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11 votes
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2022/2023 Formula E - Round 16, London (Season End)
Anyone watch Formula E? The 2022/2023 season, or Season 9, just ended in London. Round 16, London results Nick Cassidy, Envision Racing Mitch Evans, Jaguar TCS Racing Jake Dennis, Avalanche...
Anyone watch Formula E? The 2022/2023 season, or Season 9, just ended in London.
Round 16, London results
- Nick Cassidy, Envision Racing
- Mitch Evans, Jaguar TCS Racing
- Jake Dennis, Avalanche Andretti Formula E
2022/2023 Season 9 Final Standings
2023 Teams Championship
- Envision Racing -- 304 pts
- Jaguar TCS Racing -- 292 pts
- Avalanche Andretti Formula E -- 252pts
2023 Drivers Championship
- Jake Dennis, Avalanche Andretti Formula E -- 229pts
- Nick Cassidy, Envision Racing -- 199pts
- Mitch Evans, Jaguar TCS -- 197pts
I missed most of the second half of the season, but at least caught the last race!
I was really hoping rookie Jake Hughes (Neom McLaren Formula E) would do well, but he turned out to be more of a quali driver; could never keep race pace. But he did finished 12th in the standings, ahead of his teammate, Rene Rast. I suppose that could be viewed as a solid first season.
Overall I've only been watching Formula E since about 2021, but it seemed like this year was less bumper cars than the last two. The poor racecraft definitely turned me off from the series at times.
Looking forward to Season 10!
9 votes -
Norway squeak into knockout stage of Women's World Cup as Sophie Haug thrills in Philippines thrashing
7 votes -
Formula 1 race weekend (Belgian GP) thread
32 votes -
UFC 291: Poirier vs Gaethje 2
12 votes -
Sweden seal place in Women's World Cup last sixteen with rout of Italy
14 votes -
Alex Highsmith, Pittsburgh Steelers agree to terms on four-year, $68 million extension
14 votes -
Manchester United agree deal to sign Atalanta forward Rasmus Højlund
5 votes -
Sarah Sjöström breaks her own world record in the women's 50m freestyle swimming at the 2023 World Aquatics Championships
13 votes -
South Korean businesswoman Michele Kang has a controlling stake in two women's teams and plans to acquire more
9 votes -
Lauren James scored a wonder strike to lead England to victory over Denmark in Women's World Cup
5 votes -
Damian Lillard wants out of Rip City
19 votes -
Ottawa Senators sign Vladimir Tarasenko to a one-year, $5M deal
17 votes -
The independent league team that traded a Muddy Waters album for a championship
3 votes -
Patrice Bergeron retires from NHL after nineteen seasons with Boston Bruins
16 votes -
Saudi Arabia’s plan to conquer global golf
4 votes -
Ada Hegerberg: ‘I don't think things will change without women standing up’
11 votes -
Sean Strickland all but confirmed for Israel Adesanya’s next fight
4 votes -
Conor McGregor’s UFC return set to be delayed until next year as manager admits he’s ‘looking for’ 2024 return
5 votes -
World Cup executive feels Premier League could stage games in the US
3 votes -
Murray Walker - It wasn't work
6 votes -
Paris olympics swimming events to be held in cleaned up river Seine, public swimming to become legal
13 votes -
Parkour pro climbs hardest route yet... without ropes
8 votes -
RB contract value and labor rights
I've been keeping a finger on the pulse of analytics & contract valuation in the NFL for the last few years (as a fan, not related to my profession). Anyone else who has been of fan of this is...
I've been keeping a finger on the pulse of analytics & contract valuation in the NFL for the last few years (as a fan, not related to my profession). Anyone else who has been of fan of this is probably aware that we hit a pretty serious breaking point yesterday, as a handful of top-end RBs failed to reach deals with their respective teams resulting in them being franchise tagged. I was wondering what others thought about this whole fiasco.
My thoughts:
In one sense, this is simply effective roster management: RBs add little win probability by themselves (i.e., their production is largely a result of the offensive line and passing game), their age curve is poor (i.e., they're typically out of highly productive years by the end of their rookie deals), and they're easily replaced by rookie talent.
On the other hand, these guys take a beating to produce a product we all love. They spend some of their best years in the college system, where they do seem to add a lot of win probability, being totally uncompensated. They get to the NFL only to have their potential earnings suppressed by the rookie wage scale, then get franchise tagged guaranteeing they'll be SOL with respect to a deal with big fully-guaranteed cash.
What's the solution here? Assuming the draft is an efficient(-ish) market, adjusting the rookie pay scale for them will just cause teams to adjust their drafting behavior. Letting RBs arrive to the NFL sooner than everyone is something that the NCAA almost certainly won't allow without a vicious fight. Is there any hope for these guys?
edit: typos
9 votes -
Blackhawks owner Rocky Wirtz dies at age of 70
9 votes -
Switzerland frustrate Norway in Women's World Cup stalemate after Ada Hegerberg injury
4 votes -
Parkour Puzzle Mission - Don't get wet (Netherlands Waterloopbos)
5 votes -
Nottingham Forest sign Sweden international Anthony Elanga from Manchester United on five-year deal
5 votes -
Retired Komusubi Gagamaru visits Miyagino stable to observe the training by retired Yokozuna Hakuho (English translation)
5 votes -
Amanda Ilestedt breaks South Africa hearts with last-gasp strike for Sweden at Women's World Cup
5 votes -
Max Verstappen dominates Hungarian GP to give Red Bull a record 12th successive win
10 votes -
Denmark's Jonas Vingegaard sealed his second successive Tour de France triumph as Jordi Meeus sprinted to a surprise win on the final stage
9 votes -
Formula 1 race weekend (Hungarian Grand Prix 2023) thread
24 votes -
Amalie Vangsgaard's late winner sees Denmark return to Women's World Cup with win over China
4 votes -
Dressage or show jumping on a hobby horse? In Finland it's an international competitive sport called hobby horsing
14 votes -
2023 Trade Value: Introduction and honorable mentions
4 votes -
Is Rasmus Højlund actually worth it for Manchester United?
4 votes -
New Zealand's Hannah Wilkinson stuns Norway in Women's World Cup opener at Eden Park in Auckland
5 votes -
Minnesota Vikings rookie WR Jordan Addison cited for driving 140mph
13 votes -
Cincinnati Bengals to induct Boomer Esiason, Chad Johnson into Ring of Honor during Week 3 game vs. Rams
6 votes -
Tyson Fury to fight ex-UFC heavyweight champion Ngannou in Saudi Arabia
8 votes -
Bruce Lee’s garage startup years in Oakland laid the groundwork for MMA
3 votes -
What it's like to run deep in the WSOP Main Event (Part 1)
5 votes -
Strongman tries Olympic Bobsleigh
4 votes -
Manchester United agree deal for Inter Milan goalkeeper Andre Onana
15 votes -
Christian Lundgaard won the Honda Indy Toronto, mixing sizzling speed and successful strategy, for his first career NTT IndyCar Series victory
11 votes -
Brittney Griner makes a triumphant return in her first WNBA All-Star Game since her Russian detention
13 votes -
Australia Commonwealth Games 2026: Victoria cancels event after costs blow out to $7bn
9 votes -
How do you solve a problem like the New York Mets?
11 votes -
With its own Major League, cricket looks for a foothold in the United States | Six teams, eighteen regular season matches, three-hour games
25 votes