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/ 22 August 2005

Bittersweet victory for McLaren

Kimi Raikkonen claimed a dominant victory for McLaren in the inaugural Turkish Grand Prix in Istanbul on Sunday to turn the heat up on championship leader Fernando Alonso. The Finn was the class act of the field as he coolly claimed his fifth win of the year, but he could only close the gap in the title race by two points.

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/ 22 August 2005

Drogba helps sink Arsenal

Didier Drogba overshadowed debutant Michael Essien to poach a fluke winner for Chelsea’s first league victory over Arsenal in 10 years in Sunday’s Premiership clash at Stamford Bridge. Drogba once again outmuscled Philippe Senderos to latch on to a Frank Lampard free kick and bundle the ball past Jens Lehmann.

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/ 22 August 2005

Top spot puts a smile on Sharapova’s face

Maria Sharapova’s combination of dazzling looks and steely determination has turned the Russian tennis superstar into a sports phenomenon. Little more than a year after she shot to stardom with her 2004 triumph at Wimbledon, the 18-year-old has become the fifth-youngest woman to claim the world number-one ranking.

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/ 22 August 2005

Federer does it again

Roger Federer won his 22nd straight final on Sunday, beating Andy Roddick 6-3, 7-5 for the Cincinnati Masters title and his ninth overall victory this season. Federer improved to 10-1 against Roddick, who tried every tactic but still came up short. Federer has won the past six times they’ve met, including the past two Wimbledon finals.

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/ 22 August 2005

Plane crashes into Durban home

The owner of the Durban house into which a light aircraft nose-dived on Sunday escaped injury because he was at a bowling club at the time of the incident, KwaZulu-Natal police said. The aircraft, carrying six occupants, mainly Austrian tourists, crashed into his lounge and dining room.

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/ 22 August 2005

All or nothing as pope warns of DIY religion

Pope Benedict XVI wrapped up his first foreign tour on Sunday with an uncompromising warning that Catholics must strictly follow the church’s teachings. Addressing nearly one million young pilgrims, many of whom had camped overnight in a muddy field outside Cologne, the pope said that Christians should not choose the bits of doctrine they liked and ignore the rest.

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/ 22 August 2005

Sharon says settler leaders playing politics

Ariel Sharon widened the breach with his former allies among the settler leaders on Sunday on Sunday by accusing them of causing unnecessary suffering for political gain during the Gaza Strip pullout. The prime minister’s attack came as forces moved into some of the last of the Gaza settlements still to be cleared, meeting with protest but little physical resistance.