
Piastri dominates Hungarian GP final practice
The two McLaren men clocked times of 1min 14.916 sec and 1:14.948 respectively to finish 0.399 clear of third-placed Charles Leclerc of Ferrari and are separated by just 0.032 seconds.
Piastri's best lap was three-tenths faster than Norris' pole lap last year and set up a thrilling duel in prospect for qualifying later on Saturday when rising temperatures, requiring additional cooling for the cars, will favour different teams.
After his struggles in Belgium last weekend and on Friday in Hungary, seven-time world champion Lewis Hamilton bounced back to more familiar form by taking fourth place, three-tenths adrift of Leclerc.
Four-time champion Max Verstappen wound up 12th for Red Bull.
The close nature of the contest would have intrigued the visiting Bernie Ecclestone, Formula One's retired former ringmaster who negotiated the first Hungarian race, behind the 'iron curtain' in 1986.
With 20 minutes gone, the big teams joined the fray. After his travails on Friday, Verstappen needed some improvement and quickly clocked 1:16.547 to go top only for Leclerc, George Russell and then Piastri to move clear.
The Australian's lap of 1:16.240 lifted him clear of Russell, but it was not enough to resist the increased pace of Verstappen who went top in 1:16.202 -- half a second better than his Friday best.
Contrary to Hamilton's struggles, Leclerc showed pace in his Ferrari to beat Verstappen after half an hour in 1:16.137, six-hundredths of a second clear, but Piastri returned to remind his rivals of his affinity with the circuit in 1:15.871.
Somewhat unexpectedly, Hamilton then proved his overnight homework had been fruitful by rising to second, ahead of Leclerc, in 1:16.015, a reminder of his status as a record eight-time winner at the Hungaroring.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Express Tribune
11 hours ago
- Express Tribune
Chappell backs Brook as Root successor
England batsman Harry Brook says the team had a conversation and 'it's time to not be those nice guys'. Photo: AFP/file The Australian legend Greg Chappell on Wednesday described England's Harry Brook as a player with the potential to become a match-winner and a great cricketer for England in the post-Joe Root era, while emphasising the importance of maintaining discipline. In his column for a renowned cricket website, Chappell praised Brook's extraordinary talent and potential, calling him a 'worthy successor' to Root, England's all-time leading run-scorer. However, he cautioned that Brook's aggressive instincts need to be balanced with sound judgment, particularly in high-pressure situations. "Brook has the tools to be one of England's finest batters, arguably their most destructive in the modern era," Chappell wrote. "He has time, range, confidence, and that rare gift of making batting look effortless. But cricket, particularly Test cricket, is not just about shot-making. It's about judgment." Chappell pointed to Brook's dismissal in the final Test at The Oval, where he attempted an ambitious stroke with the game evenly balanced, only to fall cheaply. "Brook's dismissal at The Oval was symptomatic of the conundrum England are facing," Chappell added. "The 'Bazball' philosophy has rejuvenated their Test side, but it cannot become an excuse to shy away from the hard graft. Positive cricket isn't reckless cricket, it's confident, calculated risk-taking." Chappell concluded with a word of encouragement, "Brook is still emerging, and he will learn. But to fulfil his vast potential, he must embrace the grind along with the glamour. "Root didn't become England's most prolific batter by always playing pretty strokes, he earned it with grit. Brook will need to do the same." The 26-year-old batter has already notched up 10 Test centuries, becoming the ninth-fastest in history to reach the landmark in terms of innings (50). Only one batter in the past 70 years, West Indies legend Clyde Walcott, has done so faster, reaching the milestone in 47 innings in 1955. Brook's statistics already place him in elite company. With 2,820 Test runs at 57.55, he holds the second-highest aggregate among all batters since his debut.


Business Recorder
a day ago
- Business Recorder
Auto sector woes: What's good for Australia may not be good for Pakistan
As a lingering post-colonial inferiority complex continues to shape our national thinking, many still look to the West as a shining example – a blueprint for modernity. But what works for their today may not be what Pakistan needs for its tomorrow. As our policy-makers inch closer to opening used car imports and scaling back support for the local industry, decisions that could trigger rapid deindustrialisation and the quiet, seemingly permanent closure of Pakistan's automotive sector, they would do well to pause. On the surface, it may appear that 'even Australia did it.' But scratch deeper, and the differences couldn't be starker. In 2010, Australia had an 80-year-old automobile industry that was producing a around 239,443 vehicles annually to fulfil local demand. Pakistan's auto policy: fueling imports, killing industry But something else happened that year too. The Australian government liberalised the sector by reducing tariffs to just 5%, expecting global efficiency and higher exports. The result: swift deindustrialisation. Multinational brands found it cheaper to shut local operations and import from their foreign plants. By 2017 all local plants had closed. Yet interestingly, global brands like Toyota continued to dominate. It was number one in 2017, and still the market leader in 2024. And the market size? Still hovering around 1.2 million vehicles, 7 years later. The difference? A decade ago, those cars were built by Australians, using locally made components made with cutting-edge technology. Today, they're all imported. If a mature, exporting industry couldn't survive liberalisation, what hope does a nascent Pakistani industry have? But Australia liberalised its auto sector from a position of strength. It was a post-industrial, high-income economy characterised by high-value exports, strong services and mining sectors, and clear alternatives to cushion the shock. Pakistan, by contrast, is still in the early stages of industrial maturity. The direction we're being nudged toward seems driven by abstract ideas of 'efficiency' and 'resource reallocation.' In theory, this sounds great. In practice, it's dangerously vague. Where exactly are these so-called 'more efficient' destinations for capital? Has anyone mapped them? Is the investment already sunk into the automotive sector ready to be reallocated? Have the 2.5 million people directly or indirectly employed in the ecosystem been offered meaningful alternatives? Or are policymakers once again making decisions in haste, without regard for the industrial ecosystem they're about to dismantle? Australia's withdrawal was strategic, a pivot to areas better suited to its demographic and economic structure. But what is Pakistan pivoting to? With a population of 240 million, Pakistan has no shortage of labour or talent. Nor does it benefit from a surplus of high-value service exports. So why spend scarce foreign reserves importing fully built-up vehicles, when it can use that same capital to feed its own manufacturing base, grow the domestic parts industry, and build a more self-reliant, value-adding automotive ecosystem? By 2010, Australia had completed its industrial learning curve. It had built the technical foundations that the automotive value chain naturally fosters – process engineering, supply chain integration, metallurgy, systems design. Pakistan, on the other hand, is still climbing that curve. Shutting it down now would be like dropping out of university before the first exam and calling yourself overqualified. Policy mimicry without context is a shortcut to structural ruin. Are we really choosing our future – or merely imitating someone else's past? It's time we learn to read our own map. The article does not necessarily reflect the opinion of Business Recorder or its owners.


Business Recorder
3 days ago
- Business Recorder
Alexander Zverev fights back to oust defending champion Popyrin from Canadian Open
Alexander Zverev rallied from a set down to beat defending champion Alexei Popyrin 6-7(8) 6-4 6-3 in Toronto and move into the semi-finals of the Canadian Open on Monday. Top seed Zverev was unable to convert two set points in a tight first set, but built up 3-0 leads in both the second and third sets to clinch the win in two hours and 42 minutes. The victory took the German's head-to-head record against Australian Popyrin to 4-0 and sent him to his 75th semi-final on the ATP Tour, joining Novak Djokovic as the only active men's tennis player to have reached the mark. 'I had to tell myself, even though I lost the first set, I thought we were both playing actually quite well,' said Zverev, who won the Canadian Open in 2017. 'I had to find a return position in the beginning because he's a very big server, and when he gets into a rhythm, it's very difficult against him. 'I did that in the second and third set. Honestly, I can't complain about much. I played one loose game on my serve in the second set, but apart from that, it was pretty good.' Zverev next faces Russian Karen Khachanov, who beat Alex Michelsen of the United States 6-4 7-6(3). Mboko's run continues Canadian teenager Victoria Mboko stormed into the semi-finals of the women's tournament in Montreal with a 6-4 6-2 win over Spain's Jessica Bouzas Maneiro to continue her fairytale run. The 18-year-old, ranked 85th in the world, found herself a break down early in the second set, but won six straight games to become the first Canadian to reach the semi-finals of the Canadian Open since 2019. 'I'm so excited to be in the semi-final here. I want to thank everyone for your support once again. It has been unreal,' said Mboko, who beat No. 1 seed Coco Gauff on Saturday and is set to enter the top 50. Mboko next takes on Elena Rybakina, the 2022 Wimbledon champion, who was leading 6-1 2-1 when her opponent, Marta Kostyuk of Ukraine, was forced to retire from their quarter-final match due to a wrist injury. Rybakina will meet Mboko for the second time in as many weeks, with the ninth-seeded Kazakh winning 6-3 7-5 when the pair faced off in the Washington Open last month.