Australia beat England in Sydney Test to seal 4-1 Ashes triumph

Australia had a few nervous moments but safely ‌chased down their 160-run victory target before tea on the final day of the fifth Ashes Test match against England, earning a five-wicket victory and a ‍4-1 series triumph.

Seamer Josh Tongue led England’s ‍battling rearguard with 3-42 but Alex Carey got Australia across the line with a four through the covers in the company of Cameron Green on Thursday.

“We’ve played so well as a team,” said Steve Smith, who was standing in for Pat Cummins as Australia captain for the fourth time in the series.

“We’ve had some incredible individual performances but … everyone else just stood up at different moments. I think that’s what makes a really good team. We won those ⁠big moments throughout the series.”

England will take credit for making a game of it and not being ground into the Sydney dirt as previous tourists have in end-of-series dead rubbers ​at the famous old ground.

Without the bowling of injured captain Ben Stokes, however, defending 160 was always going to be an uphill challenge on ‍a good wicket.

Australia’s openers managed to get the target under 100 runs before Man of the Match Travis Head, whose third century of the series underpinned his team’s first-innings 567, ballooned a shot to midwicket off Tongue for 29.

Jake Weatherald followed for 34, again caught off Tongue’s bowling, to bring up lunch with Australia 89 runs from their goal.

It ‍was 15 years and ⁠a day since England won the final Test of the 2010-11 series at the same ground by an innings and 83 runs – the last time they won an Ashes series Down Under.

Alex Carey celebrates after hitting the winning runs [David Gray/AFP]

Emotional Khawaja bows out

Usman Khawaja made his debut in that match and got his chance for one final innings before retirement when Smith was bowled through the gate by the spin of Will Jacks for 12 soon after lunch.

The England players formed a cordon to welcome Khawaja to the crease but Tongue’s bowling was less friendly and the left-hander played on for six after facing seven balls.

His farewell did not go as planned but Khawaja said it was a memorable occasion after a decorated 15-year career and more than 6,000 runs.

“I was trying to act cool, but the whole Test match I found it really hard to control my emotions,” the 39-year-old admitted afterwards.

“It means a lot. The only thing I wanted was a win,” he said.

“Grateful for the one last final win and to celebrate with my teammates.

Upon his dismissal, the batter stopped at a “Thanks Uzzy” sign on the ground and bowed down in prayer before returning to the pavilion.

Khawaja immigrated to Australia from Islamabad as a child, battling the odds to become the country’s first Pakistan-born and first Muslim national player.

At one point, he was the only Asian first-class player in Australia and is credited as a role model who opened doors for others.

“Some people have lost family, I am lucky my parents are still around. My family, my wife, my kids and another one on the way,” he said.

“I love the game of cricket but life outside cricket has been more important.

“Few dicey runs there with a little bit of pressure, but we got the job done in the end.”

Australia’s Usman Khawaja bows down to the ground as he walks off following his dismissal in his final Test during the last day of the fifth Ashes cricket Test between Australia and England at the Sydney Cricket Ground in Sydney on January 8, 2026. (Photo by Saeed KHAN / AFP) / -- IMAGE RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE - STRICTLY NO COMMERCIAL USE --
Usman Khawaja bows down onto the ground as he walks off following his dismissal in his final Test at the Sydney Cricket Ground [Saeed Khan/AFP]

Starc gets the job done

England had resumed their batting on 302-8 but Mitchell Starc struck a major blow to their hopes of setting Australia a testing target when he had Bethell caught behind for 154.

Bethell’s superb maiden Test century offered plenty of promise for the ‌future and was essentially the difference between an innings defeat for England and Australia batting again.

Starc (3-72) returned to remove ⁠Tongue for six to end the innings on 342, the left-arm quick later awarded Player of the Series honours for his tally of 31 wickets over the five Tests.

“The body is still holding together and this is a great group to be a part of,” the 35-year-old said. “I am a little tired but got the job done.”

In Sydney, Australia were again superior in every department, as they were when wins in Perth, Brisbane and Adelaide and secured possession ‌of the Ashes urn for another 18 months in just 11 days.

England won a lottery of a fourth Test in Melbourne – their first win in Australia since Sydney in 2011 – but the future of the “Bazball” style of play must be in doubt after a tour that started with high hopes ended in a 4-1 loss.

“We’ve not won the big series that we want to ‍be winning,” said Stokes.

“When a trend is happening on a consistent basis … that’s when you do need to go back and look at the drawing board and make some adjustments.”

England’s Ben Stokes walks past the trophy during the presentation ceremony at the end of the fifth Ashes cricket Test between Australia and England at the Sydney Cricket Ground in Sydney on January 8, 2026. (Photo by Saeed KHAN / AFP) / -- IMAGE RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE - STRICTLY NO COMMERCIAL USE --
England’s captain Ben Stokes walks past the Ashes trophy during the presentation ceremony [Saeed Khan/AFP]

Unloved in PE, ignored at top – what is cross country’s future?

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Grassy hills and boggy ditches are Megan Keith’s happy place.

For most of her running life she has considered herself primarily a cross-country athlete but, after winning the European Under-23 title two years ago, a reality dawned on her: if she was to be a professional athlete, she would need to look beyond mud and brutal ascents.

“Pretty much until the end of secondary school, I didn’t have any interest in the track. My entire running sphere revolved around cross country,” Keith, 23, told BBC Sport.

“But sponsors and British Athletics put their main focus on the track, so I’ve had to become a track runner and view cross country differently.

“It’s where my passion still lies but there’s expectations for me in the summer, so I can’t put all my eggs into being in peak form in the winter.”

The shift has proven fruitful. A European 10,000m bronze in the summer of 2024 preceded Olympic and World Championship appearances over the same distance, earning her British Athletics funding for the first time.

But the Inverness runner still makes time to follow her heart. She won European Cross Country individual and team silvers last month and will lead the British contingent at Saturday’s World Cross Country Championships in Tallahassee, Florida, which you can watch on the BBC (14:35-19:00 GMT).

Cross country, though, is no longer the prestigious discipline it once was and the number taking part at the top level has fallen. About 500 participants will line up this weekend across the various races, compared to a high of more than 800 at the turn of the century. Previously an annual showpiece event, it was cut to biennial from 2011.

Many nations do not send athletes to it, while others take skeleton teams, shorn of their leading lights, whose winter focus instead lies on training for lucrative spring road races or prominent summer track opportunities.

World Cross Country Championships 2026

Saturday, 10 January

Watch on iPlayer

‘There just isn’t any money in it’

Few people forget their school cross-country days, trudging through murky playing fields on freezing winter afternoons, invariably clad in kit sourced from the lost property bin.

While park runs, trail runs and marathons boom in popularity among the masses, cross-country appetite from the general public is almost entirely absent, likely influenced by those negative schoolday connotations.

At elite level, it is similarly shunned.

“The prestige is not close to when I did it,” said Tim Hutchings, the last British man to win a World Cross Country medal when claiming his second silver in 1989.

“There were several winters where I was among the best cross-country runners in the world and I would go to Europe, win races in Spain, France, Italy, Germany, and it was a very lucrative circuit. It was very much a worthwhile, highly recognised sport in its own right. Now, there just isn’t any money in it.”

A lack of financial incentive is critical. British Athletics funding is linked specifically to track and road performances in Olympic and Paralympic disciplines – a major consideration in Keith looking beyond cross country.

UK Sport began distributing National Lottery funding to Olympic and Paralympic sports in May 1997, allocating it according to medal potential. Before that athletics had been largely amateur until the 1980s, when athletes were left to generate their own income if they wanted to turn professional.

Other factors have also impacted the decline in stature of cross country. The domination of African runners has altered perception of competitiveness, with no-one from outside the continent making the World Cross Country men’s podium for more than two decades – or women’s podium for 12 years.

At either end of the competitive spectrum, the discipline is largely ignored and unloved but, within its own hardcore athletics club community, it remains strong.

More than 5,000 people ran at last year’s English National Cross Country Championships, while the Surrey, Birmingham, Metropolitan and Chiltern Cross Country Leagues all routinely welcome in excess of 1,500 competitors for their monthly events.

Emile Cairess running at the European cross country championships in 2022Getty Images

Could cross country join the Winter Olympics?

While former marathon world record holder and four-time Olympian Paula Radcliffe won successive World Cross Country titles at her peak in 2001 and 2002, it is now largely seen – outside of Africa, at least – as little more than a stepping stone to other things.

But that could soon change.

World Athletics president Lord Coe has long advocated for cross country’s inclusion in the Winter Olympics, and has suggested there is a “good chance” it could be added for the 2030 Games, despite opposition from some existing winter sports.

BBC Sport also understands Britain is formulating bids to host multiple international cross-country championships over the next few years. The last major cross-country event held in Britain was the 2008 Edinburgh World Cross Country Championships.

“Historically, we’re a great cross-country nation,” said Eamonn Martin, English Cross Country Association secretary and British men’s team manager in Tallahassee.

“If we did host more competitions, it would be a bit of a game-changer. And if there’s then an Olympic medal at the end of it, it changes everything.

“Suddenly, British Athletics would fund cross country and the individuals who are so good at it.”

Keith agrees, suggesting it would generate greater exposure and encourage athletes to take it more seriously.

“It’s exciting,” she said. “If we had cross country in the UK at the highest level more regularly, I wouldn’t be surprised if more of our best track runners do cross-country races.

Related topics

  • Athletics

More on this story

    • 14 November 2025
    A cross-country skier in front of the Olympic rings

Unloved in PE, ignored at top – what is cross country’s future?

Getty Images
  • 12 Comments

Grassy hills and boggy ditches are Megan Keith’s happy place.

For most of her running life she has considered herself primarily a cross-country athlete but, after winning the European Under-23 title two years ago, a reality dawned on her: if she was to be a professional athlete, she would need to look beyond mud and brutal ascents.

“Pretty much until the end of secondary school, I didn’t have any interest in the track. My entire running sphere revolved around cross country,” Keith, 23, told BBC Sport.

“But sponsors and British Athletics put their main focus on the track, so I’ve had to become a track runner and view cross country differently.

“It’s where my passion still lies but there’s expectations for me in the summer, so I can’t put all my eggs into being in peak form in the winter.”

The shift has proven fruitful. A European 10,000m bronze in the summer of 2024 preceded Olympic and World Championship appearances over the same distance, earning her British Athletics funding for the first time.

But the Inverness runner still makes time to follow her heart. She won European Cross Country individual and team silvers last month and will lead the British contingent at Saturday’s World Cross Country Championships in Tallahassee, Florida, which you can watch on the BBC (14:35-19:00 GMT).

Cross country, though, is no longer the prestigious discipline it once was and the number taking part at the top level has fallen. About 500 participants will line up this weekend across the various races, compared to a high of more than 800 at the turn of the century. Previously an annual showpiece event, it was cut to biennial from 2011.

Many nations do not send athletes to it, while others take skeleton teams, shorn of their leading lights, whose winter focus instead lies on training for lucrative spring road races or prominent summer track opportunities.

World Cross Country Championships 2026

Saturday, 10 January

Watch on iPlayer

‘There just isn’t any money in it’

Few people forget their school cross-country days, trudging through murky playing fields on freezing winter afternoons, invariably clad in kit sourced from the lost property bin.

While park runs, trail runs and marathons boom in popularity among the masses, cross-country appetite from the general public is almost entirely absent, likely influenced by those negative schoolday connotations.

At elite level, it is similarly shunned.

“The prestige is not close to when I did it,” said Tim Hutchings, the last British man to win a World Cross Country medal when claiming his second silver in 1989.

“There were several winters where I was among the best cross-country runners in the world and I would go to Europe, win races in Spain, France, Italy, Germany, and it was a very lucrative circuit. It was very much a worthwhile, highly recognised sport in its own right. Now, there just isn’t any money in it.”

A lack of financial incentive is critical. British Athletics funding is linked specifically to track and road performances in Olympic and Paralympic disciplines – a major consideration in Keith looking beyond cross country.

UK Sport began distributing National Lottery funding to Olympic and Paralympic sports in May 1997, allocating it according to medal potential. Before that athletics had been largely amateur until the 1980s, when athletes were left to generate their own income if they wanted to turn professional.

Other factors have also impacted the decline in stature of cross country. The domination of African runners has altered perception of competitiveness, with no-one from outside the continent making the World Cross Country men’s podium for more than two decades – or women’s podium for 12 years.

At either end of the competitive spectrum, the discipline is largely ignored and unloved but, within its own hardcore athletics club community, it remains strong.

More than 5,000 people ran at last year’s English National Cross Country Championships, while the Surrey, Birmingham, Metropolitan and Chiltern Cross Country Leagues all routinely welcome in excess of 1,500 competitors for their monthly events.

Emile Cairess running at the European cross country championships in 2022Getty Images

Could cross country join the Winter Olympics?

While former marathon world record holder and four-time Olympian Paula Radcliffe won successive World Cross Country titles at her peak in 2001 and 2002, it is now largely seen – outside of Africa, at least – as little more than a stepping stone to other things.

But that could soon change.

World Athletics president Lord Coe has long advocated for cross country’s inclusion in the Winter Olympics, and has suggested there is a “good chance” it could be added for the 2030 Games, despite opposition from some existing winter sports.

BBC Sport also understands Britain is formulating bids to host multiple international cross-country championships over the next few years. The last major cross-country event held in Britain was the 2008 Edinburgh World Cross Country Championships.

“Historically, we’re a great cross-country nation,” said Eamonn Martin, English Cross Country Association secretary and British men’s team manager in Tallahassee.

“If we did host more competitions, it would be a bit of a game-changer. And if there’s then an Olympic medal at the end of it, it changes everything.

“Suddenly, British Athletics would fund cross country and the individuals who are so good at it.”

Keith agrees, suggesting it would generate greater exposure and encourage athletes to take it more seriously.

“It’s exciting,” she said. “If we had cross country in the UK at the highest level more regularly, I wouldn’t be surprised if more of our best track runners do cross-country races.

Related topics

  • Athletics

More on this story

    • 14 November 2025
    A cross-country skier in front of the Olympic rings

Meghan Markle’s bold request ‘about Megxit’ to Prince Harry exposed by lip reader

A private conversation between Prince Harry and Meghan Markle has been decoded by lip readers – and they claim it gives a telling insight on their plot to quit the Royal Family

Prince Harry and Meghan Markle sent shockwaves around the world exactly six years ago when they dramatically announced they were quitting their royal roles. But it seems one telling comment between the couple has led experts to believe they had been plotting their departure from the Royal Family years before they relocated to California.

The seemingly confidential conversation occurred between the Sussexes at a Service of Remembrance at Westminster Abbey in 2018, just six months after their star-studded wedding in Windsor Castle. The couple was joined in the Abbey by the entire Frim, including the late Queen Elizabeth to honour fallen servicemen and women, and to mark the Centenary of the Armistice.

READ MORE: Prince Harry ‘confident of huge victory in UK security battle’ with wish ‘nailed on’READ MORE: Prince Harry’s ‘desperate’ wish for King Charles amid heartfelt Archie and Lilibet hope

According to the Channel 5 documentary, Lip-Reading The Royals: The Secret Conversations, as Harry and Meghan sat and waited for the ceremony to begin, they started conversing and taking in the situation, with Meghan asking Harry a very serious question.

Lip reading expert Nicola Hickling decoded the conversation for the programme, as she claimed Meghan instructed Harry to “take advantage of the situation”, before she turned to look around at the sea of royals that surrounded them.

She says Harry responded to her comment by asking: “Today?”, as Meghan added: “Do it tonight.” Then, Harry poses a question to Meghan, asking: “You do realise that this is the end?” as Meghan responds: “Yeah, I do know”.

It is then suggested by royal historian Dr Tessa Dunlop that the seemingly private comments between the Sussexes could mean that the couple had been plotting their dramatic exit from the royal family years before they actually decided to call it quits.

Despite having the cryptic conversation at the end of 2018, their first child Prince Archie was born just six months later, as they remained in senior working royal positions for a further eight months after becoming parents.

The Sussexes announced their departure from the royal family in January 2020, sharing a statement on Instagram that they would be “taking a step back” as senior working royals, adding that they would “plan to balance our time between the United Kingdom and North America”.

Their statement also said that by leaving the royal family and relocating to California, it would give them the opportunity to raise their son Archie “with an appreciation for the royal tradition into which he was born, while also providing our family with the space to focus on the next chapter.”

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Previously, in the couple’s controversial new Netflix show, Harry admitted they had been planning the shock move away from the UK for “a minimum of two years”.

In 2018, Harry claims they discussed moving to New Zealand or South Africa – and almost did move to South Africa before the story was leaked to the press. But Harry says they were forced to scrap the plan as it became a “public debate”, so they desperately looked to find a new home while temporarily living in Canada in January 2020.

The NFL record-breaker who never planned to play the sport

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At just 22 years old, Cam Little’s shirt is already on display in the NFL’s Pro Football Hall of Fame in Canton, Ohio.

The reason? A moment in Las Vegas, in a game against the Raiders, in week nine of the 2025 NFL season.

Jacksonville Jaguars kicker Little was called upon just before half-time to convert a field goal from 68 yards out – two yards further than the NFL record set by Justin Tucker in 2021.

The kick was good. In just his second season as a professional in the league, Little had made history.

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“I had no plans on playing football. I was a soccer player through and through,” Little tells BBC Sport.

“I got invited to a football practice by one of my buddies. Most of the time at my high school, the kicker was just a guy who was good at kicking a soccer ball and they would just have him go over there for a practice a week and he would go play the game.

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‘This isn’t for me…’ Why Little nearly quit

Eventually, Little would play in junior varsity football games as a punter, before jumping up to varsity level.

It’s here where his story as an NFL kicker almost ended before it started… again.

“I get to punt my first punt in the game,” Little explains. “They snap it over my head and I get smacked. And so, two days after that, I’m like: ‘I’m good. I’m done with football.’

“I told my dad I wanted to quit, told my coach, I was like: ‘This isn’t for me. I’m going to keep playing soccer. I don’t really want to play football.’

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Little spent the next season studying video of NFL kickers such as Tucker, the previous record holder, before playing for Arkansas in college and then being drafted by the Jaguars in the sixth round in 2024.

“It all happened so fast,” he says. “Good opportunity after good opportunity started hitting me. I put myself in the right positions at the right time, took advantage of them when I needed to, and here we are today.

“Going from someone that didn’t even think he was going to play professional sports, maybe not even college sports, to breaking a record that I never thought was ever going to get broken after Justin Tucker hit the 66. I mean, that’s mental to think about.

Coach Coen’s impact in Jacksonville

Tony Boselli and Liam CoenGetty Images

In the final week of the regular season, the Jags secured the division title for the third time in 26 years. They beat the Tennessee Titans 41-7 to pip the Houston Texans to the AFC South top spot.

During that game, Little scored the first 67-yard field goal in the NFL. He now has the two longest field goals in league history.

Last season, they won just four games and brought in a new head coach in Liam Coen as well as former player Tony Boselli as executive vice-president of football operations.

Under their guidance, they won 13 games and head into the play-offs on a eight-game winning streak.

“Something that coach Coen’s harped on is just going 1-0 every week,” says Little.

“Everyone’s on the same page as far as captains on the team, guys that are leaders on the team, and front office and head coach and coaching staff.

“When you combine those three levels of front office, coaching staff, and captains on the team and leaders on the team, that forms to success.

The Jaguars will now face the Buffalo Bills in the AFC Wild Card round on Sunday at 18:00 GMT.

For Little, it is another special moment in his career.

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