Archive November 5, 2025

Ex-England batter Wilson retires to become coach

Images courtesy of Getty

Fran Wilson, a Somerset batter and former World Cup winner, has announced that she is retiring from the game and will lead Gloucestershire Women’s coaching staff.

The 33-year-old returned to Somerset in 2025 for a second spell as the women’s team transitioned to a professional, and he led the charge with 574 runs in 28 games.

She previously played for the club between 2006 and 2014, and she registered more than 2,500 runs in List A and T20 games.

Before she retired from international cricket in 2021, Wilson participated in the England team that won the 2017 World Cup 64 times across three different formats.

Wilson told the Somerset website, “I’ve made the decision that this 2025 season was my last and that I’ll be hanging up my bat for good this time.”

“What a journey it’s been, one that has taken me to various locations around the world along with England and, more recently, back to the West Country.”

As a young player, it was beyond my wildest dreams to have a locker in the CACG’s changing room.

The English and Wales Cricket Board granted Gloucestershire one of 10 clubs Tier 2 status in 2025.

They finished last in the South group, winning just one game out of eight games this year in the Vitality Blast 2 and placing fifth overall in the One-Day Cup women’s league 2 standings with five victories out of nine games.

Wilson stated that the objective is to foster “sustainable success” so that the club can advance to Tier 1 status.

The “next step” in Wilson’s journey.

Fran Wilson holding the bat in the air with two hands during a matchImages courtesy of Getty

Wilson made her England debut in 2010, aged 19, but she didn’t become a regular until 2016 when she joined the international squad.

She participated in eight of England’s nine games, including the final against India, during her 50-over World Cup triumph in 2017.

She also played for the 2020 T20 World Cup squad that advanced to the semi-finals.

Wilson has represented Sunrisers, Kent, Gloucestershire, and the United States in four of The Hundred’s four seasons domestically, and he has twice won the Kia Super League title with Western Storm.

Wilson left a “lasting impression” on the women’s cricket match, according to Somerset cricket director Andy Hurry.

He continued, “Here is an amazing opportunity to draw from all that experience as she moves on her journey.”

related subjects

  • Gloucestershire
  • Women’s Cricket Team of England
  • County cricket
  • Somerset
  • Cricket

Atletico’s Le Normand Set To Miss Spain Qualifiers After Knee Injury

The La Liga team announced on Wednesday that Atletico Madrid defender Robin Le Normand has a “high grade” knee injury.

The Spanish center-back injured himself in the 3-1 Champions League victory over Union Saint-Gilloise on Tuesday.

Le Normand’s expected return was not announced by Atletico, but Spanish media reported that he would not be able to play with his country in upcoming World Cup qualifiers.

In a bid to advance to the 2026 World Cup, Spain will face Georgia on November 15 and Turkey on November 18.

Read more about Arsenal’s Dowman becoming the youngest player in the Champions League.

On November 4, 2025, at the Metropolitano Stadium in Madrid, the Ecuadorian forward #13 Kevin Rodriguez and Atletico Madrid’s 24-year-old defender #24 Robin Le Normand play for the UEFA Champions League league phase day 4 football match between Club Atletico de Madrid and Union St-Gilloise. (Photo by JAVIER SORIANO/AFP)

According to Atletico, “Le Normand has sustained a high-grade injury to his left knee’s posterior capsule.”

His meniscus and knee ligaments were not impacted by the injury, according to the club.

Before the international break, the defender will not be able to face Levante on Saturday in La Liga.

Israel kills one in south Lebanon as Bekaa Valley still reels from war

Beirut, Lebanon – An Israeli air strike on southern Lebanon has killed one person and wounded another, Lebanon’s Ministry of Public Health says, as Israel ramps up its cross-border attacks in defiance of a ceasefire.

The ministry said in a statement on Wednesday that an “Israeli enemy raid” struck a car in the town of Burj Rahal in the southern district of Tyre.

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“The attack resulted in the martyrdom of one citizen and the injury of another”, the statement read, without identifying the dead.

Lebanon’s National News Agency said the attack happened near a school, triggering panic among students and prompting parents to rush to collect their children amid scenes of fear and chaos.

Ceasefire under strain

The Israeli military did not immediately comment on the strike, which was the latest in a series of its attacks across southern Lebanon, despite a ceasefire signed on November 27, 2024.

Israeli forces remain deployed in at least five areas of Lebanon’s south as they carry out near-daily air raids that Israel says target Hezbollah fighters and infrastructure.

On Monday, two people were killed and seven wounded in separate attacks in southern Lebanon. A day earlier, Israeli raids in Nabatieh killed four people, according to Lebanon’s Health Ministry.

Inside Lebanon, the continued bombardment has heightened fears of a renewed war, as Israeli and United States officials press the Lebanese government to force Hezbollah to disarm.

Israeli military intelligence has claimed in recent days that Hezbollah is attempting to rebuild its military capabilities. A Hezbollah spokesperson denied reports of expanded military activity or attempts to restore its elite units.

“Israel fabricates stories and claims to justify its attacks”, the spokesperson told Lebanon’s L’Orient Today newspaper on Monday.

Hezbollah was severely weakened after the Israeli escalation in September 2024, which killed its longtime leader, Hassan Nasrallah. Since the November ceasefire, the group has responded to Israeli attacks only once.

Hezbollah officials have repeatedly said the group will not disarm, saying that relinquishing its weapons would leave southern Lebanon exposed to an Israeli invasion.

Baalbek still under fire

Nearly a year after Israel’s wide-scale bombing campaign across Lebanon, residents in the eastern Bekaa Valley say they are still living under persistent Israeli threats.

In Baalbek, a city known for its Roman ruins and considered part of Hezbollah’s heartland, Israeli strikes continue to target what the Israeli military describes as Hezbollah’s “logistical and operational base”.

But many civilians also remain under constant bombardment.

“What is happening now isn’t short of a war. It is a war”, Abu Ali, a resident of Baalbek, told Al Jazeera. “There is so much talk about targeting Baalbek, and this is scaring people away”, added another resident, Ali Chokair.

Much of the Bekaa region remains scarred by last year’s Israeli strikes, leaving one of Lebanon’s poorest areas struggling to rebuild.

Lebanon under pressure to negotiate

Israeli and US officials are pressing for Hezbollah’s disarmament, with US ambassador Tom Barrack urging the armed group to begin a dialogue with Israel.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu warned on Sunday that the army would “act as necessary” if Lebanon failed to ensure Hezbollah handed over its weapons.

“We expect the Lebanese government to fulfil its commitment – to disarm Hezbollah – but it is clear we will exercise our right of self-defence under the terms of the ceasefire”, he said.

Lebanese President Joseph Aoun has said the country has “no choice but to negotiate” with Israel to avoid a wider conflict. But many in Baalbek and southern Lebanon oppose any talks that could lead to Hezbollah’s disarmament,

Hussein Osman, who runs a restaurant in Baalbek, refused to flee when the Israeli army ordered residents to leave during last year’s war. Like many Hezbollah supporters, he questions Lebanon’s decision to negotiate with Israel, which is attacking the region almost every day.

“We would support any negotiation that works for the benefit of the resistance”, he said. “But any negotiation that involves disarming the resistance is not accepted … These weapons protect us and allowed us to stay in our homes”.

‘Australia not a bunch of old-timers – they’re an outstanding team’

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  • 446 Comments

It’s the season for excitement.

John Lewis dropped its Christmas advert before Bonfire Night, John Cena’s final opponent is due to be revealed and the Ashes hype train is careering down the tracks.

All of which is absolutely fine. Christmas is brilliant, Cena is the GOAT and if we can’t hype this upcoming Ashes series, we might as well knock Test cricket on the head forever.

There are still 16 days to go until meaningful action on the field, so there is a vacuum to be filled.

Decisions to pore over, front pages to splash, predictions to make.

Last week it was England’s one-day series defeat in New Zealand; next week it will be their limited red-ball preparation in Australia. On Tuesday it was Ben Stokes’ arrival in Perth; on this Wednesday it is the announcement of the Australia squad for the first Test.

Chief selector George Bailey has not randomly assembled a bunch of old-timers. This group of cricketers have collectively eased into their 30s because of the success they have enjoyed over the past decade.

Australia were world champions in Test and 50-over cricket two years ago. They have not lost an Ashes series since 2015 and the aggregate scoreline from England’s past two tours down under is 8-0 to Australia.

Whatever the outcome of this series, this Australia team is likely to break up. At 38, opener Usman Khawaja is closest to the finish line and stand-in captain Steve Smith, 36, has previously said he is unlikely to tour England again. Pace bowlers Mitchell Starc and Josh Hazlewood turn 36 and 35 respectively in January.

Not that England are set to see the back of all their tormentors. Nathan Lyon has said he wants to extend his career until he wins away series in India and England. Travis Head, Marnus Labuschagne and Alex Carey should make the Ashes series in the UK in 2027.

Australia’s succession planning is bordering on non-existent. England took hard decisions over James Anderson, Jonny Bairstow and Jack Leach, decisions which legendary Australia captain Steve Waugh said Bailey does not have the “appetite” to make.

Looking at the squad for this series, one wonders who may still be around to face England the next time they travel down under in 2029.

When it comes to selection, Australia pay more attention to domestic performances than their English counterparts.

Labuschagne’s form demanded a recall, while uncapped Jake Weatherald was the leading run-scorer in the Sheffield Shield last season.

If the left-hander gets the nod in Perth, he will be Khawaja’s sixth different opening partner since David Warner retired in January 2024.

Facing Jofra Archer and co at Optus Stadium would be far removed from last year’s stint with Great Witchingham in the East Anglia Premier League, where Weatherald was a team-mate of Monty Panesar.

As confirmed last month, there is a Pat Cummins-shaped hole in the Australia attack. Cummins may return for the second Test, and for now Scott Boland is a capable fill-in with an outstanding record in Australia.

To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.

In terms of selection, Australia have more questions to answer than England, yet remain favourites to retain the urn. Just six of England’s squad have previously played a Test in Australia and the touring party of 16 has one Test hundred down under between them, belonging to Stokes. Only the captain and Mark Wood have laced up their bowling boots in Australia before.

England’s collective inexperience in Australian conditions will fuel questions over their limited preparation time. They play one red-ball three-day warm-up match, against an England Lions team at Lilac Hill, from next Wednesday.

Veterans of Ashes tours past are aghast, though critics have perhaps not been paying enough attention to England’s away trips under Stokes and Brendon McCullum.

Since the captain and head coach took charge in 2022, tour preparations have been scaled back to one or no warm-up matches. England have won the first Test on all five of their overseas tours under Stokes, including all-timers against Pakistan in Rawalpindi and India in Hyderabad.

It is reasonable to want to keep the same method for this tour – they deserve the benefit of the doubt.

In any case, extended preparation does not guarantee success. England’s triumph in 2010-11, when they won three warm-up matches before beating Australia 3-1, is held up as an example, but is also an outlier.

On plenty of other tours England have played warm-ups until the kangaroos come home and been subsequently hammered in the Tests.

If England can control their preparation, they cannot control the rough ride they will get from the Australian press, which began with The West Australian labelling Stokes “Cocky Captain Complainer”.

The jibes are unlikely to unsettle someone as thick-skinned as Stokes, and England will know the press can quickly turn on the home side if England get on top.

Therein lies the rub. For all the talk of selection and preparation, judgement will come through results and the identity of the captain holding the urn in Sydney in January.

It is the unpredictable nature of this series that fuels the excitement – a compelling case can be made for so many different scorelines. The uncertainty is glorious and will remain until 21 November, after which we will know a little more than we know now.

Related topics

  • Australia
  • The Ashes
  • Cricket

More on this story

    • 15 hours ago
    Cameron Green
    • 13 hours ago
    Marnus Labuschagne, Steve Smith and Nathan Lyon
    • 2 days ago
    The Ashes urn

‘Australia not a bunch of old-timers – they’re an outstanding team’

Getty Images
  • 446 Comments

It’s the season for excitement.

John Lewis dropped its Christmas advert before Bonfire Night, John Cena’s final opponent is due to be revealed and the Ashes hype train is careering down the tracks.

All of which is absolutely fine. Christmas is brilliant, Cena is the GOAT and if we can’t hype this upcoming Ashes series, we might as well knock Test cricket on the head forever.

There are still 16 days to go until meaningful action on the field, so there is a vacuum to be filled.

Decisions to pore over, front pages to splash, predictions to make.

Last week it was England’s one-day series defeat in New Zealand; next week it will be their limited red-ball preparation in Australia. On Tuesday it was Ben Stokes’ arrival in Perth; on this Wednesday it is the announcement of the Australia squad for the first Test.

Chief selector George Bailey has not randomly assembled a bunch of old-timers. This group of cricketers have collectively eased into their 30s because of the success they have enjoyed over the past decade.

Australia were world champions in Test and 50-over cricket two years ago. They have not lost an Ashes series since 2015 and the aggregate scoreline from England’s past two tours down under is 8-0 to Australia.

Whatever the outcome of this series, this Australia team is likely to break up. At 38, opener Usman Khawaja is closest to the finish line and stand-in captain Steve Smith, 36, has previously said he is unlikely to tour England again. Pace bowlers Mitchell Starc and Josh Hazlewood turn 36 and 35 respectively in January.

Not that England are set to see the back of all their tormentors. Nathan Lyon has said he wants to extend his career until he wins away series in India and England. Travis Head, Marnus Labuschagne and Alex Carey should make the Ashes series in the UK in 2027.

Australia’s succession planning is bordering on non-existent. England took hard decisions over James Anderson, Jonny Bairstow and Jack Leach, decisions which legendary Australia captain Steve Waugh said Bailey does not have the “appetite” to make.

Looking at the squad for this series, one wonders who may still be around to face England the next time they travel down under in 2029.

When it comes to selection, Australia pay more attention to domestic performances than their English counterparts.

Labuschagne’s form demanded a recall, while uncapped Jake Weatherald was the leading run-scorer in the Sheffield Shield last season.

If the left-hander gets the nod in Perth, he will be Khawaja’s sixth different opening partner since David Warner retired in January 2024.

Facing Jofra Archer and co at Optus Stadium would be far removed from last year’s stint with Great Witchingham in the East Anglia Premier League, where Weatherald was a team-mate of Monty Panesar.

As confirmed last month, there is a Pat Cummins-shaped hole in the Australia attack. Cummins may return for the second Test, and for now Scott Boland is a capable fill-in with an outstanding record in Australia.

To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.

In terms of selection, Australia have more questions to answer than England, yet remain favourites to retain the urn. Just six of England’s squad have previously played a Test in Australia and the touring party of 16 has one Test hundred down under between them, belonging to Stokes. Only the captain and Mark Wood have laced up their bowling boots in Australia before.

England’s collective inexperience in Australian conditions will fuel questions over their limited preparation time. They play one red-ball three-day warm-up match, against an England Lions team at Lilac Hill, from next Wednesday.

Veterans of Ashes tours past are aghast, though critics have perhaps not been paying enough attention to England’s away trips under Stokes and Brendon McCullum.

Since the captain and head coach took charge in 2022, tour preparations have been scaled back to one or no warm-up matches. England have won the first Test on all five of their overseas tours under Stokes, including all-timers against Pakistan in Rawalpindi and India in Hyderabad.

It is reasonable to want to keep the same method for this tour – they deserve the benefit of the doubt.

In any case, extended preparation does not guarantee success. England’s triumph in 2010-11, when they won three warm-up matches before beating Australia 3-1, is held up as an example, but is also an outlier.

On plenty of other tours England have played warm-ups until the kangaroos come home and been subsequently hammered in the Tests.

If England can control their preparation, they cannot control the rough ride they will get from the Australian press, which began with The West Australian labelling Stokes “Cocky Captain Complainer”.

The jibes are unlikely to unsettle someone as thick-skinned as Stokes, and England will know the press can quickly turn on the home side if England get on top.

Therein lies the rub. For all the talk of selection and preparation, judgement will come through results and the identity of the captain holding the urn in Sydney in January.

It is the unpredictable nature of this series that fuels the excitement – a compelling case can be made for so many different scorelines. The uncertainty is glorious and will remain until 21 November, after which we will know a little more than we know now.

Related topics

  • Australia
  • The Ashes
  • Cricket

More on this story

    • 15 hours ago
    Cameron Green
    • 13 hours ago
    Marnus Labuschagne, Steve Smith and Nathan Lyon
    • 2 days ago
    The Ashes urn

‘Australia not a bunch of old-timers – they’re an outstanding team’

Getty Images
  • 446 Comments

It’s the season for excitement.

John Lewis dropped its Christmas advert before Bonfire Night, John Cena’s final opponent is due to be revealed and the Ashes hype train is careering down the tracks.

All of which is absolutely fine. Christmas is brilliant, Cena is the GOAT and if we can’t hype this upcoming Ashes series, we might as well knock Test cricket on the head forever.

There are still 16 days to go until meaningful action on the field, so there is a vacuum to be filled.

Decisions to pore over, front pages to splash, predictions to make.

Last week it was England’s one-day series defeat in New Zealand; next week it will be their limited red-ball preparation in Australia. On Tuesday it was Ben Stokes’ arrival in Perth; on this Wednesday it is the announcement of the Australia squad for the first Test.

Chief selector George Bailey has not randomly assembled a bunch of old-timers. This group of cricketers have collectively eased into their 30s because of the success they have enjoyed over the past decade.

Australia were world champions in Test and 50-over cricket two years ago. They have not lost an Ashes series since 2015 and the aggregate scoreline from England’s past two tours down under is 8-0 to Australia.

Whatever the outcome of this series, this Australia team is likely to break up. At 38, opener Usman Khawaja is closest to the finish line and stand-in captain Steve Smith, 36, has previously said he is unlikely to tour England again. Pace bowlers Mitchell Starc and Josh Hazlewood turn 36 and 35 respectively in January.

Not that England are set to see the back of all their tormentors. Nathan Lyon has said he wants to extend his career until he wins away series in India and England. Travis Head, Marnus Labuschagne and Alex Carey should make the Ashes series in the UK in 2027.

Australia’s succession planning is bordering on non-existent. England took hard decisions over James Anderson, Jonny Bairstow and Jack Leach, decisions which legendary Australia captain Steve Waugh said Bailey does not have the “appetite” to make.

Looking at the squad for this series, one wonders who may still be around to face England the next time they travel down under in 2029.

When it comes to selection, Australia pay more attention to domestic performances than their English counterparts.

Labuschagne’s form demanded a recall, while uncapped Jake Weatherald was the leading run-scorer in the Sheffield Shield last season.

If the left-hander gets the nod in Perth, he will be Khawaja’s sixth different opening partner since David Warner retired in January 2024.

Facing Jofra Archer and co at Optus Stadium would be far removed from last year’s stint with Great Witchingham in the East Anglia Premier League, where Weatherald was a team-mate of Monty Panesar.

As confirmed last month, there is a Pat Cummins-shaped hole in the Australia attack. Cummins may return for the second Test, and for now Scott Boland is a capable fill-in with an outstanding record in Australia.

To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.

In terms of selection, Australia have more questions to answer than England, yet remain favourites to retain the urn. Just six of England’s squad have previously played a Test in Australia and the touring party of 16 has one Test hundred down under between them, belonging to Stokes. Only the captain and Mark Wood have laced up their bowling boots in Australia before.

England’s collective inexperience in Australian conditions will fuel questions over their limited preparation time. They play one red-ball three-day warm-up match, against an England Lions team at Lilac Hill, from next Wednesday.

Veterans of Ashes tours past are aghast, though critics have perhaps not been paying enough attention to England’s away trips under Stokes and Brendon McCullum.

Since the captain and head coach took charge in 2022, tour preparations have been scaled back to one or no warm-up matches. England have won the first Test on all five of their overseas tours under Stokes, including all-timers against Pakistan in Rawalpindi and India in Hyderabad.

It is reasonable to want to keep the same method for this tour – they deserve the benefit of the doubt.

In any case, extended preparation does not guarantee success. England’s triumph in 2010-11, when they won three warm-up matches before beating Australia 3-1, is held up as an example, but is also an outlier.

On plenty of other tours England have played warm-ups until the kangaroos come home and been subsequently hammered in the Tests.

If England can control their preparation, they cannot control the rough ride they will get from the Australian press, which began with The West Australian labelling Stokes “Cocky Captain Complainer”.

The jibes are unlikely to unsettle someone as thick-skinned as Stokes, and England will know the press can quickly turn on the home side if England get on top.

Therein lies the rub. For all the talk of selection and preparation, judgement will come through results and the identity of the captain holding the urn in Sydney in January.

It is the unpredictable nature of this series that fuels the excitement – a compelling case can be made for so many different scorelines. The uncertainty is glorious and will remain until 21 November, after which we will know a little more than we know now.

Related topics

  • Australia
  • The Ashes
  • Cricket

More on this story

    • 15 hours ago
    Cameron Green
    • 13 hours ago
    Marnus Labuschagne, Steve Smith and Nathan Lyon
    • 2 days ago
    The Ashes urn