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Gareth Jones On Speed

Gareth Jones/WhizzBang

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THE podcast for petrol-heads, by Gareth Jones (of ITV1's Speed Sunday & How2, and A1GP pit lane reporter), his car-mad uber-geek mate Zog, Alex Goy (Road And Track, Carfection, GQ). On Speed covers everything on 4 wheels, from Audi to BMW; Ferrari to Williams; Alpine to McLaren; Ford to Porsche; Alfa to Mercedes; VW to Jaguar; classic cars; concept cars; road cars; race cars. There's every kind of motorsport Formula One, WRC, Le Mans, F2, IndyCar, and drivers, from Damon Hill and Ayrton Senn ...
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The risk-takers, late-brakers and history-makers of Formula 1 slow down for in-depth interviews. Tom Clarkson brings you revealing, feature-length conversations with drivers, team bosses, engineering experts and F1 legends. Hit the follow button for the fastest way to get new episodes. Watch episodes exclusively on the F1 YouTube channel. An official Formula 1 podcast. For race reviews + previews, listen to F1 Nation. To learn more about how F1 works, listen to F1 Explains
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Join Christine as she guides you through all the happenings in the fast-paced world of Formula 1. Bringing you information, gossip, statistics and humour, with the odd race report thrown in for good measure. But don't think this is news churned out the normal way - the lady tells it like it is. Conspiracy theories, honest opinions and irreverent musings all add up to a refreshing listen.
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Every day has a story — and in sports, those stories are everywhere. Sports History Daily takes you on a journey through the moments that shaped the games we love. From record-breaking performances to forgotten milestones, each episode explores what happened, why it mattered, and how it changed the course of sports history. Perfect for sports fans and curious minds alike, it’s a daily dose of learning, storytelling, and discovery — one game, one play, one legend at a time.
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Bring Back V10s celebrates a classic era when Formula 1 was loud on the track and off it. Join host Glenn Freeman and a range of guests as they take a deep-dive into a golden age of F1 from 1989 to 2005, when superstars like Schumacher, Senna, Mansell and Prost were thrilling fans and rising talents like Alonso, Button and Raikkonen were establishing themselves as modern greats. Go back in time as we recall information you might have forgotten and unearth previously unknown details about som ...
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Welcome to the White Knuckle Racing Club Podcast And you guessed it. This is all about the world of motorsport and not just cars, but mostly motorsport and anything I want. We might throw in some cooking channel advice at some point and possibly a tutorial on how to perform a frontal Lobotomy. These are the stories of the team principals…engineers…drivers…cooks and cleaners and everyone that's involved in the kindred traveller circus in the world of motorsport. Sit back and enjoy...or stand. ...
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Grief in Brief

Ken Barringer

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Grief in Brief is a podcast hosted by Ken Barringer, LMHC a mental health counselor with a specialty in grief and loss. In each episode you will hear a conversation with an someone sharing a deeply personal story about their loss, or an expert discussing ways to manage the intense feelings and emotions that can accompany grief and loss, or a talk with a professional working in an area where we may not think of loss. Most episodes are between 15 – 20 minutes in length. There is also great iro ...
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Winning four Formula 1 World Championships is a feat only six elite drivers have achieved. Competing under the highest pressure, year after year, has given Sebastian Vettel rare racing insight. Since retiring from the sport in 2022, he’s been raising awareness of causes he cares about, and reflecting on his career – the peaks, how he learned to bal…
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On November 24th, 2013, at the Brazilian Grand Prix, Sebastian Vettel crossed the finish line and did something no Formula 1 driver had ever done before — not Fangio, not Senna, not Schumacher. Nine straight wins. Thirteen victories in a single season. And a level of dominance the sport may never see again. It was the final masterpiece of the Red B…
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Houston was changing fast in the mid-1960s. NASA had arrived, the Space Age was taking shape, and the city was suddenly becoming the center of America’s push toward the stars. But one place still looked like the Old West — its brand-new baseball team, the Houston Colt .45s. That was about to change. On December 1st, 1964, Houston traded in its pist…
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The penultimate race of the season where Lando ‘could’ have wrapped up the title, but Piastri, Verstappen and McLaren all had other ideas. So we head to Abu Dhabi for the showdown. Lets discuss Qatar first though right? We hope you enjoy. Warning: this podcast occasionally contains strong language (which may be unsuitable for children), unusual...…
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On November 30th, 1987, Bo Jackson turned Monday Night Football into his own national showcase. In a hyped showdown with Seahawks linebacker Brian Bosworth, Bo outran, outmuscled, and ultimately ran over “The Boz” in one of the most iconic plays in NFL history. But the night was more than just a highlight — it was the moment America realized Bo Jac…
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On November 29th, 1890, two service academies met on a muddy field at West Point and unknowingly launched one of the most iconic rivalries in American sports. In their first-ever showdown, Navy blanked Army 24–0, setting the tone for more than a century of pageantry, passion, and tradition. In this episode of Sports History Daily, we revisit the ru…
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The turkey was in the oven, the pies were cooling, and in Detroit, the Bears were on the menu. On a Thanksgiving afternoon at the Silverdome, one of the most electrifying runners in NFL history turned a holiday tradition into his own personal highlight reel. Missed tackles, broken ankles, defenders grabbing at air… and a scoreboard that just kept t…
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On November 26th, 1989, the Los Angeles Rams walked into the Superdome and watched Willie “Flipper” Anderson turn into a one-man highlight reel. Deep ball after deep ball… clutch catch after clutch catch… and a final overtime grab that pushed him into NFL history. 336 receiving yards. More than Jerry Rice ever had. More than Calvin Johnson ever had…
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Welcome to a free episode we're releasing in full from The Race Members' Club's Bring Back V10s 1993 Revisited series. Throughout 2025 we've been doing race-by-race episodes on the 1993 F1 season, which was voted for by our members as the follow-up to the 1997 season we covered in 2024. We're currently running a Black Friday special offer where you…
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On November 25th, 1993, a snowy Thanksgiving Day in Dallas produced one of the wildest endings in NFL history. After Miami’s potential game-winning field goal was blocked, all the Cowboys had to do was let the ball die. Instead, defensive lineman Leon Lett slid into sports lore by touching the rolling ball, making it live — and giving the Dolphins …
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We head off to the glittering lights and atmosphere of Las Vegas where there’s rain in the desert, Ferrari are slowest, Lando is aggressive and McLaren are ‘Too Low’. We hope you enjoy. Warning: this podcast occasionally contains strong language (which may be unsuitable for children), unusual humour (which may be unsuitable for adults), and the...…
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On November 22nd, 1986, in Las Vegas, a 20-year-old kid from Brooklyn stepped into the ring carrying the weight of a prophecy. Cus D’Amato said he’d be champion of the world. Boxing experts said he was the most terrifying fighter since Liston. Trevor Berbick said, “He’s never faced a man like me.” But the world was about to see what “Iron Mike” rea…
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On November 21st, 1934, the NFL tried something it had never attempted before — it moved a full regular-season game indoors. Inside Chicago Stadium, on a field just 80 yards long and laid over a hockey rink, the Chicago Bears and Detroit Lions battled in one of the strangest environments in league history. In this episode of Sports History Daily, w…
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Inside Rio’s Maracanã Stadium, with 80,000 fans on their feet and millions more listening across Brazil, 29-year-old Pelé stepped to the penalty spot and scored the 1,000th goal of his legendary career. It was more than a milestone — it was a cultural event. A moment so massive that newspapers ran extra editions, radio stations cut into national pr…
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On November 19th, 1984, college football witnessed one of its most unforgettable miracles. With six seconds left, Boston College trailed Miami on a humid South Florida night… and the game was all but over. Then Doug Flutie scrambled right, spun his shoulders, and launched a 48–yard prayer into the dark Miami sky. One of the most famous passes in fo…
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Every driver who wants to win with Red Bull needs to impress Helmut Marko. The veteran Motorsport Advisor oversees the team’s young driver programme and helped launch the careers of Sebastian Vettel and Max Verstappen. A former F1 driver himself, he knows what it takes to race under the highest pressure. Helmut tells Tom Clarkson about his life in …
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On November 18th, 1985, Monday Night Football turned into one of the most unforgettable moments in NFL history. Washington quarterback Joe Theismann — a Super Bowl champion and former league MVP — suffered a gruesome, career-ending leg fracture after a blind-side hit from Lawrence Taylor on a broken flea-flicker. The impact was so violent that ABC …
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In 2001, Ichiro Suzuki didn’t just arrive in Major League Baseball — he detonated every expectation the sport had for a “rookie.” At 27 years old, the Seattle Mariners’ new right fielder became only the second player in MLB history to win Rookie of the Year and MVP in the same season, leading a 116-win team with jaw-dropping precision, speed, defen…
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On November 15th, 1995, baseball didn’t celebrate a power pitcher. It celebrated a craftsman. That day, Atlanta Braves ace Greg Maddux won his fourth consecutive Cy Young Award — the longest streak in MLB history. He didn’t overpower hitters. He out-thought them. And in doing so, he proved that dominance can be quiet — subtle, surgical, and impossi…
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On November 14th, 1943, Chicago Bears quarterback Sid Luckman delivered one of the greatest performances in NFL history. In a cold afternoon at Wrigley Field, Luckman threw seven touchdown passes — a record that still stands today — and showcased a brand-new offensive vision that would reshape football forever. In this episode of Sports History Dai…
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On November 13th, 1964, inside St. Louis’ old Kiel Auditorium, Bob Pettit did something no one in the NBA had ever done. With a smooth jumper from the elbow, the Hawks’ quiet superstar became the first player in league history to hit 20,000 career points. No three-point line. No modern training. Just relentless, old-school work. And in reaching tha…
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On November 12th, 1972, the Miami Dolphins didn’t just win a football game — they delivered a statement. A 52–0 demolition of the New England Patriots pushed Miami to 9–0… and gave head coach Don Shula something no one in NFL history had ever reached: 100 regular-season wins in just 10 seasons. It was a milestone built on discipline, innovation, an…
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With three rounds left of the 2025 season, Oscar Piastri is still in contention to become Formula 1 World Champion for the first time. So what’s it like being in the thick of an F1 title fight with so much at stake? Speaking to Tom Clarkson before the Sao Paulo Grand Prix, Oscar opens up about the pressure of a title battle and why fighting a teamm…
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On November 11th, 1981, a 20-year-old rookie with an unhittable screwball and a calm, unshakable presence changed baseball forever. That night, Fernando Valenzuela became the first player in MLB history to win both the Rookie of the Year and the Cy Young Award in the same season — the unforgettable peak of Fernandomania. In this episode of Sports H…
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On this day in 1963, Gordie Howe skated into history. With his 1,051st career point, the Detroit legend passed Rocket Richard to become the NHL’s all-time points leader — a moment that crowned two decades of toughness, talent, and unmatched longevity. Learn how Mr. Hockey reached the top of the sport and why his legacy still looms large.…
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An exciting weekend in Brazil as Bortoleto takes off, Hamilton loses his nose, Verstappen starts from the pit lane and Ringo Star should be working for Ferrari. We hope you enjoy. Warning: this podcast occasionally contains strong language (which may be unsuitable for children), unusual humour (which may be unsuitable for adults), and the ramblings…
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On November 9th, 1946, Yankee Stadium hosted one of the most anticipated games in college football history. #1 Army. #2 Notre Dame. National champions. Heisman winners. Future Hall of Famers. A combined 79-game unbeaten streak between them. By the time the final whistle blew, the scoreboard still read 0–0 — but the game became a legend anyway. It w…
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On November 8th, 1966, baseball history didn’t just shift — it swung big. That day, Baltimore Orioles outfielder Frank Robinson was named the American League’s Most Valuable Player, completing one of the greatest individual seasons the sport has ever seen. Just five years earlier, he’d won the National League MVP with the Cincinnati Reds. No player…
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On November 7th, 1991, inside The Forum in Inglewood, California, one of basketball’s brightest stars stood behind a microphone — and stunned the world. Earvin “Magic” Johnson, the face of the Los Angeles Lakers and a five-time NBA champion, announced that he had tested positive for HIV — and would be retiring from basketball, effective immediately…
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On November 6th, 1869, on a grassy field in New Brunswick, New Jersey, two groups of college students gathered for a game no one had ever seen before. There were no helmets. No pads. No forward passes. Just 25 players on each side, one round leather ball, and a new set of rules that borrowed from soccer and rugby — but would soon evolve into someth…
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In the humid air of Tulane Stadium, New Orleans felt something new — hope. On November 5th, 1967, the winless Saints stunned the Philadelphia Eagles 31–24 to capture their first-ever NFL victory. It was more than just a football game. It was the moment a party city became a football city — when brass bands met blocking schemes, and Mardi Gras spiri…
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McLaren have won back-to-back Constructors’ titles for the first time since the early ‘90s. Just eight years ago, in 2017, they finished second to last, so how exactly have they transformed into World Champions since then? Speaking to Tom Clarkson at the McLaren Technology Centre, CEO Zak Brown and Team Principal Andrea Stella outline how they’ve m…
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On November 4th, 2007, a 22-year-old rookie named Adrian Peterson turned an ordinary Sunday into a football legend. Inside the Metrodome, the Minnesota Vikings star-in-the-making exploded for 296 rushing yards and three touchdowns against the San Diego Chargers — setting the NFL’s single-game rushing record in just his eighth career game. In this e…
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On this day in 1996, inside the Louisiana Superdome, San Francisco 49ers legend Jerry Rice made NFL history. With a routine 10-yard pass from Steve Young, he became the first player ever to record 1,000 career receptions — a milestone that redefined what longevity and consistency mean in professional football. In this episode of Sports History Dail…
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On a chilly Friday night at Chicago’s Soldier Field, Walter Payton did what many thought impossible — he passed the legendary Jim Brown to become the NFL’s all-time leading rusher. With each carry, the Chicago Bears star reminded fans why he was more than just a great running back — he was a symbol of endurance, discipline, and quiet excellence. In…
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On November 1st, 2001, just weeks after 9/11, baseball gave New York City a moment of magic. As the clock struck midnight at Yankee Stadium, Derek Jeter stepped to the plate — and with one swing on an outside-corner fastball, made history. His walk-off home run became the first ever hit in November and earned him a new name: “Mr. November.” In this…
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30 years ago, a 120mph puncture sent Mika Hakkinen’s car spinning over a high kerb and into a wall of tyres. His McLaren did not have many of the safety devices modern F1 cars have. Mika suffered serious injuries which left him in hospital, unsure if he would ever race again. Mika tells Tom Clarkson he thinks about his crash at the 1995 Australian …
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A fun Mexico GP? No, surely not…. well it’s true. The Mexico’s came good and gave us great content involving drivers cutting corners, more drivers cutting corners and VSC being thrown so we don’t get too excited. We hope you enjoy. Warning: this podcast occasionally contains strong language (which may be unsuitable for children), unusual humour...…
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