Categories
Sports

Michael Hooper withdraws from Wallabies tour citing ‘mindset’ struggles

The Wallabies will be without captain Michael Hooper for the Rugby Championship opener against Argentina after the skipper informed coach Dave Rennie he’s struggling mentally.

The four-time John Eales Medalist told team officials on Thursday night his “mindset” is not where it should be to lead the team against the Pumas on Sunday morning (5.10am AEST) in Mendoza.

“The 121 Test openside flanker believes he’s not in the mindset to fulfill the responsibility that goes with leading and representing his country at this point in time,” the Wallabies said in a statement on Saturday.

Watch every match of the 2022 Rugby Championship – featuring the Wallabies, All Blacks, Springboks and Pumas – live, ad free and exclusive on Stan Sport

Centurion prop James Slipper will take over the Wallabies captaincy, and Fraser McReight will come into the team at openside flanker.

“While this decision did not come easily I know it is the right one for me and the team at this point in time,” Hooper said.

“My whole career I’ve looked to put the team first and I don’t feel I am able to fulfill my responsibilities at the moment in my current mindset.”

READMORE: Dancing Aussie favorite cannons into final

READMORE: Bellamy’s ‘hysteria’ plea as star rues ugly move

READMORE: Ricciardo rocked by team’s brutal contract call

The Wallabies have given him the green light to take as much time as he needs.

Rennie described Hooper’s decision as courageous.

“Michael’s one of the most professional and impressive men I’ve coached (and) I know this has been a difficult decision for him,” Rennie said.

NEW PODCAST: Morgan Turinui joins Sean Maloney and Andrew Mehrtens to unpack a seismic month of northern vs southern hemisphere Test rugby

“He’s shown true courage by acknowledging where he is at and acting on it.

“We will support him in any way we can and I know the team will be focused on getting the job done tomorrow.”

Rugby Australia chief executive Andy Marinos described Hooper as “an incredible leader.”

“It takes a brave man to identify where he’s at and come forward whilst having the best interests of the team at heart,” Marinos said.

“His wellbeing is and remains the highest priority right now where Rugby Australia and the Australian rugby community will do everything to support him and his family.”

If you or anyone you know needs immediate support, contact Lifeline on 13 11 14 or via lifeline.org.au. In an emergency, call 000.

For a daily dose of the best of the breaking news and exclusive content from Wide World of Sports, subscribe to our newsletter by clicking here!

Categories
Sports

Wallabies captain Michael Hooper leaves tour, Australia vs Argentina, team news

Wallabies captain Michael Hooper has withdrawn from Sunday’s (AEST) Rugby Championship opener against Argentina and is heading home to Australia.

The 121-Test veteran pulled out of the Test after the team was announced on Friday morning, citing a “mindset” issue.

“While this decision did not come easily I know it is the right one for me and the team at this point in time,” Hooper said in a statement.

“My whole career I’ve looked to put the team first and I don’t feel I am able to fulfill my responsibilities at the moment in my current mindset.”

Hooper will be accompanied home by his NSW teammate Dave Porecki, who suffered a head knock earlier in the week.

Fraser McReight, who has long been viewed as Hooper’s heir apparent, has been called up from outside the matchday 23 and will wear the No.7 jersey against Michael Cheika’s coached Los Pumas. It will be his third Test but first start.

James Slipper, who captained the side in Hooper’s absence (injury) last November against Wales, will once again lead the Wallabies.

Michael Hooper has withdrawn from the Wallabies' camp because of a “mindset” issue.  Photo: Getty Images
Michael Hooper has withdrawn from the Wallabies’ camp because of a “mindset” issue. Photo: Getty ImagesSource: Getty Images

Wallabies coach Dave Rennie said “nothing that was evident” to the group that Hooper was struggling with any mental health concerns until the long-serving captain approached the team doctor Sharron Flahive on Thursday (local time).

“How I have trained and how I have contributed around, around the team, around leadership, was excellent,” Rennie said.

“But clearly he’s been struggling a bit and masking that pretty well.

“That came to a head last night and he was brave enough to call Sharron and have a chat with her, which then involved (manager) Chris Webb and myself to get an understanding of where he’s at.

“The concern is all around his wellbeing. It was an easy decision to let him go home, and he’ll get plenty of support around.”

MORE NEWS

EXCLUSIVE: Larkham’s Wallabies ‘regret’ – but why it made him a better coach as Bernie returns to Brumbies

TEAM NEWS: Wallabies make seven changes for Cheika Test as Rennie ends Petaia experiment before it started

Dave Rennie has applauded Michael Hooper’s “courage” in looking after his mental health. Photo: Getty ImagesSource: Getty Images

Rennie applauded Hooper for his “courage” in addressing the team on Friday (local time) and putting his wellbeing first.

“I think he’s felt he’s been able to suppress things over the past handful of weeks and so we certainly weren’t aware of anything,” Rennie said.

“He’s such a professional. He was able to get on and do his job from him, and he addressed the team today, which took an enormous amount of courage, to let them know that he’s not OK.

“He felt it was best for himself and for the team that he heads home.

“It’s not uncommon in life, is it? It’s a cross section of society and often men will say bugger all and suffer in silence. As I said before, it took a lot of courage for him to address the group so a huge amount of respect from everyone and a respect that we want to get him home and get as much support around him as we can.”

No timeframe will be put on the 30-year-old’s return.

Hooper isn’t the first professional athlete to take time away from their respective careers, with Lance Franklin missing the latter stages of the 2015 AFL season. Glenn Maxwell also spent two months away from cricket in 2019.

The Wallabies will face Michael Cheika’s Argentina on Sunday. Photo: AFPSource: AFP

Hooper made his debut in 2012 and first captained the Wallabies in 2014, after Stephen Moore suffered a season-ending injury against France.

Three successive coaches have made Hooper captain, with Ewen McKenzie turning to the northern beaches flanker in 2014. Michael Cheika then entrusted Hooper with the captaincy as Stephen Moore came to the end of his career in 2017.

Rennie opted to keep Hooper as captain when he took over in 2020.

Hooper has since gone on to break George Gregan’s (59) record as the Wallabies’ most-capped captain, having led the side 68 times.

MORE RUGBY NEWS

ARROGANCE AND CONTEMPT: How All Blacks Went From Kings To Punching Bag

EXCLUSIVE: Wallabies’ worst fears realized in crushing Kerevi update after Comm Games injury

Fraser McReight (C) will wear the No.7 jersey in the absence of Michael Hooper. Photo: AFPSource: AFP

His absence allows McReight a long-awaited opportunity in the No.7 jersey.

The Reds open side flanker has had to be patient behind Hooper. While he took no place during the 2-1 series loss to England, McReight was one of his side’s stronger performers during Australia A’s three unofficial Tests in the Pacific Nations Cup.

If you or anyone you know needs immediate support, contact Lifeline on 13 11 14 or via lifeline.org.au. In an emergency, call 000.

.

Categories
Sports

Alpine’s claim to Piastri as Ricciardo faces McLaren exit

Oscar Piastri and Daniel Ricciardo

Daniel Ricciardo is set to be replaced at McLaren for the 2023 Formula 1 season by Oscar Piastri.

Ricciardo has reportedly been asked to make way for his countryman for next season, despite holding a valid contract with the team.

In turn, Piastri will join the Woking squad alongside Lando Norris on a two-plus-one deal.

All this comes despite the stated position from Alpine to the contrary, and radio silence from McLaren.

The motorsport world has run rampant since Monday, when Fernando Alonso’s decision to join Aston Martin for 2023 was announced.

On Friday, it was revealed that Piastri had signed a deal with McLaren for next year, which had been accepted by the Contract Recognition Board, a facility of the FIA.

The primary function of the CRB is to provide a resolution to driver contract disputes in days rather than weeks, without needing to involve expensive legal proceedings.

It is a body which is included in the Formula 1 Sporting Regulations, and is cited in Schedule 11 of the Concorde Agreement, the commercial contract between teams and the sport’s rights holder (Liberty Media).

The CRB is understood to have deemed McLaren holds a valid contract with Piastri for 2023.

Effectively it means, at least in the eyes of the FIA, Alpine has no legal claim to the Australian.

That isn’t necessarily the end of the affair, though pursuing it further opens a costly legal pandoras box, and draws aspects of the Concorde agreement itself into question.

On Tuesday when he spoke with the media, Szafnauer stated Alpine’s position and opinion on the matter.

His comments pre-date Alpine’s ‘confirmation’ of Piastri, but provide insight into the thinking at Enstone.

“I’m not privy to whatever pre-arrangements I have [Piastri] has with McLaren, if any at all, but I hear the same rumors that you do,” Szafnauer began.

“But what I do know is that he does have contractual obligations to us, and we do to him.

“We’ve been honoring those obligations all year, and those obligations last through ’23 and possibly in ’24 if some options are taken up.

“Our obligations to him this year was to be a reserve driver, to also put him in last year’s car for a significant amount of time – we’re well over half that program of 5000 kilometers, which isn’t insignificant, in last year’s car in preparation for a race seat next year – also Free Practice 1s, some simulator work.

“We’ve been performing those obligations on both sides,” he added.

“So he’s been performing, we’ve been performing, so therefore we do have a legal contract with him in the future for ’23 and, if an option is taken up, for ’24.

“I don’t know what he’s done with McLaren, like I said, I’m not privy to that.”

It’s thought Piastri signed a deal with McLaren over the Hungarian Grand Prix weekend, and was lodged with the CRB on July 30, prior to Alonso’s departure from Alpine.

Szafnauer said he only learned of the Spaniard’s defection through the media on Monday.

He then spoke with the media on Tuesday morning, having spent the previous afternoon fielding calls from prospective drivers.

It leaves precious little time to have got to the bottom of Piastri’s contract situation to understand exactly what rights Alpine has over him.

Nonetheless, Szafnauer is adamant that his team has a valid claim over the Melburnian, and believes it is Alpine which is entitled to decide where he drives in 2023.

“So the contractual terms, you know that those details we don’t like to disclose, but it was on the team’s side to say, not on the driver side,” he said.

He went on to explain the process of contractually converting Piastri from the team’s reserve driver to a full-time racer.

“There are some considerations of going from a reserve driver contract with options, to become a racing driver, to that racing driver contract,” he stated.

“But we’re absolutely in the position to take him.

“It’s just when you switch to racing driver; a racing driver these days signs, some of them, four different contracts.

“There’s commercial agreements, testing agreements, racing agreements, link agreements, there’s all that kind of stuff. And those are for all sorts of different considerations.

“When you move from reserve driver to racing driver, all that stuff has to happen too.

“But yes, we do have the right to take him.”

Szafnauer’s stance appears at odds with developments of the week as they’re understood to have transpired.

On the other side of the ledger, it’s suggested McLaren advised Ricciardo over the course of the Hungarian Grand Prix that he would be replaced by Piastri next season.

Should that indeed be the case, a settlement would need to be reached given the 33-year-old has a deal for 2023.

It’s understood the option to continue into next season sits on Ricciardo’s side, and would therefore need his cooperation.

Another possibility, should he not agree to step away, is Piastri taking on the reserve driver role at McLaren next year, then stepping into a race drive in 2024.

That is thought to be unlikely, with Ricciardo expected to reach a settlement and move on, freeing the pathway for his compatriot.

With few high caliber drivers and competitive seats on the market, the logical extension is therefore a return to Alpine.

It’s a move Szafnauer has suggested the operation would be open to.

“In the short term, we now have to replace Fernando with the absolute best driver, but what we mustn’t forget is we have [a] 100 race plan to start winning races and vying for a championship,” Szafnauer explained.

“We’re over 10 races into that, so we’ve got 80-some races left.

“The choice for us has to be one that complements that goal.

“That driver that sits next to Esteban [Ocon] has to be the best choice for us, that complements and helps us attain that goal.

“If you looked at Fernando, for example, he comes and goes, and I think that happens to other drivers too,” he added specifically referring to a Ricciardo return.

“I don’t think that’s an issue at all.

“I think what we need to focus on, for the plans that we have, for the next 89/88 races.

“We’ve got to make sure that we complement that plan with the best driver that we can, and there are some options out there for us.”

Categories
Sports

Commonwealth Games 2022 – Australia’s team of matchwinners will take some stopping

Take an inch against Australia and they’ll still win by a mile. That’s the realization other teams have come to in recent years as the depth of talent enjoyed by the reigning ODI and T20I world champions has come to bite them again and again.

In the opening match of the Women’s Ashes in January, England started brightly with an 82-run opening stand to reach 169 for 4 from their 20-over allocation. Then Alyssa Healy fell for just 7 and Australia were 26 for 1, only for Tahlia McGrath to smash an unbeaten 91 in a 144-run stand with Meg Lanning and Australia won by nine wickets. England didn’t win another match in that series, despite challenging in the drawn Test.

Against India in their opening match of the Commonwealth Games, Australia slid to 49 for 5 chasing 155 before Ashleigh Gardner and Grace Harris launched a successful rescue mission with a 51-run partnership for the sixth wicket. And when McGrath and Beth Mooney dug Australia out of trouble at 19 for 2 in their final group match to beat Pakistan by 44 runs, a key to their success was rammed home yet again – if one or two players fail, someone else inevitably steps up .

“We were in a bit of a sticky situation early,” McGrath said after the Pakistan game. “Then Moons and I both probably struggled a bit early and had to work through that. Then that sort of allowed us to have that freedom at the end and get us to what was a really good total.”

McGrath has been a revelation in T20Is, going unbeaten in four of her six innings in the format, although she said her approach wasn’t so much about valuing her wicket.

“In T20 cricket I sort of just go out there with no fear, a bit of freedom,” she said. “I get to play my shots and I know that the batters I’ve got coming in before me are world-class, that allows me to play with that freedom.

“I’ve just been lucky that I’ve had a few not-outs because it doesn’t happen very often in T20. So I’ll just ride it for as long as I can do it.”

Her partnership with Mooney has also been key, in this instance yielding 141 runs for the third wicket.

“We’re both very chill,” McGrath said. “I remember there was a game in the Gold Coast where we got caught in traffic and it was Moons and I in the car and we literally rocked up two minutes before the start of warm-up. The security guard said to us he was glad it was us two because everyone would be freaking out.

“We’ve batted a fair bit together now. I really enjoy with Moons and we both recognize when each other is struggling.”

Mooney agreed: “She’s awesome to work with. I think we’ve got a pretty good understanding of each other and each other’s games. We’re both pretty level-headed people.

“She just comes out and plays to her strengths straight away and takes some pressure off the person at the other end, so she’s a very impressive player and hopefully she can continue that form for a while yet.”

Their union against Pakistan was all the most important after Healy, the hero of Australia’s ODI World Cup triumph in April, fell for four runs, as did Lanning, the captain. In six innings since her knock of 170 in the World Cup final against England, Healy has not passed 23. But Mooney wasn’t concerned.

“She’s looking really good in the nets,” Mooney said of Healy. “Ella She’s just been a little bit unlucky. We also know that when we get into semis and finals, that she steps up and is one of the best players in the world.

“So there’s no doubt in our changeroom that she’s going to show up and do that again for us. We’re really behind her and we know that she’s got the capacity to do some serious damage against the opposition, so I’m sure she ‘ll be fine.”

With Australia having set such a high standard for themselves, Mooney warned against seeing them as “robots” in light of “a couple of low scores”.

With the ball, Australia are also in a good place. McGrath took 3 for 13 against both Pakistan and Barbados, while spinners Alana King and Jess Jonassen have been in fine form.

New Zealand are well aware of the task they face in Saturday’s second semi-final of the Commonwealth Games, scheduled to start at Edgbaston at 6pm local time, which will be 3am on Sunday in Sydney and 5am in Auckland.

Having managed just 71 for 9 in their final group game – a seven-wicket loss to England, who will play India in the other semi-final earlier on Saturday – Sophie Devine, the New Zealand captain, was keen to put their latest result behind them .

“We were well below par and it wasn’t through lack of effort or lack of planning or anything like that, I think you just get days like that,” Devine said. “It’s never nice to be a part of but we’ve got to flush it down the dunny pretty quickly and move on to something that’s actually really exciting for us, playing in a semi-final against Australia at a Commonwealth Games.”

And Devine embraced underdog status against a side New Zealand, like everyone else, knows are capable of great things.

“I think a lot of the pressure is going to be on Australia,” she said. “They’ve certainly come into this competition as favorites and hopeful of taking that gold medal whereas a lot of people didn’t think we’d maybe make the semi-finals.

“We can really take that on board and just play with a bit of freedom and take it to the Aussies. We obviously know them really well, so I think our plans are going to be pretty spot on and likewise they know us really well too It’s always just a great battle against the Australians.”

Valkerie Baynes is a general editor at ESPNcricinfo

.

Categories
Sports

McLaren to investigate Daniel Ricciardo-Lando Norris mismatch

Andreas Seidl has conceded McLaren “need to understand” why Daniel Ricciardo was unable to match Lando Norris’ performance at the Hungarian Grand Prix.

Ricciardo has endured a torrid 18 months at McLaren despite leading the team to its only victory in a decade at last year’s Italian GP.

The recent weekend at the Hungaroring was another example of his difficult season as McLaren put both drivers on the same strategy, with Lando Norris coming home seventh after starting fourth, and the Australian finishing 15th from ninth.

Assessing the dramatic differences again between his two drivers, team principal Seidl said: “[We scored] important points, obviously, for our battle in the constructors’ championship battle with Alpine.

“But, of course, we need to understand why on Daniel’s side, with exactly the same strategy, we were falling off so much with the hard tires in the final stint which put Daniel out of the points.

“That’s what we need to analyze together with Daniel.”

McLaren encouraged by upgrade progress

McLaren started the season with a brake duct issue, dropping the team to the back of the field.

After bringing its latest upgrades to the track in France, McLaren is continuing to see improvement as it continues to fight to be the ‘best of the rest’ with Alpine behind the leading trio of Red Bull, Ferrari and Mercedes.

“In the end, P7 was a good outcome for us because we have to accept that when the cars of the top three finish a race without major incidents, they are clearly a step ahead,” added Seidl.

“Therefore, P7 for us was a good result for various reasons.

“I am very happy that we could also show in the race the encouraging signs we had already seen in Paul Ricard and also on Friday since we introduced our upgraded package in terms of performance.

“They have definitely made a good step forward which allowed us to score the P4 in quali and the P7 of Lando in the race.”

.

Categories
Sports

Michelle Jenneke smiling, bouncing and running faster than ever to make final

“I don’t know if I will be quite good enough for a medal, but hopefully I can run a personal best and see where that puts me.”

Jenneke, who dances and bounces cheerily in the starting line, is unperturbed by the field’s credentials and the stony visages of the stars around her.

“I am not someone who, as a young athlete at my first champs, that got really intimidated by anyone. For me, when I go out there I am just trying to put my best foot forward and they are trying to do the same thing, and if they beat me they beat me.”

Jess Hull is back on track in Birmingham after suffering from COVID.

Jess Hull is back on track in Birmingham after suffering from COVID.Credit:Getty

Australia’s Celeste Mucci also qualified for the final after running a 12.96 personal best in her heat.

Later Jess Hull, who was out of action for a week after running at last month’s world championships with COVID, qualified for the 1500m final.

“I felt a little rundown going into the final and, as the hours went by towards the final, it was like ‘I’m getting really sick’,” she said.

“I spent five days flat on my back and I think running the end with symptoms was what flattened me, not necessarily the virus itself.”

Since then, she has got stronger in training.

“My legs were totally fine, it’s just the breathing that was a bit funky. Once I could get through that I thought, ‘I’m getting better every day, and so long as I can put that out of mind and just race – which is what I did in the final at worlds, I just focused on breathing and not how I actually felt – then I’m going to be OK’.”

She ran well to finish in the top five of her heat in 4.16 minutes, 13 seconds to advance to the final. Linden Hall also qualified after running 4:14.08.

loading

Abbey Caldwell, who was surprisingly not picked for the world championships despite winning the national title and having a qualifying time, said she was hungrier to do well in Birmingham after missing out. She qualified for the final by running 4:13.59 in her heat.

“There are certainly parts of me (that feel like she has a point to prove). That’s sport. There are always going to be sides to it where you have highs and lows, and you have to just ride them as they are,” she said.

“As hard as it was, it made me a bit more hungry and made me eager to really want to get the best out of myself now… I said I wanted to come into this championship as a competitor rather than just coming in as my first major, so I am going to see how it plays out really.”

Australia’s long jump record holder Brooke Buschkuehl, who finished fifth at the world championships, comfortably qualified for the final with her 6.84-meter second jump.

Get all the latest news from the Birmingham Commonwealth Games here. We’ll be live blogging the action from 4pm-10am daily.

Categories
Sports

MotoGP Silverstone: Aleix: 0.8s Long Lap ‘a joke’, ‘we have to be more professional’ | MotoGP

While there has been plenty of debate over whether MotoGP champion Fabio Quartararo should even have received a Long Lap for the Assen incident with Aleix Espargaro, it is the Silverstone Long Lap layout itself that has now come under fire.

Usually, riders lose around 2.5-3 seconds when they run ‘wide’ to serve the Long Lap. But Quartararo looked to lose far less during his many practice runs through the Silverstone penalty area on Friday.

This weekend’s Long Lap lane is located on the outside of Turn 14, a tight hairpin corner.

Quartararo wouldn’t put a number on exactly how much time he was losing, but the slow nature of the turn, combined with the relatively short length of the loop, meant Espargaro estimated it is only 0.8s.

While the Aprilia star has made clear he does not agree with Quartararo receiving the penalty, given other incidents have gone unpunished this year, he felt it was also inexcusable for MotoGP not to be able to create a consistent Long Lap zone of 2.5-3s at each racetrack.

“It’s a joke. It is not for me to complain about the Long Lap because it looks like I am saying it because my rival has to do the penalty, but it’s a joke. You lose eight tenths! He was trying it today and it was eight tenths,” Espargaro said. “We have to be more professional about this.

“If it’s 3 seconds then it should be 3 seconds everywhere. 2.5s is OK, but eight tenths?! It’s ridiculous.

“But anyway it doesn’t matter. Even if it was 2 seconds Jack [Miller] proved this year you can do the Long Lap penalty and fight for the podium, so imagine Fabio.”

Espargaro added that he fully supports the Long Lap as a way of penalizing riders.

“In the past, if you did a jump start then you had to do a ride-through [the pits] and this was a disaster. Now if you do a Long Lap penalty it is better for the show. It is a good invention, but now we have to be serious with it.

“I don’t think it is that difficult [to get the same time Long Lap time at each track]. Someone can come with a Superbike and try it, if it’s too fast then you tighten it. You can have half a second up or down, but not from 3.1-3.2 like it was in Barcelona to 0.8 here. That’s a huge difference.

“You can see here that it is one meter out of the track and with the same layout. It’s easy!”

For Espargaro, it comes down to consistency once again.

“I have nothing against Fabio. It looks like I’m saying all this because he has to do the Long Lap, but again, what we want is that things are the same: the Long Lap penalty, the penalties in general and how we treat everything.

“Once again, we get to another track and it is different; this is what we need to improve.”

Joan Mir jokes: Maybe you gain time on this Long Lap!

Espargaro wasn’t the only one to highlight the lack of time lost on the Long Lap at Silverstone.

“This Long Lap penalty, maybe you gain a bit of time rather than lose!” joked Suzuki’s Joan Mir. “Okay, for sure you don’t gain time. But it’s not 3 seconds, not at all. Maybe just 1 second.

“It’s a really tight corner, and also it’s really close [to the racing] line. In a slow corner you always lose less time than in a fast corner.

“I think that this can be improved a little bit more, to have more or less than 3 seconds average [at every track].”

A ‘delayed’ Long Lap would also help Quartararo

Aside from the time lost in the Long Lap, the timing of when Quartararo serves the penalty will also determine how many places he loses.

The earlier in the race the ‘Long Lap’ board is shown, after which Quartararo will have two further laps in which serve the penalty, the more positions the Frenchman is likely to concede.

“I will not say a number, but we lose quite a lot [of time],” Quartararo said of his Long Lap practice.

“I also need to make it in the beginning of the race, but I hope I will not make it so much in the beginning because I think it’s quite a dangerous place to get back on the track.

“Of course, it’s also a small advantage for me [to take later]but for the safety, I hope they will not put it straight away from the first lap, but maybe from the second or third lap.”

Other riders serving Long Laps in the early stages of a race have lost around 3-4 positions this year.

Quartararo, last year’s Silverstone winner, was fastest during Friday practice with Espargaro, currently 21 points behind the Yamaha rider, in a close fifth (+0.207s).

.

Categories
Sports

F1 world reacts to McLaren sacking Daniel Ricciardo: ‘Done dirty’

Daniel Ricciardo might sit well outside the top 10 in the F1 driver rankings but he remains one of the sport’s most popular figures.

And his army of supporters was out in full force after it was revealed McLaren plans to replace him with young Australian driver Oscar Piastri next season despite Ricciardo being contracted for 2023.

The 33-year-old’s career has been on some what of a downward spiral since his days of outdriving Sebastian Vettel and regularly challenging Max Verstappen at Red Bull. But no one wants to see it end this way.

All-Aussie F1 bombshell: Ricciardo ‘told he’ll be replaced’ by Piastri at McLaren

ESPN’s Nate Saunders reported four teams have sounded Ricciardo out recently to “see where his head is at” and slammed McLaren for its treatment of the Aussie.

“It reflects very poorly on Brown and McLaren how they have treated Ricciardo over the past six months,” Saunders wrote. “Ricciardo, the only McLaren driver to have won an F1 race since 2012, has been the first to admit his performances have not been up to the standards he set at Red Bull and Renault but it feels as though he has been made as a scapegoat to deflect away from deeper problems at the team.”

He wasn’t alone in hailing the Aussie’s class during a turbulent season.

“Amid all the rumpus and pressure you have to commend Ricciardo on his grace and professionalism over these last few months,” tweeted Tom Gaymor. “El Says everything about him as a man, he is a class act and I hope he keeps smiling and doing it his way.”

But others saw it differently, believing Ricciardo is a spent force and he’s replacement is part and parcel of the cut throat nature of F1.

“Ricciardo is getting a taste of his own medicine when he left Renault to join McLaren and this is proof that that was not right move for him,” tweeted Sahil Mohan Gupta. “Now, he will probably end up at Alpine if not leave F1. This is crazy.”

Daniel Ricciardo is out at McLaren.  (Photo by Clive Rose/Getty Images)
Daniel Ricciardo is out at McLaren. (Photo by Clive Rose/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

“I’ll always be a fan of Ricciardo, but can you really blame McLaren?” added Gannon Burgett. “They’re paying him out the ass for a driver who’s scored only 20% of the team’s points so far.”

“Please Alpine don’t take him back!” Tiff Needell tweeted. “Love Daniel but he’s had 12 years in F1, stuffed a few million in the bank and there’s lots of other motorsport he could do. So give someone else a chance!”

Despite the rapid turn of events this week Ricciardo’s future could take a long time to settle because McLaren will likely face a challenge from Alpine over its poaching of Piastri.

The West Australian could spend a year with McLaren’s IndyCar team to see out his deal, or could receive a pay out and join another team. That team could even be Alpine if Piastri is able to leave.

Who is Oscar Piastri?

Born in Melbourne, Piastri joined Alpine’s academy after clinching the Formula Renault Eurocup title in 2019, securing seven wins.

He carried the form into the Formula 3 series in 2020, winning the opening race on his debut and holding his nerve to claim the title by three points in one of the most closely fought championships ever.

The following year he was on the Formula 2 grid, where he clocked six wins to unequivocally announce his arrival on the world stage, becoming just the third rookie champion after Charles Leclerc (2017) and George Russell (2018). They are both now in F1.

Despite his rapid rise Piastri was overlooked for a drive in Formula One this season because of a lack of available seats, instead lurking on the sidelines at Alpine ready to replace either Esteban Ocon or Alonso if they were forced to miss a race.

He’s managed by fellow Aussie and nine-time F1 race winner Mark Webber. “Does he deserve to be in F1? Absolutely, we all know that,” Webber says. “It’s not a question of if, but when.”

The Piastri family say they are “petrol heads” with his father Chris telling The Sydney Morning Herald that “Oscar’s bedtime stories were mainly car books”.

He started racing remote-controlled cars aged six and by nine had graduated to piloting go-karts.

Oscar Piastri is a star in the making. (Photo by Robert Cianflone/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

“I think he’s got the determination and the ability and the intellect,” his mother Nicole told The Age newspaper this year of her son’s progression to Formula One.

“I think he’s got everything that’s required to be able to get there and to do a good job, but that’s only one very small factor.

“There are a lot of other things that come into getting a Formula One seat – politics, money, availability of seats.”

Chris Piastri pinpointed Webber’s involvement from Formula 3 onwards as key to helping their son reach his goal, opening funding and sponsorship doors to help with the soaring costs that come with making it as a racing driver.

“Mark knows everybody,” he said. “It was at that point that he started taking over the reins, dealing with the teams, managing Oscar up into the visibility of the teams.”

Webber said it was a “no-brainer” to help out. “It’s hard to turn heads, especially in the F1 paddock, as they are pretty hard to please,” he said.

“But there’s not many people who haven’t mentioned him to me – how impressed they are with him, what he’s doing, the trajectory he is on.”

– with AFP

.

Categories
Sports

Daniel Golubovic and Cedric Dubler win silver and bronze in Commonwealth Games decathlon

Australian Daniel Golubovic has come within three seconds of winning a gold medal in the decathlon at the Commonwealth Games.

Golubovic finished with silver, and countryman Cedric Dubler nabbed bronze, after a sensational 1,500m race wrapped up the 10-event competition.

Coming into the final event sitting in third place behind Dubler and defending champion Lindon Victor, Golubovic needed to win the 1,500m by a whopping 23 seconds to claim gold.

The 28-year-old gave himself every chance, setting a furious pace for three and three-quarter lapses, but fell agonizingly short, establishing a 20.62-second gap.

Just 12 days after competing in the World Championship in Eugene, all the decathletes looked absolutely spent during the final lap, with Dubler and Victor in particular both tiring badly in the final stages.

However, both just held on to win gold and bronze respectively.

Dan Golubovic and Cedric Dubler hold the flag
Australia secured two medals in the decathlon.(Getty Images: Michael Steele)

“I had a dig for that gold,” Golubovic, who finished 14th in last month’s World Championships, told Channel 7 after the race.

“But it’s cold out here [and] there was just nothing in the legs.

“Two decaths in 12 days total, 10 days rest, I don’t recommend it.”

The thrilling finale provided a fitting conclusion to what was a superb contest over two days at the Alexander Stadium in Birmingham.

Victor, who came fifth to Dubler’s eighth in Eugene, led at the halfway stage from Dubler.

The pair alternated the lead throughout the second day, with the Aussie’s superior sprint hurling and pole vault countered by the Grenadian’s discus and javelin prowess.

Cedric Dubler raises both hands after the pole vault in the decathlon at the Commonwealth Games.
Cedric Dubler won bronze in the decathlon in 2018.(AP: Alastair Grant)

Golubovic was always there or thereabouts though, steadily improving his position from fifth at the end of day one before leaping into medal contention on day two.

“I think it just comes down to consistency,” Golubovic said, before paying tribute to the Australian backroom team.

“It’s been a wild few years and it’s a long, long process to get here but, oh man, it feels so good to be on this stage right now.”

Fellow Aussie Alec Diamond finished in fifth spot overall.

Australia’s Olympic bronze medalist, Ash Moloney, missed the Games through illness.

.

Categories
Sports

Hooper to leave Wallabies tour, take break after admitting ‘mindset’ struggle”

“Michael’s one of the most professional and impressive men I’ve coached (and) I know this has been a difficult decision for him,” Rennie said in a statement.

“He’s shown true courage by acknowledging where he is at and acting on it. We will support him in any way we can and I know the team will be focused on getting the job done tomorrow.”

Hooper is not the first high-profile athlete to step away from their sport to prioritize mental wellbeing. Buddy Franklin missed the latter stages of the 2015 AFL season to focus on his mental health and Australian cricketer Glenn Maxwell took two months off in 2019, to help restore balance. Maxwell said being on tour for five years had “ruined him”.

Hooper is one of Australia’s most durable athletes but has played a lot in the last two years, after playing in Japan last year and then leading the Wallabies in difficult times during the pandemic.

Fraser McReight is on standby to play.

Fraser McReight is on standby to play.Credit:Getty

McReight is a very competent replacement, given his excellent form for Queensland and Australia A this year. Rennie favors having only a single openside in his matchday 23, and has pointed towards Samu being capable cover for Hooper.

But the value of the Australia A program will shine through again when McReight takes over as No.7. He was controversially omitted from the Wallabies’ squad for the England series in July, and instead sent to play in the Pacific Nations Cup. The 23-year-old, who debuted in 2020 but has only won two caps, played in every game and re-joined the Wallabies squad for the Argentina trip with plenty of match fitness.

Slipper, meanwhile, has stressed the importance of starting strongly against Argentina, to dampen down the passion of the Pumas players and their fans at a sold-out Estadio Malvinas Argentinas. The venue, built for the 1978 FIFA World Cup, can hold 42,000 people.

The problem for the Wallabies is their starts were poor against England, and they failed to score a point in the opening 20 minutes of all three Tests. Two tries were bombed in the opening 10 minutes in the third Test.

loading

‘It is an important part of the game, the start, isn’t it? It doesn’t matter who you are playing, playing catch up rugby against anyone will get you away from how you want to play the game,” Slipper said.

“For us, it is just about nailing our detail and it is one thing to create opportunities and another to take them. To be honest, this week we have spoken a lot about our detail and our execution. If there is one place you want to start well it’s here, the Argentina team and the fans are very passionate and you can’t let that build.”

more to eat