Category: 6. Sports

  • Noel León: My Ultimate Driver

    Noel León: My Ultimate Driver

    PREMA Racing’s Noel León tackles the task of creating the ultimate racing driver, taking the traits of multiple F1 drivers and combining them into the perfect racing template.

    Here is what the PREMA Racing driver came up with…

    INTELLIGENCE

    “Lewis Hamilton. He’s quite smart, not involved in crashes often, so I’ll pick Hamilton.”

    WET WEATHER DRIVING

    “Hamilton or Max Verstappen. I’ll go with Max so I don’t repeat my first answer!”

    QUALIFYING SPEED

    “Charles Leclerc. He’s really, really fast. When he nails that lap, he’s always up there.”

    CORNERING STYLE

    “Max. He attacks the corners a lot. But another choice, Yuki. Tsunoda looks to carry a lot of entry speed.”

    TYRE MANAGEMENT

    “Checo! He’s really good at that. Who else is good at tyre management? I’ll stick with Checo Perez.”

    BRAVERY

    “Yeah that’s Max. He’s always taking risks in the car.”

    SMOOTH DRIVING STYLE

    “Maybe Carlos Sainz, he’s the smooth operator. He always looks quite smooth and under control.”

    OVERTAKING ABILITY

    “Leclerc. He overtakes so much. I remember Monaco that one year – he didn’t finish but he was making a lot of moves.”

    ANYTHING ELSE?

    “Mentality. The mentality for me is quite important. To win a title, you need always be up there, top five and getting P1s consistently. And a lot of that comes down to mentality. You can’t have a good mentality one week and then one week not, because then the results don’t come.

    “I think Max is really good at this. He’s always up there, even not on his best days or with his best performances, he’s always at like 97% and up there. That’s why he’s winning these titles, he’s not in P12 one week and back to P1 the next. He’s just always up there.”

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  • Sprint Races, Home Races, and Milestones: What’s Coming Up in the Second Half of F1 2025

    Sprint Races, Home Races, and Milestones: What’s Coming Up in the Second Half of F1 2025

    A Trio of Sprints

    Belgium in July saw the final F1 Sprint event of the first half of the season, and when the racing returns after the break there will be three further weekends of the shortened format to look forward to.

    For the third year in a row, Austin will host a Sprint race when F1 rolls into Texas in October, and two weeks later there will again be an extra race on the schedule at Interlagos.

    São Paulo is the only track to have hosted a Sprint race in every season since the format’s inception in 2021 and was the site of George’s first F1 win of any description a year later in 2022.

    The final Sprint race of the year takes place in Qatar, which also featured on the 2023 and 2024 Sprint calendar.

    With so much racing left to go, the extra 45 points on offer at these three weekends could make all the difference in the Constructors’ Championship.

    500 Not Out

    While even the best and most experienced F1 drivers might get to 300 or even 400 Grand Prix race starts in their career, it is highly unlikely any will get to 500.

    But that is exactly what Mercedes can achieve with its Safety Car this season, with the United States Grand Prix in Austin set to be the 500th race for a Mercedes Safety Car in F1 history.

    The first Three-Pointed Star Safety Car deployment came at the 1996 Belgian Grand Prix with the C 36 AMG, and since then an array of incredible machines have been used to fill the role of the most important jobs on the grid.

    At Home in Singapore

    While the British and Italian-based Grands Prix will already be ticked off by September, there will be one more home race for the team to celebrate in 2025.

    Located just a few hundred kilometres from the headquarters of PETRONAS in Kuala Lumpur, the Singapore Grand Prix has become somewhat of a second home race for our Title and Technical Partner.

    This year is the 15th anniversary season of our collaboration with PETRONAS, who have been with us every step of way since Mercedes rejoined F1 in 2010.

    It is a relationship built on dedication and innovation and has yielded eight Constructors’ titles and seven Drivers’ titles to date, as well as 121 wins, 287 podiums, and 134 pole positions from 318 Grands Prix.

    In 2024, to celebrate PETRONAS’ 50th anniversary, we ran a special emerald-green inspired livery for the race around Marina Bay.

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  • Neymar leaves field in tears after Santos humbled by Vasco da Gama

    Neymar leaves field in tears after Santos humbled by Vasco da Gama

    Brazil forward Neymar left the field in tears after Santos suffered a 6-0 home defeat by Vasco da Gama.

    The loss was the biggest of Neymar’s career and it was the first time that Santos have conceded six goals at home in a Brazilian Serie A match.

    The eight-time champions are two points above the relegation zone and coach Cleber Xavier was sacked hours after Sunday’s game.

    Former Liverpool and Aston Villa forward Philippe Coutinho scored twice as Vasco claimed their first win in six league games and their biggest league win in 17 years.

    “I’m ashamed,” said Neymar. “I’m totally disappointed with our performance. The fans have every right to protest, obviously without using violence.

    “But if they want to curse and insult, they’re in their right. To sum up our attitude on the field, it was terrible.

    “I’ve never experienced this in my life. The tears were from anger, from everything. Unfortunately, I can’t help in every way.

    “I think everyone today needs to go home and think about what they want to do.”

    Neymar remains the world’s most expensive footballer, joining Paris St-Germain from Barcelona for £200m in 2017, and he returned to his boyhood club in January after the termination of his contract with Saudi Pro League side Al-Hilal.

    The 33-year-old signed another six-month deal in June and since rejoining Santos has claimed six goals and three assists from 21 games in all competitions.

    Brazil’s all-time leading goalscorer left the field in tears after getting injured 34 minutes into his first Serie A start of the season, before missing the next five league games with a hamstring problem.

    Xavier, 61, took charge at the end of April after serving as an assistant manager at several Brazilian clubs, plus the national team.

    Santos won five of his 15 games in charge and are now just two places above the relegation zone, just a place higher than Vasco who were lifted out of the bottom four after Sunday’s win.

    Santos won promotion back to the Brazilian top flight last November after spending a year in Serie B following their first ever relegation.

    Their next game is away to fourth-placed Bahia on Sunday, 24 August.

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  • VIDEO: Neymar breaks down in tears after Philippe Coutinho-inspired Vasco da Gama annihilate Santos in Serie A relegation six-pointer as head coach Cleber Xavier is immediately sacked

    VIDEO: Neymar breaks down in tears after Philippe Coutinho-inspired Vasco da Gama annihilate Santos in Serie A relegation six-pointer as head coach Cleber Xavier is immediately sacked

    • Neymar breaks down after defeat
    • Coutinho scored twice
    • Xavier sacked after 6-0 defeat

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  • Roy Keane and Micah Richards in heated clash over Manchester United’s Altay Bayindir

    Roy Keane and Micah Richards in heated clash over Manchester United’s Altay Bayindir

    Roy Keane and Micah Richards heatedly clashed over Altay Bayindir’s culpability for Arsenal’s winner against Manchester United.

    The United keeper was unable to deal with a first-half corner under pressure from William Saliba and Riccardo Calafiori nodded in on the line at the far post for what proved to be the only goal of the game on Sunday (18 August).

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    Former United midfielder Keane had no sympathy for the Turk as he discussed the match with fellow Sky Sports pundits.

    Keane said: “He has to come with violence, he’s got to be aggressive, he’s got to be almost saying to players, ‘Come in here, I’m happy to deal with it’.”

    Fellow pundit Richards did not agree with Keane and a heated row followed.

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  • The World Triathlon Monday Morning Mix: Week 25

    Multisport was at the forefront of one of the biggest sporting events of 2025 over the past weekend. As Chengdu played host to the World Games, a sporting festival mirroring the Olympic Games for non-Olympic sports, the duathlon events produced a set of spectacular races. Find out all that happened in Chengdu as well as elsewhere in the triathlon world in this week’s Monday Morning Mix.


    Chengdu World Games

    Anahi Alvarez Corral (MEX) timed her race to perfection as she struck gold. The World Triathlon Cup winner had been part of a three-woman pack to break clear on the opening 5km run. Mara Varo Zubiri (ESP), the World Duathlon Championships silver medallist, was the first woman into T1 having run 17:20 with Alvarez and Belgium’s Jeanne Dupont only a second down.

    Over the 30km bike, several athletes were able to close the gap to the leaders but no one could break away to turn the race on its head. As a result, the fight for victory came down to the second 5km run and here Alvarez was ready. She powered to a split of 17:19, the fastest of the day to move clear. Notably, she was the only woman to run faster on her second 5km. Varo followed only 2 seconds behind to take silver while Dupont held on for the bronze medal.

    In the men’s race, Benjamin Choquert (FRA) starred with a performance that was just as balanced as that of Alvarez. The field stayed a little closer together over the first 5km run with Arnaud Dely (BEL) and Thibaut De Smet (BEL) sharing the lead in 15:18. Only a second behind was Choquert, as was Vincent Bierinckx (BEL).

    Choquert, the reigning world duathlon champion, marshalled the bike well as attacks fizzed around him; among the aggressors was Ondrej Kubo (SVK) who seemed intent to break the field up at every opportunity. Yet no one managed to escape and, once again, the race came down to the final run. Like Alvarez, Choquert had the best second run, clocking 15:20 to almost match his opening effort. That was enough to put him 9 seconds clear of silver medallist Dely, handing him a relatively comfortable victory. A further 10 seconds back, Bierinckx then rounded out the podium.

    Later in the Games, the duathlon returned with the hotly-contested 2×2 relay. Each athlete on the one-man-one-woman teams took on a 2km run, 6km bike and another 1km twice. Spain ultimately emerged triumphant with Varo teaming up with 2024 world duathlon champion Javier Martin Morales. Following mere seconds behind were Team Belgium and Team Netherlands, with Team Mexico forced to settle for 4th place. View the full results here.


    Riga Europe Junior Cup

    Over in Latvia, Kira Ellis (PHI) impressed on her way to gold at the Riga Europe Junior Cup. Ellis, a previous Asia Junior Cup gold medallist, beat out Luca Vanderbruggen (BEL) and Sarah Walter (GER) after clocking the fastest 5km run of the day (17:36). Earlier in the race, Beate Jansone (LAT) had led the 750m swim in a time of 11:59. That was enough to create space for a seven-athlete front pack which contained the eventual medallists.

    The men’s race followed a similar pattern as Christian Ache (GER) prevailed in a running race over Isaac Lamprecht (USA) and Henry Haag (GER). The swim was led out by Ilio Kopriva (BEL) in 10:29. He had Haag clamped on his feet but the rest of the field lagged behind in disarray. Gradually, a select front pack from what was a massive field of 60 formed at the front, bringing Lamprecht and Ache back into contention. Then, on the run, Ache dropped a sizzling 14:39 to beat Lamprecht by 12 seconds, with Haag another 6 seconds back. View the full results here.

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  • Rising Stars White triumphs in Independence Day hockey clash

    Rising Stars White triumphs in Independence Day hockey clash

    Rising Stars Hockey Club White sealed a 3–1 victory over Rising Stars Green in the Independence Day Exhibition Match at Shehnaz Sheikh Hockey Stadium, Rawalpindi. Organised by the Rising Stars Hockey Club, the exhibition match marked Pakistan’s 78th Independence Day with a spirited display of sportsmanship and international friendship.

    The event carried special charm as it featured diplomats, young players, and budding female athletes on the same field. His Excellency Neil Hawkins, High Commissioner of Australia to Pakistan, donned the Rising Stars Green jersey, while His Excellency Kamal Ahmed, High Commissioner of Brunei Darussalam, represented Rising Stars White. Their participation not only energized the crowd but also highlighted the growing role of sports diplomacy in strengthening people-to-people ties.
    The match began with fast-paced action, with Rising Stars Green pressing hard in the opening minutes. However, Rising Stars White quickly found their rhythm and took the lead midway through the first half. Despite a strong fightback from the Green side, including a penalty corner conversion, the White side proved too strong, scoring twice more to seal a 3–1 victory. A highlight of the Independence Day Cup was the participation of female players from the Rising Stars Girls Hockey Academy, who showcased their skills alongside senior players.

    Their involvement drew wide appreciation from the spectators, who praised the club’s efforts to encourage women’s participation in hockey.
    Following the match, both high commissioners and Eduard Preda, Deputy Head of Mission of the Romanian Embassy, joined the players in cutting a cake to mark the Independence Day celebrations.

    In their remarks, Neil Hawkins and Kamal Ahmed lauded the Rising Stars Hockey Club for organizing the event with such enthusiasm and inclusivity. They commended the management for creating a platform where youth, diplomats, and female players could come together in the spirit of sportsmanship.

    “This was more than just a match; it was an occasion to celebrate Pakistan’s independence, promote hockey, and build bridges of friendship,” said Kamal Ahmed. Neil Hawkins echoed similar sentiments, emphasizing that such initiatives reflect the true spirit of unity and celebration.

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  • New Caledonia stun hosts with second-half comeback in Group B thriller

    New Caledonia stun hosts with second-half comeback in Group B thriller

    New Caledonia have produced a stunning second-half fightback to defeat the Solomon Islands 5-2 in a pulsating Group B match at the OFC U-16 Men’s Championship in Honiara.

    In a match full of attacking intent and end-to-end drama, the visitors proved more clinical after the break, striking four times to silence the vocal home crowd.

    New Caledonia made the perfect start in the 8th minute when Hnoka Wetewea unleashed a superb right-footed strike past Solomon Islands goalkeeper Eddie Aefi.

    The hosts, however, responded with pace and power down the flanks, constantly troubling the New Caledonia backline. They drew level midway through the first half when Junior Sam converted from the penalty spot after being brought down by Typhan Dreuko.

    Eight minutes before halftime, Sam turned provider, bursting down the right before squaring for Junior Ben to slot home and give the Solomon Islands a 2-1 lead. The home side thought they had extended their advantage just before the interval, but Ben’s second goal was ruled out for offside, while Ben Filia’s long-range attempt whistled narrowly over the bar.

    The momentum shifted after the restart. In the 53rd minute, Darryl Hmaloko’s teasing free kick was met by Andre Menango, who rose highest to nod in the equaliser. Just four minutes later, Wetewea turned creator, whipping in a pinpoint cross for Lenddy Wede to head New Caledonia back in front.

    New Caledonia’s Sylvain Ipeze concedes a goal at the OFC U-16 Men’s Championship 2025, New Caledonia v Solomon Islands, National Stadium, Honiara, Solomon Islands, Monday 18 August 2025. Photo: DJ Mills / www.phototek.nz

    With the home side chasing an equaliser, space opened up at the back, and Wede made no mistake in the 69th minute, breaking clear before finishing calmly with his left foot to seal an impressive win.

    The referee added 18 minutes of extra time due to two cooling breaks and a lengthy stoppage as Solomon Islands keeper Eddie Aefi was stretchered off the field early in the second half. New Caledonia made sure of the result in the 7th minute of injury time, heading home his second goal of the game from a corner.

    New Caledonia now face New Zealand on Thursday, while the Solomon Islands will look to bounce back against Samoa.

    New Caledonia 5 (Hnoka WETEWEA 8’, Andre MENANGO 53’,90+7’, Lenddy WEDE 59’, 69’)

    Solomon Islands 2 (Junior SAM 23’ pen, Junior BEN 37’)

    HT: 1-2

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  • Swiatek swamps Rybakina, to face Paolini in Cincinnati final

    Swiatek swamps Rybakina, to face Paolini in Cincinnati final


    CINCINNATI:

    Iga Swiatek reached the final of the ATP-WTA Cincinnati Open for the first time on Sunday, surging past Elena Rybakina 7-5, 6-3 to book a title clash with Jasmine Paolini.

    The six-time Grand Slam champion earned a Monday evening final against an opponent with nothing to lose after Paolini managed to “forget” a patch of bad form to claim a 6-3, 6-7 (2/7), 6-3 win over Russian Veronika Kudermetova.

    The 29-year-old, who was a two-time Grand Slam finalist in 2024, will bid for the fourth title of her career when she faces Swiatek, who is set to compete in her 13th final at the 1000 level as she closes in on a return to world number two.

    Swiatek, the reigning Wimbledon champion, recovered an early break in the opening set and powered away to beat 2022 All England winner Rybakina — who had swept past world number one and defending champion Aryna Sabalenka in the quarter-finals.

    The former world number one from Poland now ranked third, had twice stalled at the semi-final stage at the pre-US Open event, but booked her title chance on her third opportunity.

    “It was a great match, and at the beginning, I was even surprised that I’m able to keep up with the pace, because we played so fast,” Swiatek said.

    “I wanted to be there when Elena starts making mistakes. It’s impossible to play such a good level throughout the whole match.”

    Swiatek recovered from 3-5 down in the opening set, sweeping the last four games.

    She jumped to a 4-1 lead in the second, sandwiching a pair of love service games around a break of Rybakina’s serve.

    But Kazakhstan’s Rybakina made her work for it, fending off three break points in the sixth game and saving a pair of match points in the eighth before Swiatek closed it out a game later.

    “I was playing with intensity and quality,” Swiatek said. “I feel good about my game right now and would not change anything.”

    Swiatek has beaten Paolini in all five of their prior meetings with the Italian winning just one set.

    But Swiatek said she was prepared for a tough final against a player who beat world number two Coco Gauff in the quarter-finals.

    “Anyone who is there will have been playing well,” she said.

    Before her 6-0, 6-0 Wimbledon final win over Amanda Anisimova last month, Swiatek had been in a trophy drought with her last prior title coming in June 2024 at Roland Garros.

    Another victory on Monday would be a strong springboard into the US Open, where first-round play starts on August 24.

    Paolini looked headed to a straight-set victory but failed to serve out her match at 5-4 in the second set and admitted the lapse left her nervous.

    “The key was to forget, get back into the fight and stay in the present,” Paolini said after wrapping up the win in two and a quarter hours.

    “I was fighting in the second set and all was fine. But I got nervous and thought I would lose the tiebreaker.

    “I came back onto court in the third set trying not to think about what had happened. You have to keep going.”

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  • Ilona Maher takes women’s rugby onto new plane

    Ilona Maher takes women’s rugby onto new plane


    PARIS:

    Ilona Maher transcends women’s rugby, giving it a profile outside of the sport in the way that Mia Hamm did for women’s football.

    Now the stage is set at the women’s World Cup in England for the American to spark even more interest.

    The 29-year-old phenomenon has attracted over eight million followers on social media, not only through her sporting exploits but also for her promotion of body positivity.

    She played a pivotal role in the USA women’s team winning a first ever Olympic medal, beating Australia in the third-place playoff in Paris last year.

    On the back of that achievement, Maher featured in Sports Illustrated’s swimsuit edition and appeared in the US version of hit TV show “Dancing with the Stars”, finishing runner-up.

    The Maher-fuelled improvement of the USA team attracted the attention of American investor Michele Kang who donated $4 million to help develop the USA Women’s Rugby Sevens Team over four years.

    In another sport, Kang owns the Lyon women’s football team, the eight-time European champions.

    Maher’s days in Paris were not just spent playing rugby but also attracting even more followers with her pithy social media posts.

    She compared life in the Athletes’ Village to a reality TV show, in one humorous posting saying she was there “looking for love”, to which her friend replies: “No you are here to play rugby.”

    In more reflective mode in Paris, she told the Bleacher Report one of her goals was trying to reassure “girls” that playing sport did not take away their “girliness”.

    “What we’re trying to show is the beauty that in sports you can be a badass on the field, you can be a beast on the field, but also be a beauty,” she said.

    “It’s really important for me because I want girls to see what their body is capable of.

    “It’s not just to be looked at, objectified, but it’s strong and it’s fast, and it’s brilliant.”

    Maher, who through her body positivity push has become a brand ambassador for a deodorant and a skincare product she co-founded, revels in her global popularity and being “America’s sweetheart.”

    “I love when people call me that because I feel like I’m maybe not the image you would have of a sweetheart in some sense of the word,” Maher told CNN in January this year.

    “I’m honoured.”

    Maher, who hails from Vermont, may be extrovert and cheerful but she keeps her ego in check by showing appreciation to those women sports stars who paved the way for her.

    Hamm, her fellow American and a groundbreaking football superstar of the 1990s and early noughties, a two-time Olympic and World Cup winner, features high on the list.

    “I remember in our gym we always had a poster of Mia Hamm, and that was always cool to look up to her,” Maher told the Bleacher Report.

    Closer to home, though, she is part of a tight-knit family unit, with her father Michael, a keen rugby player who introduced her to the sport, Netherlands-born mum Mieneke and sisters Olivia and Adrianna.

    Elder sister Olivia has a considerable social media presence herself.

    From her father Ilona not only learned about rugby but also a crucial life lesson when he defended her at a softball event.

    One of the other dads complained that Maher’s pitches were unhittable but he was put in his place by Maher senior.

    “I think that was the first moment of being told to never tone it down,” she told CNN.

    “Because that dad over there … wanted me to tone myself down so that it could be easier for (his daughter).

    “But that’s not the world, is it? The world isn’t going to tone down for you.”

    Instead Maher has upped the ante and the fruits for women’s rugby have been plentiful as New Zealand legend Portia Woodman-Wickliffe told AFP.

    “Having someone from America with that American market who is very confident, loves rugby, loves supporting women’s bodies, someone as vocal as that is amazing for us,” Woodman-Wickliffe said.

    “We need to capitalise and follow her as much as we can.”

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