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Lando Norris Wins Emotional British GP at Silverstone

Lando Norris Wins Emotional British GP at Silverstone

The Sun7 hours ago
LANDO Norris said it was 'everything I dreamed of' after making the most of McLaren team-mate Oscar Piastri's misfortune to secure an emotion-charged British Grand Prix victory on Sunday.
The beaming 25-year-old Briton claimed his maiden home triumph in stirring fashion to trim Piastri's lead in the drivers' world title race to eight points after the Australian was handed a 10-second penalty for driving erratically while leading behind the safety car.
Piastri was understandably aggrieved at the stewards' decision and requested that McLaren instructed Norris to swap positions with him, but he was told the team would not issue any team orders.
'I don't really understand it,' he said of the penalty meted out after he caused Max Verstappen of Red Bull to overtake him shortly before a re-start that saw the Dutchman slide off-track and drop eight positions.
'I need to look back and see it again because I don't think I did anything different or anything wrong,' he said.
'I mean I did what I did at the first re-start and, apparently, one needed a penalty and other didn't.'
Piastri's misery, after McLaren's fifth 1-2 of the season, was Norris's joy as he celebrated with his family and friends after surviving a testing afternoon of torrential rain, multiple safety car interventions and collisions in treacherous conditions.
'Incredible race'
'It's beautiful,' said Norris.
'Everything I dreamed of, I guess. Everything I've ever wanted to achieve. Apart from a championship, I think this is as good as it gets in terms of feelings and in terms of achievement, being proud, all of it.
'This is where it all started for me, I was actually watching on TV many years ago and now thankfully I've been able to have my go.
'An incredible race, stressful as always, but the support from the fans -- it made the difference today so I've got to thank them for it all.
'The last few laps, I was just looking into the crowd. I was just trying to take it all in, enjoy the moment, because it might never happen again.
'I hope it does, but these are memories that I'll bring with me forever. An incredible achievement.'
The McLaren drivers congratulated each other and the team, Piastri describing his car as a rocket-ship.
'With all the safety cars and everything, to win by such a big margin is impressive,' he said of their 34-second lead ahead of third-placed Nico Hulkenberg of Sauber.
At the midway point in this year's 24-race championship, after 12 races, Piastri leads with 234 points ahead of Norris on 226 and Verstappen on 165 while in the constructors' title race McLaren lead with 460 to Ferrari on 222 and Mercedes on 210.
It was McLaren's first home triumph at Silverstone since seven-time champion Lewis Hamilton won in 2008. For Norris, it was a first home win, his fourth win of the year and the eighth of his career.
For Hulkenberg, 37, and in his 16th season, finishing third delivered his long-awaited first podium in his 239th race, but also ended Hamilton's run of 12 podiums in his home event - AFP
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Rock-solid Scott Vincent ends three-year title drought
Rock-solid Scott Vincent ends three-year title drought

The Sun

time33 minutes ago

  • The Sun

Rock-solid Scott Vincent ends three-year title drought

SCOTT VINCENT never gave his rivals any opportunity as he cruised to a composed four-shot win in the US$2 million International Series Morocco. At the par-73 Royal Golf Dar Es Salam course on Sunday, the Zimbabwean put together a masterclass in ball striking with 17 greens in regulation, and his only mistakes were two three-putt bogeys in a round of three-under par 70. That took his four-day tally to 14-under 278, four better than Thailand's fast-charging Danthai Boonma (66). American Peter Uihlein (71) again faced closing trouble on the Robert Trent Jones-designed golf course and dropped to a tie for third place after three birdies on the front nine had brought him to within a shot of leader Vincent. New Zealand's Denzel Ieremia (69) and Australian Maverick Antcliff (72) joined him on nine-under par. Austen Truslow, the 6-feet-5-inch-tall American who had several top-fives playing on the Korn Ferry Tour, finished with three birdies in a row to take solo sixth place, his best finish on the Asian Tour. It was Vincent's second win on the Asian Tour, both in International Series events, and comes exactly three years and one month after his last victory in the 2022 International Series England. It takes him to the top of the Asian Tour Order of Merit and to No.2 in the International Series Rankings behind Australian Lucas Herbert. On Sunday, Vincent started with a three-putt bogey, but that never threw him out of gear. What was more important was that when leading by one shot over Boonma after 14 holes, the 33-year-old closed with three birdies in his last four holes, including a 20-footer on the 18th for a grandstand finish. After losing his card on LIV Golf last year, Vincent is enjoying a brilliant run of form in 2025 with his childhood friend Kyle Basson on his bag. This is his eighth top-12 finish this season in 11 worldwide starts. 'It's hard to put in words, but what an amazing week, what an amazing day. This is incredible, so amazing to be here and so thankful,' said Vincent. 'It was a challenge, for sure (to stay patient as he kept missing birdie putts before the 15th hole), because I didn't know where I was standing, and it just felt like I was missing all those opportunities. 'But what can you do? You just have to get on to the next hole and try and do your best from there. And then I look up on the last and it's a three-shot lead. And I was like, 'wow, it all paid off!' Vincent also becomes the sixth multiple International Series winner after Uihlein, Mexico's Carlo Ortiz, New Zealand's Ben Campbell, American Andy Ogletree and Thailand's Sarit Suwannarut. Vincent said the key to doing well on a tree-lined course like Royal Dar Es Salam was to accept that mistakes will be made. 'You can't really try to avoid bogeys – they happen. But I had a clear game plan and just focused on executing it. Sometimes things go your way, sometimes they don't, but it's about hitting the best shot in front of you each time,' added Vincent. 'This week, the strategy, the way I played, and even some bounces just went my way. It's special. This kind of week only happens occasionally. And to do it alongside my close friend and caddie, Kyle, makes it really cool.' Boonma finished nearly two hours before the final group came in, and his magnificent round of 66 set the marker in the clubhouse. That included an eagle attempt from 12 feet on the drivable par-4 17th hole, where he smashed a brilliant drive to leave himself a 12-foot putt. 'I had no thoughts in my mind. I mean, I just played shot-by-shot. I hit it really good. I hit it on the fairway and then hit it on the green, and then just made a putt. I started with a birdie on the second hole, the par-three, which is a bit hard, and it was just momentum after that,' said the Thai. Uihlein was left to rue his performance over the closing holes the last three rounds since Friday, after making four straight birdies from the 15th hole onwards in Thursday's opening round. 'It felt okay, but those last five holes the whole week kind of kicked my teeth in. I mean, I made 20 birdies this week and only shot nine-under. So, all in all, pretty solid but we just got to clean up some of the sloppy bogeys,' Uihlein said. The next International Series tournament on the Asian Tour is the Indonesian Masters at Royal Jakarta Golf Club from 2-5 October. Scores after round 4 of the International Series Morocco being played at Royal Golf Dar Es Salam (Red Course), a par-73, 7,630-yard course (am - denotes amateur): 278 - Scott Vincent (ZIM) 71-66-71-70. 282 - Danthai Boonma (THA) 70-72-74-66. 283 - Denzel Ieremia (NZL) 71-73-70-69, Peter Uihlein (USA) 68-72-72-71, Maverick Antcliff (AUS) 69-70-72-72. 284 - Austen Truslow (USA) 71-71-69-73. 285 - Settee Prakongvech (THA) 72-70-67-76. 286 - John Lyras (AUS) 70-71-73-72, Jack Buchanan (AUS) 71-72-68-75. 287 - Taichi Kho (HKG) 73-72-72-70, Kevin Yuan (AUS) 70-72-74-71, Sampson Zheng (CHN) 70-73-72-72, Charl Schwartzel (RSA) 75-71-69-72. 288 - Ekpharit Wu (THA) 71-70-75-72, Jaco Ahlers (RSA) 72-73-73-70, Manav Shah (USA) 70-75-74-69, Gaganjeet Bhullar (IND) 72-73-71-72, M.J. Maguire (USA) 71-71-73-73, Miguel Carballo (ARG) 73-69-72-74, John Catlin (USA) 68-76-70-74, Bobby Bai (CHN) 70-73-67-78. 289 - Chen Guxin (CHN) 74-73-70-72, Ian Snyman (RSA) 71-71-74-73, Pavit Tangkamolprasert (THA) 73-74-70-72, Travis Smyth (AUS) 72-71-73-73, Stefano Mazzoli (ITA) 71-73-72-73, Julien Sale (FRA) 75-71-72-71, Ben Campbell (NZL) 73-68-77-71, Yosuke Asaji (JPN) 73-71-72-73, Bjorn Hellgren (SWE) 71-73-71-74, Sean Ramos (PHI) 71-73-70-75, Liu Yanwei (CHN) 71-70-71-77. 290 - Andy Ogletree (USA) 73-74-69-74, Yuta Sugiura (JPN) 72-73-71-74, Ryan Peake (AUS) 73-73-68-76, Charlie Lindh (SWE) 72-69-72-77, Kazuki Higa (JPN) 75-67-71-77. 291 - Micah Shin (USA) 70-73-77-71, Suteepat Prateeptienchai (THA) 73-67-71-80. 292 - Dominic Foos (GER) 76-71-69-76, Takumi Murakami (JPN) 74-69-73-76, Charles Porter (USA) 73-72-74-73, Siddikur Rahman (BAN) 71-71-77-73, Justin Quiban (PHI) 76-68-71-77, Rattanon Wannasrichan (THA) 71-76-74-71. 293 - Jakkanat Inmee (THA) 70-73-76-74, Wang Wei-hsuan (TPE) 74-73-72-74, Julien Quesne (FRA) 73-71-71-78, Gunn Charoenkul (THA) 71-74-75-73, Ajeetesh Sandhu (IND) 74-73-75-71. 294 - Guntaek Koh (KOR) 73-73-73-75, Tatsunori Shogenji (JPN) 71-73-76-74, James Piot (USA) 71-76-73-74. 295 - Jonathan Wijono (INA) 75-71-73-76, Newport Laparojkit (THA) 76-71-72-76. 296 - Gregory Foo (SIN) 72-72-73-79, Tomoyo Ikemura (JPN) 75-70-73-78, Mito Pereira (CHI) 74-70-72-80, Chonlatit Chuenboonngam (THA) 76-70-73-77, Joel Stalter (FRA) 72-74-74-76, Miguel Tabuena (PHI) 71-74-76-75, Kelvin Si (MAC) 71-75-75-75, Santiago De la Fuente (MEX) 74-72-78-72. 297 - Brett Rankin (AUS) 71-74-74-78, Jeunghun Wang (KOR) 75-72-75-75, Jonathan Broomhead (RSA) 71-74-79-73. 298 - Nitithorn Thippong (THA) 72-71-77-78, Chang Wei-lun (TPE) 77-68-77-76, Sarit Suwannarut (THA) 69-78-77-74. 299 - Atiruj Winaicharoenchai (THA) 75-72-73-79. 301 - Berry Henson (USA) 71-74-78-78. 302 - Carlos Bustos (CHI) 76-70-77-79.

Wimbledon Expansion Faces Legal Battle in London Court
Wimbledon Expansion Faces Legal Battle in London Court

The Sun

timean hour ago

  • The Sun

Wimbledon Expansion Faces Legal Battle in London Court

WIMBLEDON fans will have eyes only for the tennis this week but for those who run the world's oldest and most prestigious Grand Slam, the real high-stakes contest will unfold not on their grass, but in London's Royal Courts of Justice. On one side of the legal net is the campaign group Save Wimbledon Park, while facing them in a judicial review of their ambitious expansion plan on Tuesday and Wednesday will be the All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club (AELTC). It is the latest stage of a long-running fight that has split the south-west London 'village', which has been home to the Championships since 1877. Last September the AELTC secured planning permission from the Greater London Authority (GLA) to treble the size of the main site to include 39 new courts including an 8,000-seat show court by redeveloping a former golf course on parkland land it already owns. The 200-million-pound ($272.92-million) expansion aims to increase daily capacity to 50,000 people from the current 42,000, upgrade facilities and move the qualifying rounds on site to mirror the Australian, French, and U.S. Opens. The plans have the backing of several leading players, including Novak Djokovic, and 62% of 10,000 residents in Merton and Wandsworth, the London boroughs that share the new site, also support the scheme, according to the AELTC. 'Our confidence in the development and the proposals that we've been working on for many years is as strong as it ever has been,' Wimbledon tournament director Jamie Baker told Reuters. 'For the championships to continue to be in the position that it is and to deliver all the benefits to stakeholders including the local community it is vital that we are able to stage the tournament on one site and bring all the grounds together.' However, this week's judicial review will decide whether the GLA's decision to grant planning permission was unlawful. Opponents of the development, including Thelma Ruby, a 100-year-old former actress who lives in a flat overlooking the park, and West Hill Ward Councillor Malcolm Grimston, say the club's plans will cause environmental damage and major disruption to the area. 'It's terribly important that it does not go ahead not just for myself but for the whole planet and future generations,' Ruby told Reuters. 'I overlook this beautiful landscape and there are all sorts of covenants that say you mustn't build on it, and yet the tennis people have this unnecessary plan they admit will cut down all these glorious trees, which will harm wildlife. 'They're using concrete, building roads, they're going to have lorries polluting and passing my window every 10 minutes. The whole area will be in chaos as they're closing off roads,' she said. Save Wimbledon Park says the GLA failed to consider covenants that were agreed by the AELTC, including restrictions on redeveloping the land, when it bought the Wimbledon Park golf course freehold from Merton council in 1993 for 5.2 million pounds. The AELTC paid a reported 63.5 million pounds to buy the Golf Club's lease, which was due to run until 2041. The campaign group also believes the GLA failed to consider the land's statutory Public Recreation Trust status which means it should be held as 'public walks or pleasure grounds'. 'It is not antipathy towards the AELTC that's driving this, as some of the benefits are real, such as the extension of lake,' councillor Grimston told Reuters. 'The problem is that it will treble the footprint of the current Championship and turn what currently has very much a feel of being rural England and a gentle pace of life into an industrial complex that would dominate the views of the lake. 'That's why it's classified as Metropolitan Open Land, which is the urban equivalent of the green belt that has been protected for many decades in planning law in the UK and rightly so,' he said. The AELTC say the plans will improve the biodiversity of the park, as well as bringing parts of it back into public use. 'The London Wildlife trust have endorsed the plans, they've spent many hours scrutinising our analysis and our expert views,' the AELTC's head of corporate affairs Dominic Foster said. 'We know that this expansion will deliver a very significant benefit to biodiversity, whereas golf courses are not good for biodiversity.' ($1 = 0.7328 pounds)

Wimbledon expansion plan goes into legal tie-break
Wimbledon expansion plan goes into legal tie-break

The Sun

timean hour ago

  • The Sun

Wimbledon expansion plan goes into legal tie-break

WIMBLEDON fans will have eyes only for the tennis this week but for those who run the world's oldest and most prestigious Grand Slam, the real high-stakes contest will unfold not on their grass, but in London's Royal Courts of Justice. On one side of the legal net is the campaign group Save Wimbledon Park, while facing them in a judicial review of their ambitious expansion plan on Tuesday and Wednesday will be the All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club (AELTC). It is the latest stage of a long-running fight that has split the south-west London 'village', which has been home to the Championships since 1877. Last September the AELTC secured planning permission from the Greater London Authority (GLA) to treble the size of the main site to include 39 new courts including an 8,000-seat show court by redeveloping a former golf course on parkland land it already owns. The 200-million-pound ($272.92-million) expansion aims to increase daily capacity to 50,000 people from the current 42,000, upgrade facilities and move the qualifying rounds on site to mirror the Australian, French, and U.S. Opens. The plans have the backing of several leading players, including Novak Djokovic, and 62% of 10,000 residents in Merton and Wandsworth, the London boroughs that share the new site, also support the scheme, according to the AELTC. 'Our confidence in the development and the proposals that we've been working on for many years is as strong as it ever has been,' Wimbledon tournament director Jamie Baker told Reuters. 'For the championships to continue to be in the position that it is and to deliver all the benefits to stakeholders including the local community it is vital that we are able to stage the tournament on one site and bring all the grounds together.' However, this week's judicial review will decide whether the GLA's decision to grant planning permission was unlawful. Opponents of the development, including Thelma Ruby, a 100-year-old former actress who lives in a flat overlooking the park, and West Hill Ward Councillor Malcolm Grimston, say the club's plans will cause environmental damage and major disruption to the area. 'It's terribly important that it does not go ahead not just for myself but for the whole planet and future generations,' Ruby told Reuters. 'I overlook this beautiful landscape and there are all sorts of covenants that say you mustn't build on it, and yet the tennis people have this unnecessary plan they admit will cut down all these glorious trees, which will harm wildlife. 'They're using concrete, building roads, they're going to have lorries polluting and passing my window every 10 minutes. The whole area will be in chaos as they're closing off roads,' she said. Save Wimbledon Park says the GLA failed to consider covenants that were agreed by the AELTC, including restrictions on redeveloping the land, when it bought the Wimbledon Park golf course freehold from Merton council in 1993 for 5.2 million pounds. The AELTC paid a reported 63.5 million pounds to buy the Golf Club's lease, which was due to run until 2041. The campaign group also believes the GLA failed to consider the land's statutory Public Recreation Trust status which means it should be held as 'public walks or pleasure grounds'. 'It is not antipathy towards the AELTC that's driving this, as some of the benefits are real, such as the extension of lake,' councillor Grimston told Reuters. 'The problem is that it will treble the footprint of the current Championship and turn what currently has very much a feel of being rural England and a gentle pace of life into an industrial complex that would dominate the views of the lake. 'That's why it's classified as Metropolitan Open Land, which is the urban equivalent of the green belt that has been protected for many decades in planning law in the UK and rightly so,' he said. The AELTC say the plans will improve the biodiversity of the park, as well as bringing parts of it back into public use. 'The London Wildlife trust have endorsed the plans, they've spent many hours scrutinising our analysis and our expert views,' the AELTC's head of corporate affairs Dominic Foster said. 'We know that this expansion will deliver a very significant benefit to biodiversity, whereas golf courses are not good for biodiversity.' ($1 = 0.7328 pounds)

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