
Sciver-Brunt to miss rest of India T20 series
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Guardian
10 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Max Verstappen snatches F1 British GP pole for Red Bull from McLarens
Max Verstappen claimed pole for the British Grand Prix for Red Bull, a blistering run beating the McLarens of Oscar Piastri and Lando Norris into second and third. Mercedes's George Russell was fourth, with Lewis Hamilton very much in the mix, taking fifth for Ferrari. The pole was somewhat against odds for Verstappen, who absolutely wrung the neck of the Red Bull to beat a very strong assault from both McLaren and an improved Ferrari. The world champion has not been particularly happy with his car all weekend, having struggled with its balance all season. With the team using a trimmed back low-downforce configuration at Silverstone, it required every bit of his considerable skill to wrangle across the old airfield. As he has demonstrated previously this season, sometimes he can be the ultimate differentiator. It was a salutary reminder of quite why there is so much interest in his future, with Mercedes considering him again and Red Bull just as anxious to hang on to their prized asset. With Red Bull having brought what is likely to be their last major upgrade of the season to the last race in Austria with a revision to the floor of the car hoped to help address the balance issues that have plagued it all year, they will be buoyed that this time out they had the advantage over McLaren, at least in Verstappen's mercurial hands. The team have been honest in that no quick fix was expected to the problems with a disconnect between wind-tunnel predictions and real-world performance at the heart of their inability to solve the problems but Verstappen enjoyed his lap at Silverstone perhaps more than many of late to take his fourth pole of the year and his first since Miami, six races ago. Verstappen opened the running in Q3, taking the top spot, but was swiftly eclipsed by Piastri, who set a time of 1min 24.995sec. Norris followed but could not quite hook it up and was just under two-tenths back, while Hamilton was enjoying his best qualifying of the season to grab second place just over one-tenth back from Piastri, with Verstappen fourth. Sign up to The Recap The best of our sports journalism from the past seven days and a heads-up on the weekend's action after newsletter promotion The final laps would prove decisive and were a suitably tense affair. Norris went out first and pushed hard but did not improve enough over Piastri, while Hamilton set a superb first sector but was unable to quite make the difference. However, behind them Verstappen was flying, putting together what was his best lap of the session when it really mattered. Hammering it to the very limit, he took the top spot with a time of 1:24.892, a full tenth up on Piastri and Norris. Ollie Bearman was in eighth place for Haas but has a 10-place grid penalty for failing to slow under a red flag in third practice. Kimi Antonelli was seventh but has a three-place penalty for his crash with Verstappen in Austria. 1. Max Verstappen (Red Bull) 1min 24.892sec 2. Oscar Piastri (McLaren) 1:24.995 3. Lando Norris (McLaren) 1:25.010 4. George Russell (Mercedes) 1:25.029 5. Lewis Hamilton (Ferrari) 1:25.095 6. Charles Leclerc (Ferrari) 1:25.121 7. Kimi Antonelli (Mercedes, three-place grid penalty) 1:25.374 8. Oliver Bearman (Haas, 10-place grid penalty) 1:25.471 9. Fernando Alonso (Aston Martin) 1:25.621 10. Pierre Gasly (Alpine) 1:25.785 Q2 11. Carlos Sainz (Williams) 1:25.746 12. Yuki Tsunoda (Red Bull) 1:25.826 13. Isack Hadjar (Racing Bulls) 1:25.864 14. Alex Albon (Williams) 1:25.889 15. Esteban Ocon (Haas) 1:25.950 Q1 16. Liam Lawson (Racing Bulls) 1:26.440 17. Gabriel Bortoleto (Sauber) 1:26.446 18. Lance Stroll (Aston Martin) 1:26.504 19. Nico Hulkenberg (Sauber) 1:26.574 20. Franco Colapinto (Alpine) 1:27.060


Daily Mail
13 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Max Verstappen produces stunning lap to claim pole for British Grand Prix with home hero Lewis Hamilton fifth and Lando Norris on the second row
Max Verstappen produced a stunning final run to claim a surprise pole position for Sunday's British Grand Prix. The Dutchman had been struggling with the handling of his Red Bull during practice, but pulled together a perfect lap when it mattered most, as he so often has during his career. 'It was tricky out there with the wind,' explained Verstappen, who yesterday told Mail Sport he wanted to stay with Red Bull 'for ever'. 'Around here with these cars, it's extremely sensitive to it. 'That final lap was good enough but this is a proper track, qualifying when you have to go flat out. 'We're quite quick on the straight which is not easy to manage in the high-speed corners. I'm happy of course with our pole in qualifying, it's a big boost for the team.' Verstappen will start tomorrow's race ahead of Championship pace-setter Oscar Piastri, who was a tenth of second slower than the four-time world champion. Piastri's team-mate Lando Norris is one spot further back in third with George Russell completing the second row for Mercedes. Asked whether he would be able to keep the McLaren pair behind him on race day, Verstappen said: 'Difficult to say but we'll try. We're going to go racing.' A promising start for the weekend for Ferrari threatens to amount to little more than a false dawn for Lewis Hamilton and Charles Leclerc. Hamilton's pace has been impressive around his home circuit, where he has claimed more race victories than any other driver, all weekend, but he struggled during qualifying. It was a much better session for Oliver Bearman, but the British rookie's day was spoiled by a costly error in final practice on Friday morning. Bearman carried too much speed into the pit lane and lost control of his Haas, spinning off the track and into the barrier, losing his front wing in the process. With the incident occuring under red flag conditions following an earlier spin from Gabriel Bortoleto, the stewards came down hard on Bearman, slapping him with a 10-place grid penalty for tomorrow's race. As a result Bearman, who posted the eighth-quickest qualifying time, will start his first home race in Formula One way down in 18th.


BBC News
14 minutes ago
- BBC News
Delacroix pips Ombudsman to win Coral-Eclipse Stakes
A stunning late surge in the final furlong saw jockey Ryan Moore ride Delacroix to a dramatic victory in the Coral-Eclipse Stakes at led Delacroix from the back of the six-horse field to edge past Ombudsman on the line and deny William Buick a 2,000th British is a third successive victory in the Sandown feature race for trainer Aidan O'Brien and ninth in is also redemption for Delacroix, who was sent off favourite in last month's Epsom Derby but was never in contention, finishing ninth."It wasn't the first or the second or the third plan. He began OK but nobody really wanted to make the running and there were three of us in a line that came out," Moore told ITV Racing."Me and William [Buick] wanted the same position and I had to give way. "It was a steady run race for that class of horse, but this horse has a real good turn of foot and that made the difference."Oisin Murphy finished third on board Ruling Court for trainer Charlie Appleby.