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Search resuls for: "England men’s"


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England to host Zimbabwe in one-off test in 2025
  + stars: | 2023-08-15 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +1 min
LONDON, Aug 15 (Reuters) - England will host Zimbabwe in a one-off four-day test match in 2025 as part of a concerted effort to improve relations between the two cricket boards, officials said on Tuesday. It will be the first time Zimbabwe travel to England for bilateral cricket since 2003, when England fast bowler James Anderson took 5-73 on his debut at Lord's. "We are committed to developing a closer relationship with Zimbabwe Cricket and the announcement of this Test against our England Men’s team is a step in that ambition," England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) chief executive officer Richard Gould said in a media release. Zimbabwe have not played an away test against England, India or Australia since 2003. The test will be played from May 28-31 at a venue which is still to be confirmed.
Persons: James Anderson, Richard Gould, Givemore Makoni, Nick Said, Ed Osmond Organizations: Zimbabwe, Zimbabwe Cricket, England, Wales Cricket Board, ECB, Thomson Locations: England, Zimbabwe, Lord's, India, Australia
CNN —An independent report into the culture of cricket in England and Wales has found racism, class-based discrimination, elitism and sexism to be “widespread” and “deep rooted” in the sport. The “Holding a Mirror Up to Cricket” report was written by the Independent Commission for Equity in Cricket (ICEC) and received more than 4,400 responses to its call for evidence between oral and written submissions. … The decline in Black cricket in England and Wales has been well documented and subject to much public debate for many years. Regarding sexism, the report said: “Women are still seen as an ‘add on’ to the men’s game. “The apology should acknowledge that racism, sexism, elitism and class-based discrimination have existed, and still exist, in the game, and recognise the impact on victims of discrimination.
Persons: George Floyd, , Cindy Butts, Azeem Rafiq, Butts, Rafiq, Ben Stokes, Joe Root, Heather Knight, , Richard Thompson Organizations: CNN, Cricket, Independent Commission, Equity, Wales Cricket Board, Culture, Media, Sport Committee, England men’s, ECB, , England Women, England Locations: England, Wales,
A personal redemption narrative forms a compelling subplot the main story, and it’s a cruel irony that Southgate’s England side also lost the final of Euro 2020 in a penalty shootout on home soil. That Southgate has yet to bag a trophy — the England men’s team still hasn’t won a major tournament since 1966 — remains a powerful trump card for his doubters. Yet “Dear England” is not so much about sports as it is about culture. The technical and tactical foundations of the England team’s revival are conspicuously underplayed in this telling: The team’s on-field improvement is straightforwardly tethered to a shift in moral values, and we are given to understand that correlation equals causation. Dear EnglandThrough Aug. 11 at the National Theater, in London; nationaltheatre.org.uk
Persons: — Theresa May, Boris Johnson, Liz Truss, Southgate’s, Southgate, hasn’t, , nationaltheatre.org.uk Organizations: Conservative, Germany, England men’s, National Theater Locations: London, England
England footballers have taken the knee at the 2022 FIFA World Cup in Qatar to “protest against discrimination, injustice and inequality” and say the gesture is not “aligned to a political organisation or ideology”, as some people have claimed online. The tweet in the screenshot reads: “So the England team are going to take the knee before the Iranian team because of a policeman in Minnesota? They are doing this as a mechanism of peacefully protesting against discrimination, injustice, and inequality. There can be no doubt as to why the players are taking the knee and what it represents in a footballing context.”VERDICTMisleading. England football players take the knee as a peaceful protest against discrimination, injustice and inequality.
CNN —For many, the name Patrick Vieira brings to mind one of the most dominant midfielders in English Premier League history. To the younger generation, he is now one of the up-and-coming modern managers emerging in the Premier League. But Vieira wants to remind the world that he was born in Senegal and is proud to be African. “The diversity of our French and French national team was a success as well as winning the World Cup.”Patrick Vieira holds aloft the Premier League trophy after the Premier League match between Arsenal and Leicester City in 2004. The former Arsenal captain is currently the only manager from an ethnic minority in the Premier League and only the 10th Black manager since the competition’s inception in 1992.
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