De Bruyne to miss Belgium’s game against Russia at Euro 2020

Belgium’s players laugh during training at Petrovskly Stadium in St. Petersburg on the eve of their EURO 2020 match against Russia that Kevin De Bruyne will miss due to injury. (AFP)
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Updated 11 June 2021
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De Bruyne to miss Belgium’s game against Russia at Euro 2020

  • Belgium coach said Friday he expects Manchester City’s midfielder to join training after Russia’s game
  • De Bruyne only linked up with the squad on Monday after having a minor operation

ST. PETERSBURG: Kevin De Bruyne will not play for Belgium in Saturday’s opening group game against Russia at the European Championship.
He is still following an individual training program after an operation on his fractured nose and eye socket.
Belgium coach Roberto Martinez said Friday he expects the Manchester City midfielder to join full training with the squad when the players return to their training camp in Tubize, near Brussels, after the game against Russia in St. Petersburg.
“The next two days will be really important, just to get him back to really being able to move freely and start getting the exercise needed before he can come to the group,” Martinez said of De Bruyne, who was recently voted as the Premier League’s player of the season for the second straight year.
De Bruyne only linked up with the squad on Monday after having a minor operation following the injuries sustained during City’s loss to Chelsea in the Champions League final on May 29.
Belgium’s second game in Group B is against Denmark in Copenhagen on Thursday, when Martinez expects De Bruyne to play a part.
Another key Belgium player missing against Russia will be defensive midfielder Axel Witsel, who was surprisingly included in the Euro 2020 squad despite missing the final four months of the club season with Borussia Dortmund because of a torn Achilles tendon injury.
Martinez said Witsel, who didn’t play in Belgium’s warmup games ahead of the tournament, was “progressing well” and had been training with the full squad.
“I don’t expect Axel will need a lot more work with the group,” Martinez said.


Teams on edge as F1 reset faces litmus test in Australia

Updated 12 sec ago
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Teams on edge as F1 reset faces litmus test in Australia

  • Formula One’s new era faces first test in Melbourne

MELBOURNE: Formula One’s new era starts at this weekend’s season-opening Australian Grand Prix, where teams will leap into the unknown and grapple with sweeping technical changes under race conditions for the first time.

F1 has simultaneously overhauled chassis and power unit regulations for the first time in decades, posing a challenge for drivers and engineers alike while raising concerns about the quality of racing.

With near-parity between electrical and combustion engines and cars running on 100 percent advanced sustainable fuel, drivers gained some insight into the changes during winter testing. But all are in the dark about how the reset will play out when going wheel-to-wheel on race-day.

“I’m certainly more comfortable now than I was a couple of months ago, with how ‌to drive these ‌cars and how to try and get the most out of ‌them,” McLaren’s Oscar Piastri told reporters on Wednesday.

“But I think there’s still the saying of, ‘You don’t know what you don’t know.’”

Australian Piastri said McLaren thought they had the cars worked out two months ago, only to find they had “a whole bunch of stuff” they did not understand during winter testing.

With more power generated by electricity than last year’s engines, there is more emphasis on drivers needing to be tactical with energy deployment and regeneration.

The old drag reduction system has been replaced by a new overtake mode giving extra power for overtaking.

Four-time world champion Max Verstappen described the changes ‌as “like Formula E on steroids” and “anti-racing.”

Formula One chief executive Stefano ‌Domenicali defended them and assured fans there will still be plenty of thrills.

‘Unnatural’ driving

The changes may have ‌different effects at different circuits, leaving all teams to learn on the fly, week by ‌week.

Piastri said Sunday’s race at Albert Park would probably showcase the more “unnatural” parts of driving.

“You know, a lot more lift and coast, a lot more kind of just driving to maximize the power unit,” he said.

“You’ve got power units that are reducing in power down the straights at different points. And there’s a ‌lot of unknowns, a lot of challenges in there.”

The new regulations raised hopes of a more open championship and the prospect of a disruptor team emerging to force change at the top.

But pre-season testing in Bahrain hinted at a familiar top four, with Ferrari, Mercedes, Red Bull and McLaren all performing.

Audi team principal Jonathan Wheatley said the gap between the “best and the rest” might only widen.

“I think it’s going to be a very different year in terms of the competitiveness in the sport,” he told Reuters. “We’re already seeing the gap between the fastest teams and the slowest teams, but larger than it’s been in the last few years.”

Whatever the pecking order, F1 race tracks will be more crowded with the addition of the new Cadillac team although there may be more breathing room at Albert Park given Aston Martin’s pre-season troubles.

Despite the technical guidance of Adrian Newey, who joined from Red Bull, the Honda-powered team completed few laps during winter testing and have reliability problems.

The AMR26 cars will be in Australia — something of a relief for F1 management — but may only race for a few laps before retiring.