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Fast, challenging but fun Losail impresses F1 drivers

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Losail international circuit qatar grand prix venue

Formula 1 drivers were unanimous in their praise for “challenging, fast but fun” Losail Circuit, venue for this weekend’s Qatar Grand Prix, best known for hosting MotoGP since 2008.

With F1 in a fix as venues dropped off this year’s calendar due to COVID-19, Qatar stepped in to sub for this year’s cancelled races and at the same time ink a deal to host the Grand Prix for the next decade.

Losail is devoid of any really slow bends or chicanes which gives it a natural flow and high-speed nature which well suits the current generation F1 cars despite being in the middle of the desert with little else than a relatively basic pit and paddock complex.

The grandstand in front of the pitlane and start line is likely to be full as bargain package deals can reportedly be picked up by F1 fans from close-by UAE to witness the first Qatar Grand Prix.

But that’s all there is in terms of spectator facilities at Losail, one grandstand.

Thus, for now, the Qatar Grand Prix is made for TV. If the empty backdrop and surroundings (or lack thereof) are ignored, at least the track itself has been well received by drivers who hailed it as challenging, fun to drive, surprisingly fast and grippy.

This is what they had to say after the two one-hour sessions on Friday:

Lewis Hamilton (Mercedes): This is a new track, it felt okay to drive, quite nice and no real issues, but it’s all high-speed corners so it’s quite physical.”

Max Verstappen (Red Bull): “I’ve had a lot of fun driving today, I think it’s a really cool track.”

Sergio Perez (Red Bull): “I have driven this track before when I was younger and it is slowly starting to come back to me now I have been out there, I don’t feel that has put me at any advantage over others. It is an interesting place, especially from day to night, it is very different. It is not an easy track and we expect the wind to change so it will be interesting to see what happens.”

Carlos Sainz (Ferrari): “The first day on an unknown track is always exciting and challenging, as it’s obviously a completely new experience. To be honest, I think this track has surprised everyone with how fast it is and the speed we are doing around the corners.”

Charles Leclerc: “I really like the track here at Losail, it is great. It’s always interesting to mix things up and see a new venue on the calendar.”

Lando Norris: “I like the track, it’s good fun, especially being a night session as well – we haven’t had a night session in quite a while. It’s fast, it’s high-speed and it’s a good challenge.”

Daniel Ricciardo: “This track’s fun. The initial impressions are that it’s good with it being flowing and pretty fast.”

Lance Stroll: “The track has a very good flow and that makes it very enjoyable. I had a lot of fun today.”

Sebastian Vettel: “It takes some time to focus and find your rhythm, but overall this is a very fun circuit to drive.”

Fernando Alonso: “The circuit is really great to drive. I love the layout and how the combination of corners really gives you the feeling and ability to maximise the potential in a Formula 1 car. I was enjoying every lap, so it was fun.”

Esteban Ocon: “It was a fun Friday discovering this new Losail track. It had some very good surprises for many reasons, so it’s been an enjoyable day. The track was high grip and it was very fast and flowing, which was awesome to drive. It brings challenges of places like Sepang and Istanbul rolled into one and that was really good fun to experience. It’s challenging for all of us to learn a new track.”

George Russell: “It’s a really fun circuit to drive and it’s very fast, probably faster than we expected. The tyre degradation seems relatively low which allowed us to push pretty hard, which is what we all want as drivers from a track.”

Nicholas Latifi: “I was expecting Losail International Circuit to be fun after driving it on the simulator and it did not disappoint! It’s really fast and flowing with not many tight corners, which is great for these current Formula 1 cars.”

Antonio Giovinazzi: “It was a good first experience driving here at Losail. I was really surprised by the amount of grip, already in FP1. The track is really nice, really fast and driving it is enjoyable.”

Mick Schumacher: “The track is very fast, that was probably not as expected. It feels pretty good, I think it’s a nice track to perform qualifying on, probably for racing it’s going to be a bit more difficult but I’m ready to be surprised.”

Nikita Mazepin: “I think it’s the fastest circuit I can remember visiting this year in terms of almost no slow corners here, which definitely makes it an interesting challenge. The surface is very smooth which makes it an enjoyable experience and this track is all about what Formula 1 cars bring.”

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Brooklyn Nets’ Kevin Durant to miss first game of season because of shoulder sprain

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The Brooklyn Nets are holding Kevin Durant out on Friday against the Orlando Magic because of a right shoulder sprain that has “just been bugging him a little bit.”

Nets coach Steve Nash made it clear, though, that Durant’s injury will not be something that will keep him out for multiple games.

“Let me put it in this context: We don’t feel concerned that it’ll linger or that he’d miss the next game,” Nash told reporters. “It’s just a pocket in the season [to find him some rest] where it’s not like he sits tonight and plays tomorrow or Sunday. He actually gets a few days rest on top of rest of the shoulder (before the Nets play again on Monday), and so there was multiple factors that I think made it attractive for us to choose this game for him to sit.”

Durant acknowledged Sunday that he had been getting treatment on his shooting shoulder but had been playing through the issue. Friday marks Durant’s first missed game of the season.

Durant, 33, is second in the NBA in scoring at 28.6 points per game while also contributing 7.9 rebounds and 4.9 assists per contest.

“I just think it’s just been bugging him a little bit,” Nash said of Durant’s shoulder. “And finding a time for him to rest is difficult, so coming out of a back-to-back [on Wednesday], the shoulder lingering a little and him having a four-day break here, in a sense, for the shoulder is just an opportunity we thought was positive for us. Unfortunately for tonight, it hurts the team, but in the long run it could help us. Those are the decisions you have to make.”

The Nets also will be without sharpshooter Joe Harris and veteran Paul Millsap against the Magic. Harris will miss his third straight game because of a left ankle sprain, while Millsap is out for his fourth straight game for personal reasons.

Boxing news: Liam Williams ‘injured and out’ of Chris Eubank fight days after announcement | Boxing | Sport

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Welsh middleweight Liam Williams is reportedly out of his all-British showdown with Chris Eubank Jr on December 11 after picking up an injury in training, although there has been no official communication from the fighter or Sky Sports, as of yet. The pair came face-to-face for the very first time just two days ago for the official fight press conference in London but the bout is now thought to have been waved off in a cruel blow for boxing fans.

Promoter Kalle Sauerland had labeled the clash the biggest domestic fight of 2021 and the Motorpoint Arena was expected to be rocking in just under one month’s time.

Williams is coming off the back of an unsuccessful world title bid after he was beaten by WBO champion Demetrius Andrade earlier in the year in Miami.

But the 29-year-old, who was forced to undergo a surgery after the Andrade defeat, was not prepared to take an easy fight and instead wants to push himself at the highest level as he looks to follow in the footsteps of Joe Calzaghe and 10 other Welsh world champions.

Eubank had been looking to end the calendar year on a high following wins over Marcus Morrison and Wanik Awdijan but now he’s unlikely to face Williams until 2022.

According to ESPN’s Mike Coppinger, Williams has been forced to withdraw from the bout due to injury.

There has been plenty of excitement around the middleweight matchup, which was due to be Sky Sports’ biggest pull since parting company with Matchroom Boxing.

Williams had been doing his best to get under Eubank’s skin before pushing the pace in the ring and the Englishman had clearly been aggravated by his opponent in the early build-up to the fight.

“Respect is definitely not a word I would use for my feelings towards Liam,” Eubank Jr said on Wednesday at the press conference.

“He has said a lot of reckless things online. It doesn’t sit well with me.

“This is a grudge match, a genuine domestic rivalry. It is personal. He has made it personal.

“He has come here today and tried to talk about respect? It has gone too far past that now.

“He will pay for what he has said. He will get embarrassed.”

It’s now unclear whether Eubank will still be on the card fighting an alternative opponent or if the bout will simply be rescheduled.

Recent Match Report – Abu Dhabi vs Bangla Tiger 2nd Match 2021/22

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Report

Gayle and Paul Stirling smash 97 in five overs together as Team Abu Dhabi get off to a flyer

Judging by the way Gayle helped to get Team Abu Dhabi’s campaign off to a flyer on Friday evening at the Zayed Cricket Ground, he seems a man who, even at the age of 42, still has more than enough in his armoury to destroy bowling attacks around the world, regardless of the format of the game or the colour that he wears.
Alongside Paul Stirling, in the bright yellow of Team Abu Dhabi, the pair of them shone and added a remarkable 97 runs in just five overs, taking much of the Bangla Tigers attack to the cleaners and in doing so, taking the game away from Faf du Plessis’ side in quite brutal fashion.
Stirling ended with 59 off 23, including six fours and five sixes, whilst Gayle finished unbeaten on 49 off 23, with five sixes of his own. Their combined tally was more than Bangla Tigers could manage in their entire innings. It was an exhibition of explosive and ferocious six-hitting for the Abu Dhabi crowd that earlier got to witness Delhi Bulls defeat the defending champions, Northern Warriors.

“It’s a great way to start from a team point of view,” Gayle said. “All of the guys played their part, Stirling batted well, [Marchant] de Lange with the ball, the captain with the ball as well – everyone played their part.

“Stirlo was fantastic and we were just having fun out there. He executed well today and I think he’ll love this wicket and score a lot of runs on this wicket.”

On his own performance, Gayle added: “It’s good to be in the runs and hopefully it can continue tomorrow.”

The numbers alone spoke of carnage. Sixty runs came in the space of the fifth and sixth overs. Spare a thought for Sabir Rao who was smashed for 29 in an over and Qais Ahmed, dispatched for 31 in the next. Neither of them returned to the attack. Such is the brutality of this format, no bowler is permitted more than two overs and the last thing that du Plessis would have thought about doing would be to give Gayle and Stirling another sniff.

At the end of the sixth over, the Abu Dhabi score was a ludicrous 112 for 2 and a third of the deliveries had gone the distance: 12 sixes in 36 deliveries.

For all the talk about the importance of a toss (both sides that won the toss chose to field on opening night), given the numbers in the T20 World Cup which highlighted the value of chasing, this Team Abu Dhabi batting order will strike fear into opposition, regardless of whether they bat first or second.

Captain Liam Livingstone said in the build-up that it was about “trying to hit as many sixes as we can” and that is exactly what they did. Each of the first four batters hit at least one six and finished with a strike rate of 200-plus.

Phil Salt pulled his second delivery over the midwicket fence, before getting run out off the next. And Livingstone himself thumped James Faulkner for two consecutive maximums before getting bowled by the Australian. The skipper’s dismissal simply welcomed the “Universe Boss” to the crease, who alongside Stirling wreaked havoc.

Rao was clobbered around the ground, as Gayle hammered, pulled and smeared him for three sixes in his first four legitimate deliveries. He returned with a brilliant yorker that went for a bye, only for Stirling to add to the pain by dispatching a slower delivery next ball for six more. For Rao, his first ever T10 appearance was one he’ll want to forget.

As if that wasn’t enough. Stirling added three more sixes in the next over, hammering a length delivery, flicking away a full toss, before gracefully getting down on one knee and sending one sailing over long-on. It was raining sixes in Abu Dhabi.

By the time Stirling was dismissed, the damage was already done. Despite managing to restrict Team Abu Dhabi to 145 for 4, given the start they had, the task was always going to be an uphill one for Tigers.

Livingstone also emphasised the need to “take as many wickets as possible” to try and stem the flow of runs in this format and in Marchant de Lange, he had just the man. When Sheldon Cottrell’s opening over was blasted for 18 by Andre Fletcher, Tigers had got off to a belter – only for de Lange to bowl both du Plessis and Fletcher in the next. The South African finished off the job with only the second five-for in Abu Dhabi T10 history as he ripped through the Tigers middle order.

“It was phenomenal to watch. We back ourselves to hit sixes and thanks to Chris and Paul, we probably got 20 or 30 more than par,” Livingstone said.

For Fletcher, it was an all too familiar story seeing his fellow West Indian take the game to to the Tigers. “As we’ve got to know with Gayle, it’s do or die.” Friday night in the desert belonged to Team Abu Dhabi.

Toronto faces Sacramento, seeks to end 3-game skid

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Toronto Raptors (7-8, 12th in the Eastern Conference) vs. Sacramento Kings (6-9, 12th in the Western Conference)

Sacramento, California; Friday, 10 p.m. EST

FANDUEL SPORTSBOOK LINE: Kings -3.5; over/under is 218

BOTTOM LINE: Toronto is looking to stop its three-game slide with a victory against Sacramento.

The Kings have gone 2-4 in home games. Sacramento is third in the Western Conference scoring 110.7 points while shooting 45.4% from the field.

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The Raptors have gone 5-3 away from home. Toronto is 2-4 in games decided by 10 or more points.

TOP PERFORMERS: Buddy Hield averages 4.3 made 3-pointers per game for the Kings, scoring 17.0 points while shooting 40.4% from beyond the arc. Harrison Barnes is averaging 20.4 points and 7.9 rebounds over the last 10 games for Sacramento.

OG Anunoby is shooting 43.0% and averaging 20.1 points for the Raptors. Fred VanVleet is averaging 3.6 made 3-pointers over the last 10 games for Toronto.

LAST 10 GAMES: Kings: 3-7, averaging 110.5 points, 45.3 rebounds, 22.9 assists, 7.4 steals and 5.2 blocks per game while shooting 45.5% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 109.1 points per game.

Raptors: 4-6, averaging 106.3 points, 41.9 rebounds, 21.2 assists, 9.4 steals and 4.6 blocks per game while shooting 44.6% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 108.2 points.

INJURIES: Kings: None listed.

Raptors: Precious Achiuwa: out (shoulder), OG Anunoby: out (hip), Yuta Watanabe: out (calf).

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The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.




© 2021 The Canadian Press

Adelabu hails Amiesimaka’s ‘bold step’ in rejecting sports committee job | The Guardian Nigeria News

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Former Green Eagles winger, Adegoke Adelabu, has described as ‘bold step,’ the decision by Adokiye Amiesimaka to turn down an appointment by the Sports Minister, Sunday Dare, as a member of a committee to produce a 10-year football development masterplan for the country.

Amiesimaka, a member of the Green Eagles squad that won the 1980 African Cup of Nations, and former Attorney General and Commissioner of Justice in Rivers State, rejected the minister’s offer a few days ago, describing it as a ‘waste of time and public funds.’

Speaking with The Guardian, yesterday, Adelabu, who played club football with the then IICC Shooting Stars of Ibadan said: “I think it is just a way of using those who have served the nation to defraud the government. I presented a paper at the last one and up till now nothing had been done.”

Adelabu, a sports scientist, and former manager of Eko United FC of Lagos said: “The important thing is that, apart from the fact that they don’t know what they want, they are not even aware of what we (ex-players) have, hence there is no organised approach to do anything objectively.

“They should go back to the archives, and check on what had been recommended in the spirit of continuity. We must start from somewhere. We are yet to feel the impact of the problems in our sport because of competitions. But when you look at the degree of vices in the society, you will agree with me that we have a big problem at hand.”

Speaking further, Adelabu said: “I hope the sport minister will take the advise from Amesi…as I used to call him, and find a way out objectively. We have never engaged ourselves in any form of sustainable sport development programmes, therefore it is difficult to know what will work. That is why every government uses trial and error approach.

“The important thing is that the sports ministry should not be used for political compensation. It has its own economic power if well organised,” he stated.

In turning down the appointment, Chief Amiesimaka, a former chairman of Sharks FC, said in a letter titled, ‘RE: Appointment As Member Of The Committee To Produce 10 Year Football Development Master Plan,’ that he had been in similar committees in the past but their recommendations were never implemented.

Fury’s undisputed hopes hit with Joshua only interested in one fight | Boxing | Sport

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Last month, ‘The Gypsy King’ came through a thrilling trilogy bout with Deontay Wilder in Las Vegas to retain both his WBC crown and Ring Magazine title, a win which was supposed to finally pave the way for a long-awaited bout with Joshua, 32.

However, that notion had already been scuppered in September after ‘AJ’ was left stunned by Usyk in London, with the Ukrainian outclassing him to take his WBA, IBF, WBO, and IBO titles.

Joshua immediately triggered a rematch clause and is currently negotiating a return bout in the spring of 2022, while Fury was widely expected to face Whyte, despite ‘The Body Snatcher’ having to withdraw from his October fight with Otto Wallin due to a shoulder injury.

However, on Tuesday the WBC failed to order the two British heavyweights to arrange a clash, saying there was a legal arbitration to settle with Whyte first.

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“I have a meeting planned with [Usyk’s promoter] Alex Krassyuk to start working on proposed venues for the spring rematch.

“It’s a huge fight and we believe AJ can become a three-time world heavyweight champion.”

For his part, Krassyuk said three possible options were being looked at for the fight – the UK, Ukraine, or the Middle East.

It was in Saudi Arabia where Joshua avenged his only other career defeat, against Andy Ruiz Jr, back in December 2019.

Fury meanwhile, remains in limbo as Whyte, 33, seeks to sort out issues with the authorities.

The Brixton man has long claimed Fury has avoided facing him, and his pinned post on his Twitter page dates back to June 2020 where he labelled his rival a “coward.”

He lost his mandatory challenger status when he was knocked out by Alexander Povetkin in August 2020, but regained it by dismantling the Russian fighter in a rematch seven months later.

Golden State Warriors enjoy return to spotlight as Brooklyn Nets acknowledge they’re not there yet

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BROOKLYN, N.Y. — After the Brooklyn Nets were routed by the Golden State Warriors on Tuesday night on their home floor, losing 117-99 to fall to 0-4 this season against the Warriors, Miami Heat, Chicago Bulls and Milwaukee Bucks, Nets coach Steve Nash said his team doesn’t belong in the same conversation as those teams yet.

“Well, I just don’t think we’re in that category yet,” Nash said, after Brooklyn was blown out in the third quarter despite Stephen Curry sitting for the majority of it with foul trouble. “We got a lot of work to do. We’re trying to improve as a group, get better and hopefully we can find a way to overcome some of our deficiencies by the end of the year.”

The Nets, at 10-5, sit a game behind the East-leading Washington Wizards and a half-game behind the Bulls in second. But despite their record, and their star power, Nash was disappointed with the way his team faded in the second half against Golden State — just as it did in the fourth quarter in Chicago last week.

In facing a Warriors team that is steeped in corporate knowledge with the likes of coach Steve Kerr and stars Curry and Draymond Green — all of whom have been together for seven-plus seasons — the Nets repeatedly said continuity is something they’re going to have to spend the season catching up on.

“We’re just trying to get better every game,” Nets star James Harden said after finishing with 24 points, four rebounds and four assists. “The goal is to be the best team at the end of the season, in the postseason. That’s the goal. But probably not [there yet]. We’re probably nowhere near. But it’s a long season for us to get better, and we will continue to get better.”

Asked what it will take to get there, Harden talked about creating an identity for how to play at both ends — something the Warriors, at a league-leading 12-2 and beginning to resemble the teams that won the 2015 NBA title and made the 2016 NBA Finals before current Net Kevin Durant arrived in Golden State, have clearly established.

“We have to find our identity,” Harden said. “We’re still a brand-new team, so we still have to find out what we’re good at, what we’re great at, what we can be great at, and it’s gonna take a long season. But we’re, what, 14, 15 games in? So tonight’s game doesn’t really affect us at all. I don’t think anybody knows themselves well. Maybe the Warriors, because they’ve been together for a long time.”

That Golden State identity certainly came to the fore in the third quarter, when the Warriors — who have now outscored teams by a staggering 124 points in the third across their 14 games this season, by far the most in the NBA — turned up the heat at both ends, even as Curry sat with foul trouble. It was the avalanche that these Warriors would hit teams with when they were at their best, with Curry shooting from deep beyond the 3-point arc, Green wreaking havoc defensively and Golden State looking connected at both ends of the court in a way their opponents couldn’t keep up with.

“Yeah, the way the crowd energizes when Steph starts rising up from 30 feet — it’s everywhere,” Kerr said. “It happened in Charlotte the other night. It happened tonight. So I think the fact that our team is good again and is playing well and has a good record adds to what Steph brings to the table every night, in terms of his skill and showmanship. And so that stuff — when you’re winning and you get the incredible display of skill from Steph, people are going to watch. It’s fun to be back in the spotlight again. Our team is really enjoying being back here.”

The Nets looked powerless to stop it — even Durant, who had an uncharacteristically poor shooting night, scoring 19 points on 6-for-19 shooting. Curry, on the other hand, was electrifying, finishing with 37 points on 12-for-19 shooting, including going 9-for-14 from 3-point range, eliciting “MVP” chants from the crowd in Brooklyn. Curry admitted it was strange to hear that in an opposing building, which was notably pro-Warriors throughout the game.

“It was a combination,” Durant said in explaining his shooting woes, adding his recent bout with soreness in his right (shooting) shoulder did not factor into his off night. “They played great defense, they’ve got long defenders and guys that can help, sending bodies all the time when I had the ball. That’s what great defenses do. And there’s some shots I wish I could have back. I rushed it. Once we got down 18 or 20, I was trying to get it back so fast and was taking bad shots and rushed shots. It’s all part of the journey and understanding what level you need to be at every possession. This was a great test for us.”

It was also a test the Nets fell short in. And, for a team that was expected to be an offensive juggernaut this season — even while Kyrie Irving continues to be away from the team after declining to get a COVID-19 vaccine — it was another poor performance at that end.

The Nets shot just 39.1% from the field and went 10-for-36 (27.8%) from 3-point range. While Brooklyn has far exceeded expectations defensively and is tied for ninth in defensive efficiency with the Boston Celtics after Tuesday’s loss, the fact that the Nets sit 18th in offensive efficiency is jarring.

Nash admitted part of it is a hangover from the absence of Irving, who he reiterated before the game he continues to stay in contact with, although they don’t talk about basketball. Meanwhile, he has to try to coax his team in the direction it wants to go as it continues to try to build toward the sort of deep playoff run it expects to have — one that, based off current form, could potentially end with them facing these same Warriors in the NBA Finals.

“I think the guys have been great as far as buying into what we want to do defensively,” Nash said. “No one would have picked us as a top-10 defense to start the year, and we’re defending, we’re finding a way. I think offensively we have all these different lineups, different backgrounds, styles of play, 10 new players on our team. It takes time.

“We started the year with a continuity plan from last year that got thrown out the window obviously when [Irving] didn’t come back, so we’re trying to build and figure it out. But we played a really good defense. It really tests you. And I think tonight was a great lesson for us that we got to double down on some of our principles when the going gets tough.”

Verstappen expects no sanction as F1 waits for stewards

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Red Bull’s Formula 1 championship leader Max Verstappen said he did not expect to be punished retrospectively for a defensive move against Lewis Hamilton at the Sao Paulo Grand Prix, and would do it again.

Hamilton’s Mercedes team have requested a review of the incident, with stewards hearing representatives of both teams on Thursday ahead of this weekend’s Qatar Grand Prix to decide how to proceed.

The governing FIA said the stewards would publish their decision on Friday.

Both drivers went off track as Verstappen defended, with Mercedes feeling the Dutch youngster should have had a time penalty.

Hamilton ultimately overtook his rival anyway and won the race at Interlagos.

Verstappen, now 14 points ahead of the seven times world champion, said last Sunday’s race had been a good battle between the two contenders.

Asked whether he would repeat the move in the same circumstances against Hamilton, Verstappen replied: “Yes.

“As a driver I think we know exactly what we can or cannot do in a car, and we were fighting hard, braking late into the corner, the tyres were quite worn. If I would have turned more abrupt to the left, you’d just spin off the track.”

The 24-year-old said he was not worried about a retrospective time penalty that would cost him points.

“I don’t even think about that,” he said. “Also — if if if. I mean, it’s not the end of the world. But again, I don’t expect that to happen because I thought it was fair, hard racing between the two guys who are fighting for the championship.

“So it wouldn’t have been anyway an easy pass, because that’s not how I am and I don’t think how it should be when you’re fighting for the title.”

Verstappen was asked also whether he had seen the video footage from his own car’s forward-facing camera, images that were not available at the time to stewards.

“I didn’t need to look at the footage because I was driving the car,” he replied.

Hamilton told reporters separately that he was focusing on the weekend ahead.

“I’ve literally just tried to give all my energy to getting ready for this weekend, making sure we arrive and hit the ground running,” he said.

“I have no idea where they’re going with the discussion or what could be the outcome.” (Reporting by Alan Baldwin)

Sebastian Munoz has career-best 60, leads RSM Classic by 1 shot

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ST. SIMONS ISLAND, Ga. — Sebastian Munoz saw the tough weather conditions on the way to the RSM Classic and figured all he could do was keep his head down and make birdies. He wound up with a 10-under 60 to shatter his career round by 6 shots.

Scoring was so low Thursday at Sea Island that all that got Munoz was a 1-shot lead. The Colombian, who won his first PGA Tour event just over a year ago, birdied his final hole at Seaside.

He led by 1 stroke over Sea Island member Zach Johnson at Seaside, while three players were 1 shot behind to par. Past champion Mackenzie Hughes, Chez Reavie and Scott Stallings each had a 9-under 63 on the Plantation course.

Four players were tied at 8 under, led by Canadian Corey Conners (62 at Seaside). His wife, Malory, gave birth last week to their first child, a girl named Reis. Jhonattan Vegas, Talor Gooch and Russell Henley shot 64 at Plantation.

Scoring was so ideal that 33 players shot 66 or lower on the two courses, located just off the Atlantic Ocean, and all but 21 players in the field of 156 broke par. The cumulative score in relation to par at the Seaside Course was 288 under, 42 shots lower than the previous record set in 2018.

The scoring average of 66.308 at Seaside was a tournament record, and the second lowest for any round on the PGA Tour since 1983, when the Tour began tracking hole-by-hole data. The record is 66.28 at Indian Wells in the 2003 Bob Hope Chrysler Classic.

Munoz matched Tommy Gainey’s 2012 record for low round at Seaside; Hughes, Stallings and Reavie tied for low round at the Plantation set last year by winner Robert Streb and Bronson Burgoon.

A warm, sunny day that began with just enough light rain to soften the already pure greens is expected to morph into more common November weather on the Georgia coast Friday with a drop of about 10 degrees in the temperature and wind forecast to gust as high as 30 mph.

“When you’ve got just absolute pure conditions weather-wise and pure conditions on the golf course — the best I’ve ever seen these two golf courses, period — you know you’ve got to get after it,” said the 45-year-old Johnson, who hit all 18 greens.

“It was a perfect day and we all knew it (low scores) was out there,” added Cameron Smith, who had a 66 at the Seaside.

Munoz, however, was staying in the present for his best round as a professional. He hit 11 fairways and 16 greens, made six birdies on the front nine and punctuated the day with a 12-foot eagle putt at No. 15 and a 10-foot birdie putt at No. 18.

“I felt great yesterday playing the pro-am, basically the same weather for two days, so I knew I was hitting it good,” he said. “I just let it happen.”

And for tomorrow?

“I haven’t really looked at the forecast,” he said. “I don’t know how much it’s going to blow tomorrow or if it’s going to be cold or not, so I’m just kind of here right now and I’ll adjust tomorrow and see what happens.”

Johnson was the only player who had a reasonable shot at a sub-60 round. He was 9 under through 15 holes after making a 7-footer for birdie at No. 15 and missed birdie attempts of 10, 20 and 25 feet on the final three holes.

“It hit me (the chance to shoot 59) after I birdied 12 and 13 and I got to 8 under,” Johnson said. “Making birdie on 15, I was like, ‘Well, two more and I’m right there.’ I gave myself looks, pretty good looks, and that’s all you can hope for.”

Johnson also had a shot at 59 in the Tour Championship in 2007 until hitting into a bunker on the par-3 18th hole at East Lake and having to settle for par and a 60.

Johnson and playing partners Matt Kuchar (65) and Joel Dahmen (65) didn’t make a bogey.