H
trending
H
HOYONEWS
HomeBusinessTechnologySportPolitics
Others
  • Food
  • Culture
  • Society
Contact
Home
Business
Technology
Sport
Politics

Food

Culture

Society

Contact
Facebook page
H
HOYONEWS

Company

business
technology
sport
politics
food
culture
society

CONTACT

EMAILmukum.sherma@gmail.com
© 2025 Hoyonews™. All Rights Reserved.
Facebook page

Verstappen takes F1 US GP pole after sprint victory to turn up heat on Norris and Piastri

about 11 hours ago
A picture


Max Verstappen claimed pole position for the US Grand Prix with an immense lap for Red Bull at the Circuit of the Americas.However the day was marked by yet another incident between the two world championship contenders Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri, with the latter crashing into Norris on the opening lap of the sprint race taking them both out and leaving McLaren with a headache as to how they manage their drivers.Verstappen had been all but untouchable throughout qualifying, his lead over Norris in second place was a full three-tenths, an age on this track.However in what is an increasingly tense title fight Piastri’s difficult weekend continued as he managed only sixth on the grid.Charles Leclerc and Lewis Hamilton took third and fifth for Ferrari, with Mercedes’ George Russell in fourth.

The real drama, certainly for McLaren, had already taken place to devastating effect.On the first corner of the sprint, which was won by Verstappen, with Norris starting in second and Piastri in third, the Australian looked to cut back inside his teammate but in doing so was struck by the Sauber of Nico Hülkenberg.The impact speared him into Norris at speed, lifted Piastri’s car into the air and entirely sheared off one of Norris’s wheels, damage that ended both their races.It was the worst possible scenario for McLaren on a weekend when the team wanted nothing more than a clean meeting to calm the atmosphere that has begun to surround their drivers, with Piastri leading Norris by 22 points in the world championship, as they strive to manage their title fight as fairly as possible.The incident occurs only a week after Norris was told there would be “consequences” for his move in Singapore where he attempted to pass Piastri and in so doing clipped Verstappen and was skewed into the side of his teammate.

Both continued but Norris was held to have been in the wrong.This far worse incident in Austin leaves McLaren once more having to address their complex management of their men.Certainly if Norris was at fault for going for a gap in Singapore, Piastri was equally to blame for cutting back at the notoriously crowded turn one in Austin, where the chances of there being more than one car inside him through the apex was very high.The team principal, Andrea Stella, cited a “lack of prudence” on Hülkenberg ’s behalf but his real issue is how they once more try to balance the increasingly complex scales they are now employing to ensure both drivers are treated equally.The issue has refused to go away and the team’s repeated efforts to be scrupulously fair in intervening has created a torturous set of precedents from which they can no longer simply retreat.

“We have lost eight points with both drivers, we just look forward to some normal racing,” Stella noted with a hint of exasperation.The team did well to repair both their cars for qualifying but without having quite the time to prepare as they would like.Norris nonetheless must consider this a good chance to make points back on his teammate but both drivers will be more than aware that neither could come even close to an imperious Verstappen.“Just don’t get hit is my plan for tomorrow,” said Norris after the travails of the sprint.“Hoping for a good race with Max, we’ve had some good ones in the past, so I’m looking forward to it again.

”Sign up to The RecapThe best of our sports journalism from the past seven days and a heads-up on the weekend’s actionafter newsletter promotion1 Max Verstappen (Neth) Red Bull 1min 32.510sec2 Lando Norris (GB) McLaren 1:32.8013 Charles Leclerc (Mon)Ferrari 1:32.8074 George Russell (GB) Mercedes 1:32.8265 Lewis Hamilton (GB) Ferrari 1:32.

9126 Oscar Piastri (Aus) McLaren 1:33,0847 Kimi Antonelli (It) Mercedes 1:33,114 8 Oliver Bearman (GB) Haas 1:33,1399 Carlos Sainz Jr (Sp) Williams 1:33,15010 Fernando Alonso (Sp) Aston Martin 1:33.

160Eliminated in Q211 Nico Hülkenberg (Ger) Sauber 1:33.33412 Liam Lawson (NZ) Racing Bulls 1:33.36013 Yuki Tsunoda (Jpn) Red Bull 1:33.46614 Pierre Gasly (Fr) Alpine 1:33.65115 Franco Colapinto (Arg) Alpine 1:34.

044Eliminated in Q116 Gabriel Bortoleto (Br) Sauber 1:34.12517 Esteban Ocon (Fr) Haas 1:34.13618 Lance Stroll (Can) Aston Martin 1:34.54019 Alexander Albon (Tha) Williams 1:34.69020 Isack Hadjar (Fr) Racing Bulls no time setRed Bull have proved in recent races that they appear to have finally ironed out the issues with their car that plagued it for most of the season.

They have now shown form across a range of circuits and conditions, with the team’s motorsport adviser Helmut Marko pronouncing “we are there” of the car earlier this week.Certainly they look in position to compete for wins now at every track and Verstappen demonstrated that emphatically in Austin.After the victory in the sprint he is now 55 points off Piastri and what had once appeared to be an insurmountable gap is suddenly looking to be a genuine target for the Dutchman.Before the summer break he was 97 points adrift but two wins and two second places since have given him a sniff of a chance which will have cause to focus the mind at McLaren, who have acknowledged their rivals are very much up to speed.On the first hot runs in Q3 Piastri, who did not really settle into a good single lap, opened with a marker but was swiftly eclipsed by Russell.

Norris and Verstappen followed and the Dutchman was immediately quick in the first two sectors, before he claimed provisional pole by almost a full four-tenths from Norris.It was a huge gap to make up in the final laps but Verstappen had waited again to go out last and could not make the line to begin his last lap before the clock counted down.Yet for all that Red Bull had cut it too fine he had done enough.Norris went hard but could not match him, still three-tenths off the world champion’s time of 1min 32.510sec.

businessSee all
A picture

Nearly £11bn wiped off UK banks after US regional banking fears spooked markets – as it happened

Nearly £11bn has been wiped off the value of the largest banks listed in London today.Banks were among the big fallers in today’s sell-off, with Barclays down 5.66%, NatWest losing 2.88%, HSBC down 2.5%, Standard Chartered losing 3

1 day ago
A picture

Bank shares lead global market fall amid jitters over US private credit

European stock markets fell on Friday and gold hit a record high after two US regional banks said they had been exposed to millions of dollars of bad loans and alleged fraud.Signs of credit stress rattled markets across Europe and Asia. In London the FTSE 100 fell 0.9%, Germany’s Dax fell 1.8%, Italy’s FTSE Mib fell 1

1 day ago
A picture

‘A foot out in the cold’: leaders huddle at IMF as icy economic winds blow

“The security blanket is covering us, but maybe we have a foot out in the cold.” That was the typically colourful warning from the International Monetary Fund’s managing director, Kristalina Georgieva, this week to its gathering of finance ministers in Washington.At its spring meetings in April, the IMF said the erratic trade policies emanating from the White House, half a mile away from its glass and steel HQ, amounted to a “major negative shock” for the global economy.Since then, experts’ worst fears have not materialised – global growth has held up; frantic negotiations, agile manufacturers and new trading links have prevented supply chains collapsing.But the US economy has been cushioned against the full effects of the trade shift by the AI mega-boom – and the IMF issued a clear warning this week that it may not last

2 days ago
A picture

What could a Trump deal on critical minerals mean for Australia – and could Maga be a sticking point?

Australia’s rich deposits of minerals used for green energy technologies and military hardware are increasingly prized, especially because of rising anxiety about China’s stranglehold on the global supply chain.That anxiety escalated after Beijing imposed new restrictions on rare earths exports, prompting a furious rebuke from Donald Trump and a warning from his treasury secretary that western allies would need to “decouple” from China if it proved an unreliable supplier.The timing of the latest US-China trade conflict could be good for Anthony Albanese, who will arrive at next week’s White House meeting armed with a valuable bargaining chip to negotiate with the deal-making president.The Australian government is expected to offer the US access to a proposed critical minerals stockpile, amid wider attempts to shield the country from the worst of Trump’s trade strikes and secure the Aukus submarine deal.But one expert thinks the critical minerals fight puts Australia in a “really compromised position”, caught between the competing priorities of its strongest strategic ally and its biggest trading partner

2 days ago
A picture

UK government borrowing costs fall to lowest level since July

The UK government’s borrowing costs have fallen to the lowest level since July as Rachel Reeves considers tax rises and spending cuts before next month’s autumn budget.In a boost for the chancellor, the yield – in effect the interest rate – on 10-year UK government bonds has fallen by about 0.15 percentage points this week, after briefly dipping below 4.5% early on Friday for the first time in three months.Government bond yields have tumbled across advanced economies, as investors scrambled to buy safe-haven assets amid fears over US-China trade tensions and signs of stress in the US banking system

2 days ago
A picture

Gaucho chain to slash waiters’ share of service charge and boost head office pay

The Argentinian steak restaurant Gaucho is slashing the share of the service charge its waiters receive, using some of the funds to bump up the pay package of head office workers.A letter to workers seen by the Guardian says that from 1 October existing waiters would receive between 25.45% and 29.4% of the service charge collected at tables they have served, depending on length of service, down from 37% previously – already a reduction from 45% early last year. Bar staff will get 17% of the service charge, down from 20%

2 days ago
cultureSee all
A picture

From After the Hunt to the Last Dinner Party: your complete entertainment guide to the week ahead

1 day ago
A picture

The Guide #213: Should we mourn the demise of TV channels?

1 day ago
A picture

Jimmy Kimmel on the Republicans: ‘So much greed and hypocrisy and duplicity’

2 days ago
A picture

Laurence Fox’s libel claim over racism accusations to go to retrial

2 days ago
A picture

Blue plaque to be unveiled at home of Thomas the Tank Engine creator

2 days ago
A picture

Jimmy Kimmel: ‘Trump’s inner circle knows how dangerous the incessant misinformation from Fox News can be’

3 days ago