Max Verstappen blames frustration for a 'move that was not right' after colliding with RussellNew Foto - Max Verstappen blames frustration for a 'move that was not right' after colliding with Russell

Max Verstappen said Monday that frustration caused "a move that was not right and shouldn't have happened", a day after he initially seemed unrepentant over hiscollisionwith George Russell atFormula 1'sSpanish Grand Prix. Before the collision, Verstappen had been asked by his Red Bull team to give up a place to Russell. It followed an earlier incident between the two drivers when Russell had tried to get past Verstappen, who went off the track. The race stewards ruled Verstappen had "suddenly accelerated" before the collision and Russell said it "felt very deliberate". The stewards gave Verstappen a 10-second penalty which dropped him from fifth to 10th and left him 49 points off standings leader Oscar Piastri, whowon Sunday's race. "We had an exciting strategy and good race in Barcelona, till the safety car came out. Our tire choice to the end and some moves after the safety car restart fueled my frustration, leading to a move that was not right and shouldn't have happened," Verstappenwrote on Instagram. "I always give everything out there for the team and emotions can run high. You win some together, you lose some together. See you (at the next race) in Montreal." Initially in the aftermath of Sunday's race, Verstappen had said that "next time I will bring a tissue", responding to Russell claiming he set a poor example for young drivers. Russell finished fourth. A series of setbacks The collision followed a series of setbacks for Verstappen, who had been in third and pressuring the two McLaren drivers in front before the safety car came out. Red Bull decided to bring Verstappen into the pits for fresh tires, even though the only ones he had left were slower hard-compound tires, a type that no other driver used. At the restart, Verstappen lost grip and was overtaken by Charles Leclerc, whose Ferrari made contact with Verstappen's Red Bull. Neither driver was ruled at fault for that. Verstappen then went off the track while defending against Russell and Red Bull asked Verstappen to give up the place to Russell, apparently because the team expected Verstappen would be given a penalty. The stewards later ruled they wouldn't have taken action against the Dutch driver for that incident. Risking a suspension Verstappen needs to be careful in the next two races because the penalty for the collision with Russell also brought him penalty points on his licence, taking him to 11 in the last 12 months. Drivers get a one-race suspension if they hit 12 points in a year. Two of those points expire at the end of the month, but until then Verstappen needs to get through the Canadian and Austrian Grands Prix without any further penalty points. ___ AP auto racing:https://apnews.com/hub/auto-racing

Max Verstappen blames frustration for a 'move that was not right' after colliding with Russell

Max Verstappen blames frustration for a 'move that was not right' after colliding with Russell Max Verstappen said Monday that frust...
Scottie Scheffler cruises to victory at Memorial Tournament, joins Tiger Woods in exclusive clubNew Foto - Scottie Scheffler cruises to victory at Memorial Tournament, joins Tiger Woods in exclusive club

Scottie Scheffler joinedTiger Woodsas the only players to win consecutive Memorial Tournament titles after cruising to victory on Sunday. The world No. 1 carded a two-under 70 in his final round to secure a four-shot victory at the tournament in Dublin, Ohio, to finish at 10-under 278. With the victory, Scheffler joins Woods as the only repeat winners of the tournament, renowned as one of the hardest PGA Tour events on the schedule. Woods has won the Memorial five times, including three straight from 1999 to 2001. Scheffler is in dominant form now, having started the yearrecovering from a freak hand injury suffered while cooking Christmas dinner at home. He has now won three times in his last four starts, including at thePGA Championship last month, all by at least four shots. But despite being the best player in the world at the moment – he stretched his lead atop the world rankings leaderboard to a margin last seen when Woods was at his peak – the American says he takes "each tournament individually." "Every tournament's different, and I try to do my best to come out here and compete," Scheffler told reporters after his victory, sitting alongside golf legend Jack Nicklaus, the host of the Memorial Tournament. "That's what I love to do. I love being able to play the PGA Tour, and I love being able to compete against the best players in the world and play on great golf courses like this one and be able to play in these legacy tournaments, like Mr. (Arnold) Palmer's tournament, Mr. Nicklaus's tournament. "I always just dreamed of playing these tournaments. I never think about dominating. I don't – it's a waste of time for me to think about that kind of stuff. I'm just trying to be the best that I can be and work hard and use the gifts that I have for good and that's pretty much it." It wasn't all smooth-sailing for Scheffler though who, after embracing his wife Meredith in celebration, was handed his son Bennett to carry, only to find out the one-year-old had had a slight bathroom mishap. Meredithcould be heard saying: "He has poop all over his back," with Scheffler responding: "That'll happen." With his victory at the Muirfield Village Golf Club, Scheffler joined an exclusive group of players to have 16 PGA Tour victories, including multiple majors before the age of 32. The 28-year-old joined Woods, Nicklaus, Arnold Palmer, Tom Watson, Johnny Miller, Rory McIlroy and Justin Thomas. There was little jeopardy during Sunday's final round, even when Scheffler ended 31 holes without a bogey on the 10th hole which dropped his lead to just one shot. Ben Griffin, Scheffler's nearest rival, had an opportunity for a birdie on the par-5 11th but missed while Scheffler made his birdie putt to restore his lead. And from there it was a procession as Scheffler showed why he's the man to beat in golf at the moment, ahead of the US Open in two weeks at Oakmont Country Club. "You know Scottie's probably going to play a good round of golf. The guy's relentless. He loves competition, and he doesn't like giving up shots," Sepp Straka, who finished in third, said afterwards. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Scottie Scheffler cruises to victory at Memorial Tournament, joins Tiger Woods in exclusive club

Scottie Scheffler cruises to victory at Memorial Tournament, joins Tiger Woods in exclusive club Scottie Scheffler joinedTiger Woodsas the o...
MLB power rankings: Cal Raleigh chases home run record as Mariners stay afloatNew Foto - MLB power rankings: Cal Raleigh chases home run record as Mariners stay afloat

LetShohei Ohtani and Aaron Judgehog all the headlines and national TV slots. While they were going one-on-one in L.A., both were upstaged by a catcher in the Pacific Northwest. Oh,Cal Raleighwon't match those greats sublime overall offensive numbers soon. Yet Raleigh has now taken the major league lead by homering for the third consecutive game, his 23rd homer putting the Mariners in position to salvage a series win against Minnesota. And he's helping the Mariners tread water both in the American League West and USA TODAY Sports' power rankings. With the season just past the one-third mark, Raleigh is on pace to threatenSalvador Perez's record for home runs by a primary catcher - 48, set in 2021. Raleigh was the first catcher to hit 20 home runs before the end of May. Raleigh leads Seattle in every major offensive category save batting average, where his .264 average is second to J.P. Crawford's .272. His 1.016 OPS trails only those Dodger-Yankee megastars – Judge, Freddie Freeman and Ohtani. All the more important given the rail-thin margin the offensively-challenged Mariners operate. They won two games by walk-off this weekend and cling to a half-game lead over Houston in the West - thanks largely to their most unlikely MVP candidate. A look at our updated rankings: If you're scoring at home, that's 15 pitchers now on the injured list. That's a six-game lead in an AL Central very much looking like Detroit and Everybody Else. Francisco Lindor clubs 261st home run, moves past Derek Jeter into third for homers by a shortstop. Good vibes moderately dimmed by Kyle Tucker's jammed ring finger. Lose four of five after Bryce Harper sidelined following hit-by-pitch. Max Fried finally throws a clunker, in his hometown. Manny Machado (.308 average, .861 OPS) quietly having All-Star caliber season. In losing four of five, produce just seven runs for hard-luck pitchers. Sonny Gray's racked up six wins, nearly halfway to career-best 14. Nolan Jones starting to put a grim 14-for-92 (.152) start behind him. Vaunted infield prospect Cole Young gets the call - and gets walk-off RBI in debut. Yordan Alvarez was nearly back –until he wasn't. Matt Wallner hits a home run on his first swing since April 15. They've won seven in a row as starting pitchers go 15 games without giving up more than three runs. Addison Barger, who has homered in three consecutive games, may have finally arrived. They've lost five of seven against Tigers. No room for the moment for electric rookieChandler Simpson, sent back to Class AAA. Marcus Semien is 8 for 14 (.571) with a 1.468 OPS batting eighth – and should soon earn a promotion. Alexis Díaz went from All-Star totraded as a minor leaguerin less than two years. Getting a little ridiculous we haven't seen Roman Anthony at Fenway yet. Go figure: They've lost eight of 11 sinceSpencer Strider returned, followed by Ronald Acuña Jr. Grim stuff: Snap a four-game losing streak but $215 million man Corbin Burnes exits withelbow discomfort. Wild road trip: Score seven runs in 10th inning and 10 runs in first inning. Mike Trout's return can't stop slide of seven losses in eight games. Cold game: Ronny Simon commits three errors, cries in dugout, gets designated for assignment. Gotta start somewhere: First sweep comes against White Sox. Sixteen losses in 17 games, including 0-6 road trip that makes a Yolo County return look appealing. Andrew McCutchen's 240th homer as a Pirate ties him with Roberto Clemente. Top prospect Kyle Teel knocking on door with .885 OPS at Class AAA. They're 9-50. Nine and fifty.Nueve y cincuenta... The USA TODAY app gets you to the heart of the news — fast.Download for award-winning coverage, crosswords, audio storytelling, the eNewspaper and more. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:MLB power rankings: Cal Raleigh home runs keep Mariners in standings

MLB power rankings: Cal Raleigh chases home run record as Mariners stay afloat

MLB power rankings: Cal Raleigh chases home run record as Mariners stay afloat LetShohei Ohtani and Aaron Judgehog all the headlines and nat...
Supreme Court agrees to hear absentee ballot appeal from Illinois congressmanNew Foto - Supreme Court agrees to hear absentee ballot appeal from Illinois congressman

The Supreme Court said Monday that it will hear an appeal from Illinois Rep. Mike Bost who wants to challenge the state's decision to count absentee ballots after Election Day. At issue is a lower court ruling that found the Republican and two presidential elector nominees did not have standing to sue. The Supreme Court will likely hear arguments in the case in the fall. Bost sued in 2022, claiming that an Illinois law allowing mail-in ballots to arrive up to two weeks after Election Day ran afoul federal law that sets a uniform day for federal elections. As in other states, the mail-in ballots at issue must be postmarked on or before the election. President Donald Trump has attacked the practice with an executive order that pressures states to abandon their post-election deadlines for mail-in ballots to arrive at election offices. His directives are subject to litigation as well. Roughly 20 other states and jurisdictions count ballots that arrive after Election Day. Republicans are pursuing litigation in multiple courts attempting to roll back the expansion of mail-in voting. A federal appeals court in Louisiana last year ruled that Mississippi wasviolating federal lawby counting mail ballots that arrive after Election Day, but stopped short of blocking the policy before the November election. Lower courts never considered Bost's underlying claim. A federal district court ruled that Bost and the other plaintiffs were not injured by the state ballot law and so they did not have standing to sue. A divided 7th US Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed that decision and Bost appealed the technical question of standing to the high court. Bost, first elected in 2014, tried to argue that his campaign was required to pay for an additional two weeks of staff to monitor ballot counting. But the 7th Circuit noted that Bost won reelection in his Southern Illinois district by a healthy margin and that he chose to spend resources to avoid a hypothetical future harm. "Plaintiffs cannot manufacture standing by choosing to spend money to mitigate such conjectural risks," the court wrote. The three-judge panel included one judge nominated by Trump and another named by President Joe Biden. US Circuit Judge Michael Scudder, who was also nominated by Trump, dissented. "As a sitting member of Congress in the midst of an ongoing reelection campaign, he is nothing close to a 'mere bystander' to the upcoming election or the allegation at the heart of this lawsuit," Scudder wrote. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Supreme Court agrees to hear absentee ballot appeal from Illinois congressman

Supreme Court agrees to hear absentee ballot appeal from Illinois congressman The Supreme Court said Monday that it will hear an appeal from...
US manufacturing remains subdued in May; delivery times lengtheningNew Foto - US manufacturing remains subdued in May; delivery times lengthening

WASHINGTON (Reuters) -U.S. manufacturing contracted for a third straight month in May and suppliers took longer to deliver inputs amid tariffs, potentially signaling looming shortages of some goods. The Institute for Supply Management (ISM) said on Monday that its manufacturing PMI edged down to a six-month low of 48.5 last month from 48.7 in April. A PMI reading below 50 indicates contraction in the manufacturing sector, which accounts for 10.2% of the economy. The PMI, however, remains above the 42.3 level that the ISM says over time indicates an expansion of the overall economy. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast the PMI rising to 49.3. The survey suggested manufacturing, which is heavily reliant on imported raw materials, had not benefited from the de-escalation in trade tensions between President Donald Trump's administration and China. Economists say the on-gain, off-again manner in which the import duties are being implemented is making it difficult for businesses to plan ahead. Another layer of uncertainty was added by a U.S. trade court last week blocking most of Trump's tariffs from going into effect, ruling that the president overstepped his authority. But the tariffs were temporarily reinstated by a federal appeals court on Thursday. The ISM survey's supplier deliveries index increased to 56.1 from 55.2 in April. A reading above 50 indicates slower deliveries. A lengthening in suppliers' delivery times is normally associated with a strong economy. But in this case slower supplier deliveries likely indicated bottlenecks in supply chains related to tariffs. In April, the ISM noted delays in clearing goods through ports. Port operators have reported a decline in cargo volumes. The ISM's imports measure dropped to 39.9 from 47.1 in April. Production at factories remained subdued, while new orders barely saw an improvement. The ISM survey's forward-looking new orders sub-index inched up to 47.6 from 47.2 in April. Its measure of prices paid by manufacturers for inputs eased to a still-high 69.4 from 69.8 in April, reflecting strained supply chains. Factories continued to shed jobs. The survey's measure of manufacturing employment nudged up to 46.8 from 46.5 in April. The ISM previously noted that companies were opting for layoffs rather than attrition to reduce headcount. (Reporting by Lucia Mutikani; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama)

US manufacturing remains subdued in May; delivery times lengthening

US manufacturing remains subdued in May; delivery times lengthening WASHINGTON (Reuters) -U.S. manufacturing contracted for a third straight...

 

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