Formula 1 is to introduce a device to cool drivers when conditions become too extreme in hot weather.
The move, which from next season will mandate a “driver cooling kit” when a heat hazard is declared, is a response to last year’s Qatar Grand Prix.
Drivers complained after the race in the Gulf state last October that conditions were “beyond the limit”.
A number of drivers needed medical attention for either dehydration or heat exhaustion after a race run in high temperatures and humidity.
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Alpine driver Esteban Ocon said he had vomited in his helmet.
The new cooling system involves a series of measures all aimed at reducing the temperature in the cockpit when conditions could lead to heat-related medical concerns.
These include a method of blowing cool air on the drivers, possibly using heat exchangers, and increasing cooling apertures in parts of the car around the cockpit.
The use of the device was approved on Wednesday at a meeting of the F1 Commission, which involves governing body the FIA, commercial rights holder F1 and the teams.
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Its introduction follows what were described in a statement by FIA and F1 as “encouraging test results”.
A STADIUM dubbed the “eight wonder of the world” has revealed bold new plans to save the iconic mega structure.
This plan is set to breathe new life into the Houston Astrodome that’s even bigger than Wembley, after it closed down over 10 years ago.
A new concept was been announced on November 13 that aims to turn the Houston Astrodome in Texas into a “global entertainment destination”.
“Vison: Astrodome” includes a total of 450,000sq ft of space to generate massive amounts of revenue.
This will include space for restaurants, shops, offices and hotel space.
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This is 20,000sq ft larger than Wembley Stadium, which is 430,000.
read more in redevelopments
Shawn Stephens, a member of the Astrodome Conservancy Board of Directors, shared his enthusiasm for the project.
Shawn said: “Oh, I am super excited about it. I think it’s incredibly viable.
“I think it brings tourism dollars to Houston.
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“I think it brings investment dollars to Houston.
“And I think it brings historic tax credits to Houston and Harris County that didn’t exist with any prior plan.
“I think this city within the dome is fantastic.
“It gives people the opportunity to enjoy the outdoors inside in air-conditioned comfort, which in Houston is pretty great.
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“I’m really excited about it”.
Inside iconic abandoned stadium that hosted England matches before falling into disrepair when club went bust
However, this new vision will not come cheap.
Reports say the estimated cost to redevelop the space will reach an eye-watering £790,000 ($1billion).
Insiders are not phased by the huge price tag, however.
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Ryan Levasseur says the conservancy aims to rely on a mix of private investment and public-private partnership.
He said: “We are solid with this, and the billion dollars is reflective of a very compelling design.
“And also, yes, numbers are scary.
“This is an investment, not a contribution, right?
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“This isn’t just cost-based, this is investment-based.
“And so when you think about an arena and commercial real estate and all the different tools that can be leveraged for this great historic structure, it starts to be very compelling as an investment opportunity for both the public and private sectors”.
The concept has also been praised for the upgrade it is set to bring to Houston.
Jerry Alexander, one of the project’s designers, said: “It is becoming essential in the sports climate.
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“So, in the Battery in Atlanta, the Milwaukee Bucks built a great piece under theirs.
“It’s essential to build a thriving kind of economic community that goes with our sports venues because the sports venues only serve our population every so often, you know, and during specific times.
“So, it’s really important that you add all of these additional uses so that we can get the most out of these venues and these attractions”.
There has been criticism towards the plans.
The Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo expressed concerns, issuing a statement: “The proposed plan by the Astrodome Conservancy does not align with the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo’s strategic vision and operational requirements.
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“We believe the total cost of deferred, current, and future maintenance and capital improvements for these facilities is well over a billion dollars.”
The Houston Astrodome closed in 2009, and was known for being a major sports venue, including baseball, basketball and tennis.
The venue also played host to several concerts from Elvis, to The Jacksons, Madonna and Pink Floyd.
It is not currently clear when and if redevelopment will begin.
The UFC returns to New York on Saturday to settle a debate.
At 309, the presumed greatest fighter of all time takes on the presumed greatest heavyweight in UFC history. Both return after lengthy layoffs, but there are key storylines at stake this week, too.
The UFC has released the UFC 309 cold open video. The card features a heavyweight title fight between champion Jon Jones (27-1 MMA, 21-1 UFC) and former champ Stipe Miocic (20-4 MMA, 14-4 UFC).
The video is narrated by actor and regular UFC voice-over narrator Ron Perlman and has a backdrop soundtrack of “For Whom the Bell Tolls” by Metallica from the 1986 album “Ride the Lightning.”
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The cold open also looks at the co-main event lightweight fight between former champion Charles Oliveira (34-10 MMA, 22-10 UFC) and Michael Chandler (23-8 MMA, 2-3 UFC).
Check out the UFC 309 cold open video above.
UFC 309 (pay-per-view, ESPNews/Hulu/FX, ESPN+) takes place Saturday at Madison Square Garden in New York.
MAIN CARD (Pay-per-view, 10 p.m. ET)
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Champ Jon Jones vs. Stipe Miocic – for heavyweight title
Michael Chandler vs. Charles Oliveira
Paul Craig vs. Bo Nickal
Viviane Araujo vs. Karine Silva
James Llontop vs. Mauricio Ruffy
PRELIMINARY CARD (ESPNews/FX/Hulu, 8 p.m. ET)
Jonathan Martinez vs. Marcus McGhee
Eryk Anders vs. Chris Weidman
Damon Jackson vs. Jim Miller
David Onama vs. Roberto Romero
PRELIMINARY CARD (Hulu/ESPN+, 6 p.m. ET)
Jhonata Diniz vs. Marcin Tybura
Ramiz Brahimaj vs. Mickey Gall
Bassil Hafez vs. Oban Elliott
Veronica Hardy vs. Eduarda Moura
For more on the card, visit MMA Junkie’s event hub for UFC 309.
Be sure to visit the MMA Junkie Instagram page and YouTube channel to discuss this and more content with fans of mixed martial arts.
Tech3 GasGas rider Pedro Acosta conceded that he gave away potential victories in his rookie MotoGP campaign by “f***cking up everything”.
Although Acosta managed to live up to the hype upon his graduation to the premier class this year, his season on the KTM RC16 has also been plagued by a series of mistakes and crashes from leading positions.
Most notably, the Spanish rider qualified on pole position for the Japanese Grand Prix at Motegi, only to crash out of both the sprint and the main race while in contention for victory.
Recapping his first year in MotoGP ahead of this weekend’s season finale in Barcelona, Acosta said that victories were an achievable target for him in 2024, but his unforced errors meant that he wasn’t able to improve on the second-place finishes he achieved in Austin and Mandalika.
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“We were fighting for many wins in the season, the problem then [was] I f**k up everything,” he said.
“At the end, the target to fight for wins was there. The possibility was realistic, it was not something of dreaming. It’s true that it’s hard to see how many opportunities I put in the bin, but it’s part of the job also.
“With all the mistakes I do over the season it’s unbelievable I’m still P5 [in the championship. It’s important enough for sure but it’s more important to finish the year in a good mood, with good results.”
Pedro Acosta, Tech3 GASGAS Factory Racing
Photo by: Rob Gray / Polarity Photo
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Despite admitting to making several mistakes over the year, Acosta is still the highest-placed non-Ducati rider in the championship in fifth place, having outscored even KTM stablemate Brad Binder on the factory-entered bike.
The 2023 Moto2 champion burst into the scene at the start of the year, scoring a podium in only his second grand prix appearance at Portimao before finishing second at the next round in Austin.
Although his results then began to tail off, he was able to bounce back after the summer break, adding three more rostrum finishes to his tally.
Acosta gave himself a 6/10 rating ahead of the Barcelona finale, having previously thought his performances at the mid-point of the year were only good enough for a score of 4.5.
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Asked to grade his first year in MotoGP, he said: “Six [out of 10]. Six maybe because putting everything together, all the mistakes I made, all the points I put in the bin, all the stupid crashes that I was having, all the things I needed to try [six is fair].
“In the last couple of races, I was trying things and then in the race I was racing with other things, and I was not really having time to work on a weekend.
“I will put a 6 because I said in the beginning we will go like this [pointing upwards] and then we drop. And from my point of view maybe it was not like this in the last couple of races but not bad.”
Paul seems to enjoy ruffling feathers, prioritising clicks over what people think of him.
“My brand has become the comments section, which is full of hate, accusations, lies. It has become all of these things but they don’t see the underlying genius in it all, which is that I’m just an entertainer having a blast,” he says.
But dig a little further and you will find a more complex individual.
“The super power is the resilience, the hard work, the ambition and all of that stuff,” he explains.
“When your parents are hard on you it can create a lack of self love and insecurities. You just have to squash the bad parts and then keep the good parts of trauma.”
When Paul says “it’s all a game and I’m playing the game better”, you get the feeling he is not just referring to boxing.
But controversy follows him just as closely as his vast fanbase.
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Paul was dropped from Bizaardvark after neighbours complained of the “living hell” caused by parties and noise at his Californian mansion in 2017.
Dustin Poirier only had to point at the scoreboard to win his latest dispute.
It’s no secret that Poirier and fellow lightweight contender Michael Chandler have long disliked each other, with their feud culminating at UFC 281 in November 2022 when Poirier defeated Chandler by second-round submission in a “Fight of the Night”-winning duel.
Despite the respect was shown in the cage that night, there’s still plenty of animosity between Poirier and Chandler, and Chandler used a word association segment with ESPN to take a shot at “The Diamond.”
Watch the clip below, in which Chandler called Poirier “salty.”
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It didn’t take Poirier long to respond and he didn’t have to say much, simply posting the finish from their fight on Instagram Stories (h/t Championship Rounds):
Chandler has other fish to fry this Saturday as he takes on another past opponent in Charles Oliveira in the co-main event of UFC 309 in New York. Let’s hope Chandler is recovered from Poirier’s burn by the time fight night rolls around.
The top-2 fights at UFC 309 are intriguing, but as far as narratives go they have zero juice. Jones has spent 90 percent of his media time being asked about Tom Aspinall, not Stipe Miocic, and Michael Chandler’s rematch with Charles Oliveira came out of nowhere.
That’s not to say these fights won’t deliver because they definitely could. It’s just that the lack of enthusiasm surrounding the final UFC pay-per-view of 2024 is understandable.
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