Keegan Bradley finishes as Skins Game Champion on Black Friday

Keegan Bradley finishes as Skins Game Champion on Black Friday

The Skins Game, presented by Capital One, returned to our lives on Black Friday and featured a match that involved Keegan Bradley, Xander Schauffele, Shane Lowry, and Tommy Fleetwood. As you would expect there were a lot of points of discussion around the Ryder Cup for obvious reasons.

But this particular match was about revitalizing The Skins Game and this edition of it aired on Prime Video to kickstart Black Friday. Prime Video established a huge slate of sporting action on the “holiday” that also involved the NFL and NBA. For professional golf to start the party was significant.

We have seen these matches, or ones of a similar variety, happen at different points over the last decade, and this one was a ton of fun. I have never understood why people call this the silly season as we are still watching the best golfers in the world do their thing. The format is different, but in this case it tugged at nostalgia for The Skins Game that many knew and loved long ago.

Keegan Bradley wound up winning the overall event as he took home the most skins. The Boston native finished with 11 skins and $2.1M for his efforts.

While Bradley was the overall winner there were other big-time moments from throughout the day’s action. Notably Tommy Fleetwood finished it all off to snatch $1.125M for himself.

The Thanksgiving weekend is filled with all sorts of sports and this was a wonderful addition to it all. Give me all of the golf. More. And then more.

Well done by everyone who was a part of the revitalized edition of The Skins Game!

F1 qualifying results: Oscar Piastri takes F1 Sprint pole ahead of Lando Norris

F1 qualifying results: Oscar Piastri takes F1 Sprint pole ahead of Lando Norris

Only 24 points separate the three contenders for the 2025 Formula 1 Drivers’ Championship.

That means every point counts over the final two weeks of the season.

Today, the 20 drivers will take on qualifying for the F1 Sprint race at the Qatar Grand Prix, where eight points will go to the winner of tomorrow’s F1 Sprint race. Earlier today, the drivers enjoyed their single hour of practice before the lap times count for real, and it was the McLaren pair of Oscar Piastri and Lando Norris who led the way. Piastri topped the timing sheets with a lap of 1:20.924, just 0.058 seconds ahead of Norris.

Max Verstappen posted the sixth-fastest time, clocking in 0.580 seconds behind Piastri.

Norris currently leads in the Drivers’ Championship race with 390 points, followed by Piastri and Verstappen who sit level on points with 366 each. Norris can technically clinch his first Drivers’ Championship this weekend if he leaves Qatar with a 26-point advantage over his rivals, otherwise, the title race will head to the season finale in Abu Dhabi.

We’ll be tracking F1 Sprint qualifying at the Qatar Grand Prix, which gets underway at 12:30 p.m. Eastern, live today here at SB Nation. So follow along with us as the grid gets set for tomorrow’s F1 Sprint race.

Update: Piastri has taken provisional pole position ahead of George Russell, with Norris set to start third. Verstappen settled for a P6 result.

Read on to see how F1 Sprint qualifying unfolded.

Qatar GP provisional F1 Sprint grid

Here is the provisional grid for the F1 Sprint race at the Qatar Grand Prix, which will be filled in as qualifying unfolds:

Row Position Driver Team Position Driver Team
Row 1 1 Oscar Piastri McLaren 2 George Russell Mercedes
Row 2 3 Lando Norris McLaren 4 Fernando Alonso Aston Martin
Row 3 5 Yuki Tsunoda Red Bull 6 Max Verstappen Red Bull
Row 4 7 Kimi Antonelli Mercedes 8 Carlos Sainz Jr. Williams
Row 5 9 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 10 Alexander Albon Williams
Row 6 11 Isack Hadjar VCARB 12 Oliver Bearman Haas
Row 7 13 Gabriel Bortoleto Sauber 14 Nico Hülkenberg Sauber
Row 8 15 Esteban Ocon Haas 16 Lance Stroll Aston Martin
Row 9 17 Liam Lawson VCARB 18 Lewis Hamilton Ferrari
Row 10 19 Pierre Gasly Alpine 20 Franco Colapinto Alpine

How F1 Sprint qualifying unfolded

What happened in SQ3

Eight minutes were put on the clock, and ten drivers remained in contention for pole position for the F1 Sprint race at the Qatar Grand Prix.

And it was time to see the C3 soft tires bolted onto the cars for the first time in the qualifying session.

Again, Mercedes went first with the rookie Antonelli leading the veteran Russell onto the track. Red Bull followed, with Verstappen in front of Tsunoda.

Those drivers were followed by Sainz, Alonso, and Leclerc. Piastri was the first McLaren out of the garage, followed by Albon and finally Norris as all ten drivers took to the circuit.

Getting a feel for the C3 soft tires on the evolving track surface was the first order of business.

Antonelli set the early benchmark, but Russell nipped that at the top of the timing sheets with a 1:20.528. Meanwhile, Verstappen was railing over the radio about the RB21, declaring it was “bouncing like a ****ing idiot.”

Verstappen’s first push lap was only good for seventh, and replays showed that the Red Bull driver slid off the racing line and into the gravel. Not only was his time deleted, but now the team had to worry about damage to the floor of the RB21.

Piastri jumped to P1 with a 1:20.241, and Norris came across in second, just 0.044 seconds behind his teammate.

It was time to determine P1, as the final push laps began with 60 seconds remaining in SQ3, with Verstappen the initial driver to drop the hammer.

Verstappen was one-tenth down to Piastri through the first sector, and at the end of the second sector Verstappen remained behind Piastri’s pace, now two-tenths behind the Australian driver. Could he salvage things with a remarkable third sector?

He could not, as he only moved to fourth as drivers improved behind him.

Tsunoda was first, jumping to third ahead of Russell and Verstappen. Alonso was next, as the veteran rocketed into third. Russell then jumped into P1, only to see Piastri take pole position at the death.

Russell will start in second, followed by Norris in third with Alonso alongside him.

What happened in SQ2

Under F1 Sprint rules, the C2 medium tires were again required in SQ2, and the session began with ten minutes on the clock.

But the end of SQ1 remained the topic of discussion, with race officials looking into potential impeding incidents between Norris and Verstappen. Alex Jacques and Jolyon Palmer described them as “gamesmanship” more than anything else.

However, the ultimate decision rests in the hands of the stewards.

Cars took to the track, and unlike SQ1, Mercedes went on the early side with Russell leading the 15 remaining drivers onto the circuit.

With eight minutes remaining in SQ2, the word came from race officials that there would be no further investigation into the incidents between Norris and Verstappen.

As the opening push laps came in, Verstappen led the way, followed by Leclerc and Tsunoda in the top three. But then it was time for the MCL39s to hit the track, and Norris jumped into P1 with six minutes left in the session with a 1:20.956. Piastri’s opening lap was just behind his teammates, as the Australian driver delivered a 1:21.005 to slide into P2, 0.049 seconds behind Norris.

With five minutes left in SQ2, Ocon, Albon, Bortoleto, Alonso, and Antonelli were the five drivers in the drop zone.

Antonelli jumped into P7 with under three minutes to go, as the final rounds of push laps began. It was over to Verstappen for his next effort, but the concern at Red Bull was over the level of bouncing the driver was reporting inside the cockpit of the RB21. While his next lap was strong, it was only good for third behind Norris and Piastri.

Bearman, Ocon, Albon, Bortoleto, and Alonso were the five drivers in the drop zone as the clock approached zero. Alonso jumped into P7 as the track came alive for the final laps on the C2 medium tires, before the softs would come into play in SQ3.

Hadjar and Hülkenberg had lap times deleted, which led to their eliminations. Bearman, Bortoleto, and Ocon joined them in the bottom five of SQ2.

What happened in SQ1

12 minutes were put on the clock, and F1 Sprint qualifying began under the floodlights at Lusail International Circuit. As required under F1 Sprint rules, C2 medium tires were bolted onto the 20 cars as SQ1 began, and tires may be a big story over the course of the weekend. As we discussed earlier this week, Pirelli, the sport’s exclusive tire supplier, has mandated a 25-lap maximum for each set of tires.

That is something to watch through Sunday’s main event.

Leading the drivers out was none other than Verstappen, who was the first driver to exit pit lane and take on the Lusail International Circuit, with its 16 corners, 10 of which are right-handed turns that put tremendous stress on the left front tires.

Verstappen set the early benchmark with a time of 1:22.258, which stayed atop the timing sheets as other drivers completed their initial push laps but was off the laps posted by Piastri and Norris during FP1.

Then came the opening gambit from Norris, who went purple through the first sector and clocked in at 1:21.621, which vaulted him into P1. Piastri followed with a 1:21813, just 0.192 seconds behind his McLaren teammate. With seven minutes remaining in the session, those two led the way, followed by Alonso, Hadjar, and Albon rounding out the top five.

The Alpine duo of Gasly and Colapinto were down in the elimination zone along with Lawson, Antonelli, and Russell, all three having yet to set a time by the six-minute mark.

The second push lap from Verstappen saw the Red Bull driver deliver the fastest first sector to that point, along with the fastest third sector, and Verstappen roared back to P1 with a 1:21.494.

Gasly then delivered a strong lap, jumping up to P8 with five minutes left in SQ1. Times kept tumbline as Tsunoda jumped up to P5, Sainz into P6, and Ocon into P9.

McLaren answered Verstappen’s volley, with Norris pumping in a 1:21.398 to take P1 for a few seconds, only to be nipped by Piastri, who delivered a 1:21.286 to jump ahead of Norris by 0.112 seconds.

As the clock hit three minutes remaining, neither Mercedes driver had yet to set a time, as the Silver Arrows waited to go until the end of the session. Antonelli’s first push lap kept him in the bottom five, while Russell jumped to P5.

With the final push laps looming, the five drivers at risk were: Antonelli, Gasly, Lawson, Hamilton, and Colapinto. Ocon (P13), Bearman (P14), and Stroll (P15) were the other drivers at risk.

How about Alonso? The wily veteran rocketed to the top of the timing sheets with 90 seconds remaining with a time of 1:21.276. Aston Martin is in a tight fight for seventh in the Constructors’ Championship, where they sit eighth with 72 points, one point behind seventh-place Haas.

The clock finally hit zero just as Verstappen crossed the line to jump into P1. Hamilton crossed the line in P15, which put him a risk of elimination.

Ultimately, the seven-time champion was eliminated down in P18. Stroll, Lawson, Hamilton, Gasly, and Colapinto were the five drivers eliminated.

“The car is not good,” warned Jolyon Palmer in the F1TV booth about Ferrari and the SF25.

Also of note? An incident between Norris and Verstappen was noted by race officials for a potential impeding penalty.

Verstappen led the way in SQ1, followed by Alonso, Piastri, Hülkenberg, and Norris in the top five.

Blazers ousted, get ‘first taste’ of playoff-like test

Blazers ousted, get ‘first taste’ of playoff-like test

The Blazers fumbled their chance to clinch Group C in the NBA Cup’s West bracket on Wednesday night, but considered it a “good loss” to learn from for a team that has been out of the playoff mix in recent seasons.

Spurs’ Harper (calf) returns, provides spark in win

Spurs’ Harper (calf) returns, provides spark in win

Spurs rookie Dylan Harper had seven points, three rebounds and two assists off the bench in his return Wednesday at Portland after missing 10 games because of a strained left calf.

NBA Cup takeaways: Everything to know before Friday’s final night of group play

NBA Cup takeaways: Everything to know before Friday’s final night of group play

The 2025 NBA Cup continues as group play wraps up. Here’s everything you need to know about the third annual in-season tournament.

How a legendary historian is quietly fueling OKC’s championship rise

How a legendary historian is quietly fueling OKC’s championship rise

As OKC GM Sam Presti formed a Thunder team built for a dynasty, he was inspired by a man who has been working on the same project for more than 50 years.

Ron Harper Jr. Named G League Player Of The Week

Ron Harper Jr. Named G League Player Of The Week

Ron Harper Jr. has been named the G League Player of the Week for games played between November 17th and November 23rd. Harper is on a Two-Way contract with the Boston Celtics.

Harper averaged 36.0 points, 7.0 assists and 6.0 rebounds for the Maine Celtics as they went 2-0.

Harper has also appeared in three NBA games this season.