
-
EU-member Luxembourg enthrones monarch, drawing hundreds
-
Bellingham left out of England squad for October games
-
Sarah Mullally appointed first woman to lead Church of England
-
Carrefour name disappears from Arab stores as Israel boycotters claim victory
-
Brignone will give her all to be ready for Winter Olympics
-
Organisers say last Gaza flotilla boat intercepted by Israel
-
Jurel, Jadeja power India's lead to 164 against West Indies
-
Philippine military chief says rejected calls to oust Marcos
-
Hamas says still needs time to study Trump's Gaza plan
-
World champion Marquez crashes twice in Indonesia MotoGP practice
-
UK on 'high alert' following synagogue terror attack
-
Finland dismisses case over Baltic cable cuts
-
Liverpool goalkeeper Alisson ruled out until after international break
-
Russia-linked tanker stopped by France resumes voyage: vessel trackers
-
Hamas official says group still needs time to study Trump's Gaza plan
-
Goffin beats Shelton in first Shanghai Masters shock
-
Ton-up Rahul, Gill steer India into lead in West Indies Test
-
Spain's Benidorm embraces its Franco-era mass tourism model
-
Not all 'A's: Unconventional paths that led to Nobels
-
New York judge to sentence Sean 'Diddy' Combs after blockbuster trial
-
Typhoon Bualoi death toll in Vietnam tops 50
-
Indonesia free meals programme under fire after thousands sickened
-
South Korea's Hwang charges into Hawaii LPGA lead
-
Munich airport resumes flights after drone sightings trigger closure
-
Wallabies vow to send Slipper off on a high against All Blacks
-
Cyberattack halts shipments from Japan's biggest brewer
-
Liverpool seek to steady ship, Man Utd's Amorim faces must-win game
-
Luxembourg gets new Grand Duke with royal abdication
-
Cambodian ex-MP's killer jailed for life in Thailand
-
Czechs head to polls with billionaire ex-premier tipped to come first
-
Taylor Swift moves into 'Showgirl' era with new pop album
-
Last flotilla boat sails on towards Gaza after Israel interceptions
-
Munich airport halts flights after drone sightings
-
Rookie Schlittler pitches gem, Yankees beat Red Sox to advance in MLB playoffs
-
Indonesia school collapse death toll rises to 7: rescue official
-
China trials 'energy-saving' underwater data centres
-
Tech fans Tokyo rally on broadly positive day for Asian markets
-
Group leading Morocco protests demands govt dismissal
-
Virtual Jesus? People of faith divided as AI enters religion
-
McEvoy calls on World Aquatics to make 25m sprint an official event
-
Australian drug kingpin to face retrial in police informant scandal
-
Staniforth predicts All Blacks honours for 'freak' Manu before Top 14 match-up
-
AC Milan face Scudetto rivals Juve after landmark San Siro ruling
-
Tensions rising at Real Madrid before Villarreal test
-
Top four face off in early Bundesliga litmus test
-
Could PSG finally be there for the taking in Ligue 1?
-
South Africa eye back-to-back Rugby Championship crowns
-
Sean 'Diddy' Combs asks judge for 'mercy' ahead of sentencing
-
FIFA unveils Trionda, the official ball of the 2026 World Cup
-
Higgo in four-way tie for PGA Tour lead in Mississippi

England's injured Woakes still has Ashes hopes
England paceman Chris Woakes is considering rehabilitation rather than surgery on his dislocated shoulder in a last-ditch bid to make himself available for the upcoming Ashes tour of Australia.
Woakes bravely came out to bat at number 11 with his arm in a sling on Monday in a desperate attempt to help England secure victory in the fifth and deciding Test against India at the Oval after dislocating his left shoulder while diving in the field on the first day of the match.
But Woakes' courageous effort was not enough as India won a thrilling match by six runs, without the Warwickshire stalwart facing a ball, to end the series all square at 2-2.
It seemed then that Woakes' hopes of being involved in England's quest to regain the Ashes had evaporated.
The 36-year-old has had a scan on his shoulder and, although he is still awaiting the results, he is holding out hope that an eight-week period of rehabilitation could ensure he makes an astonishing recovery to feature in the Ashes, which start on November 21.
"I'm waiting to see what the extent of the damage is but I think the options will be to have surgery or to go down a rehab route and try and get it as strong as possible," Woakes told the BBC on Friday.
"I suppose naturally with that there will be a chance of a reoccurrence, but I suppose that could be a risk that you're just willing to take sort of thing.
"What I've heard from physios and specialists is that the rehab of a surgery option would be closer to four months, or three to four months. That's obviously touching on the Ashes and Australia so it makes it tricky.
"From a rehab point of view you can probably get it strong again within eight weeks. So that could be an option, but again obviously still waiting to get the full report on it."
Woakes, a veteran of 62 Tests, is the most experienced member of England's pace attack following the retirement of Stuart Broad two years ago and the team management's decision to move on from record wicket-taker James Anderson in 2024.
But even before his injury at the Oval, doubts had been expressed over whether England would select Woakes for the Ashes given his Test bowling average overseas is an expensive 48.93 compared to 23.87 on home soil.
Ch.Kahalev--AMWN