Kate Waugh has been a chunk of the Huge Britain team for the supreme piece of 10 years already, no topic handiest turning 24 earlier this year.
A conventional medal winner at championship occasions by the whole time – extra on that below – Waugh carried out potentially the most important success of her career to this level, when a scoot victory in Abu Dhabi in November 2022 seen her become the World Triathlon U23 Champion.
Kate became once racing this previous weekend on the Arena Games Triathlon Finals in London, and while we had been there we spoke to her about that U23 success, her career to this level, the challenges of Paris 2024 qualification and so mighty extra.
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Championship performer
About a months on, we needed to birth with that winning day at Yas Marina. Success is by no method guaranteed, but in this case, it became once completely the goal. The handiest goal.
“It became once my main goal for the year. I’d were disappointed with anything else as antagonistic to gold because it became once one thing I’d written down as my supreme goal of the year. It became once feeling to construct that and become a World Champion. It became once one thing I’d dreamed of for a no doubt very long time, so it became once no doubt particular.
“It became once a colossal early birth, I don’t think I slept in any admire – I rob into consideration being wide awake at 3:40 a.m. and then getting up at ten previous four! It became once reasonably soft when we raced, perhaps starting to warmth up in the direction of the stop of the escape, nevertheless it wasn’t too wicked, especially relative to what I became once looking out ahead to.”
[Photo credit: Janos M Schmidt / World Triathlon]
Spherical seven years ago now, I interviewed Kate quickly after she gained the silver medal on the World Junior Duathlon Championships in Aviles, Spain. The last decade has viewed her constantly feature on many podiums at European and World Championship occasions, across extra than one codecs, by the Early life, Junior and U23 ranks.
It’s constantly a good signal when an athlete can seemingly make their supreme on the supreme occasions, and clearly they give extra level of curiosity and motivation for Waugh.
“I feel I’ve constantly viewed myself as the roughly athlete that can constantly manufacture in these eventually races. I don’t know if it’s good because I give myself a kick up the bum in practising in the lead up, but I constantly feel like when I even like these desires of the mammoth races, I good no doubt roughly know when to knuckle down in my practising. I’m no doubt good ample with about a of the titles and the medals that I even like, and hope to continue on that sort.”
Kate’s World and European Championship medal series:
2016 World U23/Junior Blended Personnel Relay Championship – Silver
2016 World Junior Duathlon Championship – Silver
2016 European Junior Blended Personnel Relay Championship – Gold
2015 European Early life Relay Championship – Silver
2014 European Early life Relay Championship – Gold
Shifting, motivation and adapting to commerce
It’s no longer good by the pattern ranks that Waugh has stumbled on success, with extra than one World Triathlon Cup podiums (including Bergen last year), leading to a first season of WTCS racing all over 2022. These occasions integrated 12th location finishes in both Hamburg and Cagliari. Sitting twenty fifth in the World Triathlon Rankings on the time of writing, what’s on her time table for the year ahead?
“I feel I’m going to strive to throw myself into the World Series this year and good get as mighty trip as I’m able to. I’m no longer an Beneath-23, mixing with the mammoth ladies, so if I like to salvage some capabilities on the stop of the year I’ll potentially conception to construct some World Cups.
Kate Waugh Leeds WTCS [Photo credit: World Triathlon / Ben Lumley]
“I’ve good moved practising groups, practising below Paulo Sousa now in an world squad, so as that’s been a mammoth scoot. I’d be lying if I said it hadn’t been a strive against to get ancient to living overseas and practising with a peculiar neighborhood. I feel off the support of U23 Worlds I good struggled for motivation a chunk – I threw all the pieces into that – so I’m good trying to rob my time with this year, and know that it’s going to be a long year as neatly, and good hope that I’m able to manufacture in these races that I’m focusing on.
“I’m essentially based in Monte Gordo in the intervening time [Ed. in Portugal], and can just be there until mid-Would possibly presumably perhaps, and then will seemingly be practising in Font Romeu in the summer in the lead-in to a pair of the mammoth races like the take a look at tournament. The likes of Taylor Spivey, Miriam Casillas, Claire Michel, Yuko Takahashi are all in the neighborhood, so it’s a no doubt nice squad, a no doubt nice neighborhood of girls and about a lads too who’re racing here this day, so the vibes are just.
“It’s good been a mammoth commerce – I’m playing it, so good trying to get into the drift of it. I’m a chunk of a house chicken, so it’s been a mammoth commerce.”
In reward of Huge League
Having raced the elephantine Huge League Triathlon Championship Series as piece of Personnel Sharks in 2022, does a return to the brief-titillating SLT format feature in her plans for what’s going to be one other busy year?
“With out a doubt. I completely loved racing the Championship Series last year and I carried out Tenth, so it’s positively given me extra motivation to perhaps get into top-five vary this year. I’m no doubt angry to be doing that every other time this year in about a months time.
“I’m a formidable believer that Huge League racing possibilities are you’ll perhaps perhaps’t review it to practising. It’s colossal rapid, colossal onerous, and when you compose a mistake you truly pay for it. I feel it no doubt primes and dials you for WTCS racing and I feel numerous us who escape the Huge League sequence, we escape support-to-support weekends with WTCS and seem to fabricate reasonably mighty, so I feel that’s a testomony to how Huge League racing can prime you and rapid-tune you as an athlete.”
Photo: Darren Wheeler – That Cameraman/SuperLeague
Hamburg recollections, Olympic desires
While Waugh ended the season as U23 World Champion, it became once removed from the supreme highlight of the 2022 season. In Hamburg, Waugh brought dwelling to the gold medal a youthful Huge Britain Blended Relay squad to WTCS success, in what became once an exhilarating and great escape.
“I feel all of us had been no doubt blown away that we managed to get. All of us said we are a younger team and that a top-five would were a huge show for us. I feel we had been all a chunk terrorized to be correct that we managed to get.
“Being the final leg, it became once such and honour and to shocking the line in first location and show that every the onerous work that every four of us had done. That became once colossal particular, I’ll by no method neglect that day.”
Kate Waugh helps Huge Britain get Blended Relay at WTCS Hamburg in 2022 [Photo credit: World Triathlon]
With the likes of Georgia Taylor-Brown, Beth Potter, Sophie Coldwell, and Jess Learmonth good four of the seemingly contenders for Huge Britain’s Paris 2024 squad, Waugh is neatly attentive to the challenges ahead if Olympic more than a few is a goal. She’s up for the drawl of affairs though.
“I’d be lying if I said I’d be reasonably cushy good looking out at an Olympics scoot by and no longer being there. Like every Olympics that comes, I are looking out out for to be as shut as I’m able to to getting myself on the team. I positively haven’t written myself off, and for that I’m working onerous to compose that the predominant level of curiosity of my year.
“If it occurs it occurs, and that is at probability of be amazing. I even like other issues planned if it doesn’t scoot to region, that I’m able to plunge support on one thing else as neatly. I even like to stamp that I’m a younger athlete and in the intervening time GB, especially in the females’s aspect, is reasonably packed.
“It’s going to bloody onerous to compose that team!”
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In today’s fitness world, where monotonous gym routines quickly lose their spark and motivation often disappears as fast as a typical New Year’s resolution, one competition has broken through the clutter: Hyrox. This international event fuses endurance running with grueling functional workouts, evolving from a niche gathering into a worldwide obsession that now draws hundreds of thousands of participants across the globe.
The concept is brilliantly simple yet brutally effective: eight 1-kilometer runs, each followed by one of eight demanding workout stations. Athletes tackle sled pushes, rowing, burpee broad jumps, sandbag lunges, wall balls, farmer’s carries, and more. On paper it sounds punishing—and it usually feels that way, but the surprisingly high finish rates prove the format strikes the perfect balance: tough enough to test limits, accessible enough for determined participants to conquer.
Its global standardization is a game-changer. The exact same course and stations appear in every city London, New York, Singapore, Dubai, you name it. This consistency allows competitors to directly compare times, splits, rankings, and personal bests across continents, seasons, and years. In our data-obsessed fitness culture, those tangible metrics become powerful fuel for ongoing improvement.
Hyrox has also perfectly captured the rise of the hybrid athlete. It shatters old divisions—runner vs. lifter, endurance vs. strength demanding excellence in both cardiovascular capacity and muscular power. By steering clear of highly technical skills like complex gymnastics or elite Olympic lifts, it keeps the entry barrier reasonable while still offering serious competitive depth. Elite pros and complete beginners share the same start line (in separate divisions), facing identical challenges.
The experience goes far beyond the workout. Hyrox events are full-on spectacles: massive indoor arenas filled with booming music, vivid branding, roaring crowds, and spectators close enough to feel the energy. It’s often described as a fitness festival rather than just a race. Finish-line photos flood social media, volunteers keep spirits high, and a powerful sense of community emerges from shared exhaustion and triumph.
The lifestyle aspect is growing too. Athletes now plan “fitness travel” around the race calendar, turning weekends in Europe or city trips in the U.S. into purposeful adventures. Because the format never changes, training and expectations travel seamlessly—no surprises, just the same test anywhere.
Inclusivity is another cornerstone. From top-tier professionals to competitors in their 60s, 70s, and beyond, plus dedicated adaptive divisions, Hyrox truly lives its promise: this is for every body capable of training for it. That shared struggle and collective celebration forge unusually strong loyalty.
The brand’s growth shows no signs of slowing. Participation numbers keep climbing, prize money is increasing, and serious discussions about potential Olympic inclusion are already circulating in fitness circles. Regardless of whether that dream comes true, Hyrox has already redefined what large-scale, inclusive fitness competition can be.
In an era craving trackable progress, genuine community, and experiences worth sharing, Hyrox delivers on all fronts. It’s undeniably brutal. But for the thousands already registering for their next event while their muscles are still recovering—it’s unmistakably addictive.
The United States dramatically ended a 46-year drought by claiming men’s Olympic ice hockey gold at the 2026 Winter Games in Milano Cortina.
In an intense gold-medal showdown at the Milano Santagiulia Ice Hockey Arena, Team USA edged out archrivals Canada 2-1 in overtime, clinching the final gold of the Games in thrilling fashion.
Jack Hughes emerged as the hero, scoring the decisive goal just 101 seconds into 3-on-3 overtime, roughly 1:41 in off a feed from Zach Werenski. The puck slipped through Jordan Binnington’s five-hole, igniting euphoric celebrations on the American bench. Hughes, who had lost a tooth earlier in the game, delivered a moment that will forever stand alongside the iconic “Miracle on Ice” from 1980.
This victory marked the first time the U.S. men had won Olympic hockey gold on foreign soil, adding extra significance to the triumph abroad.
Canada, the pre-game favorites, controlled much of the play and outshot the Americans 42-26 overall (with Hellebuyck making 41 saves). They pressed relentlessly but were thwarted by missed chances, including a golden opportunity from Nathan MacKinnon and a stellar close-range denial of Mitch Marner by Connor Hellebuyck, whose goaltending brilliance proved crucial.
The U.S. opened the scoring early through Matt Boldy’s dazzling individual effort, weaving through defenders to beat Binnington. Canada leveled late in the second period via Cale Makar’s sharp finish amid sustained pressure, but neither side could find a winner in the third despite Canada’s territorial edge.
The rivalry was amplified by an electric, predominantly pro-Canadian crowd that booed the Americans pre-game. With NHL stars back in Olympic action for the first time since 2014, the quality was elite throughout.
Canada suffered a major blow when Captain Sidney Crosby was sidelined by a knee injury, his leadership sorely missed in critical moments.
In a poignant touch, the victorious U.S. players honored the late Johnny Gaudreau, tragically killed in 2024, by carrying his jersey during celebrations, infusing the triumph with deep emotion.
This gold helped the United States secure 12 golds overall, placing second in the medal table. For Canada, the loss capped a tournament of high expectations turned to heartbreak.
On a night filled with tension, grit, and historic resonance, American men’s ice hockey reclaimed its place at the top of the Olympic podium.
Padel isn’t merely surging in popularity; it’s rewriting the global playbook for sport, community, and capital. What began as a niche pastime has evolved into a cultural and economic force, stretching from Dubai’s desert courts to Europe’s bustling clubs and, now, America’s rapidly accelerating Padel boom. With more than 35 million players worldwide, the sport has entered a new era of mainstream momentum. At the heart of this transformation stands Marcos del Pilar, the visionary many now refer to as the Godfather of Padel in the USA.
A serial entrepreneur, investor, and one of the most respected global Padel consultants, Marcos has spent more than 30 years building, teaching, and scaling the sport. Today, he is the expert investors call before breaking ground on a Padel facility, the advisor federations depend on to set standards, and one of the strategists whose work helped push Padel into the American mainstream.
His best-selling book THE SECRET CODE OF PADEL reveals the first complete blueprint behind the sport’s meteoric rise, unpacking the mindset, systems, and business frameworks that have turned Padel into an international cultural and economic force. For the first time, he is revealing the formula that shaped the modern Padel era.
Cracking the Code: Why Padel Became a Global Force
According to Marcos, Padel’s strength comes from a rare combination of accessibility, community engagement, and scalable growth. As he explains, “Padel is more than a sport. It is a platform for human connection, growth, and opportunity.”
Unlike traditional racquet sports, Padel is easy to learn, highly social, and thrives in compact facilities with strong revenue potential. This has attracted entrepreneurs, private clubs, celebrities, athletes, and institutional investors. But its rapid rise in the United States needed more than enthusiasm. It required leadership, structure, and someone who understood the sport from every angle.
One of those was Marcos del Pilar.
The Architect Behind America’s Padel Revolution
When Marcos arrived in the USA in 2017, Padel was almost virtually unknown. Courts were limited, investors were hesitant, and the ecosystem lacked standards, trained coaches, and infrastructure. The resistance was significant, but Marcos saw a future others could not yet imagine.
His leadership portfolio reflects one of the most comprehensive resumes in modern sports development:
Former President of the United States Padel Association (USPA)
Head of Padel with the RSPA (Racquet Sports Professionals Association), certifying thousands of professionals
Padel Consultant for Tennis Australia and the United States Tennis Association (USTA), and several international investment groups.
Recipient of multiple industry awards, including RSPA Master Professional, President’s Award, and Professional of the Year
Serial entrepreneur and investor in the Padel ecosystem, and partner of some of the biggest Padel ventures in the USA.
Co-Founder, and former CEO and Commissioner of the Pro Padel League
Team USA Head Coach at the 2021 Qatar and 2022 Dubai Padel World Championships.
Ranked Top Number 3 among the Top 50 Most Influential Persons in the New Padel World by international media outlets.
Marcos also played a critical role in bringing the first-ever Padel World Championship to the United States in Las Vegas in 2022, uniting more than 600 players from 32 countries. Beyond executive leadership, he has shaped the sport’s educational and professional frameworks by authoring and leading the RSPA’s worldwide certification program, as well as numerous resources for coaches, investors, and clubs.
His book, THE SECRET CODE OF PADEL, reveals the proven principles, strategic insights, and mindset shifts that shaped the sport’s global rise while offering powerful lessons for business, leadership, and personal transformation.
The Hidden Formula: Vision, Mindset, Ecosystem Building
Marcos believes that Padel’s expansion is driven by a mindset he refers to as the secret code. The code includes:
Believing in a vision before anyone else can see it
Making bold and strategic long-term decisions
Building sustainable Padel ecosystems rather than simply building courts
Creating opportunities for communities, investors, and future leaders
Using sport as a vehicle for growth, impact, and transformation
As he shares, “Success begins with one decision. You must believe in your vision even before the world understands it.”
From Consultant to Global Catalyst
MARCOS DEL PILAR, Global Padel Consultant and Professional Padel Coaching, has now become the premier strategic advisory platform for the sport’s global expansion. His hybrid model includes:
Facility development and ROI consulting
Strategic business planning for clubs and federations
Coaching certification and professional education
Leadership development and workshops
Brand partnerships, marketing strategy, and keynote speaking
Advisory roles with major investors and global organizations
He is widely regarded as the go-to expert for anyone entering the global Padel industry.
A Vision for the Future of Padel
Marcos aims to make Padel one of the world’s largest sports, especially in the American market. His vision includes thousands of high-quality facilities across the country, unified education and coaching standards, stronger international collaboration, and a thriving ecosystem where investors, communities, and athletes grow together.
As he says, “If you want to change an industry, you begin by changing yourself and people’s mindsets.” And through Padel, he is doing exactly that.
As the sport accelerates toward becoming a multi-billion-dollar global industry, one thing is clear. The future of Padel, particularly in America, will continue to be shaped by the vision and leadership of Marcos del Pilar.
The Godfather of Padel has revealed the code. Now, the world is ready to play.
A tense standoff has developed between the International Cricket Council (ICC) and the Bangladesh Cricket Board (BCB) over Bangladesh’s participation in the men’s T20 World Cup 2026, co-hosted by India and Sri Lanka from February 7 to March 8.
Reports indicate that the ICC has turned down the BCB’s plea to relocate Bangladesh’s group-stage matches from India, following concerns raised by the BCB about player safety amid strained bilateral relations. During a recent virtual discussion, the ICC reportedly emphasised that Bangladesh must fulfil its scheduled fixtures in India or face potential forfeiture of points.
The BCB, however, has pushed back, insisting no direct threats of forfeiture were made in talks and maintaining their stance on security issues. No official statements have been released by the ICC or the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI), leaving the matter unresolved with the tournament approaching.
Bangladesh, in Group C, are due to play three initial matches in Kolkata—against West Indies (February 7), Italy (February 9), and England (February 14)—with their final group fixture against Nepal in Mumbai. Ongoing preparations underscore the urgency for resolution.
The controversy stems from a related IPL incident, where the BCCI directed Kolkata Knight Riders to release Bangladesh pacer Mustafizur Rahman from his INR 9.2 crore contract for the 2026 season, citing unspecified “recent developments.” Mustafizur was the only Bangladeshi player picked in the auction, and his release—without a formal Governing Council meeting—heightened the BCB’s apprehensions about player treatment and security.
With less than a month until the event, the lack of consensus is drawing attention to ICC governance, tournament planning, and board diplomacy. Potential outcomes could influence future venue dispute resolutions in ICC tournaments.
As of now, Bangladesh’s fixtures in India stand unchanged, but further discussions in the near term will be pivotal to avoid escalation or disruption.
With the ICC Men’s T20 World Cup 2026 set to begin in early February, co-hosted by India and Sri Lanka, the Bangladesh Cricket Board (BCB) has declared that its national team will not travel to India under the current circumstances. The board has officially asked the International Cricket Council (ICC) to move all of Bangladesh’s group-stage fixtures to venues outside India, primarily citing safety and security concerns for players and officials amid strained bilateral relations.
The decision follows an emergency BCB board meeting and comes on the heels of the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) directing Kolkata Knight Riders (KKR) to release Bangladeshi pacer Mustafizur Rahman from his IPL 2026 contract. Although not explicitly linked by either board, the timing has fueled speculation in cricket circles, with some Bangladeshi officials viewing it as indicative of broader tensions.
Bangladesh, placed in Group C alongside England, West Indies, Italy, and Nepal, was originally scheduled to play three matches at Eden Gardens in Kolkata and one at Wankhede Stadium in Mumbai. Shifting these games would involve complex rearrangements, including venue availability in Sri Lanka (where Pakistan’s matches are already allocated due to similar geopolitical issues), security protocols, and broadcasting logistics—all with limited time before the tournament opener on February 7.
The ICC has yet to respond publicly, but sources suggest contingency plans are being discussed. Precedents like hybrid models in recent events (e.g., India’s Champions Trophy games shifted due to Pakistan relations) could influence the outcome, though relocating one team’s fixtures mid-preparation is rare.
For the Bangladeshi squad, training continues amid uncertainty, with emphasis on player welfare. Indian venues remain prepared as primary hosts, but any schedule changes could impact travel and rest for multiple teams.
This episode underscores how geopolitical frictions can disrupt major international tournaments, challenging the ICC to uphold fairness, practicality, and the event’s overall integrity. A swift resolution is anticipated in the coming days to maintain momentum for the global spectacle.
England captain Ben Stokes has expressed strong support for head coach Brendon McCullum to stay in his role, despite the team’s loss of the Ashes series in Australia.
Stokes and McCullum took charge together in 2022. This tour was seen as a key test of their leadership, but England lost the first three Tests, conceding the series early. They bounced back with a victory in the fourth Test at Melbourne, their first win on Australian soil in nearly 15 years, with the fifth and final Test set to begin in Sydney on Sunday (23:30 GMT Saturday).
Both Stokes and McCullum have contracts running until 2027 and have indicated their desire to continue beyond this tour.
While Stokes is widely regarded as England’s ideal captain and likely to lead into the home summer, questions may arise over McCullum’s position and that of cricket director Rob Key.
“I have no doubt that Brendon and I are the right duo to lead this team forward in the coming years,” Stokes said.
When asked if he and the New Zealand-born McCullum form an inseparable partnership, Stokes added: “I struggle to picture anyone else stepping in to guide this side from its current position to greater successes.”
This series defeat continues England’s poor record in away Ashes contests, with their last triumph in Australia dating back to 2010-11, the only success there since 1986.
Past heavy losses in Australia have often triggered major overhauls in England’s setup; Stokes and McCullum were appointed after a 4-0 thrashing four years earlier.
“We haven’t won an Ashes series here since 2010-11, and reactions to those failures have led to changes that haven’t ultimately solved the problem,” Stokes noted. “There are decision-makers above me. Previous tours haven’t gone well, but repeating the drastic resets of the past would likely land us in the same spot again.”
McCullum is scheduled to coach England at next month’s T20 World Cup in India and Sri Lanka, so any review of his role is expected to wait until after that event.
Stokes added that he would expect to be involved in discussions about potential leadership changes.
“No one knows if changes are coming, but we’re both committed to continuing our work,” he said.
Under Stokes and McCullum, England started strongly, winning 10 of their first 11 Tests, though results have levelled off since. In their last 34 Tests, they have 16 wins, 16 losses, and two draws, without securing a major five-Test series win against Australia or India.
McCullum took on oversight of England’s white-ball sides at the start of 2025. Since then, the Test team has won just four of 10 matches, including a routine series victory over Zimbabwe in May.
Director Rob Key has suggested the pre-tour white-ball commitments in New Zealand hampered Ashes preparation, though he stood by the scheduling.
Stokes, however, dismissed concerns that McCullum’s expanded responsibilities have impacted the Test side.
“He’s handling both roles now, but it hasn’t affected our dynamic with the Test group at all,” Stokes said.
England have announced a 12-man squad for the Sydney Test, including spinner Shoaib Bashir and paceman Matthew Potts.
The team will make at least one change after fast bowler **Gus Atkinson** was ruled out with a hamstring injury sustained in Melbourne.
Bashir hasn’t played since July due to a finger injury suffered against India, while Potts last featured over a year ago against New Zealand in December 2024.
“He’s been around the squad,” Stokes said of Potts. “He made a strong early impression in Tests, but his role has evolved. With Gus sidelined, this creates an opening for someone new.”
Australia may make up to two adjustments, potentially bringing in specialist spinner Todd Murphy for seamer Jhye Richardson, and possibly swapping all-rounder Beau Webster for Cameron Green.
The 2025 Qatar Grand Prix delivered everything a Formula 1 season finale contender should: drama, razor-sharp strategy, high-stakes pressure, and a championship battle left wide open with just one race to go. Max Verstappen’s commanding victory at Lusail not only showcased his trademark racecraft but also revived his bid for the Drivers’ Championship, narrowing the gap to just 12 points behind leader Lando Norris. With Oscar Piastri only four points further back, the season now heads to Abu Dhabi with three drivers still mathematically in contention.
Verstappen’s Calculated Brilliance
Starting third behind a McLaren front-row lockout, Verstappen wasted no time asserting himself. He swept past Lando Norris at Turn 1, instantly slotting into second behind polesitter Oscar Piastri. But the defining moment came moments later when Nico Hulkenberg’s stranded Haas triggered an early Safety Car.
Red Bull executed what Verstappen would later call a “smart” and decisive strategy: they pitted immediately. McLaren, in contrast, kept both Piastri and Norris out, an error CEO Zak Brown would publicly concede as “the wrong decision.”
From there, Verstappen was clinical. Adhering to the FIA’s mandatory 25-lap tire limit, he managed two perfectly timed stops, maintained race-leading pace, and reclaimed track position with surgical precision. When Norris finally pitted and rejoined on fresh rubber, Verstappen breezed past him again, this time for the lead that would secure his “incredible” win.
The triumph was more than a race victory. It was a statement of intent: Verstappen is not done fighting.
McLaren’s Miscalculation Costs Crucial Points
For McLaren, the weekend was a near-perfect opportunity turned into a missed milestone. Their pace was undeniable, with Piastri on pole and Norris alongside him, both boasting strong Sprint results (Piastri first, Norris third). But in Formula 1, timing is everything.
By choosing not to pit under the Safety Car, McLaren forced their drivers into a compromised strategy, losing invaluable track position as the race unfolded. Piastri’s raw pace salvaged second place, but he finished 15 seconds behind Verstappen. Norris, meanwhile, struggled in the mid-stint traffic, eventually finishing fourth after a late gain due to a rival’s mistake.
The cost? Norris missed the chance to clinch the championship one race early. Instead, he heads to Abu Dhabi just 12 points clear of Verstappen and 16 points ahead of his own teammate. The internal dynamics at McLaren will be fascinating to watch; team harmony under the pressure of a three-way title fight is never guaranteed.
Williams Shines with a Surprise Podium
While the spotlight fell on the championship contenders, Williams quietly authored one of the weekend’s most compelling stories. Carlos Sainz delivered a superb drive from seventh to third, capitalizing on McLaren’s vulnerability and overtaking Norris to secure Williams’ second podium of the season.
This result marked a significant turnaround from their performance at the same venue the previous year. “To get a podium here, of all places, was a surprise,” Sainz admitted. For a team fighting to re-establish itself as a consistent midfield force, this was a breakthrough.
Ferrari’s Troubles Deepen
If Williams over-delivered, Ferrari did the opposite. The team struggled from the opening practice sessions, unable to dial in the car on a circuit that exposed their aerodynamic weaknesses. Sprint qualifying was especially painful. Lewis Hamilton failed to escape Q1 for the second consecutive weekend, while Charles Leclerc lost positions in the Sprint after starting ninth.
The Grand Prix brought little relief. Leclerc salvaged eighth thanks to incidents up ahead, but he never looked competitive. Hamilton, still searching for his first podium of the season, finished outside the points. Two poor weekends in a row leave Ferrari with more questions than answers heading into the finale.
Star Power Lights Up Lusail
True to Qatar’s reputation for spectacle, the paddock brimmed with global celebrities. Novak Djokovic presented the Sprint trophies. Football icons David Beckham, Rio Ferdinand, Steven Gerrard, and Gary Neville walked the grid. Serena Williams soaked in the pre-race energy. Heavy metal legends Metallica roamed the pit lane. And Kevin Hart waved the chequered flag to end the event, an appropriately dramatic finish to a dramatic race.
A Championship on a Knife’s Edge
The 2025 Qatar Grand Prix underscored the essence of championship-level Formula 1: strategy defines outcomes, pressure exposes teams, and one race can reshape everything. Verstappen’s win rekindles the title fight. McLaren’s strategic error tightens the race to the wire. Piastri remains the dark horse with nothing to lose.
As the paddock heads to Abu Dhabi for the showdown, one thing is clear: the 2025 title will not be won by raw speed alone, but by nerves, nuance, and flawless execution. The battle is far from over, and the finale promises to be unforgettable.
In a world where sports often mirror societal divides, women’s soccer emerges as a radiant sanctuary for the LGBTQ+ community. From rainbow-draped stadiums to queer-led festivals, the sport weaves threads of belonging, defiance, and unapologetic celebration. As global viewership surges, it stands not just as a game, but as a lifeline for those seeking visibility and solidarity.
From Stadiums to Festivals: Building Queer Spaces in the Beautiful Game
Picture this: a sun-drenched field in northern England, where players in Marge Simpson wigs and Sporty Spice outfits chase a ball under Pride flags fluttering like confetti. This is Ball Together Now (BTN), a 2022-founded festival that draws non-professional LGBTQ+ teams from across the UK for daytime matches and euphoric nighttime raves. Organizer Lois Kay beams, “I’ve never seen so many lesbians all in one tent!” BTN’s ethos is unyielding inclusion, explicitly welcoming trans and non-binary athletes in a sport still grappling with barriers elsewhere.
This electric energy spills into professional arenas. At Arsenal Women’s matches, fan Emily Calder, a lifelong devotee, finds a queer utopia. “Arsenal women’s games are the only place you’d find as many lesbians and queer women as you would at Pride!” she exclaims. Calder’s story is emblematic: alienated by the men’s game’s toxic undercurrents, she rediscovered soccer at the 2023 FIFA Women’s World Cup, drawn by its open-hearted crowds. Queer couples link arms in the stands, rainbow scarves swaying like a collective heartbeat. Events like Baller FC’s “Slaying the Field”—a 2025 UEFA Women’s Euros bash blending short films, arm-wrestling, and line dancing—further blur lines between pitch and party, filling voids left by shuttered LGBTQ+ nightlife spots. In London alone, over half of queer venues have vanished in two decades, making these soccer-fueled gatherings indispensable hubs for connection.
Out Stars Shining Bright: Visibility That Draws and Inspires
At the heart of this allure? A constellation of openly queer players who shatter silence. The 2025 Women’s Euros boasted at least 78 out athletes among 368, a staggering 21%, dwarfing global LGBTQ+ identification rates of just 9%, per a 2023 Ipsos survey. Power couples like USWNT icons Christen Press and Tobin Heath, or Arsenal’s Vivianne Miedema and Beth Mead, embody this boldness. Mead and Miedema even quipped about their on-pitch “rivalry” turning romantic, turning potential tension into tender lore.
Contrast this with men’s soccer’s shadows. No openly gay players grace the English Premier League or Ligue 1’s top tiers. Adelaide United’s Josh Cavallo, the sole out male pro in a major league, decries it as a “very toxic place,” haunted by death threats and slurs. Homophobic flares erupt routinely: Ligue 1 clubs fined for hiding anti-bigotry badges, a 2023 USMNT-Mexico clash halted by chants. Women’s soccer, however, flips the script. Calder notes, “There’s a shocking difference in the culture… so many out gay women players.” This visibility magnetizes newcomers; her queer friends, once soccer-averse, now flock to games as de facto Pride parades.
Across the Atlantic, the USWNT amplifies this. Amid Trump-era rollbacks on LGBTQ+ rights—from health funding cuts to bathroom bans—Megan Rapinoe led a defiant charge. Skipping a 2019 White House invite post-World Cup triumph, she declared queerness “intrinsic to the success” of her squad: “You can’t win a championship without gays on your team.” Allies like Ali Krieger echoed her, forging a legacy of vocal advocacy that fans like Ed Fox hail for sidestepping “machismo and toxic masculinity.”
Defiant Roots and a Boundless Horizon
Women’s soccer’s queer magnetism isn’t accidental, it’s forged in rebellion. Banned in England for 50 years on league grounds, outlawed in 1920s Canada, and stifled under Franco’s Spain until the 1970s, the sport has always thrived on society’s edges. This marginal history resonates with those challenging heteronormativity, birthing a culture of radical joy.
Today, as attendance skyrockets, Euros finals drawing millions, it battles fresh foes: pay inequities, online harassment, and inclusion growing pains. Yet, figures like Birmingham’s Flaming Foxes captain Laura Graham insist, “Women’s soccer feels like it has something for everyone.” BTN remains her “favorite weekend,” spawning enduring queer bonds beyond the bar scene.
As the game evolves, its LGBTQ+ embrace promises broader ripples. It counters isolation with community, bigotry with brilliance. In stadium roars and festival beats, women’s soccer isn’t just played, it’s lived, a testament to resilience that invites all to join the dance. For queer hearts worldwide, it’s more than a haven: it’s home.
For 28 years, Scotland had become experts in almost-there moments – play-offs lost on penalties, last-minute concessions, campaigns that crumbled when it mattered most. Then came one insane evening at Hampden Park that rewrote everything. A 4-2 win over Denmark turned a nation’s long-suppressed scream into pure, chaotic celebration.
It finished in storybook fashion: Kenny McLean picking the ball up on the halfway line deep into stoppage time and lobbing the keeper from 50 yards. He took off sprinting, arms aloft, chased by the entire team in scenes that looked more like a street party than the end of a World Cup qualifier. Fireworks exploded overhead, Scott McTominay sank to his knees, and an entire country finally breathed out.
A Qualifying Story Too Wild to be Normal
This campaign never did anything the easy way. Injuries, red cards, 90th-minute winners, tactical curveballs – every twist seemed designed to test Scottish hearts one more time. So of course, the decisive match had to be a roller-coaster.
Scott McTominay announced the night’s tone inside three minutes with a sensational overhead kick that ripped the roof off Hampden. He stood there, kissing his fingers to the sky, soaking in a noise he’ll never forget.
Denmark equalised. Scotland went ahead again. Denmark levelled again. With every swing, the old familiar dread crept in – here we go again. Except this time, Scotland refused to blink.
Robertson, McGinn, and the Weight of a Generation
Andy Robertson and John McGinn, both 31 and scarred by more failed qualifiers than most players endure in a lifetime, played like men who knew this might be the last dance. Afterwards in the tunnel they were the loudest, the most emotional – hugging everyone, roaring in disbelief, tears mixing with sweat. They’d carried the hope for years; now they could finally set it down.
Kieran Tierney’s beautiful second-half curler looked for a moment like it might be the goal that sent Scotland through. But the script still had one more outrageous page to turn.
Hampden Loses Its Mind
The crowd lived every kick: hands on heads one minute, embracing strangers the next. Even the press box supposedly a no-emotion zone erupted when McTominay scored; grown journalists jumping and shouting like teenagers.
Then came McLean’s impossible strike. The ball hung in the night sky, dropped perfectly over the stranded keeper and Hampden detonated. Craig Gordon, 42 years old and back for one last ride, just stood there with his gloves over his face, trying to take it in.
A Dream That Took 28 Years to Arrive
Most of this squad were kids or not even born the last time Scotland went to a World Cup in 1998. Now they’ll get to live it. For the older heads it’s the end of a lifetime’s waiting; for the youngsters it’s the beginning of something huge.
When the stadium emptied, Craig Gordon stayed on the pitch with his family, calmly taking photos while the echoes of euphoria still bounced around the stands.
After nearly three decades of hurt, Scotland are going to the World Cup again and they did it in a way no one will ever forget. Football, on nights like this, is everything.
In a bold move, Alpine has announced it will switch to Mercedesengines in 2026, ending a long chapter of partnership with Renault. This significant change in strategy will make Alpinethe fourth team to be powered by Mercedes engines, joining a growing list of teams to benefit from the German manufacturer’s expertise and performance.
The End of an Era: No More Renault Engines for Alpine
The announcement marks the end of Alpine’s reliance on Renault engines, which have powered the team since its rebranding in 2021. Despite several strong moments, including occasional podium finishes, the Renault engine has often struggled to keep up with the competition in the current generation of F1 regulations, introduced in 2014. For Alpine, the decision to shift to Mercedes power comes as a strategic move to enhance performance and adapt to the upcoming changes in F1 engine regulations.
Alpine to Become the Fourth Mercedes-Powered Team in 2026
This partnership with Mercedes means that from 2026, Alpine will be one of four teams powered by Mercedes engines. Currently, Mercedes supplies engines to three other teams, and with Alpine joining the fold, it solidifies Mercedes’ position as the dominant engine supplier in the sport. This move is seen as a potential game-changer for Alpine, who will now have access to Mercedes’ superior engineering and power, which could boost their competitiveness in the sport.
The partnership will see Alpine not only adopt Mercedes’ power units but also benefit from Mercedes’ gearboxes, ensuring the team has the complete package for the new generation of Formula 1 regulations. This shift is expected to significantly impact Alpine’s performance as they work toward becoming a leading contender in F1.
Why the Change?
For Alpine, the decision to no longer use Renault engines and instead switch to Mercedes power is rooted in a desire for greater performance and consistency. While Renault’s engine program has had its successes, Alpine has struggled to match the speed and reliability of competitors like Mercedes and Ferrariin recent seasons.
With the introduction of new F1 engine regulations in 2026, Alpine is looking to align itself with a supplier that can offer not only cutting-edge performance but also the engineering expertise needed to meet the evolving demands of the sport. Mercedes, with its proven track record of success and dominance in the hybrid era, is seen as the perfect fit for Alpine’s aspirations.
Looking Ahead: Alpine’s Future with Mercedes Power
As Alpine prepares to enter the 2026 season with Mercedes engines powering their cars, the team will no longer be burdened by the challenges of developing an engine internally. The shift will allow them to focus more on their chassis development and overall race strategy. With Mercedes providing a reliable and competitive engine, Alpine’s ambitions to climb the F1 ladder are likely to be accelerated.
This partnership is also part of a broader trend in Formula 1, where teams are increasingly relying on established, high-performance engine suppliers. With Mercedes now supplying engines to four teams, including Alpine, the manufacturer is solidifying its role as a key player in F1 for years to come.
The announcement that Alpine will switch to Mercedes engines in 2026 signals a new era for the team and the sport. By joining the ranks of the Mercedes-powered teams, Alpine aims to leverage Mercedes’ superior technology and engineering to bolster their performance on the grid. As the 2026 season approaches, all eyes will be on Alpine to see how their switch to Mercedes power shapes their future in Formula 1.