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Matthew Potts poised to play in fifth Ashes Test after England rule out Gus Atkinson

about 13 hours ago
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Matthew Potts is poised to play his first Ashes Test in Sydney after England confirmed that Gus Atkinson has been ruled out of the series finale.Atkinson limped off with a hamstring issue on the second and final day of England’s rollercoaster four-wicket victory in Melbourne and scans undertaken in the past 24 hours have ruled out his further participation.With Jofra Archer and Mark Wood having similarly seen their tours end early, it leaves Potts as the last unused seamer from the original squad of 16.Wood’s knee injury saw Surrey’s Matthew Fisher moved across from the shadow Lions tour after the second Test in Brisbane as cover.Provided Brydon Carse and Josh Tongue recover sufficiently during the seven-day break between Tests – and England continue with Will Jacks as the spin option at No 8 – then the fast-medium Potts in for Atkinson may well be the only change from the XI that prevented the whitewash.

Jacks went unused with the ball at the Melbourne Cricket Ground – not a single over of spin was sent down by either side – but England like the depth he offers their batting, such that even another seamer-friendly pitch being served up in Sydney on 4 January is unlikely to see them change tack.What transpires here remains to be seen.Last year’s Test between Australia and India was completed in three days, with 185 the highest total in the match and just one of the 34 wickets to fall was claimed by a spinner.But plenty of caterwauling about England’s two-day heist in Melbourne – plus the second round of financial losses this incurred for Cricket Australia after a similarly quickfire series opener in Perth – means there is pressure on the Sydney Cricket Ground to ensure the fifth Test goes deeper.“I think people in Sydney will be knowing full well the spotlight will be on them in a day or two, and I’m really hoping the SCG wicket performs well for us,” said Todd Greenberg, the CA chief executive.

“It’d be a good way to finish at the SCG with a really great Test match to finish what’s been an amazing series.I know there’s been some short Tests, but it’s been an incredible series, and it’ll be remembered for a long period of time for a variety of reasons.“But I’m hopeful and confident Sydney will give us a good wicket.”Were Potts to get the nod for England, it would be his 11th Test cap but a first for 12 months after playing against New Zealand in Hamilton last December.The 27-year-old has 36 wickets at 29 to date and made the cut after a shoulder injury forced Chris Woakes into retirement.

Atkinson leaves his first Ashes tour with six wickets at 47 runs apiece – figures that reflect a mixed campaign overall,
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Silver and other precious metals hit new peaks before falling back; oil price rises after Trump-Zelenskyy meeting – business live

Global stocks are on course to end the year at all-time highs, while the dollar is trading close to a three-month low, as markets are expecting further interest rate cuts from the US Federal Reserve next year.The MSCI’s world equity index is flat, leaving the global stock benchmark with a near-21% gain so far this year, after Wall Street hit record highs at the end of last week – dubbed a Santa rally.European shares on the Stoxx 600 index briefly touched an all-time intra-day peak this morning. The FTSE 100 index in London is broadly flat (up 3 points at 9,873), with the world’s leading silver miner Fresnillo leading gains, up 2.6%, while defence shares are down on Ukraine peace hopes

about 3 hours ago
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Influx of cheap Chinese imports could drive down UK inflation, economists say

The UK is poised for an influx of cheap Chinese imports that could bring down inflation amid the fallout from Donald Trump’s global trade war, leading economists have said.After figures showed China’s trade surplus surpassed $1tn (£750bn) despite Washington’s tariff policies hitting exports to the US, the Bank of England said the UK was among the nations emerging as alternative destinations for the goods.Stephen Millard, a deputy director at the National Institute of Economic and Social Research, said: “There is an expectation that given the high tariffs the US are imposing on China, that China will divert its trade elsewhere and one of those places will be the UK.”This month Catherine Mann, an external member of the Bank’s rate setting monetary policy committee, told MPs on the Treasury committee there were early signs of trade diversion affecting UK inflation.“Import prices have started to moderate on the back of sterling appreciation and some of the spillover of the diversion of Chinese products from the US tariff burdens to other places, including to our docks

about 3 hours ago
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Louis Gerstner, man credited with turning around IBM, dies aged 83

Louis Gerstner, the businessman credited with turning around IBM, has died aged 83, the company announced on Sunday.Gerstner was chair and CEO of IBM from 1993 to 2002, a time when the company was struggling for relevance in the face of competition from rivals such as Microsoft and Sun Microsystems.After becoming the first outsider to run the company, Gerstner abandoned a plan to split IBM, which was known as Big Blue, into a number of autonomous “Baby Blues” that would have focused on specific product areas such as processors or software.IBM’s current chair and CEO, Arvind Krishna, told staff in an email on Sunday that this decision was key to the company’s survival because “Lou understood that clients didn’t want fragmented technology, they wanted integrated solutions.”“Lou arrived at IBM at a moment when the company’s future was genuinely uncertain,” he wrote

about 21 hours ago
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Nvidia insists it isn’t Enron, but its AI deals are testing investor faith

Nvidia is, in crucial ways, nothing like Enron – the Houston energy giant that imploded through multibillion-dollar accounting fraud in 2001. Nor is it similar to companies such as Lucent or Worldcom that folded during the dotcom bubble.But the fact that it needs to reiterate this to its investors is less than ideal.Now worth more than $4tn (£3tn), Nvidia makes the specialised technology that powers the world’s AI surge: silicon chips and software packages that train and host systems such as ChatGPT. Its products fill datacentres from Norway to New Jersey

1 day ago
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Tom Jenkins’s best sport photographs of 2025

This is a selection of some of my favourite pictures taken at events I’ve covered this year, quite a few of which haven’t been published before. Several have been chosen for their news value, others purely for their aesthetic value, while some are here just because there’s a nice story behind them.Lens 30mm, 1/1600 f4.5, ISO 5000I’m starting off with a bit of chaos caused by one of Arsenal’s famous attacking corner routines, this time at the north London Derby early in the year. As a photographer I can plan around these, knowing with a fair level of certainty where the ball is going to be played

about 6 hours ago
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I was there: Europe’s dramatic Ryder Cup win signed off a strange week

I was out by the practice green late afternoon on the Monday of the Ryder Cup, and so was Bryson DeChambeau. He was on his own, signing autographs for the handful of people on the other side of the railings, and there was this one woman leaning over towards him, a bottle blonde, late middle-aged, in a tight white dress. She was only a couple of feet away from him but she was screaming in his ear like she was trying to reach someone across the far side of the golf course. “We love you Bryson! Bryson! We love you! We love you for everything you’ve done for the Donald! We love you for everything you’ve done for the Donald!”It was a long, strange week, and when I think back on it now the golf is entirely overwhelmed by technicolour memories of the weird scenes around the grounds of Bethpage Black and in the surrounding town of Farmingdale. I wish I could say that the things I remember best are that approach shot Scottie Scheffler hit from 180 yards at the 10th, or the 40ft putt Rory McIlroy made on the 6th, or Jon Rahm’s chip-in from the rough at the 8th

about 6 hours ago
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DIY chains enjoy bumper year as UK property market slows

about 3 hours ago
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UK accounting body to halt remote exams amid AI cheating

about 6 hours ago
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From shrimp Jesus to erotic tractors: how viral AI slop took over the internet

2 days ago
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More than 20% of videos shown to new YouTube users are ‘AI slop’, study finds

2 days ago
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Matthew Potts poised to play in fifth Ashes Test after England rule out Gus Atkinson

about 13 hours ago
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Patriots clinch AFC East as Eagles edge Bills while Browns shatter Steelers: NFL week 17 – as it happened

about 14 hours ago