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Remorseless Australian bowling onslaught blows away West Indies in second Test

about 11 hours ago
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The second Test in Grenada finished like the first in Barbados, with a batting performance as shambolic and uninspired from the home side as their bowling had been impressive.Everybody is bored of the eulogies for West Indies cricket: we’ve all been reading them for 25 years, and some of us have been writing them for what feels as long.But it doesn’t matter how many times you’ve seen The Shawshank Redemption, you still feel a pang of sadness when Tommy Williams steps out to meet Warden Norton for a midnight chat.Australia shot down West Indies with as little remorse, all out for 143 in less than 35 overs on day four, the visitors winning by 133 runs at the Grenada National Stadium and going 2-0 up to win the series.It’s not that the scoreline is a surprise, given the resource disparity between the teams and administrations, but it still feels wrong to feel that a Test side has no chance of chasing once a target approaches 250.

West Indies had bowled well when Australia resumed at 221-7 to begin day four, with the two Josephs, Alzarri and Shamar, collectively having Pat Cummins nick behind from his first ball of the day, trap Alex Carey for only four additional runs to his overnight score, then knock Josh Hazlewood’s stumps out.All up Australia had added 22.But the key part was that a few balls kept low while still offering lateral seam.With 277 to get, nobody had confidence in the West Indies’ batting, least of all the West Indies batters.John Campbell forgot that feet can move and was nailed in front by Josh Hazlewood before most people had resumed their seats.

Kraigg Brathwaite in his hundredth Test went nowhere, poking around to add seven to his first-innings duck before nicking Beau Webster’s medium pace.Keacy Carty got a fierce working over, fingers turned into cevapcici by repeated blows to the gloves, before nicking Mitchell Starc.Brandon King got a Pat Cummins special, angled in, beating the outside edge to hit off stump.Hello, 4-33, goodbye contest.It’s strange that a region where life revolves around the ocean should produce a team that is so far out of its depth.

But it’s not for lack of trying.Caribbean long-form cricket is an afterthought domestically, and the cupboard is bare.The best first-class average in the squad is 34.Braithwate is surely at the terminus of a long decline, but has kept being picked on experience for want of a competitor.Campbell, Carty, and King are short-form players trying to adapt.

Shai Hope had some Test triumphs in another life, but has returned from the white-ball Pet Sematary possessed by the accursed spirit of a desperate slogger.Roston Chase had a few moments in his 34, including a mango-sweet flick off the pads that took six runs from Starc, but the captain’s 38-run stand with Hope was as good as it got for his team, and if anything, Hope’s innings of 17 looked worse than some of the knocks worth fewer.After a few bits of galloping nonsense, he pulled Hazlewood straight up the chimney for the bowler to wait underneath.Starc swung his way past another Chase flick, and at 86-6 that was it.A No 8 slogging two sixes from his first two balls might spark excitement with 50 runs to get, but it only speaks of desperation when there’s 180 to go.

The very next ball after Alzarri Joseph’s opening clouts against Lyon, Starc produced a shooter on the angle to get his third, Justin Greaves stranded as it smashed his front pad.The Josephs and Jayden Seales hit six sixes from Lyon, but he got them all out to end the game, and now is two wickets from passing Glenn McGrath’s Test tally of 563, with his average at a 13-year low of 30.14.Sign up to The SpinSubscribe to our cricket newsletter for our writers' thoughts on the biggest stories and a review of the week’s actionafter newsletter promotionIt was a very even bowling performance, both innings with nobody taking more than three wickets or less than one.That’s easier when the opposition don’t have the tools to counter your own, and any move will work eventually.

In a low-scoring series, Australia are still having their batting struggles, but West Indies would give anything for batting that only struggles that much.In a scheduled pink-ball Test in Jamaica, one more humiliation is on the cards.The only hope is that being this low eventually creates the drive, at home and in the international community, to decide on a path towards something better.It’s a long way off.West Indies may have to swim through a river of filth to come out clean.

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The spirit of the G8 ‘make poverty history’ summit of 2005 seems long gone | Heather Stewart

Twenty years ago this weekend, the leaders of the world’s most powerful countries, chaired by Tony Blair, gathered at the Scottish golf resort of Gleneagles and made a series of historic promises on debt relief and overseas aid.It was the culmination of a long-running campaign involving charities, churches and celebrities and benefited from the passionate commitment of Gordon Brown, for whom international development is a lifelong cause.A few days before, more than 200,000 campaigners had gathered in Edinburgh and formed a noisy, joyful human chain, demanding that the world’s leaders “make poverty history”.As a result of the momentum created and the promises made, international aid increasedand 36 countries eventually had their crippling overseas debts drastically reduced.There are many reasons it would be hard to envisage a Gleneagles summit today

about 21 hours ago
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Anger as Nationwide refuses members a binding vote on boss’s 43% pay hike

Nationwide is under fire for refusing to give members a binding vote on a 43% pay rise for its chief executive, Debbie Crosbie, that could mean her pay package reaches up to £7m.Campaigners say it leaves the building society’s members with fewer rights than shareholders of listed UK banks and exposes a worrying “loophole” in building society rules.Nationwide says that after its £2.9bn takeover of Virgin Money, Crosbie’s pay should compete with that offered by banks such as Lloyds and NatWest. However, the board is offering members only an “advisory” vote at its annual general meeting (AGM) on 25 July, meaning there are no repercussions if they reject it

about 21 hours ago
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Qantas attack reveals one phone call is all it takes to crack cybersecurity’s weakest link: humans

All it can take is a phone call. That’s what Qantas learned this week when the personal information of up to 6 million customers was stolen by cybercriminals after attackers targeted an offshore IT call centre, enabling them to access a third-party system.It is the latest in a series of cyber-attacks on large companies in Australia involving the personal information of millions of Australians, after the attack on Optus, Medibank and, most recently, Australia’s $4t superannuation sector.The Qantas attack came just days after US authorities warned the airline sector had been targeted by a group known as Scattered Spider, using social engineering techniques, including impersonating employees or contractors to deceive IT help desks into granting access, and bypassing multi-factor authentication.While companies may spend millions keeping their systems secure and software up-to-date to plug known vulnerabilities, hackers can turn to this form of attack to target, often, the weakest link – humans

1 day ago
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Buy now, pay later loans will now affect US credit scores – what does that mean for consumers?

A new change to buy now, pay later loans means borrowers’ credit scores may see a change, which has worried some users of the loans.“I have a feeling that I’m just not going to have as much access to spending power and zero or really low APR rates,” said Nicole Nitta, a 31-year-old Las Vegas resident, who uses BNPL and shared that she already does not have great credit.Fico, the credit scoring company used by most US lenders, announced on 23 June that they would include BNPL loans, which play “an increasingly important role in consumers’ financial lives”, to help lenders more “accurately evaluate credit readiness”.For users of companies like Affirm, Afterpay and Klarna, the new calculation could benefit them because it allows them to build their credit – if, of course, they pay back the loans on time, experts say.Nitta first used BNPL for essentials in 2021, like non-perishable food items

2 days ago
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How has Ryanair changed its cabin baggage rule – and will other airlines do it too?

For all but the most seasoned travellers the metal bag sizers used by budget airlines have become an instrument of fear because of the heavy financial penalty incurred if hand baggage is too big to fit.But as the summer holiday season gets under way there is some good news for those who struggle to travel light: Ryanair has announced it is increasing the size of the small “personal” bag you can take in the cabin for free by 20%.Yes. But it comes as airlines fall into line behind a new EU guaranteed bag size of 40cm by 30cm by 15cm. The current dimensions of the Ryanair free carry-on limit are 40cm by 25cm by 20cm – below the EU rule

2 days ago
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Leaders of Russia and China snub Brics summit in sign group’s value may be waning

Russia and China are not sending their leaders to a Brics summit starting in Brazil on Sunday in what may be a sign that the group’s recent expansion has reduced its ideological value to the two founding members.China’s 72-year-old leader, Xi Jinping, has attended Brics summits for the past 12 years. No official reason has been given for sending the premier, Li Qiang, other than scheduling conflicts.Russia’s president, Vladimir Putin, is facing an international criminal court arrest warrant and may have decided not to travel to Rio to avoid embarrassing the summit hosts, who are signatories to the ICC statute.Mongolia has been in an acrimonious legal dispute with the ICC after it did not act on the warrant when Putin visited last year

2 days ago
politicsSee all
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Keir Starmer should be bold and consider a wealth tax, Neil Kinnock says

about 23 hours ago
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‘I was naive in being hopeful’: Labour voters feel let down after first year

about 23 hours ago
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Big pay days and top of the polls: Nigel Farage’s first year as an MP

1 day ago
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‘A mess of our own making’: Labour mayors reflect on Starmer’s first year

1 day ago
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Reform MP James McMurdock resigns whip pending ‘business propriety’ investigation

1 day ago
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Reform UK puts teenagers in charge of vital public services

2 days ago