
Jackson speeds past Wójcik for 500m World Cup win
American Erin Jackson stormed past Andzelika Wojcik of Poland to win a 500m race on Sunday at an ISU Speed Skating World Cup event in Heerenveen, Netherlands.

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Newsweek
3 hours ago
- Newsweek
Shane Van Gisbergen Takes Jab at Red Bull Over Liam Lawson Demotion
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. NASCAR driver Shane van Gisbergen made a joke about Red Bull Racing's brutal driver handlings. Gisbergen got his maiden win in Mexico over the past weekend after struggling in his first full-time NASCAR Cup Series season. He only made the top ten once in the first 15 races. He struggled to adapt to the ovals that feature so prominently in the American racing series. Shane Van Gisbergen, driver of the #88 Safety Culture Chevrolet, celebrates after winning the NASCAR Cup Series Viva Mexico 250 at Autodromo Hermanos Rodriguez on June 15, 2025 in Mexico City, Mexico. Shane Van Gisbergen, driver of the #88 Safety Culture Chevrolet, celebrates after winning the NASCAR Cup Series Viva Mexico 250 at Autodromo Hermanos Rodriguez on June 15, 2025 in Mexico City, Mexico. Photo byGisbergen - a New Zealander sponsored by Red Bull - started in pole position in the Mexico City Cup Series race. His win was anything but smooth; he battled shifting conditions due to the inconsistent rain and a never-ending series of caution flags. Despite all of the challenges, Gisbergen managed to pull off the win, staying calm, cool, and collected throughout the race. After his landmark win, he thanked Trackhouse Racing for their continued support of him despite his struggles. He made a cheeky remark about the support he received during his downturn in form, comparing it to what Red Bull offered fellow New Zealander Liam Lawson. "I'm glad I didn't drive for Red Bull F1 after how the first few rounds went," van Gisbergen joked after the race. "[Team boss] Justin [Marks] has been amazing, supporting me and just giving me all the time I need and not putting pressure on [me]. It's been really cool." Red Bull's F1 team decided to axe Lawson after only two races, a drastic decision that followed a series of underwhelming results. When Lawson made an Instagram post back in March about his removal from Red Bull, van Gisbergen left a message under the post saying, "Prove em Wrong!" The 36-year-old New Zealander mentored his fellow countryman and backed Lawson through different racing series. While trying to make it in America, van Gisbergen still monitored Lawson's progress. "The way he's gotten to F1 has been a little difficult the last couple of years. But seeing him get this opportunity full-time now, I'm just stoked and so proud," he said back in December. "You've got to be versatile, which is something I've always tried to do by driving a bunch of different cars. It helps you when it comes to something new in the setup, something technical, or even with the weather changing. You've got to be able to adapt straight away. "Liam's been exceptional at that. Even when F1 wasn't working out, he did DTM and other racing that I think has really helped him."


San Francisco Chronicle
5 hours ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
In America's Outfield, Giants' Ramos, Lee and Yaz bond over differences (and trash talk)
The San Francisco Giants feature America's Outfield, if you define America as a cultural and ethnic melting pot. The left fielder is Puerto Rican, the center fielder is South Korean, born in Japan, and the right fielder is American, with Polish and Italian immigrant roots holding up his family tree. Left to right, they are Heliot Ramos, Jung Hoo Lee and Mike Yastrzemski. Pronounce and spell all three names correctly, win a prize. It's a defensive rainbow coalition. Probably the first Dominican/Korean/Polish-Italian American outfield in major league history. They've come to the right team. The Giants, New York and San Francisco, are big on ethnic outfield firsts. The first MLB all-Black outfield — Monte Irvin, rookie Willie Mays and Hank Thompson in the 1951 World Series. The first all-Latino outfield, which was also the first and only all-brothers outfield — Felipe, Matty and Jesus Alou, for eight games in 1963. Ramos, Lee and Yastrzemski are close neighbors in the clubhouse, too, their lockers side-by-side-by-side in one corner. Make it a foursome, counting Justin Han, Lee's interpreter. The Giants' clubhouse dressing cubicles are arranged by position. 'It's about being close to the guys you're going to be playing close to,' Yastrzemski says. 'There's so much communication that goes on out on the field, and it all starts in here, so it's nice to be close to each other. We can talk about how we're going to play against a certain team, how we're going to do against a certain guy, so it's pretty helpful.' In their first full season together, the three have become buddies. Amigos. Be peu. 'Sometimes baseball,' Lee says when asked what the three talk about, 'but more of it is just joking around, you know, being friendly with each other.' 'We're super close to each other,' Ramos says, referring to more than geography. 'We have a good communication, we talk a lot of crap to each other, we just play around a lot.' Yastrzemski says, 'We go out to eat on the road together a decent amount. Me and Ramos both have families, so if they're on the road, one of us will be missing (from dinner), but we try to do as much stuff together as possible.' Language is not a barrier. Ramos speaks English fluently, working at it since he signed his first pro contract at 17. 'I feel like I'm still learning a lot,' Ramos says. 'It was a challenge for sure when I was coming up, but I feel pretty good at it now. It was a main thing for me, I watched everything in English, all my friends were Americans, that helped me a lot. I like talking, so I just go out there and talk, I'm not shy.' Lee works hard on his English. 'Jungy's done a great job of focusing on learning English, and he understands really well,' Yastrzemski says. 'I don't think he's quite comfortable talking to the media in English, but he does pretty well with us, and he understands just about everything we're saying, which is great. 'At the same time, I'm learning some Korean and some Spanish words, we all just kind of mix and match and have fun with it. There's some interesting conversations.' What has Yastrzemski learned in Korean? 'A lot of it is probably stuff that I can't say (for print). That's obviously our nature, the first place we want to go is to learn the curse words and the ways to make fun of each other.' Lee says, through Han, 'I have Justin around, he helps out, but the players also help out with English, so that makes it comfortable for me.' Learning English is no picnic for a South Korean. English has sounds that don't exist in Korean, and vice versa. Humor helps, it's kind of universal. 'Youngie's pretty funny,' says Ramos, who gives Lee's nickname a Latin flavor with the soft J, while Yastrzemski gives it the hard J — Jungie. The three have stuff in common, such as athletic bloodlines. Lee's father, Jong Beom Lee, was a star player in the Japanese and Korean major leagues. His nickname was Son of the Wind. Jung Hoo's nickname in Korea was Grandson of the Wind, although his speed is only slightly above average. Ramos' older brother Henry is a true baseball journeyman, currently in the 16th year of that journey, which has included a cup of coffee in the big leagues and two seasons in the Korea Baseball Organization. Another older brother, Hector, was a professional soccer player. Yastrzemski's grandfather is, of course, Red Sox Hall of Famer Carl. Carl's parents emigrated from Poland to become potato farmers on Long Island. Mike's mother's family traces back to Italy. All three Giants have roots in great baseball cultures. South Korea came relatively late to the game, but has produced 29 MLB players, seven of whom are currently in the majors. Puerto Rico's rich baseball world has churned out more than 400 big leaguers, including late Giants legend Orlando Cepeda. Culture-wise, Yastrzemski trumps his buddies. Historical records show that in the early 1600s, Polish immigrants brought a sport to the New World, a game called palant, played with a bat and a ball made of rags, to the amusement of Native American spectators. In the outfield, Ramos, Lee and Yastrzemski communicate with looks, gestures and baseballese. Question to Lee: How do you say, 'I got it'? Lee (skipping his interpreter): 'I got it.'


Chicago Tribune
6 hours ago
- Chicago Tribune
Letters: It was a joy to celebrate Pope Leo XIV at the home of the White Sox
If you are part of a 30,000-strong crowd of fans at Rate Field, or any other baseball park, you would expect to jump to your feet for any number of reasons, A walk-off home run, a spectacular catch at the outfield wall, a grand slam homer or a runner thrown out at the plate, to name a few. But you would never hear over the roaring crowd the collective exclamation from 30,000 plastic seats suddenly relieved of their occupants' weights and snapping upright, as you would have heard many times on June 14 as the faithful dutifully stood during a Mass celebrating a newly elected Holy Father. The green numbered seats seemed to scream out together: 'What? An American pope? From Chicago? And a confirmed White Sox fan?' The weather was beautiful, the crowd polite, proud and happy. The ballpark help seemed eager to please, and restrictions on seating and other areas were loose to unenforced. They weren't needed for this diverse group of mostly Catholic celebrants. Absent for the 5 1/2-hour event were the things that make us cringe or keep us at home: foul language, abusive signage and aggressive behavior. Security could have taken the day off. Many notables spoke. The pope himself spoke on a prerecorded message on the jumbo screen that dominates center field, encouraging the young to engage in changing the world for the better. Cardinal Blaise Cupich spoke forcefully and eloquently on the contributions of immigrants, the cruelty and lawlessness of the current immigration policies, drawing many rounds of applause. But not from the guy in front of me, or a few sitting around me, so I guess we still stand divided on this issue. I am often critical of my Catholic Church for many reasons, especially on its insistence on a celibate priesthood and denial of ordination to women, but on that sunny Saturday, it felt good to be among the many other Catholics celebrating this curious intersection of papal election, civic pride and baseball fandom. God bless you, Pope many of the uplifting Tribune stories I often stop to read, 'Pope encourages peace at Rate Field celebration' (June 15) worked on several counts. Foremost was in hinting that the new personable and approachable pontiff has the potential to become a speaker not just for the young or proponents of contemporary popular causes but for everyone. Maybe he can succeed in this uniting at which our world's secular heads today are abjectly failing. This would certainly be an exciting cause for hope and signify the rebirth of a willingness to listen to our spiritual leaders again. All that would denote progress, stemming partly from the efforts of a man who can still find it in himself to back his hometown White Sox. (Which alone marks him as a grounded person to emulate.) But it moved me deeply, too, to read the article's second-paragraph reference to St. Augustine's advice to try bettering the world by first bettering ourselves. This was my thinking exactly, since spotting and photographing a lawn sign in front of a local church one recent night. Transcending religious denomination in offering some specific, helpful advice, it featured a dozen admonitions pointed the reader: Lead with love. Encourage others. Give thanks. Pray often. Practice peace. Work for justice. Two sound like results as much as means to an end: Be a blessing. Be the light. Meaning, for others. And then of course pray to St. Augustine that the initiative spreads a proud graduate of The Immaculata High School, I want to salute Ellen Skerrett for her op-ed about a strongly Catholic Chicago ('The pope's mother came of age during a complex Catholic-centered Chicago,' June 13). The Immaculata was just one of the elementary schools in Chicago that the Sisters of Charity of the Blessed Virgin Mary, (BVMs) staffed, plus two high schools and Mundelein College. Many other Catholic schools were taught by the Jesuits, the Sisters of Mercy, the Dominicans and other religious orders. Spending so many hours each day during the school year being taught by black-robed women and men, who were totally dedicated to spreading religious values, affected everyone who attended their schools. The effects of this immersion reverberate even to this day. Chicago can claim the first American pope because Mildred Prevost carried The Immaculata message of the classroom to her son, as did her two sisters who became nuns — one a BVM and the other a Sister of Mercy. This religious impact dwindled when many sisters left their religious communities in the 1970s, resulting in the closure of a number of Catholic schools. Perhaps the question we need to be asking now is: How can we pass on these educational, religious and social lessons of unity and peace to help shape today's world?These days, politicians regularly embarrass themselves, and us by extension. Many politicians' speeches pass blame onto others, making them sound as if they were elementary school-aged children. Some politicians demonstrate their unsavory characters with words of bullying and poorly disguised dishonesty. So, it is refreshing to hear a politician whose words exude fairness, truth and empathy. I'm referring to Democratic Gov. JB Pritzker. Tribune's Sunday opinion section quoted Pritzker ('Quotes of the week'), and I feel his words deserve to be repeated. He said: 'The vast majority of immigrants contribute to our communities, pay taxes and abide by the law. We should value their entrepreneurship, ingenuity and hard work. Both political parties are to blame for America's broken immigration system.' There it is: no blaming others; no bullying; no using lies to support an agenda. And best of all, no one could possibly be embarrassed by these empathetic Peregrine's op-ed 'A look back at the Blackhawks' streak when Chicago was a true championship city' (June 17) reminded me of June 11, 2010, when my granddaughter Elizabeth and I boarded a crowded train filled with happy Blackhawks fans and made our way to the rally downtown on a perfect Chicago summer day. Fans waited for the buses that carried the heroes of that year's Stanley Cup-winning team; as soon as a bus turned a corner and the players came close enough to be recognizable, fans started shouting their names, yelling joyfully. It was one of those collective experiences one always remembers. And then — another bus turned a corner. I looked. Was that … ? It was! Tony Esposito! Bobby Hull! Stan Mikita! Dennis Hull! I started yelling too.