
Christian Horner breaks silence on Red Bull exit after ‘special F1 journey'
The former Red Bull team principal's emotional farewell speech at the team's HQ in Milton Keynes was leaked online, with hundreds in attendance giving the 51-year-old a standing ovation after his shock departure.
And Horner has outlined how he achieved 'accolades we never dreamed possible' and thanked both his team and rivals for enabling 'a special journey,' which included guiding Max Verstappen to four world titles, a partnership the Dutch driver had acknowledged after paying tribute to his former boss.
'After an incredible journey of twenty years together, it is with a heavy heart that today I say goodbye to the Team I have absolutely loved,' Horner said in a statement on social media.
'Every one of you, the amazing people at the factory, have been the heart and soul of everything that we have achieved. Win and lose, every step of the way, we have stood by each other as one and I will never forget that. It's been a privilege being part of and leading this epic Team and I am so proud of our collective accomplishments and you all.
'Thanks to the amazing partners and fans who enabled us to go racing. Your support has helped grow the team from its humble beginnings to an F1 powerhouse that laid claim to six Constructors Championships and eight Drivers Championships.
'Equally, thank you to our rivals, with whom there would be no racing at all. You've pushed us, challenged us, and enabled us to achieve accolades we never dreamed possible. The competition has made every victory sweeter and every setback an opportunity to develop and grow.
'Formula 1 is a sport built on relentless ambition, passion, and respect. The rivalries have been fierce, but the mutual drive to innovate and raise the bar is what has made this journey so special.
'It's been an honour to be part of this incredible era of motorsport. I leave with immense pride in what we've achieved and also with what's in the pipeline for 2026 — and huge respect for everyone who's made F1 the pinnacle it is today. Thank You. Christian.'
Horner then listed his achievements leading Red Bull, including six constructors' championships, eight drivers' championships and 124 victories in total.
He added 12 sprint victories, 287 podiums, 107 pole positions and 100 fastest laps, emphasising a dominant run over more than two decades.
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BreakingNews.ie
26 minutes ago
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Manchester United agree terms with Brentford for Bryan Mbeumo
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Telegraph
26 minutes ago
- Telegraph
Big-name predictions for Dubois vs Usyk – and it's a split decision
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It's not an easy task but he's definitely the man that can go through with it. He's seen a weakness in the first fight. I believe [when] there's a weakness, you've got to attack it. Don't give Usyk short cuts. This fight is everything. Daniel's a pretty determined, focused fighter. He's ready. 'Usyk on points' Ricky Hatton, former two-weight world champion It's very hard to go against Usyk. He's a boxing master, a fantastic judge of timing and range – and nothing like I've ever seen. Look what he did against Tyson Fury in spite of the height and weight advantages. But I also think Dubois has a better chance of beating Usyk than anyone in the division, and he'll give Usyk a better fight than last time. His confidence is high, adding Kieran Farrell to the training team will add fluency. He needs to put it on Usyk, which is not beyond his reach. We know about the alleged low blow in the first fight. I expect him to cause more problems. Better fight, closer fight, and I have the feeling it will be close. Daniel will push him further than ever before, but Usyk will win on points. 'Hopefully Dubois has learnt his lesson' Roy Jones Jnr, former multi-weight world champion It's a great match up and hopefully we will see Dubois having learnt something from the first fight. If he can catch Usyk with a big punch, who knows? Usyk is not one of the bigger heavyweights, but at the same time Usyk did stop him last time with a jab. Dubois will have to do something really impressive to beat Usyk. 'Go in 50-50 and you're getting knocked out by Usyk' Derek Chisora, fought Usyk at heavyweight You must be more crazy than Usyk. You have to want it more. You have to go to the other side, where you don't want to go. So if you are prepared to go there, you could win the fight. But if you are going in 50-50, you're getting knocked out. It's going to be difficult for Dubois. Usyk is always using movement. So if you come forward and then sideways, and he is in the middle of the ring, he won't go back to the ropes, he will go left, right and move sideways. The safe money is on Usyk, I'm not going to lie. But you never know with this young kid Dubois. He's hungry, he wants it. 'I've placed a big bet on Usyk' Saul Canelo Alvarez, two-weight division undisputed champion Usyk has very strong stamina; he's very technical and smart. When I see someone with that focus, I back them. That's why I placed a big bet on his victory. 'Usyk is the best… he'll win in the late rounds' Tony Bellew, fought Usyk at cruiserweight Usyk is the best heavyweight in the world. He's probably the best heavyweight of our era. He's amazing at what he does. Dubois has been amazing. I've written him off on a number of occasions and he's come back to prove me wrong. You've got to give him a shot and he's in with a chance, but Usyk has already made him quit once. Dubois is at a stage in his career where he's overcome such adversity, and he's the most confident he's ever been. But he'll get stopped between rounds eight and 12. 'Dubois – if he can get heavy shots in early' Amir Khan, former two-weight world champion It will be an amazing fight. Dubois has to do more early, set the pace, as Usyk can be a slow starter. If Dubois can get heavy shots in early, he can win this fight. Coming off a great victory against Anthony Joshua, his confidence will be high. He wants it more, and he could nick it. On the other side, Usyk is such a smart fighter, but I would like to lean towards Dubois as a British fighter to make history. 'Dubois doesn't have the skills' Carl Froch, former super-middleweight world champion It's going to go the distance, or be a late stoppage for Usyk. Dubois can make it hard for Usyk, but I don't think he's got the pedigree or skills. Close competitive fight for five to seven rounds, but then Usyk takes over, puts the pressure on. 'Usyk late or on points' Joe Calzaghe, former undefeated two-weight world champion Usyk probably on points or late stoppage although Dubois will be dangerous in the early rounds. 'Usyk will confuse Daniel' Joseph Parker, former WBO heavyweight champion Dubois has to show something mentally different and stronger from the first fight. Chisora showed us the blueprint of how to fight Usyk with aggression and pressure, confidence and non-stop punching. But Usyk, being the masterclass fighter that he is, a technician, feints, movement, footwork, he will confuse Daniel and win on points, or even get a late stoppage, similar to the first fight. Johnny Nelson, former world cruiserweight champion Usyk to stop him again, but I would not be surprised if Dubois is too strong for him, and the timing is perfect. Usyk 38, Daniel 27, probably the most athletic heavyweight out there, so I give him a puncher's chance. Because we have not seen Usyk lose, it is hard to see how he loses, with that boxing brain. But I have to lean towards Usyk. 'Usyk is too accurate and will exploit Dubois' lack of movement' Duke McKenzie, former three-weight world champion Usyk wins this fight for different reasons. The main reason, he already holds a victory over Dubois, so he has the psychological edge. Dubois will be fit, and Dubois will have to make this a bloodbath if he has any chance of securing a victory. Dubois is not going to win on points. His main problem is that there is no lateral movement. No head movement. Every time he unloads he can be hit. You can't do that with Usyk. He's too accurate. Dubois will bring out the best in him. Vintage performance coming from Usyk. I expect him to stop Dubois around round 9 or 10. 'Dubois, because of his punching power' Spencer Oliver, former European champion Dubois has matured, improved and with his power punching can win this time by midway stoppage. This is a completely different fight to the first one, and I'm tipping Dubois. 'Dubois is fresher and stronger' Dave Allen, Usyk sparring partner I'd go for a Dubois stoppage. He's the younger, fresher, stronger man and he is getting Usyk at the right time. 'Dubois will stop him' Frank Warren, promoter of Dubois I do not believe it was a low blow in the first fight. Daniel by stoppage this time around. 'Usyk by late stoppage' Eddie Hearn, promoter I think Dubois has a real shot here but taking the patriotism away I go for Usyk by stoppage rounds 9 to 12. 'Usyk will dominate late rounds to win' Gareth A Davies, Telegraph Boxing Correspondent Usyk to win by decision or by late stoppage rounds 9 to 12. Dynamite DD will be dangerous for the first half of the fight, needing to attack 'The Cat' Usyk with sustained pressure. Dubois likely needs a stoppage, and needs to fight, rather than box. For me, the Ukrainian will take over from the mid rounds onwards, nullifying Dubois, perhaps even demoralising the younger man by 11 years, to claim a decision victory, or possibly a late stoppage.


BBC News
26 minutes ago
- BBC News
Mbeumo 'proven quality' - but Man Utd still have striker dilemma
One of Manchester United's key priorities this summer was a search for season was United's worst in the Premier League era, and a key reason was the paltry 44 goals they scored - the average of 1.15 per game their lowest in a top-flight season since Mbeumo's expected £65m move will take their guaranteed spending on attacking talent this summer to £127.5m, following the signing of Matheus Cunha from with both players expected to play in number 10 positions, do the club need a new central striker, or will Rasmus Hojlund and Joshua Zirkzee benefit from added firepower around them?Chris Sutton, who won the Premier League with Blackburn Rovers, said: "United's attack is clearly an area they need to improve. That's why they have gone for Mbeumo, because I think he is someone they feel they can trust in all areas, in possession and out of it, with the work-rate and energy - and goals too."Mbeumo is absolutely not cheap, but that is the going rate for a proven Premier League player."They want to bring in signings who are not development players but players who have been there and done it. Mbeumo is one of those. Cunha too."The question is do United still need another number nine? Because Rasmus Hojlund did not score enough last season." The end for Hojlund? Or a new opportunity? By common consent, when United's troublesome Premier League campaign came to an end in May, the key failing that had to be addressed was their lack of assumed that meant a new number nine would be United made a big play for Liam Delap - available for £30m from Ipswich - before he signed for Chelsea indicated key figures at Old Trafford felt the now, more than £120m later and with two new additions more at home behind a main forward rather than as one, questions are being asked about whether they will bring in a number nine or if - despite huge reservations - they stick with reasoning for the latter would be order to fund more expensive recruitment, they need to generate more finance and - aside from sell-on clauses for Anthony Elanga and Alvaro Carreras - they have not managed a big offer for Aston Villa's England international Ollie Watkins is unlikely and, of the players available for nothing, the injury-hit Dominic Calvert-Lewin and veteran Jamie Vardy represent significant many thought they overpaid at the time, the recruitment team behind then manager Erik ten Hag felt it was worth signing off a £72m fee to sign Hojlund from Italian club the time, Ten Hag said Hojlund had "huge potential" but he had "to prove it". So far, he has not done so. He scored just four league goals all season, with understudy Zirkzee only managing has to be said, Hojlund's goals came from chances worth a measly 5.2 expected goals, showing the lack of opportunities he was being provided with - or making for said: "Have United been providing him with the chances and the opportunities? The answer to that is no."But also, you have to consider whether he has done well enough. Has he ever been a prolific goalscorer? That would be the nagging doubt and is something I have debated with United fans. "It is not to say he doesn't have time on his side, and his attitude is good too."But in a summer during which Carreras joined Real Madrid - fulfilling the promise many in the club's academy felt he had before they were overruled by Ten Hag and others who believed the full-back was not quick enough to excel at the highest level - are they ready to give up on Hojlund just yet?The 22-year-old's contract does not expire until 2028. If they sold now, United wouldn't receive close to the sum they paid for are many unanswered questions at Old Trafford as the Premier League opener against Arsenal they should sign another number nine or stick with Hojlund and hope he flourishes alongside the likes of Cunha and Mbeumo is one of the most significant. 'Mbeumo will be expected to perform straight away' Whatever the decision on United's striker dilemma, there can be little argument the addition of Mbeumo - alongside Cunha - strengthens their Liverpool's Mohamed Salah, Newcastle's Alexander Isak and Manchester City's Erling Haaland scored more than his 20 Premier League goals last was, though, the first time he has reached double figures for a top-flight club, and his expected goals (xG) statistic of 12.3 - which he outperformed by 7.7 goals - is something that would be difficult to the past five Premier League seasons, just 14 players have overperformed their xG by five goals or said: "He has done well at Brentford but playing for Manchester United is very different. With respect to Brentford, there is no great expectation there. At United, he will be expected to perform straight away."He has experience, he is a good finisher and his versatility is a big positive - he can play as a central striker as well as on the wing, cutting inside off the right on to his left foot."But he has had one very good season where his numbers were very good, so the question is whether he can repeat that."The Cameroon international is not being bought just for his goals, prefers to play on the right behind a striker - with Cunha expected to feature on the left - but also has the versatility to play centrally, offering another solution to the striker topped the list for touches per 90 minutes for players who scored more than 15 goals last season - showing his involvement in play - and ranks as one of the best ball carriers in the league, consistently with an effective end was 17th on the list of top assisters - with seven - but in expected assists he led the way in the Premier League with 9.3 Cunha's creativity, that can only be good news for whoever is chosen to play the central striker role."Consistency in those forward positions is what United are striving for, because they have not had it with, say, Alejandro Garnacho or Antony," said Sutton."They are maybe thinking an older, more experienced player, who is more reliable, is what they need. That's Mbeumo - he fits into Ruben Amorim's system and he fits the bill as proven Premier League quality too."Amorim wants a harmonious camp as well as a consistent performer, not someone who is a 3/10 one week and a 9/10 the next."That's what Manchester United have really been lacking and the numbers Mbeumo provided could be really important. That is the part of the jigsaw they have got to really solve if they want to be challenging at the top end of the table."