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Wallabies resume England rivalry with memories still fresh of Twickenham triumph | Angus Fontaine

about 15 hours ago
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Smell that? That delicious whiff, sometimes bitter, but all the sweeter for its bluster? ‘Tis the distinctive funk of Australia-England sporting acrimony back on the breeze.The Kangaroos and England battling over rugby league Tests.The Lionesses and the Matildas resuming their World Cup feud.Stuart Broad and the Barmy Army playing at villainy before the Ashes next month.And the green grass of Twickenham twitching at the Wallabies’ return this weekend.

Last year’s meeting was a monumental gunfight of multiple twists, with 79 points scored and a lead that changed five times.Australia entered as heavy underdogs and England duly led 15-3 inside half an hour.The Wallabies pegged it back to 18-20 at half-time and then raced further ahead after the break until England gobbled up the 10-point lead with twin strikes for 30-28.With five minutes to go, Australia seized an intercept to go ahead only for England to respond in the 78th minute for 37-35.Then came the extraordinary moment Australian rugby had waited over a decade for.

In the 83rd minute, with Twickenham roaring and every player running on fumes, the Wallabies rumbled downfield.After mauling for seven phases, the gold backline fanned left for one last throw of the dice.A swivel offload, a tip-on pass, a hand-off.Then Len Ikitau surges into the line, fends, draws his man and flicks out the back for winger Max Jorgensen to streak down the line and score.A famous 37-42 victory.

It was the Wallabies’ first win at the home of rugby since 2015,More importantly it gave Joe Schmidt’s men the spark of belief they needed to keep climbing off the canvas against the world’s best sides in 2025,That they did, narrowly losing 2-1 to the British & Irish Lions, then shocking the world champions South Africa at Ellis Park by overturning a 22-0 deficit to romp home 38-22,There were last-gasp wins over Argentina and Fiji before the vanquishing of Eddie Jones’s Japan last week,Usually, a Wallabies squad bearing a win-loss ledger sitting at 5-6 isn’t enough to make the Six Nations tremble, certainly not an England side on a seven-Test streak.

But the nature of that Twickenham win and the same never-say-die spirit that sank the Lions and Springboks sounds a warning,England coach Steve Borthwick knows it, killing complacency by reminding his side that Schmidt’s men “are one of the form teams in the world” and “have had four months together … we’ve got four sessions,”But if Kiwi-born Schmidt has learned anything of Anglo-Australian relations it’s to be wary of a rival coach pissing in his pocket and telling him it’s raining,The Wallabies are indeed battle-fit after the Lions series and an encouraging Rugby Championship,But after leading for three quarters of that tournament, they lost three straight Tests.

Schmidt played a Walla-B-side in the Brave Blossoms win last week to save 13 stars for the England Test, but fatigue and a torrid toll of injuries has him short of weaponry.Australian rugby rolled out its biggest gun for that showdown last November when centre Joseph-Aukuso Suaalii staged a player-of-the-match performance on debut.Despite willing performances in 13 Tests since, the 21-year-old hasn’t been able to match the aerial mastery and magic offloads he unveiled that day.The issue is that Schmidt hasn’t yet found a flyhalf to give Suaalii the time and space he needs to fly, despite Lolesio, Tom Lynagh, Tane Edmed and James O’Connor all being trialled.Sign up to The BreakdownThe latest rugby union news and analysis, plus all the week's action reviewedafter newsletter promotionRugby Australia shelled out $5m to steal the boy wonder back from rugby league and lead the code’s “golden era” in time for the home World Cup in 2027.

But their Ferrari is too often parked out wide with no ball and nothing to do but tackle,Neither of the 10s who played at Twickenham last year will feature on Sunday, with Lolesio suffering a neck injury before the Lions series and Ben Donaldson out of favour,Instead, it’ll be five-Test rookie Edmed up against England’s 102-cap George Ford,The sparkplug playmaker Suaalii and Australia sorely need may come off the bench,Carter Gordon, 24, looks like making his return to gold after a brief stint in the NRL.

Gordon burst on to the scene in 2023 with fast hands, a deft grubber and fierce tackle.At 189cm he is rangy, built like an NFL quarterback, with slingshot acceleration and electric counterattack.Eddie Jones threw him into the furnace at the 2023 World Cup but Gordon flamed out.Is “Flash” the saviour of Schmidt’s universe?Australia haven’t conjured back-to-back Twickenham boilovers since 2007-08 and World Rugby hasn’t helped, staging this Test outside the “international window” that opens next week.It means UK and European clubs aren’t obliged to release four of Australia’s best (despite the Premiership being on pause for a month).

So Ikitau, Tom Hooper and Will Skelton will cool their heels while England pick a full-strength squad under a “professional game agreement” between the RFU and clubs.It’s that smell again.The rank tang of gamesmanship between these two old foes.No matter.Whenever Australia take on England even the air is fiercely contested.

politicsSee all
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Tightening Pip benefit eligibility could save £9bn a year, says Reform

Reform UK has set out plans for changes to personal independence payments (Pip) that the party says could save up to £9bn a year, with Lee Anderson, one of its MPs, saying he used to “game the system” to help people become eligible for the benefit.In Reform’s third consecutive Westminster press conference of the week, Anderson and the head of policy, Zia Yusuf, said the party would bar people with less serious psychological conditions such as anxiety from claiming Pip and would ensure anyone getting the payments would first receive a face-to-face assessment.“We are betraying our young people,” said Yusuf, who was formerly the party chair. “Reassessments are basically not happening any more. These young people are being labelled

about 15 hours ago
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Boris Johnson approved China’s London super-embassy proposal in 2018

Boris Johnson approved the China’s super-embassy proposal in 2018 and welcomed the fact it would represent “China’s largest overseas diplomatic investment” anywhere in the world, the Guardian can disclose.In a letter to Wang Yi, China’s top diplomat, Johnson gave his consent for Royal Mint Court to house a sprawling diplomatic complex in May 2018. The Chinese government bought the 20,000 sq metres site for £255m that same month.The disclosure demonstrates that the Conservatives under Theresa May gave Beijing assurances that it could proceed with the proposal, which is still in limbo seven years later after attracting huge political and local backlash.Johnson’s letter, sent while he was foreign secretary, was a response to Wang setting out details of the planned project in April

about 24 hours ago
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Your Party to launch legal action against three of its ‘rogue’ founders, sources say

Your Party, the leftwing party steered by Jeremy Corbyn and Zarah Sultana, says it is preparing legal action against a group of its own founders after a final deadline to hand over at least £800,000 in donations passed without payment, the Guardian understands.Figures close to the party accused directors of MoU Operations Ltd (MoU) of having “gone rogue”, holding supporters’ funds to ransom and undermining its founding process “despite direct pleas from Jeremy and Zarah”.Party insiders say they “reluctantly” agreed to initiate legal proceedings after “exhausting every possible alternative” to recover the money still held by the directors of MoU.MoU is run by Andrew Feinstein, the anti-apartheid activist who ran as an independent candidate in Keir Starmer’s constituency; Jamie Driscoll, the former North of Tyne mayor; and Beth Winter, the former Labour MP for Cynon Valley. The three helped shape the movement’s early structure before relations broke down

1 day ago
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Should the Home Office be broken up into two units?

“It’s not that the Home Office is too big. It’s that the brains of many of the people who run it are not big enough,” says one former departmental insider.Unwieldy, dysfunctional and plagued by poor morale, the Home Office is once again the subject of debate about whether it is beyond repair and should simply be chopped up into two more manageable units.No 10 is so far showing no appetite for a big restructure, but Shabana Mahmood, the new home secretary, has acknowledged that she has a turnaround job on her hands along with the new permanent secretary, Antonia Romeo.Politicians have been calling for the Home Office to be split up every couple of years when a major scandal shines a light on its persistent problems, such as those exposed in the Windrush and immigration centre abuse scandals

1 day ago
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Reform wheels out Danny Kruger, the ‘brains’ of Nigel Farage’s operation | John Crace

Nigel Farage too Marmite for you? Lee Anderson too Lee Andersony? Richard Tice too smooth? Sarah Pochin a bit too racisty? Don’t worry. These things happen. But all will be well, because Reform have just the MP for you. Someone who can be passed off as a safeish pair of hands. Someone who won’t frighten the horses

1 day ago
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John Major tells Tories alliance with Reform would be ‘beyond stupid’

John Major has told the Conservatives that forming an alliance with Reform UK would “for ever destroy” the party, which he said had already left traditional supporters “politically homeless” by lurching too far to the right.The former prime minister dismissed a pact with Nigel Farage’s party as “beyond stupid”, saying that any Tories tempted to defect to Reform should go now because his own party would be better off without them.As the Tories struggle with the existential threat posed by Reform’s surge in popularity, Major warned far more than the future of the party was at stake with autocracies on the march across the world.“Frustration with democracy should not blind us to the toxic nature of nationalism, or any and every form of populist or authoritarian government,” he said.Addressing a Conservative party lunch on Tuesday, he urged the party not to reject the centre ground of British politics, saying they were “seriously alienating” voters by coming down on the wrong side of public opinion on Europe, climate change and overseas aid

1 day ago
cultureSee all
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Steve Coogan says Richard III film was ‘story I wanted to tell’ as he agrees to libel settlement

2 days ago
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‘We were fitted with remote control penises’: Harry Enfield and Kathy Burke on Kevin and Perry Go Large

3 days ago
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From White Teeth to Swing Time: Zadie Smith’s best books - ranked!

3 days ago
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Ardal O’Hanlon: ‘I fell asleep on stage once – I could hear someone doing my material, got annoyed and woke up’

4 days ago
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My cultural awakening: A Jim Carrey series made me embrace baldness – and shave my head on the spot

5 days ago
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From Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere to IT: Welcome to Derry – your complete entertainment guide to the week ahead

5 days ago