lundi 29 juin 2026

Ben Stokes’s chaotic retirement unpacked

Burnham: Give me 10 years to transform Britain | NHS hospitals defy trans ruling
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Britain’s most popular daily newsletter, read by more than 850,000

Monday, 29 June 2026

Issue No. 491

Good morning.

Ben Stokes has always done things his own way, and the England captain’s bizarre retirement was no different. Mid-match, mid-series and amid a power-struggle crisis at the top of the ECB, Stokes told his players before the fourth day of the Test that it would be his final match for his country. He then took a wicket with the first ball after the news was made public and promoted himself to open the batting, which Scyld Berry, our Chief Cricket Writer, calls brainless bravado. Michael Vaughan, our columnist, discusses the role the nightclub saga played in Stokes’s decision-making, and Nick Hoult, our Chief Cricket Correspondent, takes a closer look at the retirement that stunned the cricket world.

Chris Evans, Editor

P.S. We’re giving you a year of The Telegraph for £1.99 per month. Hurry, this email-exclusive offer must end soon. If you’re already a subscriber make sure you’re logged in to read today’s stories.


 

In today’s edition

Burnham: Give me 10 years to transform Britain

Chinese mega-embassy ‘could be used as a prison’

Plus, ‘Waitrose films’ are ruining British cinema

Ends soon: A year for £1.99 per month

Stay ahead of every crucial update as Burnham closes in on No 10

 

Ben Stokes’s chaotic retirement unpacked

Ben Stokes scored 30 runs in his final Test innings before losing his wicket to Zakary Foulkes

Nick Hoult

Nick Hoult

Chief Cricket Correspondent

 

It started with a murmur. A day that was dull and uninspiring was about to explode as news spread around Trent Bridge that Ben Stokes was retiring.

The mid-match announcement stunned cricket. All the crowd could do as Stokes stood ready to bowl his 11th over of a mammoth spell was cheer their champion to the crease. With the first ball after the resignation was made public, he took the wicket of Zak Foulkes. It was “the most Ben Stokes thing you will ever see”, according to Joe Root, totally nailing the moment.

It sparked the craziest three hours of cricket you will ever see. As Daryl Mitchell ground out a hundred, and New Zealand set England 373 to win, Stokes decided to “create some chaos” and open the batting. It ended in glorious failure but was fun while it lasted.

Now at 103 for four England are staring at a series defeat, their first at home in a three-Test series since the 2012 London Olympic summer.

Why now? It is quite something to give up the chance to be the captain in next year’s Ashes. Stokes has fallen out of love with the job, but that has only happened because of the fallout with those above over the last few weeks. “I actually said to my wife, ‘I don’t think I have any more fight left in me’,’’ he said.

The curfew row was not mentioned but it all added up for a man exhausted by the captaincy.

“That whole week at Lord’s for me was a very, very strange week. That was the start of all of this questioning. This is brutal, what we do: physically, mentally. Even the stuff away from it, the stuff you have to put in and the hard work. Even that’s just getting a bit tiring these days. I’m 35. I feel like I have to do so much physical work to keep myself doing what I do out there. Again, do I have that in me? That fight in me to keep doing that?”

He will have to fight from the changing room today. This will be Stokes’s final day as an England player, but he won’t bowl, bat or field. You can follow England’s attempt to rescue the series in our live coverage.

This report is available only to subscribers.
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See more of our expert commentary below:

Scyld Berry: Ben Stokes’s brainless bravado sinks the England ship

Michael Vaughan: This shock retirement is a sad day for English cricket

Sign up to Cricket with Michael Vaughan for exclusive analysis from the former England captain, plus sign up to Sportsday for Thom Gibbs’s take on the biggest stories every morning.

 

Opinion

Simon Heffer Headshot

Simon Heffer

The cult of Andy Burnham is sinister and un-British

Andies seem to be as gullible, docile and brainwashed as the Moonies. For the country’s sake, let’s hope they snap out of it

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Michael Mosbacher</span> Headshot

Michael Mosbacher

Capitalism is the only way to drag Britain out of its doom spiral

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Muriel Zagha</span> Headshot

Muriel Zagha

French food isn’t far-Right

Continue reading

 

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Headlines

The Princess of Wales at the summit of Ben Nevis

The Princess of Wales was pictured at the summit of Ben Nevis on Saturday evening

summer of sport

England’s tournament just beginning, while Raducanu pulls out

As well as all of the cricket drama, it’s been a big weekend in the world of sport. Below, our team bring you the latest from the World Cup and Wimbledon.

Football predictor
Luke Edwards

Luke Edwards

Northern Football Writer

 

If football is indeed coming home this summer, it will have to be done the hard way.

England’s reward for topping their group after Saturday’s 2-0 win over Panama is a horrendously tricky path to the final. Should Thomas Tuchel’s side beat DR Congo in the round of 32, they will probably face co-hosts Mexico, at the Azteca Stadium at altitude, in the round of 16 before potentially meeting Brazil.

Stephen Eustaquio (centre) scored two minutes into added time to send co-hosts Canada in to the next round

A semi-final against Lionel Messi’s Argentina is on the cards, ahead of a potential final with France. If you’re going to be crowned world champions, you have to beat them all.
Try our World Cup predictor

Simon Briggs

Simon Briggs

Tennis Correspondent

 

Emma Raducanu has withdrawn from Wimbledon at the 11th hour after developing a stress fracture in her right shin. The news came late last night, after the 23-year-old had previously indicated her intention to play through the pain in her scheduled match against Antonia Ruzic this afternoon.

Emma Raducanu practised yesterday but has since been forced to withdraw through injury

“I can’t believe I’m saying this,” Raducanu wrote in a post on Instagram, “but sadly I’ve had to withdraw from this year’s Wimbledon. I’ve done everything possible to try to get to the start line tomorrow but after a final scan tonight, the niggle I’ve been managing has developed into a stress fracture and I’ve been medically advised to stop pushing through.”
Read the full story here

 

Essential Reads

NHS hospitals defy trans ruling

NHS hospitals are continuing to allow some transgender patients to use female-only wards and facilities, despite a Supreme Court ruling on the meaning of sex in equality law. Ministers are now under pressure to clarify the rules, as trusts await long-delayed national guidance on how the ruling should be applied. Michael Searles, our Deputy Health Editor, has the story.

Continue reading

 

Jannik Sinner discusses his extraordinary tennis rise, his rivalry with Carlos Alcaraz and why success hasn’t changed him

Jannik Sinner: ‘I play for myself, I don’t play for records’

The French Open proved that World No 1 Jannik Sinner was human after all, but his dominance in men’s tennis in 2026 has grown from “impressive” to “laughable” as the year has gone on, Guy Kelly writes. Now, with his frenemy Carlos Alcaraz struck by injury, it will take an almighty upset to stop Sinner defending his Wimbledon title. I met him in Monaco, and found a man who may have the weight of the world on his shoulders, but he shrugs it off better than anybody.

Continue reading

 

Chinese mega-embassy ‘could be used as a prison’

Britain’s debate over China’s proposed London “mega-embassy” has focused on spying, but Taiwan’s envoy to London has other concerns, writes Adrian Blomfield, our Chief Foreign Correspondent. He warned me that hidden chambers beneath the vast complex could be used to hold captured dissidents and activists as Beijing looks to widen its campaign of transnational repression.

For subscribers only

 
Films GIF

‘Waitrose films’ are ruining British cinema (and disrespecting the elderly)

“Heart-warming” cringe-fests have dominated British cinema for more than a decade now. They have patronising “feel good” messages and appear precision-engineered for middle-class couples who live in the Home Counties and shop at Waitrose. They may seem well-intentioned and harmless enough, but they’re a disaster for British culture and an insult to the elderly, as David Alexander explains.

Continue reading

 

Seize the day

What to read this summer

Every day this week, one of our critics will share their recommendations for this summer’s best books.

Lucy Thynne

Lucy Thynne

Deputy Literary Editor

 

On Saturday, we revealed our essential 2026 summer reading list. It has recommendations for everyone, from fiction to history, science to biography.

Personally, I need absorbing fiction. More and more, I’m reaching for short stories over novels: the form is having a real moment. You can’t go wrong, for instance, with One Sun Only, the darkly funny collection by the young French-American writer Camille Bordas. On the Books desk, we loved her old-fashioned sentences and wisecracking dialogue.
Read the full review

I’ve also been recommending Colm Tóibín’s latest suite of emotional stories, The News from Dublin, to everyone I know. The Brooklyn writer just gets better and better.
Read the full review

 

CAPTION COMPETITION WITH...

Matt Cartoon
Matt Pritchett

Matt Pritchett

Cartoonist

 

Hello! Today you have this man holding an ice cream to caption. Below is this week’s winner from Simon May. I very much empathise with this child – offices haven’t been this busy since before Covid. Keep your entries coming!
Send me your captions here

P.S. For an inside look at what inspires my weekly cartoons, you can sign up for my personal subscriber-exclusive newsletter here.

Matt Cartoon
 

Your say

The great seat debate

While Orlando Bird, our loyal reader correspondent, is away, Kate Moore is on hand to share an off-piste topic that has brought out the best of your opinions and stories.

Kate writes...
If you want to raise the temperature even higher than it has been of late, one surefire way to do it is to start a conversation about bad behaviour on trains.

We had hundreds of replies to Rowan Pelling’s piece about the etiquette of taking up more than one seat, after a man’s complaint against a young woman who barricaded herself in with her luggage went viral. Rowan’s view is that seat-blocking is an egregious act worthy of a day in the stocks. Surely readers would agree?


 

The response was impressively nuanced. “Personal view only: seat-blocking is acceptable only if there are plenty of other seats available,” said John Davis.


 

Some admitted to the deed themselves, with mitigation. “Loads of people plonk their bag on the seat next to them to keep an eye on it, including me, but will very happily anticipate the seat being needed if the seating space fills up, and move it spontaneously,” wrote Jeremy Weatherhead.


 

As Ben Gunn pointed out: “There is a problem of comically inadequate luggage space. You see huge numbers of bewildered tourists with massive suitcases and nowhere to put them.”


 

Hilary Deighton was one of many to take a hard line against the bag-wielders. “If you use public transport you accept that you will need to sit next to people, that is what it is for. Sometimes, those people are very annoying, sometimes they are charming, frequently they do the decent British thing of acting as if you and they exist in non-contiguous universes. However, you can’t block seats you haven’t paid for.”


 

Perhaps it’s time that old strategies were revisited. Frances Braithwaite recalled his time travelling into Waterloo from Kew Bridge, on a busy 5pm train. “The guard used to fight his way through checking tickets and would ask very loudly, ‘Has this case got a ticket? If not, it cannot remain on a seat.’ It always worked and a grateful commuter got to sit down.”

Is seat-blocking ever justified? Tell us what you think here.

Please confirm in your reply that you are happy to be featured and that we have your permission to use your name.

 

On this day

1850 | Sir Robert Peel falls off his horse. He dies of his injuries three days later

2001 | Steven Spielberg’s film A.I. Artificial Intelligence is released

2009 | Financier Bernard Madoff sentenced to 150 years in US maximum prison over his Ponzi scheme (see the front page of our business section the following day)

Birthdays: Jude Bellingham (23), Eberechi Eze (28), Katherine Jenkins (46)

Telegraph front page

Plus, in the news today, a rare German Messerschmitt fighter has flown alongside a Spitfire for the first time this century at an airshow. Where was the show?

Planes

Red 12, the restored Messerschmitt, and a Spitfire from the Shuttleworth Collection

1. Bedfordshire
2. Sussex
3. Essex
4. Hertfordshire

Click one of the options to reveal the answer...

 

Puzzles

Panagram

Find as many words as you can in today’s Panagram, including the nine-letter solution. Visit Telegraph Puzzles to play a range of head-scratching games, including The 1% Club, Cogs, and Quick, Mini or Cryptic Crosswords.


 

Yesterday’s Panagram was EXECUTION. Come back tomorrow for the solution to today’s puzzle.

 

Please let me know what you think of this newsletter. You can email me your feedback at fromtheeditor@telegraph.co.uk.

Thank you for reading. Have a fulfilling day and I hope to see you tomorrow.

Chris Evans, Editor

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dimanche 28 juin 2026

‘My son was killed by his girlfriend’

England book date with DR Congo | Simon Case interview
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Britain’s most popular daily newsletter, read by more than 850,000

Sunday, 28 June 2026

Issue No. 490

Good morning.

Ashe Smith believed James Self, her son, was in a normal relationship. When he was killed by his abusive girlfriend, Smith was devastated at not seeing the truth before it was too late. Now, she is working with police to raise awareness of domestic violence against men. Sybilla Hart reports on her interview with the “remarkable woman” below.

Plus, England have made it through to the last 32 at the World Cup as group winners after beating Panama 2-0. Oliver Brown, our Chief Sports Writer, argues that although the atmosphere at the final whistle may have been euphoric, concerns about the England squad remain.

Allister Heath, Sunday Telegraph Editor

P.S. We’re giving you a year of The Telegraph for £1.99 per month. Hurry, this email-exclusive offer must end soon. If you’re already a subscriber make sure you’re logged in to read today’s stories.


 

In today’s edition

Simon Case: Burnham will have to be honest or he will go the same way as the last five PMs

The US-Iran war may have ended, but 6,000 miles away the death toll is rising

Plus, how tennis could add 10 years to your life

Ends soon: A year for £1.99 per month

Stay ahead of every crucial update as Burnham closes in on No 10

 

‘My son was killed by his girlfriend’

Ashe Smith says her son, James Self, was the victim of a society prejudiced against men

Sybilla Hart

Sybilla Hart

 

Domestic violence makes headlines depressingly often. However, it is rare for the victim to be male. I recently met Ashe Smith, whose son James Self, 47, died after an attack by his girlfriend. He was brutally beaten by Polly Murphy and endured six agonising weeks in hospital before succumbing to his injuries. Murphy is now serving a life sentence for the crime.

Smith is devastated both by James’s death and at not seeing the truth about her son and his partner’s relationship behind closed doors. “I feel very naive…” she told me, “and James was too embarrassed to tell us what he was going through.”

James Self

James Self died on Dec 21 2023, aged 47

Smith says society seems to be prejudiced against men when it comes to domestic violence. She believes that “people have grown up with the idea that men are physically stronger than women”.

Now able to find some calm since Murphy’s conviction, she is determined that her son’s death should not be in vain. Smith wants to encourage more men to come forward and share their burdens – and she is working with police to raise awareness. She is, I think, a remarkable woman.
This exclusive interview is available only to subscribers.
Continue reading

 

World cup diary

Bellingham to the rescue yet again as England book date with DR Congo

Jude Bellingham and Harry Kane both scored against Panama

Oliver Brown

Oliver Brown

Chief Sports Writer at the MetLife Stadium, New York

 

The mood at the final whistle was euphoric as Harry Kane celebrated becoming his country’s record World Cup goalscorer by leading fans in a rousing refrain of Wonderwall.

England made it difficult for themselves against Panama, the tournament’s only team not to score a goal, but finally prevailed courtesy of second-half goals for Kane and Jude Bellingham. Now, at last, the serious business begins.

They are through to the last 32 as group winners, ready to face the Democratic Republic of Congo in Atlanta on Wednesday. It begins a mouthwatering run of fixtures, potentially involving a duel with co-hosts Mexico at the Azteca Stadium.

But there are some concerns simmering close to the surface. One in particular is at right-back, with Jarell Quansah going off with a strained ankle midway through the second half, compounding England’s catalogue of problems in that position. They have already lost both Reece James and Tino Livramento to injuries and can ill afford Quansah being consigned to the sidelines as well.

There is a nagging sense that it never needed to be this way. Tuchel had a ready-made world-class right-back in Real Madrid’s Trent Alexander-Arnold, but he decided to leave him out of the squad. The manager is adamant his players do not fear anybody. It is a mindset they will need in abundance as the sharp end of the tournament approaches.
Read the full match report here

England player ratings: Rogers better off bench and Anderson too isolated

England rely on two world-class players – they are not yet a team

Roy Keane and Gary Neville’s wild punditry shows why neither made it as a manager

Scoreboard
 

Opinion

Daniel Hannan Headshot

Daniel Hannan

Burnham threatens to be the latest PM thwarted by Tony Blair’s deep state legacy

Even Starmer ended up frustrated that the administrative and judicial state stands in the way of delivering for the voters

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Janet Daley</span> Headshot

Janet Daley

I don’t regret Brexit. But Trump’s ignorance is making Europe look serious

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Arthur Reynolds</span> Headshot

Arthur Reynolds

Wes Streeting talks like a centrist but governs from the Left

Continue reading

 
Matt Cartoon
 

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In other news

Weekend reads

Simon Case photographed for The Telegraph this week in central London

Simon Case: Burnham will have to be honest or he will go the same way as the last five PMs

The former Cabinet secretary worked closely with David Cameron, Theresa May, Boris Johnson, Liz Truss, Rishi Sunak and Sir Keir Starmer. Now, in his first major interview since leaving Whitehall, Simon Case tells Gordon Rayner, our Associate Editor, why all of them ended up failing and what Andy Burnham, the putative Labour leader, must do if he is to escape the same fate.
This story is available only to subscribers.

Continue reading

 

The US-Iran war may have ended, but 6,000 miles away the death toll is rising

In Madagascar, there is a thin line between death and survival. In its rural communities, a relatively common medical condition can rapidly become a death sentence. Yet in the country’s remotest regions, a fragile support network of planes, supply chains, and volunteer medics is under threat from a conflict thousands of miles away writes Verity Bowman, our Foreign and Global Health Security Reporter. The US-Iran war may be drawing to a close, but its death toll is still rising – an unexpected consequence of a global fuel and food shortage triggered by the crisis in the Middle East.

Continue reading

 

Hacked off Hugh Grant pushes next prime minister to curb free speech

Hugh Grant arrives at the Community Sports Club in Makerfield, Greater Manchester

Fifteen years after the phone hacking scandal, Hugh Grant – aka @HackedOffHugh – believes his moment to win tougher press regulation has finally arrived, writes James Warrington, our Media and Telecoms Editor. As Andy Burnham prepares to enter Downing Street, campaigners hope to revive Leveson-style regulation over the media, while Labour weighs new controls for online platforms. Britain’s prized free speech protections are being sucked into a political war.

Continue reading

 

Telegraph journalists assemble their perfect festival bill – from Taylor Swift to The Smiths

Our dream Glastonbury line-up (if it was on this year)

It’s Glastonbury weekend, but with the festival on a fallow year (perhaps for the best, given this scorching weather), The Telegraph’s writers couldn’t resist compiling their fantasy line-ups. Dead or alive, British or American: Michael Deacon, Neil McCormick and more pick their dream headliners, from a reunited Smiths and R.E.M. to Taylor Swift and Prince. Who would be yours? 

Continue reading

 

Your Sunday

How tennis could add 10 years to your life

Will Stoddart decided to pick up a racquet after hearing that playing tennis was associated with a 15 per cent lower risk of dying

Of all the things you can do in midlife to live longer – eat better, sleep more, stress less – picking up a tennis racquet may be the most powerful. A recent study linked the sport to a 15 per cent lower risk of dying, the strongest results for a single form of exercise, including jogging or going to the gym. Here’s why.

Continue reading

Here is another article that I hope you’ll find helpful this morning:

 

Devil’s Advocate

Shall I tell you what’s really disruptive to learning? Heat stroke

Alexandra Jones

 

My child attends a very well-maintained nursery in east London. They have air conditioning in every room and a vast garden shaded by plenty of trees. It’s basically impossible to get into – thanks, if rumours among the neighbourhood nannies are to be believed, to extremely stringent DEI policies. I digress, I have absolute faith that it’s the best place for her if the mercury rises. Not least because our ex-council mid-terrace is insulated to the point of suffocation.

Despite that, if the only other option were to send her to the kind of grotty establishment I myself attended as a child and teenager, where half the lessons were conducted in portacabins known to reach 43C at even the barest sniff of a sunny interval, you bet I’d be keeping her at home.

Common sense dictates that if it’s hot enough for the pavements to melt, it’s too hot for a child to sit in a poorly ventilated prefab box doing phonics. Shall I tell you what’s really disruptive to learning? Heat stroke.

“What about work?” a colleague asked this morning when I let my feelings be known. Well, that seems like a problem for them – my biggest responsibility is to my child. The fact is, we seem to be on the receiving end of a heating climate, a not unwelcome position to be in, if we’re honest with ourselves. However, that doesn’t mean that we have the infrastructure to handle it.

People are quick to point to other parts of the world where they go about their lives even in furnace conditions, but that’s because they’ve adjusted. If the next few summers do indeed bring the sort of temperatures that climate doomers have predicted, then it’d be sensible to follow the example of those hotter economies: air con where possible, daily siesta everywhere else, no outdoor work and schools that follow hot weather timetables.

 

One great life

Jim Sewell, ‘supercop’ who caught dozens of villains as head of the Murder Squad and the Flying Squad

Jim Sewell, right, being presented with an award from the FBI at the US embassy: he was the most widely travelled British policeman of his day

Jim Sewell, who has died aged 94, was nicknamed “Supercop” by the press on account of his remarkable clear-up rate, writes Andrew M Brown, our Obituaries Editor.

He rose to near the top of the Metropolitan Police, but his golden years were the 1970s, when he ran the Murder Squad and then the Flying Squad.

Creative in his approach, when chasing villains who had battered a petrol station attendant to death, he once borrowed 200 pupils from a nearby prep school to comb the countryside for a stolen cash register.

Sewell

Sewell as deputy assistant commissioner of the Metropolitan Police, c 1983

Another especially callous case was the shotgun killing of a bank cashier, since the young woman had already complied with the thief’s demand to hand over the money.

When crime writer PD James interviewed Sewell, she described the contents of his “murder bag”: as well as handcuffs and a tape recorder, it included more gruesome items such as “sample bottles for stomach contents” and an “instrument for the extraction of teeth from the corpse”.

In 1981, Sewell led the crowd-security operation at Charles and Diana’s wedding. The day was gloriously crime-free: “Thieves have to have holidays too,” Sewell enthused.

Read Jim Sewell’s full obituary here

 

On this day

1846 | The saxophone is patented by Antoine-Joseph Sax

1914 | Franz Ferdinand is assassinated, setting off a chain of events that lead to the First World War

1919 | Treaty of Versailles is signed in France, ending the First World War

1982 | Prince Charles and Diana, Princess of Wales announce the name of their first born: William (and our front page coverage the following day)

Birthdays:
Elon Musk (55), Kathy Bates (78), Mel Brooks (100)

Front page
 

Puzzles

Panagram

Find as many words as you can in today’s Panagram, including the nine-letter solution. Visit Telegraph Puzzles to play a range of head-scratching games, including The 1% Club, Cogs, and Quick, Mini or Cryptic Crosswords.


 

Yesterday’s Panagram was FLEDGLING. Come back tomorrow for the solution to today’s puzzle.

 

Thank you for reading.

Allister Heath, Sunday Telegraph Editor

P.S. Please share your thoughts on the newsletter at fromtheeditor@telegraph.co.uk.

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