After appearing before the world council of the FIA the world governing
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After appearing before the world council of the FIA, the world governing body of the sport, the Williams-Renault driver said in Paris that he could face a ban if he upset the authorities again. The Canadian, who will be driving in his home grand prix on Sunday, created uproar in the paddock at Imola last April by insisting that the changes for 1998, involving the use of grooved tyres and narrower cars, were "ridiculous".On the eve of the opening day's practice for the San Marino Grand Prix, Villeneuve said: "These new regulations are just a joke To run on these tyres is just ridiculous. It takes all the precision out of the driving and the racing - as well as the fun - and it is just a ridiculous idea."After talking to the FIA president, Max Mosley, and other officials for 10 minutes, he said: "It was a discussion to make things clear and everything went well The problem is not what I've said but the way I said it. After appearing before the world council of the FIA, the world governing body of the sport, the Williams-Renault driver said in Paris that he could face a ban if he upset the authorities again. "It's just a warning which means I might get a suspension next time, if there is a next time," he said. The Canadian, who will be driving in his home grand prix on Sunday, created uproar in the paddock at Imola last April by insisting that the changes for 1998, involving the use of grooved tyres and narrower cars, were "ridiculous".On the eve of the opening day's practice for the San Marino Grand Prix, Villeneuve said: "These new regulations are just a joke To run on these tyres is just ridiculous.
Jacques Villeneuve, the Formula One World championship leader who is tipped to lift the title this season, received a warning from the sport's governing body yesterday for criticising planned regulation changes. The Gars am Kamp centre has been used by numerous sportsmen and women - the former Formula One racing champion Niki Lauda recuperated there from severe burns suffered in a crash in Germany and returned there recently following a kidney transplant.. She does not have a clear idea what to do with her life after tennis and a hefty slice of her fortune has been lost as a result of her father/manager, Peter's, problems with the German tax authorities.Currently ranked No 3 in the world, her lowest position for a decade, Graf finds herself caught in the incoming tide of a new generation. Martina Hingis has supplanted her as the No 1, Iva Majoli has won the French Open, and Anna Kournikova and Venus Williams are in the process of cutting their teeth.This would be hard enough for Graf to deal with if she were fit and confident, but there have been signs that her opponents no longer fear her, 21 Grand Slam titles or not.At least she will be in good hands.
"I think that Steffi Graf will be 100 per cent again by the end of the year."Graf, a perfectionist, is unlikely to settle for less than the highest level, even though it will be a difficult decision. "It is a sign of wear and tear that, however, by no means has to mean the end of a career," he said. Graf issued a statement after the operation, saying she was "confident that I will return to the sport which I love so much - and in good health."Weinstabl, unfortunately, was less certain "That is certainly our aim," he said. "Whether that aim can be reached one cannot say now."The German Olympic team and tennis federation doctor, Joseph Keul, had supportive words for Graf. Replacements: N Jenkins (Pontypridd and Wales) for Underwood, 55.Referee: T Henning (Northern Transvaal).. "I feel I'm in seventh heaven," was how Steffi Graf summarised her Wimbledon triumph last year Now the valedictory articles are being prepared And not for the first time.
The great German athlete's career is under threat again following further surgery, on this occasion to repair her left knee five days before her 28th birthday on Saturday. Rehabilitation is expected to take six months, and Graf's Austrian surgeon, Reinhard Weinstabl, has expressed a doubt that the seven-times Wimbledon champion will be able to compete again at the highest level. Neil Jenkins, on for the injured Underwood, sank the most awkward of conversions and the Lions were in front for the first time.Gauteng: D du Toit; J Gillingham, J van der Waht, H le Roux, P Hendriks; L van Rensburg, J Roux; R Grau, C Rossouw (J Dalton, 52), K van Greuning, K Wiese (capt), B Thorne, A Vos, W Brosnihan, P Krause.BRITISH ISLES: N Beal (Northampton and England); J Bentley (Newcastle and England), J Guscott (Bath and England), W Greenwood (Leicester), T Underwood (Newcastle and England); M Catt (Bath and England), A Healey (Leicester and England); T Smith (Watsonians and Scotland), B Williams (Richmond and Wales), P Wallace (Saracens and Ireland), N Redman (Bath and England), J Davidson (London Irish and Ireland), R Wainwright (Watsonians and Scotland) T Rodber (Northampton and England, capt) N Back (Leicester and England). Nick Beal's hack through would have resulted in a try but for brilliant defensive work from Hendriks and Andre Vos while in turn, Guscott made amends for his earlier slip by pulling the rampaging Piet Krause to the floor inches from the Lions' line.Then, on the hour, came the breakthrough. Bentley used his strength to protect Lions' possession close to the right touch line and with help from Williams and Rodber, Greenwood squeezed through the smallest of holes into the Gauteng 22, fed Austin Healey with a sublime pass out of the tackle and turned in jubilation to see the scrum-half sprinter outstrip the cover on his way to the right corner. Sadly, an uncharacteristic missed tackle on Gillingham allowed Gauteng to turn the tables and it needed two of Tony Underwood's bravest tackles to repulse them, one on Johan Roux in the right corner and a second on Rossouw in the left.After the stern and unforgiving close-quarter battle before the interval, the game was now alive with pace and adventure.
Catt was short and wide with an early penalty effort but Jeremy Guscott contributed one of his dangerous chip-and-chase raids to win an attacking scrum - a valuable platform wasted when Back knocked on in the tackle five metres short.With Jeremy Davidson the dominant force at the line-out, Guscott was finding the sort of space that makes him a threat to any defence in the world. But the Lions finished the first 40 minutes with a spell of encouraging territorial advantage, and had Tony Underwood not stumbled inside the home 22 after excellent work from Back, Rob Wainwright and Catt, an opening try would have been his for the taking.That strong finish to the first period galvanised the Lions and with Back buzzing around like an entire swarm of bees, Gauteng were on their uppers from the restart. Williams had chosen to use Bruce Thorne as a dormat at a line-out, but it was Rossouw who received the ear-bashing from Mr Henning.While Catt struggled to adjust his radar - he hit the left-hand post twice in the opening half - du Toit settled into his rhythm with two relatively straightforward shots to give Gauteng a 9-3 advantage at the break. Gauteng breathed fire in the final ten but with the Lions' back row of Tim Rodber, Rob Wainwright and Neil Back giving everything in defence, they were restricted to an injury time try by Andre Vos, their blind side flanker.Dawie Du Toit made an embarrassing foul-up of his first penalty shot after Tim Rodber and Neil Back killed the ball on the floor but made no mistake after five minutes when John Bentley was caught well offside near his own posts.Mike Catt squared it almost immediately from distance but the Lions were still under the cosh - and in more ways than one. Will Greenwood's try- saving tackle on Joe Gillingham in the right corner was quickly followed by a humdinger of a punch by Chris Rossouw, the Boks' World Cup-winning hooker from 1995, on Barry Williams, his opposite number. The former rugby league wing left five Gauteng tacklers for dead, and coming as it did just seven minutes after Austin Healey's superb opening try, it ripped the game from the South Africans' grasp in the most dramatic fashion immaginable. Bentley struck on 67 minutes, picking up the ball fully 60 metres out, beating two tackles on the wide right before curving inside and giving three more defenders the slip before finishing off under the post. John Bentley, his Test place in jeopardy after a flawed performance in Pretoria last weekend, scored one of the great individual tries in Lions history at Ellis Park last night to give the tourists their first victory over a Super 12 Province.