Bethell’s elegant first Test century presses pause on Australia’s Ashes party

A picture


It was good.So good.So unbelievably good.On the penultimate day of a tour packed with regret for England, a star was born as Jacob Bethell, 22 years young, compiled a truly golden hundred that offered hope for the future.There were no histrionics upon getting there either, no suggestion this was a maiden first-class century compiled in the heat of an Ashes Test.

Instead, having skipped down to the off-spin of Beau Webster and belted a four, he reacted like an old pro – albeit one with parents welling up in the stands,There was also no reason why England should collapse to defeat on this sun-soaked fourth day,But there was every reason to think they could anyway,Worn down by Australia over the course of two months, starting their second innings 183 behind and with the departure lounge calling, they certainly looked ripe for it,And not least with Ben Stokes once again injured.

Yet by the close, even with a couple more brain-fade dismissals along the way to leave a 4-1 series win loading for Australia, England had made it to 302 for eight with a lead of 119 runs,Still breathing, therefore, and all thanks to a gum-chewing rookie with zinc cream on his cheeks and ice in his veins,It was not just the numbers next to Bethell’s name when he walked off unbeaten on 142 from 232 balls, rather the manner in which he achieved these over five hours at the crease,This was pure spun silk, elegance personified, his 15 fours made up of back-foot punches, drives, and pull shots,Each one was struck with Swiss-clock precision and interspersed with diligent defence.

There was courage under fire, too, Bethell copping a nasty blow to the head from Cameron Green and dropping like Woody in Toy Story when the humans walk in.But Bethell won the battle with five fours, each one racing out of the middle.And he coolly navigated 24 balls in the nervous nineties, with the four overthrows that came his way on 87 the only thing gifted all day.No specialist England batter had previously scored their maiden first-class century in a Test match, just a handful of wicketkeepers and bowlers.And yet it remains a head-scratcher as to why England parked Bethell for much of 2025 when that arrival in New Zealand last winter had them all purring.

For a team that claims to embrace risk, their loyalty to Ollie Pope was conservative.Still, Bethell has now arrived in Test cricket and if nothing else on this bleak tour, England have found a No 3 with the required temperament.It was certainly needed at first drop here, Bethell walking out to the middle after Zak Crawley’s series ended much like it started: dismissed during Mitchell Starc’s latest thunderous first over, albeit this time lbw shouldering arms.Bethell left and repelled much of what came his way, untroubled by the loss of Ben Duckett for 42 – the opener’s highest score on tour – and Joe Root for a slightly tortured six from 37 balls.Scott Boland was once again showing up England’s quicks here, figures of two for 34 from 19 overs constricting all-comers by hitting that handkerchief length over and over again.

Although on a day headlined by a newcomer, it was a journeyman who turned things for Australia.Fresh from an unbeaten 71 that had applied the finishing touches to his side’s 567 all out, the giant Webster swapped his seamers for off-breaks and winkled out three key wickets after tea.Having led in the morning after Stokes limped off with a groin injury, Harry Brook was one half of a stand worth 102 runs, with thoughts of his frustrating tour ending on a high note also percolating.But on 42 he played back to one that spun sharply, lbw on review.When Will Jacks holed out trying to launch a six second ball, England were effectively 32 for five.

Enter Jamie Smith, initially atoning for his first innings self-immolation with 26 runs in a stand worth 52.But when the Marnus Labuschagne bumper plan was finally enacted he ended up red-faced once more, run out after a mix up in communication with Bethell but at least sparing the set man.Out hobbled Stokes, this his fifth Test series in a row to end with an injury and his final contribution a wafted edge to slip off Webster fifth ball that underlined his struggle to move.Unlikely to bowl on the final day, all he could do was return to the pavilion, watch Boland shut down Brydon Carse for a handy 16, and stew on his team’s predicament at large.Stokes possibly saw a bit of himself in Bethell out there as he did so; shades of his own emergence during the whitewash of 2013-14 and that statement century in Perth.

On another Ashes tour that has ended with precious little to write home about, here was a genuine reason to crack a smile.
businessSee all
A picture

Pub chain shares rise on reports of government U-turn over business rates – as it happened

Shares in UK pub and hospitality companies have jumped this morning, as the government prepares to announce a climbdown on forthcoming increases to their business rates.Mitchells and Butlers, whose pub brands include All Bar One, Harvester, O’Neills, and Toby Carvery, are up 2.5%, one of the top risers in the FTSE 250 share index today.Rival Marsons, which has more than 1,300 pubs, bars and inns across the country, are up 2%, while JD Wetherspoons have gained 1.2%

A picture

Tesco aiming for bumper 2026 after best Christmas market share in decade

Tesco is aiming to grab an even bigger slice of the grocery market this year after winning its best share in more than a decade over Christmas with strong sales of fresh food and its Finest own-label range.The supermarket, which has an almost 29% market share, according to Worldpanel by Numerator, said it had taken the most trade from Asda, the UK’s third-largest supermarket chain that has been struggling to turn around falling sales.However, shares in Tesco dropped by more than 6% on Thursday as analysts said its third-quarter sales performance was behind expectations in all markets including the UK, Ireland, central Europe and at its Booker wholesale chain.Sales in the UK rose 3.2% in the six weeks to 3 January against hopes of 3

A picture

CMA begins full review of Kingsmill owner’s planned takeover of bread rival Hovis

The UK competition watchdog has ramped up its investigation into a £75m takeover deal that will result in the owner of Kingsmill snapping up its sliced bread rival Hovis.Associated British Foods (ABF), which also owns the Primark clothing chain, confirmed plans to buy Hovis from its private equity owners Endless in August, combining the UK’s second and third largest bread brands.The Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) has now launched an in-depth investigation into whether the deal could harm consumers, potentially leading to reduced choice and higher prices on grocery shelves. It follows a request by the two companies to fast-track the review of the merger.ABF said in a statement: “Our priority is to achieve regulatory clearance as efficiently as possible and we are pleased to have agreed with the CMA that we will fast-track to the in-depth and detailed final phase of their merger review

A picture

Greggs puts up price of sausage roll by 5p to £1.35 amid rising costs

Greggs has added 5p to the price of a sausage roll and 10p to a latte coffee as it leans on some of its bestsellers to soak up rising wage, energy and packaging costs.The UK’s largest bakery chain said it had no plans for further price increases at present and it expected inflation to ease this year as it admitted it had sold fewer items in the run-up to Christmas amid a “very tough, challenging market”.The “targeted” rises mean a sausage roll now costs £1.35 in most shops, up from £1.30 a year ago, while a latte will now cost £2

A picture

Trump plans to use Venezuela’s huge crude reserves ‘to cut US oil price to $50 a barrel’

Donald Trump plans to use Venezuela’s vast crude reserves to establish control of most of the western hemisphere’s oil in an attempt to drive the market price down to about $50 (£37) a barrel, according to reports.The US president has repeatedly raised the prospect of producing enough crude from Venezuela’s oilfields to drive down the US oil price from more than $56 a barrel today to about $50 in an effort to cut energy costs for consumers, according to the Wall Street Journal, which cited senior Trump administration officials.Global oil markets have already recorded significant losses in recent years due to an oversupply of crude. Prices slumped by almost 20% in 2025, marking the biggest annual loss since the Covid-19 pandemic and the first time the oil market has recorded three consecutive years of annual losses.As well as driving market prices lower, officials reportedly claimed Trump’s plans to control Venezuela’s oil reserves, which are the largest in the world, include cutting Russia and China’s access to the South American country in order to establish a western hemisphere oil production stronghold

A picture

Tunbridge Wells residents without water again as supplier blames cold weather

Residents of Tunbridge Wells have been left without water again, just a month after a major outage.South East Water said 6,500 households have no water at all, while thousands more have “intermittent supplies”.It blamed the cold weather for the disruption, which caused a “series of burst water mains”. The company had previously been found to be spending more paying dividends and servicing its debt pile over two years than investing in infrastructure.On Thursday night, South East Water said: “Reservoir levels have fallen this evening to the point where our boosters, which push water to the higher ground, are unable to operate