‘Going in wrong direction’ – F1 drivers have lost confidence in leadership
Ice in their veins: the women who changed ice hockey forever
Growing up in New England, Kelly Dyer was a product of the Bobby Orr explosion. On the streets outside her house, neighborhood kids emulated their hero. Dyer pieced together a set of goalie pads from garbage she found in dumpsters, her sewing kit and shoe glue. Soon, Massachusetts began building more arenas and it was on one of these rinks that Dyer first stepped on the ice.“I started as a figure skater because at the time that was the only way girls could get on the ice,” Dyer recalls
‘Going in wrong direction’ – F1 drivers have lost confidence in leadership
Formula One drivers are fed up and losing confidence in the FIA and the governing body’s president, Mohammed Ben Sulayem, after receiving no response to their collective criticism of both in a public statement. They had called for dialogue to address their grievances but the FIA has not replied since it was issued two weeks ago.This weekend’s Las Vegas Grand Prix is the first meeting since the Grand Prix Drivers’ Association (GPDA) issued its statement, a damning indictment of the FIA and Ben Sulayem, demanding they stop treating all 20 drivers on the grid like children. It addressed the recent controversy over swearing, took issue with the “tone and language” used by Ben Sulayem in relation to his objections to the swearing and questioned the financial transparency of the FIA in how the organisation used the money from fines imposed.The Mercedes driver George Russell, who is a director of the GPDA, was blunt in his disappointment and that of other drivers at the lack of any response from the FIA when asked if they had any confidence in the leadership of the governing body in Las Vegas
England adjusting Tom Curry’s technique to ensure safety after latest concussion
England are making changes to Tom Curry’s all-action technique to ensure his safety after he returned to the fold for Sunday’s clash with Japan following his latest concussion.Curry sat out last weekend’s defeat by South Africa after sustaining a head injury in a collision with Australia’s Rob Valetini in the previous week’s loss against the Wallabies. The 26-year-old, who missed almost all of last season with a debilitating hip injury that nearly forced him into retirement, has a history of head injuries and sustained a concussion in Sale’s opening match of the season against Harlequins.Curry also flew home early from England’s 2022 tour of Australia after sustaining a third concussion in the space of six months, but while Immanuel Feyi-Waboso is absent from this week’s squad having also suffered a head injury against the Wallabies, the openside flanker could return against Eddie Jones’s Japan this weekend having successfully come through the return-to-play protocols. Feyi-Waboso, who is studying medicine, made headlines earlier this year when effectively ruling himself out of England’s final Six Nations match against France on concussion grounds
Warren Gatland doubles down on Wales job but public support in short supply
The last rites, if that is what they are, are going to drag on a while longer yet. On Wednesday, Warren Gatland reiterated that he would resign as head coach if it were “in the best interests of Welsh rugby”, while also making it very clear that in his opinion it is not.Gatland says he had the conversations with his family and his employers after Wales lost 52-20 to Australia on Sunday, their 11th straight defeat. Whatever was said, it has left him “focused solely on preparing the team for this week”.Which brings the ominous prospect of a match against South Africa, the back-to-back world champions
Rejigged India can draw strength from 2021 – but still face uphill struggle | Geoff Lemon
Arriving in Australia in the ember weeks of 2024, the Indian Test team is in an unusual position. They are, in a sense, defending champions. Starting in 1947, Asian teams toured Australia 30 times in a row without winning a series. Most of the time they didn’t come close: Australia won 24, six drawn. It was January 2019 in Sydney, after more than seven decades, that India’s run mountain while leading the series forced the home team to bat for a draw
‘No intention of stopping’: meet the F1 mechanic set for 600th race
Whatever happens at the Las Vegas Grand Prix this weekend, Aston Martin will be celebrating a remarkable achievement. It’s viva Las Vegas for Andy Stevenson, Aston’s sporting director who will mark his 600th grand prix here, a feat of longevity made all the more striking in that he has competed in every one of them at the same team he joined as a callow youth in 1987.Such was his childhood ambition to work in F1 that he committed to it in writing. “My mother recently found the paperwork from my first visit to the careers office which said I wanted to work with fast cars and travel the world,” he says with a smile.“I was always interested in anything mechanical and F1 cars are the best machines on the planet
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