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‘It’s not up to me is it?’ McCullum wants to stay on despite England’s Ashes defeat

about 6 hours ago
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Brendon McCullum has stressed his desire to stay on as England head coach but acknowledged this is now a question for those higher up.Australia winning this much-anticipated Ashes series at the earliest opportunity has thrust McCullum’s role into the spotlight but with a multi-format contract that runs up to the end of the 50-over World Cup in late 2027, removing him would cost English cricket a seven-figure sum.Senior figures at the England and Wales Cricket Board are understood to be wary of making wholesale changes but with Australia now openly targeting a third home whitewash this century as the series moves to Melbourne and then Sydney, McCullum and the team director, Rob Key, are under pressure.Asked if he expected to be in the role come the English summer, McCullum replied: “I don’t know.It’s not really up to me, is it? I will just keep trying to do the job, try to learn the lessons that I haven’t quite got right here and make adjustments.

Those questions are for someone else, not for me.“It’s a pretty good gig.It’s good fun.You travel the world with the lads and try to play some exciting cricket and try to achieve some things.For me, it’s a matter of trying to just get the very best out of the people and try to achieve what you can with them.

Those other decisions are up to other people.I think we’ve made some progress from when I took over to where we are.”With Key having extended McCullum’s deal in 2024 and expanded his brief to include the white-ball teams, their fates may well be intertwined and not helped by 21 defeats in 39 games across all formats this calendar year.Among the questions swirling after the 82-run defeat at Adelaide Oval is whether McCullum and the captain, Ben Stokes, remain on the same page.At 2-0 down, Stokes suddenly ordered his players to show “fight” and a flat pitch that England would usually look to attack was met with caution: 286 all out in 87.

2 overs represented their slowest first innings under the current regime.Asked if the players still believed in his methods, McCullum replied: “I hope so.You’ll have to ask them.For the last few years, we’ve had a team which has understood how we’re going about this style and we put this team together based on the skill level and the talent [required].That’s not going to change during the time that I’m still in the job.

“I will always have the back of my players, always support them and I’ll always make sure that I’m protective of them as well in a public forum,That doesn’t mean you don’t challenge them privately,“The style has never been about the scoring rates,We have never said we are going to try to score at 5,5/6 an over.

It’s about allowing us to get in the head space where we are clear, transparent and immersed in the situation and the moment so we can identify risk, where the game is at and what is required.“For the first nine days [of the series] I felt we were incredibly tight, tense and desperate to perform and succeed.That desperation is great, but not if it puts the handbrake on your ability to let your talent and game come out.”As a head coach who has always maintained his methods relate to the “top two inches” – ie mindset – rather than technical coaching, this “desperation” does fall on McCullum.England’s mid-tour break in the holiday town of Noosa is also likely to be the subject of questions inside the ECB given the headlines it generated at the time (and the fact the reset did not work out on the field).

Richard Thompson, the ECB chair, is currently in Australia, with the chief executive, Richard Gould, due to be on the ground in Sydney.Both took on their roles after Key and McCullum were appointed in 2022 but there is still time to change perceptions in the final two Tests of this Ashes tour and, if given the chance, the T20 World Cup in India and Sri Lanka next year.McCullum said: “If we can just play, again, just find that beautiful state you can get in where you’re not restricted by the pressures and the expectations of everything...

acknowledge all of that and accept that it’s going to be there,,,but then just go out and when you cross the line, go out and just play the game,.

.then we give ourselves a better chance.“This [defeat] is going to sting, no doubt.But we know we’ve got a job to do in Melbourne and in Sydney.If we can salvage something out of the next two Test matches, then that’s something.

”England are due to resume training at the MCG on Tuesday morning with Jacob Bethell and Gus Atkinson, two of the unused players in Adelaide, now in contention to play on Boxing Day.
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UK failure to seal EU tax exemption hands industry mountain of paperwork

UK manufacturers are to be hit with mountains of Brexit-style paperwork in January on £7bn worth of exports to the EU after the government failed to secure an expected exemption from new green taxes.The UK had hoped to secure a carve-out by Christmas on the carbon border adjustment mechanism (CBAM), but EU commissioners have confirmed this is not going to happen.UK Steel says the exemption is unlikely to be in place before Easter, resulting in detailed paperwork for exporters in a repeat of Brexit when they were hit with paperwork on customs and standards of their goods.The documentation requires exporters to provide a detailed paper trail of carbon emissions generated during the manufacturing process.It will apply to scores of products made with steel and aluminium, including washing machines and car parts, under plans Brussels announced on Wednesday

1 day ago
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Reform councillors in Kent condemned for spending thousands on political assistants

Reform UK’s “flagship” local authority, Kent county council, has been condemned for pushing through plans to spend tens of thousands of pounds on hiring political assistants.The move comes after councillors from Nigel Farage’s party in Warwickshire were accused of hypocrisy in July when they voted to spend £150,000 on the advisers, some of whom are being parachuted in by the national party to deal with a litany of issues at Reform-run councils.Both councils face budget crises and Reform candidates were voted in on pledges to cut waste and save money.A new leaked recording of a meeting of the Reform councillors in Kent – wearing turquoise Santa’s elf hats – showed them being told earlier this week by one of their leaders, Maxwell Harrison, that a former Reform director of campaigning and training at the party’s head office had been hired by the council as a “political assistant”.Harrison named him as Michael Hadwen, who has attracted controversy for social media posts including expressing support for Enoch Powell’s ideas about immigration

2 days ago
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UK aid cuts take 40% from funds to counter Russian threat in western Balkans

Keir Starmer’s raid on overseas aid has led to a 40% cut in funds for countering Russian aggression and misinformation in a region of Europe described by the prime minister as vital to the UK’s national security.British funding committed to bolstering the western Balkans, where Russia has been accused of sowing division and creating destabilisation, has been cut from £40m last year to £24m for 2025-26.The Integrated Security Fund (ISF) is designed to tackle the highest priority threats to the UK’s national security at home and overseas.Starmer recently described the western Balkans region, encompassing Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Kosovo, Montenegro, North Macedonia and Serbia, as “Europe’s crucible – the place where the security of our continent is put to the test”.Last year’s ISF funds were used in part to counter and respond to malicious cyber-attacks in the region and to bolster democratic institutions and independent media

2 days ago
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‘It’s rather rude’: Truss accused of trying to poach members of rival Tory club

For Tory grandees licking their wounds and plotting their return after their disastrous 2024 general election performance, the opulent, fire-lit rooms of the exclusive club 5 Hertford Street are a sanctuary.But in recent weeks, their long lunches have been rudely interrupted by Liz Truss, who has been accused of wandering the premises in search of members to poach for her own rival operation, just one street away, which asks “founding members” for an eye-watering £500,000.The former prime minister’s alleged headhunting is understood to have irritated those who run the Mayfair club, including its owner, Robin Birley, the entrepreneur and son of Annabel Goldsmith and the nightclub owner Mark Birley. A friend of his said: “It is rather rude, but at £500k, we are rather better value.” Membership of 5 Hertford Street is a relative snip at less than £2,000 a year

3 days ago
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UK politics: ‘Not clear’ who was behind FCDO hack, says minister, amid reports of China link – as it happened

Good morning.The UK’s Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office was hacked in October, according to trade minister Chris Bryant.Details of the hack emerged on Friday in a report by the Sun that claimed a Chinese hacker group was behind the cyber-attack.The Sun named Storm 1849 as the Chinese cyber gang responsible for the breach, which it said was understood to possibly include tens of thousands of visa details.The group has been “accused of targeting politicians and groups critical of the Chinese government”, the newspaper said

3 days ago
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UK Foreign Office victim of cyber-attack in October, says Chris Bryant

The UK’s Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office was hacked in October, a minister has said.Chris Bryant, a trade minister in Keir Starmer’s government, told Sky News there was a low risk to “any individual” from the cyber-attack.Details of the hack emerged on Friday in a report by the Sun that claimed a Chinese hacking group was behind it.But Bryant told broadcasters it was “not clear” who perpetrated the attack and cautioned against speculation. “There certainly has been a hack at the FCDO and we’ve been aware of that since October,” Bryant told Sky News

3 days ago
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‘It’s not up to me is it?’ McCullum wants to stay on despite England’s Ashes defeat

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