure jobs’

Young people in the UK are more likely to leave their job for health reasons and become economically inactive when they work in insecure, low-paid sectors, a study has found.Research carried out for the Trades Union Congress by the consultancy Timewise charts a connection between the jobs young people are most likely to do – in hospitality, retail and care, for example – and the proportion of people leaving because of ill health.“The occupations that young people are concentrated in are associated with high numbers of people moving into long-term sickness and worklessness,” the analysis said.The authors said that these sectors were also among those most likely to offer precarious or low-paid jobs.More than 40% of staff in accommodation and food services are in insecure working arrangements, for example

1 day ago
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NHS rehabilitation care staff shortage fails stroke patients, say health leaders

The NHS is failing stroke patients and limiting their chances of recovery because of a shortage of rehabilitation care staff, health leaders have said.More people are surviving strokes than ever before in the UK. But their hopes of getting better are being dashed because of a lack of physiotherapists and other specialist staff, according to the Chartered Society of Physiotherapy and the Association of Chartered Physiotherapists in Neurology.National guidelines say people who have had a stroke should receive therapy-based rehabilitation for three hours a day, five days a week. But data suggests that, on average, people only receive rehab three to four days a week in hospital, and one to two days once they are discharged, the CSP and Acpin said

2 days ago
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CPS considering 13 suspected cases of assisted dying in England and Wales

Thirteen cases of suspected assisted dying are being considered by prosecutors in England and Wales, according to the latest data.Encouraging or assisting the suicide or attempted suicide of another person is against the law in England and Wales, under the Suicide Act 1961.The Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) said its latest data showed 209 cases that have been recorded as assisted dying have been referred to it by the police between 1 April 2009 and 31 March this year.This was up from 199 cases that had been referred by the end of March last year.Of the 209 cases, 131 were not taken forward by prosecutors and 42 were withdrawn by police, the CPS said

2 days ago
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UK drug exports to US spared tariffs under deal critics say will cost NHS billions

British drug exports to the US will escape tariffs imposed by Donald Trump as part of a controversial UK-US medicines deal that critics fear will mean less money for the NHS.The deal will also give patients in Britain greater access to potentially life-extending drugs because the rules have been relaxed to allow the NHS to pay more for particular treatments.In an announcement on Thursday, the UK government highlighted the recent approval of two cancer medicines as representing good value for money and proof that its agreement with the US administration will benefit the very unwell, not just pharmaceutical firms.They are now available because the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (Nice) from this week has increased the amount of money the NHS can spend on a treatment in the hope of giving patients a longer and higher quality of life from £30,000 to £35,000 a year.Ministers, drug industry bosses and patient groups hailed the deal as good news

2 days ago
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Streeting hits out at BMA ‘delusion’ as talks to avert resident doctors’ strike fail

The NHS in England is bracing for the longest strike yet by resident doctors after last-ditch talks failed, prompting Wes Streeting to accuse the medics of suffering from “delusion”.Many thousands of resident – formerly junior – doctors will stage a six-day stoppage over pay and jobs starting at 7am on Tuesday, just after the Easter weekend. A deadline for agreement ended on Thursday.It will be the 16th walkout the doctors have staged since their first strike in March 2023, and there are growing fears that the dispute could drag on for another year.Streeting confirmed in a letter to the British Medical Association that he had withdrawn his offer to create 1,000 extra places in specialist medical training this year, as that was conditional on the BMA accepting the government’s most recent offer, which it rejected last week

2 days ago
sportSee all
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Rising star ‘Wreck-It Will’ Sherman has roots in US rugby’s past and eyes on its future

about 15 hours ago
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NCAA women’s Final Four: UCLA 51-44 Texas; South Carolina 62-48 UConn – as it happened

about 21 hours ago
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Geno Auriemma and Dawn Staley have tense postgame exchange after South Carolina shock UConn in Final Four

about 23 hours ago
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County cricket: Gay makes hay on opening day to blast season’s first century

1 day ago
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Foakes to the rescue for Surrey as County Championship makes its earliest start

1 day ago
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Timeforshowcasing into Classic contention after Burradon success

1 day ago