Sunday, 3 March 2024

Jos Verstappen: Red Bull F1 team will “explode” if Horner stays as team principal

The Red Bull Formula One team will “explode” if Christian Horner stays on as team principal, according to Jos Verstappen, the father of three-time F1 champion Max Verstappen.

The F1 spotlight has been almost entirely on Horner in the days leading up to the new season, over his alleged behavior toward a team employee.

“There is tension here while he remains in position,” Jos Verstappen told British newspaper the Daily Mail after his son won Saturday’s season-opening race in Bahrain. “The team is in danger of being torn apart. It can’t go on the way it is. It will explode. He (Horner) is playing the victim, when he is the one causing the problems.”

On Wednesday, the team’s parent company dismissed a complaint of alleged misconduct by Horner toward a team employee. A day later during practice for the Bahrain Grand Prix, a file alleged to contain evidence against Horner — including alleged WhatsApp message exchanges — was emailed to nearly 200 people in the F1 paddock, including Liberty Media, F1, the FIA, the other nine team principals and multiple media outlets.

The authenticity of the file, which was sent from a generic email account, has not been verified by The Associated Press.

Jos Verstappen, a former F1 driver who was Michael Schumacher’s teammate when they raced at Benetton, has been pointed to as a potential source of the file by some F1 insiders but he firmly denied it.

“That wouldn’t make sense,” the 51-year-old Dutchman told the Daily Mail. “Why would I do that when Max is doing so well here?”

Horner has denied wrongdoing and said in a statement issued Thursday that he would not “comment on anonymous speculation” concerning the file.

Reacting to the ongoing controversy, the president of Formula 1’s governing body told the Financial Times that the controversy around Horner is damaging the sport, but that the FIA won’t conduct its own inquiry unless it receives a complaint.

FIA president Mohammed Ben Sulayem said any complaint lodged with its compliance officer would be investigated but it had not received one related to Horner’s situation.

“It’s damaging the sport,” Ben Sulayem told the newspaper, which added that he was speaking Friday after a meeting with Horner. “This is damaging on a human level.”



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Saturday, 2 March 2024

Maple Leafs’ Lyubushkin, Jarnkrok to play vs. Rangers, Liljegren game-time decision

Ilya Lyubushkin will begin his second stint with the Toronto Maple Leafs against the New York Rangers on Saturday night.

Head coach Sheldon Keefe confirmed that Lyubushkin will play alongside Morgan Rielly in the lineup. The Leafs acquired the 29-year-old from the Anaheim Ducks on Friday.

Calle Jarnkrok will also be in the lineup playing on a line with John Tavares and Bobby McMann after missing the last 13 games after suffering a broken knuckle on his hand. The 32-year-old was forced to leave practice after blocking a shot off his hand.

Defenceman Timothy Liljegren is a game-time decision after missing the last two games with an undisclosed injury. If he does return, Toronto would get two right-shot defencemen on the blueline after having none available the last two games.

Nick Robertson and William Lagesson are expected to be scratched from the lineup while Mark Giordano’s injury opened a spot on the blue line.



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Tkachuk OK to return, Sogaard to start as Senators still looking for answers

Finding the low point of this Ottawa Senators season is tricky, given all the options.

But who says no to this recent rock-bottom candidate?: Falling to the Arizona Coyotes, losers of 14 straight games, playing on the road in the second half of a back-to-back scenario.

The Senators can complain all they want about calls or missed calls, the Coyotes deserved their 5-3 win (the last goal was into an empty net) on Friday.

Don’t look now but the Sens are tied with those Coyotes with 53 points on the season, Arizona holding down 28th in the league because of two more games played. The Senators are in 27th place after 58 games played.

What a place to be with the trade deadline just six days away.

Watching this debacle unfold in front of another strong crowd at the Canadian Tire Centre (17,734), new general manager Steve Staios will have to resist any impulsive urge to trade away his roster in bunches.

This, too, shall pass. One day.

There is talent here. But the lineup needs work. At every position.

As usual when the Sens bottom out, there is an injury scare.

Last game it was centre Josh Norris, with an undisclosed (but apparent shoulder) injury that could keep him out for the rest of the season.

Friday night, it was captain Brady Tkachuk, who left the game after getting hit by Logan O’Brien midway through the third period. Tkachuk slowly skated to the bench, put his head down and after a chat with trainer Domenic Nicoletta, walked to the dressing room. He did not return to the game.

This game got chippy and Tkachuk was in the middle of most of it.

At least there was some good news on this front. On Saturday morning from Philadelphia, interim head coach Jacques Martin said that Tkachuk is OK and will be in the lineup versus the Flyers on Saturday night.

The health news on Ottawa’s goaltenders is not as promising (see below).

Sleepy start

Ottawa has a habit of falling behind by two or three goals and then trying to rally from the deficit. In previous losses to Nashville and Washington, the Sens were quickly behind 2-0. Verus the ‘Yotes, it was a 3-0 hole that they eventually overcame, but then eased off again when the score was 3-3, only to have Arizona take it to them in the third period.

The Senators sleepwalked through most of the first period, which the Coyotes were only too happy to exploit in their quest to stop their 14-game losing streak. The supposedly tired Coyotes outshot the Sens 18-11 over the first 20.

Holding possession in Ottawa’s end for the bulk of the opening minutes of the game, the Coyotes put their first puck past Senators goaltender Anton Forsberg at 7:31 of the first.

Forsberg wasn’t supposed to start but stepped in when Joonas Korpisalo was a late scratch due to illness.

If Forsberg didn’t expect to face a 19-shot barrage from lowly Arizona in the first period, he soon got used to the idea, making several big stops to keep his team in it early.

J.J. Moser made the score 2-0 at 12:39, just before recent AHL recall winger Zack MacEwen took a four-minute high-sticking penalty that put an exclamation mark on the crappy start.

While trying to kill off the double minor, Ottawa took another penalty, a tripping call to Ridly Greig that provided the visitors a lengthy 5-on-3 advantage.

Nick Schmaltz buried his 17th of the season on that two-man advantage, at which point there were audible groans among the cowboy-hat wearing crowd on western night at the CTC.

That third goal seemed to annoy the Senators bench. The Sens immediately put pressure on backup goalie Karel Vejmelka, and Vladimir Tarasenko wired a shot that beat Vejmelka on the short side, just inside the post.

The comeback was well underway. Two Ottawa goals in the second period, by Drake Batherson and Shane Pinto, on the power play, tied the game at 3-3.

Batherson, the Senators best player on the night, now has 21 goals on the season, just one off his career high of 22 set last season over 82 games.

In a rare show of frustration, coach Martin expressed displeasure with the officiating.

“They got two power-play goals, I thought there were some calls that were questionable,” Martin said. “We didn’t get any calls. I thought that was the difference in the game.”

There’s always room to question the referees, but Arizona had just one extra power play, four to Ottawa’s three. The Senators have had many games this season where they have enjoyed two or three more power plays than their opponent.

Far more concerning than any call or non-call was the effort by Ottawa in the third period. Even during a power play halfway through the period, the Sens accomplished little.

The Coyotes scored on their advantage earlier in the period, on yet another Greig penalty.

“I thought the guys worked hard,” Martin said. “We need to have a better start.”

Fans didn’t like the finish, either, booing the Sens off the ice as the seconds ticked down and Ottawa was stuck in its own zone, having already surrendered an empty net goal.

Forsberg said he learned just 25 minutes before the warmup that he would be starting.

Yes, it was a curve ball. But surprise starts are part of the game, Forsberg said, beating himself up on the winning goal by Dylan Guenther.

“I’ve got to make that save because it gives us a chance to win,” he said.

To be fair, that was a group effort. Arizona had an easy entry on its power play, Guenther was alone in the high slot and he ripped a shot high to the stick side.

Goaltender shuffle: Forsberg, Korpisalo out

While the news on Tkachuk was encouraging, now Ottawa’s goaltenders are both out.

Martin told Senators colour man Gord Wilson in Philly that Forsberg picked up an injury Friday night (lower body) and did not make the trip to Philadelphia. Korpisalo is still sick, and also stayed back in Ottawa. That means the kids are playing: Mads Sogaard has been called up and will start against the Flyers. Leevi Merilainen was also recalled from Belleville to back up Sogaard.

Because defenceman Thomas Chabot, who was dealing with an issue from the Nashville game, remains a question mark, defenceman Max Guenette was also recalled. Chabot was in the lineup against Arizona.

Tarasenko’s last game in Ottawa?

Tarasenko scored a beauty on home ice in this loss. Will it be the last goal he scores in front of Senators fans? A pending free agent, the veteran winger is the top trading chip Ottawa has to offer at or before Friday’s trade deadline.

“We’ll see what happens,” Tarasenko said, in a post-game scrum. “We have a game (Saturday). I told you before, I’m just preparing for each game. I like the group of guys and hanging around them. Tomorrow is a new day and we’ll see what’s going to happen.”



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F1 champion Max Verstappen wins season-opening Bahrain Grand Prix amid Red Bull turmoil

SAKHIR, Bahrain (AP) — Formula 1 champion Max Verstappen eased to victory in the season-opening Bahrain Grand Prix on Saturday despite the turmoil surrounding his Red Bull team principal Christian Horner.

Verstappen started on pole position and was never seriously challenged on his way to a commanding one-two win for Red Bull ahead of his teammate Sergio Perez.

“Today went even better than expected,” Verstappen said. “It was a lot of fun.”

He said he felt “one with the car.”

Carlos Sainz Jr. was third for Ferrari after fighting hard with teammate Charles Leclerc.

At the start of the longest-ever F1 season at 24 races, Verstappen already shows signs of repeating his near-perfect record from 2023, when the Dutch driver won 19 of 22 races on his way to a third straight title.

Saturday was the eighth win in a row for Verstappen going back to September last year. He set an F1 record of 10 consecutive wins last season.

Horner arrived on race day hand in hand with his wife Geri Halliwell, also known as Ginger Spice of the pop group the Spice Girls. The race came after FIA President Mohammed Ben Sulayem said the turmoil around Horner was “damaging the sport,” in comments to the Financial Times.

The F1 paddock’s focus has firmly been on the Red Bull team principal this week, with Verstappen saying Saturday his boss was “probably a little bit distracted.”

On Wednesday, the team’s parent company dismissed a complaint of alleged misconduct by Horner toward a team employee. A day later during practice for the Bahrain Grand Prix, a file alleged to contain evidence against Horner was emailed to nearly 200 people in the F1 paddock, including Liberty Media, F1, the FIA, the other nine team principals and multiple media outlets.

The authenticity of the files has not been verified by The Associated Press; the file came from a generic email account.

Charles Leclerc was fourth and George Russell was fifth, with Lando Norris sixth for McLaren and seven-time champion Lewis Hamilton seventh after an uneventful race in the second Mercedes. Oscar Piastri of McLaren was eighth, ahead of the two Aston Martins of Fernando Alonso and Lance Stroll.



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Former Newcastle midfielder Longstaff looks forward to new start with Toronto FC

Matty Longstaff arrives at Toronto FC with some memorable markers already on his footballing resume at 23 years old.

While injuries have disrupted the former Newcastle midfielder’s career path, Toronto coach John Herdman hopes Longstaff has more special moments in him.

Longstaff joined Newcastle when he was 10, working his way up through the ranks to join older brother Sean in the first team.

Sent on loan to Scotland’s Aberdeen and League Two sides Mansfield Town and Colchester United in England, Matty made just 20 first-team appearances for Newcastle with three goals.

But each of the scores was special.

Longstaff turned heads in October 2019 in a 1-0 win over Manchester United, becoming — at 19 years 199 days — the youngest player to score in his Premier League debut for Newcastle

His rocket-like right-footed strike from outside the penalty box was voted Premier League goal of the month, marking the first time a player won the award with a goal on their debut since August 2016.

Longstaff did it again against the Red Devils in December 2019, taking a pass from Brazil’s Joelinton in the penalty box and scoring on a low shot to the corner at Old Trafford in a 4-1 loss.

And he produced another highlight-reel goal in January 2020 in a 4-1 win over Rochdale, then in England’s League One, in an FA Cup third-round replay.

Longstaff, between two defenders with his back to goal, looked to control Matt Ritchie’s cross into the box with his left foot. The ball came off his foot and hit one of the defenders, bouncing towards goal. Longstaff controlled the ball on his right thigh then coolly knocked it home past goalkeeper Robert Sanchez, a Spanish international now with Chelsea.

At the time, it was his third goal in eight starts for Newcastle.

The Longstaffs are now members of the small band of brothers who have scored in the FA Cup, joining the likes of Yaya and Kolo Toure, Sammy and Shola Ameobi, Michael and Will Keane, and Josh and Jacob Murphy.

Longstaff tore the anterior cruciate ligament in his knee playing for Colchester at Gillingham on Boxing Day 2022. Sidelined for much of the season due to a hamstring injury, Longstaff was hurt just eight minutes after entering the game and was taken off the field on a stretcher in stoppage time.

Newcastle released him last June but allowed him to continue his rehab at its facilities.

“I’m very lucky the club looked after me. I was there for the full 13 months (of recovery),” he said.

Herdman and Longstaff share the same roots.

A native of Consett, just southwest of Newcastle, Herdman grew up supporting the Magpies. Longstaff was born in Rotherham, some 200 kilometres south, but is quick to note: “I moved to Newcastle the next day.”

Herdman was in Newcastle prior to Christmas and met with Dan Ashworth, then Newcastle’s sporting director,

“He felt (Longworth) was in a great place and could maybe kick his career on again.”

TFC brought Longstaff in as a trialist during training camp, giving him an audition in the final pre-season game against Los Angeles FC.

“A really good 30 minutes once he got into his rhythm,” said Herdman, who likes both his character off the pitch and “next-level touch (and) passing ability” on it.

Longstaff, who has signed a two-year contract with an option for 2026 with Toronto, may not be ready to make his debut Sunday at New England, however.

“The (artificial) turf this weekend is a challenge for him,” said Herdman. “He’s obviously coming off that ACL and he’s on only his second potential game. So for us, it’s not really worth the risk. He might travel with the team, he might be on the bench. But I’m looking more next week for the home opener (March 9 against Charlotte FC) and beyond, putting him in the right conditions to minimize any risk to him.”

Longstaff, who made two appearances for the England under-20 team, is looking forward to a new start in MLS.

“I’ve been around a little but I’m still only 23,” he said. “So I’ve got plenty of years ahead of us.”

Longstaff arrives in Canada no stranger to ice hockey. His father David represented Britain more than 100 times and played more than 1,000 club games, mostly in England but also in Sweden.



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Friday, 1 March 2024

F1 2024 Prix-view: Verstappen eyes four-peat, Hamilton’s last dance with Mercedes

The longest season in Formula One history is set to kick off this weekend in Bahrain.

A record 24 grands prix will be staged in ’24 with Imola and China returning to the jam-packed calendar. The iconic Monaco Grand Prix takes place May 26 followed by the Canadian Grand Prix a fortnight later at Montreal’s Circuit Gilles Villeneuve on June 9. The season wraps up in Abu Dhabi once again on Dec. 8.

Before we say “lights out and away we go” to the 2024 F1 season, here’s a rundown of what you need to know.

VERSTAPPEN EYES FOUR-PEAT

Red Bull’s Max Verstappen will be targeting a fourth consecutive drivers’ championship and you don’t have to look too far into the past to find the most recent four-peat. Mercedes driver Lewis Hamilton pulled it off from 2017-20 right before Verstappen’s reign kicked off.

Yes, F1 is all about eras and we’re firmly in the Verstappen Era — likely until the regulations change in 2026. Design wizard Adrian Newey and his team have nailed the current setup and have created the perfect rocketship with Verstappen in the cockpit.

It’ll be tough for the 26-year-old Dutch driver to match his dominant 2023 season featuring a record 19 wins, but expect nothing less than maximum effort from Verstappen.

THE LAST DANCE: MERCEDES/HAMILTON EDITION

Just when you thought it would be a quiet off-season, Lewis Hamilton sent shockwaves when he announced he would be opting out of his Mercedes contract and joining rival Ferrari in 2025.

It’s hard to summarize Hamilton’s legacy with Mercedes as the raw numbers — six drivers’ championships, eight constructors’ championships and 82 grand prix victories — don’t paint the whole picture. Hamilton established himself as one of the greatest of all time (if not the greatest) and a global icon and activist at Mercedes with one more season still to come.

This will be Hamilton’s record 12th year with Mercedes, surpassing Michael Schumacher (11 seasons with Ferrari from 1996 to 2006) as the driver with the longest tenure on one team. There’s another record Hamilton shares with Schumacher that he’s keen to break: most world championships. The 39-year-old Hamilton has unfinished business and is still looking to “reclaim my eighth” title he lost out on back in 2021.

Mercedes haven’t been able to provide Hamilton with a championship-calibre car since then as he’s gone winless over the past two seasons — the longest drought of his career. Mercedes teammate George Russell has just one win, the only win of his career, during that same period.

Can Mercedes give Hamilton the proper sendoff or will the focus shift entirely to Russell as the future of the team? It’ll be a compelling storyline either way.

PEREZ ON THE HOT SEAT

Verstappen could single-handedly help Red Bull claim a third consecutive constructors’ championship as well, but that doesn’t mean the team doesn’t expect Sergio Perez to make a significant contribution.

Things got heated between Perez and team advisor Helmut Marko last season, particularly when the Mexican driver struggled during qualifying. Perez missed out on Q3 a total of nine times, including a stretch of five consecutive early exits, to put him out of the top 10 on the starting grid despite having identical equipment as Verstappen.

Regardless, Perez picked up a pair of wins and finished second in the drivers’ championship as Red Bull won all but one race. But is just being good, good enough? As other teams become more comfortable with their setups, it should get closer in the standings.

Perez’s contract is up at the end of the year and look no further than Red Bull’s secondary squad Visa Cash App RB F1 Team (the name just rolls right off your tongue) where Daniel Ricciardo and Yuki Tsunoda will be out to prove they’re worthy of a promotion. You can also add reserve driver Liam Lawson to that mix. The 22-year-old rising star held his own during a five-race stint filling in for an injured Ricciardo last season. It should be an entertaining battle if anything.

A TALE OF TWO FERRARIS

It’ll be intriguing to see how things play out this season at Ferrari between Charles Leclerc and Carlos Sainz. Which one will be under more pressure lies in the eye of the beholder.

Leclerc signed a multi-year contract extension in January — a week before Hamilton’s decision to join the Scuderia squad next season. The 26-year-old Monegasque driver has captured five wins and 23 pole positions since arriving at Ferrari in 2019 and will be out to ensure he remains their main man going forward.

Although Hamilton’s arrival means Sainz will be moving on, the 29-year-old Spanish driver is in the prime of his career and will be a highly coveted free agent. Sainz, who has two wins with Ferrari and was the only non-Red Bull driver to score a victory last season, can increase his value elsewhere. Sainz will have plenty of options to choose from as only seven of 20 seats have been reportedly filled for next year.

THE SILLIEST OF SILLY SEASONS?

The drama off of the track is just as spicy as the action on it. Hamilton’s move to Ferrari for 2025 will create a domino effect to follow throughout the season beginning with his vacant seat at Mercedes.

Sainz could simply swap rides, but Mercedes also have their eyes on promising prospect Andrea Kimi Antonelli, who will compete in Formula 2 this year. If Mercedes believe the 17-year-old Italian junior driver is ready to make the jump to the big leagues, they’re not going to hesitate as it appears that’s why they didn’t sign Hamilton to a longer contract last year.

Mercedes boss Toto Wolff explained to Autosport.com that he wanted to ensure his options were available because he doesn’t want a repeat of what happened back in 2014 when they had the chance to sign Verstappen but were tied up long-term with Hamilton and Nico Rosberg. Red Bull inked Verstappen to their Toro Rosso squad (now Visa Cash App RB F1 Team) and the rest is history.

If Mercedes feel Antonelli isn’t quite ready, how about two-time world champion Fernando Alonso? The 42-year-old Spaniard had a renaissance season with eight podiums in 2023 and would be a fine driver to have in the meantime if he wants to continue racing. How’s this for a comparison: Antonelli was only two months old when Alonso won his second world title.

Don’t rule out Esteban Ocon, who has strong ties to Mercedes from juniors right through to serving as the team’s reserve when he was out of a full-time ride in 2019. Ocon even said he was “very close” to joining Mercedes in 2020 before landing his current deal (thanks to Wolff) at Alpine.

We’ve already mentioned Red Bull’s situation, but if Aston Martin keep improving, that’ll be another desirable destination for free agents should Alonso opt to move on or retire.

ONE BOLD PREDICTION

Hamilton has second thoughts and decides to stay with Mercedes? Maybe if you’re still in the denial stage of grief, but we’re going to go with McLaren winning a grand prix this season.

With 24 races this season, the door will be open at some point for McLaren’s Lando Norris to score his first career victory. 

McLaren more than doubled their point total during the second half of 2023 and Norris and Piastri finished with a combined seven runner-up results during the season. The team should be able to build off of that positive momentum to take the next step on the podium. 



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Barker: Holy moly, Blue Jays offence is a snooze fest so far!



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Anaheim Ducks Team Preview: Can they get into the playoff race?

It’s been seven years since the Anaheim Ducks last made the playoffs, but the 2024-25 season can be looked back on as one in which the team...