I wake up thinking about driving – Hamilton defends work ethic

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Following criticism from Ferrari’s John Elkann, who claims Lewis Hamilton wakes up thinking about driving, he has defended his work ethic.

After Ferrari doubled his retirement at the Sao Paulo Grand Prix last weekend, Elkann instructed the seven-time champion and team-mate Charles Leclerc to “focus on driving and talk less.”

With three grands prix and a sprint remaining, Ferrari finished fourth overall in the constructors’ championship, 36 points behind Mercedes and four behind Red Bull.

Hamilton was asked if it was appropriate to ask him to concentrate more on driving during a press conference prior to Sunday’s Las Vegas GP, which almost entirely focused on Elkann’s comments.

“I need to concentrate more on being able to unplug more,” I said.

It’s been a very heavy year, they say. The year I believe I’ve had the busiest is it. I’ve visited the factory more frequently than I’d like to visit any other factory.

Hamilton asserted that he did not object to Elkann’s remarks.

He said, “I am aware of John’s intentions.”

We have spoken several times in the past week, which is how we used to say it. It’s all about bringing the team together, and we’re all truly at peace. We are all deeply invested in it.

Hamilton left Mercedes for the 2025 season and finished his 11-year career there in 2024.

Hamilton finished sixth in the standings for his 40th appearance in red in his debut season.

“There has just been a ton of learning and doing.” When we work together for something, he said, “it’s definitely tough when you fall back,” he said.

“It’s like we’re climbing up a mountain, and then you arrive at weekend and kind of backwards or backwards.” Then, you must restart your effort the following time.

” I’ve backed this team 100% and I back myself 100%. I am aware that when things are done right, it will be amazing, and I look forward to that because I’m curious to see what you’ll write in the interim.

“I firmly believe that’s what will occur,” she said. Despite the challenging times we’ve had, I’m just continuing to keep that in mind.

Hamilton did not manage to take home a podium finish this year despite winning the sprint race at the second grand prix of the year in China. Leclerc, a teammate, has won seven podiums.

Hamilton’s novelty has not diminished, though, for Ferrari.

“I still feel a little sad because I’m in red, that I get to drive a Ferrari, and that I get to represent so many amazing people,” he said.

I became aware that a ship needs time to travel a different way.

This is a significant thing. It’s a sizable business. There are a lot of moving parts. You can’t fix it with a finger’s click. Real time is required.

With the difficulties we’ve encountered and the outcomes we’ve had, it’s not been what any of us wanted for a season. We’ve just kept going full steam ahead.

Hamilton claims that his first campaign at Ferrari has “remembered how resilient I am” despite his difficulties.

I support this team 100%, I support myself 100%, and I know it will be amazing if things go right,” Hamilton said.

“Despite the challenging days we have had, I can’t wait for that moment,” declares one person. “I truly believe that will happen and I will keep our eyes on it.”

According to Leclerc, Elkann called him the morning after the Sao Paulo GP to inform him that the comments were on his mind.

John called me to catch up and said the message he wanted to send was “we want to do better,” Leclerc said.

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  • Formula 1

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    • two days ago
    Ferrari drivers Charles Leclerc and Lewis Hamilton pictured holding microphones at the Sao Paulo Grand Prix
    • November 9th
    Lewis Hamilton in the pit lane after getting out of his Ferrari to retire from the Sao Paulo Grand Prix

Fans say ‘amazing’ as Michael Barrymore shows secret food hot spot hidden gem

The star tried out a secret food hall that the majority of people are unaware was there, but the footage shows him doing so.

Fans can’t believe they’ve never heard of Michael Barrymore trying out a “secret London foodhall.” The TV legend, who was once one of Britain’s highest-paid entertainers, took a picture of himself at the hidden-outlet for a meal.

He shared the video with his 4.1 million TikTok followers, who have already received more than 350, 000 views. Before entering the small food court, Barrymore greets a staff member, passes a shawarma stand, a cookie stand, and heads back to find what he refers to as a “hidden gem.”

He discovers Somali food there, and he places an order for a mixed box. He also grabs a brownie and a banana milkshake while waiting in the quiet food hall.

The 73-year-old then heads to the cookie shop, where the owner surprises her with a whole box of treats before ordering two traditional chocolate chip cookies. He finally makes his way back to the nearly-full barracks, where only two customers were seated, after collecting his Somali dish and milkshake.

A few small independent eateries are housed at W3 Food Court, which is hidden away in Acton, west London. Many fans later admitted they had no idea it was possible.

The video’s creator, Michael from Bermondsey, called it “Secret London Foodhall.” Since then, the post has received over 33 000 likes and comments. One person said, “I didn’t know this existed, I’m in Acton.”

Another remarked, “This is amazing, more hidden gems please”; I work nights in Acton and am constantly looking for good food, a user wrote.

One person continued, “I want to try all these places you go to because they always look so good.” No duds”! “You’re a real foodie just like me, Michael,” one fan said.

Continue reading the article.

South Africa beefs up security on streets, bracing for G20 summit protests

The drama and psychology of Ashes first balls

JavaScript must be enabled in your browser to play this video.

There is a lot more to the Ashes’ first ball than just one delivery.

When all that pre-series talk comes to an end, it is a stomach-churning two or three seconds of theater.

When asked about the potential this week, England bowler Gus Atkinson responded, “It would really help set the tone for the entire series.”

“I am aware that the Ashes have had a few memorable first balls. It would be cool if I could add something to that. ” “.

Cummins crashed through the flimsy of the covers.

Getty Images

In the lead up to the 2023 Ashes, Zak Crawley had been considering hitting the first ball for a boundary and wanting to “make a statement.”

At Edgbaston, England fans roared incessantly as Australia captain Pat Cummins entered the stadium while Crawley slammed into a drive through the covers.

Crawley told The Times, “I’ve always been a big fan of the Ashes first ball.

“I’ve watched it since I was a child, and I just realized a few weeks ago that if we won the toss, we had a good chance of facing it.”

When we were playing golf in Scotland, I told Brooky [Harry Brook] that it would be cool if I could get the first one out and make a statement.

England and Burns bowled over.

Mitchell Starc celebrates wicket of Rory BurnsGetty Images

However, that Birmingham opening salvo was one of the few to follow England’s path.

They have been ominous representations of the incoming Australian dominance far more frequently.

Mitchell Starc became the first bowler to score a wicket with the opening ball of an Ashes series since Aussie seamer Ernest McCormick in 1936 when he defeated England’s Rory Burns with a leg-stump half-volley in Brisbane during the 2021-22 tour.

England’s preparation had been poor, and the tourists sat up in Australian cheer at the time.

Bowler Stuart Broad, who was standing in the dressing room, said, “My emotion just dropped to the floor.”

You built this series, and with the first ball, he’s out.

Slater’s statement was filmed.

Michael Slater cuts for fourGetty Images

An Australian captain who reveled in “mental disintegration” also comes as no surprise that a similar incident from 27 years earlier had sparked proceedings.

When opener Michael Slater hammering England seamer Phil DeFreitas for four through backward point, Steve Waugh and Australia were hoping for a fourth Ashes series win in a row.

Waugh, who would play all five Tests in a 3-1 home win, said, “alright boys, here we go again, we have got them already.”

We thought we were already in the lead, so let’s just keep hammering away. We are capable of defeating these men.

The horror spectrum of Harmison

Steve Harmison bowls a wide Getty Images

What if the series’ first delivery is exactly one in ten thousand or more?

The wide opener for the 2006-07 series, which featured Steve Harmison throwing the ball into captain Andrew Flintoff at second slip and almost missing the cut strip, has since become the most well-known Ashes opener of all time.

On Sunday, Harmon told the Mail that “I froze.”

“I let the magnitude of the occasion overwhelm me.” I didn’t realize it was there. My entire body was numb.

My hands were perspiring at an implacable rate. I had no rhythm, nothing after the first ball slipped out of my hands, and the second ball also slipped out of my hands.

15 months prior, England had won the series 5-1 before the defeat. Some claim that Ashes was completely lost at that precise moment. Harmony disagrees.

Whether or not that series’ opening ball occurred, he said, “we weren’t good enough to defeat Australia.”

“Those who say the ball set the tone for the entire series are the same as those who said I set the tone in England when I hit three batsmen in the opening morning of Lord’s in 2005, when we were defeated by 239 runs.”

Lord’s silence at Lord’s

Justin Langer faces the first ball from Steve Harmison at Lord'sGetty Images

Justin Langer played the opener for Australia both in 2006 and 2005.

He had faced the opening delivery of a match countless times before, just like Burns did as an opener.

However, there is something special about the Ashes.

“My heart is pumping, Harmony,” Langer said on the BBC’s Stumped podcast.

The bowler typically makes the first ball when the crowd starts roaring, and you can hear the whistling, shouting, and banging. However, this time the entire audience silent.

It is “the most bizarre thing.” It was measurable.

Geraint Jones was ejected from Harmison’s first delivery when it whistled through. Langer smiled back in turn and hopped on the spot before the Durham quick turned to know.

Langer’s elbow was slammed against the next delivery.

The slips started walking toward me as Ian Bell approached me, and Harmison ended up about as close as this microphone, according to Langer.

Matty Hayden, the opening partner of Lantern, said, “Be prepared, these guys, these guys are on.”

Hayden was hit on the helmet only once, and Ricky Ponting was also hurt in another accident, which he still has today.

18 years later, I can still recall that first ball as the best cricket I’ve ever played.

Not every Ashes first ball is as quiet as the others are memory-sticking.

related subjects

  • Cricket

More on this story.

    • August 16
    BBC Sport microphone and phone

The drama and psychology of Ashes first balls

JavaScript must be enabled in your browser to play this video.

There is a lot more to the Ashes’ first ball than just one delivery.

When all that pre-series talk comes to an end, it is a stomach-churning two or three seconds of theater.

When asked about the potential this week, England bowler Gus Atkinson responded, “It would really help set the tone for the entire series.”

“I am aware that the Ashes have had a few memorable first balls. It would be cool if I could add something to that. ” “.

Cummins crashed through the flimsy of the covers.

Getty Images

In the lead up to the 2023 Ashes, Zak Crawley had been considering hitting the first ball for a boundary and wanting to “make a statement.”

At Edgbaston, England fans roared incessantly as Australia captain Pat Cummins entered the stadium while Crawley slammed into a drive through the covers.

Crawley told The Times, “I’ve always been a big fan of the Ashes first ball.

“I’ve watched it since I was a child, and I just realized a few weeks ago that if we won the toss, we had a good chance of facing it.”

When we were playing golf in Scotland, I told Brooky [Harry Brook] that it would be cool if I could get the first one out and make a statement.

England and Burns bowled over.

Mitchell Starc celebrates wicket of Rory BurnsGetty Images

However, that Birmingham opening salvo was one of the few to follow England’s path.

They have been ominous representations of the incoming Australian dominance far more frequently.

Mitchell Starc became the first bowler to score a wicket with the opening ball of an Ashes series since Aussie seamer Ernest McCormick in 1936 when he defeated England’s Rory Burns with a leg-stump half-volley in Brisbane during the 2021-22 tour.

England’s preparation had been poor, and the tourists sat up in Australian cheer at the time.

Bowler Stuart Broad, who was standing in the dressing room, said, “My emotion just dropped to the floor.”

You built this series, and with the first ball, he’s out.

Slater’s statement was filmed.

Michael Slater cuts for fourGetty Images

An Australian captain who reveled in “mental disintegration” also comes as no surprise that a similar incident from 27 years earlier had sparked proceedings.

When opener Michael Slater hammering England seamer Phil DeFreitas for four through backward point, Steve Waugh and Australia were hoping for a fourth Ashes series win in a row.

Waugh, who would play all five Tests in a 3-1 home win, said, “alright boys, here we go again, we have got them already.”

We thought we were already in the lead, so let’s just keep hammering away. We are capable of defeating these men.

The horror spectrum of Harmison

Steve Harmison bowls a wide Getty Images

What if the series’ first delivery is exactly one in ten thousand or more?

The wide opener for the 2006-07 series, which featured Steve Harmison throwing the ball into captain Andrew Flintoff at second slip and almost missing the cut strip, has since become the most well-known Ashes opener of all time.

On Sunday, Harmon told the Mail that “I froze.”

“I let the magnitude of the occasion overwhelm me.” I didn’t realize it was there. My entire body was numb.

My hands were perspiring at an implacable rate. I had no rhythm, nothing after the first ball slipped out of my hands, and the second ball also slipped out of my hands.

15 months prior, England had won the series 5-1 before the defeat. Some claim that Ashes was completely lost at that precise moment. Harmony disagrees.

Whether or not that series’ opening ball occurred, he said, “we weren’t good enough to defeat Australia.”

“Those who say the ball set the tone for the entire series are the same as those who said I set the tone in England when I hit three batsmen in the opening morning of Lord’s in 2005, when we were defeated by 239 runs.”

Lord’s silence at Lord’s

Justin Langer faces the first ball from Steve Harmison at Lord'sGetty Images

Justin Langer played the opener for Australia both in 2006 and 2005.

He had faced the opening delivery of a match countless times before, just like Burns did as an opener.

However, there is something special about the Ashes.

“My heart is pumping, Harmony,” Langer said on the BBC’s Stumped podcast.

The bowler typically makes the first ball when the crowd starts roaring, and you can hear the whistling, shouting, and banging. However, this time the entire audience silent.

It is “the most bizarre thing.” It was measurable.

Geraint Jones was ejected from Harmison’s first delivery when it whistled through. Langer smiled back in turn and hopped on the spot before the Durham quick turned to know.

Langer’s elbow was slammed against the next delivery.

The slips started walking toward me as Ian Bell approached me, and Harmison ended up about as close as this microphone, according to Langer.

Matty Hayden, the opening partner of Lantern, said, “Be prepared, these guys, these guys are on.”

Hayden was hit on the helmet only once, and Ricky Ponting was also hurt in another accident, which he still has today.

18 years later, I can still recall that first ball as the best cricket I’ve ever played.

Not every Ashes first ball is as quiet as the others are memory-sticking.

related subjects

  • Cricket

More on this story.

    • August 16
    BBC Sport microphone and phone

Detente? Trump says Mamdani will visit White House on Friday

In a move that has already sparked a diametrically opposed political outlook for the country, US President Donald Trump will meet with New York City mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani at the White House.

Late on Wednesday, Trump posted a false statement on his social media platform Truth Social stating that Mamdani would travel to the Oval Office on Friday. He also falsely identified Mamdani as a communist and put his middle name, Kwame, in quotation marks.

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“Further details to follow” the president enlarging.

The president slammed Mamdani as a “communist,” mispronouncing his name, threatened to cut off federal funding to New York if he won, and capped off the campaign with his historic victory on November 4 as the city’s first Muslim mayor.

In the final hours before the election, Trump even endorsed Democratic Rep. Andrew Cuomo over Republican Rep. Curtis Sliwa, boasting to his supporters that Mamdani was a “FAILURE.”

Mamdani, for his part, has frequently compared the Trump administration to authoritarianism and portrayed his own objectives as mayor in stark contrast to the president’s lifelong pursuit of wealth and power.

In his victory speech, Mamdani made a promise to the same city that gave rise to Donald Trump, noting his New York roots. And if there is any way to terrify a despot, it is by destroying the very conditions that gave him the most power, “And there is only one way to do that.”

Trump has nevertheless indicated that he is willing to defrost relations following the election earlier this month, which also saw sweeping victories for Democrats in New Jersey and Virginia. The president rebuffed his threat of funding in a speech to the American Business Forum in Florida as he criticized communism.

“We’ll help him,” the phrase means “we’ll help him.” New York should have success, we want it. He said, “We’ll give him a little help, maybe.”

In the run-up to and after Mamdani won the mayoral election, numerous Republicans and MAGA supporters launched racist and vitriolic attacks on Mamdani.

Mamdani addressed “racist, baseless attacks” from his opponents in an emotional speech days before the election day. Mamdani criticized opponents for bringing “hatred to the forefront” while speaking outside a Bronx mosque, noting that close to one million Muslims live in New York and are affected by their Islamophobia.

Mamdani claimed earlier this week that his team had contacted the White House because he had “made a commitment that showed a willingness to meet with anyone and everyone, as long as it is for the benefit” of New Yorkers.