Archive December 5, 2025

England face Ashes battle despite Gabba fightback

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Second Ashes Test, the Gabba, Brisbane (day-night, day two of five)

England 334: Root 138, Crawley 76; Starc 6-75

Australia 378-6: Weatherald 72, Labuschagne 65, Smith 61; Carse 3-113

Australia are 44 runs ahead

England produced a floodlit fightback late on day two of the second Test against Australia, but still face a huge battle to stay alive in the Ashes after missing five chances at the Gabba.

Australia were on course for a substantial first-innings lead until Brydon Carse summoned the energy for a hostile spell in the Brisbane night.

In the same over, Carse bowled Cameron Green for 45 and then ended Steve Smith’s march to yet another Ashes century on 61 thanks to a wonder catch from Will Jacks.

When captain Ben Stokes bowled Josh Inglis, Australia had lost three wickets for 38 runs and eventually closed on 378-6 – a lead of 44.

England are still in the match despite being woeful for much of Friday. It was a performance that had all the characteristics of their 16-Test winless run in this country and 39-year winless run on this ground.

The tourists added only nine to their overnight 325-9 to be all out for 334, then allowed Australia to get away with some scattergun bowling before the first interval.

Wicketkeeper Jamie Smith’s drop of Travis Head was the first of the quintet of chances England missed.

Jake Weatherald slashed 72 and Marnus Labuschagne made 65 before Smith and Green added 95 for the fourth wicket.

The came the Carse-inspired revival. Whether it was too late to keep Australia to a lead England can manage will be revealed on Saturday.

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England downed, but not out

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If the first three days of this series – the two days of the first Test and the opening day here – were packed with action, this had a more familiar and foreboding feel of Australia slowly turning the screw.

No team has made as many as England’s 334 in the first innings of a day-night Test and lost, yet Australia put the tourists’ effort into context. This might have been the best day for batting and, when the pink ball went soft, England lacked inspiration.

On day one, England’s batting seemed fraught with danger, never far from the threat of implosion. A second-string Australia attack always found a way of conjuring – or being gifted – a wicket.

On day two, the Australians simply played orthodox Test cricket. It just so happened England’s best pace bowlers offered plenty of chances to score.

Off-spinner Jacks bowled only one over, and his selection would have looked an error had it not been for his incredible catch.

Still, day-night Tests can change rapidly under the lights and England deserve praise for hanging in and eventually using the conditions to their advantage. Their short-ball plan had Australia hopping around, though also allowed more rapid scoring.

Carse chaos breathes life into England

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Carse, usually so reliable, had been as guilty as anyone of spraying the ball around Brisbane – he conceded 113 runs from his 17 overs.

And it was indicative of England’s situation that the Durham man was asked to bowl a spell of bouncers in the night session, when usually the floodlights would offer the kind of movement to encourage orthodox seam bowling.

With Green stepping back to flay an expected short ball, he was bluffed by a Carse yorker that splattered the stumps. From the next ball, Carey gloved a venomous lifter, only for Ben Duckett to grass the vital catch moving forward from gully.

Still, in the same over, Carse got the crucial wicket of Smith thanks to Jacks’ moment of magic. Smith tried to drag a pull around the corner only for Jacks, at backward square leg, to fling himself to his right and cling on with his right hand.

Inglis and Carey countered, boundaries continued to flow and Duckett put down another chance – this time Inglis at gully off the bowling off Stokes. Three balls later, Stokes removed Inglis’ middle stump.

There was still time for England to create two more chances, and for Carey and Neser to add 49 from only 55 balls.

England gift away momentum

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It may seem churlish to criticise Archer for his dismissal 14 balls into the day – 38 was his highest Test score, 70 was England’s highest last-wicket stand in this country for 74 years and Labuschagne took a stunning catch – but it was the beginning of Australia snatching the momentum. It left Root out of partners on 138 not out.

Still, the error of Archer’s needless pull at Brendan Doggett was dwarfed by the drop of Smith. When Archer took the edge of Head on three, England’s keeper failed to cling on to the rising ball and Australia surged into life.

Head added another 30 to his score, and along with Weatherald’s maiden Test half-century, the hosts punished some woeful England bowling. Australia took 112 runs in the 14 overs up to the first interval, with Labuschagne attacking when he replaced Head.

England rarely had control for the remainder of the day. Australia rocketed along at more than five an over, yet their batting was risk-free thanks to the wayward bowling. Time and again the home side were able to cut and pull because England missed their lengths.

Archer was excellent at the beginning of the second session to have Weatherald lbw, yet a seven-over spell meant he could not come back in the twilight. Stokes induced a poor slash from Labuschagne.

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As Hong Kong reckons with worst fire in decades, many see echoes of 2019

The tragedy has rekindled some of the mistrust and divisions in Hong Kong that erupted as a result of the devastating housing estate fire that claimed the lives of at least 159 people.

On November 26, the city watched horrifiedly as the fire started at Wang Fuk Court and quickly spread to seven of the complex’s eight towers. According to official reports, many residents were trapped inside because the alarms were malfunctioning.

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After burning for more than 40 hours, Wang Fuk Court is on track to be one of the worst fires ever to occur, with 176 people killed in the blaze that started in 1948. However, the casualties rate have kept rising since the fire was extinguished on November 28.

Many Hong Kongers have never considered the scale.

This is a downtown area, not a small village in the middle of nowhere. We wouldn’t have anticipated that this would have happened, Issie, an educator who works in Wang Fuk Court’s Tai Po district, told Al Jazeera.

“This is a completely unthinkable situation. We anticipated that the government would have “put out the fire.”

Hong Kongers quickly mobilized following the fire’s eruption, when they distributed food, water, and shelter to young protesters despite not always agreeing with them. This is unlike the protests of 2019, which have taken place since.

As other residents of the housing estate’s 4, 000-plus residents were quickly gathered online assistance databases, including clothing, food, and other supplies, in Tai Po.

A petition was then released calling for “four demands” of government accountability in response to the protest’s “five demands, not one less” slogan. More than 10,000 people signed the petition, according to local media, before it was eventually removed.

In a striking visual similarity to the 2019 protest artwork “Lennon Walls,” handwritten notes adorned the fire’s victims.

On November 28, 2025, people visit a resource collection point set up by volunteers to deliver supplies to residents of Tai Po, Hong Kong, China’s deadly fire.

A Hong Kong professor with experience with the city’s governance structure told Al Jazeera, requesting anonymity because of concerns for the impact on their careers, that “mobilization is in Hong Kong’s “DNA.”

Because it was meant to be a significant renovation project, “people couldn’t explain why that happened.” He claimed that the renovation project, which was carried out to make the building structure and the residents safer, ended in tragedy.

Athena Tong, a visiting research fellow from Hong Kong and a visiting researcher at the University of Tokyo, shared the sentiment that the government was slow to act.

According to Tong, “the fact that society, the regular citizens, needed to mobilize at that scale to help with relief demonstrates that there is no trust in the government’s competence,”

Hong Kongers began to question the government’s prompt response online, including a suggestion from early experts and officials that Wang Fuk Court’s bamboo scaffolding, a custom in Hong Kong construction, should be replaced with metal.

Later, fire investigators determined that Styrofoam blocks and subpar mesh netting were the main culprits.

However, some of the discontent stems from the deep existential questions that the protests in 2019 raised about Hong Kong’s future, according to observers.

As a number of grievances began to surface, some of which date back to the city’s 1997 return to Chinese sovereignty, the protests erupted into a widespread antigovernment movement in 2019.

The issue ranged from whether Beijing was backing off with its commitments to the former British colony’s “high degree of autonomy” until 2047 under the “one country, two systems” agreement with China to how the local leader of Hong Kong would be chosen. Some people were concerned about the future of Hong Kong’s distinctive identity and culture.

People pray as they lay flowers at a makeshift memorial near the Wang Fuk Court housing complex residents after the deadly fire, in Tai Po, Hong Kong, China, December 1, 2025. REUTERS/Maxim Shemetov
After the deadly fire in Tai Po, Hong Kong, China, on December 1, 2025, people pray at a makeshift memorial near the Wang Fuk Court housing complex residents. [Maxim Shemetov/Reuters]

By contrast, pro-government Hong Kongers and Chinese officials perceived the protests as a city ebbing into pieces, possibly with the support of the US government, who wanted to destabilize Hong Kong for their own reasons.

Hong Kong was temporarily at a standstill for months as a result of the protests, but as a result, COVID-19 containment laws started to become in effect in 2020. Beijing passed legislation that made it next to impossible for large-scale protests in the middle of 2020.

The government’s response in 2019 and 2025, according to Issie, the resident of Hong Kong.

These things wouldn’t have happened before, she said, “especially when it comes to people being critical of their policies, and even this time when people were trying to help.”

A Hong Kong government spokesman earlier this week claimed that “foreign forces, anti-China, and destabilizing forces” were using “seditious pamphlets” to “maliciously smear the rescue work, instigate social division and conflict to undermine the society’s unity” in a language that was strikingly reminiscent of its 2019 remarks.

According to China’s state-run Global Times newspaper, a “small number of external hostile forces” were attempting to “reverse the tragedy and “replica tactics from the anti-extradition bill unrest” in 2019 to obstruct rescue and recovery efforts.

According to local media reports, Hong Kong police have detained at least 15 people on suspicion of manslaughter in connection with the fire, and have also detained at least three others on suspicion of sedition and “attempting to incite discord” in response to the arrests.

According to local media, Miles Kwan, a university student, and former district councillor Kenneth Cheung, who was detained for leafleting, are among them.

People leave notes with well-wishes for those affected by the deadly fire at the Wang Fuk Court housing complex, in Tai Po, Hong Kong, China, November 30, 2025. REUTERS/Tyrone Siu SEARCH
People leave notes with well-wishes for those affected by the deadly fire at the Tai Po, Hong Kong, China housing complex on November 30, 2025 [Tyrone Siu/Reuters]

The local government’s Executive Council member Ronny Tong claimed that there isn’t much information available about the sedition-related arrests, and that more evidence than criticism of the government would have helped to support the national security charges brought against them.

The law is the law, in our opinion, with a capital W. The police might err on the side of caution if someone violates the law at a sensitive time. The courts will be there to protect them if they overreacted, Ronny Tong said.

He claimed for Al Jazeera that it made sense for the government to reroute volunteers’ efforts to streamlined their work. The government provided a 100, 000 Hong Kong dollar ($12, 847) subsidy over the course of the past week, promising Wang Fuk Court residents would receive free housing until their homes were rebuilt.

Although only a small number of details have been made public, Hong Kong leader John Lee has also demanded an independent committee to look into the fire and review the building-work system in Hong Kong.

No government official had resigned as of Friday due to the deadly fire.

Turkiye orders arrest of top-tier footballers, officials in gambling probe

As part of a comprehensive investigation into insider betting that has roiled the country’s professional football leagues, Turkiye’s prosecutor’s orders the detention of 46 people, including 29 footballers from top-tier clubs, club presidents, commentators, and others.

27 of the players who were detained were allegedly involved in betting on games that took place against their own teams, according to a statement released on Friday by the Istanbul public prosecutor’s office.

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Metehan Baltaci, a former Turkish champion, was one of them, according to the statement. He had been given a nine-month suspension earlier this month as a result of the betting scandal.

Six referees and the president of Eyupspor, one of Turkey’s top Super Lig division clubs, were put in pre-trial detention on November 10 as a result of the investigation.

The other 26 players who were suspected of betting on their own teams were not identified by the prosecution, but Mert Hakan Yandas, who plays for Fenerbahce, a significant club in Istanbul, claimed they had made the wagers on someone else’s account.

Murat Sancak, the ex-president of Adana Demirspor, was also listed on the detention list, according to a report from the A Haber news channel. Additionally, there were a number of additional players listed.

None of the organizations mentioned could be reached for comment right away.

According to the prosecutor’s office, 35 of the 46 people named in the arrest order have been apprehended so far. According to the report, five people are known to be currently abroad.

According to the statement, two club presidents were among those who were “attempting to influence the outcome” of a game between their two third-division rivals in the 2023-2024 season.

According to Turkish media, neither team had even attempted to score a goal, which was where the investigation actually began, according to reports from newspapers in Turkey.

More than 1, 000 Turkish football players have been suspended by the Turkish Football Federation (TFF), 25 of whom have been banned from the Super Lig, for a time frame of 45 days to 12 months.

Alassane Ndao, the Senegalese winger for Konyaspor, was the only foreigner to receive a 12-month suspension.

More than 900 people come from the third and fourth divisions, a majority of whom are from those divisions.

Iranian delegation in the US for World Cup draw after threatening boycott

‘As good as I’ve ever seen’ – where does Jacks’ catch rank?

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Will Jacks piloting with one hand under the Brisbane lights.

The outstanding Steve Smith was the batter. He was behind the ball.

England’s fans yelled incredulously that a comeback might be possible in the second Ashes Test as Surrey all-rounder Jacks clung on.

Former England captain Michael Vaughan praised this as “the best catch I’ve ever seen” on the BBC Test Match Special.

Oh my word, please! That’s a piece of incredible movement from Jacks, and it doesn’t get any better than that.

The catch was remarkable, as did his athletic ability to take the ball with his right hand while diving into leg gully.

Given the circumstance, it was even more unique.

Alex Carey was dropped by Ben Duckett two balls later.

Cameron Green had earlier been dismissed by Brydon Carse, but Smith continued with the score of 292-4, giving the team the unavoidable impression that a chance had been missed.

After all, England would be celebrating with Jacks, who leaped into a wide-eyed Joe Root’s arms.

Australia may still lead by 2-0 in Brisbane, but they are still strong in that regard.

Former England ace Matt Prior remarked on TNT Sports, “Will Jacks, take a bow.”

“That is a fantastic catch,”

The fielders getting behind the bowlers is exactly what we were discussing.

He threw out a claw as he had to cover a lot of ground. It’s a fantastic catch.

On day 2, England had a bright moment in the field, with Root getting his fingertips, Carse spilling Michael Neser, and Duckett dropping Josh Inglis.

Getty Images
Will Jacks celebrates his catch with Joe RootGetty Images
Will Jacks is mobbed by Joe Root, Zak Crawley and Harry BrookGetty Images

What is its place among the best Ashes captures?

Vaughan placed Jacks’ catch at the top of his list of recent viewings.

Given the circumstance, hyperbole? Possibly .

However, it is undeniable that it joins the great Ashes moments in the field.

In 2015, when Stuart Broad was caught catching Adam Voges, Ben Stokes dived to his right at gully, disbelieving in disbelief?

Adam Gilchrist’s gravity-defying snaffle by Andrew Strauss in 2005?

When England won the fourth Test by three runs in Melbourne in 1982, Geoff Miller retorted an iconic rebound catch to dismiss Jeff Thomson.

The Australians wouldn’t want us to forget Glenn McGrath’s dive in 2002 that eliminated Smith and Vaughan at The Oval in 2019.

related subjects

  • England Men’s Cricket Team
  • Australia
  • The Ashes
  • Cricket

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