Fernando Alonso has made light of his huge grid penalty at the Belgian Grand Prix by flipping the provisional grid on social media to show him on the front row with Lewis Hamilton.Alonso has been hit with a 60-place grid penalty, accumulated after multiple engine failures and changes since the start of the Spa weekend. That has put him behind championship leader Hamilton, who has a 55-place penalty after Mercedes made several changes of its own, albeit with a more tactical approach to stockpile fresh power units for the remainder of the year.After the size of his penalty was confirmed, Alonso shared a picture of the FIAs provisional grid upside down, showing him at the head of the field alongside his former McLaren teammate.?Actual polesitter Nico Rosberg soon replied to Alonsos tweet, joking that he would have to visit the stewards to query the grid reversal.??The Spaniards last pole position was in 2012 at the German Grand Prix.?China Shoes . Louis Cardinals. Victorino is batting sixth and playing right field after missing two games because of back tightness. Fake China Shoes .Y. - General manager Billy King says the Brooklyn Nets are looking to add a big man and confirmed the team worked out centre Jason Collins, who would become the first openly gay active NBA player if signed. https://www.chinashoes.us/ . Peter Gammons, an analyst for Major League Baseballs network and website, drew the ire of hockey fans on Sunday when he criticized the two NHL teams on Twitter for their physical game the night before. China Shoes Online . PETERSBURG, Fla. China Shoes Store . Scott won the Australian PGA last week in his first event in Australia since winning the U.S. Masters in April. American Matt Kuchar, ahead by two strokes with four to play and even with Scott with one to go, double-bogeyed the 18th after taking two shots to get out of a bunker.LONDON -- English Premier League clubs swelled the bank accounts of continental rivals in a summer of record-breaking spending that ended Wednesday with the biggest shock of the transfer window: David Luizs return to Chelsea.The flamboyant Brazilian is back at Stamford Bridge after two years at Paris Saint-Germain to reinforce Chelseas defense under new manager Antonio Conte. While Chelsea sold the 29-year-old for around 50 million pounds ($84 million in 2014), the London club has re-signed him on a three-year contract for about 20 million pounds ($26 million) less.Thats also far lower than what was spent on the summer transfer windows biggest reunion. Italian champion Juventus banked a world-record 105 million euros ($116 million) from Manchester United for midfielder Paul Pogbas return to Old Trafford.United was one of 13 Premier League sides to break their club records for spending on a single player since the end of last season. The 20 top-flight clubs collectively spent nearly 1.2 billion pounds ($1.5 billion) on talent in the summer, breaking the billion-pound barrier for the first time in a transfer window as they benefit from new television deals.Over the next three years, the Premier League will make 8.3 billion pounds ($10.9 billion) from broadcasters eager to televise the most unpredictable of Europes top leagues -- a bonanza that has swelled thanks to a 70 percent upsurge in the value of domestic rights.There is a flipside.All the European clubs rub their hands because when they are short of money they just ring up one of the Premier League clubs (to sell a player) to keep them going for the next two years with 10 million, 20 million -- whatever it might be, Stoke chairman Peter Coates told the BBC on Wednesday. So its pretty good business for them.Stoke had a relatively modest summer of spending after breaking its transfer record in the January window when it paid Portuguese club Porto 18.3 million pounds (then $26 million) for defensive midfielder Giannelli Imbula.Negotiating with clubs on the continent for a bargain is proving tougher for Premier League chairmen like Steve Parish at Crystal Palace. The London clubs record-breaking summer deal was a domestic transaction, paying Liverpool 27 million pounds ($35 million) for striker Christian Benteke.Its been the most difficult transfer window anybody can remember -- theres kind of a wall of money, Parish said. The other leagues basically have decided theres one price within their league and a completely different price if a Premier League club calls. The prices have gone crazy ... you find people focusing more on the domestic market.Tottenham turned to Newcastle for its biggest summer deal, paying a reported 30 mmillion pounds ($39 million) as the window was closing for France midfielder Moussa Sissoko.ddddddddddddFrench clubs profited from the English wealth on Wednesday, receiving about 55 million pounds ($72 million) from the Premier League. Luizs return was preceded by Georges-Kevin Nkoudous move from Marseille to Tottenham and Sunderland signing Didier Ndong from Lorient.Here are some of the other key deadline-day moves across Europe:---ENGLANDWhile splurging on new talent, Premier League clubs having sought to shed non-vital players. Offloading top earners is tough with the wealthier parent clubs, like Manchester City, often having to subsidize the wages for a player on loan.New City coach Pep Guardiola dispatched Joe Hart, Wilfried Bony, Samir Nasri and Eliaquim Mangala on Wednesday for the rest of the season.Hart, the England goalkeeper, is now at Italian club Torino after dropping to third choice at City. Bony joined Stoke after seeing his career stall since joining from Swansea last year. Nasri headed to Sevilla for the season after Guardiola said the French midfielder returned for preseason training overweight. France center back Mangala also departed for Spain with Valencia.In addition, Arsenal midfielder Jack Wilshere had to accept moving to a less prestigious club on Wednesday, heading to Bournemouth on the English Riviera for the season in a bid to revive his injury-plagued career.Liverpool also got troubled striker Mario Balotelli off its books, with the Italian joining Nice in France.---ITALYThree of the biggest transfers in Serie A on deadline day saw players arrive from England. As well as Harts loan move, Juan Cuadrado returned to Juventus from Chelsea and Luis Alberto joined Lazio from Liverpool on permanent deals.In the biggest internal deal of the summer in Italy, Juventus reinvested the Pogba windfall by bringing in last seasons top goalscorer, Gonzalo Higuain, for 90 million euros ($100 million) from Napoli.---GERMANYBundesliga clubs broke the 500 million-euro ($558 million) barrier for the first time in a transfer window, with the largest late deal seeing Brazilian Olympic gold medalist defender Douglas Santos join Hamburger SV from Atletico Mineiro for up to 10 million euros ($11.2 million).---SPAINEspanyol was the most active Spanish club Wednesday as the squad overhauled its roster under new Chinese owner Chen Yansheng continued.After conceding eight goals in its first two matches of the season, Espanyol brought in three players (striker Alvaro Vazquez, defender Diego Rivas and goalkeeper Diego Lopez) and shipped out four more. ' ' '