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Terry Crews is there talking with … an ESPN reporter? Should I be watching the other ESPN stream instead of the one they pick up from Sky?
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Ted Kravitz and Jenson Button are doing the walk in place of Brundle, and it looks like they’re trying to interview the asphalt.
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Are we not getting a Martin Brundle grid walk for this race? This seems like the perfect scene for it. Surely some characters by the cars.
Checking the news – yes, apparently this is one of the races that Brundle skips. Odd.
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Soccer’s done. Time to watch some cars go fast under the bright lights of Vegas.
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I’m pulling double-duty tonight. Please check out the five minutes of stoppage time in the NWSL final:
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Updated at 04.12 CET
Weather report
After yesterday’s soggy qualifying, Accuweather informs us that “a shower cannot be ruled out during the race.” Great.
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Preamble
After such a long slog with plenty of breaks tossed into the mix, the F1 season wraps in rapid fashion:
Tonight: Las Vegas
Next week: Qatar
The week after: Abu Dhabi
And that’s it.
We have a legit three-way contest in the season standings, but if Lando Norris can win from the pole tonight, that may all but eliminate four-time defending champ Max Verstappen.
Tonight’s lineup and where they stand on the season is …
Lando Norris, McLaren (1st, 390)
Max Verstappen, Red Bull (3rd, 341)
Carlos Sainz, Williams
George Russell, Mercedes (4th, 276)
Oscar Piastri, McLaren (2nd, 366)
Liam Lawson, Racing Bulls
Fernando Alonso, Aston Martin
Isack Hadjar, Racing Bulls
Charles Leclerc, Ferrari
Pierre Gasly, Alpine
Nico Hulkenberg, Kick Sauber
Lance Stroll, Aston Martin
Esteban Ocon, Haas
Oliver Bearman, Haas
Franco Colapinto, Alpine
Alex Albon, Williams
Kimi Antonelli, Mercedes
Gabriel Bortoleto, Kick Sauber
Yuki Tsunoda, Red Bull
Lewis Hamilton, Ferrari
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Beau will be here shortly. In the meantime, here’s how Cadillac is preparing for life in F1:
Twelve months ago at the Las Vegas Grand Prix, Cadillac were finally given the green light as Formula One’s newest entry for 2026. Building the team from scratch has entailed a frenetic work rate that the team principal, Graeme Lowdon, has compared to the Apollo moon landing. As F1 descends on Vegas this weekend, Cadillac know time is getting tight.
At the final race of the season to be staged in the United Statess, with just over 100 days to go before they take to the track for the first time in Melbourne at the 2026 opener, Cadillac have come on in leaps and bounds but, in what must seem like a sisyphean task, they are aware there will never be enough hours in the day.
The chief technical officer, Nick Chester, joined the nascent operation in March 2023 shortly after it was formed, when the team were without even an approved entry. He has been at its heart ever since and enjoys a wry smile when considering the ride.
“You can have five minutes looking back at what you’ve done and go: ‘Wow, isn’t this fantastic what we’ve done in less than three years,’” he says. “And then the next minute you think: ‘Yeah, we’ve still got quite a lot to do.’”
You can read the full article below:
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