- Carbon cuts 'miles short' of 2030 goal: UN
- Crisis-hit VW eyeing plant closures, deep pay cuts: report
- What next after Japanese election
- Trump, Harris lean on traditional bases eight days before US vote
- Still no snow on Japan's Mount Fuji, breaking record
- Philips lowers sales outlook on drop in China orders
- French screen legend Depardieu asks for delay to sexual assault trial
- Paris show spotlights Afghan women who 'lost hope'
- Climate change-worsened floods wreak havoc in Africa
- French screen legend Depardieu faces sexual assault trial
- Japan PM vows to stay on despite election debacle
- Record number of women win seats in Japan election
- Vinicius favourite for Ballon d'Or in post-Messi/Ronaldo era
- Milan and Inter back on long road towards a new San Siro
- Oil prices tumble as Iran fears ease, yen weakens after Japan polls
- Olympus CEO resigns over alleged illegal drugs purchase
- After disastrous election, what happens to Japan's new PM?
- Bangladesh immunity order sparks fears of justice denied
- North Korea says probe 'proved' Seoul to blame for drones
- Wallabies return to Perth and Townsville for 2025 Tests
- Left, center-right candidates to duel in Uruguay presidential runoff
- Australia rest Test stars for Pakistan T20 series
- New storm bears down on Philippines after deadly Trami
- 'Wiped off the face of the Earth': How Russia erased a Ukrainian city
- Teacher vs veterinarian: Uruguay's presidential frontrunners
- Down to the wire: Trump, Harris in final week push
- NFL Chiefs stay unbeaten as Commanders win on miracle catch
- Trump's New York rally attacks Harris, draws criticism
- Maxey scores 45 points to propel 76ers over Pacers
- Left, center-right candidates to duel in Uruguay presidential runoff: estimates
- Debutant Sears shines as US women rally to beat Iceland
- Sainz achieves wish with one more win for Ferrari
- Japan PM under pressure after debacle election
- Timothee Chalamet crashes his own look-alike contest
- McLaren say Verstappen penalties 'not enough' after 'ridiculous' Mexico move
- Eight-try Toulouse flatten Toulon to go top of Top 14
- Ohtani expected to play in World Series game three after injury scare: Roberts
- Centre-left opposition leads in Lithuania election
- Sainz wins Mexico Grand Prix as Norris makes most of Verstappen penalty
- Trump leads New York rally as Harris targets grassroots
- Centre-lift opposition leads in Lithuania election
- Injured Springbok Willemse to miss November Tests
- NFL Browns upset Ravens while Tagovailoa loses in comeback
- Yildiz saves Juve in eight-goal thriller at Inter as Napoli pull away
- Bolivia's ex-president blames govt as shots fired at him
- Japan ruling coalition projected to lose majority in election
- Yildiz drags Juve back from brink in eight-goal thriller at Inter
- Ford added to England squad for New Zealand clash
- Faltering Atletico stumble again at Real Betis
- Ohtani to play World Series game three after injury scare - report
Paris-Roubaix cobbled 'Hell' looms as cycling faces crash crisis
Defending champion Mathieu van der Poel goes into Sunday's muddy, cobbled Paris-Roubaix bike race sceptical over new safety measures in a week when several of the sport's biggest stars were hospitalised.
Miles of mud and millions of cobbles have lent the race the name of 'the Hell of the North' and a reputation of the most gruelling one-day race in cycling.
In 2018, one competitor, the Belgian Michael Goolaerts, was found slumped dead by the roadside after heart failure, and the peloton will pass a memorial to him along the route.
First run in 1896, broken wheels and broken bones have been part of the history of the annual race due to the hefty hunks of cobble that surface around 57km of the 260km route.
Organisers this week introduced a u-turn to slow the riders ahead of their entry into the legendary section outside the 650m deep Arenberg coal-mine.
World champion and one day racing's hottest star van der Poel asked on X: "Is this a joke", after hearing about the change to the route.
Richard Plugge, CEO of the dominant Visma team, praised the race organisers.
"It's really brave and courageous thinking. If it's a good solution. It doesn't matter to me. We can discuss about it. But the idea of changing that is already really good," he told AFP.
His star rider Jonas Vingegaard is in hospital after a midweek crash.
As cycling fans tune in Sunday, their thoughts will be with Tour de France champion Vingegaard, Remco Evenepoel and Primoz Roglic, who were among those hospitalised after crashing at the Tour of the Basque Country on Thursday.
Of road cycling's five huge one-day races known as the Monuments due to their epic length, Paris-Roubaix, which starts in Compiegne 80km from the French capital, is known as 'Queen of the classics' because it is the toughest.
Ineos rider Tom Pidcock was a last minute inclusion and was mobbed on his arrival at the start-line gala on Saturday.
"I'm so excited, I haven't felt like this since I was a kid," said Pidcock, who won the race as a junior.
The 25 teams select seven of their sturdiest riders to cope with the repeated punctures and frequent falls.
- Cold beer -
In 2021, winner Sonny Colbrelli fell to the ground at the finish line unrecognisable in a coating of mud. The following year, after a race ridden in drier conditions, champion Dylan van Baarle rode into the Roubaix velodrome cloaked in ghostly grey dust.
Race folklore has it that the cobbles decide the winner, who receives one of the rough-hewn slabs in guise of a champion's trophy along with a cheque of 30,000 euros (32,500 dollars).
The winner also has his name engraved on a plaque at the Roubaix velodrome's iconic outdoor cold showers.
He will also, as tradition requires be presented with a carton of local delicacies -- french fries and a cold beer.
There are 29 cobbled sections along the 260km route, each of them given a star rating of one to five depending on their bone-rattling potential.
Six are four-star and three of them five-star.
The first is the Trouee d'Arenberg, where the safety chicane has been introduced.
These sections can be as narrow as three metres, are by no means flat, and are flanked with a daunting drainage ditch on one side.
At last week's other great cobbled classic, the Tour of Flanders, which Van der Poel won with ease.
"I'm lucky to have a team dedicated 110 percent around me," said the 29-year-old Dutch rider.
In the warm-up race, Around Flanders, one of cycling's top stars Wout van Aert suffered broken bones and was left in agony after a high-speed crash that fueled the safety debate.
That is not the only concern about the road. Roubaix regional officials plead each year with travelling bike fans and curious onlookers to refrain from taking home souvenir cobbles, considered part of the heritage of one of France's less affluent regions.
F.Bennett--AMWN