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F1 live Hungarian Grand Prix: Oscar Piastri starts second behind Charles Leclerc, Lewis Hamilton calls himself 'useless'

F1 live Hungarian Grand Prix: Oscar Piastri starts second behind Charles Leclerc, Lewis Hamilton calls himself 'useless'

Oscar Piastri starts on the front row of tonight's Hungarian Grand Prix, a year on from taking his maiden F1 grand prix win at the same circuit.
Ferrari's Charles Leclerc starts on pole, while his teammate Lewis Hamilton has described himself as "useless" after a tough weekend.
Follow all the action of the Formula 1 Hungarian Grand Prix on the live blog below.
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F1 star Franco Colapinto suffers horror crash during tyre testing
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F1 star Franco Colapinto suffers horror crash during tyre testing

Alpine have issued a statement after driver Franco Colapinto was involved in a crash during testing. Images appeared to show Colapinto had collided with barriers at the Hungaroring during Pirelli tyre testing, The Sun reports. Fox Sports, available on Kayo Sports, is the only place to watch every practice, qualifying session and race in the 2025 FIA Formula One World Championship™ LIVE in 4K. New to Kayo? Join now and get your first month for just $1. Alpine is one of a number of Formula One teams that are currently testing for the 2026 campaign during the F1 summer break. Teams have been testing prototype Pirelli tyres for next year's compounds to simulate the loads the 2026 regulations are due to generate in the short break before the 2025 schedule continues in the Netherlands at the end of the month. The 2026 tyres are set to be 25mm narrower at the front and 30mm narrower at the rear. Colapinto, Lando Norris, Liam Lawson and Paul Aron are some of the names that have been testing this week. But things went awry for Colapinto when he crashed on turn 11 during a lap around Hungaroring. A team statement from Alpine said: 'Team Update. During Day 2 of Pirelli Tyre Testing at the Hungaroring this morning, Franco Colapinto had an incident at Turn 11. 'Franco was assessed on site at the medical centre and is OK.' It comes after a frustrating outing for Colapinto at last week's Hungary Grand Prix. The 22-year-old Argentine finished in 18th place, one place in front of teammate Pierre Gasly, in a race won by Norris ahead of Aussie and McLaren teammate Oscar Piastri. Pirelli's motorsport boss Mario Isola also released a statement to clarify the incident was not tyre-related. 'These have been two useful days for making progress with the development of our compounds for next season, given that we are now entering the home straight,' he said. 'The Hungaroring is a demanding track due to its many slow curves and the amount of energy that goes into the tyres on a lap that is rather short. 'This makes it a challenging place to test tyres, in particular for the compounds that will be central to the 2026 range – which will go from C1 to C6 like this year. 'We have collected a lot of data, although it was a pity that we lost some of our potential mileage today when Colapinto went off the track, even though this was not in any way linked to the tyres.' Colapinto is in his first year with Alpine after replacing Jack Doohan behind the wheel. The former Williams driver is yet to score a point since replacing Doohan. F1 will return on August 31 with the Dutch Grand Prix at the Circuit Zandvoort.

‘Tensions growing' inside McLaren garage as Oscar Piastri drama addressed
‘Tensions growing' inside McLaren garage as Oscar Piastri drama addressed

News.com.au

time12 hours ago

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‘Tensions growing' inside McLaren garage as Oscar Piastri drama addressed

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Rugby Australia relaxes 'redundant' limit on foreign-based players
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The Australian

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Rugby Australia relaxes 'redundant' limit on foreign-based players

Rugby Australia has signalled that more overseas-based players will be allowed to represent the Wallabies, shifting away from a strict policy that has heavily favoured domestic players. The so-called "Giteau Law" -- named after former fly-half Matt Giteau -- has for years put restrictions on overseas-based players being selected for the Wallabies. But with Test stars such as lock Will Skelton, flanker Tom Hooper and prop Taniela Tupou all joining an exodus to Europe, Rugby Australia has indicated the Giteau Law has been dropped. That gives head coach Joe Schmidt a free selection hand when he names his squad for the Rugby Championship this week. "Joe's got no impediment to select whoever he wants," Rugby Australia head of high performance Peter Horne said. "The Giteau Law, it's kind of redundant right," Horne added in comments reported by Schmidt is due to name his squad Thursday for the Rugby Championship which begins this month. Scrapping the rule would also benefit incoming head coach Les Kiss, who takes over the Wallabies next year tasked with preparing for the Rugby World Cup on home soil in 2027. The Giteau Law was adopted by the Wallabies in 2015, allowing overseas-based players to represent the side only if they had played 60 Tests for Australia and seven seasons of Super Rugby. It enabled players such as Matt Giteau, who was then starring for Toulon, to be picked for the 2015 Rugby World Cup. Before then, Australia had a blanket ban on overseas-based players representing the Wallabies. sft/dh

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