
From yachts to pit stops: Monaco GP in pictures
The Monaco Grand Prix, arguably the most anticipated race on the Formula 1 calendar, provided the usual mix of glamour, celebrities and spectacular sights. Here are a selection of some of the best images from the grand prix weekend.
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The Independent
22 minutes ago
- The Independent
Ben Shalom calls for changes to be made for Chris Eubank Jr vs Conor Benn rematch
Chris Eubank Jr 's promoter Ben Shalom believes any rematch with Conor Benn should be staged at a higher weight. Eubank Jr and Benn continued a family feud turned into personal battle at the end of April, the two exchanging heavy blows in what has quickly become a British classic. Despite ending up as the victor, Eubank Jr was taken to hospital after the fight, having aggressively boiled down in an attempt to make the 160lb mark. 'Next Gen' failed to reach the middleweight limit, and was further restricted from going back up in weight due to a 10lb rehydration clause. Whilst Boxxer promoter Shalom does not believe the rehydration clause was as big a limiting factor, he wants the contracted rematch to be held at a higher weight division. He told Sky Sports: 'The rehydration clause is probably less dangerous than the 160lb limit now at this stage in his career. That's where probably it's the biggest challenge. As the organisers of the event, everyone has to be sensible as to how we approach the second fight. That probably was the one downer on the event, all the talk about the weight. And so I'm sure everyone will be sensible.' Eubank Jr's father, the legendary former boxer Chris Eubank Sr, had been a vocal critic of the weight, with Benn jumping up two divisions from welterweight for the fight. While Eubank Sr made amends with his son on fight night, walking into the ring with Eubank Jr, the former two-division world champion has continued his comments about the weight on his YouTube channel. Restarting, Shalom shared: 'I think that would alleviate a lot of people's concerns about the fight. I think everyone involved just wants the fighters to make as much money as they can but get out of the ring safely. That's what's boxing's about and so anything that can increase the chances of that happening should be focused on.' Shalom believes that by increasing the weight, Eubank Jr's long-term health would be preserved. Reports currently suggest that a rematch, which was agreed in the contracts of the first bout, would be staged once again at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, this time in September. Shalom continued: 'We saw a very good fight, a very competitive fight but there were concerns around the challenge on Chris's body. So no one wants to see that. We believe and we hope there'll be discussions around that before we make the rematch. It was very competitive. I think Conor Benn proved himself at the weight that night. He was a serious competitor. He came in big and he looked comfortable.' He added: 'I think that's why in the rematch there should be less talk about the weight. That was the only real concern of the whole event. Wouldn't it be amazing to do it again because of the impact it had on the sport in this country, but everyone wants it to be as safe as possible for the fighters.'


BBC News
26 minutes ago
- BBC News
Gillingham's Williams agrees new one-year deal
Gillingham midfielder Euan Williams has agreed terms on a new one-year deal at the 22-year-old joined from Charlton in the summer of 2024 and last season made 13 appearances across all competitions. He also earned a call-up to the Northern Ireland Under-21 squad for games against England and Ukraine. Last campaign Gillingham finished 17th in League Two, comfortably clear of the league's bottom two."I am delighted to be staying at the club," Williams said."There is a real togetherness around the place, we finished the season in good form and I am now looking forward to seeing what we can collectively achieve in 2025/26."


BBC News
36 minutes ago
- BBC News
Alex Warren's Ordinary becomes longest-running UK number one this decade
US singer Alex Warren's smash hit Ordinary has notched up its 12th week at number one in the UK - the longest chart reign since Ed Sheeran's Shape of You in which the 24-year-old wrote for his wife after their wedding last year, has been streamed 107 million times in the UK, according to the Official Charts has broken the 70-year-old record for the most consecutive weeks at number one by a US artist - surpassing Slim Whitman's Rose Marie, which spent 11 weeks at the top in shows no sign of going away - it remains by far the biggest song on Spotify in the UK, with 33% more streams than its nearest rival in the service's latest daily rankings. But it has some way to go before it catches the longest-running number ones of all number ones in history:Frankie Laine, I Believe - 18 weeks, 1953Bryan Adams, (Everything I Do) I Do It For You - 16 weeks, 1991Wet Wet Wet, Love Is All Around - 15 weeks, 1994Drake ft Wizkid & Kyla, One Dance - 15 weeks, 2016Queen, Bohemian Rhapsody - 14 weeks, 1975/6 & 1991/2Ed Sheeran, Shape of You -14 weeks, 2017Alex Warren, Ordinary - 12 weeks, 2025 Warren found fame as one of the founders of the Hype House, a TikTok collective who lived together in Los Angeles and entertained millions of teenagers during the first reached the top 10 with Carry You Home last year, then his career as heartfelt folk-pop singer-songwriter exploded with Ordinary, which is currently also number one in the US."It has been enormous," said James Masterton, who writes the Chart Watch UK blog. "It's a crossover hit single in a good old-fashioned sense, and in a way we haven't seen for quite some considerable time."It's the kind of record that sat comfortably on the playlists of both Radio 1 and Radio 2, but ironically it's dropped off both of those now and they've both moved on to playing his new single. But that's an example of how it has genuine pan-generational appeal."Ordinary has also become a popular wedding song, and Warren's label has even released a Wedding Version."In that sense it's got much in common with some of the other famous long-running tracks of the past, such as (Everything I Do) I Do It For You, Love Is All Around and I Will Always Love You. They are all very deeply felt romantic songs." But despite being such a mammoth hit, changing media and music habits mean Ordinary hasn't become a universal phenomenon of the kind Bryan Adams and Wet Wet Wet had when they were appearing on BBC TV chart show Top of the Pops week after week."The fragmentation of the media means the ability for records to grab the attention of large groups of people has diminished rapidly," Masterton said."In times gone by when a record was number one for as long as 12 weeks, everybody would know who the superstar was." Longest-running number ones of the 2020s:Alex Warren, Ordinary – 12 weeks, 2025Ed Sheeran, Bad Habits – 11 weeks, 2021Harry Styles, As It Was – 10 weeks, 2022Miley Cyrus, Flowers – 10 weeks, 2023Dave & Central Cee, Sprinter – 10 weeks, 2023 Ordinary is also the longest-running number one since chart rules were changed in 2017 to stop the top 40 getting clogged up by songs that have passed their peak of chart formula automatically demotes songs that have had three consecutive weeks of declining streaming figures, when compared with the rest of the market. But Ordinary has held sufficiently steady to avoid that fate so far.