Category: 6. Sports

  • Favorites and Sleepers: Mid-Ohio

    Favorites and Sleepers: Mid-Ohio

    Reigning Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course winner Pato O’Ward snapped the Team Penske/Chip Ganassi Racing domination on the 2.258-mile track last year by giving Arrow McLaren its first victory there.

    But Chip Ganassi Racing driver Alex Palou enters this weekend as the driver to beat. The three-time NTT INDYCAR SERIES champion is undefeated on natural road courses in 2025 with wins at The Thermal Club, Barber Motorsports Park, Indianapolis Motor Speedway road course and Road America. He’s also on a four-race podium streak at Mid-Ohio, including a 2023 victory and runner-up finish last year.

    Can anyone stop the points leader in Sunday’s 90-lap race?

    If so, it may take a village.

    Typically, Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course has been a track that has featured organization-wide dominance; if someone tops Palou, look for their teammate to be close by.

    Since 1990, a one-two team finish has occurred 138 times in NTT INDYCAR SERIES competition. Mid-Ohio has produced a series-leading 16 of those occurrences, double the next best of eight at the former Belle Isle Park circuit in Detroit.

    Here are the favorites and sleepers for The Honda Indy 200 at Mid-Ohio Presented by the All-New 2026 Passport airing at 1 p.m. ET Sunday on FOX, the FOX Sports app and the INDYCAR Radio Network.

    Favorites

    Scott McLaughlin (No. 3 Odyssey Battery Team Penske Chevrolet)

    McLaughlin has three straight top-five finishes at Mid-Ohio, including a 2022 win in which he led 45 laps. He finished third last season, the third straight year a Team Penske driver finished in that spot, with Will Power doing so in 2022 and 2023. On natural road course races this season, McLaughlin finished 27th, third, fourth and 12th, respectively, showing he’s a serious contender when the car is right.

    Pato O’Ward (No. 5 Arrow McLaren Chevrolet)

    Last year’s winner led 24 of 80 laps en route to the victory, but history isn’t on his side as no driver has gone back-to-back at Mid-Ohio since Scott Dixon in 2011-12. However, O’Ward has flashed natural road course speed this season with podiums at The Thermal Club and the IMS road course. He also earned NTT P1 Award honors and led 51 laps at The Thermal Club and finished sixth at Barber Motorsports Park.

    Scott Dixon (No. 9 PNC Bank Chip Ganassi Racing Honda)

    Dixon has six wins in 19 Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course starts. His recent finishes include fourth, fifth, second and 27th, respectively. Chip Ganassi Racing has also produced the second-place finisher each of the last four years via Marcus Ericsson (2021), Palou (2022, 2024) and Dixon (2023).

    Alex Palou (No. 10 Open AI Chip Ganassi Racing Honda)

    Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course has been a great track for Palou, who has three straight top-two finishes on the track, including a victory in 2023. There’s not much more to say for the three-time series champion, who leads second-place Kyle Kirkwood by 93 in the standings.

    Will Power (No. 12 Verizon Team Penske Chevrolet)

    Power led 206 combined laps with seven top-four finishes in his last 10 Mid-Ohio starts. While he finished 11th last year, he battled a sickness that compromised his ability to push his car beyond its limits. He finished sixth this season at The Thermal Club, fifth at Barber, third on the IMS road course and 14th at Road America.

    Sleepers

    Christian Lundgaard (No. 7 Arrow McLaren Chevrolet)

    Lundgaard, in his last two Mid-Ohio starts driving for Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing, qualified fifth and ninth and finished fourth and seventh, respectively. This season, his first with Arrow McLaren, he has shown podium speed on natural road courses, with finishes of third and second at Thermal and Barber, before dipping to 16th and 24th at the IMS road course and Road America, respectively. Arrow McLaren proved it can win here, and Lundgaard is more than capable.

    Graham Rahal (No. 15 Fifth Third Bank Honda)

    Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course is Rahal’s home track and is a place where he has performed well. Rahal has completed 99.7 percent of his laps (1,521 out of 1,525) and produced 10 top-10 finishes in his last 12 tries. He qualified second in 2023 and finished seventh after a slow final pit stop dropped him in the finishing order. Rahal has finished 11th, 14th, sixth and 20th on natural road courses this season.

    Kyle Kirkwood (No. 27 Andretti Global Honda)

    The only driver not named Alex Palou to win this season, with three in total, is chasing his first natural road course victory. Kirkwood is 0-for-24 on this type of track but is trending upward and improving nearly every season at like venues. At Mid-Ohio, he has finished 26th, 17th and eighth, respectively. Kirkwood finished fourth two weekends ago at Road America.

    Louis Foster (No. 45 Mi-Jack Honda)

    He finished first and second, respectively, at Mid-Ohio in USF Pro 2000 competition in 2022. He then earned his first career INDY NXT by Firestone victory on this track in 2023 and repeated last year during his 10-win championship season. Foster earned NTT P1 Award honors in the last race at Road America, and his best finishes during his rookie season are 11th at both the IMS and Road America road courses. He has qualified 10th, 12th, third and first, respectively, on natural road courses, too.

    Felix Rosenqvist (No. 60 SiriusXM Honda)

    Rosenqvist earned his first career podium at Mid-Ohio by finishing runner-up to Dixon in 2019. He placed runner-up in the last race, at Road America. On natural road course tracks this season, Rosenqvist has three top-10 finishes in four tries.


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  • Rugby union in England: how can financial sustainability be achieved?

    Rugby union in England: how can financial sustainability be achieved?

    Rugby union in England stands at a crossroads. The professional era, launched with optimism in 1995, has struggled to deliver a viable business model nearly three decades after its inception. 

    Recent years have seen several high-profile club collapses, mounting debts and a sector-wide dependency on wealthy benefactors. This article examines how rugby union could make the transition to a more financially sustainable future, drawing on insights from industry and academic work.

    The crisis defined

    Three historic English clubs – London Irish, Wasps and Worcester Warriors – fell into administration between 2022 and 2023. Their debts exceeded a combined total of £90 million. 

    Indeed, no Premiership rugby club turned a profit in 2022/23, according to the 2024 Leonard Curtis rugby finance report, the first publicly available deep dive into the financial performance of the game. 

    Gloucester Rugby came closest to breaking even, with a loss of just over £0.5 million, but all the other Premiership clubs posted losses of more than £1 million. The highest loss, posted by Saracens, was £5.3 million. 

    Seven of the ten clubs were technically insolvent, operating only due to continued financial injections from owners. Many clubs also showed significant amounts of debt on their balance sheet, ranging from £15.6 million (Exeter Chiefs) to £60.8 million (Bristol Bears). 

    There are broader systemic failures underpinning this crisis, according to research on rugby union’s finances (see Wilson and Plumley, 2017; Golding et al, 2025). 

    One study that analyses 20 years of club accounts finds persistent loss-making, weak cost control and a mismatch between expenditure and revenue growth (Golding et al, 2025). Another draws similar conclusions using an earlier ten-year dataset, and confirms that the game has encountered financial difficulties over the last two decades (Wilson and Plumley, 2017). 

    Despite recent substantial investments from private equity firm CVC Capital Partners and a lucrative TV deal with TNT Sports, clubs continue to burn through cash at an alarming rate. 

    Indeed, if current trends persist, there is a realistic possibility that even more clubs may vanish, weakening the competition and threatening the sport’s domestic and international appeal.

    Striving for financial sustainability: a long-term play

    The historical finances show a rather bleak picture for the sport. Yet there have been green shoots of recovery in the last two seasons with highly competitive league competitions and match day attendances. TV audiences and fan engagement have also boosted.

    Could these developments offer promise for the future of rugby union in England? Echoing calls in the academic and industry research, we present a roadmap for the sport to tackle these significant challenges head on and move towards financial sustainability. 

    The proposed changes address governance, cost structures and affordability, alternative revenue streams, league structure, community roots and resilience. 

    Implement centralised governance

    Rugby union has historically suffered from a fragmented governance structure. It has grappled with issues surrounding salary caps and open versus closed leagues. The salary cap has consistently been raised throughout the sport’s history, and there remains debate as to whether it should be set independently by an external body rather than by the clubs themselves, to ensure more sensible and sustainable levels. The Premiership (tier 1) has also at times placed a moratorium on relegation, most notably between 2020 and 2022. 

    Issues like these have meant that the sport has borrowed elements of both the European model of team sport (open leagues, no or little wage control, no revenue sharing) and the American model of team sports (closed leagues, revenue sharing, salary caps and franchise systems). Rugby union has often adopted a hybrid of these models, which has caused governance strain and financial challenges. 

    English rugby union clubs operate with a high degree of autonomy, often prioritising short-term sporting success over long-term stability. Other governing bodies in the sport operate a more centralised model – for example, the Irish Rugby Football Union (IRFU) employs players and owns the professional teams. This model has helped the IRFU to control costs, manage player welfare and deliver national team success. 

    English rugby could learn from this. A unified governance structure combining the Rugby Football Union (RFU), Premiership Rugby Limited (PRL) and the clubs is perhaps a way forward. Such an entity could oversee central contracting of players to manage wage inflation, a unified commercial and broadcast deal to pool revenues, and standardised financial reporting and benchmarking. 

    Tackle the cost base 

    Rugby union clubs have too often built cost structures based on ambition, rather than affordability. The notion of building a cost base and then trying to generate revenues to cover it is fundamentally flawed, often resulting in the excessive losses detailed above. 

    As a result, cost control must go beyond the salary cap and look to audit and reduce non-player costs (including the size of executive teams or underused facilities). A shared service model, particularly in the area of player cost and wage control, across clubs is also an option that could reduce duplication and allow the opportunity for flexible player contracts tied to central funding or revenue metrics.

    The salary cap system, introduced in 1999, was intended to enforce financial responsibility. Yet repeated breaches – most notoriously by Saracens – and loopholes have undermined its efficacy. 

    What’s more, the cap – set at £6.4 million for the 2024/25 season (although with various exceptions) – is considered more of a target up to which clubs should spend, rather than a limit that should be balanced against revenues earned. The ‘hard’ cap must be properly enforced, with severe penalties for breaches, real-time salary audits and full transparency.

    Some argue that regulatory reforms, like the post-Saracens Myners report, were reactive rather than transformative (Golding et al, 2025). A proactive and independently monitored cap – possibly linked to club turnover (as in French rugby) – would align spending with income more effectively. Stricter monitoring of wage bills and centralised regulation could also dramatically improve fiscal discipline.

    Diversify revenue streams

    Rugby clubs have generally failed to diversify revenue beyond income from match days. The pandemic exposed this vulnerability, with many clubs reliant on gate receipts collapsing as stadiums sat empty. 

    Rugby must embrace modern revenue-generation tactics, such as stadium development and multi-use facilities. Clubs that own their stadiums can benefit financially by offering a range of different events that could unlock year-round revenue. For example, Gloucester Rugby host music concerts to generate revenue out of season – a simple yet effective use of their ground. 

    Clubs must also maximise their presence on digital platforms, aiming content at a younger audience, including behind-the-scenes footage or promoting young players, such as Henry Pollock, as brand ambassadors. They could also provide streaming of academy or women’s games and find new ways of engaging with fans through digital platforms, following models seen in football and the National Football League (NFL) in the United States. 

    Technology should also be used to create ‘loyalty loops’, recognising that a customer’s journey does not end with the first transaction, enabling clubs to grow the next generation of fans and generate added value revenue opportunities. Customer relationship management (CRM) systems, fan apps and data-driven insights can all be enabled to personalise and enhance the supporter experience. 

    Vertical integration could help in this regard. Clubs could bundle merchandise, memberships and experiences into unified fan offerings to deepen engagement and spending. Global expansion and international tours could further leverage rugby’s growing markets (for example, in Japan and the United States, where the sport’s popularity is rising).

    Some initiatives closer to home have already brought early success. Hosting regional rivalry ‘event games’ at national stadiums can draw bigger crowds and is a strategy that should be pursued. 

    For example, in 2024/25, Bristol Bears launched their new ‘big day out’ fixture where they played a match at Cardiff’s Principality Stadium, which has a capacity of 74,500 compared with Ashton Gate’s 27,000. The same season also saw Harlequins play two home games at the Allianz Stadium (Twickenham), bringing in crowds of 60,000 and 82,000. Similarly, Saracens played a fixture at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium with a crowd of 55,000.

    This momentum needs to be maintained through family-friendly initiatives and entertainment zones to improve the appeal of match days. 

    Reform the league structure and restore promotion/relegation with prudence

    The temporary ‘ring-fencing’ of the Premiership – whereby promotion and relegation were suspended – until 2024/25 was intended to stabilise clubs. In reality, it has had the opposite effect, weakening the integrity of the competition and diminishing incentives for Championship clubs. 

    A more dynamic but financially prudent structure could involve a two-tier Premiership, with controlled promotion/relegation based on financial and sporting criteria. The new set of minimum standards criteria is a positive step forward in this regard. This helps to ensure that Premiership clubs and promoted clubs have suitable facilities to protect player safety and welfare, and to provide a good quality, safe environment for spectators.

    Revenue sharing and parachute payments – allocations to relegated clubs to lessen the financial impact of dropping a league – could also protect promoted/relegated clubs from financial challenges. But revenue distribution models are never easy to implement, as clubs will always protect themselves over collective action.

    Provide incentives for community roots and social impact

    Rugby union’s heritage lies in its communities, as it does in most European team sports. Yet financial pressures have eroded these bonds, which at its most extreme has led to clubs ceasing to exist.

    The sustainability of the sport depends on rebuilding those connections, not just for attendance but also for broader social relevance. Connections with an active fan base are crucial for restoring repeat revenue-generating activities and selling more content.

    Clubs must have the incentives to develop youth academies and invest in grassroots, to help to build a fan base for the future. They must also play an active role in contributing to social outcomes (for example, education, health and social inclusion projects through club outreach). 

    The sport should also seek to leverage women’s rugby and diversityas new growth markets. New fans can be enticed to double-header games, as we see in the Hundred cricket franchise tournament. 

    With England set to host the 2025 Women’s Rugby World Cup, now is the time to invest in women’s clubs, ensuring that growth is matched with sound financial foundations.

    Align with climate goals for long-term resilience

    Environmental sustainability is no longer optional, as highlighted in the 2024 Leonard Curtis report. Climate events disrupt matches, damage infrastructure and increase costs. To date, only two current Premiership clubs – Bristol Bears and Northampton Saints – have signed the United Nations Sports for Climate Action Framework. 

    By taking steps to limit their emissions – through less carbon-intensive travel (particularly in European competitions), installing renewable energy sources in stadiums, promoting green transport options for fans, and engaging sponsors aligned with environmental, social and governance (ESG) values – rugby clubs can both contribute to the climate change agenda and reap financial benefits. 

    Beyond compliance, this also presents a branding opportunity that can help clubs to become more attractive to younger, socially conscious fans and corporate partners.

    Conclusion: a call to action

    Rugby union is not beyond saving, but the clock is ticking. The Leonard Curtis report posts clear warning signs. What’s more, the RFU chief executive Bill Sweeney has publicly declared that the game’s model is ‘broken’.

    The path to financial sustainability will require courage, collaboration and innovation. Stakeholders, from the RFU and club owners to fans and potentially even the government (as we have seen with football’s creation of an independent regulator), must recognise that the sport’s romantic ideals must now be grounded in economic reality. Rugby’s survival depends on finally matching that passion with professionalism.

    Where can I find out more?

    Who are experts on this question?

    • Bill Gerrard
    • Andy Golding
    • Daniel Plumley
    • Rob Wilson
    Authors: Daniel Plumley, Rob Wilson and Andy Golding
    Photo: leighcol for iStock

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  • What entrepreneurs can learn from F1: Racing boss James Vowles shares 10 leadership lessons

    What entrepreneurs can learn from F1: Racing boss James Vowles shares 10 leadership lessons

    The British F1 team principal brought the beleaguered Williams back from the brink with a focus on process, points and people.

    James Vowles knows what it takes to perform under pressure. “We race on TV and in front of 70 million people,” he tells Monocle. But despite the high-speed, high-stakes nature of F1, Vowles insists that the fundamentals are the same as any business. “You want strong foundations, clear systems and smart use of data –  people are at the heart of it all.”

    After helping to steer Mercedes to multiple Formula One titles, he took over as team principal at Atlassian Williams Racing in 2023 and quickly made an impact, playing a key role in securing Carlos Sainz Jr for the team.

    Now signed to a new long-term deal, Vowles heads into the British Grand Prix with Williams sitting fifth in the constructor’s standings – a vast improvement on the bottom-dwelling position they held for four of the five years prior to Vowles taking charge.

    Monocle Radio spoke to Vowles about how to build a winning culture for our podcast The Entrepreneurs. Here are 10 key leadership lessons the motorsport boss shared.

    Eyes on the prize: James Vowles (Image: Alamy)

    1. 
    Tear down what’s familiar to build something better
    “We had to go from settling to settling for nothing but the best, and to do that we had to break everything. Changing culture takes a shift in thinking but it works. It’s changed our mindset in a short time.”

    2. 
    Don’t rest on your laurels
    “Our history makes me proud but it won’t win future races. I’m here to fight for championships and that means thinking long-term and aiming higher than fifth or sixth.”

    3.
    Embrace failure as part of the process
    “How you deal with poor performance defines you. We’re going to fail a tremendous amount. The really important bit is how you take that learning and reapply it back into what you do in a positive way.”

    4. 
    Hire people more intelligent than you
    “I’m not the most intelligent person at Williams and I shouldn’t be. My job is to assemble world-class talent, empower them and know when to get out of their way. That’s how you build future leaders and successors.”

    5. 
    Direction is often more important than the answer you provide
    “Indecision is worse than a wrong call. People are often afraid of making decisions. I’m not. The answer might not be perfect but we’ll be moving forward together.”

    6.
    Be visible and communicate constantly
    “I’ll email the whole factory three times a week and do team talks after every race. We’ll hold monthly meetings with the full company. I also make a point to walk the factory. And I know that I need to do even more.”

    7.
    Create space for the next generation
    “More than 10 per cent of our team is in early careers. I want success today but I’m here to build the backbone of the next 10 to 15 years. To do that, you invest in graduates, those at university and apprentices.”

    8.
    To get the best out of people, genuinely care about them
    “I’m hugely appreciative of people’s time, because they could be spending that minute with their family, and they’re not. They’re by my side as we work towards building this team up into championship material and that will buy infinite respect with me.”

    9.
    Stay authentic, especially under pressure
    “You have to believe in what you’re doing with all your heart, because ultimately, that’s what’s going to drive you on every single day when things get tough. And that’s where your true personality comes out. So if you put up a façade, it’ll eventually be broken down.”

    10.
    Play the long game
    “I don’t believe in any short-termism. I’m not going to go short term because it’s not right for Williams and its future. I wear the Williams shirt with pride but it’s not mine to keep. It’s mine to put into a better place and eventually pass on to future generations.”

    Listen to our full interview with James Vowles on The Entrepreneurs.

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  • Shelton needs just 71 seconds to finish off R2 Wimbledon win – ATP Tour

    1. Shelton needs just 71 seconds to finish off R2 Wimbledon win  ATP Tour
    2. Wimbledon 2025: Ben Shelton fumes as play suspended while serving for match  BBC
    3. Ben Shelton (finally) sticks American flag in Wimbledon hopes in second round  Lob and Smash
    4. Farcical Ben Shelton Wimbledon scheduling shows SW19 must change approach  Tennis365
    5. Wimbledon 2025: Shelton seals win over Hijikata in 55 seconds to reach third round  Sportstar

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  • At 37 years old, Siegemund knocks out No. 6 Keys to extend Wimbledon run

    At 37 years old, Siegemund knocks out No. 6 Keys to extend Wimbledon run

    WIMBLEDON — Laura Siegemund lost in Grand Slam qualifying the first 10 times she tried. When she put together three qualifying wins for the first time, 10 years ago here at Wimbledon, she lost in the first round.

    In the intervening decade, the stoic German managed to win only two matches at the All England Club. But this year — at the age of 37, the second oldest woman in the starting field — has been completely different. On Friday, she defeated No. 6 seed Madison Keys 6-3 6-3 to advance to the fourth round. Those three match-wins in five days surpassed her career total here.

    Keys, the Australian Open champion, had won 13 of her 14 Grand Slam matches this year. Aryna Sabalenka — still yet to play on Friday — is the only Top 10 seed left in the top half of the draw.

    Next up for the No. 104-ranked Siegemund is another surprising second-week visitor. Lucky loser Solana Sierra has improbably put together three main-draw victories of her own — the first three of her Grand Slam career. The 21-year-old Argentine defeated Cristina Bucsa 7-5, 1-6, 6-1.

    Like gum on your shoe, Siegemund hangs around. Like a cold you can’t shake, she lingers and lingers until the frustration mounts. This Keys discovered on a gorgeous sunny day on Court 2. Drop shots, slices, lobs, odd short balls — they were all coming at the 30-year-old American in surreal time.

    Siegemund broke Keys’ serve no fewer than three times in the opening set, but it was on the other side that the set was truly won. Siegemund came into the match as the women’s leader in that crucible of resilience, break points saved, at 89 percent. She saved three of four against Keys and coasted to the first set by a tidy margin.

    When Keys broke through in the opening game of the second, it seemed the tide may have shifted. But Siegemund, playing that confounding game that took Keys out of her rhythm, came right back, She broke Keys’ twice to take a commanding lead.

    Siegemund finished with a clean card — 19 winners and only 11 unforced errors. Keys, meanwhile, had 16 winners and 31 unforced errors. Siegemund broke her serve five times.

    She is also a formidable doubles player, with titles at the 2020 US Open and the 2023 WTA Finals. And now Siegemund can equal her career-best result here at Wimbledon — the doubles quarterfinals in 2023 and 2024 — with a win on Sunday.

    Earlier, another seeded American, No. 13 Amanda Anisimova, was victorious — 6-3, 5-7, 6-3 over Dalma Galfi. She’ll play No. 30 Linda Noskova, a 7-6 (6), 7-5 winner over Kamilla Rakhimova.

    A win would send Anisimova into the quarterfinals for the second time in four years.

     

     

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  • Wimbledon 2025 live updates: Day 5 scores and results with Fritz leading and Alcaraz, Raducanu to come

    Wimbledon 2025 live updates: Day 5 scores and results with Fritz leading and Alcaraz, Raducanu to come

    Norrie *2-4 Bellucci

    Mattia Bellucci just hit perhaps the shot of the tournament so far, and is exuding real quality early on against fellow left-hander Cam Norrie on No. 1 Court.

    The Italian is coping pretty well with Norrie’s serve, forcing a deuce as he looked to take an early double-break.

    Norrie, with the advantage, did little wrong with his 107mph serve from the left, pushing Bellucci well out wide with a bit of kick.

    But the world No. 73 left the fans purring as he absolutely crunched a forehand around the net post, kissing the sideline, eradicating his opponent’s advantage.

    Norrie went on to seal the hold, but that one deserves to be replayed again, and again. Exhibition stuff.

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  • Tsolov takes second consecutive pole for Campos Racing

    Tsolov takes second consecutive pole for Campos Racing

    Nikola Tsolov fired in a late lap to take his second Aramco Pole Position Award in a row.

    The Campos Racing driver had been bettered by title contender Rafael Câmara going into the final attempts, but one last improvement put the Bulgarian back to P1. He finished ahead of Ugo Ugochukwu, who wound up second for PREMA Racing, with Câmara having to settle for third.

    With the tyre preparation laps complete, TRIDENT set the early pace with Câmara going to the top on a 1:46.318, 0.2s ahead of teammate Noah Stromsted in second. Ugochukwu split them on his first attempt, going to within 0.023s of the Brazilian’s effort.

    Tim Tramnitz delivered his first time to go top of the pile, but only briefly, as Tsolov followed to smash the time to beat with a 1:45.655, some 0.3s quicker than the MP driver in second.

    Tasanapol Inthraphuvasak made it a Campos 1-3, slotting into third with his initial attempt.

    Everyone returned to the pitlane for a fresh set of Hard tyres and returning to the track with just over 15 minutes of the session remaining.
    Tramnitz cut the gap down to 0.2s to Tsolov, while teammate Bruno del Pino slotted into third for the Dutch team on their next attempts.

    Behind them though, Câmara delivered a 1:45.176 to surge to the top of the times, 0.479s quicker than Tsolov’s initial benchmark time.

    Stromsted put in an improvement also to go third overall with just over 10 minutes to go, while Charlie Wurz followed a few minutes later to go fourth.

    With five minutes left, the circuit got busy once again. Théophile Nael moved Van Amersfoort Racing up to second to cut the deficit to provisional pole sitter Câmara down to 0.3s.

    Tramnitz followed that up to go second for MP, 0.296s behind the TRIDENT, but Tsolov returned to P1 with a 1:45.043 with less than half a minute to go.

    Ugochukwu then went to P2 with his final attempt and just 0.023s off the top spot. Câmara had a poor middle sector on his last lap and could only manage third in the end.

    Boya moved to fourth on his final turn ahead of Tramnitz and Wurz. Martinius Stenshorne followed in P7, with Laurens van Hoepen in eighth, Nael ninth and Noel León in 10th. Christian Ho wound up 11th for DAMS Lucas Oil, while Tasanapol Inthraphuvasak completed the top 12 positions and is set to line up on reverse grid pole for Saturday’s Sprint Race.

    The Formula 3 Sprint Race is scheduled to get underway on Saturday at 09:15 local time.

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  • The ITA notifies wrestler Tsogbadrakh Tseveensuren of an apparent anti-doping rule violation

    The ITA notifies wrestler Tsogbadrakh Tseveensuren of an apparent anti-doping rule violation

    The ITA reports that a sample collected from Tsogbadrakh Tseveensuren, a wrestler from Mongolia, during an in-competition testing mission at the Senior Asian Championships on 29 March 2025 has returned an AAF¹ for exogenous testosterone.

    Exogenous testosterone is prohibited under the WADA Prohibited List as S1.1 Anabolic Androgenic Steroids. Exogenous testosterone is prohibited at all times (in- and out-of-competition) and is a non-specified substance. Testosterone is the principal androgenic steroid and is associated with the promotion of muscle growth and increased strength, power and speed.

    The athlete has been informed of the case and has the right to request the analysis of the B-sample.

    If the B-sample analysis is requested and confirms the result of the A-sample, the case will be considered as a confirmed anti-doping rule violation. If the B-sample analysis is not requested, the case will also go ahead as a confirmed anti-doping rule violation. The athlete will have the opportunity to present his explanations for the result.

    Further, in accordance with the World Anti-Doping Code and article 7.4.1 of the UWW anti-doping rules, a mandatory provisional suspension has been imposed on the athlete. The athlete has the right to challenge the provisional suspension and ask for its lifting.

    Pursuant to the UWW’s delegation of its anti-doping program to the ITA, the prosecution of the case is being handled entirely by the ITA. Given that the case is underway, there will be no further comments made.

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  • WP U18s down hosts while Border CD and Bulls U16s share spoils at FNB Girls Weeks

    WP U18s down hosts while Border CD and Bulls U16s share spoils at FNB Girls Weeks

    WP and the Bulls claimed wins on Friday to finish the U18 Girls Week unbeaten, while Eastern Province, the Limpopo Blue Bulls, South Western Districts, the Pumas, Border and KwaZulu-Natal secured third-round victories to end their campaigns on a high.

    WP got off to a slow start in the final match against the Lions, but cracked into gear after half-time. The girls from the Cape scored five unanswered tries and 31 points in the second stanza, with flyhalf Nuha Levy contributing a try as well as three conversions.

    Earlier in the day, No 8 Amanda Seokotsa scored a hat-trick in the Limpopo Blue Bulls’ 31-15 win over the Griffons, while loosehead prop Jessica Ejeleonu touched down three times for the Valke in the East Rand outfit’s 27-25 loss to the Pumas.

    In the final round of the U16 Girls Week, the Lions beat WP 17-7 to finish their campaign with three consecutive wins.

    Border Country Districts drew 12-12 with the Bulls in the last game of the tournament, with the Eastern Cape side ending their campaign unbeaten.

    The girls from Border CD led 7-0 at the break, before the Bulls hit back with two tries after half-time. Just as the game was slipping away, loosehead prop Endinako Fetumane crossed the line for Border, ensuring that her side came away with a draw.

    FNB U18 Girls Week day three results (Friday, 4 July 2025):
    EP 12 (5) Zimbabwe 0 (0)
    Griffons 15 (0) Limpopo Blue Bulls 31 (12)
    Leopards 12 (12) SWD 22 (0)
    Valke 25 (15) Pumas 27 (0)
    Griquas 0 (0) Border 41 (12)
    Blue Bulls 19 (12) Boland 12 (0)
    Free State 0 (0) KwaZulu-Natal 38 (17)
    WP 31 (0) Golden Lions 5 (5)

    FNB U16 Girls Week day three results (Friday, 4 July 2025):
    Free State 0 (0) Zimbabwe 5 (0)
    Griquas 0 (0) Griffons 17 (5)
    Border 17 (12) Pumas 7 (0)
    SWD 20 (10) Limpopo Blue Bulls 27 (0)
    Valke 0 (0) Golden Lions Invitational XV 20 (10)
    Leopards 0 (0) KwaZulu-Natal 38 (24)
    Golden Lions 17 (12) WP 7 (0)
    Boland 7 (0) EP 13 (13)
    Border Country Districts 12 (7) Blue Bulls 12 (0)

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  • Ratified: world records for Assefa, Stano and Dunfee | PRESS-RELEASES

    Ratified: world records for Assefa, Stano and Dunfee | PRESS-RELEASES

    Women’s marathon (women-only)
    2:15:50 Tigist Assefa (ETH) London, 27 April 2025

    Men’s 35km race walk
    2:21:40 Evan Dunfee (CAN) Dudince, 22 March 2025
    2:20:43 Massimo Stano (ITA) Podebrady, 18 May 2025

    World records set earlier this year by Tigist Assefa, Evan Dunfee and Massimo Stano have been ratified by World Athletics.

    Olympic silver medallist Assefa achieved her women-only world marathon record at the London Marathon on 27 April. The Ethiopian clocked 2:15:50 to improve the previous world record by 26 seconds to win the World Athletics Platinum Label road race.

    The previous world record of 2:16:16 had been set by Kenya’s Peres Jepchirchir in London on 21 April 2024.

    “When I crossed the line, I felt extreme happiness,” said Assefa.

    The performance, achieved in a women-only race, was the third-fastest marathon of Assefa’s career behind the 2:11:53 she ran to win in Berlin in 2023, a mark that at the time was a world record for a women’s marathon in a mixed race, and her 2:15:37 also from Berlin in 2022.

    Assefa’s 2:11:53 remains the second-fastest women’s marathon of all time behind the 2:09:56 achieved by Ruth Chepngetich to break Assefa’s world record in Chicago in October.

    “Having won today, what I am really thinking about going forward is to try and get my world record back for the marathon (in a mixed race),” Assefa added.

    Canada’s Dunfee set his world 35km race walk record at the Dudince 50 – a World Athletics Race Walking Tour Gold meeting – in Dudince, Slovakia, on 22 March.

    The world and Olympic bronze medallist’s time of 2:21:40 was seven seconds inside the previous world record of 2:21:47 set by Japan’s Masatora Kawano in Takahata on 27 October 2024.

    “I was well under pace but then lost a little time over the last seven kilometres,” said Dunfee. “I (then) got a little stressed out, but it was a dream come true.”

    Dunfee’s world record was improved by Italy’s Stano, who clocked 2:20:43 at the European Race Walking Team Championships in Podebrady, Czechia, on 18 May.

    The 2021 Olympic champion took the lead at 23km then wound up the pace to win by almost three minutes, improving the world record by 57 seconds.

    “The approach to the race was not to set out to break the world record, but the strategy was to close the last 20 kilometres as fast as possible,” said Stano. “That was my mission, then the world record was the consequence.”

    World Athletics

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