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Kimi Antonelli produces gutsy drive to hold off Norris and win F1 Miami GP

about 14 hours ago
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The margins were fine but ultimately it was a champion’s composure that won the day for Kimi Antonelli at the Miami Grand Prix.The teenager cannot legally buy a drink in the US yet but by the end of what was a gripping run to the flag the Italian had most assuredly earned a stiffener.Still 19 years old and in only his second season in Formula One, Antonelli’s calmness to see off immense pressure from McLaren’s Lando Norris, who hounded him to the finish, was his best performance in a run that has seen him take three consecutive pole positions and three consecutive wins in these opening four rounds.“Kimi, that was really impressive, really impressive,” said his Mercedes team principal, Toto Wolff, who is not given to unnecessary hyperbole, and it was.Wolff had fast-tracked him into a Mercedes seat last season and the kid has returned the compliment by delivering on his promise.

He knows, too, there is more to come,“This is just the beginning,The road is still long,” Antonelli said,“We are working super hard and the team is doing an incredible job,They did a great strategy, we did a massive undercut and then we managed to bring it home, even though it was not easy.

”Norris gave his all and the race turned on a pit stop but it was Antonelli who had the edge once more and with it now a 20-point lead in the world championship over his Mercedes teammate, George Russell, who could finish only fourth.Norris’s McLaren teammate, Oscar Piastri, was third, with Max Verstappen delivering a very strong comeback for Red Bull to take fifth after a spin on the opening lap.The day, however, firmly belonged to Antonelli and much as his wins in China and Japan were impressive, this victory on the circuit that winds its way round the Hard Rock Stadium was of another calibre.While he will not countenance its discussion, it did have all the hallmarks of a champion.In the opening three rounds Mercedes had enjoyed a dominant car and while Antonelli had to work for those wins, at Suzuka and Shanghai, he enjoyed a pace advantage that ultimately proved unassailable.

At the Miami International Autodrome he certainly did not.McLaren, Ferrari and Red Bull had all brought a swathe of upgrades to Florida and, in the case of McLaren and Red Bull, they had come good, very good.Verstappen’s charge through the field was indicative of how much improved a car he had beneath him and how much more he was enjoying driving it, while Norris was very much able to match and indeed better the pace of the Mercedes.This was a straight-up fight and Norris, the defending champion with his dander up, is no mean opponent.The win, then, was very much earned and this was further confirmation, were it needed, that the Mercedes remains at the head of the field, at least in Antonelli’s hands, while Russell, the pre-season favourite, now sorely needs to reassert his authority on a title fight in which Antonelli has bossed the last three rounds.

Mercedes, in turn, will be buoyed that they sealed a win while having their major development to the car still to come at the next round in Canada after having ensured they remain undefeated in grands prix this season.It is Antonelli who is proving to be the schwerpunkt of their challenge and here, even when under the most pressure he has faced all season, with the resurgent world champion chasing him down, the 19-year-old kept his cool to close out.His race in Miami and previous rounds this season have demonstrated that given the opportunity to compete at the sharp end with a strong car, Antonelli has stepped up with extraordinary control.He endured an up and down season as he learned the ropes last year, pushing too hard and being caught out on occasion but while he still clearly enjoys finding the edge, has shown great control too.Indeed this was not a cakewalk under the lowering skies in Miami where storm warnings had brought the race start time forward by three hours and ensured it was run without a drop hitting the track.

After Antonelli had lost the lead off the line to Charles Leclerc, Norris had subsequently taken a place from the Italian on track and appeared to have the advantage,Their only pit stops turned it however, Mercedes going for an undercut that paid off as the Italian just passed Norris as he emerged from the pit lane a lap later, after a stop which the team principal, Andrea Stella, admitted had been a couple of 10ths too slow,Norris was left to rue his team not having jumped first but it set up a tense showdown all the way to the flag,The pair circulated for almost 30 laps nose to tail with hardly more than two seconds between them and at times barely two or three 10ths,Norris, darting hither and thither, looking to unbalance the Italian and find a way past.

Antonelli was having none of it, even as he feared a gearbox problem and that his rear tyres were losing grip.Jaw set firmly, he was inch-perfect across the distance to the flag in the hardest circumstances he has been pushed all season.He rose to them with a performance that belies his tender years, as F1’s fight at the front turned pleasingly feisty.
politicsSee all
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Starmer adviser held 16 undisclosed meetings with top US tech bosses

An influential government adviser close to Keir Starmer and Rachel Reeves held 16 undisclosed meetings with top US tech executives, the Guardian can reveal.The No 10 business aide Varun Chandra discussed regulatory changes, AI and Donald Trump’s second administration with tech corporations during confidential meetings between October 2024 and October 2025. In one meeting he offered to help a top executive meet the prime minister directly.Chandra’s dealings with six major technology companies – Google, Microsoft, Amazon, Oracle, Apple and Meta – took place as the government developed policies to secure investment from Silicon Valley, including multimillion-pound energy subsidies and preferential planning approval for datacentres in what ministers have called AI growth zones.While largely unknown outside Westminster, Chandra, who ran a corporate intelligence firm founded by former British spies before joining government, is a central figure in Downing Street and is a key champion of the government’s push for economic growth

about 20 hours ago
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UK politics: Polanski says he would ‘discourage’ the use of ‘globalise the intifada’ chant on marches – as it happened

Speaking to the BBC, Zack Polanski discouraged people from using the phrase “globalise the intifada” (see this earlier post for its meaning) but added he is “not interested” in policing language.The Green Party leader told the BBC’s Sunday With Laura Kuenssberg:double quotation markIt’s not a phrase I would use personally and that’s because I think if there’s other phrases you can use or other ways to do things then why not just do them.I want people to be more effective so I wouldn’t encourage people to use it because actually I think you can make your point a lot more effectively and not get into this conversation about language.Words matter, but the tens of thousands of Palestinians who have been murdered, the people in Lebanon who have been killed, these people matter too, and I think if people want to protest, that it’s important we defend their right to protest.Yes I do discourage, to give you a more direct answer, the use of the phrase but I’m not interested in trying to police people’s language

about 21 hours ago
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Polanski says he would discourage ‘globalise the intifada’ chant but warns against march bans

Zack Polanski has said he would discourage pro-Palestine protesters from using the chant “globalise the intifada”, but the Green party leader warned against specifically outlawing the phrase or banning a protest planned in London later this month.Speaking earlier in the weekend, Keir Starmer called for “tougher action” against marchers using the chant after last week’s attack on Jewish people in Golders Green, saying pro-Gaza marches risked having a cumulative effect of being intimidating.While the Metropolitan police already have a policy of arresting people who chant “globalise the intifada”, Heidi Alexander, the transport secretary, said any further action would await an ongoing review of protest laws.Speaking on BBC One’s Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg programme, Polanski said outlawing the chant would overly restrict freedom of speech.He reiterated his apology for sharing a post on X that criticised police for the way they arrested a suspect after two Jewish people were stabbed in Golders Green, north-west London, on Wednesday

about 22 hours ago
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‘We have let them come on to our ground’: Labour fights off Green gains in Leeds

On the wide streets around Leeds’ Roundhay Park, Labour canvassers have built up a considerable step count just to walk between each of the stone-built mansions in one of the city’s most affluent suburbs.Lucy Powell, Labour’s deputy leader, is with activists in the sunshine admiring the manicured lawns and window-box pansies. This is one of the safest wards for Labour in Leeds, with graduates, doctors, lecturers and small business owners.In years gone by, voters in these houses with sweeping driveways and climbing roses would have been natural Conservatives. A short walk away is Roundhay school, the alma mater of Liz Truss, a place she amusingly tried to paint as the wrong side of the tracks

about 22 hours ago
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Lucy Powell says Labour has ‘no magic bullet’ as MPs brace for heavy losses in local elections

Labour’s deputy leader has warned there will be “no magic bullet” to solve Labour’s problems – or major challenges facing the country – as its MPs grapple with how to navigate the fallout out from the local elections.Lucy Powell told the Guardian she understood there was “huge anger and despondency” from Labour MPs in the aftermath of the Peter Mandelson vetting scandal, but said the prime minister would not make a similar mistake again.Powell, who called for Keir Starmer to be more explicitly progressive during her deputy leadership campaign, said she would not engage in leadership speculation with the party facing a potential loss of more than 75% of the council seats it is defending, as well as losing power in Wales and failing to beat the SNP in Scotland.But she warned restive MPs there would be “no one change” that would lead to a reverse in fortunes. “There’s no magic bullet here for us

about 22 hours ago
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Reform UK council backs release of beavers amid party row over rewilding

A Reform UK council has backed the release of wild beavers into the countryside, despite the party’s opposition to rewilding.The Reform-led Leicestershire county council has backed the release of the rodents as part of efforts to reduce flooding.The Labour government recently legalised the release of beavers in England, about 400 years after the animals were hunted to extinction for their fur and an oil they produce.The animals are lauded by environmental campaigners for the habitats they create by damming rivers, which can reduce flooding during periods of heavy rain while also storing water in the landscape during drier months. They also have been found to improve water quality and boost numbers of bats, fish, birds, amphibians and invertebrates

about 22 hours ago
businessSee all
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Political blame game begins and passengers left adrift after Spirit ceases operations

1 day ago
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Spirit Airlines ceases operations and US transportation secretary announces measures to help passengers

1 day ago
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Less financial stability, smaller social safety nets: inside the gen Z investing boom

2 days ago
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Exxon and Chevron quarterly earnings fall despite soaring oil prices

3 days ago
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Firm bookings, fast refunds: easyJet and On The Beach aim to reassure jittery travellers with holiday pledges

3 days ago
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Octopus Energy boss: some people would accept blackouts if bills cut

3 days ago