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Piastri and Norris ‘in control of own destiny’ in F1 world championship battle

about 6 hours ago
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Oscar Piastri has insisted that he and his McLaren teammate, Lando Norris, are in control of their own destiny as they fight for the Formula One world championship after the pair were involved in a highly controversial swap imposed by the team at the Italian Grand Prix.Given the pair are in a two-horse race for the title, the question of team orders playing a potentially decisive role loomed large after Monza.Max Verstappen won the race but McLaren’s decision to have Piastri return second place to Norris, after the British driver lost the position due to a slow pit stop caused by a faulty wheel gun, was contentious.With Norris claiming second place he gained three points on his teammate in the championship standings, narrowing the gap to 31 points.Many fans were aggrieved at the perceived manipulation of the result and the Mercedes team principal, Toto Wolff, warned that the team’s use of team orders in an effort to be as fair as possible to both drivers risked setting precedents that would become increasingly hard to manage in the title run-in.

Speaking before this weekend’s Azerbaijan Grand Prix, Piastri was confident that ultimately it would be the drivers, not the team, that decided the title fight.“I do think we have enough freedom to control our own destiny in the championship,” Piastri said.“Naturally there have been thoughts, we have had good discussions with the team.We have clarified a lot of things, we know how we will go racing going forwards.”When asked to move over at Monza the Australian had questioned the call, noting on the team radio: “We said that a slow pit-stop was part of racing, so I don’t really get what changed here”.

In Baku he said he stuck by his words but went on to explain that the slow stop had not been the sole rationale behind McLaren’s actions.“That is a decision we’ve made, that a slow pit stop is a part of racing,” he said.“In the car, the context wasn’t there about what else had happened in terms of the pit stop sequencing.“There was another factor outside of the slow pit stop, being the order we pitted in.That was a contributing factor to why we swapped.

We can’t plan for every scenario but we are very aligned and I respect the team’s decisions and trust they will do their best to make the right one.”Norris said he too was confident the team would not play a significant role in the title battle.“We both agreed with it after and accepted that’s what we agree as a team,” he said.“The team try and keep things fair between us but there’s not been many things where they’ve had to actually get involved and do anything to help one or the other.”Wolff, who managed what became a bitter and acrimonious fight between Lewis Hamilton and Nico Rosberg at Mercedes, had said he believed McLaren were setting up a potentially incendiary situation.

“You set a precedent that is very difficult to undo,” he said after Monza,“What if the team makes another mistake and it’s not a pit stop,Do you switch them around?”Many fans were equally displeased, with Norris receiving some booing on the podium at Monza, but Piastri was happy the team had made an acceptable call,“If we had done the opposite thing, then you’d have the opposite half of the fans saying that that was wrong and vice versa,” he said, “So ultimately there’s no correct decision,Am I surprised [by the backlash]? Not really.

I guess it’s a big moment from the race and I feel like a lot of fans are quite quick to jump on things that are deemed controversial.”McLaren go into the race with the chance of sealing their second consecutive constructors’ championship and their 10th in total, with a record of the earliest point in a season, with seven races still remaining.They lead Ferrari in second by 337 points and will take the title if they outscore them by nine points and are not outscored by Mercedes by 12 points or Red Bull by 33 points.
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Jimmy Kimmel: Republicans ‘working very hard to capitalize’ on Charlie Kirk’s killing

Late-show hosts recap Donald Trump’s chilly reception in the UK, his corrupt business deals with the UAE and Maga’s fearmongering around the “radical left”.On Monday night, Trump became the first US president to sue the New York Times, for defamation to the tune of $15bn. “Where does he even come up with this?” wondered Jimmy Kimmel on Tuesday evening. “These are like numbers my children make up when they’re talking about money.”“I thought he said the New York Times was failing,” he added

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‘The storm for Lear is inside him’: Crossing choppy seas to bring Shakespeare to Isles of Scilly

RSC touring troupe stage King Lear in a school hall on St Mary’s before continuing to the Isle of Wight“Blow, winds, and crack your cheeks! Rage! Blow!” King Lear, Act III, Scene 2A fierce wind and strong swell had turned the Atlantic into a rollercoaster and when the troupe made landfall on the Isles of Scilly, several members felt rather wobbly and looked a little green around the gills.The life of a touring actor is not always glitz and glamour, but the first visit of the Royal Shakespeare Company (RSC) to Scilly – to perform King Lear – got off to a particularly rocky start.“It was a rough crossing,” said Oliver Senton, who plays Lear, as the 15-strong cast and crew recovered on the harbourside of St Mary’s, the largest of the islands, 30 miles off the south-west coast of mainland Britain. “We’re more used to being in a van or train when we’re going place to place. But it’s wonderful to be here, breaking territory, bringing theatre to new places

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Seth Meyers: ‘Trump clearly has no answer to Putin’s aggression’

As several late-night hosts take a break for the Emmys – which went to the Late Show with Stephen Colbert on Sunday night – Seth Meyers looked into Donald Trump’s lack of international leadership.On Monday’s Late Night, Meyers pointed out the hypocrisy behind the Trump’ administration’s foreign policy agenda. “Trump and the GOP spent years whining that Democrats were supposedly leading from behind, and have now declared that America will be setting the world’s agenda,” he explained. “No more waiting for other countries to act – America acts first and other countries follow us. You got that, world?”Except earlier this week, Trump announced on Truth Social that he was ready to enact sanctions against Russia for flying drones into Poland’s airspace … but not until all Nato nations had agreed to stop buying oil from Russia

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What do the circus and US politics have in common? Ask these Black and brown circus artists

International Black Indigenous Circus Week in Philadelphia brings together artists specializing in aerial, juggling clowning and more for various panels and showsIn an industrial building in north Philadelphia, teal and red fabric used for aerial tricks dangled from the high ceiling. Alyssa Bigbee, the co-founder of the Philadelphia-based International Black Indigenous Circus Week, called on five performers to circle around for the first rehearsal of their circus show titled The Rebellion: Anarchy. “Remember to breathe. Remember to pace yourself,” Bigbee told the group of mostly Black and brown artists. “Lean on each other and feed off of each other in terms of energy

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‘We were being watched by the KGB’: how Scorpions made Wind of Change

‘A guy from our record company told me to take out the whistling. I said no way. When the song went through the roof, he came to me, bent over and said, “Kick my ass!”’Being a West German band made playing the Soviet Union in the late 1980s particularly special. We’d grown up in a divided country and had tried many times to play in East Germany, but they would never let us in. When we did our first gig in what was then Leningrad, the atmosphere was a bit grey, not very colourful or rock’n’roll – but hearts started opening up over the course of the 10 gigs we did in the city

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Josh Pyke: ‘I turned around and throat-punched the guy – and the whole gig stopped’

Your EP Feeding the Wolves turns 20 this year. Have you ever fed a wolf?I’ve never fed a wolf. But I have fed a fox once. When I used to tour the UK, I’d always try and go for runs to stay fit on the road. We’d usually end up staying in these industrial areas just outside of town

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Bank of England governor says UK ‘not out of the woods’ on inflation, after leaving interest rates on hold – as it happened

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Novo Nordisk shares climb after positive results for anti-obesity pill

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What is new in UK-US tech deal and what will it mean for the British economy?

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UK is going to be ‘AI superpower’, says Nvidia boss as he invests £500m

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Piastri and Norris ‘in control of own destiny’ in F1 world championship battle

about 6 hours ago
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Salt’s fine form adds flavour to question of who opens for England at T20 World Cup | Taha Hashim

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