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Lando Norris claims first-ever British GP win

Lando Norris claims first-ever British GP win

Independent5 days ago
Lando Norris has secured his first British Grand Prix victory at Silverstone, marking his second Formula 1 win.
His McLaren teammate, Oscar Piastri, received a 10-second penalty for erratic braking under a safety car, which ultimately aided Norris's win.
Nico Hulkenberg achieved his maiden Formula 1 podium finish, coming in third after 239 races, notably holding off Lewis Hamilton.
The race was impacted by changeable weather conditions, with all cars starting on intermediate tyres due to heavy rain.
Norris's triumph at his home grand prix was celebrated by a dedicated 'LandoStand' crowd and significantly narrowed the championship gap to Piastri.
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The Open 2025: What you need to know ahead of the golf in Portrush
The Open 2025: What you need to know ahead of the golf in Portrush

BBC News

time8 minutes ago

  • BBC News

The Open 2025: What you need to know ahead of the golf in Portrush

What time does The Open start? Around 270,000 golf fans are expected during the eight days of practice and competitive play for the 153rd Open championship at Royal Portrush. The first official practice day is on Sunday 13 July with the four-day championship beginning on Thursday 17 the practice days, there will be golf throughout the day with gates opening at 09:00 BST on Sunday then at 07:00 on Monday, Tuesday and the championship starts, the timings are as follows:Thursday and Friday – gates open 06:00Saturday and Sunday – gates open 07:00 What can I bring to The Open 2025? Organisers of the tournament, the R&A, have strict rules around what fans can bring to the phones are allowed but they must be kept on silent. People can bring rucksacks and their own spectators are not allowed to bring their own banned from the course are:selfie sticksportable speakersflaresfireworkspetsGuide dogs are permitted, as are pushchairs and it can be difficult to find a clear view of the golf within a large crowd, ladders and periscopes are not allowed on the will be available in the grandstands and at the spectator village which contains the catering and retail outlets. Can you leave the course and get back in? A re-admission policy will be in place which means spectators can leave, go into Portrush town centre and then return to the they must collect a wristband before leaving the course to ensure re-entry. How to get to The Open 2025 There will be no public car-parking beside Royal Portrush, with park and ride facilities operating will apply at the park and ride, with a fee of £17 during the four championship days Thursday to Sunday (17-20 July).Organisers have urged fans to use public transport, but an industrial dispute at Translink could lead to trains not running on two days during The Transport Salaried Staffs' Association (TSSA) has earmarked Friday 18 and Saturday 19 July for strike action involving some of its the industrial action goes ahead, it would involve widespread disruption to rail services on those days, not just in say they are doing everything they can to avert the strike. Extra bus and train services to Portrush are planned from 14 July, with fans urged to arrive 30 minutes before departure time as services are likely to be Simpson, Translink's northern area manager, said: "There will be enhanced train capacity and frequency, including additional services to Portrush and late evening return services. "Special bus and coach services are also available in addition to normal Goldliner services."I would encourage anyone heading to The Open to visit our website for travel options." What's changed since the last Open in Portrush? It is six years since The Open was last in Northern Ireland, in 2019. Since then the new transport hub Grand Central Station has opened in is now a more frequent train service to and from Dublin which will make it easier for golf fans from the Republic of Ireland to travel to are more hotel rooms available in Belfast, Londonderry and near Portrush with the expansion of some hotels and the development of some new accommodation was snapped up quickly with only limited availability left. What will be the economic impact of The Open? The economic dividend from The Open will be much greater this year - according to Janice Gault, chief executive of the Northern Ireland Hotels said: "The last time it was reckoned there was £100m of economic benefit, this time it's likely to double to over £213m as a projected figure for all aspects of the economy – tourism, retail, hospitality, there's something in it for everyone."Speaking of money, The Open site is cash-less. The bars, shops and food outlets are all card only. How widespread is Rory McIlroy fever? The recent victory by Rory McIlroy at the Masters means there will be even more focus than usual on the fans' favourite first caught the public eye in Northern Ireland as a child when he appeared on an Ulster Television chat show chipping golf balls into a washing support of the local golfing hero, a washing machine is being set up at Grand Central Station for fans to hit balls perhaps, for fans to try to hit balls into.

Sylvia Gore - A football pioneer in England and Wales
Sylvia Gore - A football pioneer in England and Wales

BBC News

time8 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Sylvia Gore - A football pioneer in England and Wales

If she were still alive, Sylvia Gore would no doubt have looked on proudly when England and Wales face each other at Euro in football for over 60 years, Gore has been described as a pioneer and a champion of the game and referred to as the 'Denis Law of women's football'.Gore scored the first official goal for England 's women's side in 1972, who were a far cry from the current Lionesses, the reigning European champions and World Cup Gore also made a significant contribution to the development of the women's game in Wales, managing the national side for over 10 was a big part of Gore's life from an early in Prescot on Merseyside, Gore remembered how she began kicking a ball as a three-year-old and on starting school would practise with the boys, but was not allowed to play in games. She started playing for Manchester Corinthians aged 12 in the late 1950s, travelling overseas, where the team played in front of big played at the time when the women's game was prohibited by the Football Association, with a ban in place since Football Association (FA) reasoning was that football was "quite unsuitable for females" and should "not be encouraged".The FA lifted its 50-year ban in 1971 and a year later the first official England women's side would play their first game."There were over 500 players that came to trials and it was whittled down to 25 in the end," Gore recalled in a 2015 interview for the BBC's Sporting Witness."I think I went to four trials and it was a tremendous feeling to get a letter to say you were in the England squad after all those trials."England's first match against Scotland in November 1972 – 100 years since the first men's international between the countries – was played at Greenock's Ravenscraig Stadium. "The crowd was about 400-500 if I remember rightly, which we thought was a good crowd then," Gore said."The conditions were terrible. It was hard ground – frosty, icy."[It] shouldn't have gone ahead but obviously because we had travelled so far and the Scots wanted to play it... We wanted to play it because it was the first official international for the FA."We were two goals down at half-time and we had to step up a gear."Step up a gear they did and Gore went on an individual run which saw her cut through Scotland's defence before coolly slotting home to score England's first official goal."I was delighted, I was jumping in the air and everyone was diving on me," Gore was the start of a comeback which saw England win 3-2 but significantly it was the start of a new era for women's football in the British Isles. Gore once scored 134 goals in one season and played for renowned works team Fodens Ladies as well as north Wales-based Prestatyn, a side formed by sisters Mai and Eleri Griffith."I actually played against Sylvia when she played for England in about 1974 in Slough," recalls Michele Ward, who played in Wales' first unofficial international in 1973."We got beaten but what I do remember, it was sponsored by an egg company and at the end of games we would get presents from the other team."It was a plastic container with the English FA crest on it full of bath salts and half a dozen eggs."After retiring from playing at the age of 36 due to injury, Gore embarked on a coaching career, with Prescot Ladies - a team she founded - and then as Wales national team manager."One of the main volunteers at the item was Ida Driscoll and how she got hold of Sylvia I don't really know to be honest," Michele Adams said."Whether people in north Wales put her in touch, quite possibly."She took the burden on at its weakest because up until then they had this little committee with people from Newport and Port Talbot." Wales Women's International Football, who ran the national team and was chaired by Ida Driscoll, turned to the woman who seven years earlier scored England's first goal in an insisted that being a non-Welsh manager was not a big deal, pointing out that the manager of the senior Wales men's team at the time, Mike Smith, was also English and "not doing too bad a job"."I've said it's impossible to expect miracles," she said at the time of her appointment in February 1979."But it's a challenge. It's an opportunity and I am going to make something of it."I wouldn't have missed this chance for the world. It's something I've always wanted and I will do my utmost to make it work." Her first training session with Wales' 18-strong squad was on the morning of her first game in charge, against France in Bordeaux, following a 24-hour overland lost 6-0 in France and a 7-0 defeat later that year against hosts Italy - a semi-professional side - in the Women's World Invitational Tournament was a stark reminder of how much catching up there was to had been appointed by Wales on an initial 12-month basis, but she would remain in charge for over 10 years and her enthusiasm for the role - despite a lack of resources - remained steadfast."It's hard work but I enjoy every minute of it," Gore told the Liverpool Echo in 1989."Unfortunately we haven't enough clubs in Wales to form a proper association, which might help to attract sponsors, so we have to pay all our own expenses."Players not only had to pay their travelling expenses, they even had to pay for their own would also make substantial financial contributions from her own pocket."When Sylvia came in we used to train one weekend in north Wales and the following weekend down in south Wales," Adams added."That would happen quite regularly over a six-week period."If we had an international away somewhere we were billeted in people's houses, not hotels."Wales had faced the Republic of Ireland at Llanelli's Stebonheath Park in their first game in 1973 but were not affiliated with the Football Association of Wales at the time. Numerous attempts had been made in the preceding decades to get recognition, which had met with firm opposition and downright hostility from some Football Association of Wales (FAW) councillors."We have to remember that neither the Welsh or English FA were particularly organised in running women's football until much, much later," said The Guardian's women's football writer Tom Garry."Particularly in the 70s and 80s and into the early 90s, running women's football was a bit akin to how you might imagine a local sports community club is run in towns and villages across the country."Many people who spent time with Sylvia have always described how there was this sort of desire to help other teams develop."Knowledge-sharing was very common in those days, clubs wanting to help each other out and local FAs and local football groups wanting to help each other out. Sylvia epitomised that really, because a lot of different clubs benefited from the knowledge that she was able to share." As Wales manager, Gore - who also coached Deeside Ladies in north Wales - essentially had a pool of less than 30 players to choose from, significantly fewer than attempted to expand Wales' squad by identifying players with Welsh family backgrounds, sending letters to women's leagues throughout the UK enquiring about eligible players."We started getting players in with Welsh heritage, about three or four players from England like Ann Rice and Gaynor Jones," Adams remembers."We had quite a few like that who came in."At a time when women's football was reliant on the goodwill of volunteers and sponsors, Gore did much to raise standards."There was an appreciation of the professionalism that she brought to what was actually a very unprofessional job," Garry added."Sylvia was someone who knew what they were doing and had the best intentions of a team at heart, even if there perhaps wasn't the resource for them to go and be competitive on the wider international stage." But there were signs of was encouraged that FAW official Malcolm Stammers attended an international against England at Prescot Cables in April 1989 and presented the squad with a new kit."The big thing was to get over to the public at large that women really can play football and it is not just one big joke," Gore said after the game, which would be her last international in FAW eventually took the women's team under their control in 1993 after being approached by Adams along with fellow internationals Laura McAllister and Karen Jones.A team was entered into Uefa qualifying for the first time two years forward 30 years and the current team's appearance at Euro 2025 is Wales' first experience of playing at a major tournament. As for Gore, her involvement with football continued after her stint managing was assistant manager at Knowsley United, and acted as secretary to Liverpool FC Ladies and as a member of the FA Women's Smith and Rachel Brown-Finnis, the former England internationals, have spoken of their gratitude to Gore and the influence she had on their early 2000 she was awarded an MBE for services to girls and women's association football and she was inducted into the National Football Museum Hall of Fame a year later."Sylvia sat on various FA committees and through my club so did I," said Adams, chairwoman of FA Women's National League South side Gwalia United, who were previously known as Cardiff City Ladies, for whom she played and managed."We used to meet up quite often - two or three times a year - at these meetings and she always came bounding over towards us."She liked the involvement with the Welsh. She was a good soul and did an awful lot for the women's game." Gore died aged 71 in 2016 having made a remarkable contribution to the story of women's football. "She had been through and experienced so many of the important moments in the sport, not just playing and scoring in that first England fixture," added Garry."I think to essentially dedicate your life to trying to grow the game is almost an even stronger legacy than the sheer volume of goals that she scored for Manchester Corinthians, Foden's and England."Undoubtedly that helped both England and Wales get to a place where they are now, where these two teams are in this tournament."

M40 closed between Beaconsfield and Denham in Buckinghamshire
M40 closed between Beaconsfield and Denham in Buckinghamshire

BBC News

time8 minutes ago

  • BBC News

M40 closed between Beaconsfield and Denham in Buckinghamshire

A major motorway was shut in one direction after a serious collision involving multiple Highways said the M40 northbound in Buckinghamshire was closed at about 01:30 closure was in place between Beaconsfield and the Denham interchange, which connects motorists with the M25."We expect the road to remain closed until 08:00, possibly longer," a Highways spokesperson said. "This is due to a serious collision on approach to junction two involving several vehicles."Police, fire and ambulance services all attended the scene and a diversion was put in Denham interchange at junction 1a is used by motorists wanting to access London Heathrow with the M25, it also provides onward journeys to the M1, M4 and Highways advised motorists to factor delays into their journey times. Follow Beds, Herts and Bucks news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X.

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