Archive November 6, 2025

Norrie wins three-setter once again to make semis

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Britain’s Cameron Norrie was taken to three sets for the third successive match before reaching the Moselle Open semi-finals as he bids for a first title since 2023.

Norrie beat lucky loser Kyrian Jacquet 4-6 7-6 (7-2) 6-4 for his third victory over a Frenchman this week.

World number 27 Norrie, the only seeded player left in the draw, is into a first hard-court semi-final since Metz last year.

The 30-year-old is bidding for his first ATP Tour title since the 2023 Rio Open.

Norrie started the better of the two, racing into a 4-1 first-set led before a nosebleed and a late surge from Jacquet checked his momentum.

World number 156 Jacquet used his serve and forehand to good effect, winning five games in a row to take the opener and stay close in the second.

Norrie called for the physio when another nosebleed disrupted his service game at 4-4 and he had to save a break point before holding and dominating the eventual tie-break.

Ultimately 48 unforced errors cost Jacquet, who was broken to love at 4-4 to allow Norrie to serve out victory.

Elsewhere, Lorenzo Musetti is two wins away from a place at the season-ending ATP Finals after reaching the Athens Open semi-finals.

Italian world number nine Musetti must win the title to take the eighth and final spot at the tournament. If he does not, Canada’s Felix Auger-Aliassime will take up the place.

Musetti, who has not won a title for two years, moved past France’s Alexandre Muller 6-2 6-4 to set up a semi-final against American Sebastian Korda.

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Win over Littler a big confidence boost – Greaves

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Beau Greaves says her landmark win over world champion Luke Littler has given her fresh belief as she prepares for several big tournaments.

The 21-year-old from Doncaster hit the headlines with victory over Littler last month to become the first female player to reach the world youth final.

“When I beat Luke, it did give me a big confidence boost. I suppose I’ve just lacked confidence over the years, and I’ve got a little bit of it now,” said Greaves.

Five-time world champion Raymond van Barneveld has predicted a good run at the PDC World Championship, which starts next month, would seal her place in the eight-player Premier League.

“I can’t imagine I would get the Premier League unless I did obviously have a crazy run but I mean I wouldn’t say no,” she said.

“It’s maybe a little bit much for me that, but you know it’d make it a bit exciting wouldn’t it?”

The Premier League starts in February and takes place over 17 consecutive Thursday nights.

“Hopefully, if she does well in the World Championship, I can guarantee you she’ll get a Premier League ticket,” said Dutchman Van Barneveld.

The top four in the world rankings qualify automatically and four others are selected as ‘wildcard’ entries.

“People go on about the Premier League being a bit flat and boring but I always end up watching it every week. It would be amazing to play in it but I don’t think I deserve it considering of all the other players that I could get in,” she said.

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Littler came from nowhere to reach the world final in 2024, before taking the title a year later, and won the Premier League on his debut appearance.

But he was beaten 6-5 by three-time women’s world champion Greaves, who averaged 105 and won the decider with an 11-dart leg as she set up a world youth final against Gian van Veen on 23 November.

Greaves ended the PDC Women’s Series with an 86-match winning run, has earned a two-year professional tour card and will play in the World Championship which starts at Alexandra Palace on 11 December.

But first she features in the Grand Slam of Darts, which starts on Saturday, when she takes on former world number one Michael van Gerwen.

She is also in the same group as two-time world champion Gary Anderson and Germany’s Niko Springer, with the top two qualifying.

“I don’t really care who I’m playing, I think I did a few years ago. I’m just going in with an open mind and stop being so negative,” she said.

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Aston Martin remove at least seven F1 design staff

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Aston Martin have removed at least seven staff from their Formula 1 design department as part of a restructure before the 2026 season.

Among those to leave the F1 team is Eric Blandin, who was recruited from Mercedes as deputy technical director in 2022 but since the start of this year has been serving as aerodynamics director.

An Aston Martin spokesperson said: “We don’t comment on internal matters and we don’t have anything to announce yet.

“However, we are going through a technical restructure ahead of the 2026 season which will be announced in the near future.”

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Some of the staff leaving the F1 programme may be retained in other parts of the Aston Martin motorsport business.

The group also owns an advanced technologies division, where former chief technical officer Andrew Green was moved before the 2023 season.

Design legend Adrian Newey joined Aston Martin as managing technical partner in March this year and is leading the team’s 2026 car design.

The team have also recruited former Ferrari chassis technical director Enrico Cardile, who started work in August after leaving Ferrari in July 2024.

Among the factors behind the restructure is the need to stay within F1’s cost cap. All salaries of people who work on the design of the car are included within the cost cap, apart from those of the three highest-paid executives.

Aston Martin has been through an extensive recruitment drive in recent years as they seek to turn themselves into world title contenders.

Among those recruited by billionaire team owner Lawrence Stroll, in addition to Newey and Cardile, is team principal and chief executive officer Andy Cowell, who was formerly the head of Mercedes’ engine company, HPP.

Eric Blandin (left) chats with Andy Cowell (right) in the paddock at ImolaGetty Images

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US judge approves DOJ decision to drop Boeing criminal case

A United States judge in Texas has approved the Department of Justice’s request to dismiss a criminal case against Boeing despite his objections to the decision.

On Thursday, Judge Reed O’Connor of the US District Court in Fort Worth dismissed the case, which will allow the plane maker to avoid prosecution over charges related to two deadly 737 MAX crashes: the 2018 Lion Air crash in Indonesia and the 2019 Ethiopian Airlines crash.

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O’Connor said he disagreed with the Justice Department’s argument that ending the case served the public interest, noting that he lacked the authority to overrule it.

The government argued Boeing has improved, and the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) is providing enhanced oversight. Boeing and the government argued O’Connor had no choice but to dismiss the case.

He said the deal with the aerospace giant “fails to secure the necessary accountability to ensure the safety of the flying public”.

In September, O’Connor held a three-hour hearing to consider objections to the deal, questioning the government’s decision to drop a requirement that Boeing face oversight from an independent monitor for three years and instead hire a compliance consultant.

O’Connor said the government’s position is “Boeing committed crimes sufficient to justify prosecution, failed to remedy its fraudulent behaviour on its own during the [deferred prosecution agreement], which justified a guilty plea and the imposition of an independent monitor, but now Boeing will remedy that dangerous culture by retaining a consultant of its own choosing”.

The DOJ first criminally charged Boeing for the crashes in January 2021, but also agreed to deferred prosecution in the case.

The plane maker was charged with one count of conspiracy to defraud the US. Courts found that Boeing deceived the FAA about what is called the manoeuvring characteristics augmentation system, which affects flight control systems on the aircraft.

“Boeing’s employees chose the path of profit over candor by concealing material information from the FAA concerning the operation of its 737 Max airplane and engaging in an effort to cover up their deception,” acting Assistant Attorney General David P Burns of the DOJ’s criminal division said in a statement at the time.

O’Connor said in 2023 that “Boeing’s crime may properly be considered the deadliest corporate crime in US history”.

Under the non-prosecution deal, Boeing agreed to pay an additional $444.5m into a crash victims’ fund to be divided evenly per victim of the two fatal 737 MAX crashes, on top of a new $243.6m fine and more than $455m to strengthen the company’s compliance, safety, and quality programmes.

Dutch Giants Ajax Sack Coach John Heitinga

Dutch giants Ajax said Thursday they had sacked coach John Heitinga after a poor start to the season that has seen them rooted to the bottom of the Champions League table.

“Ajax is looking for a new head coach. In the meantime, Fred Grim will take over Heitinga’s duties,” the four-time European champions said in a statement.

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Heitinga signed a two-year contract in May but has not been able to mastermind a turnaround in the club’s fortunes.

His contract would be terminated, Ajax said.

The club’s technical director, Alex Kroes, admitted it was a “painful decision.

“We know it can take time for a new coach to work with a squad that has undergone changes,” said Kroes.

“We have given John that time, but we believe it’s best for the club to appoint someone else to lead the team.”

Kroes himself offered his resignation, but the board asked him to stay in place to offer some continuity.

The technical director is under contract until the end of the season.

“Should the club appoint a new technical director earlier, I will hand over my responsibilities at that time,” he said.

The final straw appeared to be yet another humiliating loss in the Champions League on Wednesday.

Ajax lost 3-0 at home to Galatasaray, a bruising defeat that came on the back of a 5-1 thrashing away to Chelsea.

A 4-0 loss to Marseille and a 2-0 defeat at the hands of Inter Milan add up to a miserable record in Europe of zero points, one goal scored, and 14 conceded.

Domestically, Ajax currently sits in fourth place in the Dutch Eredivisie, languishing eight points behind place-setters Feyenoord and PSV Eindhoven.

Ajax fans had jeered Heitinga at Stamford Bridge for his substitutions and the supporters appeared to have lost faith in their manager.

The Amsterdam-based club is still recovering from an extraordinary end to last season that saw them throw away the title from a seemingly impregnable position.

With only five matches to play, Ajax were nine points clear and seemingly cruising to the title.

But Ajax somehow contrived to hand the title to PSV Eindhoven, losing twice and drawing twice.

The season before, Ajax had suffered their worst-ever start to a campaign, at one point propping up the Eredivisie table.

Heitinga played at centre-back for Atletico Madrid, Everton and Fulham, retiring in 2016 after a brief second spell with boyhood club Ajax.

He played 87 times for the Netherlands but was sent off in extra time in the 1-0 loss to Spain in the 2010 World Cup final.

UN says 2025 to be among three hottest years on record

This year is set to be among the hottest on record, sinking the world even deeper into the climate crisis and threatening “irreversible damage,” the United Nations says in a new report.

Years 2023, 2024 and 2025 are set to be the hottest years ever recorded, with this year on track to be the second or third hottest ever in 176 years of record keeping, the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) said in the report released on Thursday in advance of next week’s COP30 UN climate summit in Brazil.

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The UN report offered some stark observations, including warnings that concentrations of greenhouse gases have grown to new record highs, locking in more heat for the future, while the past 11 years, 2015 to 2025, will individually have been the 11 warmest years.

Together, these developments make “it clear that it will be virtually impossible to limit global warming to 1.5C [2.7F] in the next few years,” WMO chief Celeste Saulo said in a statement, referring to the 2015 Paris climate accords.

The legally binding pact limiting greenhouse gas emissions aimed to provide the world a roadmap for breaking away from fossil fuels that have powered the global economy since the Industrial Revolution and looked to limit global warming to well below 2C (3.6F) above pre-industrial levels, and to 1.5C if possible.

But the world has fallen short of its Paris obligations, with the WMO now saying limiting global heating to the goals of the 2015 agreement is virtually impossible.

“This unprecedented streak of high temperatures, combined with last year’s record increase in greenhouse gas levels, makes it clear that it will be virtually impossible to limit global warming to 1.5C in the next few years without temporarily overshooting this target,” Saulo said. “But the science is equally clear that it’s still entirely possible and essential to bring temperatures back down to 1.5C by the end of the century.”

In the report, the WMO said the mean near-surface temperature — about 2 metres (6 feet) above the ground — during the first eight months of this year stood at 1.42C (2.5F) above the pre-industrial average.

At the same time, concentrations of heat-trapping greenhouse gases in the atmosphere and ocean heat content continued to rise this year, up from 2024’s already record levels.

In its annual report on Tuesday, the UN Environment Programme also confirmed that emissions of greenhouse gases increased by a further 2.3 percent last year, an increase driven by India, followed by China, Russia and Indonesia.

UN chief Antonio Guterres called the inability to limit the rise in global temperatures a “moral failure” on Thursday at the opening of a leaders’ summit in Brazil before COP30.

“Each year above 1.5 degrees will hammer economies, deepen inequalities and inflict irreversible damage. We must act now, at great speed and scale, to make the overshoot as small, as short, and as safe as possible – and bring temperatures back below 1.5C before the end of the century,” Guterres said.

‘Significant advances’

The WMO said the impact of temperature rises can be seen in the Arctic sea ice extent, which, after the winter freeze this year, was the lowest ever recorded.

The Antarctic sea ice extent, meanwhile, tracked well below average throughout the year, it said.

The UN agency also highlighted numerous weather and climate-related extreme events during the first eight months of 2025, from devastating flooding to brutal heat and wildfires, with “cascading impacts on lives, livelihoods and food systems”.

In this context, the WMO hailed “significant advances” in multi-hazard early warning systems, which it stressed were “more crucial than ever”.

Since 2015, it said, the number of countries reporting such systems had more than doubled, from 56 to 119.

It hailed in particular progress among the world’s least developed countries and small island developing states, which showed a 5 percent rise in access in the past year alone.

However, it lamented that 40 percent of the world’s countries still have no such early warning systems.

“Urgent action is needed to close these remaining gaps,” it said.