Lost Lantern American Vatted Malt Edition No. 1 Review
By Jim Vorel | February 22, 2021 | 11:25am
Photos via Lost Lantern Whiskey
The U.S. whiskey scene is by no means hurting for a lack of independent bottlers and non-distiller producers (NDPs). In fact, it often feels like the sheer number of little boutique bottling operations is beginning to exceed the number that could reasonably be maintained, especially with so many of them drawing on the same handful of companies for sourced whiskey, such as MGP of Indiana, Jim Beam, or Heaven Hill. But every now and then, you do come across a concept that is something truly and utterly new. And Lost Lantern is doing something unmistakably new in American whiskey.
Young guns on top in morning Queensland Raceway Supercars test
2 months ago
Full-time Supercars Championship debutant Zane Goddard has enjoyed a morning at the top of the timesheets in the first session at Queensland Raceway today, going fastest of the eight cars before the midday lunch break.
Stepping up from part-time duties last year in which he shared the #34 car with Matt Stone Racing team-mate Jake Kostecki, Goddard will compete in the full season this year and didn’t waste time in getting on the pace in the first official test day of the year.
The Matt Stone Racing cars of Goddard and Kostecki were split by Dick Johnson Racing’s new recruit, Anton de Pasquale, coming into his fourth season in the sport and first with the new-look defending teams champions who had both of their drivers leave in the off-season.
Seven of Whincup s greatest rivalries Repco Supercars Championship By James Pavey
Jamie Whincup s final full-time campaign in 2021 will see a list of long-standing rivalries come to an end, some which have been active for over a decade.
The seven-time champion will take to the track in 2021 with three fellow former champions, one of which has been his teammate for four years.
Ahead of Whincup s final full-time campaign, Supercars.com lists the seven-time champion s greatest rivals.
Mark Winterbottom
One of the defining rivalries of the modern era, Whincup and Winterbottom went hard at each other for a decade.
From Hamilton to Sandown, Perth to Adelaide, the two were regularly joined at the hip, sometimes too closely; they famously clashed on the final lap in New Zealand in 2013.
This week saw two seismic events shake the Australian automotive landscape. Firstly, the country’s most successful touring car driver in history announced he’s quitting driving to take on a new leadership role with the powerhouse Triple Eight Race Engineering team. Secondly, the latest new-car sales figures put the final nail in Holden’s coffin, with no new Holdens sold in January 2021.