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F1 Canadian Grand Prix: qualifying – live | Formula One
Key events
Ted Kravitz is in the pitlane, looking at what the teams are up to. Red Bull have caught his eye by looking to add downforce for the wet tomorrow; conceding they can’t compete in qualifying in the dry but there are advantages to be had playing a longer game.
Rival teams – not least McLaren, who had their only internecine strife last year between Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri – will be looking to capitalise. Ferrari, who are so fast off the grid, will be anxious at least to break into the second row for the main event, giving Lewis Hamilton and/or Charles Leclerc the chance to threaten the top two, even if they cannot get to the front row by right.
Wolff was pleased with Mercedes’ starts, Russell’s especially, and blamed the car not Antonelli for his being slightly slower. But still …
Back in the day, David James caught more crosses than any other Premier League goalkeeper – because more were fired in, as opposing teams knew that sooner or later he would drop one. One successful pair of starts does not stop a vulnerability being perceived.
It was a difficult incident to cover during the sprint because the TV director failed to show anything immediately and belatedly some unhelpful on-board footage, not screening the best views until after the race had finished. We all heard Antonelli’s complaints, though, which while he went too far did him a disservice.
To me the key points are that Russell could not simply disappear, and that the stewards did not get involved, as they could have done even though the pair are from the same team.
Wolff is chatting to Sky. He is “100% sure he will look like a fool at some points this year” after discussing the rules of engagement, or “racing intent” as they prefer to say.
If you were a multimillionaire team principal, what would you have said in the past couple of hours? The most important point, I guess, is that Wolff would have told Antonelli to focus on what is in front of him, ie qualifying. Mercedes will be after another front-row lockout now and anything else can wait.
What do you think? Let me know via philip.cornwall@theguardian.com
Welcome to qualifying, starting at 9pm BST/4pm EDT.
Has everyone got their breath back? Has everyone cooled down? The first sprint race in Montreal seems likely to feature in reviews of the season after George Russell and Kimi Antonelli almost came to grief and the latter reacted furiously, forcing Toto Wolff on to the team radio to tell the teenager to calm down. Three hours later, they will be back at it, albeit not wheel to wheel as the team send forth their drivers spaced out.
(For a moment I pondered the drug connations of “spaced out”, then let it go, then returned to the quotes, and there’s Antonelli saying Russell had been “very naughty”. God I hated the Shamen’s hymn to MDMA, Ebeneezer Goode, but that “naughty, naughty, very naughty” opening line has stuck around.)
Reuters reports that Russell said he needed to check the video but from what he felt at the time:
“From my side, I didn’t think I did anything wrong and it wasn’t investigated. I guess race directors and stewards thought the same.
“You never get overtaken around the outside of that corner,” he added, saying that Antonelli’s drive was risky. “Kudos to Kimi for giving it a go … I respect that.
“You race each other hard, but fair, and from my side, there’s never ill intentions towards anything. But on the same note, I’m not just going to wave somebody by. And we’re both fighting for our championship.”
Of Antonelli, Reuters said:
He added the team would clarify the situation after reviewing the race. “The main thing for the team is that there was no contact, that we don’t crash into each other.”
We will see what Mercedes say later but you imagine there will be more internal discussions once everyone has packed up and left Quebec.
Giles Richards’ sprint race report
Here’s Giles’s view on Russell and Antonelli:
They had the race in their hands after both made a good start from the front row and Russell closed out well despite pressure from Norris, but the debrief at Mercedes will likely still be a feisty affair.
Still, the win was the strong start to the weekend Russell was looking for. He won the opening race of the season in Australia and the first sprint of the season at the Chinese Grand Prix, but with Antonelli winning the past three races, the young Italian had taken a strong lead in the world championship. Russell needed to reassert himself and did so in the first real test.
Read his full report:
Right, time to wrap up now until qualifying. Here are the latest standings:
1 Kimi Antonelli (It) Mercedes 106pts
2 George Russell (GB) Mercedes 88
3 Charles Leclerc (Mon) Ferrari 63
4 Lando Norris (GB) McLaren 58
5 Lewis Hamilton (GB) Ferrari 54
6 Oscar Piastri (Aus) McLaren 48
7 Max Verstappen (Neth) Red Bull 28
8 Oliver Bearman (GB) Haas 17
9 Pierre Gasly (Fr) Alpine 16
10 Liam Lawson (NZ) Racing Bulls 10
I’ll be back from 8.30pm BST/3.30pm EDT to see how the Mercedes pair battle each other when not wheel to wheel …
Wolff continues, asked about Norris taking P2 off Mercedes because of the fight: “You can see how quickly it goes. You create a gap with two cars, you start to fight a bit and you can lose a race … If it’s the grand prix, Norris may well win.” At bottom, he is glad this happened in a sprint, with fewer points at stake, and wants to use it to lay down some rules of engagement.
Wolff speaks. “It was great cinema. I really enjoyed these moments … we can say how will we handle these moments in future.”
It comes down to a split second and to whether Russell could have done anything differently. As Brundle says, he couldn’t just disappear.
What will Mercedes be saying behind closed doors? How will Antonelli react? He had calmed down by the presentation, but what will he take into qualifying and how will we react in the race tomorrow?
Brundle says that had it been two teams then there would have been protests, but points out that Russell bounced on the kerb – how could he give more space to give the car’s width.
Bernie Collins asking why the race director did not look at Antonelli-Russell. It was a close call. The question is whether Antonelli was under control sufficiently to take the next corner within track limits.
Interesting to hear Russell push back at the notion that he really needed that. “I was never really concerned, to be honest. It’s just I know Miami is a bit of a bogey track for me and of course there’s been this huge break in the calendar, so lots of people with a lot of things to say. But ultimately I just wanted to get back racing and it feels like the season is going to restart now with, I think, six races in eight weeks.” Will he still feel so happy after qualifying? And what will he make of Radio Antonelli?
Jean Alesi, the 1997 winner here, does the presentations.
George Russell as they hold their prizes. Photograph: Bradley Collyer/PA
Norris says “It was good to watch them go at it for a while” of the Mercedes pair. “Today was a good result for us.”
Russell speaks. “It was a cool race, I was just talking to Lando, it was very difficult to get a gap around here. It felt quite easy to follow, the slipstream was quite powerful with the overtake mode.”
Antonelli says he got pushed off, but concedes he made a mistake after that. “I was quite well alongside, I got pushed off.”
That was a hell of a race, even if we never saw the lead truly change, whatever Antonelli may think. Russell had to grind that out. It was a good performance by Norris, too, though he got lucky that when he locked up Antonelli went straight on and had to give the place back.
Russell started on pole and stayed there but it was far from a stroll. Antonelli put him under pressure but lost his head and a place – and he is still sounding off. “We talk about this internally and not on the radio,” says Wolff.
Russell wins the sprint!
Here comes Russell! Ahead of Norris, Antonelli, Piastri, Leclerc, Hamilton.
Piastri takes Hamilton! Leclerc does too.
Antonelli passes! But off the track and has to give it back.
Lap 22. Russell hanging in there despite graining problems but Norris locked up.
The big overtake chance is Piastri on Hamilton. 0.2 between them.
Lap 21: Hamilton has touched a wall under pressure from Piastri.
10sec time penalty for Hülkenberg for gaining an advantage by leaving the track.
Russell seems to have pulled out a little. Up to 1sec. Perhaps we will be robbed of a grandstand finish.
Martin Brundle was arguing earlier that you might want to be second going into the final lap, the theory being that you can overtake and not be got back at. But what if there are three cars rather than two in the argument?
Hamilton-Piastri-Leclerc is as tight as Russell-Norris-Antonelli. Max Verstappen, meanwhile, started seventh, has stayed seventh, and is no threat and under no threat.
Sector times are such an oddity now: with variations in the use of the hybrid power across different parts of the circuit, it is very hard to make comparisons.
Russell struggling. Tyres not hot enough and some graining on his mediums. Antonelli putting in fastest laps in third, Norris doing well too. It is now really tight between the top three.
We’re approaching halfway of the 23-lap sprint. 1. Russell, 2. Norris, 3. Antonelli, 4. Hamilton, 5. Piastri, 6. Leclerc, 7. Verstappen, 8. Lindblad, 9. Colapinto, 10. Sainz
Norris less than a second behind Russell. The Antonelli on-board video suggests Russell was not at fault.
Correction! Hadjar back out. It will be valuable to pick up tips for tomorrow.
Hadjar is out, engine problems for the second Red Bull. A big shame for the first driver in a while to show he can at least use the Verstappen-focused Red Bull decently.
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K-pop androids and automated artists: welcome to South Korea’s strange and ambitious robot theme park | South Korea
Four child-sized humanoid robots take the stage at an arena in eastern Seoul, and as the opening beats of a song by K-pop star G-Dragon begin, they start to dance.
Arms swinging, legs stepping in sync, heads bobbing, wigs and baggy clothes swishing, until – mid-performance – one of them seemingly malfunctions and has to be removed from the stage.
Welcome to Galaxy Robot Park, a new 16,500 square metre facility in Gangdong district that its creators claim is the world’s first robot theme park.
Photograph: Galaxy Entertainment
It represents an ambitious – some might say audacious – vision of a future in which robots don’t just assist humans but entertain them, perform concerts across continents simultaneously, and even walk runways.
Behind the project is Galaxy Corporation, an entertainment company that positions itself as an “enter-tech” firm, blending entertainment with technology.
It manages megastar G-Dragon, as well as Taemin from the group Shinee and actor Song Kang-ho, known to western audiences for his role as the father in Parasite.
K-pop has long served as a testing ground for experimental tech, from SM Entertainment’s Aespa, which pairs real members with virtual avatars, to fully virtual boybands like Plave.
At the opening show, the robots execute their moves with surprising fluidity across a repertoire of different songs, including G-Dragon’s Home Sweet Home and Taemin’s Advice and Idea.
“We’re planning three to six K-pop concerts daily, over 1,000 shows annually,” Choi Yong-ho, Galaxy’s chief executive and self-styled “chief happiness officer”, tells reporters. “By the end of this year, We’re planning to take them on a world tour.”
Cha Woo-jin, a music critic and industry analyst, is wary of whether audiences will embrace the shows around the world, but sees the ambitious plan as both a cultural and economic experiment. “If you put a robot in an Elvis museum, fans would be repulsed,” he says. “But K-pop is a visual packaging model, so robots feel less alien.”
A robot tour, he says, would be like a cover dance crew – the groups that replicate routines of famous K-pop performers – but without hotel bills or per diems.
Beyond the arena, the park offers various robot experiences. Robot valets welcomed guests at the door. Others, including robotic dogs, roam around the outdoor areas playing with visitors.
A robotic arm with a face attachment draws my portrait, chatting with me while it works. The result is highly accurate, but I feel it make me looks older than I am.
Up the hill, there’s also a boxing ring where visitors can control humanoid fighters through a mirroring system, watching their movements replicated in real time as the machines battle each other.
At one point a punch makes a glove fly off into the crowd. One robot falls off the stage, but recuperates and gets back into action.
Galaxy also plans to stage what it calls the world’s first robot fashion show in late May, followed by the launch of a robot fashion label. Choi offers few details about how exactly robots will model clothing or what a robot fashion brand might entail.
The broader vision involves deploying K-pop performing robots to places where human stars cannot easily travel, including war zones. Once choreography is programmed into one robot, all robots worldwide can instantly learn and perform it, enabling concurrent shows across multiple countries.
The real question for music critic Cha, is whether robots can replicate K-pop’s essential ingredient: emotional connection with fans. “That will determine if this is a genuine cultural shift or just a novelty show.”
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