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George Williams hopes to follow footsteps at Rugby League Ashes

George Williams hopes to follow footsteps at Rugby League Ashes

England's last win against the Green and Golds came 30 years ago and with their most recent Ashes series win coming in 1970, comparisons can be made with that of the England men's cricket team's barren run against the same opposition between 1989 and 2005.
Michael Vaughan led his side to a 2-1 series win 20 years ago to end that particular drought, sparking an outpouring of national pride as well as inspiring a new generation of cricket fans.
And Williams, who has been England Men's Rugby League captain since 2023, wants the same outcomes for his sport both on and off the pitch.
'[The 2005 cricket Ashes] is a good storyline and it would be great if we could replicate that,' the 30-year-old Warrington Wolves scrum-half said.
⌛️ The countdown is on!
👀 Just 100 days until we welcome @Kangaroos to @WembleyStadium...
Join us 👉 https://t.co/f3mCZVgVdl pic.twitter.com/BnIkrOqu0I — England Rugby League (@England_RL) July 17, 2025
'Having not beaten them for a long, long time, as players we are desperate for that to happen and I think it's what the game needs.
'The NRL do it so well in terms of their coverage across Australia, and I think that's what we need in England if we want rugby league to grow.
'We're trying to tap into London and different areas and if we beat the Aussies then it becomes a massive thing.
'And then hopefully off the back of that, we get some new faces and a new generation watching rugby league.'
Beginning in Clapham - home of one of London's largest populations of expat Aussies - and finishing at the iconic Wembley Stadium, the tour saw the Ashes Trophy travel through the capital's streets aboard a classic London bus, giving fans and passers-by a glimpse of the 97-year-old trophy as it approached the Wembley arch.
The three-Test contest will see England face Australia on home soil for the first time since the 2017 Rugby League World Cup Final and will also be the first Ashes Series since 2003, when the Kangaroos last toured the UK under the Great Britain banner.
The return of such an iconic series is a prospect Williams is relishing.
🤩 Just 100 days to go!
👀 We're getting even closer to the opening test of the @ABKBeer Rugby League Ashes at @WembleyStadium...
🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 Get your tickets and support #EnglandRL now: https://t.co/f3mCZVgVdl pic.twitter.com/QXqxcKdDPi — England Rugby League (@England_RL) July 17, 2025
'Ever since it has been locked in and confirmed, as a player, you've been striving to be a part of it,' he continued.
'As an England player, it's exciting. It's not happened for a long time, the last time it did I was a kid, so I'm really honoured to be a part of it, especially as captain. I can't wait for it to come around.'
Williams was speaking during a launch event in London to mark 100 days to go until the 2025 Ashes Series begins.
The series kicks off at Wembley Stadium on Saturday 25th October, before heading to Liverpool a week later on Saturday 1st November where a sold-out Bramley-Moore Dock will take centre stage.
Leeds Rhinos' Headingley Stadium is the venue for the third and final Test, also a sellout, on Saturday 8th November.
Over 60,000 tickets were sold on the first day of the priority sales window, which was a record-breaking figure for any Rugby League series launch, and ticket sales for Wembley are continuing at pace.
'We'll be out to right some wrongs, and we've got a great opportunity in our own country at some great grounds to try and turn them over,' Williams said.
'And it all starts at Wembley, so it's really exciting.'
Marking the milestone with a '100 days to go' London Trophy Tour were Rugby League legend Martin Offiah MBE, current England captain George Williams, star player Jack Welsby, and Aussie comedian and Rugby Football League President, Adam Hills MBE.
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Tensions threaten to boil over as England and India seek edge in series decider
Tensions threaten to boil over as England and India seek edge in series decider

The Independent

time29 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Tensions threaten to boil over as England and India seek edge in series decider

Tensions rose once again as England's fifth Test decider against India advanced towards a chaotic and ill-tempered conclusion at the Kia Oval. A total of 15 wickets tumbled on day two as ball dominated bat for the first time in the series, but the increasingly lengthy list of flashpoints between the rival teams ensured a spiky finish is in prospect. India ended the day 52 ahead on 75 for two, having lost their last four batters in double-quick time in the morning before bowling England out for 247 in just over 50 overs. England will rue not adding to the list of scalps, Yashasvi Jaiswal advancing to a rapid 51 not out after being shelled twice in the slips by Harry Brook and Zak Crawley. With the series up for grabs – England chasing a 3-1 win, India eyeing a creditable 2-2 draw away from home – both sides have everything to play for over the remaining three days. Whether they can keep a lid on their emotions remains to be seen after the strained relations between the sides continued. Ben Duckett was involved in two eye-catching exchanges. He reacted with an admirably cool head after Akash Deep dismissed him and then draped his arm over the left-hander's shoulder as he offered a few unsolicited words. Deep's actions could be deemed to breach ICC rules on 'inappropriate physical contact', despite being delivered with a smile. Duckett then appeared to annoy Sai Sudharsan after his own late dismissal, with the India number three spinning on his heels after heading for the pavilion and engaging in further verbals. In between those incidents, Joe Root responded furiously after an exchange with Prasidh Krishna. It is unclear what was said between the pair, but Root, who has rarely lost his cool in 13 years of international cricket, was clearly incensed as he shouted indignantly at the seamer. The umpires also saw fit to intervene, having words with the bowler as well as a handful of his team-mates. England began ruthlessly with the ball, taking the last four wickets for six runs to end the first innings on 224. After blowing hot and cold on day one Josh Tongue served up more of the same as he kicked things off for England, with three of his first four balls disappearing to the boundary. The pay-off came soon after as the Nottinghamshire quick beat Karun Nair with a fine delivery that zipped through at 91mph and had him lbw. From there it was over to Gus Atkinson, who crushed the tail in ruthless fashion to seal figures of five for 33 on his comeback. Washington Sundar was bounced out, taking on a bumper and failing, Mohammed Siraj lost his off stump and Krishna nicked behind for a duck. If the clatter of wickets gave England's openers the jitters it was impossible to tell, Crawley instantly on the offensive as he slapped three of his first nine balls for four. Duckett overcame a couple of early scares, a loud lbw shout shown to be going over and a possible catch landing safe as the fielders at gully and point left it for each other. But his response was emphatic, reversing his hands and launching Deep for six over the slips before hitting the ropes three more times in the seamer's next visit. The runs were raining down on India as the top-order pair piled up 92 in 12 overs, but Duckett's boldness cost him eventually, feeding a gentle catch behind after flipping his hands and looking for another scoop. India were much improved in the afternoon, seeing their lead dwindle but regularly breaking through. Siraj had Ollie Pope (22), Root (29) and Jacob Bethell (six) lbw, just reward for a wholehearted and excellently-executed spell of fast bowling. Bethell hit one glorious four through cover point but was pinned off the next ball, cutting short his first Test innings of the year. Krishna returned to remove Jamie Smith and Jamie Overton before the interval, but Brook rode his luck to make an important 53 before he was last man out to the impressive Siraj. There was enough time for 18 overs before bad light intervened, with plenty of action packed in. Tongue bowled a brilliant new ball burst in the absence of the injured Chris Woakes, finally getting his due when KL Rahul fenced to slip. Jaiswal played with unruly aggression, cashing in after edges were spilled on 20 and 40. Sudharsan was also badly dropped by substitute fielder Liam Dawson at fine leg, but Atkinson made sure that was not a costly drop as he pinned the batter lbw. Sudharsan's cross exchange with Duckett epitomised another frosty passage of play, with more of the same surely on the cards.

Joe Root loses his cool as India's last throw of the dice keeps Test series on a knife-edge
Joe Root loses his cool as India's last throw of the dice keeps Test series on a knife-edge

The Independent

time29 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Joe Root loses his cool as India's last throw of the dice keeps Test series on a knife-edge

For India, as this enthralling Test series against England seemed to be slipping away, something radical was required. In this latest episode of England and India's poking and bickering and all-out fire and fury, the piping hot visitors went for the jugular, just after lunch on day two. And in doing so, they swung this contest back into an area of neutrality, once more a one-innings shootout of sorts, heading into the final three days. It should be stated that the advantage remains in England's corner. Not only did they register a 23-run lead after the first innings, but they can play the remainder of the match in the knowledge that a draw is as good as a win, as they look to claim their biggest Test series victory in head coach Brendon McCullum's three-year reign. But under the dark clouds of south London on Friday, a dark cloud surprisingly descended for England's most accomplished performer. Joe Root is many things. A great batsman, of course. A fierce competitor, yes. But he is rarely one for explosiveness, whether it be at the crease or with his words. Even as captain, amid much hardship, his equanimity rarely wavered. But here, in the eye of a Prasidh Krishna-inspired storm, he lost his cool. A tad rattled, the strangeness of what occurred reverberated through England's batting order, leaving India firmly in the match. And out of nothing on day two, India clawed back something from the brink of no return. England's quickfire stand of 129 runs for just one wicket was followed by the remaining eight wickets falling for just 118, dismissed for 247. India saw out the day's proceedings two down, stationed steadily on 75-2, with a lead of 52. On the Oval's 'Day for Thorpey', in memory of ex-England and Surrey batter Graham Thorpe who took his own life last summer, Root (with 73 wickets) started in the field as England's most experienced wicket-taker, after Chris Woakes was ruled out of the match due to a dislocated elbow suffered on the boundary late on Thursday. With plenty in the crowd wearing Thorpe's iconic headband, the hosts blitzed through India's remaining batsmen with aplomb. In just 28 minutes, Gus Atkinson and Josh Tongue stormed through an Indian tail which, not for the first time this summer, failed to muster any resistance at all. The last four wickets fell for just six runs, with Karun Nair's sturdy innings of resistance the first to fall, dismissed leg-before-wicket by the ever-changing bamboozlement that is Josh Tongue bowling a cricket ball. Erratic? Pitch perfect? How about both? With Nair gone for 57, the rest quickly followed. Washington Sundar fell into Gus Atkinson's short-pitched trap, hooking into Jamie Overton's hands for 26, before Mohammed Siraj and Krishna came and went without scoring. Not to matter, given their exploits to come, but for Atkinson, making his Test debut this summer after a hamstring injury, an unexpected five-wicket haul on his home ground was something to cherish. Chasing 226, Zak Crawley and Ben Duckett were undaunted by the overcast conditions and swinging pitch. In something of a throwback to three years ago, when the other-worldly red-ball landscape of Bazball first landed on English shores, England's opening partnership tore through a shellshocked Indian attack at a run-rate of seven an over. Yet in striking two exquisite scoop shots for six – shots that fellow left-hander Thorpe would have enjoyed – Duckett stoked the fire for the rest of the day. A scoop too many resulted in his exit for 43, clipping the ball behind, and Akash Deep had the final say, goading his opponent with a patronising arm around the shoulder as he left the field of play. Words were exchanged; shots were fired. It wouldn't be the last confrontation of the day. Crawley brought up his fifty with 12 fours to his name but after lunch, a swift change in momentum. The visitors altered their approach, became more animated and vocal in the field, and undoubtedly unsettled an England outfit who could see the Anderson-Tendulkar Trophy on the horizon. Skying a short ball into the air, Crawley's dismissal for 64 (another frustrating case of the opener being unable to convert a promising start into a century) brought Root to the crease at 124-2. Customarily coolness personified, here, England's greatest-ever Test batsman was properly wound up. Root clashed primarily with Krishna, a bowler he has shared the same dressing room with at IPL outfit Rajasthan Royals. No sign of any lasting friendship here, though, as Root vociferously confronted the Indian seamer with a choice collection of words. Was it retaliation for Krishna needlessly throwing the ball at Crawley minutes earlier? Was Krishna walking across the England batsman running between the wickets? Did Root, plain and simple, nibble at a line of bait? Either way, it all worked in India's favour. Shortly after the umpires intervened, stand-in captain Ollie Pope was trapped lbw by Siraj – who also inevitably brought the heat in the sledging contest – before Root followed in the same fashion, unable to get bat on a quickfire ball nipping in, trudging back a defeated man for 29. Jacob Bethell, making his first Test appearance on English soil, only managed six before Siraj took his scalp too, with the youngster not even bothering to review a yorker which was nailed on for middle stump. In an instant, India were back in the ring, on the front-foot and purring. Jamie Smith, on his home ground, edged behind off Krishna for just eight and when another Surrey player in Jamie Overton went for a duck, lbw to Krishna, India had not only stopped England's runaway train but had successfully derailed it. Six wickets to the visitors made the afternoon their session. With India only needing nine wickets due to Woakes's injury, Harry Brook was the final line of defence. He looked on course for a half-century, including one magnificent sweep for six, before the rain sprinkled down just after Atkinson hooked disconnectedly to the fielder at mid-on. With just one wicket remaining, from such a position of strength, England's lead was next to nothing. Brook went on to claim his half-century after a 42-minute delay, before he dragged on to his own stumps off the bowling of Siraj for 53. India, with a stride in their step, entered the dressing room buoyed by their afternoon's work, with England's lead just 23 runs. As the sun then came out over Kennington to conclude proceedings, India's openers put on a stand of 46 before Tongue removed KL Rahul, who edged to Root at first-slip. Back in his element, taking a catch down low to his left, the tetchiness of hours earlier was long gone for England's greatest ever batsman. Substitute fielder Liam Dawson dropped Yashasvi Jaiswal on 40 in the closing overs, a gaping chance squandered at fine-leg, before Atkinson had the final say as he trapped Sai Sudharsan leg-before-wicket. Shortly after, the teams left the field for bad light at 7:17pm. The tone has been set, in a match still tantalisingly in the balance, ahead of crunch time on day three.

India hit back against Bazballing England on another remarkable day
India hit back against Bazballing England on another remarkable day

Reuters

time30 minutes ago

  • Reuters

India hit back against Bazballing England on another remarkable day

LONDON, Aug 1 (Reuters) - India roared back into contention on an exhilarating day two of the final test on Friday as their seamers restricted England to a 23-run lead after the hosts had threatened to run away with a match that the tourists need to win to square the series. After mopping up India's brittle tail in less than 30 minutes in the morning, openers Zac Crawley and Ben Duckett raced to 92-0 in 12 overs in a blistering return of Bazball. However, continuing the back and forth theme of the entire series, India responded as their bowlers ran in relentlessly to peg England back to 247. Opener Yashasvi Jaiswal then scored quickly in a potentially awkward last 90 minutes, ending unbeaten on 51 with India closing on 75-2, 52 runs ahead to leave the pivotal match fascinatingly poised. Another fabulously undulating day began with India resuming at 204-6 but soon skittled for 224 as pace bowler Gus Atkinson took five wickets in his first test since May. It was an all-too-familiar collapse by the tourists this summer as Karun Nair fell lbw for 57 and Washington Sundar was caught for 26. Atkinson then bowled Mohammed Siraj and had Prasidh Krishna caught behind, both for ducks, to finish with 5-33. England set about their reply in their usual, swashbuckling fashion, exemplified by Duckett's extraordinary "reverse hook" for six off Akash Deep. They reached 50 in seven overs - the fastest 50 opening partnership England have ever managed in a test - but fell just short of the 100 as Duckett was caught behind reversing for 43. They were 109-1 at lunch and England looked poised to take command but India, as they have all summer, refused to buckle as Crawley (64) and Ollie Pope (22) quickly departed. Joe Root brought his usual calm to proceedings until Siraj nipped one back at him for an lbw on 29, with Jacob Bethell going the same way soon after. Krishna finished off the session in style by having Jamie Smith brilliantly caught in the slips for eight by KL Rahul then getting Jamie Overton lbw for nought and followed up with the wicket of Atkinson to finish with 4-62. Harry Brook had a late flurry either side of a rain delay before becoming Siraj's fourth victim when bowled for 53 as England, with injured Chris Woakes absent, were all out for 247. India's openers quickly erased that and pushed on well beyond, with Jaiswal looking particularly enterprising en route to a quickfire 51 - though he was badly dropped in the deep on 40. Rahul departed tamely for seven off Josh Tongue, and Sai Sudharsan followed, lbw to Atkinson for 11, leaving Deep not out four. With good weather forecast for Saturday another Oval full house will turn up in expectation of more fireworks and what has been one of the most entertaining series for years still in the balance.

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