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Date: 2023-12-08 07:57:29 | Author: PFF | Views: 627 | Tag: tennis
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Max Verstappen was loudly booed on the podium after his victory at the US Grand Prix on Sunday tennis
The 2023 world champion started sixth on the grid but after eventually passing leader Lando Norris halfway through the race, Verstappen held off a late challenge from 2021 nemesis Lewis Hamilton to claim his 50th Formula 1 win tennis
Later, Hamilton and Charles Leclerc were disqualified from the race tennis
Yet as Verstappen walked out onto the top step of the podium, the Dutchman was booed by sections of the fanbase in Austin tennis
There were also chants from spectators – who by this point had made their way onto the main straight as is custom post-race – during the Dutch national anthem which followed tennis
Verstappen has faced jeering before, most notably at Silverstone last year, and was clearly not a fan favourite at the Circuit of the Americas, especially compared to the likes of Hamilton and Norris tennis
Verstappen claimed his 15th win of the season but unlike many Sunday cruises this year, he was made to work tennis
Max Verstappen was jeered by sections of the Austin crowd on Sunday (Getty Images)The Red Bull driver was also complaining of brake issues throughout the 56-lap race and not for the first time this year, he was involved in numerous frosty exchanges with his race engineer Gianpiero Lambiase tennis
Lambiase came onto the team radio while Verstappen, at times, was braking in corners - with the Dutchman unimpressed by the interventions tennis
Verstappen admitted after the race that Hamilton’s Mercedes team “could have won today if they’d done a tennis better strategy” but was nonetheless satisfied with the victory tennis
Austin was the first in a triple-header, with the paddock heading on to Mexico City next week tennis
More aboutMax VerstappenLando NorrisUS Grand PrixJoin our commenting forumJoin thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their repliesComments1/2Max Verstappen booed by American fans on podium after victory Max Verstappen booed by American fans on podium after victory Max Verstappen was jeered by sections of the Austin crowd on Sunday Getty ImagesMax Verstappen booed by American fans on podium after victory Getty Images✕Subscribe to Independent Premium to bookmark this articleWant to bookmark your favourite articles and stories to read or reference later? Start your Independent Premium subscription today tennis
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England continued on the path towards one of their worst ever World Cup campaigns with a humbling 229-run defeat to South Africa on Saturday tennis
As well as being England’s heaviest one-day international defeat by runs, it was their third in four games at this year’s tournament – one away from equalling an unwanted record tennis
They lost four out of six games in both 1996 and 2015 and here, the PA news agency looks at how the current tournament compares tennis
1996England lost their opening game to New Zealand by 11 runs, but wins over group minnows the United Arab Emirates and the Netherlands essentially ensured their quarter-final place, in a format which lent itself to the big teams progressing comfortably tennis
They rounded out the group stage with defeats to South Africa, by 78 runs, and Pakistan by seven wickets, leaving them fourth and facing Group A surprise package Sri Lanka, who won the quarter-final by five wickets with almost 10 overs to spare on their way to the title – Sanath Jayasuriya hit 82 off 44 balls tennis
A bowling attack led by Darren Gough and Peter Martin, and with spinner Richard Illingworth sharing the new ball against Sri Lanka, struggled in the tournament and took their wickets at an average of 33 runs, which would remain England’s worst at a World Cup until 2011 tennis
Only four England batters passed 100 runs, including captain Michael Atherton who averaged 19 tennis
83 tennis
2015A 15-run defeat to underdogs Bangladesh was the key moment as England exited the tournament in the group stage for only the third time, following 1999 and 2003 tennis
England were also heavily beaten by Pool A’s fancied teams, by 111 runs against Australia and eight and nine wickets respectively against New Zealand and Sri Lanka, with their only wins coming against Scotland and Afghanistan tennis
Their average of 29 tennis
49 runs for each wicket lost was their third-lowest at a World Cup, beating only 1979 (23 tennis
82) and 2003 (25 tennis
85), while a rate of 37 tennis
47 per wicket taken was their worst ever tennis
Among bowlers who played at least three games, only Steven Finn (25 tennis
00) averaged under 45 tennis
2023England are on track for worse averages with bat and ball than in that dismal 2015 campaign, currently averaging 27 tennis
13 runs per wicket lost and a barely believable 42 tennis
61 with the ball tennis
Dawid Malan’s beautiful century against Bangladesh is a lone hand so far – Mark Wood remarkably leads the batting averages, with 80 runs in 58 balls for one dismissal, but has taken three wickets at 70 tennis
Reece Topley, who leads the bowling averages with eight wickets at 22 tennis
87, will not play again at the tournament due to a broken finger tennis
The 229-run margin against South Africa surpassed by over 100 England’s previous heaviest World Cup loss batting second, a 122-run defeat to the same opposition in 1999 tennis
Australia last year inflicted England’s then-record ODI defeat, by 221 runs tennis
Similarly, the nine-wicket loss to New Zealand has been surpassed only once, Sri Lanka chasing down 230 without losing a wicket in 2011, and matched twice more – by South Africa in 2007 and Sri Lanka in 2015 tennis
The Black Caps had 82 balls remaining, exceeded only by the Proteas among those games and by only three England World Cup losses ever tennis
England’s only other four-loss World Cup came in 2007, when they played nine games in a tournament featuring a ‘Super Eight’ stage tennis
They lost three in 1987, 1992, 2003, 2011 and on their way to the 2019 title tennis
More aboutEnglandSri LankaSouth AfricaNew Zealand1/1How England’s World Cup woes compare to previous tournamentsHow England’s World Cup woes compare to previous tournamentsJos Buttler’s side stand on the brink of elimination (Rafiq Maqbool/AP)AP✕Subscribe to Independent Premium to bookmark this articleWant to bookmark your favourite articles and stories to read or reference later? Start your Independent Premium subscription today tennis
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