Archive December 7, 2025

‘England in battle to avoid worst Ashes tour in modern times’

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How do you feel?

Angry? Depressed? A sense of deja vu?

What about hoodwinked for believing England had a chance of competing in Australia?

Overall, it is probably a feeling of profound sadness.

Realistically, albeit not mathematically, this Ashes series is over in six days of cricket.

England have never come from 2-0 down to beat Australia, who have the added security of holding the urn. Australia have not lost three consecutive home Tests to anyone in 38 years.

There will be no defining series win for the Ben Stokes-Brendon McCullum era.

There have been some belters either side of a 2010-11 victory that is increasingly starting to feel like a fever dream of sprinkler dances, a Swann keeping a diary and a knight of the realm wearing a chef’s hat.

In 2002-03 England lost 4-1 but took hope from the runs of Michael Vaughan. In 2006-07, England’s Ashes winners of 2005 were ravaged by injury and felt the wrath of one of the greatest teams of all time.

There has been revisionism about 2013-14. England arrived as favourites, though any team would have been destroyed by Mitchell Johnson. Four years later was the birth of Australia’s ‘big four’ attack. Last time – the Covid tour of 2021-22 – England had no chance.

This? This was England’s big opportunity. The most anticipated Ashes series in a generation.

This is why James Anderson was pensioned off, why performances in domestic cricket were largely ignored and why parts of the County Championship were turned into an experiment with the Kookaburra ball.

Australia were supposed to be ageing and in decline – “the worst team in 15 years”. Instead, the home side have rissoled England with their reserve bowling attack and opening batter Usman Khawaja out with a bad back.

Steve Smith has been able to spend time revising Monty Panesar’s answers on Mastermind, and Pat Cummins felt comfortable enough to go through a charade over whether or not he would play at the Gabba.

All that talk about Test cricket being so different from county cricket? Michael Neser has taken wickets bowling medium-fast with the keeper up to the stumps. Where’s Darren Stevens when you need him?

The biggest insult was the Brisbane crowd voting Australia’s Bluey as the superior children’s cartoon to the UK’s Peppa Pig. This England team owe Peppa an apology. She would probably do a better job in the top order.

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Wicketkeeper Jamie Smith looks overwhelmed by the occasion. Being pictured not wearing a helmet on his e-scooter must feel like a golden age for Smith, considering the week he has had at the Gabba.

It is England’s batting that will cause the biggest recrimination. If the definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over, and expecting different results, England have collectively lost their marbles and their wickets.

Drive after drive. Edge after edge. Catch after catch. Bargain basement batting from a group playing like millionaires. Sachin Tendulkar once made 241 in Sydney by deliberately resisting the cover drive. This lot must think they are better than the Little Master.

Actions speak louder than words, but the words are pretty damning, too.

“They always play their shots. If we put as many balls in the right areas they’re going to give you some chances,” said Scott Boland, who faced more deliveries in the second Test than all of Ben Duckett, Ollie Pope and Harry Brook.

Asked before the second Test to describe the “Australian way of playing Test cricket”, Smith said: “Adapting to conditions and what’s in front of us, playing the game in real time. [It is] not get back in the shed and say ‘we should have played this way, we should have done this’.

“Playing what’s in front of us and doing it for long periods. If you do that in Test cricket it holds you in pretty good stead.”

Contrast that to assistant coach Marcus Trescothick’s explanation for England’s approach on the third evening in Brisbane.

“We are trying to play the way we want to play,” said Trescothick. “You have to have a style of play you stick to, don’t you?”

And therein lies the problem. England have become slaves to their style, stubbornly believing a one-size-fits-all method will bring results in Test cricket.

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In the cold light of day, it can be argued England beat the teams they should have beaten anyway.

The Gabba is an eighth defeat in England’s past 15 Tests. Away from home they have lost 10 in 14. There has been no win in a five-Test series against Australia or India. If it feels harsh to use a 4-1 defeat in India at the beginning of last year as part of the judgement, India have recently lost 3-0 at home to New Zealand and 2-0 to South Africa.

The Bazball empire is now at risk of capitulation. Pre-series, it felt like defeat in Australia would not necessarily necessitate change, depending on the manner of performance.

Losing 3-2 after a decider in Sydney is vastly different to losing 3-2 after being 3-0 down. England could still win (yes, I know). They could also lose 5-0.

Stokes and McCullum both have contracts until the end of the next home Ashes in 2027. Rob Key manages them both. England and Wales Cricket Board chief executive Richard Gould and chairman Richard Thompson will take the temperature of public reaction – currently boiling hot.

Beyond the management, there are careers and reputations of players on the line. One wonders what they are saying in the dressing room.

Is there enough honesty and maturity to hold one another to account? Is there space in the Bazball groupthink to suggest there might be another way of doing things?

In the aftermath of the Gabba defeat, the comments of Stokes and McCullum were as strong as they have been in their three-plus years in charge. The two alphas publicly questioning the mentality of the England team is something that could come back to haunt them later in the tour.

“A dressing room that I am captain of is not a place for weak men,” said Stokes.

Bar dragging in rookies from the England Lions – who are getting hammered by Australia A – England will have to rely on this group of players to salvage something from the tour.

England have not brought a specialist back-up keeper, so Smith is likely to remain in the firing line. There is no reserve specialist opener. The back-up batter, Jacob Bethell, has pretty much been on a gap year, but at least made 71 for the Lions on Sunday.

When a spinner is needed for the third Test in Adelaide, Australia can call on Nathan Lyon’s 562 Test wickets. England will have to gamble on Bashir, chosen off the back of a clip on social media and currently without a county contract. His figures for the Lions were 0-115.

There is more than a week until that third Test, time when England will have to justify their holiday on the Sunshine Coast.

When they return from their jollies, they will have the task of keeping the Ashes alive past Christmas.

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    • 16 August

Coronation Street star to become a first time dad with epic Christmas reveal

Coronation Street star Calum Lill is set to become a dad for the first time after revealing his fiancee is pregnant.

The soap star 30, took to Instagram to share the happy news – posting a festive snap showing wife-to- be Roberta’s bump painted like a snowman as she held up a scan photo and the actor held a carrot to her belly.

“New character dropping April ‘26,” Calum wrote alongside the announcement. The couple have been together since 2021 and got engaged last year.

“About time I made an honest woman of her,” Calum joked at the time. The star told The Mirror he kept the engagement ring hidden in his dressing room at Corrie as he waited for the perfect moment. “I’m so glad for the ring to finally be on her finger!”





CAPTION: Corrie star expecting first baby https://www.thesun.co.uk/tv/37559239/coronation-street-calum-lill-expecting-first-child/ PICTURED: Calum Lill WARNING TAKEN WITHOUT PERMISSION INSTAGRAM





Calum Lill attending the British Soap Awards 2025 at the Hackney Empire, London. Picture date: Saturday May 31, 2025. PA Photo. See PA story SHOWBIZ Soap. Photo credit should read: Ian West/PA Wire

Calum Lill played Coronation Street villain Joel Deering, and was involved in the soap’s biggest whodunnit in years. Calum’s alter ego, lawyer Deering, was recently revealed to have battered missing Lauren Bolton with a chair leg.

And nobody was less impressed with the storyline than Calum’s own grandmother. Calum was sitting next to her on the sofa when she first watched the episode – and his video of her priceless reaction has now gone viral on social media. “You mean to tell me my grandson’s a killer? You battered her!,” she asks. “I can’t believe that. Honest to goodness!”

The TikTok clip has now been watched over 8 million times.

Following the unlikely hit, Calum said he believes he owes his career to his gran’s sacrifices. Soap fan Sue who used her hard-earned money to pay for her grandson’s acting classes from the age of 14 – and she even ferried him backwards and forwards to his lessons.

“My grandma is so funny and I knew she wouldn’t be able to believe it. She’s a working class woman from Manchester; she’s so proud of me, but I knew her reaction would be priceless. We’d [always] watch Coronation Street together with a cup of tea and she used to drive me to my acting classes – from the age of 14.

“So to be able to watch this with her and share that moment was really nice and so special.”

Calum’s success did not come easy. His mum initially paid for acting lessons but found it too hard to make ends meet. So his gran and grandfather decided to do whatever they could to find the funds instead.

“We weren’t a family with money,” Calum recalls. “And the classes weren’t cheap, so I’m glad that I can now make all that expense worth it for her.”

William issued warning over Andrew home as ‘uncomfortable’ reality exposed

The true state of shamed Andrew’s Royal Lodge home has been revealed and with an investigation launched into the Crown Estate, a royal expert believes it will have caused nerves among the royals

A probe into the Crown Estate in the wake of the Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor scandal could prove ‘uncomfortable’ for other royals, according to an expert. A powerful group of MPs who form the Public Accounts Committee are set to launch an inquiry after details of former prince Andrew’s rent deal for his crumbling Royal Lodge home emerged, causing public outrage.

When shamed Andrew was stripped of his titles in October, he was also booted out of his Windsor mansion after it was revealed he was barely paying rent to the Crown Estate for the property. The lucrative peppercorn rent prompted the public spending watchdog to investigate as profits from the Crown Estate go back into the public purse, leading to fears taxpayers could be missing out on value for money.

READ MORE: Fergie ‘plots fresh move’ for ‘independent life’ as clock ticks on Royal Lodge evictionREAD MORE: King Charles tactfully refuses to answer tricky question during unexpected game

And with it also now emerging that other royals, including the Duke and Duchess of Edinburgh, also having peppercorn rent deals, royal expert Jennie Bond believes it’s time to be transparent – and the fallout may have to be dealt with a future king William.

She told the Mirror : “Although I don’t think the family will be jumping with joy at the prospect of a comprehensive rent review, I think they will accept that it’s high time that the monarchy’s finances were more transparent.

“In my opinion, it’s also time that the family’s property portfolio should be substantially reduced. And I think William will be the one to do that, if nothing has changed by the time he becomes King. For now, though, they will have to accept that their rents are being scrutinised.”

In initial answers from the Crown Estate to the Commons committee, it emerged that Andrew looks set to lose £500,000 in compensation after surrendering the lease on the property to go and live on the King’s private Sandringham estate – with the move believed to be happening after Christmas.

If no end-of-tenancy repairs were required, Andrew would have been entitled to £488,342.21 for ending his tenancy on October 30, 2026. But the Crown Estate said that following an inspection of the property on November 12, it was thought unlikely that any compensation will be paid.

Meanwhile, in the information provided by the Crown Estate, it also emerged that unlike Andrew, the Prince and Princess of Wales are paying market rent for their new home Forest Lodge.

It said William and Kate, who moved into their property with their children in the October half term, hold a “a 20-year non-assignable lease with The Crown Estate for Forest Lodge, commencing 5 July 2025” and have “open market rent”.

And Jennie added while William and Kate may have nothing to fear, the other royals will probably not receive any public sympathy. She added: “The findings could be uncomfortable for some of them, but as far as we know William and Catherine have little to fear in regards to their new home because they are said to be paying a market rent for Forest Lodge.

“But if they or others are found to be paying peppercorn rents, as Andrew did at Royal Lodge, then I think they’ll have to accept it’s time to stump up.

“None of them can possibly pretend to be impoverished. By normal standards, they are all extraordinarily wealthy and perfectly able to pay a market rent — or move to somewhere smaller if they don’t want to. I don’t think they should expect, or receive, any public sympathy about this.”

At the end of October, the King officially stripped his disgraced brother Andrew of his HRH style and his prince title, and removed his dukedom from the Roll of the Peerage over his “serious lapses” of judgment.

The move followed the publication of a posthumous memoir by Andrew’s accuser, Virginia Giuffre, and the US government’s release of documents from Epstein’s estate.

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It emerged that Andrew had emailed Epstein in 2011 saying “we’re in this together”, three months after he claimed he had broken all contact with the paedophile. Andrew denies all wrongdoing.

Qatar’s PM calls for inclusive engagement to achieve elusive regional peace

Doha, Qatar – The prime minister of Qatar, Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman bin Jassim Al Thani, has called for inclusive engagement, including with non-state actors such as the Palestinian group Hamas, as the only viable route to regional peace.

Speaking to United States journalist Tucker Carlson on Sunday at the Doha Forum, Sheikh Mohammed said you cannot resolve or reach a solution “if you have no one speaking to non-state actors”.

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The start of Qatar’s relationship with Hamas goes back more than 10 years, he said, adding that opening the group’s office in the country came at the request of the US, aiming to enhance communications with the armed group.

“When they [Hamas] moved their office back in 2012 here [Qatar], it was used only for communication and to facilitate ceasefires and aid to Gaza,” Sheikh Mohammed, who is also the foreign minister, said.

Qatar has also hosted the Taliban’s political office since 2013, during the group’s war with the US and the former Afghan government. The office was also established at Washington’s request to create a venue for potential peace negotiations.

Sheikh Mohammed refuted allegations that any money going to Gaza went to Hamas, insisting it goes to the Palestinian people.

“Politicians are trying to use this for short-term political gains … to fuel their narratives,” the prime minister stated.

“All our aid, financing, and all our support … went to the people in Gaza, and was a very transparent process that the United States is very aware of … [and] Israel was the one facilitating.

“This communication has led to ceasefires, has led to the release of hostages, has led to alleviating the suffering of the people over there,” he added.

Israeli attack on Qatar ‘unethical’

Discussing Israel’s shocking attack on Qatar in September, Sheikh Mohammed described it as an “unethical move”.

“The concept of mediation is like having a safe place for conflicted parties to achieve a deal, to end wars and to end conflicts,” he said.

“The mediator being bombed by one of the parties – this has been unprecedented.”

The prime minister revealed that US President Donald Trump was caught off guard by Israel’s actions.

“President Trump was very clear from the beginning… When he was informed about the attack, he assigned one of his advisers to reach out to us immediately. He expressed his frustration, his disappointment, because he knows everything about the process and how helpful we were throughout,” he said.

“He made it very clear for everyone that this is like the red line, that he doesn’t want anyone to cross.”

Reconstructing Gaza

On the reconstruction of a devastated Gaza, following Israel’s ongoing two-year genocidal war, Sheikh Mohammed said Qatar would “continue supporting the Palestinian people”.

“We will do whatever to alleviate their suffering,” he emphasised.

However, he said Qatar “will not write the cheque for what others destroyed”.

“When it comes to the Russia-Ukraine conflict, we hear that Russia should fund all the reconstruction, and their assets should be seized to fund all the reconstruction of Ukraine,” he pointed out. “[But] when you are talking about Israel … and you say that Israel has the responsibility to rebuild what is destroyed, they will tell you no. It’s really a very ironic double standard.

“Our position is that our payments will go only to help the Palestinian people, if we see that the help coming to them is insufficient,” Sheikh Mohammed added.

According to UN estimates, 92 percent of all residential buildings in Gaza have been damaged or destroyed since Israel’s war on the besieged enclave began on October 7, 2023, producing between 55-60 million tonnes of rubble. It has been estimated by the UN that it will take decades to rebuild.

Moreover, the prime minister firmly opposed any forced displacement of Palestinians in Gaza by Israel.

“It’s hurting us when we hear people talking about the people of Gaza as some sort of different people,” he said.

Former Liverpool co-owner Hicks dies aged 79

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Former Liverpool co-owner Tom Hicks has died at the age of 79.

The American, who owned the club alongside George Gillett from 2007 to 2010, died surrounded by family at his home in Dallas, Texas.

“No matter the trials and tribulations he faced in life, he was constant in his generosity and love for his family.

“He remains a guiding force for our family, and we are deeply honoured to continue expanding his legacy.

“Although we are devastated by this loss, we are profoundly grateful to have been his children.”

Hicks and Gillett sold Liverpool to Fenway Sports Group after encountering financial difficulties.

They were widely unpopular with Liverpool fans, running up debts of about £237m and failing to deliver on promises to renovate Anfield or build a new stadium.

In a statement, Liverpool said they send their condolences “to the Hicks family and Tom’s friends at this difficult time”.

Hicks also owned ice hockey team the Dallas Stars from 1995 to 2011 and baseball team the Texas Rangers from 1998 to 2010.

Under Hicks’ ownership, the Stars won consecutive Central Division titles between 1996 and 1998 and the Stanley Cup in 1999.

The Rangers won three American League West Division titles, and were runners-up in the 2010 World Series.

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