
McLaren boss offers Brad Pitt second chance to hit 200 mph
Like his fictional big screen character Sonny Hayes, Pitt has been offered a second chance to don race overalls and lap at 200 mph.
McLaren F1 chief executive Zak Brown told Reuters on Wednesday that Pitt had a standing offer to "come out and play" - and expected the 61-year-old not only to take him up on it but also take his passion for racing further.
Pitt drove a Formula One car for the first time with McLaren at Austin's Circuit of the Americas last month, after driving F2 cars disguised as F1 cars for the movie, and has been raving about the experience ever since.
He did have one regret, however.
"Ask me how fast I went. Three mph short of 200 mph," Pitt said at the New York premiere. "I want to go back. I want to hit 200."
Brown indicated that it could be arranged.
"He did a great job, he can drive a race car," he said at a McLaren event for the team's army of fans in London's Trafalgar Square, with title-chasing drivers Oscar Piastri and Lando Norris.
"I've traded notes with him, it was the time of his life. I feel like he's a racer now, so anytime he wants to come out and play he's more than welcome to. And that's a standing offer."
When asked if he expected Pitt to take him up on it, Brown replied: "I wouldn't be surprised looking at the level of enthusiasm that he had. I sent him his data, he wanted to understand and learn. So yeah, I bet he will."
"I wouldn't be surprised if one day you saw Brad Pitt racing some sort of sportscar," said Brown. "Paul Newman always used to say he was a racing driver, and an actor in his spare time.
"He (Pitt) is clearly in good physical shape. He had no physical limitations."
Pitt would not be the first Hollywood heartthrob to go racing for real.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CNA
2 hours ago
- CNA
Williams see fixes for problems, hope to stay fifth in F1 championship
LONDON :Williams are confident they can fix issues behind recent retirements and expect a car upgrade coming soon to keep them on course for fifth place in the Formula One championship. Team boss James Vowles told Reuters that they understood the brake problem that prevented Carlos Sainz from starting in Austria last Sunday and a fix would be in place for this weekend's British Grand Prix. "The Carlos issue, we're very clear on it, it can be replicated on a rig, it can be understood, and for Silverstone we'll have mitigation in place," he said. An issue that has sidelined Alex Albon in the last two races was more of a challenge but Vowles expected a solution by Sunday. "The issue that Alex suffered was such an instantaneous and rapid problem that it's very hard to replicate," he said at an event in London with sponsor Gulf Oil International for a fan-created livery to be used in Brazil. "Whilst the full detail of why exactly it's happening is not complete, we do have four or five different tests that will allow us to uncover that. "By the time we're going racing on Saturday/Sunday, we're in a good place but it will have compromise on the weekend." Albon has retired from his last three outings, in Spain due to collisions and a damaged car, and then in Canada and Austria due to issues that Vowles said were also seen on Sainz's side to a lesser extent. "There's evidence of it being on the other side of the garage as well. I think sometimes it's very significant and severe and other times it's more manageable," he explained. Williams are 19 points clear of sixth-placed Racing Bulls after 11 of 24 races and 107 behind Red Bull in fourth. Vowles said the upgrade, the last big one of the season, looked substantial on paper and would come either for Belgium or Hungary later this month. "We've been focused in the wind tunnel on '26, we've been trying to be clever about how we develop this upgrade so we'll see where we get to," he said. "We need to make sure the car is reliable, we don't have accidents and we operate it correctly with strategy, pitstops engineering etc. "And all of that put together, even with the car we have today, I'm comfortable we can hold on to fifth in the championship. At the performance step, that should only make our life easier."

Straits Times
2 hours ago
- Straits Times
Williams see fixes for problems, hope to stay fifth in F1 championship
LONDON - Williams are confident they can fix issues behind recent retirements and expect a car upgrade coming soon to keep them on course for fifth place in the Formula One championship. Team boss James Vowles told Reuters that they understood the brake problem that prevented Carlos Sainz from starting in Austria last Sunday and a fix would be in place for this weekend's British Grand Prix. "The Carlos issue, we're very clear on it, it can be replicated on a rig, it can be understood, and for Silverstone we'll have mitigation in place," he said. An issue that has sidelined Alex Albon in the last two races was more of a challenge but Vowles expected a solution by Sunday. "The issue that Alex suffered was such an instantaneous and rapid problem that it's very hard to replicate," he said at an event in London with sponsor Gulf Oil International for a fan-created livery to be used in Brazil. "Whilst the full detail of why exactly it's happening is not complete, we do have four or five different tests that will allow us to uncover that. "By the time we're going racing on Saturday/Sunday, we're in a good place but it will have compromise on the weekend." Top stories Swipe. Select. Stay informed. Singapore $500 in Child LifeSG credits, Edusave, Post-Sec Education Account top-ups to be disbursed in July Singapore PAP questions Pritam's interview with Malaysian podcast, says politics should stop at water's edge World Liverpool's Portuguese forward Diogo Jota dies in car crash in Spain, TVE reports Singapore Man to be charged after he allegedly damaged PAP campaign materials on GE2025 Polling Day Singapore Scoot launches flights to Da Nang, Kota Bharu and Nha Trang; boosts frequency to other destinations Singapore Electrician who bit off part of coworker's ear during fight gets 6 months' jail Asia 4 dead, 30 missing after ferry sinks on way to Indonesia's Bali Singapore $1.46b nickel-trading scam: Ng Yu Zhi's bid for bail midway through trial denied by High Court Albon has retired from his last three outings, in Spain due to collisions and a damaged car, and then in Canada and Austria due to issues that Vowles said were also seen on Sainz's side to a lesser extent. "There's evidence of it being on the other side of the garage as well. I think sometimes it's very significant and severe and other times it's more manageable," he explained. Williams are 19 points clear of sixth-placed Racing Bulls after 11 of 24 races and 107 behind Red Bull in fourth. Vowles said the upgrade, the last big one of the season, looked substantial on paper and would come either for Belgium or Hungary later this month. "We've been focused in the wind tunnel on '26, we've been trying to be clever about how we develop this upgrade so we'll see where we get to," he said. "We need to make sure the car is reliable, we don't have accidents and we operate it correctly with strategy, pitstops engineering etc. "And all of that put together, even with the car we have today, I'm comfortable we can hold on to fifth in the championship. At the performance step, that should only make our life easier." REUTERS


Independent Singapore
4 hours ago
- Independent Singapore
Wimbledon shake-up: 4 of top 5 women's seeds eliminated in opening rounds
A few days into the 2025 Wimbledon Championships, the competition has seen surprising results, especially in the women's tournament. Four out of five seeded players have been eliminated in the opening rounds, suggesting fierce and thrilling matches ahead. The first to exit Wimbledon 2025 was third-seeded Jessica Pegula, who had a surprising straight-sets defeat to Elisabetta Cocciaretto in the opening round. Furthermore, fifth seed Zheng Qinwen, who is also a 2024 Olympic gold medallist, was defeated by Katerina Siniakova. In another unexpected result, world No. 2 Coco Gauff was defeated in straight sets by unseeded Dayana Yastremska, with a final scoreline of 7-6(3), 6-1. Fourth seed Jasmine Paolini was the latest top player to exit this year's Wimbledon when she was defeated in the second round by Kamilla Rakhimova of Russia. With Paolini's loss, four out of the top five women's seeds have now exited the tournament. Aryna Sabalenka was the only top seed left in the running for this year's Wimbledon title. See also Row over 'rainbows' in Doha World Cup stadium A total of 23 seeded players lost in the first two days of the tournament. In the men's tournament, thirteen athletes have already exited, including No. 3 seed Alexander Zverev. No. 12 seed Frances Tiafoe also lost to Cameron Norrie. Following all the upsets at the start of the competition, it seems that Wimbledon 2025 will continue to deliver more surprising results as the tournament moves forward. Updates on seeded matches World No. 2 Coco Gauff suffered a first-round loss at Wimbledon, falling to World No. 42 Dayana Yastremska in straight sets, 7-6(3), 6-1. This was a rematch of their previous meeting at the Madrid Open, where Gauff defeated Yastremska. 'I feel like mentally I was a little bit overwhelmed with everything that came afterwards, so I didn't feel like I had enough time to celebrate and also get back into it,' Gauff admitted. 'But it's the first time in this experience of, like, coming off a win and having to play Wimbledon. I definitely learned a lot of what I would and would not do again,' she added. Fourth seed Jasmine Paolini of Italy won the first set in her second-round match against Kamilla Rakhimova, but ultimately lost the match. After Paolini's early advantage, Rakhimova made a powerful comeback to secure her win. Celebrating her victory, Rakhimova remarked, 'It feels amazing. I enjoyed myself on the court today … I believed in myself and worked for it… I just tried to play point by point; it doesn't matter the score, doesn't matter the opponent, and did my job.'