Schumacher Monaco accident was ‘one too many’ – Rosberg

F1 world champion Nico Rosberg believes Mick Schumacher’s crash in FP3 in Monaco was already “one accident too many” for the Haas rookie.

Schumacher suffered a big crash in the closing stages of last Saturday’s final practice session in Monaco, the young German losing control of his car as he exited casino Square.

The mistake left Haas with a costly repair bill but also sidelined Schumacher from qualifying as the VF-12 could not be repaired in time for Q1. Schumacher was nevertheless given a dispensation by the stewards to start the race the following day.

By most standards, the 22-year-old apprentice has acquitted himself well so far in his maiden season of F1, outpacing Haas teammate Nikita Mazepin – except at Monaco – and performing close to his Williams rivals in the lower tier of the field.

However, there have been a few mistakes along the way, including a mishap at Imola where Schumacher hit the barriers while warming his tyres on the damp track behind the safety car.

But Rosberg reckons that last Schumacher’s crash last weekend was already one too many for the young German.

“One accident is fine, but two is too many,” Rosberg told Sky Germany.

“As good as the season has been for him so far, this has been a major setback for him. The other rookies were better in Monte Carlo.”

Former F1 driver Ralf Schumacher was more lenient with his nephew, especially given the poor level of performance of his equipment.

“We all made mistakes,” said the six-time Grand Prix winner. “We should let him drive in peace. None of us have ever sat in a car as under-performing as Mick’s.”

    Read also: Hamilton and Rosberg ride the Mediterranean waves

Haas team boss Guenther Steiner put a price tag of between $300,000 and $500,000 on Schumacher’s Q1 crash, while the Italian also lamented his drivers’ absence from qualifying.

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“This is what these cars cost,” Steiner said. “It’s like I always said, the front wing alone is a hundred and fifty thousand.

“It’s always disappointing because the most important thing in Monte Carlo is qualifying and there’s not many a year. It’s one time only every year.

©Haas

“It’s so different, qualifying here – short track, a lot of traffic. I think if he could have done it, it’s just to get this confidence, how to move out of the way and all these things.

“He missed out on that which is never good. So it’s never good to miss something.

“But this for sure, next time, when he comes back he would’ve liked to have done it once before.”

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Whitney (gagnante de The Voice) malade : cette fois où elle a cru mourir…

Le 6 juin 2019, Whitney remportait la 8e saison de The Voice sur TF1. Une victoire inespérée pour la jeune femme de 19 ans qui a dû affronter quotidiennement la maladie, la fibromyalgie, en plus du stress de se produire sur scène devant des millions de Français !

Interrogée par nos confrères de Public, l’ex-Talent de l’équipe de Mika a évoqué les conséquences de sa maladie sur sa vie de tous les jours : “Par exemple, quand je suis couchée dans mon lit et que je veux me lever la nuit, je peux rester bloquée d’un seul coup. Si je bouge, je hurle de douleur. Dans ces moments-là, je pète un câble. Ma mère doit venir me parler, elle me détend, et ça passe. C’est le stress qui cause les crises.”

De ce fait, il est très compliqué pour la jeune femme – pour le moment – d’envisager de vivre seule. Si elle a déjà essayé l’an dernier, elle a malheureusement vécu une expérience traumatisante. “Je suis restée totalement paralysée chez moi, durant trois jours, sans pouvoir boire ni manger. Je ne pouvais bouger que les doigts. Mon téléphone était trop loin de moi pour que je puisse appeler. C’est mon meilleur ami qui, s’inquiétant que je ne réponde pas, est venu me secourir avec l’aide du gardien. (…) J’ai pensé que j’allais peut-être mourir là, d’une mort trop bête… En plus, mon ordi diffusait des reportages animaliers sur les girafes, je ne pouvais pas baisser le son, ça me cassait les oreilles“, a-t-elle raconté.

Au lendemain de sa victoire, la jeune femme qui avait devancé de très peu Clément de la team Soprano s’était exprimée auprès de Purepeople.com à propos de sa santé : “Samedi dernier, pour la demi-finale, j’ai fait la plus grosse crise que j’ai jamais faite. Je ne pouvais pas me lever, je ne pouvais pas m’asseoir… Ils m’ont amené un fauteuil roulant, je n’en voulais pas parce que j’avais trop honte, du coup, j’ai gardé ma béquille pour faire les quelques déplacements. Lors des répétitions, rien que le fait d’être debout, ça me faisait tourner de l’oeil. Je n’aurais pas été dans The Voice, je serais rentrée chez moi. Je n’étais pas en état de subir ça, avec les lumières, je n’entendais plus rien… Un gros délire.”

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Sanders, Murphy Introduce Legislation to Allow College Athletes to Unionize

Declaring it “a civil rights issue,” Sens. Chris Murphy and Bernie Sanders on Thursday introduced legislation to allow athletes at public and private universities to collectively bargain and form unions within athletic conferences. 

The College Athlete Right to Organize Act (pdf) would formalize the relationship between athletes and schools, where the lawmakers say athletes are “already treated like employees.”

“They provide a valuable service in exchange for compensation in the form of scholarships and grants-in-aid that they lose if they do not perform the job as specified by their colleges,” Murphy (D-Conn.) and Sanders (I-Vt.) said. “This past year made this distinction even clearer, as college athletes continued to work and perform while their peers often were not on campus.”

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“This is a matter of basic fairness, but it’s also a civil rights issue. The athletes in the most high-profile sports are overwhelmingly Black men and women, while those with the power are largely white.”
—Sen. Chris Murphy (D-Conn.)

The legislation comes more than a year and a half after the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) voted to allow student athletes to profit from the use of their name, likeness, and image. The NCAA left it up to its three divisions to craft their own rules regarding compensation. 

Under the new legislation, the lawmakers said, “through the right to organize and collectively bargain, college athletes will no longer have to wait for the NCAA and its members to treat them fairly.”

The bill would amend the National Labor Relations Act to define any college athlete who receives direct compensation from their school—through grants, scholarships, or other forms of payment—as an employee, and colleges as employers. 

It would also direct the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) to consider the colleges within sports conferences as bargaining units, “helping athletes negotiate across programs and within their respective conferences”—regardless of state labor laws.

The legislation would make it possible for college athletes to bargain over wages, working conditions, and other workers’ rights.

“Big time college sports haven’t been ‘amateur’ for a long time, and the NCAA has long denied its players economic and bargaining rights while treating them like commodities,” Murphy said in a statement. “Having the right to [collectively bargain] will help athletes get the pay and protections they deserve and forces the NCAA to treat them as equals rather than second-class citizens. It’s a civil rights issue, and a matter of basic fairness.” 

Murphy wrote about the need for college athletes to be recognized as workers on social media:

The legislation specifically denounces the NCAA for denying “college athletes a fair wage for their labor by colluding to cap compensation.”

Murphy and Sanders’s bill comes six years after the NLRB rejected an attempt to unionize by football players at Northwestern University. The board did not rule on the players’ claim that they should qualify as university employees but rather decided that allowing the team members to unionize would not promote “stability in labor relations.”

On Thursday, the NCAA expressed disapproval of the legislation, claiming it would “directly undercut the purpose of college: earning a degree.”

“College athletes are workers,” said Sanders. “They deserve pay, a union, and to own their own name, image, and likeness. We cannot wait for the NCAA to share its billions with the workers who create it. It is long past time we gave these workers the rights they deserve.”

The bill is supported by the AFL-CIO, United Steelworkers, and Advancement of Blacks in Sport.

As Nathan Kalman-Lamb, Derek Silva, and Johanna Mellis wrote Thursday in The Guardian, in addition to ensuring athletes can bargain over their compensation, the ability to unionize would create channels that don’t currently exist for student athletes who face abuse and exploitation.

“Unionization would provide a formal channel for bringing forth grievances and, crucially, could protect athletes from reprisal,” they wrote. “As WTA pro and former UMass tennis player Brittany Collens said: ‘In the worst cases we have sexual assault, physical abuse, and mental abuse permanently ruining athletes’ lives. A players’ union allows players to say, No, I’m not enduring that. Right now they have zero say over their health and safety. This would change that.'”

In the House, Reps. Jamaal Bowman (D-N.Y.), Lori Trahan (D-Mass.), and Andy Levin (D-Mich.) introduced their own version of the legislation.

“College athletes generate billions of dollars for their schools and the NCAA, labor under the strict control of their coaches, withstand intense media scrutiny, and manage a full college course-load, all without being paid. That’s unacceptable,” said Levin. “The false veil of ‘amateurism’ cannot continue to cover up exploitation. Giving these student workers the right to organize is a key step to achieving the fair compensation these incredible athletes deserve.”

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Rachel Legrain-Trapani : Son ex Benjamin Pavard, sexy et seul en vacances

Cet été encore, les stars partageront sur les réseaux sociaux leurs plus belles photos de vacances ! Benjamin Pavard lance les hostilités. Le footballeur et ex-petit ami de Rachel Legrain-Trapani s’affiche torse nu et musclé, pour le plus grand bonheur de ses admirateurs et admiratrices…

Benjamin Pavard compte plus d’un million de followers sur Instagram. Il y a publié une nouvelle photo le week-end dernier, pour informer les internautes du début de ses vacances. L’athlète de 23 ans pose les mains dans les poches de son short de bain au bord d’une piscine.

Au calme dans une maison en hauteur, Benjamin Pavard se dore la pilule au soleil et profite d’une vue magnifique sur la mer.

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Norris steps away from social media: ‘It sucks!’

Lando Norris says he is no longer directly involved with his social media accounts, having personally stepped away from his online platforms because they “suck”.

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Norris built up a healthy following on Twitter, Instagram and Facebook during his first year in F1, thanks to his humorous tweets and numerous memes that informed and entertained his followers.

But the McLaren driver’s demeanor on social media changed last year with a content that was less colorful and jokey, a change of approach that came in the wake of some criticism from the fan community which felt he was not taking his job in F1 seriously enough.

Although Norris dismissed the criticism at the time and relied on his team to appreciate his commitment to F1, the 21-year-old has now completely shied away from his platforms and entrusted all communication to a “minion” as he jokingly called his social media manager.

©McLaren

“I’m still enjoying what I’m doing, still having good laughs and a good time with my team,” Norris said when asked last weekend in Monaco by Channel 4 if he was still the light-hearted and witty soul he was when he first joined F1.

“But there is also just a lot of focus on the job itself. “I’m still that guy, it’s more showing the other side, me working hard, putting a lot of time and effort into things, and having the results that I’ve had this season so far.

“That is why I got rid of social media. Well I’m still on it, But I never look at it.

“My profile is on it but I have a minion, a guy who works for me and types away pretending to be me. But I’m away from all that, it sucks.”

Norris was recently awarded a new multi-year deal with McLaren, and the Briton reiterated in Monaco his enthusiasm over the future while also reflecting on his “cool journey” with the papaya squad.

“I’m super happy, proud, I like to continue with McLaren and it’s nice to see that they have the confidence and they are backing me more,” he said.

“It’s been a cool journey so far from where we were four years ago, I’ve been through that whole journey with the team.

“Towards the bottom almost, seeing the team in that position to where we are now, all the smiles on people’s faces, a lot more motivation in the team, a much happier team, more determined. I want to continue that.

“I’m hoping that when we can reach the top and reach that end goal of being those few positions higher, racing with Mercedes and Red Bull and going for those wins, I think it will make it even sweeter and even more special.”

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Pauline Ducruet en pleurs avec son père Daniel, devant sa femme et ses enfants

Un an et demi après “le premier jour du reste de sa vie“, son diplôme en poche après deux années d’études à la Parsons School of Design de New York, la date du mardi 18 juin 2019 était marquée d’une pierre blanche dans l’agenda de Pauline Ducruet : ce jour-là, la fille de la princesse Stéphanie de Monaco révélait la première collection de vêtements de la marque de prêt-à-porter unisexe, Alter Designs, qu’elle a créée.

C’est aujourd’hui le jour pour lequel j’ai travaillé pendant un bon bout de temps, ça n’a pas été de tout repos. J’ai beaucoup douté, j’ai été dure envers moi-même, mais aujourd’hui il n’en est plus question : aujourd’hui, c’est le jour où mon rêve devient réalité ! J’ai toujours voulu créer et vous allez aujourd’hui avoir un aperçu de ce qui se passe dans ma petite cervelle. C’est un euphémisme de dire que je suis stressée et excitée, mais c’est tellement bon !“, a écrit la modeuse monégasque de 24 ans à quelques heures du défilé qu’elle organisait à La Cartonnerie, dans le 11e arrondissement de Paris.

Lorsque le moment est venu, tous ses proches étaient présents dans la capitale pour lui apporter leur soutien et partager l’émotion de cet événement fondateur. Véritable modèle et source d’inspiration avec laquelle elle est fusionnelle, sa mère la princesse Stéphanie de Monaco, qui l’a embrassée avec émotion, était là, tout comme son frère Louis Ducruet et sa soeur Camille Gottlieb – sa “fan #1“, comme elle s’est elle-même qualifiée en disant toute sa fierté dans une story Instagram. Même sa cousine Charlotte Casiraghi se joignait à eux !

Un rendez-vous que les amis intimes de la créatrice d’Alter Designs n’ont évidemment pas manqué non plus, à l’image de Maxime Giaccardi et Schanel Bakkouche, pour ne citer qu’eux. “Et la voilà qui lance une collection de vêtements, tranquillement. Tu viens de rendre la petite fille que tu étais fière de la femme que tu es devenue“, a joliment adressé le jeune homme à son amie en légende d’une publication Instagram relative à la soirée à La Cartonnerie.

Here she is, launching a clothing line low key. You just made the little girl you used to be proud of the woman you are now. @paulinedcrt @alterofficial_

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Came to support @paulinedcrt on her first show @alterofficial_ unveiling a perfectly balanced ” genderfluid ” collection mixing recycled jeans and sheer satin…Congrats for your beautiful show handled by our fave former @CrazybabyParis Girl @judithkarolinski_jk So proud of you #Alter #PFW #AW20

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Meghan Markle : Sa bague de fiançailles modifiée, de nouveaux diamants ajoutés

L’annulaire de Meghan Markle était au coeur de toutes les attentions lors de sa première apparition officielle depuis la naissance de son petit Archie (1 mois). Le 8 juin 2019, à l’occasion de la parade Trooping The Colour à Londres, la duchesse de Sussex portait non seulement une nouvelle bague, mais également son alliance en or et sa bague de fiançailles. Seulement, cette dernière semble avoir été relookée.

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En plus de dévoiler un nouvel anneau offert par le prince Harry, pour la naissance de leur garçon ou leur premier anniversaire de mariage célébré en mai dernier, l’ancienne actrice de 37 ans portait au même doigt sa bague de fiançailles. Un bijou qu’elle n’avait pas porté durant les derniers mois de sa grossesse. Mais la bague conçue par le prince Harry lui-même semble avoir été modifiée : si le large diamant originaire du Botswana et les deux plus petits ayant appartenu à Lady Diana sont toujours présents, l’anneau est désormais plus fin et serti de petits diamants. Selon la joaillière britannique Arabel Lebrusan, dont le Daily Mail rapporte le témoignage, ce nouveau design serait de style américain. Selon cette experte, les anneaux plus fins sont une tendance du moment : “Beaucoup de célébrités le font, de façon à ce que la pierre principale paraisse plus grosse.”

Watch: Video Starring NY Lawmakers Lampoons Absurdity of For-Profit Healthcare

Imagine that your home was on fire but firefighters refused to extinguish the blaze because you didn’t have the right insurance, or your premiums weren’t paid in full, or you didn’t jump through the myriad requisite flaming hoops to qualify for relief. 

That’s the premise of a video published Wednesday promoting the New York Health Act, a bill that, if passed, would provide single-payer, universal health coverage for all Empire State residents and workers. 

The video, which stars faux-firefighters Jabari Brisport and Zohran Kwame Mamdani—two Democratic New York state lawmakers who back the bill—is meant to draw attention to what single-payer supporters say is the absurdity of the United States being the only nation in the developed world without universal healthcare. 

Backers of the bill argue that the ongoing coronavirus pandemic underscores the necessity of immediately passing universal healthcare legislation, with single-payer advocates noting that 300,000 New Yorkers lost their health coverage during the proverbial inferno of the Covid-19 crisis. 

Proponents say the state bill would fix that. According to the Campaign for New York Health:

The campaign notes that “every day, as many as three New Yorkers die needlessly due to lack of health coverage. It’s so common that it no longer makes the headlines. In the last 10 years, an estimated 20,000 New Yorkers died unnecessarily due to lack of health insurance. Over one million New Yorkers lack health insurance, and millions more have plans that would bankrupt them when faced with a medical emergency.”

“The U.S. nationally spends more than $3 trillion on healthcare every year, our healthcare outcomes are far behind other high-income countries in nearly every category,” the campaign says. “For example, maternal mortality is actually increasing in the U.S. despite every other comparable country making significant gains in reducing deaths related to pregnancy.”

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“Financial barriers and lack of access to care are significant drivers in these shameful health outcomes,” it adds. “Inequality is rapidly increasing, and your zip code can actually determine your life expectancy. The richest 1% of American men lives 15 years longer than the poorest 1%; 10 years longer for women. The current system is designed to make profits—which it does very well—not provide healthcare.”

Countering the “but how will you pay for it” canard, the campaign notes that “there is so much waste, fraud, and profiteering in the current system, that moving to a universal, single-payer model actually costs less than the status quo for both the state and 90% of individuals.”

“The bottom line is that not only is it a moral imperative to guarantee everyone access to care as a right and public good, it is fiscally conservative,” the campaign concludes. “We simply cannot afford not to have a single-payer system.”

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Single-payer healthcare is closer than ever to reality for New Yorkers. For the first time, a majority in both houses of the state Legislature have co-sponsored the New York Health Act. The bill came close to passage in 2019 and 2020, and now that Democrats enjoy veto-proof supermajorities in both the Assembly and Senate for the first time in the state’s history, supporters of the measure say they are on the verge of victory.

“We’re certainly going to work to move it this year,” state Sen. Gustavo Rivera, a Bronx Democrat who is the lead co-sponsor of the bill, told Gothamist. “It’s not going to pass tomorrow, I’d say—we still gotta deal with this knucklehead.”

That “knucklehead” is embattled New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, who is embroiled in a scandal involving sexual misconduct allegations.

And while Democrats technically have the numbers to override any potential veto by Cuomo, not all Democratic lawmakers—especially in more moderate Senate districts—can be considered automatic supporters of progressive agenda items like single-payer healthcare. 

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Former FIA President Max Mosley dead at 81

Max Mosley, the former FIA President and co-founder of March Engineering, has passed away at the age of 81 after a long battle with cancer according to a statement released by the Mosley family.

A lawyer and former racing driver, Mosley was among the five founding members of March Engineering, the Formula 1 constructor and racing car manufacturer that achieved tremendous success in various motorsport categories, and which won three F1 Grands Prix in the seventies.

As March’s representative within the Formula One Constructors’ Association, Mosley became close to FOCA boss Bernie Ecclestone before becoming the body’s official legal advisor and one of the authors of the original Concorde Agreement, the all-important binding commercial and financial covenant that links teams to F1.

Mosley’s political acumen led the Briton to run for president of FISA, motorsport’s governing body in 1991. Duly elected, he subsequently became the president of the FIA – FISA’s parent company – in 1993.

The combined talents of Ecclestone and Mosley – arguably motorsport’s most powerful double-act – would prove instrumental in transforming Formula 1 into a billion dollar business and global brand.

During his sixteen years at the helm of motorsport’s leading institution, Mosley focused his efforts on increasing safety in the wake of the tragic deaths at Imola in 1994 of Ayrton Senna and Roland Ratzenberger, events that also led to the promotion of the European New Car Assessment Programme.

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But Mosley’s agenda also included efforts to introduce a budget cap in F1, a plan that failed until his departure from the FIA in 2009 and which led to conflicts and feuds between the governing body and F1 teams who were reluctant at the time to cut the sport’s costs.

The controversial period also coincided in 2008 with the publication in a British tabloid owned by Rupert Murdoch of a story detailing Mosley’s sex life.

While he resisted pressure at the time to resign from the FIA, he declined to stand for re-election in 2009 which opened the door to the arrival at the FIA of Jean Todt.

Mosley later successfully sued The News of the World which also faced allegations of hacking celebrities’ phones, which led to the weekly tabloid’s demise in 2011.

As the son of Sir Oswald Mosley, the former head of the British Union of Fascists, Mosley had a natural inclination for politics and was involved with his father’s post-war political party.

However, he once said that the association of his family’s name with fascism was a dark stigma that ultimately discouraged him from indulging in a career in politics.

Mosley is the subject of a no-holds-barred documentary titled ‘Mosley: It’s Complicated’, directed by Michael Shevloff that is set to be released in July.

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MetLife Stadium will host Giants and Jets at full capacity in fall says NJ gov

Giants and Jets home games at MetLife Stadium will return to full capacity in 2021, New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy announced Monday.

The Giants and Jets played in front of an empty stadium in 2020 during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic. Now fans are allowed back in.

Friday marks the return to full capacity for all events at MetLife Stadium.

“MetLife Stadium, the New York Jets and the New York Giants are very excited with Governor Murphy’s announcement today that will allow events to return at full capacity as of May 28,” read a statement from MetLife Stadium officials. “We extend our gratitude and appreciation to Governor Murphy and his staff for their leadership and guidance throughout the pandemic.

“We are currently reviewing stadium policies and protocols as our commitment to the health and safety of our guests and staff remains our top priority,” the statement continued.

The official statement said that Giants and Jets gameday fan protocols will be communicated prior to the 2021 NFL football season.

“We are thrilled by Governor Murphy’s announcement today to have MetLife Stadium operate at full capacity for the 2021 season,” the Giants and Jets said in a joint statement. “We can’t wait to welcome our fans back, creating the gameday atmosphere we have all been missing. We will continue to work to ensure the return of fans is accomplished in a safe and responsible way.”

Prior to the May 28 policy shift, mask and physical distancing protocols will remain in place for the Seton Hall University graduation on Tuesday and the Berkeley College’s commencements on Thursday.

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The first NFL game back at MetLife Stadium will pit the Giants and Jets against each other in their preseason opener sometime between Aug. 12-16. The exact date and time haven’t been announced.

The Giants will open their regular season at MetLife Stadium in Week 1 against the Denver Broncos on Sept. 12 at 4:25 p.m. The Jets’ home opener will come in Week 2 against the New England Patriots on Sept. 19 at 1 p.m.

Monday was the first day of OTA practices (10 total) for teams in Phase III of the offseason prior to a three-day mandatory minicamp in June.

Giants wideout Sterling Shepard told the Daily News last week that he is “super excited to have the fans.”

“That’s where the energy comes from,” Shepard said. “The No. 1 thing that stands out to me from last year is it’s not so much in the game — I’m always really locked in, so I don’t really pay too much attention to the fans. But running out of the tunnel is one of my favorite things on gameday, having the fans yell pretty loud. So not having that was something I was missing. And I’m excited to get back to it.”

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