Showing posts with label Formula 1. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Formula 1. Show all posts

Sunday, 18 May 2025

The Most Glamorous Sport?

 You Be the Judge
   Sports are not well covered in MM, so I will offer something short since you may be tired of reading about the Stanley Cup. The following headline was encountered the other day and I wonder what you might think the sport would be that is referred to:  "The Straight-Laced Control Freak Who Conquered the World’s Most Glamorous Sport".  A hint: it is not the one being played for the Stanley Cup. This particular headline was in the Wall Street Journal and it refers to FI - Formula One. Another headline raises the question about the "most glamorous sport" and suggests it is E1 which is electric boat racing: "The F1 of the Seas Returns! Prince Albert of Monaco Presents the Trophy to the Winners of the E1 World Championship (so is this the most glamorous sport in Europe?)" Although the latter headline appears in the Tattler, not the WSJ, I think the photo it presents favours E1 as the winner.



  If you would rather google on about this subject, than watch hockey, other suggestions for most glamorous sports are horse racing, figure skating, polo and even snow polo - "Where else would you see horses galloping on ice at altitude, while wealthy spectators glug Krug champagne?" Personally, based on the photo above, I will vote for Tom and the Prince who do look rather glamorous, don't you think?

The Bonus:
   F1 may be glamorous, but it is also popular:  "The average television audience for a Formula I race is around seventy million people – four times that of the typical N.F.L. game." That quotation is from, Sports News From Elsewhere in MM, where you will also find this one: “American Money Has Discovered Indian Cricket: Billion-dollar investment funds and N.F.L. ownership groups are among those angling for a foothold in the Indian Premier League." 

Tuesday, 8 November 2022

Sports News From Elsewhere

    I recently offered you "News From Elsewhere" which gathered stories you may have missed. Now you are presented with sport stats unrelated to the ones you watched this weekend. These activities are more exotic (with the exception of soccer) than the baseball, football and hockey you watched, and the stuff about soccer will at least give you something to talk about when the World Cup starts. As well, learning about these sports will prepare you for the TV future, when the major sports you used to watch have disappeared from the major networks. 

Formula 1

 "Last year’s Mexican Grand Prix attracted three hundred and seventy thousand spectators. The Singapore race runs through the city at night. (Drivers can shed six pounds in stress and sweat.) The average television audience for a Formula I race is around seventy million people – four times that of the typical N.F.L. game – and the best drivers earn around soccer star-salaries and lasting fame. When Ayrton Senna, a three-time world champion was killed in a race, in 1994, the Brazilian government declared three days of mourning. A million people waited in the heat to pay their respects, and many spoke of their saudade – an inexpressible state of longing for  something that is gone."
The above is from this very interesting article: “The Sporting Scene: In Reverse: Driving to Survive at the Top of Formula 1.” Sam Knight, The New Yorker, Oct. 31, 2022.



Cricket

These data are from this piece: “American Money Has Discovered Indian Cricket: Billion-dollar investment funds and N.F.L. ownership groups are among those angling for a foothold in the Indian Premier League. The returns, not the sport, are the draw,” Mike Jakeman, New York Times, Nov. 1, 2022.

“When we first started looking at cricket, we were by no means experts,” Scheiner said. “But the more we studied it, the more we realized it felt like the N.F.L. did 20 years ago.”

That was why, in June 2021, RedBird bought a 15 percent stake in Rajasthan Royals, a team that competes in the Indian Premier League, for $37.5 million. The money that has poured into the league over the past 15 months suggests that RedBird got a bargain.

Four months after that deal closed, an I.P.L. expansion team sold for $940 million. Eight months after that, the league negotiated new television and digital broadcasting rights agreements worth $6.2 billion.

At more than $1 billion a year, that means India’s top cricket competition — a closed league with only 10 teams — now generates annual broadcast revenues on par with top leagues like the N.F.L. ($10 billion a year), England’s Premier League (about $6.9 billion) and the N.B.A. ($2.7 billion).
On a per-match basis, in fact, the I.P.L., whose season lasts only two months, now ranks behind only the N.F.L....
And suddenly a lot of people want in."


The World Cup 2022

"Qatar, the smallest country to ever host the World Cup, has poured more than $220 billion into preparations for the event, erecting miles of highways, a metro system, a new airport, stadiums and high-rises.
Dire working conditions for migrant laborers in Qatar came under fire after scores of them died on World Cup-related construction sites....
The country has produced eight new stadiums with soccer pitches covered in grass flown in from the United States and outdoor air conditioning systems that can lower the temperature by more than 20 degrees Fahrenheit (11 degrees Celsius). Last month, Qatari officials announced the addition of 30,000 rooms to meet the surge in demand for accommodation, including some on cruise ships and traditional wooden boats known as dhows….
An estimated 1.5 million international visitors — around half of Qatar’s total population — will pour into the country over the month long event, which is typically hosted across multiple, major cities. Qatar is about the size of Connecticut.

Housekeepers in one ritzy hotel in West Bay, one of Doha’s upscale neighborhoods, will be tasked with cleaning 80 rooms a day — up from the usual 20, they say. When asked if he thought the newly minted metro could handle thousands of drunk fans, the station agent at a stop in the neighborhood smiled, shook his head and muttered “no way” between exaggerated coughs.

They have announced entertainment, including beach clubs, carnivals, futuristic light shows and two month long music festivals. One involves D.J.s performing on a 50-foot-tall, flame-flowing mechanical spider borrowed from the Glastonbury Festival in England and reminiscent of a futuristic alien tank from the video game Halo."

The above is from: "The World Cup Is Weeks Away. Will Qatar Be Ready?
As sports fans prepare to flood the tiny Gulf nation, cranes and loaders are still running hard — as is criticism of Qatar’s human rights record and exploitation of workers,"  Christina Goldbaum, New York Times,  Nov. 4, 2022

The Bonus:
   What does F1 mean? Here is the answer: "The “formula” of Formula 1 refers to a set of rules, first enshrined after the Second World War, to bring some order to the urge to race dangerous cars on the asphalt of foreign cities". 

  Qatar may not be a welcoming place for some. From my earlier post about the Olympics in Rio, I learned this: "Qatar: Sharia law in Qatar applies only to Muslims, who can be put to death for extramarital sex, regardless of sexual orientation." For attitudes about such things in other countries see: "Rainbow Flags and Olympic Ones." 

   While covering sports for you, I ran across another example of an aptronym from the wonderful world of boxing.
The headline: "Former Heavyweight Boxer Charged With Trafficking $1 Billion of Cocaine," New York Times, Nov. 2, 2022.
Spot the aptronym:
"Goran Gogic helped move vast amounts of cocaine from Colombia to Europe using U.S. ports, prosecutors said. One haul was among the largest cocaine seizures in U.S. history, they said.
Lawrence A. Hashish, a lawyer in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., who said he represented Mr. Gogic, said that the charges “came as a surprise.” Mr. Hashish said his client had traveled for a boxing convention in Puerto Rico and that there hadn’t been an outstanding arrest warrant before his arrival in the United States."

Sources: 
  They have been provided above, but if  you don’t know what a GOOGLY or LOLLY is, or the difference between a JAFFA and a PERHAPSER, see: “15 Corker Cricket Terms, Deciphered," Angela Tung, mentalfloss.com, May, 5, 2016.
  If you have forgotten what "aptronyms" are see: "Aptronyms