766 and all that – when Cook conquered Australia

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Brisbane is not a city to give England some much-needed Ashes optimism.

The tourists must prepare for a trip to the Gabba, an area England haven’t won since 1986, after being defeated by Australia in the first Test.

Men wearing three lions have habitually been lambs to the slaughter at the Gabbatoir.

A shining knight delivered inspiration from a recent history of broken English hopes, dreams, and bodies.

It is exactly 15 years since Sir Alastair Cook conquered the Gabba with a career-defining 235 not out, saving the first Test of 2010-11 and setting England on course to their only Ashes series win in Australia in the past 38 years.

Three hundred and 766 runs of Cook’s triumphant circumnavigation of Australia came to an end. Wally Hammond is the only Englishman to score more runs in a series in this country.

England won by one innings and won all of the previous victories. They have not won a Test here since.

Cook says on the podcast Test Match Special, “You forget the difficult times, the nervousness, and anxiety that came with that.”

“I look back with pride. When England defeated Australia 3-1, and all three of the games were won by an innings, was a significant part of my series. That just doesn’t happen. I need to sit down and watch some of it one day.

Cook’s road to his Australian epic began 18 months earlier, at the end of the 2009 Ashes in the UK. England prevailed, but the opener averaged less than 25 and had just one score over 50.

He wanted more.

Although cricket is a team sport, he claims that the individuality does give you the impression that you are trying to pull your weight. “The stats are very clear. If I had chosen to participate in an Ashes series that I did well, that would have meant more.

” I wanted to judge myself against the best and my game wasn’t stacking up against the best bowlers in the world.

“Two days after the celebrations, I was back hitting hundreds and hundreds of balls in the nets with Graham Gooch, trying to groove something that seemed very unnatural, thinking it would improve my technique over time.”

The initial results were encouraging. Cook made three hundreds while traveling to Bangladesh and South Africa during the winter of 2009-2010.

Cook was persuaded that this was his final Test match before being dropped at the end of the second day of the third Test against Pakistan at The Oval.

“I was sitting in the bar, trying to find the answer in the bottom of a beer bottle”, he says.

“I made the promise to myself, Don’t go out defending tomorrow.” That was where I was at.

It cleared the mind, they said. I decided to go back to my old technique. By lunchtime on the third day, I had 76.

Cook’s 110 guaranteed his seat on the plane to Australia, albeit via an infamous team-bonding trip to Bavaria dreamt up by England coach Andy Flower and captain Andrew Strauss.

Players performed hundreds of press-ups while carrying bricks uphill. James Anderson suffered a cracked rib in a boxing session. Cook was fortunately unaware of almost everything.

” I was at my brother’s wedding, “he says”. The last day was when I showed up. The most broken men were Strauss and Flower. Because they had the right plan, I believed it was effective.

“I’m genuinely disappointed I did miss it. There were constant references to that camp for the next few months. At the time it was horrendous, but the fact we were still talking about it years later shows it had its worth. Every night, I believe people really stoked the campfire.

Well-drilled on and off the pitch, England continued their preparations by winning two and drawing one of their warm-up games in Australia – Cook scored a century against South Australia at the Adelaide Oval.

They were hit by Peter Siddle’s hat-trick in the opening Test at the Gabba, followed by Mike Hussey and Brad Haddin’s scores in the following Tests.

An hour before the end of the third day, Cook and Strauss opened England’s second innings with a deficit of 221 runs. At stumps, they won 19-0, and their subsequent performance was immortalized in Ashes folklore.

“I don’t remember the messages, anything of what we spoke about”, says Cook. The pitch was free of demons, and we had an experienced team. We just had to show some fight”.

For the first wicket, the left-handers added 188. Strauss made 110. Jonathan Trott eased into Cook’s slipstream for an unbeaten 135.

England's Jonathan Trott, Alastair Cook and Andrew Strauss celebrate centuries in the first Test of the 2010-11 Ashes against Australia in BrisbaneImages courtesy of Getty

“It was my 14th Test hundred, but the first time when it felt like I had really contributed and made a difference”, says Cook.

“It reinforced our belief that the Australian team was ready to take.” We got out of jail, but in a way that gave us a lot of confidence”.

The second Test’s opening day in Adelaide was a remarkable success for England. Simon Katich was run out by Trott’s direct hit from the fourth ball of the match and Australia captain Ricky Ponting was out first ball to Anderson.

Australia were 2-3 after Anderson also nicked off Michael Clarke. The home side spiralled to 245 all out, leaving England one over to bat at the end of the first day.

According to Cook, “We entered the changing room and Flower inquired if we were having a nightwatchman.”

“If Jimmy Anderson opened the batting, got out, then I went out to bat, imagine the stick I’d have got from the Australians when they were pumped up.

Straussy typically took the first ball, but I told him, “I’m going out there now and will face the first ball.” You do what you want’.

He responded, “OK.” I’ll do it as well'”.

Cook’s heroics in Brisbane were followed by 148 in a Test that will forever be remembered for Kevin Pietersen’s 227 against the Australians. Off-spinner Graeme Swann took five wickets in the second innings to bowl England to victory just before the heavens opened on the fifth day.

There’s no better place to be hungry than a flat Adelaide pitch in 40-degree heat, says Cook, “because I was struggling the entire summer.”

“The KP double hundred was a real marker of dominance, of taking Australia down. He led the team, and the result was a win-win situation. He hammered Australia into the ground”.

Only Mitchell Johnson would have predicted the havoc he would cause four years later, allowing England to retain the Ashes in Perth.

England bowled out Australia for 268 and reached 78-0 in reply before Johnson got going. England lost by 267 runs in the match thanks to the left-armer’s nine wickets.

“We had a team meeting straight after and I wasn’t sure it was the right thing to do”, says Cook.

“It turned out to be the best choice,” he said. Flower wanted us to look at how we lost the game.

Did we start to consider the end result rather than what we were doing? Did we think we had done all the hard work and were going to win? Perhaps we were considering keeping the Ashes in Perth. I don’t know.

It was crucial to get the answers to some questions, even though we may not be aware of them. We went to Melbourne and the Perth game was buried. It ended up being a two-match series at 1-1.

England dance the sprinkler in Melbourne during the 2010-11 Ashes series in AustraliaImages courtesy of Getty

Perhaps England’s greatest Ashes game ever occurred in Australia.

At the Melbourne Cricket Ground, the 100, 000-seater cathedral of Australian sport, and on Boxing Day, the highlight of the calendar in this country, the home side were blown away for 98. At the close, England’s Cook and Strauss had a score of 157-0.

” If Carlsberg did Boxing Days, it was that. At the conclusion of the day, “says Cook,” there was disbelief. Me and Strauss cleared the MCG with our batting – most people wanted to go home when we were batting together.

“On Boxing Day, the Aussies are very pleased how many people can travel to the MCG.” By the end there were only 20, 000 English people watching me and Strauss grind it around Melbourne.

“What we did as a group is absolutely tops the list of things I could do to go back in time and play any day over again.”

Trott made 168 and England won by an innings and 157 runs. A sprinkler dance on the MCG outfield celebrated keeping the Ashes.

” I felt a little bit uneasy doing it, because we hadn’t gone there to retain the Ashes – we’d gone there to win, “says Cook.

We hadn’t finished yet, despite the fact that I enjoyed the dressing room in Melbourne and a few of the young people who had gone out with the Barmy Army.

“A result of 2-2 would have felt a bit of an injustice. We still had Sydney, regardless of how good Melbourne was.

Fuelled by the focus to win the urn, Cook was at it again at the Sydney Cricket Ground. His 189-run victory gave England its highest total in an Australian Test, 644.

The question was not if England would win the match and the Ashes, but when.

Cook recalls that Chris Tremlett “bounced out Brad Haddin and brought Mitchell Johnson to the wicket on the fourth evening.”

“The song the Barmy Army sang, I’ve never heard anything like it. Tremmers said, “I’m just going to bowl this as quickly as I can,” when I spoke with him. He bowled an absolute jaffa to Johnson, and it bowled him. It’s the loudest noise I’ve ever heard.

England took the extra half an hour on that fourth evening, but could not get over the line.

A victory procession took place on the fifth morning. The Barmy Army and the rest of the travelling supporters were joined in the SCG by every ex-pat and backpacker in Sydney for an English Ashes party.

Cook describes the atmosphere as “unbelievable.” “It felt like an age, I was desperate to take the final wicket.

It was pure elation, just incredible, when Tremlett won the match and brought Michael Beer out.

“It was so early in the day, we had so much time to soak it in. We stayed for absolutely ages on the field and in the changing areas, but I’m not sure when we left the ground. It was very, very special”.

The series’ player was Cook. The remaining seven years of his Test career were illuminated by other milestones: a starring performance in the 2012 series win in India, winning the Ashes as captain in 2015 and breaking the England records for most Test runs and hundreds.

There were also some bad things, most notably his humiliating 5-0 defeat as Australia’s captain in 2013-14.

Following his international retirement in 2018, Cook was knighted for services to cricket. The tour of Australia in 2010 and 2011 provided the best example of that service.

“I couldn’t have played any better”, he says. I was very fortunate to have been a part of that team, which achieved something uncommon for England in Australia.

” When you win games of cricket, it is unbelievably special. Although it required effort, international sport also requires effort.

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Russian space agency says cosmodrome damaged after joint launch with US

A Russian launch site in Kazakhstan was damaged during a spacecraft launch carrying Russian and American astronauts to the International Space Station (ISS), Moscow’s space agency Roscosmos has said.

The joint Russian-US Soyuz MS-28 mission, carrying Roscosmos astronauts Sergey Mikaev and Sergey Kud-Sverchkov and NASA astronaut Chris Williams, took off from the Baikonur Cosmodrome at 12:28pm Moscow time (09:27 GMT) on Thursday.

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The spacecraft successfully docked later that day, the ISS announced in a social media post, and the crew was on board the station in good health.

But after inspecting the Baikonur Cosmodrome following the launch, Russia’s state space agency confirmed that “damage to a number of elements of the launchpad” had been detected.

“An assessment of the state of the launch complex is being conducted now,” Roscosmos said.

“All the necessary reserve elements are there to restore it and the damage will be eliminated very soon,” it said.

Russian space bloggers, however, have claimed that the damage to the Baikonur Cosmodrome – Russia’s only launch site for crewed missions, located in the Russian-leased city of Baikonur in Kazakhstan – is more severe than authorities are claiming.

Immediately after the morning launch, Russian rocket launch analyst Georgy Trishkin claimed that “the service cabin [had] collapsed” and part of the structures had fallen on launchpad 31, causing serious damage that could suspend operations for some time.

Russian space journalist Vitaly Egorov also drew attention to visible damage at the launch site that could be seen during the official broadcast.

“In the gas exhaust tray under the launchpad, there was some massive metal structure that should not have been there,” he said.

Egorov added that if the Baikonur Cosmodrome is disabled as suspected, Russia will have “lost the ability to launch people into space” for the first time since 1961.

The Soyuz crew is scheduled to spend 242 days at the ISS, returning to Earth in July 2026. Some 40 scientific experiments and two extravehicular activities will be conducted over the course of the eight-month mission.

Russia’s space programme, once a source of national pride, has suffered from years of chronic underfunding and corruption scandals.

Despite an almost complete breakdown in relations between Moscow and Washington over the war in Ukraine, space continues to be one of the few remaining areas of US-Russia cooperation.

Sydney Sweeney unrecognisable as new role leaves her with ‘bruises and bloody nose’

For her gritty new biopic playing boxer Christy Martin the Hollywood starlet undergoes a stunning transformation, whereas Sydney Sweeney is more frequently seen posing head-first on the red carpet.

Sydney Sweeney’s latest film role is unlike anything she’s ever done before. In sports drama Christy, she revisits her old kickboxing days – she practised the martial art while growing up – as she transforms into West Virginia boxing star Christy Martin.

The real Christy, who is now 57 and retired, had a turbulent personal life as well as a successful athletic career after being sexually abused as a child and facing her parents’ disapproval when she admitted she was a lesbian. Both of her experiences were remarkable.

Euphoria star Sydney, 28, who’s also set to play the lead in a screen adaptation of hit novel The Housemaid this December, discusses the blood, sweat and tears – and weight gain – involved in filming her latest movie, as she ditches her trademark glamour and goes full-on “method” for a distinctly grittier look.

READ MORE: Lidl to make ‘festive first’ offer for UK shoppers from November 27

What preparation did it take for you to achieve Christy Martin’s level of combat?

It took some hard work for the physical transformation. I was in the gym for three months before shooting, which I loved because, having done kickboxing before, I was kind of looking for an excuse to go back. It was fun for me, but it was something I had to give up when I started on Euphoria [the hit TV drama whose cast she joined in 2019].

Were you prohibited from kickboxing and acting?

I ain’t was. However, I’ve never been as strong as I did when I trained for this. It was a thrill for me to be able to play a woman who was as inspiring as Christy and achieve that kind of physical fitness. She is truly amazing, the more I trained and learned more about her.

In this movie, you appear so completely different. Do you have any objections to that?

No, I was excited to do it. I wanted desperately to do Christy justice and to make her proud. I really love to play characters that I can disappear into and just totally transform. I threw myself into every aspect of this character. I built a gym in my house. I had a professional boxing trainer, a weight trainer and a nutritionist. I was working hard every day to get where I needed to be physically.

You were a result of that transformation, gaining 35 pounds. Was that challenging?

It was actually only a component of the process. Building muscle, drinking plenty of protein shakes, and eating less calories were all involved. There was a lot of it. I was constantly feeling sick. That’s for sure, it’s much harder to lose than it was to put on. However, once I started boxing, my weight would drop even with the high calorie intake and eating. It was then just a matter of restoring that balance.

As a producer, you played a significant role in the development of this movie. What about it made you feel appealing?

I just found the incredible resilience of this woman in both the ring and the locker room inspiring. It is incredible what she accomplished as a boxer and how she opened the door for so many women. She is just as inspiring because she had to work that way in her personal life at the time. I began to relate to Christy more as I learned more about her story. Girls everywhere look to her as inspiration.

There are a lot of emotional scenes, but the physical aspect is so much of the focus…

Yeah, and they were both very different processes. The physical stuff was fun. I could train and feel prepared. But then some days it was about going from that to a big emotional scene. It was a different challenge. We were so lucky to have Christy there with us. I was able to talk to her a lot and figure out what her mindsetwas in those moments. It was all about feeling the moment, working with the script and just going for it. That’s the way I like to work.

The movie’s fight scenes are brutal. Have you ever been physically attacked?

I did. What you see in the film is actually me getting hit and making contact with the other girl in the ring.I didn’t want it to not feel real. It had to feel like it was really Christy fighting in there, with all the emotion she has. Some of the girls I was in the ring with were stunt people, but we also had some real fighters. I told them to go full-force. I was like, ‘Hit me. I want you to hit me!’” I got concussion one time. Other than that,it was just a few bruises and bloody noses.

You mentioned how kicking kickboxing helped you. Have you ever competed?

I once engaged in some competition. Some of the guys I fought were defeated. I was incredibly interested in kickboxing, but it’s getting harder to do it with this job. It is forbidden. With this job, it’s difficult for me to get back in the ring in the real world. Although it’s a fun idea, I haven’t received any offers yet.

What have you learned from playing this amazing woman?

So much. This has been a life-changing experience for me in such a positive way. Playing Christy and getting to know her has taught me how to stand up for myself and what I need to do to feel stronger in my work life as well as my personal life. It’s made me feel ready to stand up for the people in my life and to always be there for them. It’s also made me remember just how much I love boxing.

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From November 28 to November 28 in some select UK cinemas, Christy will be available.