Hamilton: Mercedes in 'no-man's land'
Seven-time world champion Lewis Hamilton said Mercedes are in 'no man's-land' after he finished Sunday's Emilia-Romagna Grand Prix in sixth place.
Brady Singer strikes out nine, Royals defeat A's 8-4
— Brady Singer stuck out nine, Vinnie Pasquantino hit a three-run triple and the Kansas City Royals completed a sweep of the Oakland Athletics with an 8-1 victory Sunday.
Max Verstappen clinched Imola, but it was too close for comfort thanks to Lando Norris
Lando Norris pushed Imola winner Max Verstappen to the very end, setting up a thrilling finish and putting the F1 world champion on high alert.
Hampshire stumble in small chase as Notts sense opportunity
Visitors five down and still 85 from victory after Pennington, Paterson rock top order
Bohm and Harper lead the streaking Phillies to a sweep of the Nationals with 11-5 win
— Alec Bohm homered and drove in five runs, Bryce Harper doubled and had two RBI and the Philadelphia Phillies swept their sixth series of the season with a 11-5 victory over the Washington Nationals on Sunday.
Seven-time world champion Lewis Hamilton said Mercedes are in "no-man's land" after he finished Sunday's Emilia-Romagna Grand Prix in sixth place and 35 seconds behind Red Bull's race winner Max Verstappen.
Teammate George Russell finished seventh and Mercedes have fallen further behind in the Formula One constructors' standings -- fourth overall at 79 points while third-place McLaren, who also use Mercedes engines, have 154.
- Unlapped: How to listen or watch ESPN's new F1 show, episode archive, and more
"We are in no-man's land. There wasn't much more for us to get today," Hamilton said.
"It is where we are and we have to do the best we can and that is the best we could do today."
Hamilton will move to Ferrari at the end of the season and was racing in Italy for the first time since that was announced.
Russell also referred to "no-man's land," but said the once-dominant team was still "super-motivated."
"We have got to just keep pushing. The car was capable of P6 and P7 and that is where we finished."
Team boss Toto Wolff said Mercedes has taken a small step forward.
"Our closest competitors have also done so recently, but we have closed the gap to the front a little. We still have a lot of work to do and, of course, we are all frustrated finishing P6 and P7," Wolff said.
"There is more to come though, and it is all about making incremental gains."