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Large pro-government rallies held in Tehran

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Videos show large demonstrations in Tehran, where crowds waved Iranian flags and chanted in support of the government. The rallies come as Iranian media highlights public backing amid the US-Israeli war on the country.

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UN Special Rapporteur Francesca Albanese has said the world gave Israel a ‘licence to torture Palestinians’ as she presented her latest report to the Human Rights Council in Geneva. She criticised governments for allowing violations to continue with impunity.

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Videos show flames and a plume of thick smoke following an explosion at a Valero oil refinery in Port Arthur, Texas. Police have told local media they believe an industrial heater caused the blaze and there are no reports of injuries.

McCullum and Key very lucky to survive Ashes review – Vaughan

Timothy Abraham

BBC Sport Journalist
  • 41 Comments

Former captain Michael Vaughan says England head coach Brendon McCullum and managing director Rob Key were “very lucky” not to be sacked in a post-Ashes review.

McCullum, Key and Test captain Ben Stokes are to remain in their posts despite the 4-1 Test series defeat in Australia.

It was a tour which critics claimed involved inadequate planning, and which was blighted by poor performances and off-the-field issues.

England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) chief executive Richard Gould said during a media briefing to discuss the review’s findings that dispensing with McCullum and Key would have been the “easy thing to do”.

Vaughan told a Test Match Special debate programme he did not think Stokes’ position as captain “was ever a question” but that Key and McCullum were fortunate to survive.

“I think they’re very, very lucky,” said Vaughan, who memorably skippered England to victory in the 2005 Ashes.

“There’s not many management groups that deliver something so poor away from home in an Ashes series and get the chance to carry on.

“They seem to me it’s like a football management team. I actually felt if one went, they all went. They’ve had some exciting times, but they haven’t won enough. What England fans are looking for now is, what change [will happen]?”

McCullum and Key took a more hands-off approach to the England team which critics felt led to an overly relaxed environment.

Vaughan said he was encouraged that the mood at the ECB following the review appeared to have altered.

“An attention to detail served English cricket pretty well from around 2003 to 2021,” Vaughan said.

England ‘overvalued loyalty’ with selection

Key was also a guest on the the TMS programme and he said England will make changes in the way they approach selection.

There had been a perception that the England Test team felt like a ‘closed shop’, particularly to players in county cricket who did not fit the aggressive Bazball style.

Key said the introduction of a “county insight group” to offer input into selection will attempt to formally rebuild relations with stakeholders, including directors of cricket, in the domestic game.

The 46-year-old former Kent captain also said England’s selection policy will become more cut-throat compared to the past when certain players have almost appeared undroppable.

“We’ve overvalued loyalty and overvalued having a settled team,” Key said.

“We thought what we wanted to do is make sure we have a team that is settled out there [in Australia], that we go out there and we’re not giving debuts to opening batters [during the Ashes] and stuff like that.

“But what that does is it creates an environment where there’s not enough consequence. We need to be more ruthless with our selection.”

McCullum is due to return to work towards the end of May as England gear up for a Test series against his native New Zealand which starts at Lord’s on 4 June.

However, Vaughan felt it would have been worthwhile McCullum spending time on the circuit during the early rounds of the County Championship – for good PR if nothing else.

“I’m a bit disappointed that he’s not coming a bit earlier,” Vaughan said.

“I think at this stage, when you’re trying to win back the fans, trying to win back a little bit of the game, if I was Brendon McCullum, I’d come a few weeks earlier, get seen around the counties.

“I’d go and talk to a few coaches, go and speak to a few umpires, get seen out and about just for the optics. Because at this stage he needs the fans, and he needs the game to kind of get behind his philosophy a little bit more.”

Related topics

  • England Men’s Cricket Team
  • Cricket

More on this story

    • 4 hours ago
    England captain Ben Stokes and coach Brendon McCullum before the first Ashes Test in Perth
    • 11 hours ago
    Brendon McCullum and Rob Key
    • 16 August 2025
    BBC Sport microphone and phone

Israeli settlers vandalise school, raise Israeli flag in occupied West Bank

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Israeli settlers have been filmed vandalising a boys’ school in Huwara, spray-painting racist graffiti and raising an Israeli flag on the roof. The attack comes as settler violence intensifies across the occupied West Bank with homes and cars set on fire, leaving at least nine Palestinians injured.