
De Meo's exit changes nothing for Alpine F1 team, Briatore says
MONTREAL, June 15 (Reuters) - The departure from Renault of chief executive Luca de Meo changes nothing for the French carmaker's Alpine Formula One team, de facto principal Flavio Briatore told Reuters on Sunday.
Renault announced Luca De Meo was leaving shortly after the newspaper Le Figaro reported he will take over the leadership of the luxury group Kering.
Briatore, a title-winning boss of the Benetton and Renault F1 teams, returned to Formula One a year ago as executive adviser to De Meo and has been running the team since Oliver Oakes resigned as principal.
Briatare has denied being tasked to improve the team's performance prior to selling it. Alpine are currently last of the 10 teams.
"Nothing, absolutely nothing," Briatore said when asked after the Canadian Grand Prix in Montreal what De Meo's departure changed for the team.
"Nothing changed for me. Not for me or the team. And congratulations to Luca, new job," he said.
Alpine will compete with Mercedes power units next season after Renault decided last September to end engine production at its Viry-Chatillon factory outside Paris.
The team, whose investors include Hollywood actor Ryan Reynolds and NFL stars Patrick Mahomes and Travis Kelce, are currently alone in using Renault power units.
De Meo said last October that Renault were spending up to 250 million euros ($289 million) a year on engine production while buying in from another manufacturer would cost less than $20 million.
($1 = 0.8662 euros)
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Times
an hour ago
- Times
How Monte Carlo became cool again
My life was ruined on a Monaco pier. It was there, while dozing on a banana yellow sunbed as superyachts bobbed in the waters, sports cars grumbled down the mountain behind me and lithe French girls in Lanvin bathing suits leapt into the Mediterranean, that I realised my standards of wellbeing had been irreparably raised. I might never be this happy again. It was my first time in the principality, and I was there to check out a new collaboration between the Monte Carlo Beach Hotel and the French designer Simon Porte Jacquemus. The designer has taken over the hotel's pier for summer 2025, helping create a beach club complete with branded chairs and umbrellas and towels — all in the Jacquemus black and yellow colour palette. The brand has also opened two pop-up boutiques at the hotel: one for clothing and another for accessories, including its popular bucket hats (£220). (Its viral, and comically large, raffia sunhat is not longer for sale but is also on display.) The beach club is part of a larger movement afoot in Monte Carlo. While I was there I learnt that the city is going through something of a rebrand. The smart, young crowd who haunt the coves and clubs of the Mediterranean had, apparently, written off Monte Carlo as a party town, choosing instead to take their helicopters across to St Tropez when they wanted to look for good time. Something had to be done, and so hospitality group Société des Bains de Mer, which owns the Monte Carlo Beach Hotel (as well as a host of other hotels in the country), the city's main casino, and 27 restaurants with a collective seven Michelin stars from chefs including Alain Ducasse, Marcel Ravin and Cedric Grolet — began to think about how to appeal to a younger traveller. The trick was pulling this off while maintaining the belle époque glamour and idiosyncratic charm that the city is famous for. • Read more luxury reviews, advice and insights from our experts Monaco is the second smallest independent state in the world. In 1856 Prince Charles III of Monaco granted the Société des Bains de Mer permission to build a casino in Monte Carlo in the hope of attracting wealthy clientele. The ploy worked and the place became a popular destination for everyone from Monet to Mick Jagger. The first Monaco Grand Prix took place in Monte Carlo in 1929, revving up the glitz and, before long, the place became a synonym for decadent luxury, which was further amplified when the actress Grace Kelly joined the royal family. The lustre of the country was burnished by its multiple appearances on screen, including in To Catch a Thief, Bonjour Tristesse and many a Bond film. In the Eighties the glamour took a turn for the brash, as was appropriate for the decade, with tanned royals like Princess Stéphanie, glistening with diamonds and hair gel, lording it about the place. In the Nineties the skies still thrummed with choppers and the sea was frothy with superyachts, but the empty skyscrapers and dwindling club scene meant revellers ventured elsewhere. Which is where Jacquemus, a 36-year-old designer and Côte d'Azur native with over six million followers on Instagram, came in. It turns out that when a social media savvy 16-year-old fashion brand makes an alliance with a 95-year-old hotel with an extensive history, nothing but good can come. What makes this collaboration so fabulous is that in a world where aesthetics have become increasingly uniform, the beach club seems to be eager to bring modern style to the resort while maintaining its unique personality. There you will find good-looking young couples taking photos on the yellow and black striped loungers and older women for whom the tan never went out of style wandering into the sea, perfect in their bikinis and diamonds. The beach club is open to hotel guests and visitors alike, who can feast on everything from club sandwiches and Caesar salad, to watermelon presented on a large bowl of ice, alongside cocktails and fresh juices. Thanks to its positioning at the end of the beach, it feels secluded. There is every form of water sport on offer, and at the end of the long pier there is a netted swimming area to keep you safe from jellyfish. It's a multigenerational beach, but this adds a nice ambience. There's no music blasting, just the faint sounds of children daring each other to dive into the water and suave young Italian businessmen closing deals on their phones. Away from the Beach Club, the hotel, which is part of the Relais & Châteaux group, has plush rooms featuring balconies with perfect view of both the sea and the glittering homes dotted along the hillside. By the pool, which has been recently reimagined by the interior designer Dorothée Delaye, there are chic sunbeds covered in soothing green tones with matching green umbrellas and cabanas. They're positioned by the hotel's two original diving boards — one at a reasonable three metres, the other (now closed to the public) at a staggering five metres. Everywhere we went in Monte Carlo, from the hotel to the two Michelin-starred Blue Bay, we were met with impeccable service, kindness and attention to detail in a way that felt authentic — even when they were complimenting my very broken French. By 3.30 in the afternoon on the Saturday, once everyone had finished their expertly fried courgette flowers and freshly caught Sam Remo prawns, the hotel's restaurant Maona, which is now home to a collaboration with the Mykonos restaurant Sea Satin, was confronting the party problem head on. The DJ had begun laying down dancing tracks, the ouzo was flowing and the restaurant's crisp white napkins were being waved in the air. Somehow, this didn't stop calm at the beach, or interrupt the families playing at the pool. Everyone seemed to have everything they needed. Rather than trying to adapt to the trend for quiet luxury, the beach club has decided to embrace Monte Carlo's maximalism. They're not trying too hard to be cool, which means of course that they are. While other European hotspots like Mykonos and Ibiza will also see Jacquemus pop-ups this summer, I'd suggest stopping by the outpost in Monte Carlo instead. Where else can you find yourself squeezed in a lift with women toting Balenciaga city bags discussing boarding school, a pair of drunk Italians teens in designer track pants, and a priest in white robes wearing circular tortoiseshell Persol glasses? When it comes to glamour, it's really always best to leave it to the experts. The Jacquemus x Monte-Carlo Beach Club is open until October 7. One sunbed costs €30.


Reuters
3 hours ago
- Reuters
Max Scherzer set to make Blue Jays return on Wednesday
June 23 - Future Hall of Fame pitcher Max Scherzer is set to make his return to the mound for Toronto on Wednesday when the Blue Jays play the middle game of a three-game set at the Cleveland Guardians. Manager John Schneider has officially listed Scherzer as the starter in that game. It will mark his first appearance since his Blue Jays debut versus Baltimore on March 29. "That's a huge, huge addition for us," Schneider said after Sunday's 4-2 loss to the Chicago White Sox. "That's Max Scherzer. I'll take that any day of the week." Scherzer signed a one-year, $15.5 million deal with Toronto in February. He only lasted three innings versus the Orioles in the third game of the season. He was initially placed on the 15-day injured list on March 30 with inflammation in his right thumb, but was eventually transferred to the 60-day IL. The 40-year-old has received two cortisone injections and was eligible to come off the list on May 29. He made two rehab starts for Triple-A Buffalo on June 13 and 18, fanning 12 batters and allowing two earned runs in 8 2/3 innings of work. He threw 75 pitches at Columbus on Wednesday and completed a bullpen session in Toronto on Sunday. "He's ready to go," Schneider said. "The thumb is a thing. It's a real thing. I think that getting to 75 pitches in his last start is a good thing and we just have to monitor it as we go. He knows his stuff is where it should be. I'm really, really excited to have him back." --Field Level Media


Reuters
7 hours ago
- Reuters
Clutch Miguel Vargas double pushes White Sox past Blue Jays
June 22 - Miguel Vargas hit the go-ahead two-run double in a three-run eighth and the visiting Chicago White Sox defeated the Toronto Blue Jays 4-2 on Sunday afternoon. Vargas had two hits to help the White Sox take the rubber match of the three-game series. Bo Bichette had two RBI singles for the Blue Jays, who finished a 3-3 homestand. Toronto's Brendon Little (3-1) walked pinch hitter Austin Slater to open the eighth. Michael A. Taylor singled to left with two outs. Jeff Hoffman replaced Little and walked Chase Meidroth to load the bases. A run scored when Hoffman muffed Andrew Benintendi's trickler up the first-base line. Vargas stroked the decisive double to left. Toronto starter Chris Bassitt was perfect for the first three innings before Meidroth led off the fourth by grounding a single to right. Meidroth took second when Vargas lined a one-out single to left. Kyle Teel walked to load the bases. Meidroth scored on Luis Robert Jr.'s fielder's choice chop to third. Chicago starter Adrian Houser retired nine straight before Andres Gimenez snapped an 0-for-20 drought with a one-out bloop single to left in the fifth. Gimenez took third on Myles Straw's double past third base but was out in a rundown between third and home on Alan Roden's grounder to first. Bichette grounded a single up the middle to tie the game. Houser limited the damage when Vladimir Guerrero Jr. grounded out with the bases loaded. Bassitt had a perfect sixth inning to complete his outing with one run, three hits and one walk allowed with seven strikeouts. Roden led off the home seventh with a triple over the bag at first and into the right field corner. Bichette singled up the middle and Toronto led 2-1. After Addison Barger grounded out to move Bichette to second, Jordan Leasure (2-4) replaced Houser. Guerrero walked and Bichette took third on a wild pitch. Bichette was out at home on a grounder to third. Houser finished with two runs allowed, seven hits and three walks with four strikeouts in 6 1/3 innings. Chicago's Brandon Eisert pitched a perfect eighth. Grant Taylor pitched around a single in the ninth to earn his first career save. --Field Level Media