What Makes A Good Driver Lineup In F1?

There are ten driver lineups in F1. Some have propelled their teams to the highest of highs, while others have struggled to co-exist harmoniously. What is it exactly that makes an F1 driver lineup good? And how many teams have achieved that feat for the 2022 season? If you wish to find out, keep on reading. When saying consistency, I use it in two ways. The first way is the fact that teams need drivers that they can rely on to bring back good results – week in, week out. Teams can work around m

Taking off the rose-tinted glasses: What is ED recovery really like?

Recovery. Those eight letters encapsulate an array of emotions that are felt, then digested, and then left behind as people attempt to move forward with their lives. Currently, there are over 1.25 million people in the UK who suffer from some form of an eating disorder — some are in recovery, others are not. What is recovery, really? For many, the idea of recovering from an eating disorder comes in a nice, neat package of improved eating habits and healthy weight gain.

Gentlemen, a short view to the future — who will be our next WDC?

The introduction of the hybrid era has seen F1 seasons unfold a repetitive and predictable way. Mercedes continue to flex their engineering brilliance by designing and building a car lightyears ahead of the rest of the field — the introduction of DAS only proves that they have no intention of slowing down. Lewis Hamilton continues to sit atop of the driver’s standings, fending off championship rivals as he comfortably storms to yet another World Driver Championship.

No Blacks, No Dogs, No Irish: racism in Britain is not just a thing of the past

When we hear stories like George Floyd, a black man who was tragically murdered as a result of police brutality during an arrest in Minneapolis, it is easy to believe that the UK does not have a race problem. Yet, racism does not have to be overt to exist, and casual racism is something the UK has in spades. The UK may not kill its black citizens like America does, but that does not mean it is not racist. The UK’s race problem is insidious, institutionalised and constantly glossed over.

Undervalued & underfunded: Why Britain’s education system is on the brink.

As I am writing this article, I should be sitting in my school hall about to start my first A level history paper. However, due to the coronavirus outbreak, I have spent what should have been my exam season in lockdown instead; watching on as the world attempts to fight off this pandemic. For years, both my parents and teachers had drilled me about how essential these exams would be to the rest of my life. Now, I will not even get the chance to sit them.