Month: March 2025

Carlos Boozer Urges Suns To Keep 2 Stars Together

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The Phoenix Suns have been showing signs of life lately and have won four games in a row.

They are still the 10th seed in the Western Conference and have their work cut out for them but they look better than they have in a long time.

This has some people questioning what their plans should be in the offseason.

Speaking on ESPN, Carlos Boozer said the Suns should try to keep Kevin Durant and Devin Booker together this summer, despite previous reports that they would trade Durant.

He said it would be in the team’s “best interest,” even if the Suns don’t go far in the playoffs this year.

Durant has proven that he is still a supremely talented basketball player, Boozer said.

Pairing him with Booker was the right idea when Phoenix pursued him a few years ago, but things just haven’t worked out as expected.

But that doesn’t mean it is time to cut ties with Durant and move in a different direction.

Many reports have stated that the Suns will try to ship Durant to another team, and they hope to get a big return in exchange for him.

This is mostly because the team is so strapped for cash and doesn’t have a lot of leverage or flexibility when it comes to most of their contracts.

For example, they want to keep Booker and build the team around him, and they cannot move Bradley Beal due to his no-trade clause.

That leaves them with few options outside of Durant, who could be part of a monster trade.

But this four-game winning streak might be changing some minds, and it could affect what the Suns do.

However, perhaps it is too late, and there is no avoiding a Durant trade in the summer.

 



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Red Bull set to replace Lawson with Tsunoda

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Red Bull is set to make a driver change after just two races of the new Formula 1 season, with Yuki Tsunoda and Liam Lawson swapping seats, RACER understands.

Lawson’s seat with Red Bull was called into question during the Chinese Grand Prix weekend after he qualified last for both the Sprint and the main race itself, and failed to make significant progress in either event. As reported on Monday, Red Bull then discussed addressing the issue at the earliest possible opportunity and has opted to make an immediate change.

While official confirmation has yet to be provided from the team, RACER understands Tsunoda (pictured at right, above, with Lawson) was in the Red Bull simulator on Tuesday and plans to promote him to partner Max Verstappen ahead of his home race at Suzuka next weekend. While feeling it needs to make a change quickly, Red Bull is set to keep Lawson on the grid with a return to Racing Bulls, with the New Zealander having driven for the team at the end of last season.

Speculation that Franco Colapinto could be in the mix for a Racing Bulls seat amid the movement is understood to be wide of the mark. However, the Argentine — who is currently on loan to Alpine from Williams — is believed to be a driver on the radar should further options be explored later in the year.

Tsunoda’s expected promotion comes after he reached Q3 in all three qualifying sessions so far this season, securing fifth on the grid in Australia and then finishing sixth in the Sprint in China. The 24-year-old has just entered his fifth season in Formula 1 with Red Bull’s junior team, having made 89 starts and taken a best finish of fourth in Abu Dhabi in his rookie season.

The decision to swap drivers after just two races is the earliest Red Bull has ever made such a move, having previously waited four races into the 2014 season before it replaced Daniil Kvyat with Verstappen. On that occasion, Verstappen went on to win in his debut for Red Bull at the Spanish Grand Prix.

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The RACER Mailbag, March 26

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Welcome to the RACER Mailbag. Questions for any of RACER’s writers can be sent to [email protected]. We love hearing your comments and opinions, but letters that include a question are more likely to be published. Questions received after 3pm ET each Monday will be saved for the following week. 

Q: Don’t want NASCAR. Just want competence. FOX failed us. Too much to ask for IndyCar, apparently.

Richard Dulany

MARSHALL PRUETT: A first-time problem with a blown circuit breaker, one that took 21 minutes of racing away, is being treated like the biggest failure imaginable by some who I can only assume live in a world of perfection where they never make mistakes or are subject to misfortune. It happened. It was bad. But nobody died. This wasn’t a hospital that lost power and went dark in the middle of a surgery. We didn’t get to see 21 minutes of a damn boring stretch of the race. If anything, the timing of the problem made the race better since some of the nothingness wasn’t aired. Pato led, and kept leading.

If it happens again this year, yes, there will be some serious questions to raise about competence, and one or more people will probably be relieved from their jobs. For now, let’s get back to real life and call the Thermal dropout what it was: an aberration.

Q: Darn it FOX! You screwed up a really good racing event with your technical problems. Maybe I’m in the minority, but I like the Thermal track, though it could use some safety barriers in certain areas of the track, and some grandstands. It could use some other support races like the Trans Am Series and International GT Series. Alex Palou is on a different level and I was hoping for a historical moment with Pato O’Ward and Christian Lungaard having aa historic Arrow McLaren 1-2. But Palou reminded me of Alex Zanardi when he dominated the series from 1997-98. I’m wondering if he’ll end up in F1, especially if Liam Lawson struggles with Red Bull Racing?

Alistair

MP: Alex certainly deserves a look from F1 teams, but it’s hard to make the argument that the perfect fit to replace a young driver with a decent amount of F1 experience who’s struggling is with a young driver with far less F1 experience. And pitting him against the best driver in F1 who’s crushed every teammate he’s had, barring Daniel Ricciardo, who killed his own career by leaving for Renault.

Palou is amazingly talented, and would be a steadier operator, but the team wants instant speed and effectiveness, which wouldn’t be something Alex should be expected to summon. Given two guaranteed years? Yes. In this situation? Stay the hell away.

Oh, he’s also under contract to Chip Ganassi Racing, which has sold all of its sponsors for the 10 car on Alex being its driver. So there’s that minor obstacle.

If anything, Zanardi’s 1999 season stands as a cautionary tale against trying to turn IndyCar/CART dominance into instant F1 success. Getty Images.

Q: Not sure if this was a FOX coverage thing or what. I noticed during Sunday’s race at Thermal that the track edge kept changing from light blue to red? Just curious as to what I was seeing. Thanks for any insight!

Hisham Bate, Indy

MP: The curb is painted different colors in different areas.

Q: I know you are going to get a ton of letters regarding the FOX broadcast. I get that technical issues can happen, resulting in the broadcast feed getting lost. However, FOX switched to the NASCAR broadcast from Homestead, but the ticker at the bottom stated the NASCAR race was at Martinsville. Oops.

That just leads me to the point that FOX still has work to do on its graphics. When Palou caught O’Ward with 10 to go, the broadcast tags/flags showed Pato in first and Palou (right on his bumper) in third. FOX tried it again, but again Palou was listed as third. Those positions listed on the flag graphics disappeared. I can see they have not done anything about covering up the sponsor logos on the cockpit hoop for the in-car feeds. Sponsors are going to be pissed, and it puts the team owners in a really bad spot.

Social media was busy Saturday with the broadcast graphics mistakes. McLaughlin in the No. 3 had Sting Ray’s cartoon face, among other issues. I’m not trying to pick on FOX, but these are broadcast basics in the year 2025. Once, can be forgiven, but not two races in a row. The technology and knowledge is there. Heck, they’ve broadcast NASCAR for years and years. It’s not a good look.

On the positive side, the warmup show is great and needs to continue.

John Balestrieri, Waukesha, WI

MP: Definite grace period given during and after the first race with the graphics, and the widespread issues in simply delivering the graphics to the international audience. But it was clear that three weeks wasn’t enough time to get the majority of the problems solved, and in fact, some new ones emerged (Sting Ray McLaughlin was amazing).

Where the blown circuit breaker was a fluke thing that didn’t warrant the hysteria that followed, there’s some serious quality control issues for FOX to address with its graphics and presentation. I heard from international fans on Friday and Saturday who were blown away by the 10 steps back FOX took from St. Pete to Thermal, with wrong feeds being shown, missing graphics, and mismatched audio — the booth talking about one thing and the footage of something entirely different being displayed.

Most of that was cleaned up by the race, I’m told, but the shocker here is this isn’t a case of FOX taking its first crack at broadcasting a brand-new sport. This is the same network that airs NASCAR, the NHRA, and has had F1, American sports cars, and Le Mans as staples within the last decade. Why, exactly, it’s now missing so many of the basics on the domestic and international IndyCar feeds is a head-scratcher, for sure.

This has nothing to do with lacking passion or excitement or talent. This is, as former IndyCar president (and college football player) Jay Frye likes to say, failing to execute the simple stuff like blocking and tackling.

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‘Puzzled’ Sainz looking for answers for performance swing

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Carlos Sainz says he has been left puzzled by one of the biggest swings in performance of his career from the start of his time at Williams to the Chinese Grand Prix.

Williams has enjoyed a strong start to 2025, with Alex Albon scoring a fifth and a seventh in the opening two rounds, helping the team match its 2024 points total already. Sainz, however, was unable to match his teammate in Shanghai, and despite being promoted to 10th by post-race disqualifications he says he has no idea of where his performance has gone after being so comfortable during pre-season.

“We got it right with the strategy, unfortunately with the pace of the car, we were just not there,” Sainz said. “Struggling a lot with the front tires, again. A lot of fuel saving during the whole race, which obviously were not helping the fronts, and we just didn’t seem to have the pace.

“A bit puzzled, to be honest. Not happy, because ever since I jumped in this car, I’ve been very quick in testing, but I don’t know where all that pace has gone for this weekend. At least we have now a good ten days to analyze what went wrong and put together a plan to come back stronger in Japan.”

Sainz says he felt he had the pace to be on terms with Albon and get close to the car’s potential ever since he moved to Williams, but since crashing out early of the opening race he has struggled.

“It is one of the strangest swings of performance that I’ve had in my career, going from naturally and super-quick in Bahrain and Abu Dhabi, even at the beginning of Australia, and then suddenly the pace just seemed to fall away from me.

“We did a lot of setup changes that on my side of the garage, followed really what Alex did, [both cars] were pretty similar. On his side, it seemed to respond well to a front graining, and he was a lot stronger. On my side, it didn’t seem to help much, and I stayed struggling with the graining.”

Despite reports in Spain that Sainz was running an older specification of chassis compared to Albon, RACER understands both drivers have the latest monocoque from Williams, with the team having modified last year’s design for this season.

As a result, Williams also has a spare chassis, unlike this time last season, and so Sainz will have the option to use a different chassis to the one he raced in Shanghai at the next round in Suzuka should he wish.

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Jason Kidd Reveals His Thoughts On Anthony Davis’ Return

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After weeks away with an injury, Anthony Davis was back with the Dallas Mavericks on Monday night.

Fans were thrilled to see Davis back and he helped the team win with his performance of 12 points and six rebounds.

He isn’t yet at 100 percent, but he is clearly headed in the right direction.

However, some people are concerned that Davis pushed himself too hard to return to the court.

Speaking to the press, head coach Jason Kidd talked about that following his team’s 120-101 victory.

“I think you have to commend him for working to get back because this is his job. He feels responsible to get back to work… He gets paid to play. I know you think this is a joke, but his character of working to get back with 12 games left shows how much he cares,” Kidd said, per Erik Slater.

When Davis went down with his latest injury, it came at a very perilous time for the Mavericks.

It was just days after the Luka Doncic trade that changed everything, and fans weren’t sure what the road ahead looked like.

Following Davis’ departure, multiple other players in Dallas also got hurt and things went from bad to worse for the Mavericks.

When Kyrie Irving was ruled out for the rest of the season, a lot of people said the team should stop trying and just look ahead to 2025-26.

Fans pleaded with the front office to shut Davis down and let him heal for the rest of the summer, with no return date in mind.

Instead, Davis continued to rehab and is coming back to the team as they fight and claw their way into Play-In contention.

According to Kidd, Davis isn’t rushing back but simply wants to compete with the Mavericks and help them achieve all they can.

He is a true team player, and this is proof of that, according to Kidd.

 



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Scott Speed reflects on F1’s U.S. boom without U.S. drivers

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Formula 1’s increased push for relevance and popularity in the United States has been steady with Colorado-based Liberty Media as the sport’s commercial rights holder. We have three races in the country, a U.S.-flagged team — with a second on the way in the form of Cadillac — and thanks to Netflix, there’s a general increased awareness in the mainstream, too.

Despite all of that, a sustained American driver presence remains elusive. Logan Sargeant managed one full season before being let go just after the halfway point of last year. Before him Alexander Rossi made a five-race cameo at the end of 2015, and there was a similarly long gap before Rossi, too, with Scott Speed racing for a season and a half with Red Bull’s Toro Rosso team in 2006 and ’07.

“I love that so many more people here know what it is,” Speed tells RACER. “When I did it, it was so unknown. When I came back to America, after racing F1, to NASCAR, no one really knew. It was actually really nice, because I like the anonymity of just kind of getting to start over. But no one knew who I was.”

Having made it to F1 and NASCAR’s top ranks, Speed knows all too well how difficult it can be to make it to the top and stay there. Nowadays, alongside fellow Red Bull NASCAR alum Josh Wise, Speed runs a performance consultancy business helping prepare the next generation of professional racers. While F1 is bigger than ever in the U.S., there remains a preferred route for young drivers in the country — one that doesn’t require laying down millions of dollars.

Up-and-coming talents like Connor Zilisch would naturally get fast-tracked to F1 in most countries, but in the USA the pull of NASCAR is hard to resist. Meg Oliphant/Getty Images

“I think the reality of the situation is, if you’re a young kid, 14 or 15 years old, and you’re coming out of go-karts and you want to make a career in motor racing, your best chance of doing that is to go stock car racing America,” says Speed. “We’ve done this now with kids like Connor Zilisch, and the path is well established. Basically, if you have some talent, and you have the drive to do it, you don’t need tens of millions of dollars to make it in NASCAR.”

Nevertheless, Speed insists it’s not impossible for an American to be successful in F1 if that’s what a youngster wants to do, but the established NASCAR route is hard to turn down.

“I’m a big believer that anything you want to do, you can do — and if you really wanted to make it to Formula 1, you’re going to find a way,” he insists. “I really believe in that. I hate when people say that something’s not possible, especially coming from my situation where I made it there with literally zero U.S. dollars put into my racing career.

“So, I know you can. If you really want something bad enough, you can make that happen. It’s just a lot easier to go the stock car route. Stock car racing is still bigger than Formula 1 here, so I think that’s a big driver. The barrier to entry is so high, and here in America, [F1] still doesn’t carry the same weight as stock car racing does.”

With Cadillac on the way next year, a lot of talk has centered around the team employing an American driver. IndyCar driver Colton Herta has been a long-time favorite for a seat with the team, but Speed is curious to see if a proper talent pipeline could develop in the long term — and it’s something he’d be keen to be involved with, too.

“I think it’s something that I’m very curious about myself, and hopefully down the road, I’ll be able to have some involvement and learn more about what that process could look like,” he says. “But at the moment, my primary work is taking kids and grooming them for stock car racing. Hopefully in the future I’ll know more about what that process looks like, and we’ll be able to help bring some along on that path. That’d be a really fun project.”

Speed crossed the Atlantic after forging a relationship with Red Bull and emerging from its American driver search program in the 2000s, and he suggests a similar initiative could increase the country’s on-track representation in European open-wheel racing and F1.

“I think that a lot of it’s about connecting relationships and having something like the Red Bull driver search program that we had, something to help support kids on that path over there. And I think there’s a lot of opportunity there to do it, I just haven’t got my hands on it yet.”

One major difference between Speed’s time and today is the emergence of off-track things like social media and Netflix’s “Drive To Survive” docuseries. They’ve undeniably elevated F1, but Speed admits he’s relieved it’s not something he had to deal with.

“Oh, man, I am unbelievably grateful that I grew up in an era of F1 without social media,” he says. “I value my privacy so much. It’s an unbelievably huge challenge for these guys that I think, goes unappreciated. It’s a real challenge having so many people having access to you, and the lack of privacy that comes with that, and the openness and dealing with the judgment on social media.

“There’s a lot of different challenges that guys face now that we just didn’t have to, so, yeah, I’m glad that I didn’t have to do that.”

Speed achieved a lifetime ambition by racing for Scuderia Toro Rosso in F1, although it didn’t earn him much fame back home. Gareth Bumstead/Getty Images

While there’s naturally there’s a lot of focus on getting an American driver into F1 again, the new Cadillac team opens the door for talents in other roles, too. Cadillac’s operation will be significantly based stateside, away from the traditional “Motorsport Valley” in the UK that plays host to nine of the other 10 teams, either in full or in part.

With him and Wise working out of the GM Charlotte Technical Center, Speed has had an early peek at the new team’s development. He’s impressed with what he’s seen so far and doesn’t think the decision to base the team away from F1’s conventional talent pool will be a downside, especially with F1’s revitalized business model.

“It’s going to be difficult,” he admits. “It’s no different than NASCAR here in America. All the NASCAR teams are based here in Mooresville or Concord, North Carolina, and so, when you do that, you get this environment where a lot of industry folks are in the area, and that cultivates talent and gets a lot of things done. It’s more difficult to do that outside of that area.

“That being said. Ferrari’s done pretty good in Italy on its own, so it’s not an insurmountable task for one team. It’s not going to be an easy task, for sure, but we’ll see.

“It’s really, really exciting,” Speed adds. “It’s cool to see how that’s all been progressing and that level of involvement. It’s kind of a no brainer, I think, now that Formula 1 has the budget cap, and it’s an unbelievable business model now too. So it’s creating opportunities for teams to come in.

“The series seems unbelievably healthy, so it’s really cool that an American team is now going to go in there. And I think that’s going to be massively important for the sport here in America too.”

Since his F1 adventure, Speed went on to compete in NASCAR — where he contested 163 races across NASCAR’s three national series — rallycross where he won three X Games gold medals and four championship titles, and even Formula E, where he took a podium on his debut in Miami 10 years ago. While his F1 stint ranks highly, he’s also grateful for his opportunities to sample other disciplines.

“I think that the ability to experience different racing cultures, whether that’s NASCAR — which is for me, the most competitive racing series in America, easily — or rallycross, or even drag racing, I love experiencing and understanding different motor racing cultures these days,” he says.

Speed got a chance to sample some more of that variety when he took part in Red Bull’s recent Showrun in Curitiba, Brazil, where he got behind the wheel of an RB-liveried 2011 Red Bull RB7.

“The unique thing about the Showrun in Brazil is the Brazilian motor racing fans are unbelievably passionate. And I kind of forgot what that felt like,” he says. “100,000 people came out to watch cars drive around the road. That’s pretty special.”

Speed got re-acquainted with F1 — and F1 fandom — at the Red Bull Racing Showrun in Curitiba. Bruno Terena/Red Bull Content Pool

The event marked the first time Speed had been in a grand prix car since the 2007 European Grand Prix at the Nurburgring.

“It brought back a lot of memories,” he says with a smile. “Obviously a Formula 1 car is a lot different to a stock car and a rallycross car, and so it was kind of cool to remember how different that felt in every way. Not just like physically being in the car, but also just being in that environment. I felt just an overwhelming sense of gratitude for such an amazing career and being so lucky to be able to experience all these different racing cultures.”

It might’ve been nearly 20 years, but getting back in the saddle was a familiar experience for the Californian.

“A Formula 1 car is more of a scalpel and stock cars and rallycross cars are more like chainsaws,” he says. “The way it feels inside, and how much movement you have and how tight things are is just a lot different.

“I got to do a test beforehand to get a feel for the car again, to get used to the controls, accelerating and braking. I think, honestly, if it was the same car I drove or that, it wouldn’t have made much of a difference — it was the V8 still, the same type of controls, but very F1.”

The run brought about a reunion with one of his former Red Bull Junior Team sparring partners, as well.

“The cool thing is Patrick Friesacher was also there. I’ve known Patrick since my very first day at Red Bull,” he says. “Patrick was like the number one or two Red Bull Racing drivers in the junior program, so it was cool to have him. And he’s done so many Showruns. He’s really great at it, so it was really cool to catch up with him and also to have someone to help speed up the learning process for me.”

There was one funny memory it also brought back, one that not many would think all that striking.

“It was funny to be buckled in again,” he admits. “In my whole career, getting into race cars, it was being buckled by someone. And then when I went to stock car racing, I remember my very first race, I got in my car at Talladega and I was waiting for the guys to buckle me in, and they were looking at me like, ‘Hey, are you gonna buckle?’ like, ‘What do you mean?’ I got my helmet on, I’m supposed to do this myself? So that was interesting.

“That one’s part of a big process, isn’t it? It is the last moments before you’re going out to perform, so it’s very much part of your process. Whether you’re sitting there and someone’s buckling you in, or you’re or you’re actually buckling yourself in, those are, like, the last things you’re doing before you go. So it kind of becomes this automatic routine, to sort of let your body know it’s about ready to go.”

Back in an F1 car two decades on from his debut for Red Bull at the 2005 Canadian Grand Prix, making it to F1 in the first place remains Speed’s proudest achievement, and F1’s increased popularity at home only solidifies it.

“Ever since the Netflix show, so many more people know about it. That’s cool for me, because at the end of the day, that’s always going to be my greatest accomplishment in motor racing,” he says. “I went over to Europe as an American, I won championships and I outright raced my way into a Formula 1 team against the best Red Bull Junior drivers in the world.

“That always, for me, will be the peak of my motor racing career by a landslide, so it is cool that people here in my country are starting to grasp what that meant, how cool and how big Formula 1 is. That feels good, like there’s some relatability there now with people.”

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There Is A New Betting Favorite To Win DPOY

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When Victor Wembanyama suffered a season-ending injury, it didn’t just change things for the San Antonio Spurs, it changed things for everyone.

The race for Defensive Player of the Year became wide open when Wembanyama was hurt and there is now a new frontrunner, according to Polymarket Sports.

Legion Hoops is reporting that Draymond Green of the Golden State Warriors has surpassed Evan Mobley of the Cleveland Cavaliers.

Those two are followed by Dyson Daniels and Jaren Jackson Jr.

With just a few weeks to go, the competition for this coveted prize is heating up.

Green holds 52.4 percent, followed by Mobley with 41.7 percent.

That means he has a pretty sizable advantage over his nearest competitor.

He has been putting up some of his strongest numbers in years, averaging 9.2 points, 6.2 rebounds, and 5.7 assists.

But it’s not just the stats that have been impressive.

Green has been playing with a level of intensity and on-court knowledge that is hard to overcome.

Everyone knows he has a natural talent for getting under the skin of his competitors, but Green has taken it to a whole other level this year.

He is still one of the brashest trash-talkers in the NBA, and he is also posting 1.1 blocks per game.

That means he isn’t just upsetting people, he’s literally stopping them.

The Warriors have been on a roll lately.

After being counted out by many, they are once again back in the hunt for a playoff spot and are feared by their Western Conference competition.

Green has been as aggressive as ever this year, but he’s also been smarter and more selective about his choices, which clearly helps his team.

He was named Defensive Player of the Year in 2017 and has publicly said he’d like to win it again.

Will this be the year?

 



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Jimmy Butler Gets Honest About His Reputation In Miami

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Miami Heat fans used to cherish Jimmy Butler and loved to see him every time he was on the court.

That definitely isn’t true now and he’s one of the biggest enemies the team has.

But Butler is comfortable with how he is viewed by the Heat and, based on a new statement, doesn’t seem bothered by their perception of him.

“They know what they’re doing. You got to paint somebody to be the bad guy. I’ll take being a bad guy. Makes no difference. I’m here now. I’m competing at a high level and I’m helping the Golden State Warriors win. They want me here. Hell, I’m cool with being a bad guy over there,” Butler said, per NBACentral.

Throughout the breakdown of his relationship with the Heat, there were numerous stories about how he was treating the team and how much he wanted to leave.

None of those sat right with fans and a sour view of him began to grow.

By the time he left the Heat, a lot of people who love the team wanted nothing to do with Butler.

There were also many analysts and writers saying that he had done irreparable damage to his image and future.

But since coming to the Golden State Warriors, Butler has looked far more engaged and much happier on the court.

He said he had lost his joy while playing for the Heat, but it seems to be back now.

Still, the Heat will not forget what Butler did and he is sure to hear a lot of loud boos every time he competes against them.

But that won’t get under Butler’s skin, and he will continue to be happy about where he is now.

 



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Red Bull seriously considering immediate Lawson change

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Red Bull is seriously considering making an immediate change to its driver line-up following the struggles experienced by Liam Lawson in the opening two races of the season.

Lawson replaced Sergio Perez over the winter after the Mexican’s performances were deemed unsatisfactory, with Perez scoring just nine points in the final eight races of 2024. That came against the backdrop of Max Verstappen wrapping up a fourth drivers’ championship and scoring 134 points across that same eight-race period, and it was the New Zealander that Red Bull turned to after being impressed with his approach for Racing Bulls over the final six rounds.

Although the Red Bull has not been a race-winning car in the opening two races, Verstappen has still managed to pick up 36 points while Lawson crashed out in Australia and was classified 12th after disqualifications in China – the latter a weekend where he qualified last in both Sprint and grand prix qualifying.

Melbourne and Shanghai marked the first time Lawson has driven on either of the two circuits, but he admits he doesn’t believe he will be given time to try and get used to the 2025 Red Bull.

“To be honest, we were even more competitive in [Saturday’s] Sprint — we were able to overtake cars and move forward,” Lawson said. “It’s just we tried something with setup to learn something [on Sunday], it was quite a big step, and unfortunately, it just didn’t work.

“So, a lot to learn from this weekend. A lot for me, personally, to get on top of as well. It’s just been extremely tough.

“I’d love to say I just need more time driving the car, but, obviously, we don’t really have that. So, fortunately, we go to a track that I know, and it’s a track that I like, but I’ll be spending this week very heavily going into absolutely everything to try and obviously do a better job.”

Lawson finished the Chinese Grand Prix over a minute behind Verstappen, who finished fourth, representing a pace deficit of more than a second per lap over the 56-lap race. Although he has raced at Suzuka in both Formula 1 and Super Formula, RACER understands Red Bull will now discuss whether to address the situation before the next race in Japan. Should there be a change made, the most likely outcome is expected to be a promotion for Yuki Tsunoda, with Lawson returning to Racing Bulls.

While Lawson’s future is being considered, a driver swap is not a certainty. Red Bull faced a similar situation last summer when it appeared poised to drop Perez mid-season but surprised many by opting to stick with an unchanged line-up after the summer break.

Amid the growing reports about Red Bull’s current situation, team principal Christian Horner refused to commit to Lawson for the next round in Suzuka, when pushed on the topic following Sunday’s race in Shanghai.

“Look, I think everything is purely speculative at the moment,” Horner is quoted as saying by ESPN when asked if Lawson would still be driving for the team in Japan. “We’ve just finished this race. We’re going to take away the info and have a good look at it.

“I think Liam still has potential – we’re just not realizing that at the moment. I think the problem for him is, you know, he’s had a couple of really tough weekends. He’s got all the media on his back.

“The pressure just naturally grows in this business, and I feel very sorry for him that he’s … you can see it’s very tough on him at the moment.”

Horner also told Sky Sports that Red Bull was thinking of Verstappen’s chances in the drivers’ championship when considering the future of its second car.

“There’s performance that we need to find and we need both drivers up there if there’s to be any chance of fighting for the constructors’ championship. For the drivers’ championship as well, you need to have a second car in play, you can’t just do it one legged.

“Formula 1 is a pressure business, there’s always time pressure, and Liam knows that. Hopefully he’ll respond accordingly and we’ll see where we go.”

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Top to bottom: Ferrari’s 24-hour pendulum swing in China

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Faltering Ferrari facing fresh fallout

There were so many opportunities for alliteration relating to Ferrari’s weekend at the Chinese Grand Prix, but some of them would have landed me in hot water with the FIA given the swearing guidelines that are currently in place.

Still, what a difference 24 hours can make.

Lewis Hamilton’s pole position for the Sprint — and subsequent win — appeared to put the disappointment of Australia into the rear-view mirror for Ferrari, after the team struggled with setup and strategic calls during a challenging opening weekend.

The presence of Hamilton, who it must be said was remarkably restrained after such a messy start, has only served to increase the scrutiny on a team that already faced more intense analysis than most. It has been mentioned many times that one of Fred Vasseur’s biggest strengths has been his ability to block out the noise surrounding Ferrari and stop the team overreacting to either good or bad situations, keeping the Scuderia on a much more even keel. Well, the Ferrari team principal is going to need to lean on all of that and more after Sunday in Shanghai.

Qualifying on Saturday afternoon was a little disappointing after the pace shown in the previous two competitive sessions, but if Ferrari had retained the strong race performance from the Sprint then it would be in position to fight for a podium at least in the grand prix. With Hamilton passing Max Verstappen for fourth at Turn 1, and Charles Leclerc following him through, it all looked so good.

The Chinese GP looked promising for Ferrari off the line, but soon went from bad to worse. Kym Illman/Getty Images

Even the contact between the two drivers that broke Leclerc’s front wing endplate did not appear to be a problem, as Hamilton avoided a puncture and Leclerc still displayed strong pace with a front wing that structurally was remaining intact.

Teams are allowed to replace obviously damaged parts for post-race weight checks, and Ferrari was able to fit a replacement front wing that the FIA stated was 0.2kg heavier than the one that had raced, yet that still wasn’t enough to avoid later controversy.

After Hamilton’s win on Saturday, the mood surrounding Ferrari had been much more buoyant. It looked like it had quickly bounced back from Melbourne and found a direction with its new car, one that would help Hamilton produce strong performances to rival Leclerc.

Yet there appeared to still be plenty to work on even during the race, as multiple radio messages were played out that suggested the two drivers were not totally satisfied with the information they were receiving. If anything, it was Leclerc who appeared the more frustrated, stating he was being given repetitive feedback and retaining the hint of sarcasm that was on display in Australia.

The race was soon slipping away from Ferrari after that strong start. It couldn’t quite put pressure on George Russell ahead, and Hamilton was struggling compared to the Sprint, telling the team he was willing for it to try something different as Leclerc shadowed him closely, and eventually letting his teammate through at Turn 1.

Leclerc’s initial burst of pace once clear of Hamilton soon faded away, and both were powerless to resist Verstappen’s recovery after an anonymous first stint for the Red Bull driver. Hamilton’s two-stop was a gamble worth taking as it ultimately cost him nothing, and the Ferrari was ultimately the fourth-fastest car on the day.

Yet even the disappointment of not having an answer to McLaren, Russell or Verstappen wasn’t going to prove to be enough misery for the Scuderia, as it found two different ways of tripping itself up even further.

In reality, one of those ways had been found prior to the race, with setup to blame for Hamilton’s rearward skid block wearing below the minimum allowed 9mm. A Sprint weekend does put more pressure on teams to get a setup right within smaller windows, but the current format allows lessons to be learned from the race situation on Saturday and changes made as parc ferme re-opens ahead of qualifying.

That wasn’t the case in 2023, when both Hamilton — then at Mercedes — and Leclerc were excluded from the United States Grand Prix, again for plank wear. And when a team has gone through that situation once, it really should have put steps in place to avoid a repeat.

One-stopping Leclerc may have opened the door to his DQ. Ferrari photo

For Leclerc, there are multiple potential reasons why his car was underweight, but much like Russell at Spa-Francorchamps last year, an unexpected one-stop strategy could play a role. Multiple cars pulled off such a strategy, and Leclerc was not alone in being underweight, with Pierre Gasly also disqualified.

Gasly ran the longest stint of anybody to the end of the race with 46 laps on his hard tires, while Leclerc stopped five laps later so had 41 on his. Yet none of the rest of the top five had any weight issues, despite Verstappen, Russell and Oscar Piastri running more laps than Leclerc, and Lando Norris the same number.

Russell’s situation provided all of the teams with a clear warning of a potential side effect of such a strategy. One that has been performing as well as Ferrari in recent years should really have heeded that incident and learned from it, but instead it leaves Shanghai with a double disqualification and stays behind Williams in the constructors’ championship.

“Charles was on a one-stop strategy today and this meant his tire wear was very high, causing the car to be underweight,” a team statement admitted. “With regard to Lewis’ skid wear, we misjudged the consumption by a small margin. There was no intention to gain any advantage.

“We will learn from what happened today and make sure we don’t make the same mistakes again. Clearly it’s not the way we wanted to end our Chinese GP weekend, neither for ourselves, nor for our fans whose support for us is unwavering.”

Early days they might be, but Ferrari has now had multiple different issues over the opening two rounds and they are proving extremely costly. Giving McLaren a 61-point head start in the constructors’ championship, and two fewer races to claw it back across, is not the ideal way to kick-off a season if you want to win titles.

Hamilton was quick — and right — to call out critics for being too quick to judge Ferrari after just one race weekend, using the backdrop of his win in the Sprint to point out it should also not get carried away by one good result. But the opening two rounds have been more reminiscent of the Ferrari prior to Vasseur’s arrival, and the team seems to be getting in its own way a little.

“I don’t feel the pressure,” Hamilton said on Saturday. “I know the Tifosi, I know the fans, I know the team wants to win, and I know it means everything to them. But Rome wasn’t built in one day — one step at a time. We’re not going to get ahead of ourselves. We cannot.

“We’ve got to continue to push, we’ve got to be diligent and just remain focused, stay calm. Most importantly stay calm because these moments get us all excited … It’s a long, long way. It’s a marathon not a sprint, so we’ve just got to take our time.”

But the likes of McLaren, Mercedes and Red Bull will not give the team time to get things right. And Ferrari was meant to be set up to win this year, with even Leclerc admitting during pre-season testing that he felt Hamilton had arrived at the right point in the team’s journey.

The positive momentum from Hamilton’s arrival appears to have disappeared already, and the Sprint win was certainly overshadowed come Sunday evening in China. Vasseur will have been ready for such scrutiny this season, but probably didn’t foresee Ferrari making life so hard for itself.

I wrote on Friday that Hamilton had flipped the script as Ferrari enjoyed a more positive outlook, but the team’s errors flipped it back on Sunday. Over the next few weeks, Vasseur needs to make sure everyone is on the same page.

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