
EXCLUSIVE Howzat for a body! Candid beach photos show sports presenter Grace Hayden like you've NEVER seen before - as she hits back at snarky rumour surrounding her career success
But Grace Hayden is certainly bringing sizzling sex appeal to the world of cricket as a member of Seven's all-star broadcast team.
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The Independent
24 minutes ago
- The Independent
Lando Norris plays it very cool when asked on F1 title battle: ‘Won't matter once we're all dead'
Lando Norris has offered a remarkably philosophical take on his Formula One championship battle with McLaren team-mate Oscar Piastri, declaring that the outcome ultimately matters little because "in 200 years we will all be dead". Norris arrives at the final round before Formula One's three-week summer shutdown 16 points adrift of Piastri, whose title momentum surged after last weekend's rain-affected race in Belgium. Despite starting on pole, Norris was overtaken by Piastri in treacherous conditions. With McLaren's current superiority, it is Piastri who has emerged as Norris's primary rival for this season's crown, holding six wins to Norris's four. When asked if he needs to get under the Australian's skin to secure his maiden F1 title, Norris replied: "I don't enjoy that. In 200 years no one is going to care. We'll all be dead. "I am trying to have a good time. I still care about it, and that's why I get upset sometimes and I get disappointed and I get angry at myself. And I think that shows just how much I care about winning and losing. But that doesn't mean I need to take it out on Oscar. I just don't get into those kind of things." Historically, intra-team title battles in F1 are fraught, but Norris maintains a pragmatic view. "Yes, he (Piastri) is the guy I want to beat more than anyone else," he admitted. "But if I don't beat him, then that's just because he has done a better job. I will do it the way I believe is best for me, and just because one person did it a few years ago, it doesn't mean you have to do that, too. I don't really care about those things." At the Hungaroring on Friday, Norris demonstrated his prowess with an impressive practice double, narrowly beating Piastri by just 0.019 seconds in the first session before extending his lead to nearly three tenths later in the day. Norris has an unblemished record of never being out-qualified by a team-mate in his six previous visits to this circuit, a promising sign from his practice performance. Elsewhere, Lewis Hamilton, a record eight-time winner and nine-time pole-sitter in Hungary, struggled for pace. The 40-year-old, still seeking a podium in Ferrari colours, complained his car didn't "feel good" and ran off track after a major lock-up in the first session, ending the day sixth, three tenths and three places behind team-mate Charles Leclerc. Max Verstappen, who recently committed his future to Red Bull for at least another season, also had an uncharacteristically difficult day, finishing a distant 14th in practice, 1.1 seconds slower than Norris. "I don't know what is going on," Verstappen radioed. "It is just undriveable." He also faced a stewards' investigation for throwing a towel from his cockpit but received only a warning.


The Guardian
25 minutes ago
- The Guardian
‘He was angry': India admit wind-up strategy to disrupt Root's batting
At the end of another day of backchat and occasionally fraying tempers, in which the former England captain Michael Vaughan suggested of the two sets of players that 'it's almost like they've had enough of each other', India admitted Joe Root had been the target of a deliberate plan to wind him up and put him off his game. Alastair Cook, another former England captain, had suggested as much after Root reacted to a comment from Prasidh Krishna. 'He was angry, he wasn't in much control, but why wouldn't you try to upset Joe Root?' Cook said. 'I don't know if it was a plan but you can say that it did work. I just hope what he said was within the line. I hope it didn't cross the line, and was good old honest sledging. It definitely got Joe out of his bubble.' Sign up to The Spin Subscribe to our cricket newsletter for our writers' thoughts on the biggest stories and a review of the week's action after newsletter promotion Root, who across the first four matches of the series had scored two centuries and averaged 67.16, was duly dismissed for 29. 'That was the plan,' Krishna said. 'But I didn't really expect the couple of words that I said to get such a big reaction from him. It was a very small thing. We're good mates off the field – it was just a little bit of banter and both of us enjoyed it, I think.' On another occasion Akash Deep put an arm around Ben Duckett's shoulder to usher him off the field after the England opener was dismissed for a quickfire 43, something England's assistant coach Marcus Trescothick thought might have provoked a more violent response. 'A lot of players would have just dropped the elbow on him,' he said. 'I don't think I've ever seen a bowler do that after getting someone out. I'm sure there'll be occasions in the future where he may well [react]. It is what it is, isn't it? There's no need to walk him off in that fashion, but the game has been fought in good spirits – although there's been many words and arguments along the way, the two teams are still getting on well enough and will continue to do so once the game is done.' India finished the second day on 75 for two, nursing a lead of 52 with 21 wickets having already fallen on a green-tinged pitch described by Trescothick as 'extreme'. 'This pitch has been challenging,' he said. 'There's no doubt about it, with the way it was prepared to be a little bit greener. I think it's been at the top end of what you want it to be. We're at the extreme version of what we see in these types of pitches, but it's kind of what we like – we want pace on the ball, we want the ball to bounce and we want the ball to carry through. We're happy with how it's performed so far.'


Daily Mail
25 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
England must pick Gus Atkinson for the Ashes after his five-wicket haul against India... he's the skilful, consistent bowler they need in Australia, writes NASSER HUSSAIN
The Gus Atkinson we have witnessed in this Test match is the version we saw when he first broke into the England side last summer — and one that should be in their Ashes starting XI. England are looking for bowlers that can bowl well in all conditions, and Atkinson strikes me as one of those. With Chris Woakes now out of contention due to his shoulder dislocation, I would start Atkinson in the first Test in Perth. I'd have Jamie Smith at No 7. A spinner, whoever that might be, Atkinson, then one out of Mark Wood and Jofra Archer — probably Archer given the way he's bowled in the previous two Tests — Brydon Carse or Josh Tongue, plus Ben Stokes. Atkinson strikes me as that consistent bowler a team needs in Australia — one with a repeatable action, skilful and quick enough. A lot of people go on about needing express pace in Australian conditions, but look at Glenn McGrath — he wasn't rapid. He was skilful, but equally he had the requisite speed to cause opposition batsmen problems. Sometimes you can have very skilful bowlers that aren't quite quick enough, or rapid ones that don't do enough with the ball, and Australian players don't fear pace. Atkinson's one of these bowlers that will be at 85mph on the speed gun and because he moves the ball, he rushes you as a batsman. That's the combination you need to get early wickets in Australia, really. Here, in taking five for 33 in the first innings on his first Test appearance since May, he was able to control the movement on offer in a way that Tongue and Jamie Overton were unable to. Although Tongue did improve in the second innings. Atkinson had some fortune, too, coming in on his home ground, on the first pitch this series that has provided some sideways assistance. The others have slogged on four flat, tough pitches, while he's come in fresh, been presented with a grassy surface and bowled beautifully. It's a good sign that a bowler can come back with such rhythm immediately. Some take time to get up to speed when they come back from injury, but with Atkinson — whose only match bowling since injuring his hamstring against Zimbabwe at Trent Bridge was 30 overs in a second-team game for Surrey last week — it was like he'd never been away. By the end of 2024, his speeds were dropping off a little bit, to the low 80s, and it was looking like the workload was just taking a slight toll on his zip. But he has been England's best bowler from ball one here by far, unearthing the right length for this Oval pitch, following the odd back of a length delivery with the sucker punch — the full one, pitched right up. As well as being very skilful, he's also very calm. Like his Surrey team-mate Smith, he seems born for Test match cricket. They take emotion out of their performances, just rocking up to do their jobs. I quite like that in a cricketer. Some wear their heart on their sleeve. Take Mohammed Siraj, for example. Atkinson, though, just lets his bowling do the talking.