
-
Griffin and Schmid share lead at Colonial
-
Venezuela opposition leader arrested ahead of tense election
-
US, Boeing reach deal to resolve MAX criminal case
-
Anthropic's Claude AI gets smarter -- and mischievious
-
Trump greenlights Nippon Steel 'partnership' with US Steel
-
German woman arrested after 17 stabbed at Hamburg station
-
Napoli back on top in Italy after sealing fourth Serie A crown
-
'Intense' Bath stay on track for treble with Challenge Cup glory
-
US Steel shares skyrocket after Trump greenlights Nippon 'partnership'
-
Napoli's key men in Serie A title triumph
-
Bath stay on track for treble with Challenge Cup glory
-
Conte's Napoli future uncertain even after Serie A title glory
-
McTominay steps out of United's shadow to become Napoli hero
-
Napoli claim fourth Serie A title as Inter fall short
-
UN expert says Guatemalan anti-corruption fighters persecuted
-
South Africa rescues all 260 miners stuck underground alive
-
Zimbabwe hundred hero Bennett says Trent Bridge 'war cries' remind him of home
-
Bearman handed 10-place Monaco grid penalty
-
After two setbacks, SpaceX could try to launch massive Starship next week
-
Billy Joel cancels concert dates over brain condition
-
Kardashian 'grateful' after Paris robbers convicted
-
Judge temporarily halts Trump block on foreign students at Harvard
-
Trump fires new 50% tariff threat at EU, targets smartphones
-
French-Brazilian photographer Sebastiao Salgado dies aged 81: French Academy of Fine Arts
-
Arsenal 'humble' but 'all-in' for women's Champions League final
-
UN expert calls for end of Gaza blockade in Cannes
-
Trump signs orders to boost US nuclear energy
-
US power company to pay $82.5m for California wildfire
-
Distrusting Argentines loath to bank their 'mattress dollars'
-
Kishan shines as Hyderabad defeat Bengaluru
-
79 miners rescued from S.African shaft, over 100 still underground
-
Piastri surprised by Ferrari pace as Leclerc tops Monaco practice
-
Zverev hoping lightning doesn't strike twice at French Open
-
'No chance': Bielefeld embrace underdog tag in German Cup final
-
How Ronaldo's La Liga ownership foray turned sour in Valladolid
-
Stokes strikes as England force Zimbabwe to follow-on
-
'At my own risk', Andreeva vows to continue doubles despite singles success
-
Billy Joel cancels dates over brain condition
-
Thousands hail Spurs' Europa League heroes in victory parade
-
Brazil great Ronaldo sells majority stake in Valladolid
-
UK retailer suspends Labubu toy sales amid safety fears
-
Gauff takes French Open 'motivation' from Madrid, Rome losses
-
Emery 'proud' of Villa even if top-five bid fails
-
Leclerc tops Monaco practice to boost hopes of repeat home win
-
Nuno urges Forest to seal Champions League place for Awoniyi
-
Suriname president vows oil bonanza won't hit carbon-negative status
-
Djokovic closes on 100th ATP title by reaching Geneva final
-
Twenty-year term sought for French surgeon in mass sex abuse trial
-
Stock markets fall as Trump threatens tariffs on EU, Apple
-
Sinner expects 'different atmosphere' at French Open after doping ban

Bearman handed 10-place Monaco grid penalty
British rookie Oliver Bearman was hit with a 10-place grid penalty for the Monaco Grand Prix on Friday for overtaking under red flag conditions during second practice.
The 20-year-old Haas driver, one of six rookies learning their way on the narrow, bumpy and sinuous Mediterranean street circuit, passed Williams' Carlos Sainz at La Rascasse hairpin after Oscar Piastri had crashed his McLaren at Ste Devote.
The race stewards reported that Bearman had not obeyed the warning lights and dashboard signals about the red flag.
"The driver claimed that he saw the red flags, but decided not to slow down abruptly because he felt that slowing down abruptly would have been more dangerous and that what he did was a safer way of handling the situation," the stewards reported.
Bearman remained upbeat about his prospects.
"We made a good step with the car and I am happy with the balance. There were some good signs from today so let's try and build on them."
Unfortunately, for him, on a difficult day for most of the rookies, his penalty makes it unlikely he will score points on a circuit where overtaking is notoriously difficult.
It was a better day for the RB rookies Liam Lawson and Isack Hadjar who wound up fifth and sixth behind the pace setting Ferrari of Charles Leclerc.
Hadjar survived two major brushes with the barriers on a day of three red flags across the two sessions.
S.Gregor--AMWN