Sergio Perez: Red Bull driver faces ‘most important weekend’ at Mexico City GP amid uncertainty over future


Sergio Perez enters his home race under heavy pressure

Sergio Perez’s home race in Mexico is always a special event for the Red Bull driver, but there is likely to be a different feel to the occasion this time around as his future with the team hangs in the balance.

Perez has endured a hugely disappointing 2023 campaign, failing to provide effective backup for his dominant team-mate Max Verstappen.

The Dutchman has been so brilliant that he sealed a third successive drivers’ title with six races still to go, with that form also ensuring Red Bull wrapped up the constructors’ title a round earlier.

Perez started the season impressively, sharing two victories apiece with Verstappen over the first four races and sparking talk – that he perhaps misguidedly got caught up in – of a title battle between the pair, before failing to convert pole position in the next race in Miami as his team-mate came from ninth on the grid to comfortably win.

In the 13 races since, Perez has managed just four podiums, has qualified in the top four on only one occasion, and has been knocked out before Q3 seven times.

Nico Rosberg says Sergio Perez let F1 fans down by failing to launch a genuine challenge for the title and making it 'too easy' for Max Verstappen

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Nico Rosberg says Sergio Perez let F1 fans down by failing to launch a genuine challenge for the title and making it ‘too easy’ for Max Verstappen

Nico Rosberg says Sergio Perez let F1 fans down by failing to launch a genuine challenge for the title and making it ‘too easy’ for Max Verstappen

Being beaten by Verstappen is no disgrace, but in a car that is very clearly the fastest on the grid, Perez has repeatedly been outperformed by Mercedes, Ferrari and McLaren drivers, and often several of them at the same time.

As his torrid second half of the campaign has continued, speculation has mounted that Red Bull might feel the need to cut ties with Perez at the end of the season, despite another year remaining on the 33-year-old’s contract. There was even a rumour that Perez was planning to announce his retirement in Mexico, which he laughed off.

Whether or not he was alluding to the ever-growing pressure he is facing when describing the Mexico City Grand Prix as “my most important weekend”, it might just turn out to be exactly that, with how he performs under the spotlight potentially having a big sway on how he is viewed by the Red Bull hierarchy.

Perez defiant ahead of homecoming

Perez has repeatedly explained that his struggles have been caused by the in-season development of the RB19 going in a direction which doesn’t suit his driving style, but one that enables Verstappen to produce magical speed.

There is undoubtedly some truth to this, with Verstappen’s former team-mate Alex Albon, who is now driving very impressively at Williams, having explained suffering similarly in his brief time with Red Bull.

However, for a driver of Perez’s experience to be so far off his team-mate is quite simply unacceptable.

Sergio Perez says he isn't bothered by rumours he will lose his seat at Red Bull and is 100 per cent confident he is staying

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Sergio Perez says he isn’t bothered by rumours he will lose his seat at Red Bull and is 100 per cent confident he is staying

Sergio Perez says he isn’t bothered by rumours he will lose his seat at Red Bull and is 100 per cent confident he is staying

There had been talk of a ‘reset’ for Perez at the United States Grand Prix after particularly poor races in Japan and Qatar, with several days spent on the simulator at Red Bull’s base, but it was ultimately another underwhelming weekend.

He only qualified ninth for the race, and despite finishing fourth after being promoted a place thanks to Lewis Hamilton’s disqualification, was a long way off the pace of the leading trio, while in the Sprint he qualified seventh and finished fifth.

Perez, in a post-race interview with Sky Sports F1 that sounded like many others he has done this season, explained how it had gone wrong for him on this occasion.

“I wanted more,” he said. “At times I had very good pace. We’re still lacking that consistency.

Max Verstappen is crowned world champion after Red Bull teammate Sergio Perez crashes out of the Sprint

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Max Verstappen is crowned world champion after Red Bull teammate Sergio Perez crashes out of the Sprint

Max Verstappen is crowned world champion after Red Bull teammate Sergio Perez crashes out of the Sprint

“I think we know what we did wrong at the weekend, so we are really optimistic going onto the future races, so hopefully we can improve that.

“I think we did very good steps. Unfortunately we didn’t get to show it because we took the wrong direction on the setup given that it was a Sprint race.

“But I’m still very optimistic for Mexico. We know what direction we need to take, so hopefully we get to show that.”

Horner: Mentality a ‘huge element’ of Verstappen advantage

While remaining publicly supportive of Perez, Red Bull team principal Christian Horner has repeatedly rejected the suggestion that the RB19 has been developed in a favourable direction for Verstappen.

Speaking in Austin, Horner suggested that Perez’s mentality may have been just as significant as any technical elements in the Mexican’s struggles.

“I think it’s a huge element and with any sportsman that, mental strength always plays a key role,” Horner said.

Max Verstappen was heard venting on the radio after losing grip from turbulent air caught behind team-mate Sergio Perez during Q3 of the United States Grand Prix

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Max Verstappen was heard venting on the radio after losing grip from turbulent air caught behind team-mate Sergio Perez during Q3 of the United States Grand Prix

Max Verstappen was heard venting on the radio after losing grip from turbulent air caught behind team-mate Sergio Perez during Q3 of the United States Grand Prix

“And I think there was a decisive moment this year, which was probably in Miami, where Checo had, if you like, an open goal. He’d won two races in Azerbaijan and Saudi, and you could see his confidence was high.

“I think that Max, winning that race, having been caught out by a red flag in qualy – starting down in ninth, and whatever lap it was that he took the lead, within a very short period of time – I think mentally that was that was quite a brutal one for Checo to deal with.

“And on top of that, then came Monaco, I think pretty much the next race. And then things compound. And Max is just relentless, he’s then just hitting aces every race from there onwards.”

One thing on Perez’s side is that Hamilton’s disqualification in Austin means he is in an extremely strong position to seal Red Bull’s first ever one-two in the drivers’ standings.

Sergio Perez’s struggles continued this weekend, following up a nightmare Sprint crash with three five-second time penalties during the Qatar GP

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Sergio Perez’s struggles continued this weekend, following up a nightmare Sprint crash with three five-second time penalties during the Qatar GP

Sergio Perez’s struggles continued this weekend, following up a nightmare Sprint crash with three five-second time penalties during the Qatar GP

Perez’s advantage over the seven-time world champion was going to be cut to 19 points, but instead sits at 39 with four races (and one Sprint) remaining.

Speaking before Hamilton’s disqualification had been announced, Horner insisted that there was “no pre-mandate” on Perez having to finish second to keep his seat for 2024.

“With this car, it would be fantastic in such a season that we’ve had if we could finish first and second,” Horner said. “But there’s no pre mandate on Checo that you have to finish second or you won’t be driving the car next year. That’s never been discussed.”

Red Bull set to face hostile atmosphere?

Since last year’s race in Mexico, there have been a couple of incidents that could result in a few other key members of the Red Bull team facing a particularly hostile reception.

It is likely that Perez’s fiercely loyal fans have not forgotten Verstappen’s refusal to help his team-mate’s quest for second in last year’s drivers’ standings in the closing stages of the Sao Paulo Grand Prix, which also follows the Mexico race this year.

Verstappen was booed on the podium in Austin, where a significant contingent of Perez fans were present, and can expect more of the same next weekend.

Red Bull's motorsport advisor Helmut Marko issued an apology following comments in which he blamed Perez's inconsistent form on his ethnicity

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Red Bull’s motorsport advisor Helmut Marko issued an apology following comments in which he blamed Perez’s inconsistent form on his ethnicity

Red Bull’s motorsport advisor Helmut Marko issued an apology following comments in which he blamed Perez’s inconsistent form on his ethnicity

While there is an element of pantomime to the hostility Verstappen is likely to face, the same cannot be said for Red Bull advisor Helmut Marko.

He was officially warned by the FIA after making comments about Perez where he attributed the driver’s inconsistent form this season to his ethnicity

Asked about the reception he expects his team to receive, Horner said: “I’m not worried about that.

“The team is fully behind Checo and both of our drivers. We love racing in Mexico, we love the Mexican fans. The passion, that stadium and everything, it’s unique. We’re really looking forward to it.”

When to watch the Mexico City GP live only on Sky Sports F1

Thursday 26 October
9pm: Drivers’ Press Conference

Friday 27 October
7pm: Mexico City GP Practice One
8:45pm: The F1 Show
10:45pm: Mexico City GP Practice Two (also on Sky Sports Main Event)

Look back at some of the most dramatic moments to have taken place at the Mexico City Grand Prix

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Look back at some of the most dramatic moments to have taken place at the Mexico City Grand Prix

Look back at some of the most dramatic moments to have taken place at the Mexico City Grand Prix

Saturday 28 October
6.15pm: Mexico City GP Practice Three
9pm: Mexico City GP Qualifying build-up (also on Sky Sports Main Event)
10pm: Mexico City GP Qualifying (also on Sky Sports Main Event)

Sunday 29 October
6.30pm: Grand Prix Sunday Mexico City GP build-up (also on Sky Sports Main Event)
8pm: The MEXICO CITY GRAND PRIX (also on Sky Sports Main Event)
10pm: Chequered Flag: Mexico City GP

F1 heads straight to Mexico for the middle leg of the Americas triple header. Watch the whole Mexico City Grand Prix weekend live on Sky Sports F1 from Friday, with Sunday’s race at 8pm. Stream F1 on Sky Sports with NOW



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Lando Norris: Can McLaren driver win maiden F1 race in 2023 as he closes in on unwanted Formula 1 record


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Despite leading in Austin early on, McLaren’s Lando Norris insists he’s very happy with the team’s results over the weekend at the United States Grand Prix

Despite leading in Austin early on, McLaren’s Lando Norris insists he’s very happy with the team’s results over the weekend at the United States Grand Prix

Lando Norris became the first McLaren driver since Jenson Button in 2011 to record four consecutive podiums with second place on Sunday at the United States Grand Prix.

Norris has become one of the most highly-rated drivers on the grid in recent years and has largely maximised his car’s potential this season.

The 23-year-old is closing in on an unwanted record though – the most podiums without a win – as he finished in the top three for the 12th time in his career to go just one behind Nick Heidfeld, who holds the unfortunate record.

McLaren’s development has been very impressive in 2023 as they leapfrogged from the back of the midfield at the start of the season, to Norris leading the United States Grand Prix on merit until the halfway point of the race when Max Verstappen overtook him.

The car is particularly strong on tracks which feature high-speed corners such as Silverstone, Suzuka and the Losail International Circuit in Qatar.

But, with four events remaining, Norris feels none of the tracks in Mexico, Brazil, Las Vegas or Abu Dhabi will play to McLaren’s strengths.

Highlights from the United States Grand Prix at the Circuit of the Americas

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Highlights from the United States Grand Prix at the Circuit of the Americas

Highlights from the United States Grand Prix at the Circuit of the Americas

Asked by Sky Sports F1 if he can win a race this season, Norris answered: “Unlikely. Not the answer I want to tell myself or anyone but it’s unlikely. Qatar was our best opportunity. I guess that’s why I was so tough on myself back then because I knew it was kind of our only opportunity.

“We have good tracks and bad tracks, it’s just we have our very, very strong tracks. We still have some good ones I think but not ones where we think we can compete with the others.

“Some fun ones. Vegas is still a big question mark but there are no high-speed circuits which is where we are very strong. It’s where we have always been strong and we are almost on par with Red Bull in the high-speed corners, it’s just the slow speed is letting us down at the minute.

“We understand it and know it’s our area to focus on and improve on. When it comes together, probably not this year but next year, I think we can do some good things.”

Ted Kravitz is in the paddock to review all the biggest stories from the 2023 United States Grand Prix

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Ted Kravitz is in the paddock to review all the biggest stories from the 2023 United States Grand Prix

Ted Kravitz is in the paddock to review all the biggest stories from the 2023 United States Grand Prix

Half of the 2023 F1 field have won a Grand Prix in their career and the next new F1 race winner will be the 114th in the championship’s history.

Given the pace of the McLaren, Norris or team-mate Oscar Piastri are favourites to be the next driver to land a maiden win.

In the press conference on Sunday, Verstappen asked Norris why he doesn’t rate his chances more highly for Abu Dhabi, alluding to the Yas Marina Circuit’s fast final sectors since changes were made to the track in 2021.

Norris replied: “Maybe Abu Dhabi, you never know. We’ll see. I don’t think there are any good ones for us coming up. I think our best have gone.

“I just want to be hopeful that we can do good results and I think we can still fight for podiums but these guys (Red Bull and Mercedes) are too quick for me.

“I would say they have been quicker all weekend on average. We just about keep it up in qualifying when we have that new rubber and super low fuel and things like that. We can look decent, but I think realistically we’re not at that level as a general package with these guys. So, not great ones coming up, but Vegas, Abu Dhabi are probably the better ones.”

Could Norris have won the United States GP?

Lewis Hamilton edges past Lando Norris to re take second place at the Austin Grand Prix

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Lewis Hamilton edges past Lando Norris to re take second place at the Austin Grand Prix

Lewis Hamilton edges past Lando Norris to re take second place at the Austin Grand Prix

Norris got the perfect start from second place as he overtook Charles Leclerc off the line and pushed hard in an attempt to open up a buffer over Hamilton and Verstappen, who were stuck behind the Ferraris.

The McLaren driver responded to an undercut threat from Verstappen in the first round of pit stops but was caught by the three-time world champion and lost the lead on Lap 28.

He fought hard to keep Hamilton at bay in the final stint by defending aggressively, including a hard jink left into Turn 1, but lost the position. However, Hamilton was disqualified for failing the FIA plank wear test, so Norris inherited second place.

“I’m very pleased. If before the weekend you said we had the result we have had…I wouldn’t have not believed it, but we didn’t expect it in a way,” said Norris.

Max Verstappen catches Lando Norris by surprise by diving down the inside on Turn 12, taking the lead of the United States GP

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Max Verstappen catches Lando Norris by surprise by diving down the inside on Turn 12, taking the lead of the United States GP

Max Verstappen catches Lando Norris by surprise by diving down the inside on Turn 12, taking the lead of the United States GP

“I’m very happy. From leading a race to Lap 25 or 30 almost, you are always like, ‘could I have done a little bit more’. But when you see how much I struggled compared to Lewis, how many let’s say setbacks Lewis had – two very bad pit stops, I had two very good pit stops, I didn’t have to go through the field.

“I could control it and execute a perfect race and we still didn’t have the pace, so not a surprise. I think we have known it all weekend that we had not quite what we wanted to compete against them.

“We expected it. We are still very happy with the progress we have made from where we were at the beginning of the season. Even for the team, they are happy but there is still something inside like ‘oh we have missed out’.

“I think you have got to remind yourself of where we were and the progress we have made in a short amount of time. I’m still excited because we know we have a lot more to come, the team are doing an excellent job in every area and we are getting closer and closer.”

When to watch the Mexico City GP live only on Sky Sports F1

Thursday 26 October
9pm: Drivers’ Press Conference

Friday 27 October
7pm: Mexico City GP Practice One
8:45pm: The F1 Show
10:45pm: Mexico City GP Practice Two (also on Sky Sports Main Event)

Saturday 28 October
6.15pm: Mexico City GP Practice Three
9pm: Mexico City GP Qualifying build-up (also on Sky Sports Main Event)
10pm: Mexico City GP Qualifying (also on Sky Sports Main Event)

Sunday 29 October
6.30pm: Grand Prix Sunday Mexico City GP build-up (also on Sky Sports Main Event)
8pm: The MEXICO CITY GRAND PRIX (also on Sky Sports Main Event)
10pm: Chequered Flag: Mexico City GP

F1 heads straight to Mexico for the middle leg of the Americas triple header. Watch the whole Mexico City Grand Prix weekend live on Sky Sports F1 from Friday, with Sunday’s race at 8pm. Stream F1 on Sky Sports with NOW



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Lewis Hamilton, Charles Leclerc disqualified from US GP: Mercedes will ‘learn’ from rules breach


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Sky Sports’ F1 reporter Craig Slater rounds up the best of the action from on and off the track at the United States Grand Prix

Sky Sports’ F1 reporter Craig Slater rounds up the best of the action from on and off the track at the United States Grand Prix

Mercedes say they will “go away and learn from this” after Lewis Hamilton’s disqualification due to a technical infringement on his car lost him what had been a stirring second-place finish in the United States Grand Prix.

Hamilton and Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc were excluded from second and sixth places respectively four hours after the end of Sunday’s dramatic race after wear levels on the planks underneath their cars were found to have exceeded limits set out in F1’s regulations.

“We are of course naturally very disappointed to lose our podium finish,” said Mercedes’ trackside engineering director Andrew Shovlin.

Ride onboard as Lewis Hamilton eventually gets past Lando Norris after a brilliant tussle for second at the Circuit of the Americas

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Ride onboard as Lewis Hamilton eventually gets past Lando Norris after a brilliant tussle for second at the Circuit of the Americas

Ride onboard as Lewis Hamilton eventually gets past Lando Norris after a brilliant tussle for second at the Circuit of the Americas

“Unfortunately, it is one of the pitfalls of the sprint format where we have a solitary hour of running before parc ferme.

“Without running at a race fuel load in FP1, combined with a circuit as bumpy as this and the parts of the track where the drivers have to put the car during the Grand Prix, have contributed to the higher than expected wear levels.

“We will go away and learn from this but also take the positives from our experience as a whole.”

Disqualifications Q&A: Answering some of the key questions

A look at the underside of Charles Leclerc's Ferrari back at the 2021 Monaco GP as it was winched away following a crash

A look at the underside of Charles Leclerc’s Ferrari back at the 2021 Monaco GP as it was winched away following a crash

So F1 cars have a plank of wood underneath them?

Among perhaps the most-Googled questions about F1 cars, yes, they do have a strip of so-called ‘wood’ on the underside of the chassis.

It is a safety measure to regulate ride height and ensure cars do not run too close to the ground.

Of course, being F1, it’s not exactly any old plank of wood – the material that teams use is actually a rather more complex densified wood laminate.

The plank was first mandated on cars in 1994 as part of a number of safety measures introduced mid-way through that season after the tragic events of Imola, when Ayrton Senna and Roland Ratzenberger died in accidents, and has remained in the technical regulations since.

The regulations state that “the thickness of the plank assembly measured normal to the lower surface must be 10mm ± 0.2mm and must be uniform when new” and that “a minimum thickness of 9mm will be accepted due to wear”. It is the latter rule which Mercedes and Ferrari fell foul of.

Jo Bauer, the FIA's long-standing technical delegate

Jo Bauer, the FIA’s long-standing technical delegate

When were Hamilton and Leclerc’s cars checked?

The issues with Hamilton and Leclerc’s cars came to light during the regular post-race scrutineering of cars in the pit lane in Austin, which is carried out after every race.

Conducted by the FIA technical delegate Jo Bauer, the list of checks carried out in conformity with the sport’s rulebook ran to four pages in a document issued by the governing body on Sunday night.

Some of the array of checks are carried out on all classified finishing cars – such as weight, fuel-flow meters, tyres, and various hybrid power unit limits – while other inspections are carried out on some cars on a random basis from race to race.

Highlights from the United States Grand Prix at the Circuit of the Americas.

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Highlights from the United States Grand Prix at the Circuit of the Americas.

Highlights from the United States Grand Prix at the Circuit of the Americas.

For instance, on Sunday, three cars (Perez, Norris and Tsunoda) were selected for checks on their respective aerodynamics and bodywork, which all passed.

Four cars were inspected for physical floor and plank wear, which is where Mercedes and Ferrari ran into their problems. While two cars, Max Verstappen’s Red Bull and Lando Norris’ McLaren, were found to be within the accepted limits, the Mercedes and Ferrari were not.

The matter was then referred to the stewards and, from there, things were only going one way.

But while the post-race parc ferme checks are long-established practice, questions have been raised since the disqualifications in some quarters as to why all cars aren’t checked for their plank wear and why the testing isn’t widened to include more cars if some – in this case half of those tested – are found to be non-compliant.

Sky F1’s Bernie Collins posted on X:

The reality is that the time and logistics which would be required to test every single aspect of every single car on every single race weekend makes such a scenario prohibitive, hence the threat of random checks on certain areas instead.

Would the plank wear have given any performance advantage?

Any lap-time advantage or disadvantage cannot be quantified and, in any case, any such debate is fairly irrelevant in this matter.

Whatever potential mitigating circumstances there may be at play in situations such as this where the technical regulations have been breached on a car, there is a zero-tolerance approach from the FIA and so a slam-dunk disqualification from the results is almost always the outcome.

So, knowing this to be the case, running any risk of falling foul of the plank-wear regulations is clearly something neither Mercedes nor Ferrari would have wanted. Indeed, there was also no suggestion from the stewards that either team meant to break the rules.

Rather, as the teams admitted, the variances of a Sprint weekend when set-up time is severely limited, and the fact the CoTA track was especially bumpy, meant they simply got caught out, hence why neither are appealing the decision.

“As a matter of fact it turned out we were too marginal and also because of the wind that turned direction and had a stronger intensity than forecast, this brought our car to not be legal in the end,” said Ferrari sporting director Diego Ioverno.

“With hindsight, rewinding the weekend, we may have lifted even more the car, but would have lost performance and we are here to optimise our own performance.”

What’s the wider consequence of the double DSQs in the championships?

1. Hamilton’s lost points give Perez unexpected breathing room

For a few hours in the immediate aftermath of Sunday’s race, Hamilton was sitting just 19 points behind Sergio Perez in the standings and his hopes of overhauling the under-pressure Red Bull driver over the season’s final four races appeared eminently achievable.

But the Mercedes driver’s exclusion suddenly produced a 20-point swing back in Perez’s favour, with his rival losing 18 points for second and the Mexican himself also gaining an additional two points by moving up a place in the revised classification from fifth to fourth.

Thirty-nine points with four races left looks a more formidable lead for Perez now as champions Red Bull aim to close out their first-ever Drivers’ Championship one-two.

2. Ferrari peg back Mercedes for second in constructors’

Charles Leclerc expressed his frustration in Austin after following team orders to let through Ferrari team-mate Carlos Sainz, with Leclerc also later being disqualified for excessive wear on the underfloor skid blocks of his car

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Charles Leclerc expressed his frustration in Austin after following team orders to let through Ferrari team-mate Carlos Sainz, with Leclerc also later being disqualified for excessive wear on the underfloor skid blocks of his car

Charles Leclerc expressed his frustration in Austin after following team orders to let through Ferrari team-mate Carlos Sainz, with Leclerc also later being disqualified for excessive wear on the underfloor skid blocks of his car

Although Mercedes and Ferrari each lost one car from the final results, the fact that Carlos Sainz finished two places ahead of George Russell in the other cars meant that in the end, it was the Scuderia who scored more points across the Austin weekend despite their rivals’ superior race pace and victory near-miss.

Ferrari took six points back on Mercedes, reducing their deficit to 22 points.

3. Norris gains further ground to move into Ferrari, Alonso territory

The disqualifications had two-fold significance for Lando Norris.

In terms of the race, he inherited the runner-up finish from Hamilton to match his career-best result for the fifth time this year.

In terms of his fast-improving championship position, the three extra points picked up for second combined with Leclerc’s total loss of points meant Norris moved ahead of his Ferrari rival and into the top six of the standings for the first time in 2023.

Furthermore, he is now only 24 points behind fourth-placed Fernando Alonso, who retired from the race and didn’t score all Sprint weekend in Austin. Sainz is 12 points away in fifth.

4. Crucial points boosts for Williams and AlphaTauri

The big winners of the day though were Williams who saw the double disqualification turn what had been zero points into three. Although that haul might not seem much in the grand scheme of things, it is still 12 per cent of their whole season total and consolidates the team’s grip on seventh place in the standings ahead of Alfa Romeo.

Scoring a first F1 point in 10th – and at his home race, no less – is also likely to be a timely morale boost for Logan Sargeant, who is the only driver on the current grid without a contract for 2024.

AlphaTauri, meanwhile, saw their points in the race go from two (10th and fastest lap) to five (eighth and fastest lap) and double their total for the whole season. It now gives them renewed hope of getting off the bottom of the table over the final four races of the season given they are now just two points behind Haas.

F1 heads straight to Mexico for the middle leg of the Americas triple header. Watch the whole Mexico City Grand Prix weekend live on Sky Sports F1 from Friday, with Sunday’s race at 8pm. Stream F1 on Sky Sports with NOW



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United States Grand Prix: Max Verstappen holds off Lewis Hamilton to claim record-equalling 15th win of season


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Highlights from the United States Grand Prix at the Circuit of the Americas

Highlights from the United States Grand Prix at the Circuit of the Americas

Max Verstappen held off Lewis Hamilton’s late charge to win the United States Grand Prix, equalling his own record of 15 race victories in a Formula 1 season.

Verstappen, who has already sealed his third successive drivers’ title with five rounds to spare, appeared to be cruising towards victory after coming from sixth on the grid to take the lead midway through the race.

However, apparent braking issues on his Red Bull left Verstappen agitated and vulnerable as Mercedes’ Hamilton closed to within two seconds in the latter stages, but the Dutchman clung on for the 50th F1 victory of his career.

Hamilton had already passed the McLaren of Lando Norris, who faded in the second half of the contest, having taken the lead on the opening lap to boost his hopes of a earning a maiden F1 victory in his 100th race.

“The whole race, I was struggling a lot with the brakes,” Verstappen said. “It was very close at the end and also with the backmarkers, the tyres are already going so it makes it more difficult.

“It’s incredible to win my 50th Grand Prix here. Very proud of course and we will keep on trying to push for more.”

Carlos Sainz took fourth for Ferrari after he and Red Bull’s Sergio Perez made late passes on pole-sitter Charles Leclerc, who dropped back after the Italian team attempted an ill-advised one-stop strategy.

Max Verstappen was heard raging on the team radio after having issues with his braking

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Max Verstappen was heard raging on the team radio after having issues with his braking

Max Verstappen was heard raging on the team radio after having issues with his braking

George Russell could only manage seventh as he failed to match team-mate Hamilton’s pace after dropping back from fifth on the grid at the start.

Pierre Gasly rounded off an improved display from Alpine to take eighth, although team-mate Esteban Ocon was an early retiree along with McLaren’s Oscar Piastri after a first-lap collision took them both out of the race.

Lance Stroll claimed his first Grand Prix points finish since July by taking ninth after his Aston Martin team-mate Fernando Alonso was forced to retire with floor damage, while Yuki Tsunoda took the final point for AlphaTauri, and doubled his tally for the day with the fastest lap of the race.

Lewis Hamilton edges past Lando Norris to retake second place at the Austin Grand Prix

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Lewis Hamilton edges past Lando Norris to retake second place at the Austin Grand Prix

Lewis Hamilton edges past Lando Norris to retake second place at the Austin Grand Prix

Verstappen’s victory takes him to 466 points for the season and beyond the record haul he set last year, with the Dutchman set to rewrite the sport’s history books over the four rounds of the campaign that remain.

His lead over team-mate Perez extends to 228 points, while Hamilton has closed to within 21 points of the Mexican as the Brit attempts to deny Red Bull a first-ever one-two in the drivers’ standings.

United States GP result
1) Max Verstappen, Red Bull
2) Lewis Hamilton, Mercedes
3) Lando Norris, McLaren
4) Carlos Sainz, Ferrari
5) Sergio Perez, Red Bull
6) Charles Leclerc, Ferrari
7) George Russell, Mercedes
8) Pierre Gasly, Alpine
9) Lance Stroll, Aston Martin
10) Yuki Tsunoda, AlphaTauri

Strategic battle sets up thrilling finish

With Verstappen having dominated from pole in Saturday’s Sprint contest, Norris and Hamilton were the only two drivers given any chance of holding him off in the full-length race.

To have any chance of doing that, they needed a strong start, and Norris got just that as he passed Leclerc into the first corner, before opening up an early advantage.

Hamilton, perhaps decisively in the end, was less successful. He lost a place to Sainz at the start, and although he had passed both Ferraris to move into second by lap six, lost crucial time and tyre life.

Verstappen gained a place at the start despite cautiously navigating the opening lap, and surprisingly took significantly longer than Hamilton to clear the Ferraris.

Sky F1's Anthony Davidson was at the SkyPad to analyse Hamilton's race and how close he was to taking the win in Austin

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Sky F1’s Anthony Davidson was at the SkyPad to analyse Hamilton’s race and how close he was to taking the win in Austin

Sky F1’s Anthony Davidson was at the SkyPad to analyse Hamilton’s race and how close he was to taking the win in Austin

When he did on lap 12, he was seven seconds back from leader Norris, with Hamilton about midway between them.

Any thoughts that Verstappen may have been nursing his tyres to set up a one-stop race were dispelled when the Red Bull was the first of the leaders to pit at the end of lap 16.

The fact Red Bull chose to fit him with another set of the medium tyres he had started the race on meant he would definitely need to stop again to use a different compound before the end.

McLaren reacted by bringing in Norris a lap later, but put him on the hard tyre, keeping open the option of one-stopping.

Mercedes decided to keep Hamilton out as they looked to be considering the one-stop option, but ultimately appeared to be caught somewhat between the two strategies.

Verstappen was booed on the podium as he celebrated his 50th race victory in Austin

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Verstappen was booed on the podium as he celebrated his 50th race victory in Austin

Verstappen was booed on the podium as he celebrated his 50th race victory in Austin

Hamilton’s tyres appeared to fall off a metaphorical cliff in his final couple of circuits before stopping on lap 20, with a crucial loss of time occurring as he ran wide and off track.

A slow stop compounded the situation, leaving Hamilton to come out with the several-second advantage he had previously held over Verstappen having switched the other way, while Norris led.

Verstappen ominously cruised up behind Norris and eased past the McLaren on lap 28, but he appeared uncomfortable as he described his struggles with braking in the class-leading RB19.

Norris triggered the second round of pit stops when he came in on lap 34, and closed back to within just over a second of Verstappen when Red Bull responded by stopping a lap later.

Lewis Hamilton was pleased with the upgrades Mercedes brought in Austin after finishing second, but has urged his team to keep pushing if they're to catch Red Bull's Max Verstappen

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Lewis Hamilton was pleased with the upgrades Mercedes brought in Austin after finishing second, but has urged his team to keep pushing if they’re to catch Red Bull’s Max Verstappen

Lewis Hamilton was pleased with the upgrades Mercedes brought in Austin after finishing second, but has urged his team to keep pushing if they’re to catch Red Bull’s Max Verstappen

That played into Hamilton’s hands, as he was able to keep running at a reasonably competitive pace for three further laps, and had a fresh set of the better-performing medium tyres for his final stint, with the leading duo on hards.

It quickly became clear that it would be a matter of time until Hamilton would pass Norris, with the big question being whether he could track down Verstappen in the closing stages.

Despite having little hope of holding off Hamilton, Norris put up a stern defence over a series of corners that cost Hamilton a crucial couple of seconds and potentially a shot at victory.

The five-second gap that remained with seven laps left initially looked out of reach, but the gap suddenly began to close, with the backdrop of Verstappen repeatedly scolding his race engineer over the radio for talking to him in braking zones.

Max Verstappen believes other teams could have won the United States Grand Prix if they 'chose the right strategy'

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Max Verstappen believes other teams could have won the United States Grand Prix if they ‘chose the right strategy’

Max Verstappen believes other teams could have won the United States Grand Prix if they ‘chose the right strategy’

The gap was under two seconds going into the final lap, but ultimately Mercedes’ failure to optimise their strategy, sub-par pit stops and just about the only error Hamilton made throughout a stellar weekend for the Brit left him agonisingly short of a first win since December 2021.

“I think we probably should have stopped before Lando because I was within undercut position,” Hamilton said. “I don’t know why we didn’t.

“Then after that I came out another eight seconds behind and I had to catch up. It was really difficult to catch up and then I came out again another eight or 10 seconds behind [after the second stop].”

Despite having claimed a third successive win a row at Circuit of The Americas, Verstappen was given a frosty reception by some fans as he appeared to be booed during the podium ceremony by a group of fans.

F1 heads straight to Mexico for the middle leg of the Americas triple header. Watch the whole Mexico City Grand Prix weekend live on Sky Sports F1 from Friday, with Sunday’s race at 8pm. Stream F1 on Sky Sports with NOW



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United States GP: How Lando Norris and Lewis Hamilton could beat Max Verstappen at Circuit of The Americas


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The best of the action from a dramatic Sprint at the United States Grand Prix

The best of the action from a dramatic Sprint at the United States Grand Prix

Max Verstappen’s pace in Saturday’s Sprint at the United States Grand Prix knocked a bit of hope out of his rivals, but Lando Norris and Lewis Hamilton maintain hope of victory in Sunday’s race.

Verstappen was closely followed by Hamilton initially but slowly pulled away as the Sprint went on and was nearly one second quicker per lap during the closing stages.

However, he starts from sixth on the grid on Sunday, after having his best lap deleted for track limits in qualifying on Friday, and the top three of pole-sitter Charles Leclerc, Norris and Hamilton all know how important it is to lead after Turn 1.

In particular for Norris and Hamilton, getting ahead of Leclerc will be key because their pace is quicker than Ferrari over the long runs. The Sprint also showed that the Ferraris are very quick on the straights, so will be tricky to overtake but do not have the outright pace over the 2.3 miles (3.792 km) Circuit of The Americas.

Sky Sports F1‘s Jenson Button told Norris he has to get past Leclerc then he could be gone, to which the McLaren driver responded: “For a while, until Max comes along!

“I think the last five laps of the Sprint, I caught nearly five seconds on the Ferrari. The pace is very good. I think Hamilton’s going to be our competition and Max coming through.

“If I can get into the lead early on at Turn 1, control my pace… I used a lot of tyres to try and get past Carlos (Sainz) at the beginning [of the Sprint] – it’s never a nice thing when you see the tyre temperatures going through the roof, laying 11 seconds on the track, it’s not a perfect situation.

“If I can control the race from the beginning, we can give ourselves a lot of opportunities to finish high up. But I expect some competition.”

History is on Norris’ side because four of the last five United States Grand Prix has seen the driver in second place lead after the hairpin left at Turn 1.

Sky F1’s Ted Kravitz reflects on Max Verstappen's win in the Sprint at the United States Grand Prix

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Sky F1’s Ted Kravitz reflects on Max Verstappen’s win in the Sprint at the United States Grand Prix

Sky F1’s Ted Kravitz reflects on Max Verstappen’s win in the Sprint at the United States Grand Prix

The grip is equal on both sides of the grid and the width at corner entry invites the driver behind to throw it up the inside, which Leclerc tried on Saturday, and it often pays off.

Norris, who is looking for a maiden win in F1, had similar pace to Hamilton once he got past the Ferraris but thinks the slow-speed corners in the final sector could be an issue.

“A lot of weaknesses. We are very, very bad in the slow speed corners and to improve that for [Sunday] is not really easy, or possible. We will see what we can do, the pace is good and I think we can better Mercedes at least,” he added to Sky Sports F1.

Look back at some of the most dramatic moments to have taken place at the United States Grand Prix

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Look back at some of the most dramatic moments to have taken place at the United States Grand Prix

Look back at some of the most dramatic moments to have taken place at the United States Grand Prix

United States GP starting grid – Top 10

  1. Charles Leclerc, Ferrari
  2. Lando Norris, McLaren
  3. Lewis Hamilton, Mercedes
  4. Carlos Sainz, Ferrari
  5. George Russell, Mercedes
  6. Max Verstappen, Red Bull
  7. Pierre Gasly, Alpine
  8. Esteban Ocon, Alpine
  9. Sergio Perez, Red Bull
  10. Oscar Piastri, McLaren

What are Hamilton’s chances?

No one from outside of the front row has won at the Circuit of the Americas since the track joined the F1 calendar in 2012, so that stat does not bode well for Hamilton, or Verstappen for that matter.

Hamilton has arguably looked more confident than at any other stage of the 2023 season with Mercedes’ latest upgrades in Austin, and will look to repeat his first-lap move on Leclerc from the Sprint in Sunday’s Grand Prix.

But, he is playing down his chances of a first win since the Saudi Arabian Grand Prix in December 2021.

Lewis Hamilton believes Mercedes are going in the right direction after seeing improvements this weekend by finishing second in the Austin Sprint

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Lewis Hamilton believes Mercedes are going in the right direction after seeing improvements this weekend by finishing second in the Austin Sprint

Lewis Hamilton believes Mercedes are going in the right direction after seeing improvements this weekend by finishing second in the Austin Sprint

“This is the first weekend where I’ve really felt the car take a step in the right direction, which I’m really grateful for, but it’s not enough ultimately,” Hamilton told Sky Sports F1.

“Saturday was a real good test. Obviously in qualifying we were relatively close but today [Saturday] I really tried to lean on the car and see what it was capable of, and it dropped off big time towards the end and they were half a second a lap ahead of us.

“I’ll make some alterations [on Sunday] to see if I can squeeze a bit more juice out of it but there’s lots of great learnings from.”

Max Verstappen wins the Austin Sprint, becoming the first driver to win three sprints in one season

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Max Verstappen wins the Austin Sprint, becoming the first driver to win three sprints in one season

Max Verstappen wins the Austin Sprint, becoming the first driver to win three sprints in one season

He added in the press conference: “Anything is possible. He [Verstappen] has got at least half a second on all the cars ahead of him per lap. That should be enough to get by but there is degradation.

“We will have a job on our hands to hold him back but it’s a track where you can overtake, so it’s likely he will finish high up.”

Verstappen to blitz through the field or find it tough?

Verstappen has produced some memorable drives through the pack in his 49 career F1 wins including Austria 2019, Belgium 2022 and Miami this year.

It would be rather fitting that his 50th victory requires a big push and bold moves, although he knows the pace of his car is strong, so does not need to take too much risk.

Max Verstappen admits he was surprised with the pace of his Red Bull after winning the Sprint and is optimistic he can challenge for the win in Sunday's race after qualifying only sixth

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Max Verstappen admits he was surprised with the pace of his Red Bull after winning the Sprint and is optimistic he can challenge for the win in Sunday’s race after qualifying only sixth

Max Verstappen admits he was surprised with the pace of his Red Bull after winning the Sprint and is optimistic he can challenge for the win in Sunday’s race after qualifying only sixth

“It’s not ideal to start P6 but the pace of the car is still quite strong and hopefully with high fuel we can do something similar. It’s one thing to be fast but another to get by a few cars,” said Verstappen.

“With the degradation around here, it’s not going to be straightforward and trying to follow through the high-speed. We have a race on our hands.”

Speaking of degradation, it should be a two-stop race on Sunday which could give a slight advantage to McLaren as they are the only top team to have two new sets of hard tyres.

Look back at some of the most dramatic moments to have taken place at the United States Grand Prix

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Look back at some of the most dramatic moments to have taken place at the United States Grand Prix

Look back at some of the most dramatic moments to have taken place at the United States Grand Prix

If the hard tyre proves to be the best racing tyre, this is another factor which could give Norris a chance to beat Verstappen on merit.

As Sky Sports F1‘s Button alludes to, if one of Norris or Hamilton lead after Lap 1 and Verstappen is not in the top five, it will be game on for the win, and the United States Grand Prix generally delivers entertainment.

“The only thing that saves us for [Sunday] is that Max starts sixth. And we can say, ‘woah, he’s that much quicker than everyone, it’s going to be easy’. It’s not going to be easy,” said Button.

“Overtaking here isn’t easy and they proved that in the Sprint. It wasn’t very exciting because it was difficult to overtake. It’s still going to be a challenge for him. I wouldn’t want to come up behind Lewis. Would you?”

When to watch the US GP and F1 Academy finale live only on Sky Sports F1

Sunday October 22

  • 3.30pm: F1 Academy Race Three
  • 6.30pm: Grand Prix Sunday: US GP build-up
  • 8pm: THE UNITED STATES GRAND PRIX (also on Sky Sports Main Event)
  • 10pm: Chequered Flag: US GP reaction
  • 11pm: Ted’s Notebook

Watch Formula 1 return to Texas for the United States Grand Prix on Sky Sports F1 this Sunday. Stream F1 on Sky Sports with NOW



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Woodside Energy shares third quarter report for period ended 30 September 2023

Woodside CEO Meg O’Neill said the quarter-on-quarter increase in output to 47.8 million boe was underpinned by strong operating results at Pluto LNG:

“The 99.9% reliability achieved at Pluto during the third quarter followed the completion of a maintenance turnaround in June.”

“Production from North West Shelf was impacted by planned turnaround and maintenance activities in the quarter, but the facility’s reliability was still exceptional at 98.9%.”

“Woodside’s project teams made strong progress over the course of the quarter.”

“In September, first production at the Shenzi North tieback in the US Gulf of Mexico was achieved ahead of the original 2024 schedule. Production at Mad Dog Phase 2 offshore Louisiana, which started up in April, continued to ramp up during the quarter.”

“Activity at Scarborough and Pluto Train 2 increased as planned and the project is now 46% complete. Installation of the nearshore component of the Scarborough trunkline commenced and fabrication of the
floating production unit topsides and hull continued.”

“Site construction works for Pluto Train 2 are progressing and we have awarded the engineering, procurement and construction contract for the Pluto Train 1 modifications that will allow it to process Scarborough gas.”

“The Federal Court’s 28 September decision that the Commonwealth Environment Plan for the Scarborough offshore seismic survey is invalid has not impacted our target for first LNG cargo in 2026. The decision does
however highlight the urgent need for reform of Australia’s offshore approvals process.”

“Uncertainty over approvals has the potential to add cost and delays to any offshore activities to be undertaken in Australia. In the case of gas projects, such uncertainty threatens the delivery of much-needed new supplies to the Western Australian domestic market, as well as undermining the confidence of our regional trading partners.”

“The importance of Scarborough to regional energy security was demonstrated in August when LNG Japan agreed to purchase a 10% non-participating interest in the joint venture.”

“As part of a broader strategic relationship, Woodside and LNG Japan, owned by Sumitomo Corporation and Sojitz Corporation also entered into a non-binding heads of agreement for the sale and purchase of approximately 0.9 million tpy of LNG for 10 years commencing in 2026. In addition, we entered
into non-binding agreements with Sumitomo and Sojitz to collaborate on new energy opportunities globally.”

“At Sangomar in Senegal, another two of the 23 planned wells were drilled, taking the total now completed to 14. Pre-commissioning work at the floating production storage and offloading vessel continued in Singapore.
Overall, the Sangomar project is 90% complete and we remain on track for targeted first oil in mid-2024.”

“A significant milestone for our deepwater Trion project was passed during the quarter, with the approval of the field development plan by the Mexican regulator. Project execution activities at Trion are progressing.”

“In new energy, progress was made on contracts for the plant construction scope and other critical packages at our proposed H2OK facility in Oklahoma. Technical work to support readiness for a final investment decision at H2OK is expected to be completed in 2023, although a decision itself has been delayed, pending clarification of government tax incentives and the finalisation of offtake agreements.”

“During the quarter we signed two non-binding memoranda of understanding with a total of four Japanese companies to jointly study potential carbon capture and storage (CCS) value chains between Australia and Japan. We believe that with collaboration between industry partners and governments CCS could provide a pathway to help our Japanese customers decarbonise,” she said.

Production

  • Production increased compared to the previous quarter to 47.8 million boe primarily due to:

– higher production from Pluto LNG and Ngujima-Yin following completion of planned turnaround and maintenance activities.

– high LNG reliability at Australian operated assets, with Pluto LNG and the North West Shelf (NWS) Project achieving 99.9% and 98.9% reliability respectively for the quarter.

– higher production on Mad Dog due to the continued ramp up at the Argos platform. This was partly offset by lower NWS production due to planned turnaround and maintenance activities on the North Rankin Complex, Goodwyn Platform and Karratha Gas Plant, with production recommencing in September 2023.

  • Production from Bass Strait was lower than the corresponding quarter in 2022 due to lower gas demand following a warmer winter.

Gulf of Mexico

  • First production was successfully achieved at Shenzi North in September 2023 ahead of the 2024 target.
  • A maintenance turnaround of the Shenzi facility was completed on schedule.
  • Production continues to ramp up at the Argos platform with seven wells now online.

Australia oil

  • The Ngujima-Yin FPSO recommenced production in July following successful completion of the fiveyearly maintenance turnaround in a Singapore drydock.
    Greater Angostura.
  • In July 2023, a valve bolt failure on the Angostura gas export platform resulted in an unplanned gas release and emergency shutdown to stop the flow of gas.
    This incident is classified as a Tier 1 process safety event. Production recommenced in August 2023 following completion of safety checks and
    remediation activities.

Decommissioning

  • The Enfield plug and abandonment (P&A) campaign continued with four wells permanently plugged. The plugging of 17 of 18 Enfield wells and removal of 16 of 18 xmas trees has been completed.
  • The Bass Strait P&A operations on Flounder, Bream A, and Kingfish A platforms continued with six wells plugged in the quarter.
  • Subsequent to the quarter, Woodside commenced removing the Nganhurra riser turret mooring which will be transported for cleaning and deconstruction in preparation for recycling or reuse.
  • Project and development activities

Scarborough

  • Installation of the trunkline nearshore component commenced and fabrication of the FPU topsides and hull continued.
  • The Pluto Train 2 project continued to ramp up, with both module fabrication and site construction works progressing.
  • In August 2023, Woodside entered into an agreement with LNG Japan to sell a 10% interest in the Scarborough Joint Venture.
  • In September 2023, Woodside awarded the engineering, procurement and construction contract for Pluto Train 1 modifications. Engineering and procurement of long-lead items are progressing.
  • The Federal Court has set aside NOPSEMA’s acceptance of the Marine Seismic Survey Environment Plan on the basis that NOPSEMA’s decision to accept the environment plan with conditions relating to consultation was invalid.
  • Engagement continues with NOPSEMA on the outstanding Commonwealth Environment Plans.
  • The Scarborough and Pluto Train 2 project was 46% complete at the end of the period and first LNG cargo is targeted for 2026.

Trion

  • The Mexican regulator, Comisión Nacional de Hidrocarburos, approved the Trion FDP in August 2023.
  • Awarded contracts for the drill rig; FPU and floating storage and offloading (FSO) installation; subsea trees and control system; subsea flexible piping and riser terminations.
  • Placed equipment orders for umbilical tubing and subsea manifolds.
  • Commenced FSO front-end engineering design activities and progressed shipyard engineering.

Read the article online at: https://www.oilfieldtechnology.com/drilling-and-production/19102023/woodside-energy-shares-third-quarter-report-for-period-ended-30-september-2023/



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Lando Norris and George Russell: How do they compare upon reaching 100th Formula 1 Grand Prix?


Lando Norris and George Russell enter their 100th Grand Prix weekend at this week’s United States Grand Prix

As Lando Norris and George Russell head to their 100th Grand Prix weekend, Sky Sports F1 look back at what has been a hugely entertaining start to the careers of the young Brits.

The pair came onto the grid as the next generation of British talent for when the great Lewis Hamilton retires, but now all three are competing at the front.

While they have been on their own journeys, following in the steps of and filling Hamilton’s boots are a recurring theme in both of their careers.

Norris the shining light McLaren needed

Lando Norris joined McLaren in 2019, the first season they were able to consistently fight for points since 2014

Lando Norris joined McLaren in 2019, the first season they were able to consistently fight for points since 2014

Norris arrived at McLaren to help turn the ‘GP2 engine’ frowns into papaya-soaked serotonin hits, and his injection of youth, speed and star power was precisely what McLaren needed to lead their climb towards the front of the F1 pack, where they belong.

McLaren were in a dark place in the late 2010s as they publicly fell out with their engine supplier Honda, with world champions Jenson Button and Fernando Alonso losing patience and leaving the sport entirely.

While they were not struggling quite so much when it came to car competitiveness, a fresh-faced Lewis Hamilton walked into a political storm as McLaren imploded with Alonso and then team boss Ron Dennis grating and ‘spy gate’ scandals – like Norris, Hamilton was the young shining light that gave the team and the fans a reason to cheer and believe.

Craig Slater looks at the chances of Lando Norris leaving McLaren and how much it would cost a team to buy him

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Craig Slater looks at the chances of Lando Norris leaving McLaren and how much it would cost a team to buy him

Craig Slater looks at the chances of Lando Norris leaving McLaren and how much it would cost a team to buy him

This experience for both Hamilton and Norris forced them to mature quickly – they have been the team leader despite the arrival of more experienced big names such as Alonso and Daniel Ricciardo, and they are better drivers for it.

The other similarity to Hamilton that Norris has is his natural, quirky but genuine persona, engaging a global audience – he is a superstar by being himself.

Hamilton was a superstar in the early stages of his career because of the barriers he broke and the people he spent time with, however, he didn’t have the surroundings and confidence to be himself until he moved to Mercedes.

Lando Norris' personality lends itself to him being a global superstar like Lewis Hamilton

Lando Norris’ personality lends itself to him being a global superstar like Lewis Hamilton

Norris, meanwhile, has entered F1 at a time where expressing your individuality is celebrated – thanks in a large part to Hamilton – which means that he can be his unreserved self, making him so appealing.

While the car helped, Hamilton’s ability to express himself arguably allowed him to unlock a new level of performance.

The fact that Norris has done this earlier in his career than Hamilton may allow him to grow more quickly as an individual and as a racing driver in the next 100 races.

Russell waiting in the wings for ‘too long’

George Russell drove for Williams in three seasons before making the step up to Mercedes

George Russell drove for Williams in three seasons before making the step up to Mercedes

Russell is impatient, he says he wants things “yesterday”, and that is because he knows he has the ability to mix it with the very best and he has had to be patient for most of his career.

Like Norris, he was quickly forced into a leadership position as the then Formula 2 champion joined struggling Williams alongside drivers that could not match his level – as much as he appreciated Williams, Russell quickly outgrew the team.

Mercedes driver George Russell took on the lie detector test - and you might be surprised by some of the results!

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Mercedes driver George Russell took on the lie detector test – and you might be surprised by some of the results!

Mercedes driver George Russell took on the lie detector test – and you might be surprised by some of the results!

Russell maintains that he drove for Williams for “too long” – an assessment that Mercedes boss Toto Wolff has since admitted.

The reality is that Russell would normally have been in the car after one season, like Max Verstappen at Red Bull and Charles Leclerc at Ferrari – but Mercedes were going through a far from average period.

As the Silver Arrows and Lewis Hamilton dominated F1, one of the winning formulas was the partnership between Hamilton and the reliable, diplomatic and likeable Valtteri Bottas.

Hamilton has continued to maintain that Bottas was his favourite team-mate. So, as long as the championships came, the champion’s calls to keep Bottas were heeded.

In 2021, though, Russell’s talent was too glaring to ignore for Wolff, welcoming the King’s Lynn man to Brackley for 2022.

Speaking on the Sky Sports F1 Podcast, Anthony Davidson looks into how future success for Mercedes could impact the relationship between George Russell and Lewis Hamilton

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Speaking on the Sky Sports F1 Podcast, Anthony Davidson looks into how future success for Mercedes could impact the relationship between George Russell and Lewis Hamilton

Speaking on the Sky Sports F1 Podcast, Anthony Davidson looks into how future success for Mercedes could impact the relationship between George Russell and Lewis Hamilton

Russell will have understandably expected to at least have been picking up wins as he supported Hamilton in the fight for the eighth title, but things didn’t exactly go to plan.

Team-mate tensions on the horizon for both Brits?

Oscar Piastri was the first rookie to see the chequered flag first in F1 since Lewis Hamilton in 2007, something Lando Norris has not done in his first 99 races

Oscar Piastri was the first rookie to see the chequered flag first in F1 since Lewis Hamilton in 2007, something Lando Norris has not done in his first 99 races

Instead, Mercedes have had two years trying to find their way, taking away winning opportunities but allowing Russell to grow in experience and confidence – he is just as ready to fight for titles as Hamilton.

Arguably, Russell had his greatest season in 2022, outscoring Hamilton and winning whilst the seven-time world champion failed to do so for the first time in his career.

Only one team-mate can win the driver’s title, and that’s why Christian Horner says he wants to avoid having two alpha drivers – they take points away from one another.

Red Bull boss Christian Horner admits 'big talent' Lando Norris is one of a number of drivers they are keeping 'an eye on'

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Red Bull boss Christian Horner admits ‘big talent’ Lando Norris is one of a number of drivers they are keeping ‘an eye on’

Red Bull boss Christian Horner admits ‘big talent’ Lando Norris is one of a number of drivers they are keeping ‘an eye on’

If they can get into the position to fight for race wins, Mercedes need a clear driver to back, as shown in Qatar.

McLaren have a similar issue in the form of the superstar Norris and the raw but exciting Oscar Piastri.

Does Zak Brown back Norris, with whom he seems to have a very special relationship, or Piastri, for whom he fought so hard to sign?

Piastri and Russell will only get better as they look to assert themselves on their team-mates.

Norris obviously has youth on his side and will continue to blossom himself, but how he reacts to being challenged by his team-mate, something he hasn’t had since Carlos Sainz in 2020, will be fascinating to see, especially as McLaren appear to be the team closest to the almighty Red Bull machine.

McLaren's Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri face each other in an Ashes-inspired cricket match

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McLaren’s Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri face each other in an Ashes-inspired cricket match

McLaren’s Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri face each other in an Ashes-inspired cricket match

Russell will be disappointed with this season’s results after such a positive 2022 in Mercedes.

However, on qualifying pace, he is matching Hamilton and heads into Austin 9-8 up – Russell also arguably came the closest to winning in Singapore.

The youngster is taking risks while he has nothing to lose, learning his limits for when a title is on the line – that is a dangerous challenge for Hamilton who is undoubtedly in the latter stages of his career.

Mercedes team-mates Lewis Hamilton and George Russell collide on the opening lap of the Qatar Grand Prix

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Mercedes team-mates Lewis Hamilton and George Russell collide on the opening lap of the Qatar Grand Prix

Mercedes team-mates Lewis Hamilton and George Russell collide on the opening lap of the Qatar Grand Prix

There have been a few moments this season when the Mercedes pair clashed, but Qatar’s first corner shenanigans were by far the most explosive.

Mercedes will hope to keep a lid on it and McLaren will hope their drivers don’t get any ideas.

Both Norris and Russell have made impressive starts, but they have challenges to overcome if they want to become champion in their next hundred races – not least, on the other side of the garage.

How do Norris and Russell match up?

Let’s be clear – Russell’s three years in a Williams which rarely scored points will impact the head-to-head data.

Nevertheless, the numbers do point to the respective strengths of the drivers.

Norris nor Russell have had as much success in F1 as they would have liked, with Russell the only one to have tasted victory after his win in Brazil and those painful final laps for Norris in Sochi.

But sometimes winning is not everything, and this is very much the case in an era of F1 that has been dominated by Hamilton and now three-time world champion Max Verstappen.

Lando Norris joked about the incident in which George Russell confused his own sweat for rain at the Spanish Grand Prix!

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Lando Norris joked about the incident in which George Russell confused his own sweat for rain at the Spanish Grand Prix!

Lando Norris joked about the incident in which George Russell confused his own sweat for rain at the Spanish Grand Prix!

The data points to Norris’ consistency being his greatest strength.

Norris has only failed to finish a race 10 times in 99 Grand Prix, scoring points an impressive 74 times.

For context, Russell has retired 16 times, Hamilton, one of the most consistent finishers in F1 history, retired 12 times in his first 99 races and Verstappen more than double with 21 times.

Lando Norris shares with Sky Sports' Naomi Schiff his favourite things about having a Belgian parent

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Lando Norris shares with Sky Sports’ Naomi Schiff his favourite things about having a Belgian parent

Lando Norris shares with Sky Sports’ Naomi Schiff his favourite things about having a Belgian parent

Of course, mechanical failures are not in the driver’s control, but Norris is rarely caught up in a crash, keeps his nose clean and generally delivers the best result possible in the car – that is invaluable for a team.

He also has one more podium than Russell, with 11 – five P2s and six P3s compared to Russell’s one win, two P2s and seven P3s.

Norris has yet to get his first win, but if he continues to maximise results, he will take the top step when the opportunity arises.

While Russell can be slightly less consistent, his ability to grab an opportunity shines through.

Whenever things are up in the air, who is the driver first to risk it on slicks on a drying track or call on his team to try an aggressive strategy?

Mercedes' George Russell and Sky Sports' Ted Kravitz play Iceman and Maverick in Typhoon Eurofighters

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Mercedes’ George Russell and Sky Sports’ Ted Kravitz play Iceman and Maverick in Typhoon Eurofighters

Mercedes’ George Russell and Sky Sports’ Ted Kravitz play Iceman and Maverick in Typhoon Eurofighters

Russell loves to go for it, and that has been the nature of his career in the uncompetitive Williams or Mercedes, desperate to overcome the might of Red Bull.

No wonder Russell snatched the opportunity to secure pole position and win in Brazil last year. Were it not for a puncture, he would have also clinched victory when parachuted into a Mercedes in Sakhir 2020.

This ability to snatch a chance with both hands is why Russell is beating Norris in the critical statistics of Grand Prix wins, pole positions.

George Russell wins his first ever Formula 1 Grand Prix holding off Mercedes team-mate Lewis Hamilton to win in Sao Paulo

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George Russell wins his first ever Formula 1 Grand Prix holding off Mercedes team-mate Lewis Hamilton to win in Sao Paulo

George Russell wins his first ever Formula 1 Grand Prix holding off Mercedes team-mate Lewis Hamilton to win in Sao Paulo

Norris and Russell head into their hundredth race in Austin, having established themselves as two of the best on the F1 grid.

They are ready to take the baton from Hamilton as the top British driver, but they may have to wrestle it from the seven-time champion for longer than expected.

Watch Formula 1 return to Texas for the United States Grand Prix and another Sprint weekend live on Sky Sports F1 from October 20-22. Stream F1 on Sky Sports with NOW



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Qatar GP: Esteban Ocon reveals he was sick as Lando Norris labels conditions ‘too dangerous’


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Lance Stroll and Alex Albon are both seen struggling to get out of their cars from the onboard cameras at the end of a gruelling Qatar GP, both drivers cleared after medical checks

Lance Stroll and Alex Albon are both seen struggling to get out of their cars from the onboard cameras at the end of a gruelling Qatar GP, both drivers cleared after medical checks

Esteban Ocon revealed he threw up during the Qatar Grand Prix, while Lando Norris called the race conditions “too dangerous”.

The humidity, temperatures which were in excess of 40 degrees and the high-speed corners made the race incredibly tough for the drivers.

Another factor was the 18-lap limit on tyres which led to a minimum of three pit stops, so the drivers pushed harder during the Grand Prix, which was won by Max Verstappen on Sunday.

“I was throwing up by lap 15, 16. For two laps I think,” Ocon told Sky Sports F1 after finishing seventh for Alpine in Qatar.

“I was doing that and thinking ‘s***, it’s going to be a long one’. Get it under control just mentally and just focus on what I’ve got to try and do.

“I’ve never had that in the past. I’ve always been able to do two race distances in the car, that’s what I’ve always been training for, but today it was just the hot air and how hot the engine is from behind the car.

“I don’t think we particularly sealed the cockpit too well. It must have been like 80 degrees inside the car. I’m glad that next year we come back here in December.”

Esteban Ocon reveals he threw up in his helmet due to the extreme conditions during the Qatar Grand Prix

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Esteban Ocon reveals he threw up in his helmet due to the extreme conditions during the Qatar Grand Prix

Esteban Ocon reveals he threw up in his helmet due to the extreme conditions during the Qatar Grand Prix

The inaugural Qatar Grand Prix in 2021 took place in November and next season’s event will also happen at that time of the year, when conditions should be cooler.

Lando Norris, who made it a hat-trick of podiums with third place on Sunday behind McLaren team-mate Oscar Piastri, was very outspoken on the conditions.

“I think we probably found the limit. I think it’s sad we had to find it this way. It’s never a nice situation to be in. Some people are ending up in the medical centre or passing out,” he said.

“It’s a pretty dangerous thing to have going on. But it’s not a point where you can just go, ‘the drivers need to train more’ or anything like that.

Max Verstappen, Oscar Piastri and Lando Norris compared notes in the cool-down room after a gruelling Qatar Grand Prix

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Max Verstappen, Oscar Piastri and Lando Norris compared notes in the cool-down room after a gruelling Qatar Grand Prix

Max Verstappen, Oscar Piastri and Lando Norris compared notes in the cool-down room after a gruelling Qatar Grand Prix

“We’re in a closed car that gets extremely hot in a very physical race and it’s frustrating I guess on TV. It probably doesn’t look very physical at all.

“But clearly when you have people who end up retiring, or are in such a bad state, it’s too much. For the speeds we are doing is it is too dangerous.

“I know that this race next year is later on in the season and it will be a lot cooler, a few months later, but it’s something needs to be thought of. I’m sure we will speak about it because it kind of shouldn’t have happened in the first place.”

The best of the action from a dramatic Qatar Grand Prix

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The best of the action from a dramatic Qatar Grand Prix

The best of the action from a dramatic Qatar Grand Prix

Piastri added: “Extremely hot. Even from from the beginning, I put my helmet on before the start of the race and I was sweating. It definitely didn’t get any better once I was driving! Very hot.

“It was a combination of a lot of things – the humidity, having three stops meant we were pushing flat out and just the nature of the track – there’s a lot of high-speed corners that just naturally take its toll. Definitely the hardest race I’ve done.”

Sargeant cleared after suffering from heatstroke

Ted Kravitz looks back at all the top stories around the F1 paddock from the Qatar Grand Prix

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Ted Kravitz looks back at all the top stories around the F1 paddock from the Qatar Grand Prix

Ted Kravitz looks back at all the top stories around the F1 paddock from the Qatar Grand Prix

Logan Sargeant was one of several drivers in Qatar to suffer from dehydration and stated he felt “sick” on the radio during the race.

Sargeant, who is the only driver on the grid without a contract for next year, initially pushed on, before retiring with 16 laps to go.

“Following Logan’s retirement from the Grand Prix, he has been assessed and cleared by the medical team on-site after suffering from intense dehydration during the race weakened by having flu-like symptoms earlier in the week,” said Williams.

Alex Albon was also taken to the medical centre and didn’t attend the post-race media activities, while Lance Stroll nearly fainted when getting out of his Aston Martin following the race.

Stroll crossed the line in ninth place, but was demoted to 11th due to track limits penalties.

“It’s disappointing not to take any points away having raced so hard in such physically demanding conditions,” said Stroll.

“The temperatures we faced out there were extreme – more so than any other event – and there are lots of tight corners here so you’re constantly battling the g-forces.”

Verstappen: Like walking around in a sauna

Verstappen dominated the race and compared the Qatar Grand Prix to Miami and Singapore – two other places F1 visit that seriously test the drivers physically.

“When I saw the weather before coming here, I was not looking forward to it. It’s just too warm and like Lando said, it has nothing to do with more training or whatever,” said the three-time world champion.

“I think some of the guys who are struggling today, they are extremely fit or even fitter than me. Just the whole day, it’s like you walk around in a sauna and in the night, the humidity goes up. The races are quite long.

“But it’s not the only place…a few places are like that. Singapore is almost like a two-hour race and it’s very, very warm. I think it’s also quite on the limit of what should be allowed. So there are a few things to look at, but this was definitely way too hot.”

Verstappen and Piastri try to recover just moments after the Qatar Grand Prix

Verstappen and Piastri try to recover just moments after the Qatar Grand Prix

Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc, who was fifth, told Sky Sports F1: “I think everybody [struggled], no exceptions. I think it was the toughest race of our careers as drivers.

“The heat was absolutely crazy. Secondly, we’ve got a lot of high-speed corners. And, third, which I think is the most significant thing, is adding three stops. We were all speaking about tyres that it would be a full-push race for tyres with little management.

“But I think we maybe underestimated that that meant we were under so much more stress in the high-speed corners, which is normally not the case.

“It’s difficult to put into words how difficult it was. It was twice as difficult as a race like Singapore in the past.”

Watch Formula 1 return to Texas for the United States Grand Prix and another Sprint weekend live on Sky Sports F1 from October 20-22. Stream F1 on Sky Sports with NOW for £21 a month for six months



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Women’s Super League: Can York Valkyrie swoop against Leeds Rhinos for latest Grand Final shot at glory?

Marc Bazeley

@MarcBazeley

League Leaders’ Shield winners York Valkyrie and reigning champions Leeds Rhinos face off again in the Betfred Women’s Super League Grand Final at the LNER Community Stadium; watch live on Sky Sports Arena and Sky Sports Mix from 2.30pm on Sunday (3pm kick-off)

Last Updated: 06/10/23 6:14pm


York captain Sinead Peach and Leeds skipper Hanna Butcher have their sights on lifting the Women’s Super League trophy on Sunday

The story of the York Valkyrie rugby league revolution has, up to now, been a case of so near yet so far.

The 2021 Betfred Women’s Challenge Cup final and last year’s Betfred Women’s Super League Grand Final both saw them fall short of claiming one of the sport’s big two prizes. Earlier this year, York were denied a place in the first Women’s Challenge Cup final to be at Wembley as well in an agonising one-point defeat to St Helens as well.

However, the Valkyrie have another chance to put all those near misses to bed in the Women’s Super League showpiece on Sunday, live on Sky Sports. Once again, they already have the League Leaders’ Shield from the regular season in the bag and once again face Leeds Rhinos to be crowned champions.

This year, however, Lindsay Anfield’s side have home advantage courtesy of that top-of-the-table finish and will be playing in front of a bumper crowd at the LNER Community Stadium, with captain Sinead Peach under no illusion as to how significant it would be for the club to clinch a maiden BWSL title.

“It means everything,” Peach told York RLFC TV. “Starting out the season, you put out platforms for what you want to achieve and losing in the [Challenge Cup] semi-final, we were gutted, but we’ve bounced back since that.

“We’ve got an opportunity to lift another cup after the League Leaders’ and it’s everything we want, and I’m sure the girls are willing to do everything they can to make sure they come out victorious.”

For the second year in a row, York overcame Wigan Warriors to earn a place in the Grand Final, this time winning 22-6 thanks to another pivotal display from reigning Woman of Steel Tara-Jane Stanley, who scored one try and assisted two others after the visitors had taken an early lead.

Highlights of the York Valkyrie's win over Wigan Warriors in the Betfred Women's Super League semi-finals

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Highlights of the York Valkyrie’s win over Wigan Warriors in the Betfred Women’s Super League semi-finals

Highlights of the York Valkyrie’s win over Wigan Warriors in the Betfred Women’s Super League semi-finals

Reigning champions Leeds, meanwhile, needed a try from Sophie Robinson in golden point extra-time to defeat St Helens 20-16 at Totally Wicked Stadium in their semi-final clash and go some way to avenging their Wembley cup final loss to Saints in August.

Leeds have reached the Grand Final again despite England internationals Fran Goldthorp and Georgia Roche making the switch to Australia’s NRLW competition earlier this year and Caitlin Beevers, player of the match in last year’s 12-4 win over York in the title decider, hailed the togetherness of the squad.

“I think we’ve done really well,” Beevers told Sky Sports. “We’ve had a lot of adversity; we had players moving to the NRLW at the start of the season along with some injuries at the start, and I think we’ve really got to the point where we can compete in games like this.

“For the last two years we’ve managed to make it to the Grand Final and that shows how committed we are.

Caitlin Beevers says Leeds are raring to go for the women's Super League Grand final but wary of an in-form York side and their dangerous forwards

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Caitlin Beevers says Leeds are raring to go for the women’s Super League Grand final but wary of an in-form York side and their dangerous forwards

Caitlin Beevers says Leeds are raring to go for the women’s Super League Grand final but wary of an in-form York side and their dangerous forwards

“No matter the adversity we face at the start of the season, we come together and that shows what the environment at Leeds is all about.

“We’re ready and raring to go. Training for the last two weeks has been absolutely phenomenal, so we’re biting at the bit to get going.”

Last year’s final was played at the neutral venue of Totally Wicked Stadium and Leeds know how much home advantage does not always count after defeat on their Headingley home turf by St Helens in the 2021 decider.

Peach is adamant York are taking nothing for granted either, having been held to a 12-12 draw by the Rhinos at home in July after beating them 34-12 away in April, but the 2023 Woman of Steel nominee and her team-mates are excited they have the opportunity to be crowned champions for the first time in front of a partisan crowd.

Highlights of Leeds Rhinos' dramatic Betfred Women's Super League semi-final win over St Helens

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Highlights of Leeds Rhinos’ dramatic Betfred Women’s Super League semi-final win over St Helens

Highlights of Leeds Rhinos’ dramatic Betfred Women’s Super League semi-final win over St Helens

“It’s massive that we’ve got the home advantage and we’re comfortable playing here, but in the same sense we’re not complacent,” Peach said.

“We know there is a job to do, but mentally preparing that we’re going to be at our home ground with our home supporters is massive for us, and the girls are really excited to get out there and put on a good show.

“We know the fans will get behind us with the drums, so we’re looking forward to running out.”

Wilkin: Rhinos have the ability to win tight games

Sky Sports rugby league pundit Jon Wilkin on this year’s Women’s Super League Grand Final:

“Much like the men’s team from their golden era, Leeds just have an ability to win tight games and games they maybe shouldn’t win.

“I thought they did that against St Helens in the semi-finals – it was an incredible performance and a golden-point win, and rightly they find their way to the Grand Final.

“York, although they’ve played great, they haven’t won that competition before, and I know as a player that’s in the back of your mind.

“That could be poisonous for the mentality of the York team and could play into Leeds’ hands.”

Watch York Valkyrie and Leeds Rhinos face off in the Betfred Women’s Super League Grand Final live on Sky Sports Arena and Sky Sports Mix from 2.30pm on Sunday (3pm kick-off). Also stream the Women’s, Men’s and Wheelchair Super League Grand Finals and more on with NOW for £21 a month for six months.



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World Grand Prix: Nathan Aspinall, Raymond van Barneveld, James Wade suffer early exits on opening night

Megan Wellens

Digital Sports Journalist @MegWellensX

Nathan Aspinall was knocked out by Stephen Bunting as James Wade and Raymond van Barneveld also failed to progress; watch the double in, double out World Grand Prix Darts from the Morningside Arena in Leicester up until the final on October 8 – live on Sky Sports

Last Updated: 03/10/23 12:04am


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Take a look at what happened on Night One of the World Grand Prix in Leicester

Take a look at what happened on Night One of the World Grand Prix in Leicester

Nathan Aspinall, James Wade and Raymond van Barneveld suffered first-round exits on the opening night of the 2023 World Grand Prix.  

Stephen Bunting overcame some poor finishing to knock out 2022 runner-up and world No 5 Aspinall in a 2-1 victory.

Bunting showed his strength on the doubles to cruise to a 3-1 win in the first set, a ghastly leg for Aspinall saw him take 12 darts to find the double.

Nathan Aspinall had a horror start to the third leg in the first set, needing 12 darts before hitting a double to get off the mark!

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Nathan Aspinall had a horror start to the third leg in the first set, needing 12 darts before hitting a double to get off the mark!

Nathan Aspinall had a horror start to the third leg in the first set, needing 12 darts before hitting a double to get off the mark!

Aspinall then found a clutch 140 to take the match to a deciding set but Bunting held strong under pressure, a huge maximum in the deciding leg helping him to the D16 finish for the victory.

World Grand Prix Results

Dirk van Duijvenbode 1-2 Brendan Dolan
Jose de Sousa 1-2 Gary Anderson
Krzysztof Ratajski 2-1 James Wade
Martin Schindler 2-1 Raymond van Barneveld
Nathan Aspinall 1-2 Stephen Bunting
Gerwyn Price 2-0 Danny Noppert
Michael Smith 2-0 Callan Rydz
Rob Cross 1-2 Andrew Gilding

Van Barneveld was defeated 2-1 by Martin Schindler, a disastrous opening leg foreshadowing his early exit.

‘Barney’ came back to take the second set, but Schindler’s scoring proved too much as he broke the throw on the deciding leg to seal the match and a second-round spot.

Martin Schindler brilliantly took out 160 to keep his hopes alive in the first set of his encounter with Raymond van Barneveld

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Martin Schindler brilliantly took out 160 to keep his hopes alive in the first set of his encounter with Raymond van Barneveld

Martin Schindler brilliantly took out 160 to keep his hopes alive in the first set of his encounter with Raymond van Barneveld

Krzysztof Ratajski pulled off an unlikely comeback to win 2-1 and knock out two-time winner Wade.

Two-time World Grand Prix champion James Wade lost the last three legs as he suffered a 2-1 defeat at the hands of Krzysztof Ratajski in the opening round

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Two-time World Grand Prix champion James Wade lost the last three legs as he suffered a 2-1 defeat at the hands of Krzysztof Ratajski in the opening round

Two-time World Grand Prix champion James Wade lost the last three legs as he suffered a 2-1 defeat at the hands of Krzysztof Ratajski in the opening round

Wade found himself 2-0 up in the final deciding set but Ratajski fought back and was near perfect on the trebles to take three legs in a row and clinch an astonishing victory.

Smith shows skill as Anderson and Price also progress

World champion Michael Smith showed his brilliance and dropped just one leg as he raced to a 2-0 victory over Callan Rydz.

Smith got off to a flying start against Rydz, a 124 checkout helping him to a first-set win that included two breaks of throw.

Michael Smith sent out a statement of intent, taking out 124 in the opening leg of his contest versus Callan Rydz

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Michael Smith sent out a statement of intent, taking out 124 in the opening leg of his contest versus Callan Rydz

Michael Smith sent out a statement of intent, taking out 124 in the opening leg of his contest versus Callan Rydz

Despite Rydz rallying with a brilliant 126 checkout to take a leg, Smith then won three more in a row to wrap up the match and lay down a marker in the competition.

Gerwyn Price demolished Danny Noppert in a 2-0 routing, ‘The Iceman’ showing his class to take the first set, 112 and 101 finishes to break the throw plus a dominant deciding leg giving him the upper hand.

From there, Noppert could not respond, and the Welshman cruised through three back-to-back legs to wrap up the win, his scoring on the doubles too good for the Dutchman.

Gerwyn Price won the first set against Danny Noppert thanks to finishes of 112 and 101

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Gerwyn Price won the first set against Danny Noppert thanks to finishes of 112 and 101

Gerwyn Price won the first set against Danny Noppert thanks to finishes of 112 and 101

Dirk van Duijvenbode was the first to be knocked out as he fell 2-1 to Brendan Dolan.

Van Duijvenbode got going quickly as he raced to take all three legs in the first set against the throw for a 1-0 lead but Dolan fought back to clinch the second set and take the match to a decider.

It was then his turn to take all three sets as he found the doubles much quicker than his opponent, sealing the win and the spot in the second round with a tops finish.

The next clash saw an in-form Gary Anderson take on the ‘Special One’ Jose de Sousa, the Portuguese No 1 averaging 102.5 to clinch the first set on a break of throw in the deciding leg.

Gary Anderson overcame Jose de Sousa in a deciding leg as he progressed to the second round at the World Grand Prix

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Gary Anderson overcame Jose de Sousa in a deciding leg as he progressed to the second round at the World Grand Prix

Gary Anderson overcame Jose de Sousa in a deciding leg as he progressed to the second round at the World Grand Prix

However, the ‘Flying Scotsman’ fought back and showed why he is one to watch in this year’s tournament, taking four legs in a row, with some huge maximums along the way, plus a nervy deciding leg for the 2-1 win.

The final clash of the night saw Rob Cross and Andrew Gilding in a tight, albeit low-quality, affair as Gilding sealed the 2-1 win in a last-leg decider.

Cross missed three match darts for the victory and Gilding held his nerve to hit tops and seal only his second-ever World Grand Prix win.

Rob Cross squandered three match darts in the deciding leg as Andrew Gilding fought back from losing the opening set to reach the second round at the World Grand Prix

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Rob Cross squandered three match darts in the deciding leg as Andrew Gilding fought back from losing the opening set to reach the second round at the World Grand Prix

Rob Cross squandered three match darts in the deciding leg as Andrew Gilding fought back from losing the opening set to reach the second round at the World Grand Prix

Tuesday at the World Grand Prix

Michael van Gerwen will begin his defence of the title against Josh Rock in a mouth-watering first-round tussle.

Van Gerwen, who lifted his sixth World Grand Prix title in 2022, will open his challenge against world youth champion Rock.

Live World Grand Prix Darts

October 3, 2023, 6:00pm

Live on Sky Sports Arena

World Grand Prix: Tuesday, October 3 from 6pm

Joe Cullen vs Mike De Decker
Dave Chisnall vs Luke Woodhouse
Damon Heta vs Ryan Searle
Dimitri Van den Bergh vs Chris Dobey
Peter Wright vs Gabriel Clemens
Michael van Gerwen vs Josh Rock
Jonny Clayton vs Ross Smith
Luke Humphries vs Daryl Gurney

Third seed Peter Wright will play German No 1 Gabriel Clemens in his opener, with Hungarian Darts Trophy winner Dave Chisnall up against Luke Woodhouse.

Watch the double in, double out World Grand Prix Darts at the Morningside Arena in Leicester every night up until the final on October 8 – live on Sky Sports. Stream the World Grand Prix and more with NOW for £21 a month for six months



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