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Howe joy as Newcastle end 'years of hurt'
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Montpellier Ligue 1 clash abandoned after crowd trouble
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Freeman says England rising star Pollock knew he'd score a Six Nations debut try against Wales
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Newcastle stun Liverpool in League Cup final to end 56-year trophy drought
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China's top seed Shi Yuqi wins All England Open
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Arsenal edge out Chelsea, Fulham beat Spurs
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US flies alleged gang members to El Salvador despite court block
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Trump, Putin to discuss Ukraine this week
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Record-breaking Six Nations puts France at Springboks' door
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Napoli miss out on Serie A summit with Venezia stalemate
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Meillard's double delight as Braathen bags first Brazilian podium
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Mitchell urges England to build on Six Nations rout of Wales
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Australian schoolboy Gout Gout clocks world-leading 200m time
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Greece experiences weather 'rollercoaster'
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'Decent starting point' for Verstappen in Australia
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Piastri blames himself after blowing Australian Grand Prix chance
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'Worse than I thought': Hamilton endures difficult Ferrari debut

Piastri blames himself after blowing Australian Grand Prix chance
McLaren's Oscar Piastri admitted he had no one to blame but himself after blowing a golden opportunity to win the Australian Grand Prix on Sunday.
The Australian was battling with teammate and eventual winner Lando Norris when he pushed too hard and skidded onto the grass on lap 44 at Albert Park.
It deprived him of the chance to win in front his home fans and McLaren of a likely one-two finish.
"Pretty disappointing. It felt like for every lap, apart from one, I drove an incredibly strong race, just a shame to not have the result to go with it," he said.
"I don't have anyone to blame but myself. I was a bit unfortunate to get stuck (in the grass) the way I did.
"It was only myself that put me there."
Despite the error, his drive leading up to that justified the pre-race hype around McLaren's pace, cementing their status as the team to beat.
Piastri recovered to finish ninth and at least earn his team two points.
"For me, the big positive is the other 56 laps of the race," he said.
"It felt like I had strong pace in all conditions. That's what I will try to take away. Just a shame to not have a better result."
McLaren chief Zak Brown said he felt "terrible" for Piastri who "drove such a brilliant race".
"He drove great to get back to P9," added Brown.
E.Ramalho--PC