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McLaren will use team orders in quest for F1 world drivers’ title in Abu Dhabi

about 1 hour ago
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Zak Brown has said McLaren will use team orders for Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri if required to ensure the team secure the Formula One drivers’ championship in the season finale at Abu Dhabi on Sunday.With Red Bull’s Max Verstappen trailing Norris by 10 points, the Dutchman still has a good shot at taking the title from McLaren’s grasp.Piastri is a further six points back.Having spent all season allowing their drivers to race and attempting to be scrupulously fair to both, Brown announced at the Yas Marina circuit that if circumstances rendered it necessary, they would use orders.“Yes, of course.

We’re realistic, we want to win this drivers’ championship,” the McLaren chief executive said.“If we get into the race and it’s becoming pretty clear that one has a chance and the other doesn’t, we’re going to do what we can to win.It would be crazy not to.”With Norris requiring third place or better to seal his debut championship, the most likely scenario involving team orders would require Piastri to give up a place to Norris to guarantee him a podium spot in the event of Verstappen leading the race.Brown said he was confident both drivers would acquiesce to any instruction from the team, when asked if he believed Piastri would willingly move over for Norris.

“Yes, our drivers have always complied with team wishes just as we comply with their wishes,” he said.“So I’ve got no doubt either of our drivers will continue to race, as they’ve done brilliantly, in the best interests of the team.”On Thursday in Abu Dhabi Norris and Piastri said they had yet to have any discussion about orders with the team but the team principal, Andrea Stella, had been clear after the last round in Qatar that they would address the issue and come to clear, agreed plans with their drivers.McLaren’s approach to being fair to both drivers has come under considerable scrutiny this season but Brown denied the team were going back on their principles.“I don’t think it’s a U-turn,” he said.

“We’re going to start the weekend like we have the other 23, which is going in giving both drivers equal opportunity.We’ll use common sense.We’re not going to throw away a drivers’ championship over a sixth and a seventh place, a third and a fourth place, a fifth and a sixth place, if one of our drivers doesn’t have the opportunity.We’re just going to stay true to our racing principles.So we’ll see how the race plays out.

”Norris remains favourite but Verstappen goes into the finale with four consecutive drivers’ championship titles under his belt and has recovered from a 104-point deficit at the Dutch GP in late August.His team principal, Laurent Mekies, paid tribute to Verstappen and the team’s achievements.“Max just never does a mistake,” he said.“He keeps surprising us every day.You throw him out there.

Sometimes, the car is great,Sometimes it’s a touch less great than what we would hope and he doesn’t miss a start,He doesn’t miss tyre management, he doesn’t miss an overtake,“He’s just the way he is,It is true that it gives a lot of confidence to the whole team.

It is true that it fits so well with, in general, the approach that this team has on how you go racing, taking maximum risk, accepting the pain when the risk went over the edge.”Norris topped the time sheets in first practice in Abu Dhabi but by only eight-thousandths of a second.Piastri did not run in the first session, as he had to take his mandatory second time sitting out practice to allow a young driver a chance in the car.Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc was third, looking feisty only 1/100th of a second off Verstappen.The British driver was once more on top in the second session, looking confident and dialled in at the Yas Marina circuit.

He was three-tenths up on Verstappen in second with Mercedes’ George Russell third and Piastri only in 11th, apparently suffering from balance issues,
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Skipton in Yorkshire named happiest place to live in Great Britain

It is nicknamed “the gateway to the Dales”, is home to one of England’s best-preserved medieval castles and, for trivia fans, was the birthplace of half of Marks & Spencer. Now, the Yorkshire market town of Skipton has been named “the happiest place to live” in Great Britain.It received the accolade from the property website Rightmove, which runs a “happy at home” index that is now in its 14th year. The survey asks residents how they feel about their area based on a range of factors.With its picturesque location on the edge of the Yorkshire Dales, Skipton was ranked particularly highly for its access to nature and green spaces, the friendliness of the people and access to essential services such as schools and doctors

about 12 hours ago
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‘Tough market conditions’ hit UK half-year retail sales at Frasers Group

The owner of Sports Direct and Flannels has said sales have fallen at its UK retail businesses amid heavy discounting by rivals and “very subdued” consumer confidence.Frasers, which is controlled by the former Newcastle United owner Mike Ashley, said sales at its UK sports division were down 5.8% in the six months to 26 October to £1.3bn despite growth at the main Sports Direct chain because of “planned decline” at its Game outlets and the Studio Retail online arm.Michael Murray, the chief executive of Frasers Group, which also owns House of Fraser department stores, Jack Wills and dozens of other brands and a number of shopping centres, said “market conditions are tough” and “consumer confidence is very subdued”

about 17 hours ago
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Dryrobe wins trademark case against rival waterproof changing coat D-Robe

Dryrobe, the maker of huge waterproof towel-lined coats favoured by cold water swimming fans, has won a trademark case against a smaller label that must now stop selling items under the D-Robe brand within a week.A judge at the high court in London ruled the company was guilty of passing off its D-Robe changing robes and other goods as Dryrobe products and knew it was infringing its bigger rival’s trademark.The ruling described a Dryrobe as “an oversized waterproof coat with a towelled lining, designed for surfers or swimmers to change under whilst also drying them, keeping them warm, and protecting them from the weather”.The company has rigorously defended its brand against being used generically by publications and makers of similar clothing and is expected to seek compensation from D-Robe’s owners for trademark infringement.Dryrobe was created by the former financier Gideon Bright as an outdoor changing robe for surfers in 2010 and became the signature brand of the wild swimming craze

about 23 hours ago
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Budget uncertainty triggers plunge in UK construction activity; Trustpilot shares slump after short-seller claims – as it happened

Newsflash: Britain’s construction sector has suffered its sharpest downturn since the first Covid-19 lockdown forced building sites to shut five and a half years ago.Activity across housebuilding, commercial building work and civil engineering all tumbled last month, a new survey of puchasing managers at building firms has found.Construction firms are blaming fragile market confidence, delays with the release of new projects and a lack of incoming new work.The report, by data firm S&P Global, shows there was “a sharp and accelerated reduction in output levels across the construction sector”. Many builders reporting that market conditions were challenging, with new orders slumping at the fastest rate in five and a half years, and job cuts rising

1 day ago
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Rachel Reeves will not be investigated over pre-budget briefing, FCA says

The UK’s financial regulator has decided not to immediately investigate Rachel Reeves and the Treasury over pre-budget briefings but left the door open for further examination of what the Conservatives claimed amounted to market manipulation.In a letter addressed to the chair of the Treasury committee, Meg Hillier, the the chief executive of the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) said the regulator had turned down requests by politicians including the shadow chancellor, Mel Stride, to open an inquiry into briefings made before last week’s announcement by the chancellor.Nikhil Rathi said the FCA had “not commenced an enforcement investigation” into potential market abuse, but added that the regulator would consider the findings of a Treasury inquiry into pre-budget leaks.On Wednesday, the Treasury minister James Murray said the department’s permanent secretary, James Bowler, would review “security processes” to inform future events. He said the inquiry had the “full support” of Reeves and the “whole Treasury team”

1 day ago
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What has gone wrong at Zipcar – and is UK car-sharing market dead?

Rotherhithe Community Kitchen in south London has been delivering hundreds of cooked meals a week for the last two years to pensioners and vulnerable residents. Yet the volunteer group’s plans have been thrown into disarray by the news that they will not have access to cars and vans on New Year’s Day.The group had relied on Zipcar, the car-sharing company that offered customers the ability to access its fleet of vehicles from the street using an app. The company caused shock across London on Monday when it said it would shut down UK operations from 1 January.It will mean many of the volunteers will be unable to collect food from the Felix Project, a charity that gathers surplus food from supermarkets, cafes and restaurants

1 day ago
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Rising racism blamed for collapse in number of foreign nurses coming to UK

about 17 hours ago
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GPs failing older people living with frailty, National Audit Office finds

about 17 hours ago
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Families to be offered help to leave temporary accommodation under UK child poverty strategy

about 18 hours ago
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Parents say concerns were not acted on before London nursery worker’s arrest for abusing children

about 22 hours ago
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Preventing infections in older people is hit and miss, says England’s chief medic

1 day ago
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NHS braces for ‘unprecedented flu wave’ as hospitalised cases in England rise

1 day ago