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Alexander Rossi suffered minor injuries to finger and ankle, still aims to race Indy 500

IndyCar
110th Running of the Indianapolis 500
Alexander Rossi suffered minor injuries to finger and ankle, still aims to race Indy 500

Lando Norris eyes Le Mans drive as McLaren endurance push heats up

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Canadian GP
Lando Norris eyes Le Mans drive as McLaren endurance push heats up

Official Coca-Cola 600 entry list released, Katherine Legge locked in

NASCAR Cup
Charlotte
Official Coca-Cola 600 entry list released, Katherine Legge locked in

Toto Wolff keeps Mercedes grounded ahead of crucial Canadian GP upgrades

Formula 1
Canadian GP
Toto Wolff keeps Mercedes grounded ahead of crucial Canadian GP upgrades

Kyle Kirkwood “here to win” Indy 500, not think championship

IndyCar
110th Running of the Indianapolis 500
Kyle Kirkwood “here to win” Indy 500, not think championship

How Alex Palou captured pole for the 110th running of the Indy 500

IndyCar
110th Running of the Indianapolis 500
How Alex Palou captured pole for the 110th running of the Indy 500

Rossi, O'Ward, and Grosjean cars destroyed in huge Indy 500 practice crash

IndyCar
110th Running of the Indianapolis 500
Rossi, O'Ward, and Grosjean cars destroyed in huge Indy 500 practice crash

Josef Newgarden leads abbreviated Indy 500 practice marred by storms, major wreck

IndyCar
110th Running of the Indianapolis 500
Josef Newgarden leads abbreviated Indy 500 practice marred by storms, major wreck

No public floatation for F1 - Ecclestone

Bernie Ecclestone has played down suggestions Formula One might be sold to the public. A few years ago, the F1 chief executive said an initial public offering "would probably be the right way to go" for the sport. But he has now told the ...

Bernie Ecclestone has played down suggestions Formula One might be sold to the public.

A few years ago, the F1 chief executive said an initial public offering "would probably be the right way to go" for the sport.

But he has now told the Financial Times: "There's no way I would sit in front of a load of shareholders.

"It wouldn't float under me," insisted the 80-year-old.

F1 is currently majority owned by private equity investor CVC Capital Partners, with Ecclestone holding 5.3 per cent.

The report said the Briton values the organisation at $6 or $7 billion, but he is not worried about who will run F1 in his stead.

"Somebody will emerge when I'm not there," said Ecclestone. "I think two or three people may come out the woodwork but I don't think it could be carried on in the same way as it has."

He said there is "no truth" to the rumours Flavio Briatore is a leading candidate.

Ecclestone also admitted that he would like Red Bull's Mark Webber or Sebastian Vettel to win the 2010 title, so that there are five active world champions on the grid in 2011.

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