
Stoke-on-Trent-based Prohire Limited falls into administration
A small number of employees were being kept on in Fenton to help wind the business up, but regrettably, the majority had been made redundant with immediate effect, the administrators said.Of the 80 employees across the contract hire, fleet management and rental services business, 57 people worked in Stoke-on-Trent.All those affected were being offered appropriate support and advice, said EY-Parthenon.Administrators added the company had stopped providing services while they looked at the possibility of moving existing contracts with customers and vehicle funders to new providers.
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Telegraph
an hour ago
- Telegraph
How the home of the British Grand Prix has evolved over 75 years
From a dozen likely lads competing in the Mutton Grand Prix to the cheapest race-day tickets selling for an eye-watering £389, Silverstone has come a long way over the past eight decades. It was September 1947 when 12 daredevils decided to have a race around the then-disused RAF Silverstone, a former pig farm on the Northamptonshire-Buckinghamshire border. They duly marked out a two-mile circuit on the former Second World War bomber base's three runways. During the ensuing race, its instigator Maurice Geoghegan crashed into a sheep that had innocently ambled onto the impromptu circuit. The driver was uninjured but both car and sheep were write-offs – hence the Mutton Grand Prix. From bomber base to racing circuit By 1950, the Royal Automobile Club had leased Silverstone and decided it would be the base for Britain and the world's first-ever world championship grand prix. It laid out a new 2.9-mile track around the airfield's perimeter roads, marked with ropes, straw bales and old oil drums, the height of safety at the time. Big teams of the day Alfa Romeo and Maserati entered that first round of the new world championship; ever the contrarian, Enzo Ferrari refused to enter his scuderia because he deemed the RAC's appearance money too stingy. Nonetheless, the entry list did include a British former prisoner of war who had attempted a glider escape from the infamous Colditz castle, a 56-year-old Frenchman who remains the oldest driver to score points in a championship grand prix, as well as a member of the Thai royal family. Prince Bira of Siam might have felt at home as the 200,000 spectators thronging the track on Saturday 13 May included King George VI, the only time a reigning monarch has visited the British Grand Prix on race day. My uncle, who lived in Northamptonshire, was one of the less celebrated fans who paid 7/6 (38p, or £11.27 after inflation) to get in. At the time Silverstone had minimal banking for racegoers to spectate from and only a couple of rudimentary grandstands, so most people parked by the straw bales and some stood on their cars to watch. An army engineer, my uncle's solution was more ingenious: he and his mates transported scaffolding poles and planks on the roofs of their cars to build their own mini grandstand. They saw a 70-lap race that lasted two and a quarter hours and was won by Alfa's Italian star Giuseppe Farina at the relatively sedate average speed of 91mph. As a comparison, Lewis Hamilton averaged nearly 140mph to win last year's Silverstone race. If he'd done the 1950 grand prix at that speed it would have been over three quarters of an hour earlier. Silverstone speeds up Astonishingly, the Silverstone circuit stayed largely unchanged for the next 40 years. Gradually more grandstands were built around the track. And the ropes, straw bales and oil drums were replaced with crash barriers and earth banks. This didn't just improve the view for spectators who couldn't afford grandstand seats, it also made the experience slightly less hazardous. Those hardy fans were still treated to an increasing spectacle on the track. Cars had changed dramatically since the 1950 race, making Silverstone fearsomely fast. Engines had been moved behind the drivers in the late 1950s and racers lay in, rather than sat on, their cars. Primitive bodywork on spindly bicycle wheels had become long, sleek and low with fat, grippy tyres. By 1973, average lap speeds had duly escalated to 138mph so for the 1975 grand prix a chicane was added before the pit straight to slow the cars. It reduced the fastest lap speeds by a mere 4mph. But this was a time when racing drivers were men with long hair, big sideburns and a cavalier attitude to danger. Barring tiny tweaks, the track remained unchanged until 1990 when, with aerodynamics gluing cars to the road through corners, Silverstone was the fastest track on the Formula One calendar, with drivers averaging up to 161mph per lap. Competition drives Silverstone on For 1991, F1 stars didn't need quite such large cojones when they set out to drive Silverstone. Modifications including additional and reprofiled corners around the circuit slowed speeds, although Nigel Mansell's moustache still averaged 131mph while winning that year's race. But despite more changes to slow cars in 1994, 1996 and 1997, it was difficult to dissociate an increasingly shabby Silverstone from its pig farm roots. While drivers still loved the track's challenges, in the face of classier competition from Asia and the Middle East, there was talk of Silverstone losing its grand prix. That woke up the owners and prompted a multi-million pound upgrade for 2010. This included a new arena section with three grandstands on what was once the pig fields. And rather than foot-to-the-floor, hold your breath and hope, the new 3.6-mile lap became a much more technical challenge while maintaining some of the original circuit's legendary fast sections. For this weekend's 60th Silverstone grand prix, 75 years after that first race, drivers will be internationally recognised elite sportsmen, nearly half a million fans will flood through the gates over the weekend and rich people in helicopters will make the track Britain's busiest airport on Sunday. A bit different to the Mutton Grand Prix.


Telegraph
an hour ago
- Telegraph
The depressing proof that our political class is obsessed with style over substance
It could be the most expensive full stop of all time. One round dot, albeit now painted turquoise and no longer sitting on the line but nudged up halfway between the words 'Gov' and 'UK'. It's the work of advertising agency M+C Saatchi, that once great creative company responsible for the likes of Heineken ads, for recruiting to MI6 and their 'Back the Bid' campaign that helped London win the 2012 Olympic Games. Well they're now reduced to fiddling with full stops on logos. And it's not like they even changed the font, although, when not printed in black and white there is an iteration in colour of a blue background. For this work, this tweak, came their invoice: £532,000. Let's hope that's including VAT but there was a further £99,950 spent by Leicester-based marketing agency Lnet Digital for conducting market research on the logo changes. And there was more related work still, this time by civil servants who produced a 150-page document explaining how the rebrand should be used. It contains the following priceless poetry: 'Our dot is the bridge between the government and the UK, by the side of users to help make information and services easier and more useful. Used within our wordmark and as a graphic device across all channels, the dot is a guiding hand, for life.' Consider that vignette when you wonder why your bins can't be collected more regularly, your new passport delivered sooner, the trains running on time. Because, clearly in Whitehall, what's more fun is to muse on the benevolent power of a dot and how it is like a collective hand across the nation, joining us in a heavenly and warming embrace with government – not to do all the dross that might actually help to get the country moving. Except that if you, on your computer, actually try to put the dot halfway up the line your laptop will start smoking, such is the impossibility. And if you managed this remarkable miracle, it wouldn't help you because in actuality, the dot needs to remain exactly where it was before in order to get you to the website.


The Independent
an hour ago
- The Independent
F1 race start time: British GP 2025 schedule at Silverstone and how to watch
F1 next heads back to the scene of the sport's first ever race 75 years ago as Silverstone hosts the British Grand Prix and round 12 of the 2025 season. Lando Norris secured a vital and much-needed win last time out in Austria, thwarting a challenge from McLaren teammate and championship rival Oscar Piastri. The Australian driver's lead is now 15 points after the first 11 races. Charles Leclerc picked up the final podium place for Ferrari, while Max Verstappen retired after being hit by Kimi Antonelli. Verstappen's future at Red Bull has been the topic of much discussion this week - the Dutchman has been linked with a move to Mercedes, potentially replacing arch rival George Russell in 2026. Lewis Hamilton, meanwhile, finished fourth in Austria and will be eyeing his first podium for Ferrari as he takes to his home track for the first time in red. Hamilton memorably won last year's race, his ninth victory at Silverstone. When is the British Grand Prix? All times BST Sunday 6 July Race: 3pm How can I watch it online and on TV? The British Grand Prix will be broadcast live on Sky Sports in the United Kingdom - and ESPN in the United States. Sky's coverage of Sunday's race starts at 1:30pm (BST). Sky Sports subscribers can watch all the action at Silverstone on the Sky Go app. If you're not a Sky customer, you can grab a NOWTV Day Pass here to watch without a subscription. The race will also be broadcast on free-to-air Channel 4, with all sessions live on the main channel. Channel 4's coverage of Sunday's race also starts at 1:30pm. You can watch all sessions live via this stream. If you're travelling abroad and want to watch the British Grand Prix then you might need a VPN to unblock your streaming app. Our VPN roundup is here to help. F1 driver standings 1. Oscar Piastri (McLaren) – 216 points 2. Lando Norris (McLaren) – 201 points 3. Max Verstappen (Red Bull) – 155 points 4. George Russell (Mercedes) – 146 points 5. Charles Leclerc (Ferrari) – 119 points 6. Lewis Hamilton (Ferrari) – 91 points 7. Kimi Antonelli (Mercedes) – 63 points 8. Alex Albon (Williams) – 42 points 9. Esteban Ocon (Haas) – 23 points 10. Nico Hulkenberg (Sauber) - 22 points 11. Isack Hadjar (Racing Bulls) – 21 points 12. Lance Stroll (Aston Martin) – 14 points 13. Fernando Alonso (Aston Martin) – 14 points 14. Carlos Sainz (Williams) – 13 points 15. Liam Lawson (Racing Bulls) – 12 points 16. Pierre Gasly (Alpine) – 11 points 17. Yuki Tsunoda (Red Bull) – 10 points 18. Ollie Bearman (Haas) – 6 points 19. Gabriel Bortoleto (Sauber) – 4 points 20. Franco Colapinto (Alpine) – 0 points 21. Jack Doohan (Alpine) – 0 points F1 constructor standings 1. McLaren - 417 points 2. Ferrari - 210 points 3. Mercedes - 209 points 4. Red Bull - 162 points 5. Williams - 55 points 6. Racing Bulls - 36 points 7. Haas - 29 points 8. Aston Martin - 28 points 9. Sauber - 26 points 10. Alpine - 11 points 2025 F1 CALENDAR IN FULL: ROUND 12 - GREAT BRITAIN Silverstone Circuit - 4-6 July ROUND 13 - BELGIUM (sprint weekend) Circuit de Spa-Francorchamps - 25-27 July ROUND 14 - HUNGARY Hungaroring, Budapest - 1-3 August ROUND 15 - NETHERLANDS Circuit Zandvoort - 29-31 August ROUND 16 - ITALY Monza Circuit - 5-7 September ROUND 17 - AZERBAIJAN Baku City Circuit - 19-21 September ROUND 18 - SINGAPORE Marina Bay Street Circuit - 3-5 October ROUND 19 - UNITED STATES (sprint weekend) Circuit of the Americas, Austin - 17-19 October ROUND 20 - MEXICO Autodromo Hermanos Rodriguez, Mexico City - 24-26 October ROUND 21 - BRAZIL (sprint weekend) Interlagos Circuit, Sao Paulo - 7-9 November ROUND 22 - LAS VEGAS Las Vegas Street Circuit - 20-22 November ROUND 23 - QATAR (sprint weekend) ROUND 24 - ABU DHABI Yas Marina Circuit - 5-7 December