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Max Verstappen beats Piastri to take F1 title race to Abu Dhabi GP as Norris falters

about 7 hours ago
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Max Verstappen believed he had long since “checked out” from being able to defend his world championship.Yet the Dutchman, while down, was far from out and has, with victory in the Qatar Grand Prix, battled and bludgeoned his way back into contention just as McLaren have somehow contrived to leave Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri vulnerable to his late charge, as Verstappen forced the title race to the wire at the final round next weekend in Abu Dhabi.With Lando Norris, the title leader, fourth and his teammate Oscar Piastri second in Doha, after McLaren made an egregious strategy error, there will now be a three-way fight to the finish at the season finale, with 16 points separating all three drivers.Verstappen is 12 points back from Norris, with Piastri a further four worse off.It is a scenario that was all but unthinkable when Verstappen was 104 points behind Piastri after the Dutch Grand Prix on 31 August and he had in effect written off his championship ambitions.

Earlier in the weekend the McLaren chief executive, Zak Brown, had jokingly compared Verstappen to the horror movie trope of a character that will simply not stay dead.The world champion’s response as he revelled in the sheer glee of lurching back into McLaren’s nightmares was simply: “You can call me Chucky.”Within whose fever dreams he must now loom larger than ever.What was considered to be McLaren’s party to close out the season is now set to be a nerve-jangling, pressure-filled finale, one where they are faced with having a fired-up Verstappen on a charge to try to take what would be the unlikeliest of titles and would stand as his greatest achievement.Verstappen won from third place after a superb drive but was given an enormous leg up when McLaren chose not to pit both their drivers under an early safety car when the rest of the field did so to take a free stop.

It ensured Verstappen took the lead and as the stops played out he could not be caught.Norris took damage when he went off wide and was unable to stay with the two leaders and Carlos Sainz, who was third.Norris and Piastri decried the team’s strategy decision and, coming on the back of receiving a double disqualification for the pair at the last round in Las Vegas, it seems McLaren are engineering their own problems as they stumble and stagger toward the finish line.A once simple two‑horse race between the pair may now be snatched from their grasp at the death.There are 25 points for the winner in Abu Dhabi and Norris will still seal it if he finishes in front of his two rivals there or at least third, but the finale will be far more closely fought than he would have liked having gone into the race in Doha with a 24-point advantage over both Piastri and Verstappen.

The defending champion had a mountain to climb to stay in the fight three months ago but when Red Bull brought upgrades to their car that addressed the balance issues that had plagued it for most of the season, he exploited it and as the two McLaren drivers took points from one another, the world champion came hurtling up the rails,McLaren, who have not won a drivers’ championship since 2008 and not done the drivers’ and constructors’ double since 1998, have left themselves exposed, promoting more questions about their policy of not choosing to favour one driver to close out the title,They have let them race throughout and the team principal, Andrea Stella, insisted after the race they would rigorously continue to do so in Abu Dhabi,Indeed it appears this fervent desire for scrupulous fairness to them both played a part behind the decision not to take the free pit stop, when every other team did so when a safety car was called on lap seven,Sign up to The RecapThe best of our sports journalism from the past seven days and a heads-up on the weekend’s actionafter newsletter promotionStella explained that it was a “­misjudgment”, where they been caught out expecting other teams to also stay out, which would have put the McLarens in traffic had they come in.

He also admitted, though, that it was prompted by the fact that ­Norris would have lost time and places as they double-stacked both cars at once in the pits.It was compounded by the fact that there were two stops which had to be made so they could not adapt strategy on the hoof.Pirelli had limited the use of tyres for the race to a 25-lap stint, making the 57-lap contest a mandatory two-stop as a precaution against punctures on what is an enormously demanding circuit with high lateral loads on the rubber.This pursuit of fairness, then, has ultimately cost both drivers and allowed Verstappen in through the back door.Piastri, who had been on pole and demonstrated in the race how fearsomely quick he could be in Qatar, was palpably furious that what he felt had been a likely win had been snatched from his grasp, saying only at the end that he was “speechless” with a face like thunder and a square‑set jaw.

Norris too felt the team had missed a trick but he might have made third but for taking damage to his car.Indeed he took fourth only at the death when Mercedes’ Kimi Antonelli made an error and let him through; significantly, the extra two points mean third will be sufficient for Norris in Abu Dhabi.Verstappen’s engineer, Gianpiero Lambiase, initially believed the Italian had simply moved over for Norris, an accusation for which he subsequently apologised and which the Mercedes team principal, Toto Wolff, described as “brainless and total and utter nonsense”.It was a sideshow spat on a day of grand drama that McLaren will want to forget.They require a reset and to clear the air before going again in Abu Dhabi, where the entire season now hangs in the balance.

politicsSee all
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Let’s not repeat the folly of PFIs for NHS buildings | Letter

In response to Lord Hutton’s letter (23 November) on NHS hospitals built under the private finance initiative (PFI), independent research into the design quality of PFI public buildings, by all of the auditing authorities in the UK, showed serious flaws and a significant “quality gap” when compared to traditional design-led procurement.In my 2007 book The Design Quality Manual: Improving Building Performance, I included results from all these reviews, starting with the Audit Commission’s 2003 report PFI in Schools. The design flaws were serious, including poor functionality, short-life materials, and non-compliance with building and safety regulations.PFI contracts tend to be led by building contractors rather than architects. So was the refurbishment of Grenfell Tower

about 7 hours ago
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Fears for UK security as Foreign Office moves to scrap unit on conflict and refugee crises

The Foreign Office has been warned that a plan to axe its dedicated unit on emerging conflicts and refugee crises is a “real error” that “undermines UK security” as the department grapples with swingeing cuts.The Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office’s (FCDO) migration and conflict directorate, which employs about 100 civil servants, is being abolished at the end of this year and its work subsumed by the rest of the department.The directorate provides advice and technical support to governments and civil society groups in trouble spots, including Syria, South Sudan, Ethiopia, Yemen and the Philippines.It is slated to close despite Yvette Cooper, the foreign secretary, writing last week that the FCDO was “stepping up efforts” to support peace-building.The move is part of a wider restructuring that threatens 2,000 jobs – about a quarter of the workforce – and has damaged morale among diplomats

about 12 hours ago
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Your Party to have ‘collective leadership’ in win for Zarah Sultana

The new leftwing party headed by Jeremy Corbyn and others has voted narrowly for it to have a ‘“collective leadership” in a win for Zarah Sultana, who has been at loggerheads with the former Labour leader.The results were announced on Sunday after a chaotic start to its founding conference in Liverpool. Sultana, a former Labour MP who now sits as an independent, had boycotted the first day of the conference amid disagreements over how Your Party – its provisional name – should be run.In advance of the results of voting on the party’s constitutional arrangements, Corbyn had said: “It’s quite hard for the public to grasp things that there are sort of 10 people who run things.”However, members voted by 51

about 13 hours ago
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Rachel Reeves denies lying to public in run-up to budget

Rachel Reeves has denied lying to the public in the buildup to last week’s budget, insisting that she needed to raise taxes to a record level to ensure economic stability.The chancellor said on Sunday she had announced £26bn-worth of tax rises on Wednesday in part to build a buffer against her fiscal rules and reduce the risk of further tax increases in the future, and in part to protect public spending.Her messaging contrasted, however, with what she said before the budget, when she said tax rises would be necessary because of an expected decision by economic forecasters to reduce their growth expectations.In the end, the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) did downgrade its expectations for economic productivity, but said unexpectedly strong wage growth and tax receipts would more than make up for that.The OBR’s comments have kickstarted a political firestorm, which has led opposition politicians to demand Reeves’s resignation

about 13 hours ago
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Your Party’s first conference shows little sign of achieving fresh start

When the idea of a new leftwing party spearheaded by Jeremy Corbyn and Zarah Sultana was first mooted in the summer, it was so popular that hundreds of thousands of people expressed an interest in joining.Although it was quickly beset by arguments – its co-founders rowed bitterly over its initial leadership and funding model – many hoped this weekend’s inaugural conference would signal a fresh start.A sizeable chunk of the 2,500 delegates are former Labour members, disappointed by the policies of the current government and looking for a political home as they worry about the rise of Reform UK.As plans for the party’s first official gathering were finalised, Sultana and Corbyn looked to have buried the hatchet. Appearing at a leftwing festival in Manchester last month, Sultana jokingly compared the duo to the Gallagher brothers, saying: “I’m here to tell you the show is back on the road

1 day ago
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Your Party conference thrown into chaos as Zarah Sultana boycotts first day

Zarah Sultana has boycotted the first day of Your Party’s inaugural conference, throwing the party’s first official gathering into chaos amid disagreements with co-founder Jeremy Corbyn over how the party should be run.Corbyn confirmed to journalists on Saturday that he preferred a single leader and is likely to stand for the role but Sultana said she would vote for collective leadership and that she did not believe parties should be run by “sole personalities”.In a sign of further division within the fledgling movement, a spokesperson for Sultana said she would not be entering the conference hall on Saturday in solidarity with delegates who were expelled over links to other leftwing parties, describing the process as a “witch-hunt”.The Guardian understands Sultana will run against Corbyn if members decide to elect one leader. Delegates in Liverpool will choose between electing a sole leader or a collective of lay members – those not already serving as MPs or councillors

1 day ago
technologySee all
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After a teddy bear talked about kink, AI watchdogs are warning parents against smart toys

2 days ago
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One in 10 UK parents say their child has been blackmailed online, NSPCC finds

3 days ago
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Small changes to ‘for you’ feed on X can rapidly increase political polarisation

3 days ago
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Foreign interference or opportunistic grifting: why are so many pro-Trump X accounts based in Asia?

4 days ago
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London councils enact emergency plans after three hit by cyber-attack

4 days ago
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European parliament calls for social media ban on under-16s

4 days ago