logo
'Proud' Piastri extends championship lead with Spanish GP victory

'Proud' Piastri extends championship lead with Spanish GP victory

The Sun4 days ago

OSCAR PIASTRI drove with exemplary calm and control in a torrid race on Sunday to beat rival and team-mate Lando Norris as McLaren claimed a first Spanish Grand Prix victory since 2005 with a resounding 1-2 triumph.
The 24-year-old Australian came home 2.4 seconds clear of Norris to extend his lead in the drivers' championship to 10 points with Ferrari's Charles Leclerc finishing third after a dramatic finale.
Four-time champion Max Verstappen of Red Bull went for a three-stop strategy that resulted in him losing third place in the final laps before being handed a 10-second penalty for crashing into Mercedes' George Russell who finished fourth.
It was Piastri's fifth win of the season and the seventh win of his career - and his eighth consecutive podium finish for McLaren, a feat that had only been achieved before by three-time champion Ayrton Senna and seven-time champion Lewis Hamilton.
Nico Hulkenberg was fifth, from 15th on the grid, for Sauber ahead of Hamilton in a Ferrari, Racing Bulls' rookie Isack Hadjar and Pierre Gasly of Alpine.
Two-time champion and local hero Fernando Alonso finished ninth for Aston Martin with Verstappen classified 10th after his bruising late incidents which prompted 2016 world champion Nico Rosberg to suggest he deserved to be black-flagged and disqualified.
- 'Great weekend' -
'It was a bit of a surprise to see Max try a three-stop and it nearly worked for him,' said Piastri.
'But it's been a great weekend overall. The overall pace was really good and we could turn it on when we needed to - and I am just very proud of the work we've done this weekend.
'It's a nice way to bounce back from Monaco. It's been a superb weekend.'
Monaco winner Norris started second but ceded his position to Verstappen on the first lap before battling back to follow his teammate home.
'Oscar drove a very good race today,' said Norris.
'I didn't quite have the pace to match him. We gave it our best shot. It's a long race and anything could have happened at the end of the race.
'We both got pretty sideways with the safety car restart. It was a good, fun race and for us as a team to finish one-two is even better.'
Leclerc said he was encouraged to attack Verstappen when he realised he had been given hards for the late re-start that followed a Safety Car intervention, while he was on softs.
'When the engineers told me that Max was going on a hard tyre for the last stint, I was very optimistic because I knew how bad the hard was,' he said.
'That's when I knew I needed to have a good restart. Luckily, there was an opportunity.
'It was a battle for track position to get the slipstream from the guys in front. Max wanted to bring me towards the inside where there was all the rubber, so I didn't want to go there.
'I was trying to push him to the left, there was a little bit of contact. Fortunately, for us there were no consequences.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Boxing-Double Olympic champion Lomachenko announces retirement
Boxing-Double Olympic champion Lomachenko announces retirement

The Star

timean hour ago

  • The Star

Boxing-Double Olympic champion Lomachenko announces retirement

FILE PHOTO: Boxing - Vasyl Lomachenko v Luke Campbell - WBO, WBA & WBC World Lightweight Titles - O2 Arena, London, Britain - August 31, 2019 Vasyl Lomachenko during the fight Action Images via Reuters/Andrew Couldridge/File Photo (Reuters) -Ukraine's double Olympic gold medallist and three-weight world champion Vasiliy Lomachenko announced his retirement from boxing on Thursday at the age of 37 and more than a year after his last fight. Lomachenko beat Australian George Kambosos Jr with an 11th round stoppage in Perth last May to claim the vacant IBF lightweight belt. The 2008 featherweight and 2012 lightweight Olympic champion wraps up his professional career with a record of 18 wins and three defeats, with 12 knockouts, after an amateur record of 396 wins and only one defeat. He was unified lightweight champion and also won world titles as a featherweight and super-featherweight. "I'm grateful for every victory and every defeat both in the ring and in life," Lomachenko said in a video message on social media. "I'm thankful that, as my career comes to an end, I've gained clarity about the direction a person must take in order to achieve true victory, not just in the ring but in overcoming their old self." (Reporting by Alan Baldwin in London, editing by Toby Davis)

Motor racing-Wheatley confident Audi will be winners in F1
Motor racing-Wheatley confident Audi will be winners in F1

The Star

time4 hours ago

  • The Star

Motor racing-Wheatley confident Audi will be winners in F1

FILE PHOTO: Formula One F1 - Emilia Romagna Grand Prix - Autodromo Enzo e Dino Ferrari, Imola, Italy - May 18, 2025 Sauber team principal Jonathan Wheatley arrives ahead of the race REUTERS/Jakub Porzycki/File Photo (Reuters) -Timing is everything in Formula One and Jonathan Wheatley reckons he got his right in leaving Red Bull, the team with the most race wins and drivers' titles this century, to become principal of Sauber. The Swiss-based team will become the Audi works outfit from next season but were at the bottom of the standings until Nico Hulkenberg's fifth place in Spain last Sunday raised them two places to eighth. Sauber have won only once since 1993 -- in 2008 when owned by BMW -- and there are nagging questions about how competitive the 2026 engine will be, with early reports not encouraging. But Wheatley said they had all the building blocks for success. "We're looking at a campus expansion, we've got an ambitious program ahead of us and investment from Audi and QIA (Qatar Investment Authority). I'm really, really super-excited about where we're at," the Briton told Reuters. "I do not come to work to make up the numbers. I absolutely believe that we'll get on that path and we'll be winning races and world championships." Wheatley has decades of experience, now in his 35th year in Formula One after starting as a junior mechanic with Benetton. He joined Red Bull from Renault in 2006 and was sporting director when he left at the end of last season. With Red Bull he won six constructors' titles, eight drivers' titles and 120 grands prix. He was also instrumental in securing Max Verstappen's first title in 2021 after a radio conversation with race director Michael Masi triggered a fateful change to the safety car procedure. The Briton said such experiences had shaped him and would help in his new role, which he started in April. "The radio transcripts in Abu Dhabi showed the extreme competitive passion from all the teams and I can't begin to tell you what that feels like on the pitwall in a world championship life or death situation," he said. "There's a lot of people in my position in the sport who are intensely competitive. I've absolutely absorbed myself in that (at Red Bull) and I'm absorbing myself here. It really genuinely feels like my team already and I've only been here two months." Wheatley said the move to principal felt "entirely natural" and, unlike that from Renault to Red Bull, had involved no agonising. Red Bull had the most dominant season in Formula One history in 2023, winning 21 of 22 races, but were then in the firing line. Team boss Christian Horner faced allegations, of which he was cleared, of improper conduct towards a female employee. Relations with Verstappen's father Jos soured and star designer Adrian Newey announced his departure for Aston Martin. Wheatley, who could have stayed, said his decision was all about future opportunity. "There was a huge amount of talented people in that team over the whole period I was there. I've learned from as many of them as I could... we knitted a team together there and we did something quite extraordinary. "I absolutely loved that initial stage of transforming a team and then I kind of wanted to do it again... the idea of coming to this team in this transition period at this point in history was enormously attractive to me." While former Ferrari team boss Mattia Binotto heads the Audi project, Wheatley is in charge at the track and plans to attend all the races. "It's going to take time, but where we're starting from is a good place," he said. (Reporting by Alan Baldwin, editing by Toby Davis)

Sailing-Jackman, Reynolds go full sail: Hollywood A-listers take helm of Flying Roos
Sailing-Jackman, Reynolds go full sail: Hollywood A-listers take helm of Flying Roos

The Star

time4 hours ago

  • The Star

Sailing-Jackman, Reynolds go full sail: Hollywood A-listers take helm of Flying Roos

FILE PHOTO: Hugh Jackman and Ryan Reynolds attend the premiere of 'Deadpool and Wolverine' in New York City, New York, U.S., July 22, 2024. REUTERS/Caitlin Ochs/File Photo (Reuters) -Australia's ocean dominance got a Hollywood upgrade on Thursday as Hugh Jackman and Ryan Reynolds became co-owners of the country's three-times champion SailGP team, now rebranded as the BONDS Flying Roos. The investment adds star power to the Australian outfit that has dominated the global sailing championship, winning a trio of titles in four seasons of the high-speed racing series. "We're incredibly excited to set sail together in this new adventure," Jackman and Reynolds said in a characteristically wry statement. "Hugh brings a deep love for and pride in his home country as well as being an avid fan of sailing." The move comes just days after Oscar winner Anne Hathaway sailed into sports ownership, joining a female-led consortium that acquired the Red Bull Italy SailGP Team in what circuit CEO Russell Coutts called "another significant milestone in SailGP's growth as a league". Founded in 2019, SailGP pits national crews in identical 50-foot foiling catamarans reaching speeds over 100 km/h within metres of shorelines in iconic harbours worldwide. "This is an incredible milestone for us and for our sport," said Tom Slingsby, who serves as driver, CEO and co-owner of the Flying Roos. "With BONDS joining as our title partner, we're building something distinctly Australian - a team driven by spirit, resilience, and national pride." Founded in 1915, BONDS is one of Australia's most iconic apparel brands, best known for its underwear and loungewear that have been a staple in Australian wardrobes for more than a century. SailGP director Andy Thompson added: "Today marks a landmark moment not just for the Australia team, but for the trajectory of SailGP globally," highlighting the "extraordinary combination of global reach, vision, commercial nous" the Hollywood duo brings. The newly minted Flying Roos will debut under their star-studded ownership at the Mubadala New York Sail Grand Prix on June 7-8, where they aim to defend their position atop the championship leaderboard. (Editing by Toby Davis)

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store