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From Ashes hangover to subcontinental scars as England aim to rewrite history

about 9 hours ago
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Harry Brook’s side begin Sri Lanka ODI series in poor form but confidence is needed ahead of crucial winter periodA subcontinental World Cup to close an Ashes winter? History tells us this does not end well for England.In 2014 a whitewash in Australia was followed by a group-stage exit at the World T20 with a 45-run defeat to the Netherlands in Chattogram.In 2011 the 50-over side – largely made up of Test regulars – were brutalised by Kevin O’Brien in Bengaluru before exiting with a 10-wicket quarter-final loss to Sri Lanka at the Premadasa Stadium in Colombo.Vic Marks, writing for the Observer, wondered beforehand if England had “anything left to give” after so many months on the road.And so to the Premadasa again, 15 years on, this time without the goodwill of a recent series victory in Australia.

The first one-day international against Sri Lanka will begin just two weeks after Alex Carey struck the winning runs at the SCG, and open the second half of England’s winter, with three T20s to follow in Pallekele.They will hope to end it on 8 March, at the final of the T20 World Cup in Ahmedabad, or Colombo should they face Pakistan, such is the geopolitical mess underpinning the upcoming tournament.The gap between tours has unsurprisingly been populated with discussion of how it all fell apart in Australia, questions of who goes and who stays and, already, Richard Gould, the chief executive of the England and Wales Cricket Board, outlining that “our focus is on regaining the Ashes in 2027”.The English game’s unhealthy obsession with one series lives on.Harry Brook’s own professionalism has been questioned after his coming together with a bouncer the night before an ODI against New Zealand on his first tour as England white-ball captain, a wild episode that makes him lucky to still be in post.

Brendon McCullum, meanwhile, has to deal with murmurings that his job is under threat while Rob Key, who brought in McCullum and then promoted him to head coach in all forms, is likely to be in the clear,It is hard to know who within this entire setup can speak with any genuine authority at present, Brook himself admitting that he needs to regain the trust of his players,A win or two would briefly quieten the simmering angst, but England begin this tour in their weakest format, one sidelined in the calendar of domestic cricket, the aura formed by Eoin Morgan’s squad long gone,The 3-0 loss to New Zealand in October made it six ODI series defeats out of seven since a painful World Cup showing in 2023, excluding a Champions Trophy campaign a year ago in which they finished winless,McCullum, who began as white-ball coach last January, is yet to win an ODI away from home.

They sit eighth in the rankings, uncomfortably close to the spots that do not guarantee qualification to next year’s World Cup.Sri Lanka, on the other hand, have won seven consecutive 50-over series at home in the last two years, Australia and India among those defeated.Wanindu Hasaranga’s fizzy wrist-spin has made him the joint leading wicket-taker in ODIs since the start of 2024.While their batting lineup is short on storied names, that does not guarantee success; just ask England.“We’ve got five, six, maybe seven batters who would get into almost every team in the world,” Brook said in New Zealand while analysing his side’s 50-over struggles.

You can see where he’s coming from, this being a team that hit 400 twice at home last summer and still includes members of the 2019 cohort.But it’s also one capable of imploding in the space of a toilet break and overly reliant on Adil Rashid and Jofra Archer (absent for this series while on the mend from a side strain) when it comes to the ball.The XI selected for the series opener is seriously imbalanced.Sam Curran’s presence at No 8 – he made a rapid, match-winning half‑century in the Big Bash at No 5 on Sunday – suggests England will stick to their default with the bat: let’s go hard.Zak Crawley will open in his first List-A game in more than two years, the resumption of his Test partnership with Ben Duckett coming at a particularly odd time, the pair having accrued six single-figure stands in the Ashes.

But, hey, at least Mitchell Starc isn’t about for this one.Brook laid down his usual lines in a press conference on Wednesday, about wanting his side to know “when to absorb the pressure and apply the pressure back on them”, a tired mantra that will be properly tested in the coming days.Some confidence is desperately required after the misery of the Ashes, but it won’t come easy.
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Alan Woodhouse obituary

My friend Alan Woodhouse, who has died aged 92, was the longest serving Samaritans volunteer in the history of the organisation, which offers support to anyone struggling to cope or at risk of taking their own lives.Alan joined the Liverpool and Merseyside branch when it was founded in 1960, and was still answering telephones there 60 years later. He was appointed MBE for his service in 2017 and retired in 2020.Samaritans was founded in 1953 in London by the Rev Chad Varah. Its second branch was set up in the crypt of St Nicholas Church, Liverpool Pier Head, and when it opened on 1 March 1960 Alan staffed the first overnight shift

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The return of measles: how a once-vanquished disease is spreading again

The measles outbreak in South Carolina now stands at 664 cases, more than doubling in a few weeks, officials said this week. The highly contagious virus has also spread onward to North Carolina, Ohio and Washington state, and similar outbreaks are unfurling in Arizona and Utah as well.The outbreak, which first began in Texas a year ago this week, has spread to most US states – and as the US passes the one-year mark, its measles-elimination status will probably end, a symbol indicating an expected wave of year-round preventable disease. The outbreak has been plagued by misinformation, with Robert F Kennedy Jr, secretary of the US Department of Health and Human Services and longtime vaccine critic, framing measles vaccination as a personal choice and promoting unproven treatments.The vast majority of those infected are children, and most of them did not receive the measles, mumps, and rubella (MMR vaccine)

about 15 hours ago
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UK glaucoma cases will rise to 1.6m by 2060 amid ‘demographic timebomb’, experts say

New estimates predict at least 1.6 million people in the UK will be living with glaucoma, the leading cause of irreversible blindness worldwide, by 2060.The figure is much higher than the current 1.1 million people estimated to have the condition, research published in the British Journal of Ophthalmology suggests.The sharp rise will be driven by an increasingly ageing population and growth in the proportion of higher-risk ethnically diverse groups, prompting a need for an expansion in eye health services to meet demand

1 day ago
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Michael Baron obituary

The London solicitor Michael Baron, who has died aged 96, was instrumental in changing the lives of autistic people for the better. At a time when autism was little known or understood, in 1962 he co-founded the UK’s leading autistic charity. As its first chair, he was the driving force in publicising the condition and raising funds.He helped set up the world’s first autism-specific school in 1965 and the first residential community for autistic adults in 1974. As one of a group of lawyers, he campaigned for the Education (Handicapped Children) Act in 1970, which gave all children, regardless of disability, the right to an education

1 day ago
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Educational background key indicator of immigration views in UK, study finds

Rightwing movements are struggling to gain support among graduates as education emerges as the most important dividing line in British attitudes towards politics, diversity and immigration, research has found.A study from the independent National Centre for Social Research (NatCen) found people with qualifications below A-level were more than twice as likely to support rightwing parties compared with those with qualifications above.The Demographic Divides report says: “A person with no educational qualifications had around 2 times the odds of voting for either the Conservatives or Reform UK than someone with a university degree or higher. This is independent of other factors, including financial precarity, so those without a degree are more likely to support rightwing parties in the UK even after adjusting for their financial situation.“If one wanted to predict whether a person voted for parties of the right in the UK, knowing their educational background would give them a very good chance of making a correct prediction

1 day ago
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Prostate cancer is most commonly diagnosed cancer across UK, study finds

Prostate cancer is now the most commonly diagnosed form of cancer across the UK, surpassing breast cancer, according to a leading charity.There were 64,425 diagnoses of prostate cancer in 2022, an analysis of NHS figures by Prostate Cancer UK found, and 61,640 new cases of breast cancer.The analysis found there to be a discrepancy at which stage men with prostate cancer were diagnosed, with 31% of men in Scotland diagnosed with prostate cancer at stage 4, compared with 21% of men in England.About one in eight men across the UK will be affected by prostate cancer in their lifetimes, with approximately 12,200 deaths each year caused by the disease.One in four black men will be diagnosed with prostate cancer in their lifetimes

2 days ago
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Denmark welcomes Trump ruling out force to take Greenland, before ‘future deal’ framework announced – as it happened

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Trump steps up Greenland annexation demand and attacks European leaders at Davos

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Elon Musk floats idea of buying Ryanair after calling CEO ‘an idiot’

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Tell us: has a chatbot helped you out of a difficult time in your life?

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English cricket remains a metaphor for the country as travelling circus rolls on | Jonathan Liew

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Fans and Welsh rugby chiefs at odds over plan to cut one of four professional sides

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