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Australia edge wild Boxing Day with England as 20 wickets fall in fourth Ashes Test

about 2 hours ago
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A record 94,199 spectators turned up to the MCG on Boxing Day and none will forget what they witnessed.An extraordinary 20 wickets tumbled on a pitch offering lavish movement and Cricket Australia were left fearing what would be a second multi-million dollar loss in this Ashes series.The first came in Perth, when that two-day series opener triggered the refunds and left visiting supporters scrambling for sightseeing trips.This fourth Test had the ingredients for a repeat, not just a surface with 10mm of grass but also a touring side in England who, having lost the Ashes and with criticism flying, looked broken before the coin even went up.The toss actually landed in their favour here, Ben Stokes calling correctly, inserting his opponents without hesitation, and watching Josh Tongue skittle Australia for 152 all out before tea.

Tongue was good value for his figures of five for 45, with his natural angle in, fuller length, and wobble seam asking trickier questions than one of the University Challenge Christmas specials.But for all the echoes up to this point of England’s famous Boxing Day performance here in 2010, there was also a nagging sense that Tongue’s success was signposting an ordeal for England’s batters.That ordeal ultimately came to pass when they fell to 16 for four inside eight overs and ended up 110 all out from 29.5, with Michael Neser claiming four for 45.All that was left was for Scott Boland, fresh from figures of three for 30, to see out the final over of the day as an auxiliary opening batter.

Boland just about survived, an edge just short of gully before he squirted the last ball of the day for four to prompt cheers from his fellow Victorians.Australia closed on four runs without further loss, a lead of 46 runs, and everyone could breathe.A simple scan down England’s sorry scorecard may prompt folks to assume recklessness and mutter a few curse words about so-called Bazball.Although the one player who backed their eye and took the aggressive option ended up the top-scorer for either side on this absurd day, with Harry Brook’s 41 from 34 balls a relative triumph in what were challenging circumstances.Brook had walked out at eight for three in the fifth over and danced down the pitch to Starc first ball for an almighty yahoo.

It met fresh air, admittedly, but Brook was undeterred, crashing two fours and two sixes with invention.His eventual dismissal saw him trying to move across his stumps and clip Boland into the leg side, only to be beaten for the simplest of lbws.Ridiculous as it sounds, one wonders how many England would have mustered had more of them taken it on.But over the course of three defeats a number have begun to question everything they spent three years learning, the upshot being a collection of meek pokes and, in the case of Joe Root, the longest duck of his career after edging behind to the 15th ball he faced.While Neser was exceptional in his first red-ball Test match, probing away after a useful 35 with the bat, Mitchell Starc is the bowler to cause this collective meltdown.

The left-armer was also the man to trigger the cascade of wickets, turning Ben Duckett into a pretzel and seeing a catch pop to mid-on on five.Not for the first time on tour, Duckett looked disorientated but he was not alone on a dizzying day at the MCG.Ali Martin’s full report to follow...

politicsSee all
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Welsh first minister vows to keep Labour ‘most successful democratic party on the planet’

The first minister of Wales has said she is determined for Welsh Labour not to lose its crown as the world’s most successful democratic party, despite warnings it could be relegated to third place in May’s elections.Polls suggest Reform UK and Plaid Cymru could win more seats than Eluned Morgan’s party in the Seneddelections next year, ending 100 years of dominance for Labour in Wales.Morgan said: “Of course I feel the pressure but I’m also determined to turn this round. We’re the most successful democratic political party on the planet. It’s a long winning streak

2 days ago
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U-turn on inheritance tax for farmers ‘snuck out’ to avoid scrutiny, say Tories

Ministers “snuck out” the announcement that they had decided to U-turn on inheritance tax for farmers, the Conservatives have said after the government revealed the move in a press release two days before Christmas.The shadow environment secretary, Victoria Atkins, accused the government of trying to dodge scrutiny of its latest policy reversal, under which the threshold for taxing inherited farmland will rise from a planned £1m to £2.5m.The move was announced on Tuesday in a press release from the environment department after months of pressure from farmers, campaigners and some Labour MPs.Atkins told Sky News on Wednesday morning: “This being snuck out the day before Christmas Eve means that, of course, we haven’t had chance to scrutinise this properly in parliament

2 days ago
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Ministers raise inheritance tax threshold for farms after backlash

Ministers will increase the threshold for taxing inherited farmland from £1m to £2.5m after months of pressure from campaigners and MPs representing rural areas.In a statement slipped out just before Christmas, the environment department announced the U-turn, which will apply from April when the tax kicks in.Plans to tax inherited agricultural assets worth more than £1m at a rate of 20% were announced in Rachel Reeves’s first budget last year.The change reversed tax relief that has existed in its modern form since the 1980s

3 days ago
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Deputy leader Lucy Powell says Labour must ‘stick to manifesto’ over EU customs union, in implicit rebuke to Streeting – as it happened

In an interview published at the weekend, Wes Streeting, the health secretary, suggested that he would like Britain to join a customs union with the EU. This is not government policy, and it is a proposal that Keir Starmer has ruled out. But Streeting would like to be PM himself one day and the interview was interpreted as his (latest) attempt to ensure that he is well positioned in case there is a leadership contest before the next election.No 10 largely played down the significance of Streeting’s comments yesterday.But Lucy Powell, Labour’s deputy leader, has delivered an implicit reprimand to the health secretary

3 days ago
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Reform council’s plan to shut eight care homes ‘a betrayal of local people’

A Reform UK-led council plan to shut eight of its residential care homes has been condemned as “a betrayal of local people”.Days before Christmas, Derbyshire county council announced that the homes would have to close after a proposed sale fell through.The closures have prompted a backlash and have echoes of the furore in Lancashire where the Reform-led council is planning to close five care homes and five day centres and move residents into the private sector.Mick Coppin, a regional organiser of the GMB union, said the Derbyshire plans put vital services and more than 200 jobs at risk.“These closures are nothing short of a betrayal of local people and staff,” Coppin said

3 days ago
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Reform plan to cap aid at £1bn would damage UK’s international influence, critics warn

Plans by Reform UK to slash the aid budget by 90% would not cover existing contributions to global bodies such as the UN and World Bank, shredding Britain’s international influence and risking its standing within those organisations, charities and other parties have warned.Under cuts announced by Nigel Farage in November, overseas aid would be capped at £1bn a year, or about 0.03% of GDP. Keir Starmer’s government is already set to reduce aid from 0.5% of GDP to 0

3 days ago
foodSee all
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Crunchy, tangy and fun: nine summer salad recipes to make this Christmas

4 days ago
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No more kitchen martyrs – a guide to sharing the load at Christmas

4 days ago
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A meat-free Christmas: Chantelle Nicholson’s French mushroom pie, caramelised pear pud and more

5 days ago
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10 of the best Australian sparkling wines for every budget

6 days ago
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Cosmopolitan Christmas: Stosie Madi’s French-African-Lebanese Christmas lunch – recipes

6 days ago
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From a showstopping pavlova to a £7 sherry: what top chefs bring to Christmas dinner

7 days ago