Category: 6. Sports

  • Mika Hakkinen overhauls Michael Schumacher with one of F1’s most memorable overtakes – 2000 Belgian Grand Prix

    Mika Hakkinen overhauls Michael Schumacher with one of F1’s most memorable overtakes – 2000 Belgian Grand Prix

    To mark F1’s 75th anniversary celebrations, F1.com is counting down the sport’s 25 greatest races with a new feature every week. While you may not agree with the order, we hope you enjoy the stories of these epic races that have helped make this sport what it is today. You can read the introduction to the series and see the list of races here.

    At No. 17, Mika Hakkinen gives Mike Seymour his perspective of the dramatic, rain-hit 2000 Belgian Grand Prix, a weekend on which the Finn dominated Qualifying, spun out of the race lead in slippery conditions, and then hunted down Michael Schumacher before pulling off an overtake people still talk about to this day…

    After becoming a two-time World Champion, I was full of confidence heading into the 2000 season. Again, Adrian Newey had designed our car, and again, it was very fast – even if it was very difficult to drive. I remember it being on a knife-edge.

    Our start to the year was okay. We had some technical issues, which disturbed things, but going to the Belgian Grand Prix, I felt we would do well. I knew that our car would be quick at Spa-Francorchamps – and it was. Really, really, really quick!

    When it came to Saturday’s Qualifying session, I was able to maximise the performance of the car in every sector of the lap and take pole position by more than seven-tenths of a second.

    Then the rain arrived on Sunday. When you’re driving an F1 car in the wet, it’s quite a scary experience, especially if your car is on a knife-edge. Everything went fine at the start; I got the lead, I was comfortable, but then I touched the kerb a little bit too much at Stavelot, lost control and spun…

    Luckily, the engine was still running when I ended up on the grass. Of course, I saw Michael – ‘Neeeeeooooom!’ – going flat-out past me. I said, ‘Oh my God’. But I was still confident. ‘I have a good car,’ I thought to myself.

    When those kind of things happen, you don’t have time to think about it too much. ‘What did I do wrong?’ You just have to focus, go back to the track, confirm that there is no damage anywhere on the car and put your foot down.

    After that, I started hunting down Michael. I think he had a little bit more downforce than me, because he was very good in the middle sector of the track, which has quite a few corners. He was able to pull away a little bit there, but every time we went in a straight line, I was catching him in a big way.

    I put in some incredible lap times and I knew I was going to catch Michael sooner or later, although I wasn’t sure if I would be able to overtake him. I knew Michael, I knew how he raced, and he was a really tough guy to overtake. He didn’t open the door for you.

    If you tried to make an overtake on Michael the normal way, when you leave your braking to the last minute and put your nose in, it was probably going to end up in a crash. He was very aggressive in that kind of situation. The positive was that he was consistent!

    When I finally caught Michael, I looked at where he was quick, where he was slow, what kind of tactic I had to adopt to be able to overtake him. I soon knew there was only one place where I had a chance to overtake him – the Kemmel Straight. But, to do that, I needed to go through Eau Rouge nearly flat-out.

    With the race configuration, with tyres that were old, with a car that was already knackered… to go through Eau Rouge flat-out, I knew that it was a risk. But I had to take this risk to be able to overtake him.

    Michael also knew that was the only place where I could overtake – and he kept closing the door. Even when I was next to him, he put me on the grass. I was like, ‘Michael, come on… I’m so much faster, don’t defend, it’s ridiculous. It’s not going to end up a nice way if you continue defending’. But he continued defending.

    Then there was a little bit of luck. I don’t normally think about luck. You have to work on yourself, you have to work with the team, maximise everything that you can. In this case, it was luck that there was a backmarker – Ricardo Zonta – on that straight. I thought, ‘This is it. I have to use this opportunity now’.

    Strangely, Ricardo was driving in the middle of the track. Not driving on the right, not on the left, but the middle. It was very unusual. When we approached him, Michael went left, which made sense, because the other side of the track was still a bit damp. I knew that Michael was going to aim for the dry line to help under braking for Les Combes.

    As soon as it became clear that Michael was going to overtake on the left, I just went flat-out on the right. But I knew that I had to come back to Michael’s line as soon as possible and be on the dry part of the track to hit the brakes. That’s why the movement happened very quickly.

    It was a great, great feeling when it all happened.

    I really needed to focus hard afterwards. As soon as I got past the second sector and third sector with Michael still behind me, I said, ‘Ookay, that’s it, now I’m going to put my foot down’. I didn’t make any mistakes, Michael dropped back, and I was like, ‘Wow, this is cool’.

    When the race was over, I went to see Michael about his defending. I’d known him for many years and we’d been racing each other for many years. We had some little incidents in the past, and these incidents didn’t happen because, ‘Oops, sorry, I made a little mistake’.

    I explained to Michael, ‘Look, this is not the way racing should happen. We are both competitors, we are both World Champions, let’s build our respect on the racetrack that we fight nice and clearly’. Michael just said, ‘No, this is racing, Mika’.

    Anyway, it’s a long time ago. It’s history. I’m not looking at this situation negatively. I had a chat with Michael, I understood his way of working, and that’s it. We all do things differently…

    In general, I think it was an incredible time for the sport. F1 today is mega, no question about it. But that period was special because Michael was at Ferrari, while there was McLaren as an English team with a German engine, helping this Finnish guy to beat a German driver…

    In Germany, people were like, ‘Who are we going to support here? Are we going to support Mika or Michael? Michael is at Ferrari, Mika is using a Mercedes engine and doing commercials around Germany’. So, it was a very powerful fan base, and a friendly fan base in my opinion. It was a beautiful thing.

    The fans are the most important in this business and, when I raced against Michael, it created a nice environment. We didn’t argue in the media; we fought on the track – even if Michael was a bit aggressive sometimes!

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  • Derrick Lewis | There’s Levels To This Game

    Derrick Lewis | There’s Levels To This Game

    “There’s a couple of other ones, too, but I think those two right there stand out the most. Just because those guys were talking crap before the fight, and it was just sweet to knock them out and have their eyes roll back in their head.”

    Lewis has faced a who’s who of the UFC heavyweight division during his career, but now, still ranked inside the top 10, he’s been handed a rather different assignment.

    Rather than facing a fellow top 10 contender, Lewis has drawn the name of Tallison Teixeira, a Brazilian prospect and Dana White’s Contender Series graduate who has fought just once in the UFC so far – in a fight that lasted a mere 35 seconds.

    Teixeira’s first-round knockout of Arthur Lopes on DWCS, and subsequent 35-second finish of Justin Tafa at UFC 312 have convinced the UFC matchmakers that the Brazilian has what it takes to mix it up with Lewis in Nashville.


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  • Argentina v England: Luke Northmore to make debut in second Test

    Argentina v England: Luke Northmore to make debut in second Test

    Head coach Steve Borthwick said “The players have trained with real focus and intensity this week, determined to keep improving in every area.

    “We’re expecting a tactical battle as well as a tough, physical contest, and everyone is excited for what should be a fantastic Test match.”

    The fixture is the final match of Immanuel Feyi-Waboso’s ban for a high tackle and red card against France.

    The wing has travelled with the squad and will be free to play against the US in Washington in an one-off match on 19 July.

    England: Steward; Roebuck, Northmore, S Atkinson, Muir; Ford, Spencer; Baxter, George, Heyes, Ewels, Coles, B Curry, Underhill, T Willis.

    Replacements: Dan, Rodd, Opoku-Fordjour, Cunningham-South, Pepper, Dombrandt, Van Poortvliet, Murley.

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  • PSG pummelling proves Real Madrid’s Galacticos are miles behind Europe’s elite sides: Xabi Alonso has a huge job on his hands to turn Los Blancos around

    PSG pummelling proves Real Madrid’s Galacticos are miles behind Europe’s elite sides: Xabi Alonso has a huge job on his hands to turn Los Blancos around

    The Spanish giants were played off the park in their Club World Cup semi-final, highlighting the gap between them and the European champions

    The world Fabian Ruiz used was “completeness”. Following Paris Saint-Germain’s 4-0 beatdown of Real Madrid at the Club World Cup, the Spain midfielder knew what his team had accomplished.

    This was a comprehensive victory, the kind that seldom happens in any semi-final – never mind against a club like Madrid. PSG were good value for their thrashing, though. There was no luck here, no points of controversy, no individual situations that might have changed the flow, course or vibes of the game. Los Blancos had been battered.

    Wednesday’s result serves as a seminal moment at the end of a season that was full of them. PSG have made fools of pretty much every other top club in Europe over the past six months. To them, this was just another scalp on their way towards inevitable global domination.

    But for Madrid, this loss illustrated just how far behind the very best sides in Europe they really are. Replacing Carlo Ancelotti with Xabi Alonso, coupled with a smattering of smart signings, was meant to solve the issues that plagued their 2024-25 campaign. But in New Jersey – and not for the first time in the last 12 months – they looked a shadow of a top-class team, a work in progress trying to compete with the global elite – and failing miserably.

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  • Diogo Dalot changes shirt numbers at Man Utd

    Diogo Dalot changes shirt numbers at Man Utd

    Among previous wearers of the no.2 are one-club stalwart Gary Neville, who bore it on his shirt from 1994 until his 2011 retirement.

    Wes Brown and Rafael are other recent incumbents, albeit that the former only wore it in the Manchester derby against City in 2008, that marked the 50th anniversary of the Munich Air Disaster.

    The news follows Matheus Cunha being assigned the no.10 and confirmation of three youngsters shifting squad position – Shea Lacey (61), Bendito Mantato (70) and Reece Munro (65).

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  • WTA Completes Inaugural LTA Coach Inclusion Program

    WTA Completes Inaugural LTA Coach Inclusion Program

    The inaugural year of the LTA Coach Inclusion Program has come to a successful close. The program, which was created following the success of the Coach Inclusion Program in North America, saw the WTA partner with the LTA to deliver a combined version of the 2024-2025 Coach Inclusion Program.  \

    Four female coaches successfully applied for selected by the LTA were invited to partake in the program designed at breaking down barriers for female coaches to enter the professional coaching ranks.

    The Coach Inclusion Program was delivered in three phases to cover all areas and aspects required to be a WTA Tour Coach.  During Phase One, in December 2024, participants experienced a week of preseason training with several WTA players at the LTA National Tennis Centre, facilitated by current WTA Tour Coach and WTA Coach Educator Nicole Pratt. The Inclusion Coaches also attended several sessions each day with experts from the LTA’s Performance team.

    Phase Two, which lasted from January to April 2025, was delivered virtually, with the coaches spread across the United Kingdom and internationally.  Participants received individualized support from experienced performance qualified LTA mentors, who supported them as they covered a range of key performance topics relevant to their development. The group had access to a variety of subject matter experts in high performance sport and were brought together for regular live meetings from leading industry experts.

    The program concluded with Phase Three at both the Internationaux de Strasbourg and the HSBC Championships at London’s Queen’s Club, with the four coaches shadowing a WTA Tour Coach and their player for these tournaments. This opportunity provided them with the ability to apply their knowledge while gaining valuable exposure within the WTA environment by shadowing an existing WTA coach and player during the tournament.

    Participating WTA mentor coaches included Michael Joyce (Ashlyn Krueger), Mark Gellard (Magda Linette), Jorge Todero (Caroline Dolehide), Sascha Bajin (Donna Vekic), Rohan Fisher (Storm Hunter), Diego Veronelli (Heather Watson), and Craig Veal (Erin Routliffe and Desiree Krawczyk).  While being immersed on tour, the Inclusion Coaches were able to visualize themselves coaching professionally one day.

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    Ella Taylor who coaches at a Performance Programme in Manchester, was able to evolve her coaching and how she relates with her player, “I learned a lot about myself this week.  My communication style, and how I can work with my athletes and connect with them.  Players need to know you care and the relationship doesn’t start and end when you walk on the court.”

    Anna Brogan, who is currently coaching in Alicante, Spain felt privileged to be a part of the inaugural program, saying “It was amazing to be surrounded by so many incredible professional people on the WTA Tour.”  Anna has since accepted an exciting new job opportunity back in the UK at the Scottish Player Development Centre!

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    The next 12 months will prove to be exciting as the Coach Inclusion Program looks to continue the progress achieved in recent years and seeks to expand across the globe.

    For further information about the Coach Inclusion Program, please contact coach@wtatennis.com

     

     

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  • August second on day two in Austria

    August second on day two in Austria

    AJ August produced one of the best rides of his young professional career after sprinting to a close second place on day two at the Tour of Austria.

    The 19-year-old American hit out on the third-category uphill finish in Alpendorf but was narrowly edged out by Isaac Del Toro (UAE Team Emirates – XRG). 

    With six useful bonus seconds the Grenadier moved up to fifth place overall, with Felix Grossschartner (UAE Team Emirates – XRG) holding on to a nine-second lead, and a 20-second advantage over August.

    The Grenadiers came to the fore on the uphill drag to the line to set up August, with Victor Langellotti backing up his teammate with a seventh place finish.

    With three days to go, the GC fight takes a further step forward on Friday with a first category summit finish atop the Gaisberg.

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  • Shirley Hooper Re-elected as World Netball (WN) Vice President as WN Congress 2025 Concludes.

    Shirley Hooper Re-elected as World Netball (WN) Vice President as WN Congress 2025 Concludes.

    World Netball (WN) today held its virtual Congress 2025, with Shirley Hooper re-elected as Vice President (VP).

    Hooper was up for re-election for the role, having completed her first term of four years, and was running alongside second candidate Kate Palmer AM.

    Both candidates addressed Congress, before voting delegates elected Hooper into the role.

    Speaking on being elected Hooper said: “We are at an exciting point in the development of netball across the world in all 76 of our Member countries.

    “I hugely appreciate the support from those Members to remain in the role of Vice President and hope to continue to drive this momentum.”

    In addition to this, Rob Mills was also re-appointed by Members as WN’s Independent Director.

    Mills, who is Director and CEO of Tenka, a global sport and entertainment consultancy, was first appointed as WN Independent Director for an initial term of four years at Congress in 2021 and has now been appointed for a second term of four years.

    To view all items that were discussed at Congress, you can view our Board papers here.

    WN would also like to congratulate its latest Service Award Holders Dr Grace Bryant OAM (Australia), Noeleen Dix AM (Australia), Pam Smith (Australia), and Wai Taumaunu (New Zealand).

    To view the full list of Service Award Holders and read their citations which were read out at Congress, click here.  

    Make sure you are following us on Facebook, Instagram and TikTok for the latest World Netball news.


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  • Explore R&A TV archive | The Open

    Explore R&A TV archive | The Open

    Along with live coverage from Royal Portrush, R&A TV is home to an extensive archive of exclusive Open content so you can whet the appetite as the latest edition of golf’s original championship approaches.

    Fans can watch official films from every Open since 1970, when Jack Nicklaus claimed a play-off win at St Andrews. Highlights of more recent battles for the Claret Jug are also available for those looking to refresh their memory in a more abbreviated fashion, while the Chronicles of a Champion Golfer series sees past winners go in depth in looking back on their moments of glory.

    The likes of Tiger Woods, Jack Nicklaus, Nick Faldo and Tom Watson reflect on their remarkable success at The Open, while the man who calls Portrush home, Darren Clarke, talks about his long road to winning the Claret Jug at Royal St. George’s, a success in which this year’s Championship venue played a key role.

    There are also several R&A Films exclusives to enjoy.

    ‘Trevino’ examines the incredible life and unlikely rise of Lee Trevino, the six-time major champion who twice lifted the Claret Jug and became a crowd favourite with his infectious personality.

    The story of the epic battle between Nicklaus and Watson in 1977 is retold in ‘DUEL’, with the likes of Jordan Spieth and Jon Rahm giving their insights on the ‘Duel in the Sun’, which is still widely thought of the best head-to-head fight in major championship history.

    Watson also features in R&A Films’ latest offering ‘Underdogs’. The 138th Open in 2009 is synonymous with Watson, who went within one putt of a record-tying sixth Open title at the age of 59 at the same venue where he outduelled Nicklaus. By contrast, champion Stewart Cink is somewhat forgotten.

    Underdogs tells the story of the struggles Cink faced after denying Watson, with his triumph resulting in vilification rather than celebration. It is a stirring tale of legacy, heartbreak and resilience.

    In addition to getting you in the mood for The Open, R&A TV can help you improve your own game through the OneClub coaching series, which provides tips to assist you in everything from driving the ball on the range to finding magic on the greens with the putter.

    You can explore the extensive archive of content on R&A TV now.

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  • Ferrero & Lopez assess Alcaraz's game ahead of Wimbledon SFs… – ATP Tour

    1. Ferrero & Lopez assess Alcaraz’s game ahead of Wimbledon SFs…  ATP Tour
    2. Taylor Fritz’s class on the grass gives him a genuine shot against Alcaraz  The Guardian
    3. The one Alcaraz weakness Fritz can expose at Wimbledon  MSN
    4. Wimbledon 2025: Massive 40/1 odds on Carlos Alcaraz to beat Taylor Fritz with Paddy Power  sportingnews.com
    5. Serena Williams’ former coach tells Taylor Fritz what he must do to trouble Carlos Alcaraz in the Wimbledon semi-finals  Tennishead

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