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Unstoppable Verstappen in a Formula One league of his own

By - Aug 03,2023 - Last updated at Aug 06,2023

Red Bull’s Max Verstappen celebrates in the parc ferme after winning the Formula One Belgian Grand Prix in Spa on Sunday (AFP photo)

SPA-FRANCORCHAMPS, Belgium — Another masterful display and triumph from Max Verstappen ensured Red Bull finished the first half of the season, before the European “summer” break, unbeaten after Sunday’s Belgian Grand Prix. 

The defending double world champion’s victory was his eighth consecutive success, his 10th in 12 races this year, and completed not only a hat-trick of Belgian wins, but also meant he has won every race in the last three months since teammate Sergio Perez’s victory in Azerbaijan on April 30. 

AFP Sport looks at three things we learned from Sunday’s race:

 

Playful Verstappen toying with rivals

 

The 25-year-old Dutchman is so dominant that he can still win from sixth on the grid after taking a five-place penalty.

He is on a different plane to his rivals to such an extent seven-time champion Lewis Hamilton resorted to humour to highlight it. 

Referring to the 2002 Austin Powers film Goldmember, Hamilton accepted it all seemed too easy for Verstappen when he said that “he is having a smoke and a pancake. You know the film?” 

During the race, Verstappen playfully bickered with his race engineer about tyre degradation and making a pit-stop to give the team extra practice.

Hamilton’s Mercedes team-chief Toto Wolff said: “He has all reason to be a bit cheeky.... Just driving around. On merit. Nothing else to say — as much as it’s annoying.”

Red Bull team boss Christian Horner said he was in awe of his star.

“What we are witnessing with Max is something you see once in a generation,” said Horner. 

Red Bull and Verstappen go next to his home Dutch Grand Prix at Zandvoort.

Another win on August 27 will draw him level with four-time champion Sebastian Vettel’s record of nine straight wins for Red Bull in 2013 and extend the team’s record to 13 consecutive season-opening wins and 14 overall. 

Rival teams battle for scraps 

 

Ferrari, Aston Martin, Mercedes and McLaren have taken turns in mounting a brief challenge to Red Bull in the opening 12 races, but none have been successful — on Sunday it was McLaren’s turn to find mounting optimism dashed after two podium finishes. 

Australian rookie Oscar Piastri, who led Saturday’s sprint race in the rain before being passed by Verstappen, was eliminated on the opening lap after tangling with Ferrari’s Carlos Sainz.

It was left to Lando Norris, who had been impressive in finishing second in both Britain and Hungary, to bemoan their lost pace as he battled to finish seventh. 

“We got it wrong,” said Norris.

“We were way too high on down-force and it didn’t help us in any way.... I was barely making eighth gear — we were so slow on the straights.

“I couldn’t defend and I couldn’t attack. It was impossible to overtake.”

 

Alpine focus despite management chaos 

 

The Alpine garage team remained united with Esteban Ocon finishing eighth 24 hours after Pierre Gasly’s podium in the sprint — this despite shock announcements over management changes in the Renault-owned outfit. 

The departures of Otmar Szafnauer, the team chief, and sporting director Alan Permane, after 34 years, were announced. 

Permane, nick-named “bat” because of the long hours he worked, was part of the championship-winning years with Michael Schumacher and Fernando Alonso and was hugely-respected by the paddock at large.

His exit was greeted with widespread disbelief. 

Red Bull team boss Christian Horner said he expected to see Permane back. 

“It won’t be the last you’ll see of him in the pit lane,” he said in comments that added to the impression Renault had created a crisis of their own making.

Jordan hosts King’s Cup basketball ahead of FIBA World Cup

By - Aug 03,2023 - Last updated at Aug 03,2023

AMMAN — Jordan’s national basketball team hosts the 11th King Abdullah Cup (The King’s Cup) this weekend as part of their final countdown ahead of the FIBA World Cup 2023 set to be held in the Philippines, Japan and Indonesia as of August 25.

Jordan is slated to face Portugal on August 4, Angola on August 5 and Mexico on August 7 before leaving home to play Georgia, Iran, Montenegro from August 12-14, and facing China, South Sudan and Venezuela from August 18-22 ahead of the World Cup.

Jordan just concluded two training camps playing friendlies in Portugal where it beat the Ivory Coast, and lost to the Czech Republic and hosts Portugal in close matches. They also played in Lithuania where they lost three matches to the hosts.

During their World Cup countdown, Jordan set out to play around 15 high level matches in different continents. They have lost nine and won five so far. They earlier concluded a training camp in Canada following matches in Greece and Lithuania in June. 

Jordan qualified to the World Cup finals for the second consecutive and third overall time. The squad was drawn in Group C and is set to meet Greece on August 26, before facing New Zealand on August 28 and the United States on August 30 in matches set for Manila, the Philippines. Jordan has a tough group with a tough contender like Greece, while the US, champs in 2010 and 2014, were 7th at the last World Cup won by Spain.

Eight nations from Asia and Oceania join the 32-country FIBA World Cup 2023 field that will take place from August 25 to September 10. Japan and the Philippines qualify as hosts while third host Indonesia did not make it to the FIBA Asia Cup quarters and failed to qualify. 

Representing Asia, Jordan joins the Philippines, Japan, Iran, New Zealand, Australia, Lebanon and China. “We have booked a place among the top 32 teams in the world. We have a tough group and it will not be an easy task, but we aim to work hard throughout,” coach Wisam Al Sous told the local media.

Sous, a star of the 2010 World Cup qualifying team has inspired his lineup to jump back from inconsistent results in Round 1 to a winning spirit of a team that finished 4th at the FIBA Asia Cup last summer. The coach is still under fire for his choice of players, although the team rebounded after each slump during the qualifying process.

The basketball squad was the first and only Jordanian team to reach a World Cup in a team sport alongside the junior men’s team in 1995. Jordan has now reached the FIBA Basketball World Cup — the world’s premier basketball competition three times — in 2010, 2019 and 2023. At the 2010 World Cup Jordan finished 23rd among 24 countries after losing five matches. In 2019, Jordan managed a win over Senegal to finish 28th among 32 teams.

The tournament serves as a qualifier for the 2024 Summer Olympics, where the top two teams from each of the Americas and Europe, and the top team from each of Africa, Asia and Oceania, will qualify alongside the tournament’s host France.

Jordan now has Rondae Hollis-Jefferson as the naturalised pro replacing Dar Tucker who led Jordan in the qualifies together with Ahmad Dweiri, who led Fenerbahce Club to the Turkish League crown last year. Freddy Ibrahim, has become another household name for fans, after he secured Jordan’s spot in the last FIBA Asia Cup quarters on a dramatic half court three-pointer buzzer-beater to beat Chinese Taipei 97-96 — a result now etched in Jordan’s basketball memory, as Jordan won after being nine points down with just under one minute left.

The Kingdom stunned three-time champs Iran in the quarters and moved to the semis for the first time since 2011, where they faced three-time silver medallist Lebanon who ousted record 16-time champs China, In the semis, Jordan handed the match to Lebanon 86-85, and settled for fourth place after losing to New Zealand as Australia beat Lebanon to win the title.

It was Jordan’s 16th time at the FIBA Asia Cup, previously called FIBA Asia Championship, with the Kingdom’s best performance at the event placing third in 2009 and runner-up in 2011 when they reached the final for the first time in the country’s history, but lost the chance of qualifying to the 2012 Olympic Games after losing the final 70-69 to China. Jordan then played the FIBA Olympic Qualifying Tournamen, but lost to Puerto Rico as well as Greece and were eliminated. 

Jordan’s best showing at the FIBA Asia Cup (previously named FIBA Asia Championship) was third in 2009 and runner-up in 2011, and fourth in 2022.

Jamaica, South Africa roar into World Cup last 16

By - Aug 02,2023 - Last updated at Aug 06,2023

Jamaica’s Khadija Shaw (left) vie for the ball with Brazil’s Kathellen Sousa Feitoza during their Australia and New Zealand 2023 Women’s World Cup match in Melbourne on Wednesday (AFP photo by William West)

SYDNEY — Jamaica dumped out Brazil and South Africa sent Italy home on Wednesday as the supposed minnows roared into the last 16 of an increasingly open Women’s World Cup.

The Reggae Girlz’ coach Lorne Donaldson declared it “job done” after his dogged Jamaica side strangled the life out of eighth-ranked Brazil in Melbourne for a 0-0 draw.

It was the point Jamaica needed to progress into the knockout rounds for the first time in history and meant a crushing end to the World Cup career of Brazilian legend Marta.

The 37-year-old, arguably the greatest player in the history of women’s football, was as shell-shocked as she was upset afterwards.

Brazil’s meek group-phase exit at the hands of a team ranked 43 was its earliest departure from the tournament since being turfed out at the same stage in 1995.

“It’s hard to talk at a time like this. Not even in my worst nightmares was it the World Cup I dreamed of,” said Marta, once nicknamed “Pele in a skirt” by the late football icon.

Jamaica finished second in Group F and will meet the team that comes top when Group H concludes on Thursday. That is currently Colombia.

France topped Group F as Kadidiatou Diani hit a hat-trick in a 6-3 win over Panama and a possible meeting next with Germany.

Marta Cox’s wonder strike on 67 seconds had left the French reeling, swerving a free-kick into the corner from 30 yards for Panama’s first-ever World Cup goal.

She spun away in celebration and was mobbed by teammates as the tears flowed at a sold-out Sydney Football Stadium.

South Africa joy

 

There were also tears — of joy and devastation — after 54th-ranked South Africa showed Jamaica the way in a wet Wellington.

The African champions won a Women’s World Cup match for the first time with a stunning 3-2 victory over 16th-ranked Italy in a thriller.

Captain Thembi Kgatlana scored the winner in the 92nd minute to make history for South Africa and set up a meeting with The Netherlands — sending Italy home.

Arianna Caruso scored twice for Italy and thought she had salvaged the draw they needed to go through with 16 minutes left, before Kgatlana’s stunning late intervention.

“Over the last two weeks, I’ve lost three family members. I could have gone home but I chose to stay with my girls,” said Kgatlana, who plays for Racing Louisville in the United States.

“Because that’s how much it means.”

Sweden topped Group G with the maximum nine points to set up a clash with holders the United States.

It will be the teams’ first meeting since Sweden beat the USA 3-0 at the Tokyo Olympics two years ago on its way to taking the silver medal.

“We have played really good group-stage games, we have won all three of them, and we also beat them in the Olympics,” said Sofia Jakobsson, who came into Sweden’s line-up against Argentina and set up the opening goal in a 2-0 win.

The Americans came into the tournament in Australia and New Zealand as favourites to win an unprecedented third World Cup in a row.

But they have looked nothing like the team that has for so long dominated women’s international football and only scraped out of the group phase with a shaky 0-0 draw against debutants Portugal on Tuesday.

 

Caicedo ‘100 per cent’

 

Group action concludes on Thursday with Colombia needing only a draw against Morocco to top Group H.

Germany, stunned by Colombia and 18-year-old attacker Linda Caicedo in its previous match, is through with a win over a South Korea side who are more or less already out.

Caicedo underwent X-rays after health scares at the tournament but is “100 per cent” fit for the Morocco game, coach Nelson Abadia said.

The teenage Real Madrid attacker, who was diagnosed with ovarian cancer at 15 but made a full recovery, has lit up the World Cup with goals in wins against South Korea and Germany.

In the upset over two-time champions Germany Caicedo scored one of the goals of the tournament, days after going down in training clutching her chest.

She also appeared to suffer breathing difficulties in that 2-1 win — which took Colombia to the brink of the last 16 — but carried on playing.

Jordan Profesional Football League kicks off

By - Aug 02,2023 - Last updated at Aug 02,2023

AMMAN – The 71st edition of the Jordan Professional (Pro) Football League kicks off on Thursday as local football competitions return take centre stage after a long hiatus.

After competitions ended last year, club teams had an exceptionally long break while the national team’s agenda took over. Stadia began to fill up as Wihdat beat Faisali to win the Jordan Super Cup which was played over two-legs in the past week. It was Wihdat’s 15th title while Faisali are a record 17-time champions.

Earlier, reigning Pro League champs Faisali won their 9th Jordan Football Association (JFA) Shield, while the Jordan Cup will start later this month.

Last season, the Pro League saw a close-fought contest at both ends of the standings with veteran Jazira, a three-time league champ, relegated alongside Sarih, while Ahli and Jalil were promoted from the first Division. Jazira’s relegation was the fourth time– 1977, 1992, 2003, 2022 after the club was a frontrunner in the past five years and played in the Asian Football Confederation (AFC) West Asia Zone final in 2018 and 2019.

Faisali won the league title one point ahead of Wihdat and Hussein who tied in overall points and finished second and third respectively. They were followed by Shabab Urdun, Aqaba, Ramtha, Ma’an, Salt, Sahab, Mugheer Sarhan, Sarih and Jazira. In 2021, Ramtha won the League crown for the third time in their history after 39 years. 

Last season, three teams split four titles: Faisali were crowned Pro League champs, and also won the 35th JFA Shield title when they beat Ramtha, who in turn upset Faisali to win the 39th Jordan Super Cup. Wihdat defeated Aqaba for their 11th Jordan Cup final. 

Since the league kicked off in 1944 with only Faisali, Ahli, Urdun and Homenetmen competing, Faisali are now 35-time record league champs while Wihdat were champs 17 times since they joined in 1980. Although Faisali are the all-time record titleholders, Wihdat’s record is quite impressive. After four years in the Pro League, they won their first title in 1980 and have gone on to win the majority of titles since then. Ahli won eight times, Ramtha and Jazira three times each, Shabab Urdun twice each, Amman and Urdun clubs once each.

 

Arab and Asian club championships

 

This season, Jordanian clubs will be back to Asian competition, with Faisali playing in the AFC Champions League, alongside Wihdat who played in two earlier editions, as well. If Wihdat advance in the AFC Champions League (ACL), Hussein w AFC Champions League AFC Champions League ill play in the AFC Cup instead of them.

In 2022, Wihdat were eliminated in the ACL group stages after they became the first of the Kingdom’s clubs to play in the round robin group stages in 2021. None of the Kingdom’s clubs have ever made it past the ACL preliminary round where Faisali played in 2020 and 2018, Wihdat in 2015, 2016, 2017 and 2019 and Shabab Urdun in 2014.

In the second-tier Asian club competition — the AFC Cup — last season no Jordanian clubs played citing financial and technical constraints. It was the first time Jordanian teams missed the competition since 2005 when Faisali won two back-to-back titles and Shabab Urdun won once.

Earlier this year, Shabab Urdun played at the preliminary round of the King Salman Clubs Cup (the 2023 Arab Club Champions Cup, where they were eliminated by Mauritania’s FC Nouadhibou. A total of 37 teams participated in the 30th season of the event — the Arab world’s leading club football tournament organised by UAFA — with a total of $10 million of prize money awarded. Morocco’s Raja CA are the defending champions.

 

Al Salt claim handball Super Cup

By - Aug 01,2023 - Last updated at Aug 01,2023

AMMAN — Al Salt have won a thrilling final against Al Ahli to clinch the 2023 Handball Super Cup, according to the Jordan Olympic Media Centre. The two sides put on a tremendous final at Princess Sumaya Hall in Amman to provide the perfect launch to the 2023 season.

The lead changed hands throughout the match, and it was finely poised at 11-11 at half time, but Al-Salt pulled clear in the second half to record a 19-17 win. The match is the curtain raiser for the season between the 2022 Division One champions and Jordan Cup winners.

Al Salt won both so Al Ahli, as runners-up, provided a worthy opposition.

Jordan’s Abdulrahman Al Masatfa gets World No. 1 Karate ranking

By - Aug 01,2023 - Last updated at Aug 01,2023

AMMAN — Jordan’s Abdulrahman Al-Masatfa has been unveiled as the new World No. 1 for his weight in the latest International Karate Federation Rankings, according to the Jordan Olympic Media Centre.

Al Masatfa, the Tokyo Olympics bronze medallist, topped the rankings in the -67 kg weight category, while teammate Mohammed Al Jaafari comes in second for the -84kg weight.

Other Jordanians in the top 10s are Abdullah Hamad fifth in the -60kg weight, and Hassan Masarwah is eighth in the -75 kg class. Jordan Karate is very much on the up, proved at the recent Asian Championships where Jordan won six medals — two gold, one silver, and three bronze.

England’s Stokes vindicated as ‘Bazball’ pays off in Ashes thriller against Australia

By - Aug 01,2023 - Last updated at Aug 01,2023

Australia’s Pat Cummins plays a shot off the bowling of England’s Moeen Ali, caught by England’s captain Ben Stokes on day five of their fifth Ashes Test match in London on Monday (AFP photo by Adrian Dennis)

LONDON — England captain Ben Stokes stuck to his guns despite criticism of his fearless “Bazball” approach and feels vindicated after his side levelled the Ashes series on a dramatic final day.

Australia was well-placed at 264-3, chasing a mammoth 384 to win, and even had they come away with just a draw, that would have been enough to secure a 2-1 series success.

But instead they suffered a dramatic collapse after a lengthy rain delay on the fifth day at The Oval. 

Stuart Broad took the final two wickets as England won by 49 runs to pull level at 2-2.

England started the series against Australia confident their gung-ho approach would work even against the newly crowned world Test champions.

They had good reason to be upbeat, with an impressive record of 11 wins in 13 matches since Stokes had teamed up with coach Brendon McCullum, after whom Bazball is named.

From the moment Zak Crawley hit the first ball of the Ashes for four at Edgbaston, it was apparent England had no intention of changing their formula despite the challenge posed by Australia’s pace attack.

But while the fans have thrilled to England’s approach at packed grounds, Stokes has been criticised for not applying the brakes at crucial moments.

He raised eyebrows by declaring in the first innings of the first Test at Edgbaston when England were 393-8 with half an hour’s play left, leaving Joe Root high and dry on 118 not out in a match they ultimately lost.

England were criticised for falling for Australia’s hooking trap in the second Test at Lord’s when they were well-placed to take control.

Ben Duckett bullishly came out and said the team did not regret taking on Australia’s short-ball challenge, despite the disappointment of falling for 98.

“It’s the way we play our cricket,” he said. “If we went into our shells and got bombed out it would be totally against the way we play.”

 

‘Stupid cricket’

 

But former England captain Michael Vaughan described it as “stupid Test match cricket”.

Australia went on to win that match by 43 runs, despite Stokes’s heroic 155 in England’s second innings, to go 2-0 up in the series.

The home side won a nail-biter at Headingley by three wickets and would almost certainly have levelled the series at Old Trafford without a deluge in Manchester after Crawley’s stunning 189 off 182 balls.

That would have set up the fifth and final Test at The Oval for a perfect conclusion, turning it into a one-match shootout.

A clatter of unnecessary wickets on Saturday meant Australia’s target in London was less than it might have been but ultimately it did not matter as England roared back to win.

Stokes, speaking in the aftermath of victory, said England had been “very successful” with Bazball but he was not surprised to face pushback.

“Criticism is part and parcel of everything you do,” he said. 

“But obviously the most important views and the most important opinions that we view and that I view as a leader are the opinions of the people around me, people who I’m trying to speak to, to get the output that I seek. 

“When you see performances, particularly in this series, that’s the vindication... the most important people you worry about are in your dressing room.”

Former England captain Nasser Hussain, who suffered the pain of defeat against Australia, said he had been torn over the current side’s approach.

“I have been in a quandary in this series,” he told Sky Sports. “I see the bigger picture of wanting to entertain but I have also seen the historical picture of ‘we used to get battered by this lot’.

“When you have an Australian down, keep them down. It is also about winning. Yes, entertain but win as well. England have just tightened it and got the right side of the line, to win and entertain.”

 

France’s Marchand, Australian swim stars lay down Olympic marker

By - Jul 31,2023 - Last updated at Jul 31,2023

France’s Leon Marchand poses with the best male swimmer award during the swimming event at the World Aquatics Championships in Fukuoka, Japan, on Sunday (AFP photo by Yuichi Yamazaki)

FUKUOKA, Japan — Leon Marchand’s performances at swimming’s world championships gave a tantalising glimpse of what he could achieve at next year’s Paris Olympics, while Australia’s stars will also be confident after an impressive display.

French sensation Marchand was irresistible in Fukuoka, winning three gold medals and breaking Michael Phelps’ long-standing 400m individual medley world record.

The 21-year-old cut a relaxed figure in and out of the pool, rarely looking flustered.

The Paris Olympics will be a different matter, with the expectations of the host nation cranked up to potentially overwhelming levels.

Marchand said he was “super-happy” with what he achieved in Japan, where he was named the competition’s top men’s swimmer.

“It’s not perfect, there are always things to improve,” he said.

“But I’m super-satisfied with what I’ve done this year.”

Australia’s Kaylee McKeown took the women’s MVP award after sweeping all three backstroke events.

She was one of several outstanding performers in an Australian team that tied their best world championships tally of 13 golds to top the medal table for the first time since 2001.

McKeown said the prize was a reward for “how well we’ve done as a collective as an Australian team”.

“For me, as proud as I am, I feel like I should have shared that with my teammates,” she said.

Australia’s Mollie O’Callaghan became the first woman ever to complete a 100m-200m freestyle world double, and won five gold medals overall.

The 19-year-old also played a part in four world records both individually and as a team, including setting a new mark in the women’s 200m freestyle.

Another Australian, Ariarne Titmus, won an epic women’s 400m freestyle final, outduelling American Katie Ledecky and Canadian Summer McIntosh in a world-record time.

Ledecky dusted herself down and went on to claim gold in both the 800m and 1500m freestyle, cementing her status as the most decorated woman in world championships history.

The 26-year-old has said she wants to compete at the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics and she is likely to be a force at the Paris Games before then.

 

Young Americans

 

Ledecky’s performances helped lift an American team that only really came alive late in the competition.

Ledecky believes young Americans like men’s 50m and 100m freestyle silver medallist Jack Alexy will learn from the experience.

“It’s a really young team — the things I’m hearing at the lunch table, dinner table, people are learning a lot,” said Ledecky.

“We want to be better next year in Paris so I think we’ll continue to encourage each other.”

China enjoyed a more successful world championships than last year in Budapest, where they won only one individual gold.

The Chinese claimed five in Fukuoka thanks largely to the performances of new breaststroke king Qin Haiyang.

Qin won all three breaststroke titles and will look to challenge Adam Peaty in Paris if the British swimmer returns to competition following a mental health break.

Romania’s David Popovici left empty-handed after arriving in Fukuoka as defending champion in men’s 100m and 200m freestyle. The 18-year-old insisted, however, he would “be just fine” at Paris 2024.

“After I take some time off for myself, clear my head, reflect on this very busy and weird year I’ve had, I’m going back in the pool,” he said.

“Fortunately for me, what hasn’t gone perfectly here is trainable.”

Lithuanian breaststroker Ruta Meilutyte enhanced her reputation with two golds and a world record.

Tunisia’s Ahmed Hafnaoui also claimed two titles and came close to beating Sun Yang’s 11-year-old world record in the men’s 1500m freestyle.

Then there was Canadian prodigy McIntosh, who lost her world record and missed out on a medal in the women’s 400m freestyle but still left with two world titles.

The 16-year-old won the women’s 200m butterfly and 400m individual medley, and said she had “learned so much strategically” from the competition.

“It’s always good to get positive and negative feedback on how I can improve my races,” she said.

 

Colombia stuns Germany at Women’s World Cup

By - Jul 30,2023 - Last updated at Jul 30,2023

SYDNEY — Colombia scored a 97th-minute winner to stun Germany 2-1 on a night of Women’s World Cup drama on Sunday which also saw Norway and Switzerland into the last 16 but co-hosts New Zealand dumped out in tears.

Germany smashed Morocco 6-0 in its opener to underline why they were among the pre-tournament favourites, along with Spain and England, to snatch away the United States’ crown.

But they came crashing back down to earth at the hands of a Colombia side inspired by 18-year-old Linda Caicedo and roared on by the majority of a rowdy 40,000 crowd in Sydney.

The Real Madrid attacker scored one of the best goals of the tournament so far, darting past two Germany defenders before curling the ball into the top corner to open the scoring.

Germany thought it had salvaged a point in the 89th minute when skipper Alexandra Popp defied the whistles to score from the penalty spot.

But with a pulsating game that deep into stoppage time appeared destined for a draw, Manuela Vanegas popped up to head home from close range and put Colombia on the verge of the last 16.

“Germany is a world power, that’s a reality, but Colombia has been making great strides and today Colombia is a world power,” said the defender Vanegas.

“I dreamed of scoring a goal in a World Cup, I knew it was going to come and I decided to do it for today’s game.”

Going into the last round of group matches, Colombia are top of Group H on six points, Germany and Morocco have three and South Korea have zero.

Germany’s fate is still in its own hands when they face the Koreans next, with Colombia against Morocco.

Morocco won a Women’s World Cup match for the first time after Ibtissam Jraidi struck early to give them a 1-0 victory over South Korea.

In the match, Moroccan defender Nouhaila Benzina became the first player to wear a hijab at the Women’s World Cup.

 

Norway through, New Zealand out

 

Norway and Switzerland both emerged out of an excruciatingly tight Group A.

Former champions Norway thrashed the Philippines 6-0 in Auckland to squeeze into the last 16 on goal difference from New Zealand.

A full house in Dunedin saw the co-hosts held 0-0 by a stubborn Switzerland as the Football Ferns bowed out of their home tournament in tears.

The 1995 champions Norway needed a win and they did it in style against World Cup debutants the Philippines, which itself was still in with a chance of reaching the knockouts.

Sophie Roman Haug scored a hat-trick as the Philippines’ fairytale journey came to a shuddering halt.

With Norway well ahead, New Zealand now needed to beat Switzerland.

The hosts had the better of the first half with a string of chances, the pick of which saw forward Jacqui Hand rattle the post on 24 minutes.

As Norway chalked up the goals in Auckland, the New Zealanders upped the intensity, knowing only a win would be good enough to advance.

But the goal they so desperately needed never came.

“There are a lot of tears out there, but they should be so proud to finish on four points,” captain Ali Riley said.

Australia wait on Kerr

 

On Monday, Australia will hope to avoid the same fate as their co-hosts.

The Matildas must beat Olympic champions Canada to guarantee a place in the last 16 but are still sweating on their skipper and talismanic striker Samantha Kerr.

She has declared herself available after a calf injury but it remains to be seen how much of a part she plays.

“Everyone involved in sport knows that with calf injuries it’s one thing that you’re available, but there’s also risk when you come back from a muscle injury,” said Australia’s coach Tony Gustavsson.

Also in Group B, surprise-package Nigeria need just to avoid defeat against already-eliminated Ireland to progress.

Former champions Japan and title contenders Spain meet to decide who tops Group C with both already into the last 16.

 

Verstappen makes light of Spa penalty to secure eighth straight win

By - Jul 30,2023 - Last updated at Jul 30,2023

Red Bull Racing’s Dutch driver Max Verstappen celebrates with his trophy on the podium after the Formula One Belgian Grand Prix in Spa-Francorchamps on Sunday (AFP photo by Kenzo Tribouillard)

SPA-FRANCORCHAMPS, Belgium — Max Verstappen made light of a five-place grid penalty to reel off an eighth consecutive victory for his invincible Red Bull team at the Belgian Grand Prix on Sunday.

The defending double world champion and runaway series leader came home 22.305 seconds ahead of teammate and nearest title rival Sergio Perez. 

Pole-sitter Charles Leclerc was third for Ferrari ahead of Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton who clocked the fastest lap. 

It was Red Bull’s record-extending 13th win in succession, and their fifth one-two of the season.

Verstappen, who completed a hat-trick of Belgian wins, can now draw level with Sebastian Vettel’s record of nine straight wins set in 2013 at his home Dutch Grand Prix next month. 

He said: “It’s a new spot, that’s for sure — P6. I knew that we had a great car. It was just about surviving turn one.

“We made all the right moves.”

Perez, who led for much of the early part of the race, said: “It was a good race for the team. We had a great start, to get through Charles, and I was doing my own race — but Max came through pretty fast on the second stint. There was nothing I could do.”

Leclerc said: “It was pretty good for us in terms of pace, but looking at Red Bull we have a lot of work to do.”

Two-time champion Fernando Alonso finished fifth for Aston Martin ahead of George Russell in the second Mercedes, McLaren’s Lando Norris, Esteban Ocon of Alpine and Lance Stroll in the second Aston Martin. Yuki Tsunoda was 10th for Alpha Tauri. 

The race began under grey skies, but in dry conditions as Leclerc led from pole into La Source hairpin where, after a decent start, McLaren’s Oscar Piastri was squeezed into the wall by Sainz and after limping slowly on the Australian rookie pulled up to retire at the exit of Fagnes chicane. 

By then, Perez had blasted past Leclerc on Kemmel Straight, a show of power to take the lead. 

Behind him, Verstappen was swiftly up to fourth from sixth, his starting slot after taking a five-place penalty for a new gearbox. 

It was clear Red Bull had superior handling and pace and on lap nine Verstappen eased past Leclerc into Les Combes. It meant Perez had his team-mate in his mirrors before they had run 10 laps. 

 

‘Use your head’

 

After a flurry of pit stops Verstappen chose to attack on his new medium tyres and on lap 17 swept past Perez on Kemmel Straight and promptly clocked a fastest lap before rain began to fall.

“It is raining quite a lot,” said Verstappen, who survived a big wobble at the bottom of Eau Rouge. 

The anticipated 10-minute shower eased after only five, enabling Verstappen to pull clear by 5.3 seconds while Leclerc held a 3.5-second buffer on Hamilton. 

By lap 30, Verstappen led by 27.5 seconds, gifting the Dutchman a comfortable second stop as the sun broke out.

He re-joined with an 8.5 seconds’ advantage for his final stint en route to the flag only to be reprimanded by his race engineer Gianpiero Lambiase. “You used a lot of the tyre on the out lap, Max. Not sure that was sensible.” 

The Dutchman remained silent, but responded with a fastest lap, a full second quicker than any other, in 1:48.922. “I’d ask you to use your head a bit more,” said the engineer, anxious about serious tyre degradation. 

Verstappen took little notice, pulled away by a second a lap to storm to another supreme triumph and what seems to be an inevitable third drivers’ title.

 

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