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  • Vietnam’s Q2 GDP accelerates to 7.96% as exports surge; US trade deal eases tariff concerns

    Vietnam’s Q2 GDP accelerates to 7.96% as exports surge; US trade deal eases tariff concerns

    Vietnam’s economy grew at a faster pace in the second quarter of this year, led by strong exports, in an encouraging sign just days after U.S. President Donald Trump said he would place lower-than-threatened 20% tariffs on many Vietnamese products.

    Concerns over the Southeast Asian manufacturing hub’s outlook had been growing in the run-up to the trade deal announced on Wednesday, particularly as the United States is Vietnam’s biggest export market.

    Gross domestic product growth in the April–June quarter accelerated to 7.96% year-on-year, up from 6.93% in the first quarter, government data showed on Saturday. It was just short of Hanoi’s full-year growth target of at least 8%.

    “Economic performance in the first half of this year was positive and close to our target amid global and regional economic uncertainties,” the National Statistics Office (NSO) said.

    Exports were a bright spot in the last quarter, rising 18.0% to $116.93 billion from a year earlier, while imports were up 18.8% at $112.52 billion, translating into a trade surplus of $4.41 billion, NSO data showed.

    Industrial production in the period rose 10.3%, while June consumer prices rose 3.57%.

    Trump announced on Wednesday that the United States and Vietnam reached a trade deal, under which Vietnamese goods would face a 20% tariff, with trans-shipments from third countries through Vietnam also facing a 40% levy. Vietnam could import U.S. products with a zero percent tariff.

    The tariff rates were lower than an initial 46% rate threatened by Trump in April.

    Vietnam hailed the deal as a boost for business and said negotiators were working to finalise details, as business groups awaited clarity on the finer points to assess the impact of the new tariffs.

    The United States is the largest export market for Vietnam, a regional manufacturing hub housing several multinational companies such as Samsung Electronics and Foxconn. The United States recorded a trade deficit of $123 billion with Vietnam last year, one of its highest globally.

    Vietnam is also home to several Chinese companies, which analysts said are likely the main targets for the 40% tariff on trans-shipments. China is Vietnam’s largest two-way trading partner, on which it relies heavily for components and materials for its manufacturing industries.

    Fitch Solutions said in a note on Friday that Vietnam’s exports and investment will remain strong for the rest of the year and signalled upside risks for its 2025 GDP growth forecast of 6.4%.

    “With the new 20% tariff, we think the government will speed up industrial upgrading and shift exports from low-margin goods to higher value-added products such as semiconductors,” Fitch noted.

    Dominic Scriven, founder and chairman of investment firm Dragon Capital, said the trade deal is “net-positive” and the potential GDP hit is less severe than feared.

    “With external trade risk now moderating, attention can return to the country’s core growth engine, the domestic and private sector economy,” he added.


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  • Oasis Excite As ‘Oasis Live ‘25’ Reunion Tour Kicks Off In Cardiff

    Oasis Excite As ‘Oasis Live ‘25’ Reunion Tour Kicks Off In Cardiff

    “Said it’s good to be back, good to be back,” sang vocalist Liam Gallagher, improvising a bit as Oasis took to the stage Friday night in Cardiff, Wales with “Hello,” the opening track from the band’s 1995 sophomore studio effort (What’s the Story) Morning Glory.

    It was the first Oasis performance in 16 years and the band – brothers Liam and Noel Gallagher, who took to the stage hand in hand, guitarists Gem Archer and Paul “Bonehead” Arthurs, bassist Andy Bell and drummer Joey Waronker – performed for about two hours in front of 62,000 as the “Oasis Live ‘25” reunion tour kicked off at a sold out Principality Stadium.

    “It was momentous for me and I think for a lot of people,” said Daniel Boczarski, a fan who travelled from Chicago, Illinois to Wales for the event. “Especially culturally for the U.K. fans: to be there and see that they actually did pull this off after so many years was special,” he said. “I saw grown men crying tears of joy and teenagers taking selfies,” said Boczarski, illustrating the group’s cross-generational appeal. “It was just a good, fun time. And that’s what rock and roll should be about.”

    Fans bounced along as Oasis dusted off “Acquiesce” second in the set, the B-side to the group’s first U.K. #1 “Some Might Say,” which the band offered up two songs later.

    “Acquiesce” also appeared on the 1998 Oasis compilation The Masterplan and was recently released as an acoustic remix, the first single from the group’s forthcoming 30th anniversary reissue of (What’s the Story) Morning Glory, due October 3, 2025 on CD or vinyl and for online streaming via Big Brother Recordings.

    Christian Madden handled keyboards with Alastair White (trombone), Joe Auckland (trumpet) and Steve Hamilton (saxophone) chipping in on “Half the World Away.”

    Fans from around the world made the voyage to Cardiff to capture a moment in music history many thought would never happen, a reunion which moves to America with a sold out appearance August 28 at Chicago’s Soldier Field before continuing abroad into late November.

    “For my friends and I, it’s the trip of a lifetime. My friend Matt loves Oasis, so he couldn’t miss it,” said Michael Hurcomb a photographer by trade who will be attending the upcoming Oasis performance as a fan in London on July 25, the first of a five night run at Wembley Stadium, making the trip from Toronto in the Canadian province of Ontario. “My wife and I have never been to England and we were planning a group trip. So, when Oasis announced the tour we knew we had to go,” he said. “We had to be up at 3AM to try to get tickets for Ireland. I had four tickets in my cart but, at the last minute, Ticketmaster didn’t like that I had multiple tabs open and booted me out,” said Hurcomb, echoing the frustrations of fans globally with the ticketing giant during the initial on sale last October. “At 4AM, the England shows went on sale and I got a really low queue number for Wembley. So, I waited it out and got outstanding seats.”

    Opening the encore with “The Masterplan,” Oasis called it a night on stage in Cardiff in epic fashion.

    “Right you beautiful people,” said Liam, introducing Oasis’ closing rendition of “Champagne Supernova” following “Wonderwall.” “This is it!”

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  • Here’s the Reason Why Temu, AliExpress Prices Increased in Pakistan – ProPakistani

    1. Here’s the Reason Why Temu, AliExpress Prices Increased in Pakistan  ProPakistani
    2. Taxes unnerve e-commerce platforms  Dawn
    3. A comment on Finance Act 2025—IV  Business Recorder
    4. Courier Companies Announce Increase in Delivery Charges After New Taxes  ProPakistani
    5. AliExpress halts low-cost shipping to Sri Lanka amid tax reforms  Ada Derana

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  • Oasis dedicate 'Live Forever' to Jota in return after 16-year hiatus – Euronews.com

    1. Oasis dedicate ‘Live Forever’ to Jota in return after 16-year hiatus  Euronews.com
    2. Remembering Diogo Jota, a star whose loss is felt beyond Liverpool  ESPN
    3. Diogo Jota: Liverpool forward dies in car accident in Spain  Sky Sports
    4. Liverpool soccer player Diogo Jota, his brother killed in car accident  CBC
    5. Diogo Jota funeral live: Family and football stars gather for Liverpool forward’s funeral  BBC

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  • Saif Ali Khan’s ancestral property declared ‘enemy property’; Rs 15,000 Crore fortune at risk

    Saif Ali Khan’s ancestral property declared ‘enemy property’; Rs 15,000 Crore fortune at risk

    In a major legal setback for Bollywood star Saif Ali Khan, the Madhya Pradesh High Court has upheld the Indian government’s decision to declare his inherited family property in Bhopal as ‘enemy property’, putting a massive estate worth Rs 15,000 crore at risk of seizure.

    The court’s decision comes nearly a decade after the Enemy Property Supervisory Department issued a notice in 2014, classifying the Pataudi family’s sprawling estates in Bhopal under the Enemy Property Act and ordering their confiscation. Though Saif Ali Khan managed to secure a stay order against the move in 2015, that protection has now been lifted.

    Properties under contention include some of Bhopal’s most historic and lavish estates: Flagstaff House (where Saif spent much of his childhood), Noor Al-Sabah Palace, Darul Salam, Habibi’s Bungalow, Ahmedabad Palace, and the Kohifza estate, among others.

    The High Court’s ruling also revives a complex inheritance dispute, sending the matter back to the trial court to decide whether only Sajida Sultan (Saif’s grandmother and daughter of the last Nawab of Bhopal, Hamidullah Khan) and her descendants are the rightful heirs, or if other heirs under Muslim Personal Law also have a claim. The trial court has been directed to deliver a decision within a year.

    What is the Enemy Property Act?

    The Enemy Property Act allows the Indian government to take possession of properties owned by individuals who migrated to Pakistan or China after Partition. In this case, the twist lies in the migration of Abida Sultan, Hamidullah Khan’s eldest daughter, to Pakistan in 1950. The Indian government argues that this migration makes the Bhopal estate “enemy property”, even though Sajida Sultan, the second daughter, stayed in India and married Nawab Iftikhar Ali Khan Pataudi—making Saif Ali Khan her direct descendant.

    What’s Next?

    The verdict puts Saif Ali Khan’s potential inheritance—estimated at over Rs 15,000 crore—on the line, and opens the door to a prolonged legal battle. Whether or not the Pataudi scion and his family will retain any part of their princely legacy now lies in the hands of the trial court, which must navigate a labyrinth of personal law, historical context, and geopolitical classification.

    This royal inheritance dispute now threatens to become one of the most high-profile legal property battles in modern Indian history.


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  • Karachi receives new rain spell – ARY News

    1. Karachi receives new rain spell  ARY News
    2. Heavy rain forecast across Punjab on Ashura  The Express Tribune
    3. Are Karachi authorities prepared for next spell of monsoon rains?  Dawn
    4. KP on high alert as PDMA warns of increased risk of GLOFs as monsoon rains intensify  Pakistan Today
    5. Another Warning  Daily Times

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  • Zanidatamab Combo Has Meaningful Activity in HER2+ Gastroesophageal Cancer

    Zanidatamab Combo Has Meaningful Activity in HER2+ Gastroesophageal Cancer

    “[F]irst-line treatment with zanidatamab plus chemotherapy demonstrated rapid and durable antitumor activity with promising survival outcomes in patients with HER2-positive advanced gastroesophageal adenocarcinoma,” according to the study authors.

    Combining zanidatamab-hrii (Ziihera) with chemotherapy as frontline treatment produced clinically meaningful and enduring activity in a small cohort of patients with HER2-positive advanced gastroesophageal adenocarcinoma, according to primary results from a phase 2 study (NCT03929666) published in Lancet Oncology.1

    The study treatment yielded a confirmed objective response rate (ORR) of 76.2% (95% CI, 60.5%-87.9%) among 42 evaluable patients, which included complete responses (CRs) in 3 patients (7%) and partial responses (PRs) in 29 (69%). The median duration of response (DOR) was 18.7 months (95% CI, 10.4-44.1), and the post hoc median time to first response was 1.3 months (IQR, 1.3-1.4).

    Data showed a median progression-free survival (PFS) of 12.5 months (95% CI, 8.2-21.8), with estimated PFS rates of 57% (95% CI, 40%-70%) at 12 months and 31% (95% CI, 17%-46%) at 24 months. Additionally, treatment elicited a median overall survival (OS) of 36.5 months (95% CI, 23.6-not estimable [NE]), a 12-month OS rate of 87% (95% CI, 72%-94%), and a 24-month OS rate of 65% (95% CI, 49%-77%).

    “[F]irst-line treatment with zanidatamab plus chemotherapy demonstrated rapid and durable antitumor activity with promising survival outcomes in patients with HER2-positive advanced gastroesophageal adenocarcinoma. Zanidatamab plus chemotherapy in the first-line setting was well tolerated with a manageable safety profile when incorporating antidiarrheal prophylaxis in the first 7 days of treatment,” lead study author Elena Elimova, MD, from the Department of Gastrointestinal Medical Oncology at Princess Margaret Cancer Centre in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, wrote with coauthors in the publication.1 “If these results are confirmed in a large-scale, randomized, phase 3 trial, zanidatamab could represent a substantial advancement in the treatment of HER2-positive advanced gastroesophageal adenocarcinoma.”

    In the open-label, multi-center phase 2 study, patients received zanidatamab in combination with capecitabine plus oxaliplatin (CAPOX), 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) plus cisplatin (FP), or leucovorin plus 5-FU and oxaliplatin (mFOLFOX6). In the CAPOX and FP groups, patients received zanidatamab at 30 mg/kg, 1800 mg with a weight of less than 70 kg, or 2400 mg with a weight of 70 kg or higher every 3 weeks. In the mFOLFOX6 group, patients received zanidatamab at 20 mg/kg, 1200 mg with a body weight under 70 kg, or 1600 mg with a weight of at least 70 kg every 2 weeks.

    In part 1 of the trial, investigators evaluated the safety and tolerability of zanidatamab plus chemotherapy to determine a recommended phase 2 dose; the primary end points of this part were dose-limiting toxicities and dose reductions. In part 2 of the trial, the primary end point was investigator-assessed confirmed ORR per RECIST v1.1 criteria. Secondary efficacy endpoints across parts 1 and 2 of the trial included disease control rate, DOR, clinical benefit rate, PFS, and OS.

    Patients 18 years and older with unresectable, locally advanced, recurrent, or metastatic HER2-expressing gastroesophageal adenocarcinoma and measurable disease per RECIST v1.1 guidelines were eligible for enrollment on the trial.2 Other eligibility criteria included having an ECOG performance status of 0 or 1, adequate organ function, and adequate cardiac left ventricular function.

    The median patient age was 58 years (IQR, 55-63), and most of the population was male (85%), White (61%), and not Hispanic (93%). Additionally, most patients had an ECOG performance status of 0 (57%), gastric anatomical subtype disease (41%), stage IV disease at initial diagnosis (83%), and measurable disease (93%). Prior neoadjuvant or adjuvant chemotherapy was reported in 11% of patients.

    In a subgroup of patients with centrally confirmed HER2-positive disease (n = 41), zanidatamab-based therapy produced a confirmed ORR of 84% (n = 31/37; 95% CI, 68.0%-93.8%). Furthermore, the median PFS was 15.2 months (95% CI, 9.5-33.4) in this subgroup, and the median OS was 36.5 months (95% CI, 23.6-NE).

    In a post hoc analysis of patients who enrolled on the trial before and after the implementation of antidiarrheal prophylaxis, 61% (n = 14/23; 95% CI, 38.5%-80.3%) and 95% (n = 18/19; 95% CI, 74.0%-99.9%) experienced confirmed responses. Those who received antidiarrheal prophylaxis experienced longer treatment duration and exposure.

    Treatment-related adverse effects (TRAEs) affected 100% of patients, with the most common grade 3/4 TRAEs consisting of diarrhea (39%) and hypokalemia (22%). Additionally, 17% of patients had serious TRAEs, the most common of which was diarrhea (7%).

    The median duration of grade 1/2 or grade 3 diarrhea was 6.5 days (IQR, 2-29) and 3 days (IQR, 2-5), respectively, among patients who enrolled on the trial before the implementation of antidiarrheal prophylaxis. The median durations were 3 days (IQR, 2-13) and 4.5 days (IQR, 3-8) among those who entered the trial following the implementation of antidiarrheal prophylaxis.

    References

    1. Elimova E, Ajani J, Burris H, et al. Zanidatamab plus chemotherapy as first-line treatment for patients with HER2-positive advanced gastro-oesophageal adenocarcinoma: primary results of a multicentre, single-arm, phase 2 study. Lancet Oncol. 2025;26(7):847-859. doi:10.1016/S1470-2045(25)00287-6
    2. A safety and efficacy study of ZW25 (Zanidatamab) plus combination chemotherapy in HER2-expressing gastrointestinal cancers, including gastroesophageal adenocarcinoma, biliary tract cancer, and colorectal cancer. ClinicalTrials.gov. Updated March 13, 2025. Accessed July 1, 2025. https://tinyurl.com/y9d77aay

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  • Dress to Impress Summer Update 2025 (Part 2) – All Details and Patch Notes – Dress To Impress Guide

    Dress to Impress Summer Update 2025 (Part 2) – All Details and Patch Notes – Dress To Impress Guide

    Part 2 of the Dress to Impress Summer Update 2025 is here, and it brings new masculine faces, new clothes, custom makeup, and plenty more. However, the planned quest for this part of the update has been temporarily delayed. With that said, this page lists everything added in part 2 of the DTI Summer Update that released on July 5, 2025, including the official DTI patch notes.

    DTI Summer Update 2025 (Part 2) Patch Notes

    Below are the Dress to Impress Summer Update (Part 2) patch notes, via the official Discord:

    • 2x Stars Weekend! (until Monday at 11am EST)
    • 7 Masc Faces
    • 1 Fem Face
    • New Cardigan
    • New Gym Baddie Shirt
    • New Leather Jacket
    • New Tied Masc Shirt
    • New Collared Shirt
    • 20 Custom Makeup Additions
    • New Influencer Code Item
    • New Rank Reward for Fashion Maven
    • Secret Heels? Where!?
    • Meat Room Now has a Keypad… What’s the code?
    • Dance Minigame in Lobby to earn Seashells!
    • Explore the New Yacht in the Lobby!
    • New FREE ‘Star Baby’ Walk!
    • New Achievement/Daily Task!

    Everything Added in the Dress to Impress Summer Update 2025 (Part 2)

    Part 2 of this Dress to Impress Summer Update builds on the previous part by adding new clothes, custom makeup, a new minigame to get Seashells, and more we’ll discuss below. There’s even a keypad inside the mysterious Meat Room.

    New Faces Makeup

    7 new masculine faces were added alongside 1 new feminine face and 20 custom makeup additions. This includes but isn’t limited to the following faces and makeup:

    New Clothing

    Five new tops were added, as well as one pair of secret heels hidden in the Meat Room:

    A New Minigame to Get Seashells

    A new minigame was added to the lobby on top of the new yacht players can find outside. Hop onto the dance floor where seashells will appear on the floor that you’ll need to stand on to fill the party meter. Doing this with others will help make it go quicker since you can only stand on one at a time.

    Other Miscellaneous Additions to DTI

    In addition to the new content above, some smaller tweaks were made to Dress to Impress as well:

    • The hidden Meat Room now has a keypad to interact with.
    • Starting DTI anytime before July 12, 2025, will give you the Star Baby Walk Pack when closing a message that appears upon starting the game.
    • The Fashion Maven rank now has a new reward, the Fashion Maven Nails.
    • Players can now get the Siren Tail in addition to the Old Mermaid Tail while the summer event runs.

    For more DTI Summer Update game help, check out:

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  • ‘In the zone’: Iga Swiatek glides past Collins to become a live contender | Wimbledon 2025

    ‘In the zone’: Iga Swiatek glides past Collins to become a live contender | Wimbledon 2025

    At least one positive consequence from Iga Swiatek’s relatively poor clay court run has been the added benefit of time. Instead of arriving for the grass court season exhausted from her efforts, for once she had additional time to train, work and adapt her game to the one surface she has yet to conquer.

    Swiatek’s growing comfort at Wimbledon was reflected in her most efficient performance of the tournament so far as she dismantled the eternally dangerous Danielle Collins 6-2, 6-3 to return to the fourth round.

    Swiatek, who continues to build her profile as a title contender at the All England Club, will next face the 23rd seed Clara Tauson of Denmark. Tauson upset the 2022 Wimbledon champion Elena Rybakina, the 11th seed, 7-6 (6), 6-3 to reach the fourth round.

    “I was just in the zone,” said Swiatek. “I knew what I wanted to play and I knew I needed to be brave and just let my hand do the job. Play fast and grab it from the beginning. You can’t let Danielle play her winners. I’m really happy with the performance because there were no ups and downs, it was pretty consistent and it was a good match.”

    After winning five grand slam titles, establishing herself as the most successful player of her generation and spending most of the past few years as the world No 1, the No 8 seeding next to Swiatek’s name, which is reflective of her difficulties over the past year, looks very strange.

    The 24-year-old has still not won a title at any level since the 2024 French Open last June and she has been open about how her perfectionism, one of her biggest strengths, has been her biggest weakness in recent months, often leading to her becoming overwhelmed by her negative thoughts on the court.

    Iga Swiatek and Danielle Collins have had their differences in previous meetings. Photograph: Toby Melville/Reuters

    Even though she was unable to win a fourth consecutive French Open title last month, Roland Garros appeared to mark a turning point for Swiatek as she finally stopped overthinking and began to play with greater freedom again. After putting together a series of positive performances to reach the semi-finals, Swiatek left Paris after her defeat to Aryna Sabalenka feeling as if she had regained her confidence on the court.

    While an exhausted Swiatek would usually prioritise rest in the aftermath of her four triumphs at Roland Garros, often returning home to Poland for a few days and then playing catch up for the rest of the grass court season, this year Swiatek headed straight to Mallorca for grass court prep.

    Her run to the final Bad Homburg on the eve of the Championships, both her first final of the year and her first final on grass, represented another positive result despite her eventual defeat to Jessica Pegula. She has spent her first few matches at Wimbledon attempting to further build momentum and confidence.

    “Honestly, it’s much more fun this year,” said Swiatek. “I had some practices where the ball was listening to me, which was pretty new on grass. I’m just looking for that feeling for the matches as well and today was a good day. In Bad Homburg, I played many good matches so for sure, I’m getting confidence. It’s a new experience feeling good on the grass.”

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    There was, of course, plenty of subtext to this match-up. Last year at the Olympic Games in Paris, the pair had an extended conversation while shaking hands at the net following Collins’ retirement from their quarter-final match. Collins later revealed that she had called Swiatek “insincere” during their handshake, the sympathy Swiatek had expressed fake. In general, Collins has made it clear that she does not care for Swiatek. In May, Collins was also responsible for one of Swiatek’s worst clay-court losses in recent years as she defeated the Pole in their third-round match at the Italian Open.

    Iga Swiatek served brilliantly during her victory. Photograph: Mike Hewitt/Getty Images

    This time, however, the American had no response to an excellent performance. Swiatek served brilliantly, winning 86% of points behind her first serve throughout the match. Despite holding on to only one break for most of the second set, she continued to march through her service games with ease and she did not lose her serve all match.

    On her groundstrokes, Swiatek also struck her forehand brilliantly, constantly using it to dominate the baseline exchanges. She showed her increased comfort with her movement by effortlessly soaking up Collins’ and forcing errors from the American with her defence.

    With her spinny forehand, her preference for slower surfaces that afford her more time on the ball, her serving struggles and the general challenge of moving well on grass, there are countless reasons why Swiatek has struggled to produce her best on this surface. However, many different players and playing styles are capable of thriving on these more forgiving modern courts. Sometimes you just need time.

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  • Russell predicts ‘six-way fight’ for victory at Silverstone after grabbing P4 in ultra-close Qualifying

    Russell predicts ‘six-way fight’ for victory at Silverstone after grabbing P4 in ultra-close Qualifying

    George Russell has admitted that he “would have definitely taken” fourth on the grid for Sunday’s British Grand Prix when heading into Qualifying, after his and the team’s difficult start to the weekend.

    Russell and Mercedes were off the pace across Friday’s pair of practice sessions in pleasant, warm conditions at Silverstone, but returned to the sharp end when temperatures cooled on Saturday.

    A stellar last Qualifying lap saw Russell come away with a second-row grid slot, behind Red Bull’s Max Verstappen and the two McLaren drivers, and just ahead of Ferrari duo Lewis Hamilton and Charles Leclerc – 0.229s covering that top-six group.

    Asked to reflect on Qualifying, Russell said: “It was an amazing final lap. Every lap today we were… every lap this whole weekend we’ve been about five-tenths, six-tenths off the pace, sometimes even eight-tenths off the pace.

    “Getting through Q1 and Q2 was a struggle, and then to finish my last lap only a tenth off pole, 20 milliseconds from the front row, I mean, yeah, I would have definitely taken it!”

    With similar conditions expected on race day, Russell feels he is firmly in the mix for a podium on home soil, if not more – but reckons there could be half a dozen cars vying for the big prize.

    “I think we can definitely push for a podium,” he continued. “Obviously the conditions are favourable, but it’s taken us from being off the pace to sort of being there or thereabouts – it hasn’t sort of propelled us to the front.

    “I think it’s probably fair to say that we overachieved a little bit today, especially in terms of the gaps, we definitely overachieved. Ferrari obviously struggled on that last lap. Tomorrow’s probably going to be a six-way fight.”

    As for Russell’s team mate, Kimi Antonelli, the Italian was some three-tenths slower en route to seventh position – but he will drop three places on Sunday due to the penalty he picked up for clashing with Max Verstappen in Austria.

    “It was quite tight out there,” he said of Qualifying. “I’ve been struggling a little bit in the high speed, just struggling to feel the stability and it just killed a bit the confidence, to be honest, throughout the session.

    “Not easy, but obviously tomorrow with the penalty we’ll try to do our best from there and build from there.”

    Pushed on what’s still possible, Antonelli added: “Well, hopefully the race pace is going to be good. It’s not going to be easy because it’s pretty tight, but I think if we have a good start and play it smart then we can try to set a good pace and move forward.”

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