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England’s youngest-ever captain Bethell happy to ‘go in at deep end’ against Ireland

about 12 hours ago
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Jacob Bethell is ready for England to “chuck me in the deep end” as he prepares to lead the side for the first time against Ireland on Wednesday, making him the country’s youngest men’s captain.With Harry Brook rested for this quickfire three-match Twenty20 series in Malahide, just north of Dublin, the 21-year-old steps in to continue his brisk rise in international cricket.Bethell made his England debut last September and impressed in his first Test series against New Zealand at the end of the year.Yet to seal a regular place in the red-ball XI, he has become an automatic pick in Brendon McCullum’s white-ball teams.“Baz gave me a ring and said I was going to be skipper,” said Bethell.

“Not a whole lot has been said of why I’ve been chosen for the role.I don’t know the exact thinking of those who are in charge.I guess it’s maybe just a bit of trust, and showing a bit of faith.It will be nice to see how I go under pressure, and I’m sure that the guys that have made the decision would like to see that as well.“I like when things come at a fast pace, it tends to get me up and about.

So I like those situations, doesn’t mean that they always work.But hopefully this one does.”Even with plenty of experienced names in the squad to face Ireland, Bethell’s ascension is in line with the management’s wilder impulses when it comes to selection.He will have to fall back on his previous experience of leading England Under-19s.Ireland Paul Stirling (capt), Ross Adair, Lorcan Tucker (wkt), Harry Tector, Curtis Campher, Ben Calitz, George Dockrell, Graham Hume, Barry McCarthy, Matthew Humphreys, Craig YoungEngland Phil Salt, Jos Buttler (wkt), Jordan Cox, Jacob Bethell (capt), Sam Curran, Tom Banton, Will Jacks, Liam Dawson, Adil Rashid, Luke Wood, Sonny Baker“A very young one,” replied a smiling Bethell when asked what type of captain he is.

“The main thing I’ve looked up to in captains I’ve had previously is how they manage people.Not every tactical decision you make is going to work, but it’s managing the boys well so they feel you’re backing them.I’ve got no preconceived ideas of how I’m going to be.”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 promotionBethell has found form with the bat since he was announced as captain last month, having hit his first professional century in the third ODI against South Africa less than a fortnight ago.“I didn’t play for a while and maybe lost a little bit of rhythm, but felt that rhythm come back about midway through the Hundred so it’s great to be back feeling good.

” He did not get dragged into any detailed Ashes talk: “My head’s firmly screwed on to this series.”Harry Tector and Paul Stirling “are the two main threats with the bat” for Ireland, said Bethell.The hosts enter underprepared having not played since June – a completely different story to England – and will be without the whippy left-arm pace of Josh Little, on the mend from a rib injury.Yet the only completed T20 meeting between these two sides brought an Irish victory in Melbourne at the World Cup three years ago, a reminder that it may not be all smooth for Bethell over the coming days.
societySee all
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Hospital league tables will harm, not heal, the NHS | Letters

Wes Streeting does not seem to understand the complexity of healthcare funding. League tables will exacerbate regional differences rather than abolish them (Norfolk hospital worst in country as NHS league tables reintroduced, 9 September). The problems are not unknown but, sadly for this government, will not be solved in the next four years. It should not be a surprise, especially for Mr Streeting, that the NHS cannot function efficiently until social care is fixed.There is a massive shortage of staff in all specialities, which take 10 to 15 years to get from university to skilled professional

1 day ago
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Letter: Sir Kenneth Calman obituary

During his tenure as chief medical officer for England, Sir Kenneth Calman visited our medical careers research group, led by Michael Goldacre, in Oxford in the 1990s.This was at a time of long and arduous work demands on newly qualified doctors and many had written to us expressing their fears and concerns personally and for their patients. Ken sat down and read the carefully anonymised comments of the doctors for some time and was visibly moved.As he went on his way, we were hugely impressed by his evident compassion for the junior doctors and steadfast determination to improve working conditions and support for doctors at the beginning of their careers.

1 day ago
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Mothers and babies at risk of harm in ‘toxic’ NHS cover-up culture, health leader to say

Mothers and babies being harmed in the NHS risks becoming normalised because of its toxic cover-up culture, a health leader will say, as it emerged that 14 trusts are the focus of a national maternity investigation in England.Charles Massey, the chief executive of the General Medical Council, will tell a conference on Monday that “something must have gone badly wrong” when trainee obstetrics and gynaecology doctors are fearful of speaking up.The “tribal” nature of medicine with doctors and other staff pitted against each other could be preventing people from raising their concerns or admitting when things go wrong, Massey will say.His stark warning came as the government named 14 NHS trusts that are being examined as part of its rapid inquiry into maternity and neonatal services in England.They are:Barking, Havering and Redbridge university hospitals NHS trust

2 days ago
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Three in four English hospitals failing to hit two cancer targets in league tables

Three in four NHS hospital trusts are failing cancer patients, according to the first league tables of their kind, prompting experts to declare a “national emergency”.Labour published the first league tables to rank hospitals in England since the early 2000s this week. The overall rankings score trusts based on a range of measures including finances and patient safety, as well as how they are bringing down waiting times for operations and in A&E, and improving ambulance response times.Guardian analysis of the underlying data has found that about three-quarters of trusts are failing to hit either of the two cancer targets in the tables.Ninety of the 118 trusts (76%) are missing the first target of ruling cancer in or out within 28 days of urgent referrals in at least 80% of cases

2 days ago
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Get tough on tobacco and alcohol firms to improve public health | Letters

The “timid” approach by the government when it comes to regulating businesses is a shift from the promises of just a year ago to face down the nanny-state jibes to secure the long-term future of the NHS (Editorial, 9 September). This approach is also at odds with public sentiment. Recent polling showed 74% of people want the government to prioritise people’s health over business growth.With millions of people affected by preventable diseases caused by tobacco, alcohol and unhealthy food, we need stronger action from the government to match the rhetoric – including minimum unit pricing to prevent strong alcohol being sold cheaply, a levy on the profits of the tobacco industry and the implementation of mandatory policies to improve food and drink.This will not just benefit the NHS but support the government’s growth ambition, given the heavy toll of poor health on productivity and the wider economy

3 days ago
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Reasons for rise in caesarean births | Letter

The rise in the rate of medically assisted births in the UK, particularly caesareans, is laid firmly at the feet of women for being older, larger and having more complex medical problems (Report, 11 September). This ignores a range of clinical and societal factors that contribute. Maternal factors play a part, but so does the rise in defensive clinical practice, the loss of midwives’ and obstetricians’ skills and confidence in supporting physiological birth, and the proliferation of misinformation and scare stories on social media that increase parental anxiety.All these factors have led us to the current crisis, where more than 50% of babies are born with surgical intervention, with no concomitant improvement in maternal or perinatal mortality and with unknown consequences for the health and wellbeing of future generations. Dr Debbie GarrodMidwife and antenatal educator, Abingdon, Oxfordshire Have an opinion on anything you’ve read in the Guardian today? Please email us your letter and it will be considered for publication in our letters section

3 days ago
politicsSee all
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Mandelson not given in-depth vetting before appointment, says Foreign Office

about 11 hours ago
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Starmer urged to apologise to Epstein victims over Mandelson appointment — as it happened

about 12 hours ago
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We must tackle rising tide of racism and homophobia claiming to be free speech, says Streeting

about 15 hours ago
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Maria Caulfield becomes latest senior Tory to defect to Reform UK

about 17 hours ago
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UK public has paid £200bn to shareholders of key industries since privatisation

about 18 hours ago
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‘There’s a basic decency among British people’: Hope Not Hate’s Nick Lowles on how to defeat the far right

about 19 hours ago