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England look to dodge lightning strike after familiar crumble in opening ODI

about 7 hours ago
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At the time and taken in isolation England’s opening ODI against New Zealand on Sunday seemed wild, chaotic, bizarre,As they batted at the start of the game wickets fell to the first ball, the ninth, the 12th, and – except for the period when the brilliant Harry Brook was joined at the crease by Jamie Overton – fairly regularly thereafter,Beyond that pair, the rest of the team scored 25,But to anyone who witnessed the start of their last series in the format, against South Africa at Headingley last month – when they lost the toss, were put in to bat and rolled for 131 – it was a very familiar kind of freakishness,Indeed in 12 bilateral ODI series since their 2022 T20 World Cup win they have won the first game twice and lost it nine times (one was abandoned) – and in all but one of those defeats they batted first and posted a score that was easily chased down, losing by six wickets, eight wickets, four, seven, eight, four, seven and most recently four.

In that time they have also played two global tournaments in the format, and lost their first games in both.Last month Brendon McCullum produced a curious defence of England’s planned preparation for the Ashes.“I think over the last three years since I’ve been here we’ve won every first Test of every Test series away, following the exact preparation we’re going to follow,” he said.“It doesn’t guarantee us anything, but it’s the familiarity with that preparation which gives us a chance.” If that is his logic, he must now be analysing the way the team prepares for ODI series and working out how to change everything about it.

There are many reasons why England are ranked as low as eighth in the world in the 50-over game – 29 of them to be precise, the total number of matches they have lost during the three years that count towards the ICC’s rankings.It is not only in opening games that they have made a habit of failing.But, slightly more encouragingly, since the 2022 World Cup they are 7-6 up in second games, they seem genuinely buoyed under Brook’s captaincy, and they will go into Wednesday’s match against the Kiwis in Hamilton – with Jofra Archer available for selection after his delayed arrival in New Zealand – hoping lightning will not strike twice.In the strictly literal sense this is likely to be true: Hamilton is located in one of the small pockets of the country that remained uncovered by the string of severe weather warnings issued by New Zealand’s MetService on Monday, with high winds, heavy rain and snow falls expected when what they called “a significant storm” makes landfall across the next 24 hours.Some regions remain in a state of emergency from the last one, which hit less than a week ago.

It has not been ideal cricketing weather, but the hope is that the worst of it should have blown over by Wednesday.England: Jamie Smith, Ben Duckett, Joe Root, Jacob Bethell, Harry Brook (c), Jos Buttler (wk), Sam Curran, Jamie Overton, Brydon Carse, Jofra Archer, Adil Rashid.New Zealand: Will Young, Rachin Ravindra, Kane Williamson, Daryl Mitchell, Tom Latham (wk), Michael Bracewell, Mitchell Santner (c), Nathan Smith, Zak Foulkes, Matt Henry, Jacob Duffy.Brook’s takeaway from the first game was that with the bat his side needs to “try to go a little bit harder and knock them off their lengths.That’s something we can take from this game and learn from it.

” Which is easy for him to say – it is something he does stunningly well, but the rest of his squad labour under the distinct disadvantage of not being Harry Brook.In Mount Maunganui however Overton provided an interesting study in this methodology.Having witnessed the complete collapse of England’s top order before coming in at No 8 midway through the 12th over he resolved to bat as Brookishly as possible.He ended up with 46, his highest score in List A cricket.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“It’s just trying to go hard in your own way,” he said.

“Brooky obviously moves around in the crease a bit and tries to put the bowler off, and I tried to do that with some success,There were times when I was thinking: ‘What am I doing here? I don’t know what I’m doing,’ I normally don’t move around in the crease, whereas on Sunday I felt like because the wicket was doing a lot [I should] try to move across or step back,It’s one of those which was trial and error,I actually found out it will suit my game going forward.

In these games you’ve got to learn what you can, and I feel like I came out with a little more knowledge of my own game.”In a big defeat this was a small win, and perhaps it reflected a fresh approach to the game, one more focused on protecting and improving himself, after the red-ball retirement Overton announced at the start of last month.“I feel happy with the decision I made,” Overton said.“My body feels great at the moment.Obviously I’m not going to be involved in the Ashes, the thing you grow up wanting to play.

But personally my body is the main thing and it was just trying to do the right thing at the right moment.I made my decision, and I’m very happy with what I’ve done.”
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Oil firm Petrofac enters administration, putting 2,000 jobs at risk; Greencore-Bakkavor food giant deal faces UK competition concerns – as it happened

Time to wrap up.Wall Street shares have scaled new all-time highs, as rising expectations of a US-China trade deal encouraged risk-taking by investors, in a week dominated by Big Tech results and a widely-expected Federal Reserve interest rate cut on Wednesday.The tech-heavy Nasdaq rose by 1.6%, the Dow Jones gained 0.5% and the S&P 500 climbed by nearly 1%

about 3 hours ago
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RBA governor dismisses jobs fears but hints at rates hold after inflation uptick

The Reserve Bank governor has dismissed warnings of rising unemployment and hinted at an interest rate hold, saying the labour market will not “fall off a cliff”.Michele Bullock said the RBA had been surprised by September’s jump in joblessness and an uptick in inflation but emphasised job creation was slowing broadly as the RBA expected.“There are still jobs being created, just not as many,” Bullock said on Monday night.“We’d always thought [unemployment] would drift up a bit. Maybe it’s drifted up a bit further than we thought, but it’s not a huge amount yet

about 5 hours ago
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Ultra-HD televisions not noticeably better for typical viewer, scientists say

Many modern living rooms are now dominated by a huge television, but researchers say there might be little point in plumping for an ultra-high-definition model.Scientists at the University of Cambridge and Meta, the company that owns Facebook, have found that for an average-sized living room a 4K or 8K screen offers no noticeable benefit over a similarly sized 2K screen of the sort often used in computer monitors and laptops. In other words, there is no tangible difference when it comes to how sharp an image appears to our eyes.“At a certain viewing distance, it doesn’t matter how many pixels you add. It’s just, I suppose, wasteful because your eye can’t really detect it,” said Dr Maliha Ashraf, the first author of the study from the University of Cambridge

about 9 hours ago
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Apple Watch Ultra 3 review: the biggest and best smartwatch for an iPhone

The biggest, baddest and boldest Apple Watch is back for its third generation, adding a bigger screen, longer battery life and satellite messaging for when lost in the wilderness.The Guardian’s journalism is independent. We will earn a commission if you buy something through an affiliate link. Learn more.The Ultra 3 is Apple’s answer to adventure watches such as Garmin’s Fenix 8 Pro while being a full smartwatch for the iPhone with all the trimmings

about 12 hours ago
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Steven Finn: ‘Saying I was not selectable was clumsy language and it damaged me’

In his candid new book, the former England fast bowler talks about the lasting mental turmoil that ended his 2013-14 Ashes tour“I couldn’t get the words out because I was crying,” Steven Finn says as he remembers how, hunched over a microphone, he stared at the last lines he was meant to read aloud for the audio version of his raw and revealing new book. Emotion clogged his throat after he had belonged to three Ashes-winning England squads, while never feeling he fulfilled his immense wicket-taking talent, and having ended up lost and broken on the 2013-14 tour of Australia.Finn tried again but stifled crying choked his reading. He looked up and nodded at the encouraging producer. His mouth almost crumpled but, this time, he got through it

about 4 hours ago
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Cheltenham festival switch to Saturday a gamble not worth taking

For the fourth year running, Cheltenham saw an increased attendance at its season-opening Showcase meeting over the weekend, as 31,125 racegoers made their way to the home of jumps racing. The total was a record since what was previously a midweek meeting moved to a Friday/Saturday slot in 2007, while the 21,113 crowd on Saturday was also a record for the second day of the meeting.It was a very positive start, in other words, to Guy Lavender’s first full season as the chief executive at Cheltenham, and the man tasked with turning around the sudden – and still largely unexplained – slump in attendance at the festival meeting over the last three years.Lavender, who joined Jockey Club Racecourses after a seven-year stint as chief executive of the MCC, spent much of Friday and Saturday touring the enclosures to get feedback from spectators on the changes to the customer experience that he has implemented so far, such as the removal of most restrictions on the areas where racegoers can consume alcohol and (small) reductions in the price of a pint.And he was also, perhaps, sounding out early reactions to an idea which was initially floated in the Racing Post last week, that the festival meeting should switch from its current Tuesday-to-Friday slot to a Wednesday-to-Saturday schedule instead

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Social landlords in England now forced to fix emergencies within 24 hours

about 11 hours ago
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NHS trialling rapid blood test to help diagnose sepsis and meningitis in children

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NHS leaders warn of longer waiting times if demand for extra £3bn not met

about 19 hours ago
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Over 1,200 health leaders call for swift passage of UK tobacco and vapes bill

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