logo
Ireland's Alex Dunne sees Belgian victory wiped out by race stewards

Ireland's Alex Dunne sees Belgian victory wiped out by race stewards

Irish Times27-07-2025
Ireland's
Alex Dunne
had his victory in the Formula 2 race at Spa Francorchamps wiped out after race stewards deemed he had contravened the starting procedure in Sunday's race.
The 19-year-old Rodin Motorsport driver started from pole position and held off challenges from Ritomo Miyata and Roman Stanek to win the race on the track.
He was later invited into the stewards' room to review his start-up procedure and was handed a 10-second time penalty, dropping him down to ninth in the race standings and seeing him drop from first in the overall driver's standings to fourth.
[
Fast and furious rise of Alex Dunne: 'I always wanted to be an F1 driver. I'm not that far away'
Opens in new window
]
Explaining their actions, the race stewards said: 'After the race, Car 17 was referred to the Stewards by the Technical Delegate for an alleged breach of Article 1.6.1 FIA Formula 2 Technical Regulations, after failing to engage the start-up procedure.
READ MORE
'A defined set-up procedure activation must be used during all formation starts and race starts and Car 17's data shows that the driver did not engage the starting procedure.
'The Stewards then spoke to a team representative and the driver and having considered the matter extensively elected to give Dunne a 10-second time penalty in accordance with the FIA F2 penalty guideline. This means he loses the Spa Francorchamps Feature Race victory.'
The race win went to Stanek, who finished third on the track, after second-place finisher Arvid Lindblad was later disqualified for a technical infringement.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Fine all-round display sees Ireland edge to 11-run victory over Pakistan in first T20
Fine all-round display sees Ireland edge to 11-run victory over Pakistan in first T20

Irish Times

time6 hours ago

  • Irish Times

Fine all-round display sees Ireland edge to 11-run victory over Pakistan in first T20

Ireland 142 (19.4 ovs) (A Hunter 37, O Prendergast 29, L Paul 28; F Sana 4-26) beat Pakistan 131-9 (20 ovs) (N Pervaiz 29, R Shamim 27; O Prendergast 3-28, J Maguire 2-20) by 11 runs Ireland earned an 11-run victory over Pakistan in the first of their three-match T20 series in Dublin. Opener Amy Hunter started with intent and top-scored for the hosts with 37 before she was bowled by Nashra Sandhu, leaving Ireland on 63 for two after nine overs. Orla Prendergast (29) and Leah Paul (28) came together and pushed Ireland beyond the three-figure mark before the former fell to Rameen Shamim. READ MORE The boundaries started to come at ease for set batter Paul but her wicket on 108 for four started a collapse. Ireland were looking at a score of upwards of 150 but they lost the final six wickets for just 21 runs as they set Pakistan a score of 143 for victory, Fatima Sana the pick of the bowlers with four wickets. In response, Ireland took wickets at regular intervals and had the visitors 54 for five after 12 overs, which gave Pakistan a mountain to climb. Natalia Pervaiz did her best to guide Pakistan to an unlikely victory with her score of 29 but she chipped Prendergast into the hands of Cara Murray which signalled the end of Pakistan's hopes. Prendergast claimed three wickets and Jane Maguire got two to help Ireland to a well-earned win.

John Martin seals European win for Shelbourne over Rijeka ahead of Tolka Park return leg
John Martin seals European win for Shelbourne over Rijeka ahead of Tolka Park return leg

Irish Times

time6 hours ago

  • Irish Times

John Martin seals European win for Shelbourne over Rijeka ahead of Tolka Park return leg

Europa League third qualifying round, first leg: Rijeka 1 (Jankovic 56) Shelbourne 2 (Bone 58, Martin 70) Goals from Sam Bone and John Martin saw Shelbourne stage a remarkable comeback victory to record perhaps their greatest away night in Europe, stunning Croatian champions Rijeka in their own backyard on the Adriatic coast. Ahead of this first leg, manager Joey O'Brien spoke of there being no Play B in talking up his side's ability to come and win the game. And that they did, showing admirable organisation and shape under Rijeka's dominance of the ball and commendable composure and intent when they had it. It's now very much all to play for ahead of the second leg at Tolka Park next Tuesday. READ MORE The reward for getting through is huge. The winners advance to the Europa League playoff round, with the parachute guarantee of league phase action in the Conference League and its minimum €3.8 million prize fund. Greek side PAOK or Austria's Wolfsberger await in the playoff round of the Europa League. Defeat for the League of Ireland champions could see a repeat of their Champions League first-round clash with Linfield in the Conference League playoffs, should the latter come through their third tier tie against Vikingur (Faroe Islands). O'Brien made five changes from last week's Champions League loss at Qarabag, setting up in a defensive 5-3-2 formation with Mipo Odubeko and Sean Boyd both starting in attack. Shelbourne's Mipo Odubeko in action against Rijeka. Photograph: Aleksandar Djorovic/Inpho As expected, Rijeka enjoyed plenty of possession as they worked for openings early on before an injury to Boyd forced Shelbourne into an early change with Martin coming into the fray in a straight swap up top. Despite their dominance of the ball, it was 22 minutes before the home side threatened, Amir Gojak's low drive comfortably held by Wessel Speel. The well-positioned Speel ably dealt with a strike from Niko Jankovic before Shelbourne enjoyed their first spell of possession. Rijeka finished the first 45 back on the front foot, creating their only clear opening of the half. Again it was Jankovic who got sight of goal, his low drive bringing a fine save down to his right from Speel. But an unforced error from Speel would all but gift Rijeka the lead 11 minutes after the interval. The recently signed on loan Dutch goalkeeper took a heavy touch from Bone's back pass and then tripped inrushing Congolese winger Merveic Ndockyt. The impressive Jankovic sent Speel the wrong way from 12 yards. The lead lasted just two minute, however, as Shelbourne levelled with a terrific set-piece goal from their first corner of the game. Kerr McInroy worked a one-two from the flag with Harry Wood to cross. James Norris nodded the ball back across goal where Bone arrived to head it over the line. Sam Bone scores Shelbourne's opening goal. Photograph: Aleksandar Djorovic/Inpho The game really having opened up now, Speel redeemed his error for the penalty with a superb tip-over save to deprive Simon Butic while, at the other end, Martin surged forward to rifle a shot just over the crossbar. Shelbourne then silenced the home crowd with a brilliant winner on 70 minutes. Milan Mbeng fed Wood on the right to send an arced cross had plenty of pace on it for the negligently marked Martin, whose firm header found the top corner to the delight of the boisterous Shelbourne support in the caged away end. Rijeka pressed for much of the remainder of the game as Shelbourne defended tenaciously, epitomised by a brave block by captain Paddy Barrett on a shot from Tiago Dantas. Then came a late scare in stoppage time when a VAR penalty check was needed after a shot from Jankovic struck Bone's arm by his side. But thankfully for Shelbourne, when the Spanish referee blew his whistle it was for full-time. HNK RIJEKA: Zlomislic; Orec, Majstorovic (Husic, h-t), Radeljic, Devetak (Lasickas, h-t); Jankovic, Gojak (Menalo, 69), Dantas; Ndockyt, Juric (Cop, 69), Butic (Tanjov, 76). SHELBOURNE: Speel; Mbeng (Gannon, 87), Bone, Barrett, Ledwidge, Norris; McInroy (Coyle, 87), Lunney, Wood (Chapman, 77); Odubeko (Kelly, h-t), Boyd (Martin, 19). Referee: Ricardo de Burgos (Spain).

Ole Gunnar Solskjær confirms he was approached by FAI to take Ireland job
Ole Gunnar Solskjær confirms he was approached by FAI to take Ireland job

Irish Times

time8 hours ago

  • Irish Times

Ole Gunnar Solskjær confirms he was approached by FAI to take Ireland job

Besiktas manager Ole Gunnar Solskjær has revealed he was approached by the FAI to replace Stephen Kenny as the Republic of Ireland head coach. Solskjær, speaking ahead of the Turkish club's Uefa Conference League qualifier against the Kenny-managed St Patrick's Athletic at Tallaght Stadium on Thursday night, confirmed that discussions occurred during the Association's calamitous 231-day search. Heimir Hallgrímsson eventually accepted the role in July 2024 on an 18-month contract. 'We had some good conversations,' said Solskjær, 'but in the end it did not turn out that way. READ MORE 'I am very happy where I am now.' When pressed for details on his dealings with the FAI's former chief football officer Marc Canham, the former Manchester United manager added: 'That was confidential.' A comedic moment followed at the pre-match press conference, as the diligent but confused Turkish translator needed Solskjær to explain what had just happened: 'Who is Stephen Kay-ney?' 'Stephen Kenny is the coach of St Patrick's,' the Norwegian quietly explained. 'He was the coach of Ireland before and, after him, the Irish FA asked me if I wanted to be their coach.' Diplomacy in motion, Solskjær had strolled into the Tallaght Stadium press room 15 minutes ahead of time and made himself a cup of tea before hailing the burgeoning talent of Mason Melia . None of this bodes well for St Pat's. Solskjær and Besiktas have done their homework following the Saints' 0-0 result last season against Istanbul Basaksehir in the Conference League playoff. Also, crucially, there are reports of Roberto Mancini being parachuted into the Besiktas hot-seat after a 6-2 aggregate defeat to Shakhtar Donetsk saw them drop from the Europa League to the Conference League. Besiktas manager Ole Gunnar Solskjær signs a shirt for Adam McGill at Tallaght Stadium. Photograph: Ryan Byrne/Inpho 'We are ready for a difficult game,' said Solskjær. 'We know from 0-0 against Basaksehir that we will have to fight. We know that St Patrick's have found form. 'They have a young striker who is really exciting. I am sure you all have the same thoughts that I have about him. The next one. The young lad coming through. I think Tottenham have made a good signing. We know we need to watch him.' With 91 goals from 235 appearances in the Premier League, the 52-year-old coach (he looks 35) was best placed to answer the next question: Does Mason Melia possess the tools to make it at Spurs? 'When you perform at this level at 17, definitely. You see a mature finisher. His movement, the goal he scored against Waterford, the way he spun off the centre back, the way he timed his run, of course. 'I don't want to put too much pressure on him. I always follow the young players when I see them early in their careers. There are a few decent players I played with from Ireland so I have a fond eye for Irish players.' A slim, skilful centre forward, does Melia remind the Norwegian of anyone? 'Well, he is a proper number nine. He can play off the shoulder. He is very good at link-up play and coming short. Good finisher. He has the world ahead of him. I am sure he will have a very good career. Eight, nine days from now I wish him all the best.' Again, the fact that Besiktas have already reviewed the 2-0 win in Waterford last Sunday doesn't bode well for St Pat's hopes of a generational upset. 'A centre forward who is lively, with very good movement, wide men who are very tricky with quick feet,' Ole added. 'You know they are very good at counterattacks and defensively solid. 'Stephen's record speaks for itself, he will be true to himself, he like his teams to play. I'm probably the same. 'Actually, Ryan McLaughlin he played for Mike Marsh, one of my assistants, and Joseph Anang played for my goalkeeper coach, so we know a bit more than the normal scouting.' Bad news for St Pat's perhaps, very bad news with a second leg in Istanbul to follow.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store