- UK's battered Tory party elects Badenoch as new leader
- Spain sends thousands more troops to flood-hit region
- Deadly Israeli strikes on 'apocalyptic' north Gaza
- Olympic medallist Koki Ikeda vows to clear name after doping suspension
- Cavendish coy on future as Girmay wins in Japan
- Spain braces for more flood deaths, steps up aid
- Kiwi spinner Ajaz takes five wickets but India ahead in third Test
- Martin takes big step towards MotoGP title as Bagnaia crashes
- Japan urges 200,000 people to evacuate due to heavy rain
- Martin closes on MotoGP world title as Bagnaia crashes out
- UK's battered Tory party to reveal new leader
- Gill, Pant fight back for India in third Test against NZ
- UN nature summit agrees on body for Indigenous representation
- Bagnaia clinches pole for Malaysian MotoGP ahead of Martin
- Tatum propels Celtics over Hornets, Lakers hold off Raptors
- Talks on halting nature loss enter extra time in Colombia
- War decimates harvest in famine-threatened Sudan
- Trump says vaccine skeptic RFK Jr will have 'big role' in health care if he wins
- US-Israeli settlers hope to see a second Trump term
- 'Nobody cares about us': US election doubts in West Bank
- O'Brien bags two Breeders' Cup wins to match Lukas record for a trainer
- Man Utd said 'it was now or never', new manager Amorim says
- Black man convicted by all-white jury executed in South Carolina
- Trump, Harris clash over rhetoric as they battle for swing state votes
- Judge tosses New York plastic pollution lawsuit against PepsiCo
- Nuts! NY authorities euthanize Instagram squirrel star
- MLB star pitcher Snell opts out of Giants contract
- With stones and slings, supporters of Bolivia's Morales gird for battle
- Nvidia to join Dow Jones Industrial Average, replacing Intel
- Sacked Ten Hag wishes 'trophies and glory' for Man Utd
- Wasteful Leverkusen held by Stuttgart as Liverpool loom
- Wasteful Leverkusen held by Stuttgart
- Trump says RFK Jr will have 'big role' in health care if he wins
- US stocks rebound on Amazon results ahead of Fed, election finale
- Gauff backs WTA Finals in Saudi Arabia despite 'reservations'
- Spain flood deaths top 200, hopes fade for missing
- Famed Indian designer Rohit Bal dies: fashion group
- Piastri takes Brazil sprint pole but wary of team orders for Norris
- Trump, Harris clash over rhetoric as they battle for swing state Wisconsin
- Fake US election video signals sprawling Russian disinformation ops
- Spencer to end long wait for first England start against New Zealand
- Russian skater Valieva vows to compete again after doping ban
- Erdogan sues opposition chief, Istanbul mayor for slander
- Piastri takes Brazil sprint pole ahead of Norris
- Morales supporters storm Bolivia military barracks, take hostages
- Dodgers celebrate World Series win with long-awaited parade
- Tuipulotu says 'heart and soul' behind rise to Scotland rugby captaincy
- Amber alert as US figure skater leads French Grand Prix
- Black man convicted by all-white jury to be executed in South Carolina
- Last-ditch effort to solve funding deadlock at nature-saving summit
Christian Horner - Red Bull mastermind in the eye of a storm
Days before he launches his 2024 Red Bull car, team supremo Christian Horner finds himself at the centre of a potentially damaging storm involving accusations of inappropriate behaviour from one of his employees.
The bombshell news dropped on Monday with Red Bull confirming they had launched an investigation against the man who has orchestrated the Austrian drinks company's phenomenal success on the track.
Since Horner turned his back on trying to make it as a racing driver he found his true vocation in management.
Appointed as the youngest team principal in the Formula One paddock aged 31 in 2005 he has overseen six constructors championships and seven drivers titles - a remarkable achievement by any yardstick.
But with the launch of the car he hopes will deliver Max Verstappen a fourth straight title scheduled for next Thursday, he has now had attention diverted to preparing his defence for Friday's hearing led by an independent barrister.
The charge is serious.
On Monday Red Bull said: "After being made aware of certain recent allegations, the company launched an independent investigation.
"This process, which is already under way, is being carried out by an external specialist barrister.
"The company takes these matters extremely seriously and the investigation will be completed as soon as practically possible. It would not be appropriate to comment further at this time."
Horner issued a strong rebuttal, telling Dutch paper De Telegraaf: "I completely deny these claims."
The inquiry could not come at a worse time for the man who has become an ever-present fixture on F1's landscape over nearly two decades.
Eloquent, bright, combative, his spats with his opposite number at Mercedes Toto Wolff have made for compelling viewing.
- Power and sway -
Not least when Verstappen controversially deprived Lewis Hamilton of an unprecedented eighth world crown on the last lap of the last race of the 2021 season in Abu Dhabi.
As team principal and chief executive of Red Bull Racing Horner has an enormous amount of power and sway over a vast empire based at the team's Milton Keynes headquarters in England.
During his time at the tiller the company's workforce has ballooned from 450 to 1,500, with one of that number's allegations shocking the F1 community.
Williams chief James Vowles has been one of Horner's few peers to speak publicly about the case this week.
Without going into the specifics of the allegations Vowles told Bloomberg on Monday: "All I can say is that should this ever happen in our regard, we'll be entirely supportive in terms of fixing it and making sure we have a culture that is accepting of everyone.
"I think it means we all have to look each other in the mirror and make sure that we are posing the right questions internally and acting in a way that we can only be proud of, not today but in the next 10 years."
Horner's ties with the ambitious Austrian company Red Bull date back to his time in F3000 and to Dietrich Mateschitz.
Mateschitz, the father of Red Bull who died in 2022, had purchased the Jaguar F1 outfit in 2004 - and saw enough in the young Horner to appoint him as team boss for 2005.
Among the many inspired moves Horner made was to bring on board Adrian Newey, ranked as one of the most talented engineers and designers of his or any other generation.
Newey, who climbed aboard the Red Bull wagon in 2006, produced the cars that won the drivers' and constructors titles every year from 2010 to 2013, the drivers' championship in 2021, and both championships in 2022 and 2023.
Newey's RB19, which ran riot on the track last year, is statistically the most succesful car in F1 history, winning 21 out of 22 races.
And Red Bull will be mindful that Newey's contract is linked to Horner's which means if one leaves then the other is free to follow.
Despite all the attendant stress of being at the helm of steering such a colossal enterprise through the choppy waters of a multi-billion pound industry - Horner retains an air of boyish enthusiasm.
He married Geri Halliwell, Ginger Spice of the former Spice Girls pop band in 2015, and the couple have one son, Montague. Horner also has a daughter from a previous relationship.
A supporter of Coventry City football club, Horner is the longest serving team principal in the paddock.
During that tenure he has inevitably had to deal with crisis after crisis - but none more serious than the one he is facing on Friday.
P.Silva--AMWN