‘Like a movie’: Lando Norris relives final lap to glory and partying till 6am as world champion

A picture


F1’s new superstar shares memories from road to glory Briton tells of ‘cool flashbacks’ on track in Abu DhabiAfter becoming Formula One world champion for the first time, Lando Norris revealed that he had enjoyed the final moments of the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix on Sunday by considering all the moments that had brought him to the pinnacle of the sport.Norris was speaking the day after he won the world championship by taking third place at the Yas Marina circuit.His title rival Max Verstappen won the race but fell short of Norris by two points.The fight remained tight to the decisive last round with Norris’s McLaren teammate, Oscar Piastri, who had led the championship for a large part of the season, also in the mix for the final race but who ultimately finished third.“It was like a movie,” the 26‑year‑old said.

“As much as I was trying to avoid every bump possible I was also remembering all of those moments from the very beginning, driving a go-kart for the first time ever, my first time on the track in a go-kart, the races I had, the karting world championship I won in 2014 and many different memories.“I was watching me.I was living it but I was also watching me drive around from a bird’s-eye view and this was all within the space of a couple of minutes, through to the last seven years of McLaren and the good and bad moments of the season.”Norris also revealed he had partied until 6am with his friends at the W hotel that overlooks the Yas Marina circuit and ended the night at a McDonald’s.“I had a Sausage McMuffin.

Was it the breakfast of champions? Certainly not, I regretted it straightaway,”The Briton had to hold his nerve to see out a tense fight in Abu Dhabi and pull off some bold overtakes to ensure he claimed the third place he needed but said that at the close he was unsure how he would feel when he finally took the championship he had dreamed of winning since he was a child,“I had no idea what to expect,” he said,“With three laps to go I was like: ‘I am getting pretty close and I’m not feeling anything yet,’ I was like: ‘Is this going to mean a lot to me?’“Then the next lap I started having these cool flashbacks.

It was like a montage of my life and going under the bridge for the final time and imagining my mum in the garage and that made me emotional.“The best memory was when I came round the final corner and this is now from my view from my eyes inside my visor and seeing the ­chequered flag and that moment of lifting off and being able to cry.I want to savour that moment because that was the ‘it’ moment.”As the 11th British driver to win the world championship he stands in illustrious company but was insistent the newfound fame, and all that is associated with it, would not change him.“From the exterior it will change my life but it won’t change me and how I live it.

I really hope it doesn’t anyway.I don’t want to be that kind of person,” he said.Norris was involved in a battle with Verstappen for the title last season, albeit coming from well behind the Dutchman and the McLaren team principal, Andrea Stella, believed this was one of the two key areas he had identified that had enabled Norris to close out his first title.Sign up to Sport in FocusOur picture editors select their favourite sporting images from the past week, from the spectacular to the powerful, and with a little bit of fun thrown inafter newsletter promotion“Definitely, there was a lot that was taken away from the quest last year, even if it didn’t go to the last race,” he said.“There were some learning points, like Austria, it was a tough one.

[But] I think Lando elevated his sense of status, like: ‘I can compete with Max.’”Norris also struggled with the car for the opening half of this season, not having the feel for the front grip he prefers and it particularly cost him in qualifying.It was a period when Piastri took the lead of the championship with a series of enormously assured drives.The team were ultimately able to bring developments to the car around the front suspension such that Norris felt much more comfortable and Stella maintained that the way he handled the difficult period was key.“This season there was another important turning point in my view, which is the way Lando responded to the difficulties we had at the start of the season,” he said.

“It was the start of a process which was structured, holistic, it involved personal development, professional driving, racecraft.“It makes me particularly glad that Lando could capitalise on this, because this has been something that I’ve not necessarily seen many times before in terms of the amount of work, the people involved, and the rate of development.”
technologySee all
A picture

A robot walks into a bar: can a Melbourne researcher get AI to do comedy?

Robots can make humans laugh – mostly when they fall over – but a new research project is looking at whether robots using AI could ever be genuinely funny.If you ask ChatGPT for a funny joke, it will serve you up something that belongs in a Christmas cracker: “Why don’t skeletons fight each other? Because they don’t have the guts.”The University of Melbourne’s Dr Robert Walton, a dean’s research fellow in the Faculty of Fine Arts and Music, is taking a different approach to working out whether robots can do comedy.Thanks to an Australian Research Council grant of about $500,000, he will train a swarm of robots in standup. And, at least in the beginning, they won’t use words

A picture

Artificial intelligence research has a slop problem, academics say: ‘It’s a mess’

A single person claims to have authored 113 academic papers on artificial intelligence this year, 89 of which will be presented this week at one of the world’s leading conferences on AI and machine learning, which has raised questions among computer scientists about the state of AI research.The author, Kevin Zhu, recently finished a bachelor’s degree in computer science at the University of California, Berkeley, and now runs Algoverse, an AI research and mentoring company for high schoolers – many of whom are his co-authors on the papers. Zhu himself graduated from high school in 2018.Papers he has put out in the past two years cover subjects such as using AI to locate nomadic pastoralists in sub-Saharan Africa, to evaluate skin lesions and to translate Indonesian dialects. On his LinkedIn, he touts publishing “100+ top conference papers in the past year”, which have been “cited by OpenAI, Microsoft, Google, Stanford, MIT, Oxford and more”

A picture

Cloudflare apologises after latest outage takes down LinkedIn and Zoom

Cloudflare has apologised after an outage on Friday morning hit websites including LinkedIn, Zoom and Downdetector, the company’s second outage in less than a month.“Any outage of our systems is unacceptable, and we know we have let the internet down again,” it said in a blogpost, adding that it would release more information next week on how it aims to prevent these failures.The outage on Friday came after Cloudflare adjusted its firewall to protect customers from a widespread software vulnerability revealed earlier this week, and was not an attack, it said. Earlier, it said a separate issue had been reported with its application programming interfaces.The issue, which affected 28% of its traffic, lasted for half an hour and was resolved shortly after 9am GMT, it said

A picture

‘Urgent clarity’ sought over racial bias in UK police facial recognition technology

The UK’s data protection watchdog has asked the Home Office for “urgent clarity” over racial bias in police facial recognition technology before considering its next steps.The Home Office has admitted that the technology was “more likely to incorrectly include some demographic groups in its search results”, after testing by the National Physical Laboratory (NPL) of its application within the police national database.The report revealed that the technology, which is intended to be used to catch serious offenders, is more likely to incorrectly match black and Asian people than their white counterparts.In a statement responding to the report, Emily Keaney, the deputy commissioner for the Information Commissioner’s Office, said the ICO had asked the Home Office “for urgent clarity on this matter” in order for the watchdog to “assess the situation and consider our next steps”.The next steps could include enforcement action, including issuing a legally binding order to stop using the technology or fines, as well as working with the Home Office and police to make improvements

A picture

New York Times sues AI startup for ‘illegal’ copying of millions of articles

The New York Times sued an embattled artificial intelligence startup on Friday, accusing the firm of illegally copying millions of articles. The newspaper alleged Perplexity AI had distributed and displayed journalists’ work without permission en masse.The Times said that Perplexity AI was also violating its trademarks under the Lanham Act, claiming the startup’s generative AI products create fabricated content, or “hallucinations”, and falsely attribute them to the newspaper by displaying them alongside its registered trademarks.The newspaper said that Perplexity’s business model relies on scraping and copying content, including paywalled material, to power its generative AI products. Other publishers have made similar allegations

A picture

I spent hours listening to Sabrina Carpenter this year. So why do I have a Spotify ‘listening age’ of 86?

Many users of the app were shocked, this week, by this addition to the Spotify Wrapped roundup – especially twentysomethings who were judged to be 100“Age is just a number. So don’t take this personally.” Those words were the first inkling I had that I was about to receive some very bad news.I woke up on Wednesday with a mild hangover after celebrating my 44th birthday. Unfortunately for me, this was the day Spotify released “Spotify Wrapped”, its analysis of (in my case) the 4,863 minutes I had spent listening to music on its platform over the past year