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Le Court claims Tour de France Femmes stage five win and yellow jersey amid team row

about 23 hours ago
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Kim Le Court made the classic error of raising her arms just before the finish line, but survived a late lunge from a resurgent Demi Vollering to win stage five of the Tour de France Femmes in Guéret.The Mauritian rider is enjoying a stellar 2025, having already worn the yellow jersey after stage two, and also led the Tour of Britain and won the Belgian classic, Liège-Bastogne-Liège.Her stage win and bonus seconds took her back into the race lead, at the expense of Marianne Vos.“The big goal was to take the bonus sprint,” Le Court said of her success in the Tour Femmes’ longest stage “which I managed to do.It was a bit tricky at the end.

Maybe I gave a bit of a fright to people watching, but in the sprint when you lift your hands you should double-check.Close or not close, I still crossed the line first.”Le Court, riding for AG Insurance-Soudal, admitted that her success in the bonus sprints could be pivotal.“We have seen a few tours that have been lost by a few seconds, so we are fighting for every second possible.Seconds are super-important and you just never know.

”Le Court and Vollering were part of a select group of race favourites, also including defending champion Kasia Niewiadoma, Olympic mountain biking champion, Pauline Ferrand-Prévot, and former world road race champion, Anna van der Breggen, that moved ahead on the final climb into Guéret.Three climbs in the final 35km shattered the peloton.On the first, the Cote de Chabannes, the trio of breakaway riders split apart, with Brodie Chapman, riding for UAE Team ADQ, the last to be caught.The ferocious pace to the final climb, Le Maupuy, reduced the lead group even further, with Niewiadoma’s Canyon-Sram ZondaCrypto team leading the way, and finally getting some distance on the overnight leader, Vos.The war of words between the Visma-Lease a Bike team of Vos and Ferrand-Prévot and that of FDJ-Suez race favourite Vollering had looked to be over after the team managers Jos van Emden and Stephen Delcourt shook hands in the team bus parking area before the stage start in Futuroscope.

After Vollering’s crash on Monday evening, Delcourt had rounded on her rivals saying: “The mentality of some teams is insane,Absolutely disrespectful,How is it possible that everyone wants to gamble with their lives?”Van Emden’s reaction to Delcourt’s criticisms only fanned the flames,“I have absolutely no respect for those comments,” he said of Delcourt,“He apparently wants a peloton of eight riders, with Demi in it, to ride in a gilded cage.

He’s simply been influenced by Demi, by Demi’s posturing,”In Futuroscope, the pair came face to face, with Visma’s Jacco Verhaeren, the team’s sporting director, acting as moderator, for a 20-minute discussion,“It was really good, really constructive,” Delcourt said,“We share the same idea,We want safety for everybody.

” The Frenchman added that he did not regret his original comments.“No, I don’t.We agreed to disagree.”Any truce, however, might be short-lived.Only a few minutes prior to the conciliatory meeting, Delcourt, speaking to French media, had described Van Emden as “stupid, he only thinks of himself and has an over-sized ego”.

Vollering, meanwhile, appears focused on the race and is seemingly recovered from a crash which only 48 hours earlier had looked likely to force her to quit.Second place, in a ferocious finish, showed that her ambition and appetite remain intact.Thursday’s sixth stage, from Clermont-Ferrand to Ambert, further ramps up the pressure with four climbs, including the first category Col du Béal in the second half of the stage.The rolling roads of the opening stages are now behind them as the peloton braces itself for a long and gruelling weekend in the mountains.
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Shell profits down nearly a third after drop in gas prices

Europe’s tumbling gas prices caused profits at Shell to slump by almost a third in the last quarter after denting the earnings in its gas trading business.Gas prices in Europe fell by almost a fifth between April and June this year after a sudden ceasefire forged between Iran and Israel eased fears that gas deliveries via the strait of Hormuz might be disrupted by conflict.The biggest weekly slump in gas prices in almost two years helped to dent Shell’s adjusted earnings for the second quarter, which fell by almost a third from last year to $4.26bn (£3.22bn)

about 6 hours ago
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Co-op expands its ‘food on the go’ offering with 15 new bitesize stores

The Co-op is to challenge takeaway outlets such as Greggs, Pret a Manger and Subway with plans for hundreds of small food shops selling hot pizza, fried chicken and sandwiches.The first Co-op On The Go store opens in Solihull, near Birmingham, on Thursday and 14 more are planned this year, including five in London.They will sell ready meals, such as pizzas and lasagne to heat up at home, alcoholic and soft drinks, and essentials such as toothpaste and loo roll alongside staffed hot food counters and food in heated cabinets.At between 600 sq ft and 1,000 sq ft, the stores will be about a quarter of the size of a typical Co-op but unlike many convenience stores they will not sell cigarettes or vapes. However, the company has developed 35 new products for the new format, such as all day-breakfast meal pots and smoked salmon, egg and spinach pots

about 9 hours ago
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Queensland Productivity Commission argues construction industry ‘reset’ needed to fix housing crisis and deliver Olympics

Queensland’s Productivity Commission has flagged a broad construction industry “reset” that could threaten existing enterprise bargaining agreements, arguing it may be required if the state is to build its way out of a housing crisis – and host the Olympics.The commission released an interim report on Thursday into improving productivity in the construction sector that called on the Queensland government to permanently remove so-called “Best Practice Industry Conditions” (BPICs) from its procurement policy.Adopted under the previous Labor government in 2018, BPICs outlined construction union workers’ pay and conditions for all major state projects. Union proponents claim BPICs improved safety and lifted standards and created apprenticeship opportunities for women and Indigenous workers – industry opponents complained it led to cost blowouts and worksite shutdowns.Sign up: AU Breaking News emailThe Liberal National party deputy premier, Jarrod Bleijie, hit pause on BPICs in November until the re-established Productivity Commission completed its building industry review

about 12 hours ago
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Tax rises in autumn would force our prices up, retailers tell Reeves

Rachel Reeves has been warned by Britain’s biggest retailers that tax rises in her autumn budget could trigger higher shop prices, hitting household incomes and the economy.With high street chains closing stores and cutting jobs, the British Retail Consortium (BRC) said two-thirds of finance directors predicted there would be further price increases over the next year, even before any rise in tax in the autumn budget.Iceland, Poundland and New Look were among major retailers to announce store closures in recent months, amid business warnings over the impact of tax rises in the chancellor’s first budget.A survey of retail industry finance directors by the BRC, which represents more than 9,000 stores that employ 300,000 workers, found that 85% had raised prices in response to measures brought in since Labour came to power in 2024.Helen Dickinson, chief executive of the BRC, said a fresh round of tax increases would force retailers to push up prices further and leave many households struggling to cope

about 17 hours ago
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Labour says firms will be penalised for late payments to suppliers

Keir Starmer has warned businesses who persistently delay payments to their suppliers that it is “time to pay up” as the government prepares to impose fines and penalties on repeat offenders.In what Labour has billed as the toughest crackdown on late payments in a generation, the business secretary, Jonathan Reynolds, will say on Thursday that the changes will slash a cost to the economy that has escalated to £11bn a year.As many as 38 businesses shut down each day partly owing to late payments, the government said, hurting tradespeople, shopkeepers, startup founders and family-run firms.The planned changes will include handing the small business commissioner powers to impose fines, potentially worth millions of pounds. Established in 2016 to tackle late payments, the watchdog will also be able to carry out spot checks, verify claims and impose deadlines to clear a backlog of disputes

about 18 hours ago
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Divided Fed leaves interest rates unchanged despite Trump pressure

The US Federal Reserve left its benchmark interest rate unchanged on Wednesday, even amid intense pressure from Donald Trump to lower rates.Despite an onslaught of attacks from the White House against the Fed, officials at the central bank said that economic “uncertainty” remains too high to lower rates.But two of the Fed’s governors voted against the decision – the first time that multiple governors have voted against the majority since 1993. Governors Christopher Waller and Michelle Bowman, both appointed by Trump, wanted rates to be lowered. Both have been floated as potential replacements for Fed chair Jerome Powell

about 20 hours ago
cultureSee all
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Jon Stewart on Trump’s Epstein scandal: ‘How do you expect the media to move on, when Trump has such a hard time doing so?’

2 days ago
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By the 30s, Katharine Hepburn was box office poison. Then she made The Philadelphia Story

2 days ago
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The joy of railways is shared by millions | Letters

3 days ago
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Hulk Hogan obituary

3 days ago
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‘It touched a lot of hearts’: Patrick Watson on Covid hit and Spotify record-breaker Je te laisserai des mots

3 days ago
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Considering an open relationship? Don’t read this Reddit forum

4 days ago