-
Jonathan Anderson reimagines aristocrats in second Dior Homme collection
-
Former England rugby captain George to retire in 2027
-
Israel launches wave of fresh strikes on Lebanon
-
Ubisoft unveils details of big restructuring bet
-
Abhishek fireworks help India beat New Zealand in T20 opener
-
Huge lines, laughs and gasps as Trump lectures Davos elite
-
Trump rules out 'force' against Greenland but demands talks
-
Stocks steadier as Trump rules out force to take Greenland
-
World's oldest cave art discovered in Indonesia
-
US hip-hop label Def Jam launches China division in Chengdu
-
Dispersed Winter Olympics sites 'have added complexity': Coventry
-
Man City players to refund fans after Bodo/Glimt debacle
-
France's Lactalis recalls baby formula over toxin
-
Pakistan rescuers scour blaze site for dozens missing
-
Keenan return to Irish squad boosts Farrell ahead of 6 Nations
-
US Treasury chief accuses Fed chair of 'politicising' central bank
-
Trump rules out force against Greenland but demands 'immediate' talks
-
Israeli strike kills three Gaza journalists including AFP freelancer
-
US Congress targets Clintons in Epstein contempt fight
-
Huge lines, laughs and gasps as Trump addresses Davos elites
-
Trump at Davos demands 'immediate' Greenland talks but rules out force
-
Australia pauses for victims of Bondi Beach shooting
-
Prince Harry says tabloid coverage felt like 'full blown stalking'
-
Galthie drops experienced trio for France's Six Nations opener
-
Over 1,400 Indonesians leave Cambodian scam groups in five days: embassy
-
ICC rejects Bangladesh's plea to play T20 World Cup matches outside India
-
Prince Harry says UK tabloid court battle in 'public's interest'
-
Trump lands in Davos to push Greenland claims
-
Balkan wild rivers in steady decline: study
-
Injured Capuozzo misses out on Italy Six Nations squad
-
Mourners pay last respects to Italian icon Valentino
-
EU parliament refers Mercosur trade deal to bloc's top court
-
Odermatt seeks first Kitzbuehel victory with eye on Olympics
-
Italy's Brignone to be rested for Spindleruv Mlyn giant slalom
-
Alcaraz spearheads big names into Australian Open third round
-
European stocks dip ahead of Trump's Davos speech
-
Trump flies into Davos maelstrom over Greenland
-
EU won't ask Big Tech to pay for telecoms overhaul
-
Railway safety questioned as Spain reels from twin train disasters
-
Marcell Jacobs back with coach who led him to Olympic gold
-
Syria army enters Al-Hol camp holding relatives of jihadists: AFP
-
Brook apologises, admits nightclub fracas 'not the right thing to do'
-
NATO chief says 'thoughtful diplomacy' only way to deal with Greenland crisis
-
Widow of Iran's last shah says 'no turning back' after protests
-
Waugh targets cricket's 'last great frontier' with European T20 venture
-
Burberry sales rise as China demand improves
-
Botswana warns diamond oversupply to hit growth
-
Spaniard condemns 'ignorant drunks' after Melbourne confrontation
-
Philippines to end short-lived ban on Musk's Grok chatbot
-
Police smash European synthetic drug ring in 'largest-ever' op
Root, Brook stand passes 150 as England 211-3 in 5th Ashes Test
Joe Root and Harry Brook shared in an unbroken 154-run partnership on Sunday to rescue England and give them the upper hand at tea on day one of the fifth and final Ashes Test against Australia.
Batting after skipper Ben Stokes won the toss at a sold-out Sydney Cricket Ground, they steered the tourists to 211-3 when they went off for bad light with tea called 10 minutes early.
Root was not out 72 and Brook on 78, coming together with England tottering at 57-3 after losing Ben Duckett (27), Zak Crawley (16) and Jacob Bethell (10) before lunch.
The world's top two-ranked batsmen set about counter-attacking on a decent batting pitch providing little movement for the bowlers, who toiled hard in the second session without joy.
Both brought up hard-fought half-centuries and with storm clouds looming, kept the scoreboard ticking over at a fast clip.
England came into the game buoyed by a four-wicket win inside two days at the previous Test in Melbourne, desperate to keep the momentum going.
It snapped a 15-year winless streak in Australia but came too late to save the series with the hosts retaining the urn by winning in Perth, Brisbane and Adelaide.
Australia sprung a surprise by including allrounder Beau Webster in place of quick Jhye Richardson with off-spinner Todd Murphy overlooked.
It is the first time in almost 140 years that the hosts have not played a front-line spinner during a Sydney Test.
England brought in seamer Matthew Potts for the injured Gus Atkinson in their only change.
The day began with a tribute to first responders at the recent Bondi mass shooting attack that left 15 dead, with huge cheers when hero Ahmed Al Ahmed, who tackled one of the gunmen, appeared.
When play started Duckett was lively, crunching five boundaries from Mitchell Starc in a quickfire 27 off 24 balls.
But England's tormentor-in-chief Starc had the last laugh, enticing an outside edge from an angled ball to wicketkeeper Alex Carey at full stretch.
It was the fifth time Starc has bagged Duckett this series.
Crawley was next to go, trapped lbw by Michael Neser, with both openers back in the sheds by the first drinks break and the tourists in trouble on 51-2.
A cautious Bethell took 15 balls to get off the mark and never looked confident.
He departed after prodding at a moving delivery from Scott Boland that took a faint edge and was collected easily by Carey as England fell to 57-3.
Root joined Brook at the crease and they began to rebuild.
They rotated the strike well and punished any loose balls with Root bringing up his 67th half-century, and the 100-partnership, with a single off Webster.
Only Indian great Sachin Tendulkar with 68 has scored more Test fifties.
Brook was fortunate to survive on 45 when he slogged Starc and the ball dropped between three chasing fielders.
But he kept his composure to reach a 15th half-century four balls after Root, cracking Webster through the covers for a boundary.
G.Schmid--VB