- 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
- In uncertain US election, two prestige papers refuse to pick sides
- England's Slade eager to face New Zealand after Exeter return
- 'Venom' still kills, topping N.American box office
- Conservatives top Bulgarian elections but fall short of majority
- Liverpool hold Arsenal in Premier League title clash, Man Utd beaten
- Chelsea's Palmer reminds Maresca of Blues favourite Zola
Athletics track for Paris Olympics is made in Italy -- in purple
Italian firm Mondo will supply this summer's Paris Olympics with a custom purple track which could be the fastest yet for athletes hunting the biggest prizes in sport.
Based in the sleepy Piedmont town of Alba which is immersed in vineyards where the grapes for the world-famous Barolo wine ripen in the sun, Mondo first made the track for the 1976 Montreal Olympics.
For Paris -- its 13th Olympics -- it has devised the Mondotrack EB that will host 46 of 48 athletics events of the Games at the Stade de France.
The biggest stars in athletics such as reigning women's world 100m champion Sha'Carri Richardson will strive for Olympic glory on its surface.
Mondo claim the track delivers better performance than the one used at the Covid-delayed 2020 Tokyo Olympics, where three world records were broken, including the men's and women's 400m hurdles marks set by Karsten Warholm and Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone respectively.
"We have changed the design of the cells on the lower layer of the track compared to the one used in Tokyo," Maurizio Stroppiana, vice-president of Mondo's sports division and son of one of the two founders, told AFP.
"That reduces the energy loss for athletes and sends it back up to them at the best possible point of their movement."
However research and development manager Andrea Marenghi says that Mondo cannot "do whatever we want" with the composition of the track.
"There are very strict criteria set by the IOC (International Olympic Committee) because the most important thing is to safeguard the health of the athlete and not impair their technique," says Marenghi.
"Athletes are more high-performance than ever, and the track doesn't give anything that they don't already have."
The Paris track will be a striking purple rather than the traditional terracotta.
Marenghi told AFP that the two new shades -- one for the competition areas and another for the technical areas -- will only be used for the Games in the French capital.
"We wanted to have an original colour," said former decathlete Alain Blondel, the head of athletics and para-athletics events at the Paris Olympics.
"The two shades of purple allow for maximum contrast when TV pictures are being shot, highlighting the athletes."
Despite being purple the track, which in all measures 21,000 square metres, will also be more "green" than usual as it is made with more natural components than ever before.
"Up to 50 percent of the components of the track are either renewable to recycled... we were at just over 30 percent for London 2012," says Mondo's sustainability and innovation chief Giorgio Lesage.
S.F.Warren--AMWN