McLaren’s Norris wins sprint race at Brazilian Grand Prix to cut gap on overall leader Verstappen

McLaren’s Oscar Piastri, McLaren’s Lando Norris, Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc, Red Bull’s Max Verstappen and riders in action at the start of the sprint race. (Reuters)
McLaren’s Oscar Piastri, McLaren’s Lando Norris, Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc, Red Bull’s Max Verstappen and riders in action at the start of the sprint race. (Reuters)
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Updated 02 November 2024
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McLaren’s Norris wins sprint race at Brazilian Grand Prix to cut gap on overall leader Verstappen

McLaren’s Norris wins sprint race at Brazilian Grand Prix to cut gap on overall leader Verstappen
  • Norris started second on the grid and, late into the 24 laps of the sprint race, teammate Oscar Piastri gave way to him

SAO PAULO: McLaren driver Lando Norris won Saturday’s Formula 1 sprint race at the Brazilian Grand Prix to cut his deficit to championship leader Max Verstappen.
Red Bull’s Verstappen is also under investigation for a potential virtual safety car infringement.
The gap between the two drivers, with four grands prix and a final sprint race to the end of the season, is now 45 points.
Norris started second on the grid and, late into the 24 laps of the sprint race, teammate Oscar Piastri gave way to him.
Verstappen finished third and Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc, who also has a long shot at the title, ended fourth.
Ferrari’s Carlos Sainz Jr. was fifth, with Mercedes’ George Russell, Alpine’s Pierre Gasly and Red Bull’s Sergio Perez next best.
Norris appeared to be upset about leader Piastri’s pace for most of the sprint race. “I am not sure what I am doing here, mate,” he said on the team radio. “I thought we spoke about this.”
Later, Norris said McLaren had done a good job.
“I am not proud about it but we worked well as a team together so I thank Oscar,” Norris said. “Oscar deserved (a win) but we did what we had to do.”
Piastri did not elaborate on the McLaren decision. “A great day for the team and a lot of points. We learned a lot for the race tomorrow,” he said.


Pakistan eye whitewash against Zimbabwe in third T20I today

Pakistan eye whitewash against Zimbabwe in third T20I today
Updated 1 min 9 sec ago
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Pakistan eye whitewash against Zimbabwe in third T20I today

Pakistan eye whitewash against Zimbabwe in third T20I today
  • Pakistan beat Zimbabwe by 10 wickets on Tuesday to register 10-wicket victory in second T20I
  • Spinner Sufiyan Muqeem returned figures of 5-3, the best by a Pakistani bowler in T20I format

ISLAMABAD: After securing a commanding victory over Zimbabwe in the second T20I this week, Pakistan will face Zimbabwe in the third T20I of the series at Bulawayo as it eyes completing a 3-0 whitewash over the hosts. 

Pakistan beat Zimbabwe by 10 wickets on Tuesday as spinner Sufiyan Muqeem registered the best figures by a Pakistan bowler in T20I, returning figures of 5-3. 

Set to chase a paltry 58, Pakistan chased the target with 14.3 overs to spare, marking the biggest win by balls remaining between two Full Members in men’s T20I cricket.

The Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) on Wednesday announced its playing Xi for the third T20I against Zimbabwe. 

“Pakistan playing XI for 3rd T20I against Zimbabwe,” the PCB wrote on social media platform X. 

The playing XI features openers Omair Bin Yousuf and Sahibzada Farhan as well as middle-order batters Usman Khan, Salman Ali Agha (captain), Tayyab Tahir, Qasim Akram, Arafat Minhas and all-rounders Jahandad Khan and Abbas Afridi. 

Pakistan have featured Mohammad Hasnain and Sufyan Muqeem as featured bowlers. The match has been scheduled for 4:30 p.m. today.


Leipzig down Frankfurt to reach German Cup quarters, Cologne strike late

Leipzig down Frankfurt to reach German Cup quarters, Cologne strike late
Updated 39 min 38 sec ago
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Leipzig down Frankfurt to reach German Cup quarters, Cologne strike late

Leipzig down Frankfurt to reach German Cup quarters, Cologne strike late
  • Lois Openda scored a brace as RB Leipzig roared back into form with a 3-0 home win over Eintracht Frankfurt in the German Cup last 16 on Wednesday

BERLIN: Lois Openda scored a brace as RB Leipzig roared back into form with a 3-0 home win over Eintracht Frankfurt in the German Cup last 16 on Wednesday, while Cologne found a winner in the 121st minute to advance.
Leipzig and their coach Marco Rose came into the game under pressure, after five losses and a draw during a winless November, against a Frankfurt side sitting second in the league.
The hosts, however, started with a flurry and had two goals ruled out for offside before Benjamin Sesko broke through after 31 minutes.
The Slovenian striker collected an Antonio Nusa pass on the turn and bewitched the Frankfurt defense with some clever footwork before tapping home.
Nusa was the provider again to double Leipzig’s lead four minutes after half-time, sliding the ball into the path of Openda, who hammered home.
Nusa, still just 19, collected his third assist of the game nine minutes later, again finding Openda who rifled in from long range.
After the goal, Openda ran straight to Rose on the sideline, leading his teammates who piled on and embraced the coach.
“Today we wanted to do something, we wanted to fight together as a team — and we did that tonight,” Openda told Sky.
“We wanted to win today and show we are all strong together, with the coach, the fans and the players — that we are one family.”
Speaking with Sky, Leipzig and Germany wing-back Benjamin Henrichs praised his coach.
“It’s not an easy time for him and for us as well, but it all came out (when we scored). The win was very, very important,” the 27-year-old said.
German Cup winners in 2022 and 2023, Leipzig have made the final in four of the past seven seasons.
The loss breaks a run of seven straight wins for Frankfurt and is their first loss since mid-October.
Earlier, a 121st-minute Dejan Ljubicic penalty took Cologne to a 2-1 win over 10-man Hertha Berlin.
Hertha took the lead early when Ibrahim Maza converted a penalty after Derry Scherhant was felled in the box.
Berlin’s hopes took a hit soon after when Deyovaisio Zeefuik was red carded for a headbutt in the 25th minute.
The visitors equalized five minutes later when Florian Niederlechner scored an own goal from a Cologne corner.
With scores locked at 1-1, the match went to extra time.
Ljubicic missed a sitter inches from goal on the 100th-minute mark but made good on his error, sending the goalkeeper the wrong way, with penalties looming, to book Cologne’s place in the last eight.
2015 winners Wolfsburg beat Hoffenheim 3-0 at home thanks to three goals in 22 second-half minutes.
Scoreless at half-time, Denis Vavro and Jonas Wind scored within four minutes of each other midway through the second half, before Yannick Gerhardt added a third to seal the game in the dying stages.
The win continues Wolfsburg’s improvement under former Southampton and RB Leipzig manager Ralph Hasenhuettl, with the Wolves now unbeaten in seven games.
Augsburg beat second-division Karlsruhe 5-4 on penalties away after visiting midfielder Ruben Vargas scored in the 123rd minute to level the scores at 2-2.
Bayer Leverkusen, who eliminated 20-time winners Bayern Munich on Tuesday, have already booked their spot in the quarter-finals along with Stuttgart, Werder Bremen and Arminia Bielefeld, who are the sole third-division side in the final eight.


Hamilton bids farewell to Mercedes as Ferrari vie for constructors’ title

Hamilton bids farewell to Mercedes as Ferrari vie for constructors’ title
Updated 05 December 2024
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Hamilton bids farewell to Mercedes as Ferrari vie for constructors’ title

Hamilton bids farewell to Mercedes as Ferrari vie for constructors’ title
  • Sunday’s floodlit Abu Dhabi Grand Prix at the Yas Marina Circuit will mark the end of an era as the seven-time champion ends a remarkable 12-year spell with the ‘silver arrows’ and a 26-year association with the Mercedes brand
  • Ferrari offered Hamilton a contract that runs until 2026, which Mercedes were not prepared to do, giving him a continued platform not only to bid for an unprecedented eighth title, but also to promote diversity and inclusion

ABU DHABI: Lewis Hamilton bids farewell to Mercedes, the team that carried him to six world titles, this weekend as his future outfit Ferrari, seek to snatch a first constructors’ crown in 16 years from McLaren, his first F1 home.

For all concerned, Sunday’s floodlit Abu Dhabi Grand Prix at the Yas Marina Circuit will mark the end of an era as the seven-time champion ends a remarkable 12-year spell with the ‘silver arrows’ and a 26-year association with the Mercedes brand.

He will then move on to Ferrari where, Italy hopes, he can rediscover the mojo that made him the sport’s most successful driver with seven titles and 105 wins before hitting a trough of frustration in the current ‘ground effect’ era.

This has seen Red Bull return to dominate with Max Verstappen winning four consecutive drivers’ titles even if this season saw them decline, a fall that sees McLaren hanging on to a 21-point lead on Ferrari entering the decisive season-ending race.

McLaren have not won the teams’ title since 1998 while Ferrari ‘s last success came in 2008 since when the championship has been dominated by Mercedes and Red Bull. A change is long overdue.

Despite his travails in recent weeks, notably in Brazil and Qatar, Hamilton will leave Mercedes feeling conflicting emotions.

“It is a celebration of everything we have achieved,” said team boss Toto Wolff of the anticipated finale.

“We will honor an unparalleled story in Abu Dhabi and then visit Kuala Lumpur, Stuttgart and both Brixworth and Brackley... Lewis will always be part of our family.”

He added that before Hamilton’s final visits to the team’s various centers, the “entire team wants to add on more highlight to the reel.

“Nothing is going to take away 12 incredible years. That’s the memory, not a season of races that were particularly bad.”

Ferrari offered Hamilton a contract that runs until 2026, which Mercedes were not prepared to do, giving him a continued platform not only to bid for an unprecedented eighth title, but also to promote diversity and inclusion.

For Hamilton, a Ferrari title success on Sunday could be a perfect prelude to his move and help erase his recent tantrums and comments about ending races and the season early.

Ferrari team boss Fred Vasseur declared he is not at all worried by Hamilton claiming he has lost his speed.

“Not at all,” he said. “Have a look at the 50 laps he did in Vegas. Starting P10, finishing on the gearbox of Russell. No, I’m not worried.”

Hamilton, who will be 40 in January, remains determined to “rise again” and make his mark.

“I’m still standing,” he said. “It’s not how you fall, it’s how you get back up.”

Carlos Sainz, whose seat he is set to take, will also be seeking a happy exit as he and Charles Leclerc bid to overturn McLaren’s lead before he leaves for Williams.

“Twenty-one points requires a perfect weekend from Ferrari and a bad weekend from McLaren,” he said.

“We’re going to give it our best shot. I think if we nail a good weekend, we could still make it happen. Nothing to lose.”

On form, at a circuit likely to favor them, McLaren start as favorites but, after winning in Qatar, Verstappen will seek a 10th win this year with his usual vim as Red Bull say goodbye to sporting director Jonathan Wheatley, who is moving to Sauber/Audi.

The Dutchman may also carry prickly motivation from his Qatar fallout with Hamilton’s Mercedes teammate George Russell, a daunting spectre for his rivals.

His Red Bull teammate Sergio Perez may also be in his last race with the team after a hapless run while Alpine welcome Jack Doohan for his debut as replacement for Esteban Ocon.


DAZN awarded global TV rights for FIFA Club World Cup

DAZN awarded global TV rights for FIFA Club World Cup
Updated 05 December 2024
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DAZN awarded global TV rights for FIFA Club World Cup

DAZN awarded global TV rights for FIFA Club World Cup
  • A source close to the negotiations told AFP the contract was worth around €1 billion ($1.05 billion)
  • DAZN chief executive officer Shay Segev called the deal “groundbreaking“
  • FIFA President Gianni Infantino hailed the deal as a great one for fans

MIAMI, Florida: British streaming service DAZN has been awarded the exclusive global rights to broadcast next year’s expanded 32-team Club World Cup in the US, FIFA announced Wednesday.

“The landmark agreement will see all 63 matches... live-streamed, free to view on DAZN worldwide,” read a statement from FIFA.

A source close to the negotiations told AFP the contract was worth around €1 billion ($1.05 billion).

The announcement came on the eve of Thursday’s tournament draw which is set to take place in Miami.

DAZN chief executive officer Shay Segev called the deal “groundbreaking.”

“We’re committed to ensuring that every fan can watch every moment of the thrilling action from this new prime club tournament,” he said.

FIFA are expected to announce next week that Saudi Arabia will host the 2034 World Cup. The Gulf nation is the only bidder for the tournament.

FIFA had initially held talks with Apple about broadcasting the tournament but those discussions reportedly ended in July and the organization launched a tender process.

FIFA President Gianni Infantino hailed the deal as a great one for fans.

“Through this agreement, billions of football fans worldwide can now watch the most widely accessible club football tournament ever — for free,” he said in a statement.

The tournament will see some of the world’s best club teams battle it out in what is effectively a curtain-raiser for the 2026 World Cup taking place a year later in the US, Canada and Mexico.

Twelve top clubs from Europe, including Manchester City, Real Madrid, Bayern Munich and Paris Saint Germain, will feature alongside top teams from South America, Asia, Africa and Oceania.

In November, Inter Miami, who feature eight-times Ballon d’Or winner Lionel Messi, were handed a place in the tournament to represent the host nation.

Games will take place across the US from June 15 to July 13. The opening game will be held in Miami with the final at MetLife Stadium in New Jersey.

Yet for many, Infantino’s passion project is a tournament too far, an unwelcome addition to an already crowded global calendar that exhausted players say has pushed them close to breaking point.

Javier Tebas, the chief of Spain’s La Liga, has been one of the Club World Cup’s most outspoken critics, telling Infantino in October to cancel the tournament, citing apathy from broadcasters and opposition from clubs.


Corner kings Arsenal beat Man Utd to close gap on Liverpool

Corner kings Arsenal beat Man Utd to close gap on Liverpool
Updated 05 December 2024
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Corner kings Arsenal beat Man Utd to close gap on Liverpool

Corner kings Arsenal beat Man Utd to close gap on Liverpool

LONDON: Arsenal worked their set-piece magic to beat Manchester United 2-0 on Wednesday, ending Ruben Amorim’s unbeaten start to life in the Old Trafford hotseat and closing the gap on Premier League leaders Liverpool.
United frustrated the home side and kept the crowd quiet at the Emirates in a cagey first half but Jurrien Timber broke the deadlock from a corner after the break and William Saliba repeated the feat.
The win leaves Arsenal in third place in the Premier League, behind Chelsea on goal difference and seven points adrift of leaders Liverpool, who were held to a 3-3 draw at Newcastle.
Amorim made six changes from the team that brushed Everton aside 4-0 at the weekend, dropping in-form Amad Diallo and Marcus Rashford from his starting line-up.
Gabriel was a significant absence from Arsenal’s defense, joining Ben White and Riccardo Calafiori on the injury list.
Amorim traveled to London with two wins and a draw from three matches in all competitions, keenly aware that Arsenal would be his biggest test yet.
The Gunners hogged possession in the opening moments and had the ball in the net in the fourth minute through Gabriel Martinelli, only for it to be ruled out for offside.
Mikel Arteta’s men should have been ahead just minutes later when Thomas Partey skewed his header wide from a corner.
Martinelli flashed just wide from another corner midway through the first half as Arsenal continued to look dangerous from set-pieces.
United were content to bide their time when they had the ball but they looked blunt in attack.
The visitors could have gone in ahead at half-time had Diogo Dalot not steered just wide with a right-footed shot in the 43rd minute.
The two teams, both in goalscoring form, produced a combined five shots in the opening 45 minutes, with none on target.
The game picked up tempo at the start of the second half, with Diallo replacing Tyrell Malacia for United.
Feeding off a more vocal crowd, a re-energised Arsenal put United under pressure, finally breaking the deadlock when Timber headed his first goal for the club from a Declan Rice corner.
Amorim reacted quickly, bringing on forward Rashford and Joshua Zirkzee and handing French teenage defender Leny Yoro his United debut.
Diallo won a free-kick after fine work on the right in the 66th minute and Arsenal were grateful to goalkeeper David Raya, who pushed away a powerful Matthijs de Ligt header from Bruno Fernandes’s free-kick.
Arsenal doubled their lead from a Bukayo Saka corner in the 73rd minute when Partey’s shot hit Saliba and beat Andre Onana.
Arsenal have scored more goals from corners — 21 — than any other side in the Premier League since the start of last season.
Onana got down well to save a Kai Havertz shot as Arsenal threatened to cut loose.
United just about managed to keep them out but Amorim will know that he has a big job on his hands.