Josh Hazlewood ruled out of Ashes opener but England’s Mark Wood is fit

A picture


Josh Hazlewood has been ruled out of the first Ashes Test after a second scan on the hamstring injury he initially reported during the recent Sheffield Shield match between New South Wales and Victoria found a low-grade tear.The news came hours after England announced that scans on Mark Wood, whose own participation in the opening Test had been thrown into doubt after he reported stiffness in his left hamstring on the first day of their warm-up game against the Lions at Lilac Hill, had found no damage.Hazlewood’s injury is a significant blow for an Australia side already dealing with the absence of their captain, Pat Cummins, because of lumbar bone stress.Only Mitchell Starc of their three frontline seamers remains available for selection when the series gets under way in Perth on 21 November.Sean Abbott, who was named in the Australia squad and injured his hamstring in the same Sheffield Shield game as Hazlewood, has also dropped out.

Michael Neser was added to the first Test squad on Saturday as cover.“Josh Hazlewood underwent repeat imaging today that has confirmed a hamstring strain injury,” Cricket Australia said in a statement.“Initial scans on Wednesday were clear of muscle strain however follow-up imaging today has confirmed the injury.“Early imaging can occasionally underestimate low-grade muscle injuries.As a result, Hazlewood will not travel to Perth and has been ruled out of the first Ashes Test match.

”Hazlewood, who turns 35 on the day the Ashes series is due to end, had looked to be in superb form in the recent white-ball series against India.But his fitness has been a cause of increasing concern in recent seasons and he missed three of the five Tests against India last year with a side strain.By the start of the second Ashes Test in Brisbane he will have sat out 43% of his country’s last 30 home Tests, dating back to the start of the 2019-20 season, with a variety of ailments.The update means England fans who went to bed on Friday fearing they would wake to news that one of their team’s key bowlers was out of the Ashes opener will instead find that their opponents are dealing with that disappointment instead, after Wood was cleared to return to training.“Following precautionary scans on Friday, England fast bowler Mark Wood has been cleared of any concerns regarding his left hamstring,” the England & Wales Cricket Board said in a statement.

“Wood will continue to train as planned in the buildup to the first Test in Perth,”The 33-year-old was sitting out the third and final day of England’s game against the Lions, but will be available for selection when the first Test gets under way at Perth Stadium on Friday,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 promotion“He was fairly confident that it was going to be nothing serious, and he’s received that positive news, so he’s all up and about and full of energy at the moment,” said his teammate Brydon Carse,“He’s got a huge amount of resilience, if you look back at some of the setbacks he’s had over his career, to keep coming out and keep going through the processes to get back out on the field,It shows the sort of character that he has.

”Wood’s fitness will come as a huge relief to an England camp that has identified express-pace bowling as their most likely route to success in the Ashes, carefully nursing the injury-prone quick as well as Jofra Archer through a succession of injuries and back to full fitness in time to join the squad in Australia.Carse, whose involvement across the first two days against the Lions was limited to facing three balls with the bat late on Friday after reporting stomach issues the previous morning, played a full part in the game’s conclusion after making a complete recovery, helping England to beat their understudies by five wickets.The Lions next return to Lilac Hill to face a Cricket Australia XI, a game that also starts on Friday.They will do so without Rehan Ahmed, who has been ruled out of the remainder of their tour of Australia because of a right lower leg strain and flew home on Saturday.
politicsSee all
A picture

Trump’s targeting of alleged drug vessels strains UK-US intelligence ties

It is an intelligence relationship that predates even the Five Eyes: the UKUSA alliance that began, naturally enough, in secret in 1946. But this week the strain of trying to be the closest security ally to a freewheeling White House has begun to show.Britain, it emerged, had quietly suspended intelligence cooperation with the US in the Caribbean because London does not consider the deadly US military campaign against ships accused of drug trafficking to be in line with international law.That amounts to an extraordinary open fissure in a close working relationship at a time when the US is increasing its military buildup, expanding its controversial campaign in the region with an attempt to threaten Venezuela.“I’m not sure if there is a previous example of this happening in the public domain

A picture

Britons living abroad: tell us your views on UK politics today

The last decade in British politics has been marked by instability and fragmentation, with six prime ministers in ten years, and Nigel Farage’s Reform party now leading in the polls.A study this month from King’s College London and Ipsos found that 84 percent of people now say the UK feels divided, up from 74 percent in 2020.Polling on voter intention shows a fracturing of the political landscape as people abandon two-party politics – with Reform now averaging 31 percent, Labour 18 percent, the Conservatives 16 percent, Green Party 14 percent and Liberal Democrats 12 percent.We want to hear from Brits living abroad. How do you think UK politics has changed since you left the country? Does anything surprise you about events in the UK? How does living abroad shape your views on UK politics? Do you have concerns?You can tell us about viewing UK politics from abroad herePlease include as much detail as possible

A picture

Your Party receives ‘small portion’ of withheld supporters’ donations

The leftwing Your Party, set up by Jeremy Corbyn and Zarah Sultana, is embroiled in another public row over donations to the party.A statement from Corbyn along with Shockat Adam MP, Adnan Hussain MP, Ayoub Khan MP and Iqbal Mohamed MP states that hundreds of thousands of pounds were donated to the party “by supporters in good faith, but have since remained beyond its reach”, which they describe as being “extremely frustrating and disheartening”.It added a “small portion” of the funds was transferred to the party on Thursday which they said was “insufficient” and they will continue to pursue the immediate transfer of all the money donated.The statement posted on X by the independent alliance of MPs was not signed by Sultana and comes days after the Guardian reported on the former Labour MP and Corbyn’s quarrel over hundreds of thousands of pounds in donations.Sultana offered to transfer £600,000 from a company the party’s founders set up earlier this year, only to be rebuffed by allies of the former Labour leader who accused her of playing “political games” with supporters’ money

A picture

Starmer stands by McSweeney and says he has been ‘assured no briefings against ministers done from No 10’ – as it happened

Keir Starmer has said he “of course” retains full confidence in his chief of staff, Morgan McSweeney, PA Media reports.I will post the full quote shortly.At PMQs yesterday Starmer dodged a question about whether he had full confidence in McSweeney, although No 10 subsequently said he did.Some ministers and MPs want to see McSweeney sacked.We’re closing this blog now, here’s a summary of the day’s main developments:The prime minister has attempted to draw a line under the briefing row, saying he has “been assured that no briefing against ministers was done from No 10” and that he has “full confidence” in his chief of staff, Morgan McSweeneyWes Streeting, the health secretary, has said that he doesn’t know and doesn’t care whether Starmer is trying to identify the No 10 figure briefing against him

A picture

Starmer defies calls to sack chief of staff, claiming briefing didn’t come from No 10

Keir Starmer has attempted to draw a line under extraordinary briefings by his allies that No 10 feared Wes Streeting could launch a leadership coup, insisting he had been reassured it “didn’t come from Downing Street”.The prime minister gathered his senior staff to stress that briefings against cabinet ministers were “unacceptable” after apologising to Streeting for what had happened on Wednesday.However, his spokesperson said Starmer also accepted assurances that No 10 staff had not briefed against Streeting and that he stood by his chief of staff, Morgan McSweeney.Since the furore over No 10’s fears about a leadership challenge from Streeting, first revealed by the Guardian on Tuesday, there had been calls from Labour MPs for McSweeney’s resignation.One senior Labour source described McSweeney as “the great survivor” after the Downing Street gathering

A picture

Labour must accept that the two-party age is over and embrace PR | Letters

Andy Beckett suggests the case for proportional representation may become irresistible (Britain’s two-party politics is fragmenting: what unintended consequences await?, 6 November). The strength of the case is not in doubt; the issue is lack of political will to legislate. Perhaps there is more will now than ever, with results from the 2024 general election and wide-ranging Electoral Calculus forecasts pushing parties currently against proportional representation to reconsider.Labour’s position is clearly crucial. Based on the forecasts, PR offers Labour a hedge against a doomsday scenario of losing up to 90% of its seats