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No ‘funky rugby’: new England coach Lee Blackett targets substance over style

about 6 hours ago
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To say England have been through a few attack coaches in recent times is an understatement.The latest cab off the rank, Lee Blackett, is the 11th individual to take on the role in nine years but it may just be that the national team have found the ideal catalyst to enhance their chances at the next Men’s Rugby World Cup in Australia in 2027.Blackett, 42, auditioned successfully for the job in the summer tour of Argentina and the US, where England scored 13 tries in three Tests, and he has emerged as the big winner in Steve Borthwick’s latest cabinet reshuffle with Richard Wigglesworth switching to defence and Joe El-Abd helping out with the forwards.Fresh from helping to steer Bath to Premiership and Challenge Cup titles last season, Blackett has been recruited to add further zest to England’s attacking game, starting with their opening autumn series international against Australia on 1 November.With about 20 Tests between now and the next World Cup, England will be keen for him to hit the ground running.

Blackett, for one, believes there is more than enough time for England to put together a compelling backline blend, with five campaigns – autumn international series, Six Nations and summer Tests – to come over the next two years.“Do I think we’ve got enough time? Yes.Five campaigns is enough to see people, it’s enough to develop our game, definitely.”The personable Blackett, who played for Rotherham and Leeds before turning to coaching, fully deserves his call-up having been left to resurrect his career three years ago after the financial collapse of Wasps where he was director of rugby.He has always been a sharp-eyed student of the game and his creative partnership with the masterful Finn Russell at Bath proved beneficial for all concerned.

Blackett, a mood-enhancing dressing-room presence, certainly helped to broaden Bath’s outlook and will encourage players to venture outside their comfort zone.“A psychologist once told me that those environments which say ‘This is the way we do it’ don’t have a growth mindset.My biggest fear as a coach is becoming a dinosaur.If someone says, ‘He’s past it,’ that’s my big fear.So I’m constantly looking at the game, seeing where it’s going and seeing if I’m missing something.

”A podcast chat with the former England international James Haskell also inadvertently helped to remind him of his overriding coaching objective,“Hask said: ‘You always gave us confidence,’ That is what I want to do,I want players running out confident, I want players running out there going, ‘If I see something, this coach backs me,’ I don’t want us to miss opportunities when they are there for us.

”Any number of England fans will be shouting “hallelujah” by now.For assorted reasons, until this year, England have tended to lurched from one attacking philosophy to another and have employed a battalion of specialist coaches.Eddie Jones, Glen Ella, Ed Robinson, Sam Vesty, Scott Wisemantel, Rory Teague, Simon Amor, Martin Gleeson, Nick Evans and Wigglesworth have all led the attack at some stage and if Blackett stays until the 2027 World Cup he will be the longest serving of the lot.That will depend, ultimately, on England’s results with Blackett stressing that England will not be prioritising “funky rugby” over winning matches.“I’ll be doing whatever I feel is best to win us the game.

I’ll be looking at the opposition and where I feel we can get an advantage,If you think that’s funky … I just want something that works to win us the game,”Sign up to The BreakdownThe latest rugby union news and analysis, plus all the week's action reviewedafter newsletter promotionAs yet, though, it remains unclear who exactly England’s on‑field tactical general will be, with George Ford, Fin Smith and Marcus Smith all competing for the starting fly-half jersey and Owen Farrell, for now, waiting in the wings,“Any attack coach or head coach always wants one key thing: make sure you’ve got good 10s because they make such a big difference,” Blackett said,“We’re really lucky.

A couple of the guys are going to be disappointed but, for me, having three of them competing is going to make them better.They’re all going to have to be at their best.”Leicester’s recently appointed defence coach, Mike Forshaw, meanwhile, has left his role at the Tigers for personal family reasons.
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Google Pixel 10 Pro review: one of the very best smaller phones

The Pixel 10 Pro is Google’s best phone that is still a pocketable, easy-to-handle size, taking the excellent Pixel 10 and beefing it up in the camera department.The Guardian’s journalism is independent. We will earn a commission if you buy something through an affiliate link. Learn more.That makes it a contender for the top smaller phone with Apple’s iPhone 17 Pro, offering the best of Google’s hardware without an enormous screen

about 20 hours ago
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Musk’s Grok AI bot falsely suggests police misrepresented footage of far-right rally in London

The Metropolitan police has had to counter false suggestions by the artificial intelligence on Elon Musk’s X platform that the force passed off footage from 2020 as being from Saturday’s far-right rally in the city.The claim by the chatbot Grok was in answer to an X user’s query about where and when footage of police clashing with crowds was filmed.Grok, which has had a track record of giving false and misleading answers, replied: “This footage appears to be from an anti-lockdown protest in London’s Trafalgar Square on 26 September 2020, during clashes between demonstrators and police over Covid restrictions.”The answer was quickly picked up and amplified by X users, including the Daily Telegraph columnist Allison Pearson, who tweeted: “This was my suspicion,” before asking: “Did the Met claim footage of clashes in summer 2020 took place yesterday?”The Met responded to her by saying that the footage was filmed on Saturday shortly before 3pm at the junction of Whitehall and Horse Guards Avenue.“It is quite obviously not Trafalgar Square as is suggested in the AI response you have referenced, but for the avoidance of further doubt we have provided a labelled comparison to confirm the location,” the force added

1 day ago
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Elon Musk calls for dissolution of parliament at far-right rally in London

Elon Musk has called for a “dissolution of parliament” and a “change of government” in the UK while addressing a crowd attending a “unite the kingdom” rally in London, organised by the far-right activist Stephen Yaxley-Lennon, known as Tommy Robinson.Musk, the owner of X, who dialled in via a video link and spoke to Robinson while thousands watched and listened, also railed against the “woke mind virus” and told the crowd that “violence is coming” and that “you either fight back or you die”.He said: “I really think that there’s got to be a change of government in Britain. You can’t – we don’t have another four years, or whenever the next election is, it’s too long.“Something’s got to be done

2 days ago
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UK workers wary of AI despite Starmer’s push to increase uptake, survey finds

It is the work shortcut that dare not speak its name. A third of people do not tell their bosses about their use of AI tools amid fears their ability will be questioned if they do.Research for the Guardian has revealed that only 13% of UK adults openly discuss their use of AI with senior staff at work and close to half think of it as a tool to help people who are not very good at their jobs to get by.Amid widespread predictions that many workers face a fight for their jobs with AI, polling by Ipsos found that among more than 1,500 British workers aged 16 to 75, 33% said they did not discuss their use of AI to help them at work with bosses or other more senior colleagues. They were less coy with people at the same level, but a quarter of people believe “co-workers will question my ability to perform my role if I share how I use AI”

3 days ago
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AI content needs to be labelled to protect us | Letters

Marcus Beard’s article on artificial intelligence slopaganda (No, that wasn’t Angela Rayner dancing and rapping: you’ll need to understand AI slopaganda, 9 September) highlights a growing problem – what happens when we no longer know what is true? What will the erosion of trust do to our society?The rise of deepfakes is increasing at an ever faster rate due to the ease at which anyone can create realistic images, audio and even video. Generative AI models have now become so sophisticated that a recent survey showed that less than 1% of respondents could correctly identify the best deepfake images and videos.This content is being used to manipulate, defraud, abuse and mislead people. Fraud using AI cost the US $12.3bn in 2023 and Deloitte predicts that could reach $40bn by 2027

4 days ago
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ChatGPT may start alerting authorities about youngsters considering suicide, says CEO

The company behind ChatGPT could start calling the authorities when young users talk seriously about suicide, its co-founder has said.Sam Altman raised fears that as many as 1,500 people a week could be discussing taking their own lives with the chatbot before doing so.The chief executive of San Francisco-based OpenAI, which operates the chatbot with an estimated 700 million global users, said the decision to train the system so the authorities were alerted in such emergencies was not yet final. But he said it was “very reasonable for us to say in cases of, young people talking about suicide, seriously, where we cannot get in touch with the parents, we do call authorities”.Altman highlighted the possible change in an interview with the podcaster Tucker Carlson on Wednesday, which came after OpenAI and Altman were sued by the family of Adam Raine, a 16-year-old from California who killed himself after what his family’s lawyer called “months of encouragement from ChatGPT”

5 days ago
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Cycling teams could boycott races involving Israel-Premier Tech after Vuelta chaos

about 9 hours ago
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Kurtis Marschall shines light on high jump camaraderie in epic Tokyo final

about 9 hours ago
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Football agent Kia Joorabchian’s big racing spend needs to start paying off

about 10 hours ago
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AFL finals: where the Geelong v Hawthorn preliminary final will be won and lost | Martin Pegan

about 11 hours ago
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‘A nobody who became really good’: Gout Gout takes his bow on the world stage

about 11 hours ago
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World Athletics Championships 2025: Duplantis claims pole vault world record as Kambundji wins 100m hurdles – as it happened

about 11 hours ago