Christian Horner thinks qualifying is the only area Max Verstappen is currently failing to match Red Bull teammate Daniel Ricciardo.Verstappen has vindicated Red Bulls decision to promote him from Toro Rosso earlier this season, winning his first race in Barcelona and being named Driver of the Day in three of the five races hes had at the team. Though he is yet to out-qualify Ricciardo, whose record against Daniil Kvyat and Verstappen on Saturdays this year currently stands at 9-0, Horner thinks improvements will come with time.Reflecting on whether Verstappen is out-driving Ricciardo after his strong drive to second in Austria, Horner said: Hes been racing in the past two or three races very strong and very good on the tyre. He is under pressure as well but it doesnt faze him.He has got a bit of work to do on the quali side which Daniel is right at the top of his game but it is great to have two drivers so evenly matched and pushing each other. I think it will come with experience.Verstappens result in Austria hinged on a 56-lap stint on the soft tyre and an early stop which eventually relegated Ferraris Kimi Raikkonen behind both Red Bulls. Though it was the key strategic call of the race Horner admits he originally expected Verstappen would need to stop again.We had track position having stopped early and at the point we hadnt planned on one stop. We had good pace, Max was catching Kimi, Daniel was going okay with Sebastian, we stopped our guys early because we thought it was going to be a two-stop but there was almost zero wear or degradation on that harder tyre and when the safety car came out we talked with the drivers and gave it a shot.With Max we made that work, with Daniel it was going along okay but as soon as he got passed by Kimi there was no point in taking the risk so we bunged on a set of ultra-softs for the last 10 or so laps.Asked if he was surprised by Ferraris decision not to cover off Verstappen with Raikkonen, he said: Yes and no. They were set out on a one stop and we set out at that point of the race on a two stop but then the way the tyres were behaving in that temperature we had to change our plan and it opened the window to us for the one stop. Nike Air Max BilligtNike Air Max Plus Rea . The visitors took a deserved lead in the 16th minute with midfielder Yohan Cabaye curling the ball beyond Adrian from inside the penalty area. http://www.reaairmaxsverige.com/air-max-90-rabatt.html . Michell Burger, a woman who lives on an estate next to Pistorius gated community, said she and her husband were awoken by the screams in the pre-dawn hours of Feb. 14 last year, when Pistorius killed Reeva Steenkamp by shooting four times through a door in his bathroom. Nike Just Do It Skor . "We have always prided ourselves on the way we play defence. Having two big pieces back is going to be a key for us moving forward for years to come," said Knighthawks head coach Mike Hasen. Nike Air Max 90 Rea .C. -- Glenn Howard needed an extra end to move into the Masters Grand Slam of Curling final. RIO DE JANEIRO -- Rafael Nadal was something to behold during his third-round singles match on a windswept Thursday at Olympic Centre Court.True, he flashed plenty of raggedness. No surprise there, given that injuries and self-doubt have recently stunted his play.But mixed amid a stream of unforced errors in a 7-6 (5), 6-4 win against Frances Gilles Simon were enough vibrant glimpses of vintage Nadal to widen the eyes. There were stirring side-to-side dashes. There were buzz-saw forehands that looked sure to sail three feet long only to crash down, suddenly and violently, straight into play.Same as always, the 30-year-old Spaniards intensity filled the stadium. He looked like he would chew off an arm if it meant giving himself a better chance to win. It was no surprise then, when, after the match, he said in his brief comments that he would fight to the death for a medal.Nadal, of course, is as tough a competitor as weve ever seen in any sport. He didnt need to play here. He already has a singles gold medal, from Beijing in 2008. A wrist injury caused him to miss the 2016 Wimbledon after he pulled out of his beloved French Open. And yet here he is, on the brink of a performance that would significantly gild his legend. Two more golds are a possibility in Rio. He followed the Simon match by winning in the semifinals of doubles with partner Marc Lopez. (Nadal then pulled out of the first round of mixed doubles with Garbine Muguruza.)?But if Nadal at the 2016 Rio Games underscores his dogged competitiveness, it is also a potent reminder of something missing. Or, rather, someone: Roger Federer.Martina had Chris. McEnroe had Borg. Agassi had Sampras. Since they first played in 2003, Nadal has always had Federer. Both, no doubt, have lost a step. Other rivalries have begun. But no matchups have defined mens tennis in its current form like the tense battles waged when the two greats faced off in their best days. At Wimbledon in 2008, they played five scintillating sets that finished with the dusky All England Club reveling in, arguably, the greatest match in tennis history.Ah, what fun these two could have had, playing in front of the electric crowds in Rio.Only Federer is nowhere to be seen. As far back as 2012, he was saying hed play at least long enough to take the court in Brazil. Then 2016 came, and with it a knee surgery and a balky back and birthday No.dddddddddddd 35. After losing gamely in the Wimbledon semifinals last month, Federer shut down his entire 2016 season to heal up. The closest he came to Rio was a lonely tweet -- Wish I was there with you -- typed from some undisclosed location during the Games opening ceremonies.Sadly, opportunities like this -- the Spaniard and the Swiss duking it out with the whole world watching -- might not come again. There was a period when Nadal and Federer, despite never playing each other in the Olympics, averaged four or five matchups every year. (Nadal owns a commanding 23-11 head-to-head record, in good part because prime Federer was often good enough to make it to the finals of the clay tournaments where Nadal reigned.)But they have played less and less with the passing of each season. There was just one match in 2014, a Nadal victory at the Australian Open. Then a single match in 2015, Federer winning in Basil. 2016 will end without them playing at all. Ugh.If Federer were here, they could have been closing in on a Rio showdown. Given the way their careers have been trending, and paying a nod to the strength-sapping march of time, it just might have been their last great match.Still, there is what might have been, and there is the plain reality of the moment. Upsets and the Federer no-show have turned the tennis star power in Rio down a notch, but well-known players such as Nadal and Juan Martin del Potro remain, and theyll be challenged in the closing days by the likes of Americans Madison Keys and Steve Johnson, who both advanced in singles Thursday.The Olympic tournament is proving to be memorable, full of great play and stands brimming with rhythmic chants, stomping feet and flag-waving national pride. That kind of atmosphere was on full display Thursday afternoon, when Andy Murray beat back stubborn 40th-ranked Italian Fabio Fognini, digging out of the 3-0 third-set hole by winning the last six games.Both have a few matches to go, but Murray and Nadal are now favored to meet in the final. That would be the 2008 gold medal holder against the 2012 champion, a wonderful and attractive match, perhaps as good as any that will be played this year.But it wouldnt be Federer versus Nadal. ' ' '