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Author: David Bodapati
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Organisers must waive-off entry fee for women, to host INRC round: Vamsi Merla
Bengaluru, 2 Sept 2020: Due to the global race against Corona Virus, which affected both national and international motorsports for over five months, the Indian National Rally Championship, too, was postponed after the lockdown was announced in India.
With the country taking measures to bring back normalcy in the sporting arena along with activities in other walks of life, the Indian government announced Unlock 4.0 and the motorsports fraternity is eagerly waiting for the action to begin. International motorsports, including Formula 1 and MotoGP, have started with tight measures to beat Corona and India too, is expected to resume the events amidst the necessary precautions due to the pandemic.

Vamsi Merla of Champions Yacht Group, the INRC Promoters And the first to respond is the Champions Yacht Club, the promoters of Indian National Rally Championship, the flagship event of Indian Motorsports. The calendar for 2020, was expected to begin with the South India Rally in Chennai but it was the first event to get boxed by the lockdown. The Promoters are eager to announce a seven-round calendar once the go-ahead is given by the Federation of Motor Sports Clubs of India (FMSCI). As announced earlier, the Champions Yacht Club is keen to promote ‘Women in Motorsports (WIM)’ and is offering to waive-off the entry fee for all women participants for the Rally rounds apart from providing a slew of incentives for the drivers and teams to promote rallying. “We have written to the Federation to waive the entry fee for female drivers but it looks like the decision has to be taken by the organising club. So Champions Yacht Club has decided to give hosting rights of a rally round only to those clubs who are willing to waive-off the fee,” said Vamsi Merla, the promoter. “So even a male driver with a female navigator will also get a waiver of the entry fee as the team has a female participant,” he clarified.
He also promised that the accommodation for all the participants would be provided free by the Promoters and arrangements will be made taking strict precautions to beat the Virus. “We have put in place measures to tackle the current situation. Social distancing norms and masks are made compulsory along with checking of temperature with thermal scanners, and sanitisers would be provided at all necessary entry points and other places. All large gatherings will be prohibited,” added Merla.
“Rally championship holds a special place in Indian motorsports and over the years, in its 31-year history, INRC has thrown up many champions and the Promoters are keen to encourage newcomers and young talent by providing the necessary facilities to continue the tradition of making champioins,” he added.
When queried how seven rounds could be possible with only four months available, he said that back-to-back rounds were being planned and permission is being sought to extend the calendar for two months into Feb 2021. “Also five clubs have already agreed to waive the fee and promote women participation. So the confirmed rounds are South India Rally in Chennai, K1000 in Bengaluru, Hampi, also in Karnataka, Arunachal Pradesh and Coimbatore,” Vamsi Merla revealed. The calendar will be announced soon.
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FIA Junior WRC Returns to Action on Rally Estonia
Estonia, 1 Sept 2020: The 2020 FIA Junior WRC Championship will resume service along with the FIA World Rally Championship on Rally Estonia for the first time in the history of both FIA Junior WRC and WRC.
The championship that nurtures the future stars of WRC will use the M-Sport Poland built Fiesta Rally4 which was released earlier in the year. The EcoBoost-powered Fiesta Rally4 is an evolution of the Fiesta R2T19 and represents M-Sport’s commitment to its ladder of opportunity, providing opportunities to young talent on every step of the rallying ladder. The Rally4 also aligns with the FIA’s new rally pyramid structure, underlining M-Sport Poland’s dedication to ensuring the world’s top-flight junior rally championship uses the best two-wheel-drive machinery on offer.
This year marks ten years since the first Rally Estonia was held and in the decade following the event has built up an impeccable reputation with drivers, teams and fans alike. It is evidenced by its meteoric rise in popularity in recent years, culminating in the Baltic event being added to the WRC calendar. The rally recently served as an unofficial preparation event for Rally Finland thanks to its smooth but treacherously fast gravel roads, some of which were built specifically for the rally.
Compared to a typical WRC event, Rally Estonia will be a shorter affair, with 233.40 competitive kilometres spread over three days. FIA Junior WRC sees its first competitive action in almost six months with a 1.28km super special stage on Friday evening allowing 12 hungry junior crews to push from the get-go in order to grab every stage win point possible – a unique characteristic of the championship. Saturday will see this year’s juniors take on two loops across five speed tests with an additional six stages across two three-stage loops on Sunday finishing with a total of 17 stages, with each one offering a valuable stage win point. In total, a maximum of 42 points could be taken home by one driver should they win all 17 stages and the event. All 12 Fiesta Rally4 cars will be equipped with Pirelli Scorpion K6 tyres and have a total of 14 tyres available for use across the rally including shakedown.
Using his own M-Sport-built Fiesta Rally2 and recently signed to Red Bull, the 2019 FIA Junior WRC Champion, Jan Solans, will start Rally Estonia with the 2019 FIA Junior WRC co-drivers champion, Mauro Barreiro. Solans has recently completed a series of intense tests to get us up to speed as possible with Rally2 machinery after a small taste of the action on Rally Spain last year where he made his WRC3 debut.
Maciej Woda, FIA Junior WRC Team Director, said:
“We are finally going back rallying! We have 12 incredibly talented and exciting Junior WRC crews heading to Estonia with WRC for the first time. I expect there to be very close competition at the sharp end of the field on this rally as our Baltic and Scandinavian crews know these kinds of roads very well. Even looking at the onboards, I can tell this is a driver’s rally and guarantee there will be a smile underneath every single helmet come Friday. I am really pleased that the hard-working team at M-Sport Poland’s Kraków facility has been able to deliver 12 Fiesta Rally4s for this event, it’s a huge undertaking to do so. This is a Junior championship, but it is on the world stage so there is no question, these guys need the most competitive Rally4 machinery on offer, and that’s what they’ve got. That’s all I can guarantee though, I have no idea who will win this one! We are all back with renewed enthusiasm and energy, some will be a bit rustier behind the wheel than others but, I’m sure everyone will be back in their rhythm once the first loop is done with.”
Jan Solans, 2019 Junior WRC Champion: “We’re really happy to be back, it has been 10 months without competing since Rally Spain last year. I am so happy to carry out this new programme which is by no means easy. I really would like to thank Ford Spain, Red Bull, the Spanish federation, Pirelli and M-Sport Poland. It’s a difficult rally for us with all the jumps you have in Estonia. We need to show that we want to learn and get on the pace as soon as possible. We did two days of testing on two different stages in Poland, we tried a lot of things on the car and I am now happy with the setup of the car, there are still things we need to improve but we are in a good position. The difference is huge in the Rally2 in terms of establishing a good car set up, in Junior WRC you could not change much on the car. With the Fiesta Rally2, I have so many different setup combinations when you consider I can adjust springs, roll bars, diffs, gearbox and car balance, so there is much more to work on. In a Rally4 car it is possible to still get a good result even if you don’t have the best setup, in a Rally2 car, there are so many factors that need to work together and establishing a good setup is really key to getting a good result.”
52 Tom Kristensson / Joakim Sjoberg
Kristensson claimed victory on Rally Finland in 2019 with supreme performance, targeting stages he was confident on to exploit a margin over his competitors while playing it safe on the stages that posed greater rally ending risks. It turned out to be a masterstroke, with every single one of his competitors having some kind of incident or ‘moment’ while the Swede emerged scot-free with the championship lead. He currently sits atop the 2020 FIA Junior WRC championship after claiming victory on the opening round of the season on Rally Sweden but has only competed on one rally since the snow and ice rally:
“I am so happy to be back behind the wheel of the M-Sport Poland Ford Fiesta Rally4. I enjoy the rallies with this kind of character, speed and flow. It will be demanding and tough with this fast and shortened rally and no chance for mistakes. We will give it a slow start to come into the car again and then go for it! We’re looking forward!”
53 Martins Sesks / Renars Francis
Sesks enjoyed his best Junior WRC result to date with second on Rally Sweden in February, opting for strong points finish rather than targeting stage win points – something he would often chase in 2019 and falter in the process of. When rallying action resumed this year he was hot out of the blocks taking a pair of victories in his Fiesta Rally4 before heading to Rally Liepaja where he duelled for the lead with Junior WRC rival Ken Torn but ultimately ended up retiring due to damaging his radiator after spectacularly over-jumping on the last day of action. His recent experience puts him in good stead to perform well on Rally Estonia:
“I’m really excited to be in Estonia, especially Tartu and Rally Estonia! I have very nice memories here from my 2017 Estonian Junior Championship title fight with Ken Torn, we won this rally that year, but this year I’m not taking any pressure, I want to do my own rally and enjoy the amazing Estonian roads!”
54 Ken Torn / Kauri Pannas
Hailing from Saaremaa, the same Estonian island as Ott Tänak, Junior WRC veteran Torn claimed a well-respected third on Rally Sweden with a similar focus to Sesks: gain a decent haul of points with no mistakes. In his third season of FIA Junior WRC, he is the only driver on the entry list aside from Kristensson that has stood on the top step of the Junior category podium on none other than Rally Finland. Torn is no stranger to the Estonian roads and knows them well. His recent form on Rally Liepaja, where he won in his Fiesta Rally4 means the Estonian will be one to watch out for from the offset on Friday evening:
“I really enjoy South-Estonia roads – they are always tricky and challenging but very enjoyable at the same time. Hopefully, the rally will be nice and competitive throughout the whole weekend. I also hope to have lots of fun not only for me and Kauri but also for our main competitors. It is still our home rally!”
55 Sami Pajari / Marko Salminen
Nineteen-year-old Sami Pajari, the AKK Flying Finn Future Star award winner, has been busy preparing for his return to Junior WRC action recently, with some impressive performances in a Fiesta R2T19, trading blows with Martins Sesks on Rally Rokiskis and proving he has the pace to challenge the Latvian on fast gravel roads. The Finn made his FIA Junior WRC debut on Rally Finland in 2019 where he impressed a lot of people, taking two stage wins before going off the road and retiring. He claimed fourth on Rally Sweden, picking up a stage win point to underlining he is no one-hit-wonder when it comes to surface-type:
“I’m really looking forward to going against the best in the world after such a long break. It will be also interesting to see, who are really fighting up front for the win because I think there will be quite a few contenders. I will try my best also, but first of all let’s hope we can have a safe rally for everyone.”
56 Raul Badiu / Gabriel Lazar
The rapid Romanian will be seeking redemption on fast and smooth gravel roads after a colossal accident on Rally Finland in 2019 where he and co-driver Lazar were sent somersaulting in the air after a high-speed corner. Badiu was on stage-winning pace on that rally, missing out at each stop line by mere tenths and challenging for a podium position. He returned to rallying action on Sweden, netting a pair of stage wins on his way to fifth. Since the opening round of the Junior season he has competed on three different Romanian rallies in front-wheel-drive machinery with some strong results:
“I’ve missed so much rallying so I think there is no better place to restart the championship than Rally Estonia, a Finland with jumps on steroids. It will definitely be very tricky with such high speeds being no margin for error, but for sure there will be a great pleasure behind the steering wheel driving very fast smooth roads and jumping in all the possible positions”
57 Fabrizio Zaldivar / Fernando Mussano
Making the trip to Estonia from South America via Spain, Zaldivar has squeezed in an intense period of testing on a variety of surfaces while entering an asphalt rally in Spain finishing fourth in his class. He finished sixth on Rally Sweden this year, three spots higher than where he finished on Rally Sweden in 2019 but one position shy of equalling his best result which came on Wales Rally GB in 2019 where he braved the mud and the rain to take fifth and secure eight in the FIA Junior WRC Championship:
“We were inactive for five months, however, the last three weeks have been very intense. Based in Catalunya, we did several days of tests on gravel and asphalt. Thinking about that surface in which we have less experience, we went to compete at the Ferrol International Rally in ‘La Crouña’ – with good feelings and satisfactory results. Now in Estonia, we did 70kms in the south of Tartu looking for the best set-up for the weekend. After five months it’s hard to try to ‘catch up’ in three weeks, but I think it will be the same challenge for everyone.”
58 Ruairi Bell / Matt Edwards
Unlike most British youngsters, the 2019 British Rally Championship M-Sport prize winner has experienced Estonian roads and thanks to his exploits in Latvia is also well accustomed to the flat out flowing gravel on offer on Rally Estonia. Bell has previously called upon former Junior WRC driver Roland Poom to call the pace notes for him on a handful of Latvian rounds. He collected seventh on Rally Sweden, on a surface which he will gladly admit is not his favourite. Bell heads to Estonia following a scary incident in Portugal last weekend, he has had to make a last-minute co-driver change due to his longtime co-driver, Darren Garrod, injuring his arm. Garrod’s replacement is two-time British Rally champion, Matt Edwards, who Garrod guided to his first national title in 2018:
“Rally Estonia promises to be an extremely challenging event. With months out of the car, the high-speed roads and deep ruts will provide a real test of pace notes and confidence right from the get-go. Originally it was Darren and I look forward to the weekend, but we had quite a big accident in Portugal on the weekend and Darren injured his arm. Matt Edwards, who Darren also reads the notes for, will fill-in for Darren and will be the least disruptive choice for us as Matt has been a bit of a mentor for me and coached me at various points though my career.”
59 Pontus Lönnström / Stefan Gustavsson
The young Swedish driver made an impressive debut on Rally Sweden despite suffering a puncture on the opening stage of the rally. He continuously posted top-five times through the rally and managed to bag two stage-win points too underlining his talent and promise to be a future star of the Swedish rally scene. Lonnstrom has been able to keep himself match fit on Swedish gravel, recently taking a Swedish Junior victory on Snapphanerallyt:
“I and Stefan are really looking forward to Rally Estonia, it will be really nice to come back to FIA Junior WRC after such a long break! The roads look very fast which is something I really enjoy, I hope it will be a good event for us and that we will be able to pick up many points before going home to Sweden.”
60 Marco Pollara / Maurizio Messina
Italian Junior Champion Pollara collected a single championship point on Rally Sweden thanks to his tenth place finish on a surface he had little experience on. Heading to Rally Estonia, it will be Pollara and Messina’s first gravel outing of the season after taking to the stages of Rally di Roma Capitale in July where the crew battled among the podium positions but ultimately finished fourth in the ERC3 Junior category:
“Maurizio and I are really happy to participate in this rally and restart with the Junior WRC after so many bad months. From the videos of the special stages we have seen that they are very fast stages, a little atypical for us Italians but at the same time fantastic and exciting. We hope to score as many points as possible for the Junior WRC classification and try to learn a lot without making mistakes.”
61 Fabio Andolfi / Stefano Savoia
Fabio Andolfi was one of the hotly anticipated drivers to enter Junior WRC on Rally Sweden. The Italian sensation was running in the top-five early on until a dramatic roll put an end to his outing on the opening day of the rally. He restarted the rally and returned to the stages but then damaged his radiator, ruling himself out of the rest of the rally. Since Rally Sweden, the Italian WRC3 winner has had an outing on asphalt in R5 machinery in Italy where he claimed third:
“It’s nice to be back in Estonia after a few years since my last participation here in 2014. After the test day near Varano in Italy with Motorsport Italia, we are ready to restart our challenge in Junior WRC at Rally Estonia. Thanks to ACI Sport, ACI Team Italia, M-Sport and Pirelli.”
62 Enrico Oldrati / Elia de Guio
Enrico Oldrati will have a point to prove on the fast gravel roads after his performance on Rally Finland in 2019 where he rolled. During the lockdown, the Italian focussed his efforts on the family business to help produce a ventilator attachment to snorkelling masks to aid the COVID-19 effort in Italy. Since then the Italian has been preparing for Rally Estonia including testing the new Fiesta Rally4:
“It’s our first race after the lockdown so it’s going to be important to find a proper rhythm through the very fast roads of Estonia. We had one test some months ago to get used to the new Ford Rally4: it seems very good! We can’t wait to join the battle again.”
63 Robert Virves / Sander Pruul
Robert Virves is the latest up and coming junior driver to come from Estonia having already claimed two wins in the Estonian Junior Championship this year adding his pair of victories from 2019. The Estonian is looking to join a long line of Estonians such as Egon Kaur, Ken Torn and Roland Poom to battle for podium positions in FIA Junior WRC:
“We are really excited to make our debut in JWRC. It’s cool that we can do it here in Estonia and I’m sure it will be an interesting competition in our class since there are many very fast guys at the start line. We are ready and looking for a nice weekend in the forest!” -

Kush Maini takes maiden win in British F3, extends lead
Brands Hatch, 31 August 2020: Hitech GP’s Kush Maini secured his first win of the 2020 season after having picked up 5 other Podiums over the last 10 Races with a controlled drive in the final race of the weekend, and extended his championship lead at the Famous Brands Hatch Circuit in the UK on Sunday. Kush started from his second pole position of the championship which was achieved by the average of the two fastest laps in the preceding 3 races of the weekend. Kush was second in Race 1 and third in Race 3.
The Indian claimed victory by 0.782 seconds over Douglas Motorsport’s Ulysse De Pauw, and earned Hitech GP’s first win in BRDC British F3 in the process.He also set the fastest lap of the race . Double R Racing’s Louis Foster claimed the final spot on the podium, four seconds further back from the lead duo.
Maini made a great start from pole position to hold the lead down to Paddock Hill Bend, but there was drama for Chris Dittmann Racing’s double race winner Ayrton Simmons, who got a good initial getaway from second place only to cruise to the first corner, with the rest of the field having to take avoiding action. That drama allowed De Pauw to climb into second and Foster to third, while Jewiss gained two places to rise to fourth.
Simmons wasn’t the only driver in trouble, as the Douglas Motorsport car of Manaf Hijjawi also didn’t complete the first lap, with the safety car called to enable the stricken car to be collected.
The race resumed at the end of lap five, with Maini making a strong restart to lead the field away. The Hitech driver pulled out an immediate lead of over a second to De Pauw, setting a string of fastest laps to extend the gap to almost two seconds by the end of lap 10. De Pauw closed the gap down towards the end but Maini was never under real pressure, and clinched his opening win of the year.
Maini Said “We’ve been waiting for that first win after five podiums, but I didn’t want to rush it. I just wanted to gather points and I knew the win would come sooner or later, and finally it came so I’m really happy.
“For me I don’t look at the championship until the last two rounds to be honest, because in this championship anything can happen like you saw.
“They’re so brilliant, Hitech gave me a faultless car. They’ve taken 9 podiums in 11 races the win now, and the championship lead, in their debut year. It’s amazing and I really want to thank them for this amazing oppurtunity.”
Maini’s win means he now holds a championship lead of 29 points, having entered the weekend 29 points behind then leader Kaylen Frederick. Jewiss’s run to fourth place in the race means he sits second in the standings, 18 points clear of Skelton, who has climbed into third. Foster is another to rise up the order, sitting in fourth place and a single point ahead of Frederick, who ended a difficult weekend with 11th place in race four.
The BRDC British F3 Championship returns to action on 19-20 September at Donington Park.
BRDC British F3 Championship, Brands Hatch GP, race four result:
1. Kush Maini, Hitech GP, 12 laps
2. Ulysse De Pauw, Douglas Motorsport, +0.782s
3. Louis Foster, Double R Racing, +4.994s
4. Kiern Jewiss, Douglas Motorsport, +5.645s
5. Sasakorn Chaimongkol, Hillspeed, +7.849s
6. Josh Skelton, Chris Dittmann Racing, +9.448s
7. Bart Horsten, Lanan Racing, +10.362s
8. Nazim Azman, Carlin, +10.540s
9. Reece Ushijima, Hitech GP, +10.644s
10. Benjamin Pedersen, Double R Racing, +11.610s
11. Kaylen Frederick, Carlin, +11.845s
12. Oliver Clarke, Hillspeed, +12.075s
13. Josh Mason, Lanan Racing, +13.031s
14. Piers Prior, Lanan Racing, +14.205s
DNF. Ayrton Simmons, Chris Dittmann Racing, 0 laps
DNF. Manaf Hijjawi, Douglas Motorsport, 0 laps -

Mercedes dominates; bad week-end for Ferrari
Lewis Hamilton took his 5th win of the season at the iconic Spa- Francorchamps circuit as his teammate Valtteri Bottas finished second to earn Mercedes their 50th 1-2 finish since returning as a constructor in 2010. Max Verstappen completed the podium by finishing third.
New Delhi, 31 August 2020: Lewis Hamilton secured pole by half a second over his 2nd placed teammate Valtteri Bottas on Saturday. Max Verstappen came ever so close to the front row as he was slower by 0.015s to Bottas. Daniel Ricciardo achieved his best result at the track, qualifying P4. It was a chequerboard pattern as Red Bull’s Alex Albon qualified in P5 and Renault’s Esteban Ocon in P6. Carlos Sainz outqualified his McLaren teammate Lando Norris as they lined up P7 & P10 respectively. Sandwiched between them were the Racing Point cars of Sergio Perez in P8 and Lance Stroll in P9. Daniil Kvyat outqualified Pierre Gasly for the first time in ten races as they started in P11 & P12. Ferrari had a disastrous qualifying as their cars started in P13 & P14, Charles Leclerc ahead of Sebastian Vettel. George Russell once again made it to Q2, starting in P15, his teammate Nicholas Latifi in P18. Both Alfa Romeos sandwiched the Haas of Romain Grosjean as Kevin Magnussen qualified last.
Predicted strategy was a one stop, starting on softs and then onto a set of medium tyres to finish the race. The top 3 cars were starting on the medium tyres. Alternate predicted strategy was to start on the mediums and end the race on soft tyres.
The predicted rain never arrived for Sunday as the grid formed under a cool sunny day in Belgium. Sainz could not start the race due to a broken exhaust discovered while taking his car on the grid.
The start was uneventful as the top 4 maintained their positions going into turn 5.Slipstream is a big factor at this circuit, especially at the start as the grid is bunched up. Due to a tail wind into turn 5 (rather than a head wind), Hamilton was able to keep the lead and not get overtaken by Bottas.Behind, Ocon had jumped Albon at the start. Leclerc made his way into the top 10 while Magnussen was up to P15 after starting last.
Gasly was the only person starting on the durable hard tyre. The hard tyre was working well with heavy fuel loads at the start of the race as Gasly was hunting down Stroll in P7 by lap 4. Meanwhile, Leclerc started falling back as he started to struggle on his soft tyres and inferior straight-line speed. By lap 7 he was out of the points paying position.

Pit Stops graphic by Pirelli The safety car was called into action on lap 11 as Giovinazzi spun into the barrier and Russell was unable to avoid a collision. The whole grid pitted on lap 10-11 bar Gasly and Perez. Albon was the only car to pit for medium tyres, everyone else chose the hard tyre for the end of the race. Albon also managed to overtake Ocon in the pits as Renault lost time due to a double stack.
Racing got underway on lap 14 as Hamilton comfortably pulled away from Bottas, who did the same from Verstappen. By lap 18 Perez pitted for hard tyres dropping to last place. Gasly did the same on lap 26, bolting on the medium tyres as he had started on the hard tyres. There was tension in the Ferrari camp as both cars could be seen going wheel to wheel and touching for P12. Leclerc had to pit for a second time on lap 24 due to loss of hydraulic pressure which dropped him last. Only Perez and Gasly were moving up the field as everyone else maintained their positions. Raikkonen overtook Vettel to run as the lead Ferrari powered car.
The end of the race was tense. Both Mercedes cars and Red Bull’s Verstappen were worried about tyre failures as they started to experience vibrations in them. All three reduced their pace significantly towards the end. Ultimately the worries were unfounded as Hamilton cruised to 5th win of the season- 4th win at Spa- Francorchamps. Hamilton dedicated his win to late actor and friend Chadwick Boseman who passed away on 28th August. Behind him were Bottas and Verstappen to complete the podium.Ricciardo set the fastest lap on the last lap, as he finished P4. His Renault teammate passed Albon on the last lap to finish P5 as the sole McLaren of Norris finished P7.Gasly made the most of his medium tyres to finish in P8, ahead of both of the Racing Point cars who completed the top 10. Gasly’s teammate Kvyat missed out on points as he finished in P11. Raikkonen finished as the leading Ferrari powered car, ahead of the works Ferrari team. Vettel finished in P13 & Leclerc in P14. Behind them were the two Haas cars and sandwiched between them was Latifi in P16.
Mercedes had brought an extensive low drag aerodynamic package. It included revised horns on the top of the nose of the car, new bargeboards and side pod endplates to increase their straight-line speed. They also brought a new floor which had six vertical fins added to manage the airflow around the rear tyre. This package worked well as they maintained their qualifying and race pace advantage. Though, they were slower on the straights compared to Red Bull, which indicates Mercedes were running more downforce. Red Bull had an encouraging showing, especially with Verstappen as he almost qualified on the front row. In the race they were more subdued.
The Renault car works very well in low drag, high-speed circuits as evident from Silverstone and now Spa- Francorchamps. Their race pace was on par with Red Bull and had there been 2-3 more laps, Ricciardo could have overtaken Verstappen for the podium. Alas, at least they got their first fastest lap of the race in a decade. McLaren also looked promising, though not as fast as they Anglo-French rivals. Norris could have finished higher, but compromised his race due to losing positions on the opening lap. McLaren too, like Mercedes brought a low drag sidepod endplate to increase their straight-line speed. Interesting to NOTE: McLaren tested a 2021 specification floor on Friday to collect some real-world data. The AlphaTauri showed pace in the hands of Gasly as he was able to finish in the points. His teammate was unable to capitalise on the advantage of his car as he finished outside the points.

Pirelli graphic Ferrari had the worst race of the season. After taking a pole here a year ago, they plummeted to outside of the points. They were the only team on the grid not to improve on their previous year lap time. They could not find the right set-up, and as they were already behind in the power unit department, they compromised their downforce levels. A weekend to forget then. They may have the same struggles in the next race in Monza, their home Grand Prix. Alfa Romeo and Raikkonen were faster than the Ferraris. They can be somewhat content as their car works better on low drag circuits. Haas and Williams continued in a positive direction, as both teams improved their lap time compared to the previous year, though it is not enough to achieve points.
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It’s crazy to think, I’m 35, but I feel better than ever: Hamilton
The top-three drivers who attended the post-race press conference are:
Lewis HAMILTON (Mercedes); Valtteri BOTTAS (Mercedes) and Max VERSTAPPEN (Red Bull Racing)
TRACK INTERVIEWS (Conducted by Martin Brundle)
Q: Lewis, it seemed to me that you had this race under control from qualifying yesterday with those two outstanding laps but you had some nursing to do at the end?
Lewis HAMILTON: Yeah, it wasn’t the easiest of races. I had a lock-up into Turn 5 that started to give a bit of vibration and then one into the last corner. The tyre temperatures were slowly dropping, no matter how much you were pushing. I guess as you lose rubber you start to lose temperature in the tyres. It was a bit of a struggle but nonetheless I think it was OK. I was a little bit nervous that we might have a scenario like Silverstone with that right front towards the end, so I was nursing it. It looks like the tyre has got plenty of rubber on it, so maybe it was just fine and maybe just all worry for nothing.
Q: You’re unstoppable at the moment – you’re 89th victory, just two behind the great Michael Schumacher now, your fourth victory here, matching Jim Clark. You’re on a roll!
LH: I know it’s not necessarily what everyone always wants, to see the Mercedes at the front but no matter how much success we have, we just keep our heads down. When I go back into the office now there’s no guys celebrating, they’re like, ‘OK, how can we win the next race’. It’s an incredible mentality to work around, and environment to work around. We’re continuing to learn about ourselves, about the car, how we develop and improve weekend-in, weekend-out. And honestly, it’s crazy to think, I’m 35, going towards 36 but I feel better than ever, so that’s a positive. I’m really, really grateful to the team, everyone back at the factory, thank you for their continued support. It actually worked to my benefit to be honest that snap, because it meant he was right up my chuff and I’m sure he had to lift. And that meant that when we go to the top of the hill, I don’t know if he had to lift or not, but he didn’t have enough time to slingshot. No shake and bake today, so I’m grateful for that.
Q: On to Valtteri Bottas. P2 today Valtteri, tell us about your race? There was a point early on when you were saying ‘let me have a go, let me use my power up and have a run at Lewis’?
Valtteri BOTTAS: Yeah, of course at the start it would have been a good opportunity but I think Lewis played it pretty well that he wasn’t too fast out of Turn 1 and I couldn’t really get momentum behind him and also today there was a tailwind into Turn 5, so a bit less of a tow effect. Same thing in the restart – I just couldn’t catch him on the straight. So, I think those are the main opportunities and otherwise, yeah, with the same car and Lewis driving pretty much mistake-free it was tricky, but you know, I tried.
Q: You made me smile when you said on the radio ‘I didn’t hear that instruction that we’re not allowed to race each other’.
VB: Yeah! Actually I had no clue about that! Maybe they said it, but I don’t recall.
Q: Good stuff and more world championship points. What can you take away from this weekend, we go straight into Monza of course?
VB: Well, I think Lewis was faultless today and yesterday he was quick. We earned more points this weekend. At least it was a clean weekend for me, with no big issue. But, definitely I want those race wins and I’m just happy that there’s an opportunity next weekend again.
Q: Max, 33, you keep finishing P3. You could see the Mercedes at the end of the race again. A bit tantalisingly frustrating or satisfied with the day?
Max VERSTAPPEN: No, it was pretty boring, to be honest. Not really interesting; not much to do. I couldn’t really keep up with them when they were pushing and from my side I ran out of tyres at the end. The last eight laps I was just backing it out, saving the front tyres. It was not really enjoyable out there today. On the medium I didn’t really have a lot of grip and on the hard tyre, initially I was trying to put a bit of pressure on Valtteri, but then they told him to speed up and I couldn’t keep up. Yeah, a bit lonely.
Q: Yeah, I can imagine for you. There was some really good action through the field. I wondered if you might come in before the end, put some pressure on Mercedes with some fresh tyres and try to get a world championship point, but Daniel Ricciardo was, annoying for you, in your pit stop window wasn’t he?
MV: Yeah and I was not sure with their top speed if it was easy to pass, so I said we just stay out. I think I was very close to a puncture but, yeah, we finished P3. More than that was anyway not possible today. OK, maybe it was not the most satisfying P3 but it’s still better than nothing, so I’m pretty pleased with that.
Q: It was probably a wise choice. Daniel did the fastest lap of the race on the 44th lap of the race, the last lap, so he had some speed.
MV: Yeah, well, we just had no tyres left, so I was not taking any risks. It was probably a good weekend for them and just maximised what we could.
Q: Straight on to Monza looking forward to that.
MV: Yeah, we’ll try again and see where we end up.
PRESS CONFERENCE
Q: Lewis, many congratulations, that was a hugely impressive weekend from you and Mercedes.
LH: Thank you. Yeah, it was definitely impressive from my point of view, just seeing this team continue to come here weekend-in, weekend-out. You know, we’re constantly learning and constantly improving and I don’t know how we continue to do that. What we learned from the last race, which was also a great race, we’ve brought updates here, we’ve understood our tyres a little bit better coming into this weekend, and qualifying obviously was incredible for myself and I managed to have that same pace today that I had yesterday. Even though I was on my own out there, it was still very, very tough with these tyres, in terms of looking after them. I think at the end everyone had to back off to manage the tyres to bring these cars home with these long one stops.
Q: As you say, hugely impressive qualifying yesterday and a great race today. Of the five wins so far in 2020, was this the smoothest weekend for you?
LH: Ooh, I would say the last one probably was. Barcelona, particularly the race, was the smoothest race I think I’ve generally had. This one was positive but it’s very stressful with the start, as is Barcelona, but the start is not easy. And the restart also. I think it was a pretty straightforward weekend but there are definitely areas we can improve.
Q: Great stuff, Lewis, well done. Valtteri, solid second place in the race. How did the car perform, did you feel faster than Lewis at any stage today?
VB: It’s difficult to say because of course when you are in the lead you can control the pace and you have the free air and when you are behind and if you try to get close, you are always using more of the tyres than the car ahead, so it’s impossible to say whether I was quicker at any point. But I felt in general that the pace for me was good and I think that our car was strong today. As Lewis said, as a team it was a really solid Sunday for us. So, yeah, it was pretty straightforward. Of course, I tried to use the opportunities, the first one was at the race start. Out of Turn 1 I felt a better run than Lewis and I really actually had to lift not to run into the back of him and I tried to leave a bit of a gap to get a good momentum off the tow, but today I was surprised how small the tow effect was, maybe with the tailwind into Turn 5 it made a different. Actually, it was the same on the restart. I was hoping to catch him but I just couldn’t.
Q: You said on the radio that you had numbness in your left leg. How much did that hinder you? Are you OK now?
VB: Yeah, all good. I just got a bit of numbness with the brake pedal we have in the car there have been a couple of race where my leg gets a bit numb and it happened today again. It’s difficult to say how much I was affected. It can lead to mistakes but there were no big mistakes apart from one lock-up that I can recall.
Q: Coming to you Max…
MV: This music playing in the background is more exciting than my race. Let’s keep it going.
Q: I was going to say, it was a quiet race for you today but you did keep in touch all the way through. How much satisfaction does that give you?
MV: Well, not all the way through. On the hard tyre I was trying to follow with Valtteri but then they told him to speed up, so then I lost a bit of ground. At one point, with ten laps to go, I started to have really bad vibrations on the tyres and then I started to have a lot of understeer. Then we discussed: shall we do a pit stop? But I had Daniel in my pit stop window, so I said “well, let’s just go to the end then, and I’ll just manage it.” It’s a shame. I mean, it’s such an amazing track and then you can’t really push. So, it was pretty boring to be honest. It’s a shame. I mean, I really enjoy driving here and honestly, we did 44 laps right? So, I probably did 38 of them managing a lot. It’s not been the most exciting today.
Q: We saw a nice little dice between you and your old team-mate Daniel Ricciardo at the start. Very respectful.
MV: Yeah, we gave each other room. Honestly, I didn’t see him after Turn 7 but he was on my inside, but, yeah, I could only see one Renault in my mirror but that was not Daniel, so I had no clue where he was, so I just gave him a bit more space than I think was necessary in Turn 8. But all good, it was nice. It’s always nice anyway racing him; he’s a good guy. It’s a lot of fun.
VIDEO CONFERENCE
Q: (Andrew Benson – BBC) Lewis, this one’s for you. You spoke before the race about focussing on improving your qualifying for this year after last year. How do you do that without compromising anything else?
LH: It’s a good question. Last year Valtteri was putting in great laps as he always does but I think I was definitely under-performing in qualifying, which is generally… usually… a strength of mine. It was really understanding these tyres and how I utilised it with my driving style. For this year I’ve had to make a couple of adjustments and on top of that, with this car, seems to work quite well. So now I’m back to being able to produce qualifying laps that I was able to do before last year, and on a more consistent basis. It’s just work in the background. It’s work that we do on the simulator; it’s stuff we do with set-up but getting that right without affecting the race. As you saw, last year the races were incredibly strong. It’s the fine line.
Q: (Alex Kalinauckas – Autosport) Lewis, you only really looked vulnerable today – although that might be a bit of a stretch – on the run up to Les Combes at the top of the hill. In the past you’ve used a few special tactics, like having 90 per cent throttle going on runs through Eau Rouge. Did you do anything like that today on lap one, and also at the restart?
LH: On the start itself I had a big snap out of Turn 1 and Valtteri was all over we, and as I had wheelspin, I had a de-rated shift as well, so that wasn’t particularly exciting, so I had to already block, I think, coming out of Turn 1. But the goal is to go in there in the lead and bridge a gap to the car behind – but in this instance, it worked out to my benefit, to be honest, a mistake, well, not a mistake, a snap, it was just the tyres, the way they are. It meant that Valtteri didn’t have a gap behind to slingshot alongside me. That’s definitely the stressful moment of the race. And then the restart, it’s horrible when you get the Safety Car. I’m glad that everyone’s safe. Controlling at the front and trying to bridge the gap on the restart to the car behind, because that’s another opportunity for them to slipstream you, is not easy. I think today we were lucky because in previous years we’d have had a headwind into Turn 5 and so you’re obviously more draggy and the car behind gets a better tow. This weekend it was a tailwind, so I think that really helped keeping Valtteri behind.
Q: Valtteri, how difficult was it to follow Lewis through Eau Rouge, in dirty air, on heavy fuel, on that opening lap? Is it easy-flat?
VB: To be honest, yes, it’s not really an issue. I remember a few years back with less downforce it was more tricky but now it’s actually… following through Eau Rouge is fine. I think it was just a question that, with the issue Lewis had at the exit of Turn 1, it was tricky to really build any gap to get proper momentum because of the car behind.
Q: (Christian Menath – motorsport-magazin.com) Question for Max and probably for the Mercedes drivers as well if they want to comment. Max, you said you had to manage pace on 38 out of the 44 laps. Was it just tyre management or did you have to manage anything else? If it was just the tyres, do you think it was because of the early pit stop for the Safety Car?
MV: For sure the pit stop was early. For sure that was not the best for us but yeah, it was just not really an enjoyable race, especially towards the end. The last eight laps, with so much vibration and understeer. Yeah, I don’t know what to say! It’s just not really exciting.
Lewis, how many laps of tyre management did you have to do today, out of the 44, just to continue the theme?
LH: Yeah, probably the same. It’s not particularly exciting, as Max said, but it’s a medium-high speed circuit so there’s a lot of force that goes through these tyres, and you know, they allow us to do these one-stops and you lose so much time in the pit stops so it wasn’t that exciting to have to manage to go the distance every time. It’s not something I particularly enjoy. You want to be able to attack, and push-push-push-push-push, do a stop, push-push-push.
MV: And besides that, also, they let us do a one-stop and then also the cars, it’s so hard to follow. It makes you really push for that one-stop.
Valtteri? Same for you?
VB: Yep.
Q: (Ben Hunt – The Sun) Question to Lewis. Can you quite believe how well it has gone for you this season? And also to Valtteri, is there anything you can do to try and stop your team-mate from beating you every weekend? Is there anything you can do mentally, physically just to stop the rot, as it were?
LH: The plan is obviously, for all of us, we prepare ourselves in the best way we can to win. A lot of work has gone into this year. I was talking about qualifying, for example, on my side, really trying to elevate certain areas without letting others drop. So yeah, of course, I can’t tell you that I predict that I was going to come to the weekend and have half a second advantage in qualifying, and have the pace that I’ve had in these races compared to others but obviously I’m grateful that it is going so well. It’s really nice to know that I’m delivering the way I know that I can. No matter what, the work never stops. You just have to keep pushing, keep working, keep trying to evolve because that’s what everyone else is doing. So, after this, for example, we have a debrief. It won’t be all smiles. It will be like: ‘OK guys, this could be better; this is the weakness of the car; this is where we really need to focus on.’ Communication. Whether it’s set-up or the aero level that we had this weekend, whether it’s engine driveability. Got to push on all the areas, guys, back to the drawing board, let’s keep pushing – and that’s how we continue to elevate ourselves.
VB: Of course I’m trying everything I can. The fact is that it’s not over. There’s ten or something races. Obviously I had that one kind of a DNF with a puncture at Silverstone, lost points with that. If I would give up now then I would rather stay home, so I will keep pushing, I will still keep trying to find anything from myself that I can and it just really trying to perfect everything. Yesterday I didn’t in qualifying, Lewis was on pole, he was faster on that lap then today with that pole he could turn it into a win. Of course the weekend really starts with qualifying, trying to be on pole and then those weekends that don’t go for you, you really need to maximise the points. I felt, for a long term now – actually this week has been at least like a smooth weekend, without any issues, just the qualifying was not good enough but I’m working on everything, I’m trying but there’s still many positives I can take. I feel my race pace this year has been better than any year before, so that’s a positive so I feel like always in the race I’m there and I can fight for it so now it’s just about trying to perform better and more consistently in qualifying sessions.
Q: Have you noticed the improvements that Lewis has made in qualifying this year?
VB: I think yesterday I found it hard to match. Of course it always comes from so many details, the out laps, getting the tyres in the perfect window, front and rear, the set-up and driving style and when that one lap counts yes, yeah, Lewis has been really consistent, not making any mistakes in qualifying and as you look at the numbers, has had the upper hand this year in qualifying, which honestly pisses me off but of course I’m trying and I do enjoy the challenge and I can’t wait for the next qualifying session next weekend.
Q: (Giles Richards – The Guardian) Lewis, you acknowledged after the win that it’s not what everyone wants to see, another Mercedes at the front, and Max has said he found the race boring as well. Does it concern you at all that if your level of dominance and Mercedes’s level of dominance continues like this for the rest of this season, it might actually prove to be off-putting for many fans?
LH: I can’t speak for the fans but having been a fan, growing up, having lived in different eras watching the Schumacher era of course, I know what it’s like. As soon as the start was done and the restart, you generally know that I don’t make too many mistakes so you kind of… and the same with these drivers, you know, they’re very very consistent. It’s very difficult to overtake in this circuit so I can imagine, it’s definitely not the most exciting. I feel exactly the same as Max; it wasn’t the most exciting… I mean, I generally really enjoy myself in the car because it’s… if you don’t enjoy the moment, what’s the point in doing in it. I’m still enjoy the battle. Every time I come through turn 15, I look in my mirror, I see where Valtteri is, whether he’s closer or further behind, taking in the knowledge of what times he’s doing, the gaps between him and Max and really trying to get the perfect balance each and every single lap. That’s still a massive challenge for me. It’s just perhaps not as fun for people to watch but when you’re in it; it’s a little bit different. But of course, I would love to have a real race. I’ve definitely had races in the past here which are a little bit closer, trying to follow the Ferrari and stay on top of them but they could overtake because they had all that extra power. I hope the next races, we have the… I think the Red Bulls have improved. I really hope that we have more of a race because I think everyone wants to see us all battling together.
Q: You mentioned the Schumacher years at Ferrari. As a fan, back then, what did you make of that dominance?
LH: I can’t remember. I was a teenage kid, I would have woken up, had my bacon sarnie (sandwich) and probably watched the start and gone to sleep and then woke up to watch the end. If I was watching today I would do the same most likely and watch the highlights because it’s much shorter, unless a friend told me there was a super exciting race on TV so that you watch the whole thing. Ultimately, this is not what fans… and I hope that people need to hopefully understand that this isn’t our fault. At the end of the day we’re drivers, we’ve come through all the ranks, we’ve earned the positions that we have and we come in weekend in, weekend out, devoted and give absolutely everything to go out there and perform at our best. Ultimately the decision makers who design the cars, who set rules and those kind of things, are the ones that you could apply pressure to to ultimately do a better job moving forwards, if that’s possible. I’m hopeful that’s what they’re going to do in 2022 and with that new type car, maybe we’ll see a different form of racing where you can follow. Wouldn’t that be something if we can follow closer and have more close races?
Q: (Edd Straw – The Race) Lewis, the team and yourself included always seem to overcome whatever obstacles you’re faced with, whenever they appear. Next race, there’s a new obstacle, the engine mode changes which are going to require plenty or work to adjust to regardless of the impact on performance. So does it give you a lot of confidence when you know there’s something like this, that this is a team that does, as you always say, how to get better improvements to tackle these problems and is that why it’s not too much of a concern because you think you know the team’s going to get its head down, get on top of it and probably get to the next race with the performance not really affected and everything running pretty smoothly again?
LH: Yeah, naturally I know and I’ve spoken to the engine crew. I know the implications of the rule that’s come in to try and take away… try to slow us down but as I said before, I don’t think it’s really going to make big difference. But of course we are both confident that whatever is thrown at us we go to the drawing board, we hash it out, we communicate, we delegate and then we execute it. That’s what we do. Keep throwing the punches and we will do our best to return back just as hard.
Q: (Andrew Benson – BBC Sport) Lewis, you mentioned yesterday about wanting to come into the track and make a statement but you can’t just will yourself to be half a second faster than everybody else, otherwise you’d do it every weekend, so what’s the mentality that you were in, that got you there yesterday? And are you performing this year, do you think, at a level that you’ve not reached before?
LH: I would definitely would say… I mean last year I think was one of my best years, if not the best year. But, as I said, qualifying was all of a sudden… I had a bit of a slump and the goal every year, of course, is to improve physically, mentally and with the methods that you apply… and I definitely think that I’ve been able to do it this year so yes, I feel like I’m driving at my best. Oh yeah, coming into this weekend?
Q: (Andrew Benson – BBC Sport) Willing yourself to be half a second. You can’t do that so, how do know what’s going on there?
LH: Yeah. No. I think that naturally we had that week off, I got good training at home and arrived here feeling fairly relaxed. And then obviously I woke up yesterday morning and… I mean, I’ve generally been feeling a lot of weight on my heart, spirit. You know, when you’re watching the news, when you see what’s happening around the world and I feel really quite affected by it and then obviously I was so incredibly proud when Chadwick was Black Panther because as I mentioned all the reasons yesterday, as a kid, dreaming of super heroes and finally see someone, a super hero of a similar colour to me, was really just such a remarkable moment, I think, for the black community so when I woke up and I got the news from a friend who has said I’m crying writing this message to you about Chad, and then reading the news I just broke down. I remember, just trying to pull it together and make sure I delivered on that day. Of course, you don’t know if you’re going to be able to deliver laps, you don’t know if you’re going to be distracted but when you find purpose, when you find your purpose, when you know what you’re going for, what your target is, will, I think, can get you quite far and so naturally we have to do the work with the engineers, they do great work in the background and I got the car where I needed it and was able to execute. But of course, I think it is also partly also a mental thing for me. Sorry for the long answers, guys!
MV: All good!
Ends
-

A facile win for Hamilton; 50th 1-2 for Mercedes
Spa Francorchamps, 30 August 2020: Lewis Hamilton further extended his Formula 1 Driver’s Championship with a dominant Belgian Grand Prix at Spa-Francorchamps as Valtteri Bottas took second place to wrap up Mercedes third 1-2 finish of the season. Max Verstappen took third place to score his sixth podium finish in a row.
Lewis Hamilton said: “Spa is such a special circuit, I could just drive around here for lap after lap. It’s not always been an easy one for me, so to come here and get pole and the win this weekend is fantastic. The first lap can be a nightmare, because of the huge tow down the big straight, but I managed to keep Valtteri behind me on lap one and from there I had a strong race. Of course, I’d love to be able to win every race wheel to wheel, but today was a different kind of race, it was all about managing the tyres and the gap to the cars behind. I was slightly nervous at the end that we might see a repeat of the tyre issue we had in Silverstone, but thankfully it held in there. Huge credit to the team, both here and back home in Brackley and Brixworth. No matter how much success we’ve had over the years, everyone just keeps their heads down and focuses on trying to improve. It’s an incredible mentality to have and it’s inspiring to be working in that kind of environment.”
When the light went out at the start of the race Bottas made a good start from P2 on the grid and he seemed poised to challenge pole sitter Hamilton as they went through La Source, but Hamilton had a small lock-up and that forced Bottas to slow. Lacking momentum he was unable to get a run on Hamilton as they went through Eau Rouge and down the long Kemmel straight.
There was a tougher battle happening directly behind the lead pair, however. Verstappen made a good getaway to hold his grid position of third place but on the long straight fourth-placed Daniel Ricciardo was able to pull alongside and the pair went into Les Combe side by side. Verstappen ran wide on the exit but he was able to fight back as they went through Pouhon and he closed the door on his former team-mate to retain third place.
Behind them Versatppen’s team-mate Alex Albon also came under pressure from a Renault’s Esteban Ocon on the run down the hill to Eau Rouge and on the long straight he lost the position to the Frenchman.
The race then settled in the opening 10 laps, with the Mercedes pair eking out a slim gap back to Verstappen as the Dutchman pulled away from Ricciardo. On lap 10 Hamilton held a 1.8s advantage over Bottas, but the complexion of the race then changed when Alfa Romeo’s Antonio Giovinazzi lost control on the exit of Fagnes and crashed into the barriers on the right side of the track. His car bounced back on track and a detached wheel then hit the Williams of George Russell, who then arrowed off track into the barriers on the left side. Fortunately, both drivers emerged unscathed but the Safety Car was immediately deployed.
With the race neutralised, the bulk of the field pitted and during the stops Albon managed to jump ahead of Ocon. Racing Point’s Sergio Pérez and AlphaTauri’s Pierre Gasly opted to stay out on track, however, and they rose to fourth and fifth respectively.
Following the restart on lap 15 Hamilton held his lead ahead of Bottas and Verstappen while Ricciardo and Albon soon Pérez and Gasly who were beginning to feel their starting tyres go off.
At the front, Hamilton began to stretch away from Botta. Verstappen doggedly hung onto the Finn for a while, but as the laps ground down the gaps at the front slowly began to spread and in the final third of the race Verstappen began to complain that his tyres were causing vibrations. With eight laps remaining and a healthy gap back to fourth-placed Ricciardo, The Red Bull driver opted to throttle back and cruised to his sixth podium in a row 15 seconds behind race winner Hamilton and with three seconds in hand over Ricciardo, who took the point for fastest lap on the final tour of the circuit.
Behind them Albon and Ocon provided the entertainment in the last 10 laps Albon was beginning to struggle on the mediums he had taken during his sole stop and Ocon closed in. In the last five laps the Thai driver was forced to fend off a series of late attacks by the Renault driver and though he managed to defend well, on the final lap he ran out of pace and on the long run to Les Combes Ocon powered past and Albon was forced to settle for sixth place ahead of the McLaren of Lando Norris and Gasly who powered through the order in the late stages to claim eighth. Ninth place went to Racing Point’s Lance Stroll and the final point went to Pérez.
Hamilton now has 157 points to Verstappen’s 110, with Bottas in thrid place in the Driver’s Championship with 107. In the Constructors’ battle Mercedes have 264 points, with Red Bull on 158. McLaren are third with 68 points.
2020 FIA Formula 1 Belgian Grand Prix – Race
1 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 44 1:24’08.761
2 Valtteri Bottas Mercedes 44 1:24’17.209 8.448
3 Max Verstappen Red Bull/Honda 44 1:24’24.216 15.455
4 Daniel Ricciardo Renault 44 1:24’27.638 18.877
5 Esteban Ocon Renault 44 1:24’49.411 40.650
6 Alexander Albon Red Bull/Honda 44 1:24’51.473 42.712
7 Lando Norris McLaren/Renault 44 1:24’52.535 43.774
8 Pierre Gasly AlphaTauri/Honda 44 1:24’56.132 47.371
9 Lance Stroll Racing Point/Mercedes 44 1:25’01.364 52.603
10 Sergio Pérez Racing Point/Mercedes 44 1:25’01.940 53.179
11 Daniil Kvyat AlphaTauri/Honda 44 1:25’18.961 1’10.200
12 Kimi Räikkönen Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 44 1:25’20.265 1’11.504
13 Sebastian Vettel Ferrari 44 1:25’21.655 1’12.894
14 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 44 1:25’23.681 1’14.920
15 Romain Grosjean Haas/Ferrari 44 1:25’25.554 1’16.793
16 Nicholas Latifi Williams/Mercedes 44 1:25’26.556 1’17.795
17 Kevin Magnussen Haas/Ferrari 44 1:25’34.301 1’25.540
Antonio Giovinazzi Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 9 17’03.552 Spun off
George Russell Williams/Mercedes 9 17’05.778 Collision
Carlos Sainz McLaren/Renault 0 Not started -

Rea resists Davies pressure for Aragon Race 2 victory
Aragon, 30 August 2020: It was a thrilling battle for MOTUL FIM Superbike World Championship as Jonathan Rea (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK) reclaimed his Championship lead with a 10 point gap after Race 2 victory at MotorLand Aragon for the Prosecco DOC Aragon Round, despite a late-race mistake allowing his rivals to close in on the reigning Champion.
Rea had started the race from pole position and, despite pressure from Scott Redding (Aruba.IT Racing – Ducati) in the early corners, was able to pull away from the chasing group. Rea led every lap throughout the race despite a mistake on Lap 14 which allowed Chaz Davies (Aruba.IT Racing – Ducati) to close the gap from around two seconds to just two tenths. Despite Davies attempting a move into Turn 1 on Lap 15, Rea held on to take victory by over one second ahead of Davies. Alvaro Bautista (Team HRC), who started the race from fourth, got ahead of Redding in the early stages, claimed his first podium for Honda and Honda’s first podium since Magny-Cours in 2016; Bautista and Honda showing good pace throughout the weekend.
Redding would finish the race in fourth place after being passed by Bautista and Davies, but the British rider also had to make a move on Michael van der Mark (PATA YAMAHA WorldSBK Official Team) on Lap 4 to help secure fourth place. Michael Ruben Rinaldi (Team GOELEVEN) made it three Ducati machines in the top five with fifth place as he also got by van der Mark, with the Dutchman finishing in sixth place.
Leon Haslam (Team HRC) made it two Hondas in the top seven with a seventh-place finish after a titanic battle with a group of five riders. Toprak Razgatlioglu (PATA YAMAHA WorldSBK Official Team) claimed eighth place with Alex Lowes (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK) in ninth and Garrett Gerloff (GRT Yamaha WorldSBK Junior Team) completing the top 10. There was just one second separating Haslam, Razgatlioglu, Lowes and Gerloff.
Xavi Fores (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing) had a strong result in 11th place, finishing less than a tenth of a second behind American rider Gerloff as part of the group of five riders fighting for seventh place. Tom Sykes (BMW Motorrad WorldSBK Team) was the lead BMW rider in 12th place as the final rider in that battle; Federico Caricasulo (GRT Yamaha WorldSBK Junior Team) finishing around three seconds behind Sykes in 13th. Eugene Laverty (BMW Motorrad WorldSBK Team) and Maximilian Scheib (ORELAC Racing VerdNatura) completed the points with 15th.
Sylvain Barrier (Brixx Performance), Christophe Ponsson (Nuova M2 Racing), Takumi Takahashi (MIE Racing Althea Honda Team) and teammate Lorenzo Gabellini all finished the race while Loris Baz (Ten Kate Racing Yamaha) retired from the race following a crash on Lap 4 of 18 at Turn 15; the French rider unable to re-join the race following the incident where he came off on his bike on his own. He was not the only non-finisher as Marco Melandri (Barni Racing) who retired with a technical issue and Roman Ramos (OUTDO Kawasaki TPR) retired from the race on the penultimate lap.
P1 Jonathan Rea (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK)
“I can’t believe the pace; I didn’t expect that. We kept the bike the same as yesterday, just changed the front tyre. We went for the SC1 front compound instead of the harder one and in this hotter temperature it seemed to work a little bit better. At the end, Chaz was coming, and I made a massive mistake in the last corner. I went in fourth gear and had no engine braking to stop me. I thought I was going to go down, but I just couldn’t get that last shift. I lost the position as Chaz came through, but I knew I needed to go straight back past and put my head down because I had a little bit extra.”P2 Chaz Davies (Aruba.IT Racing – Ducati)
“I got a poor start and left myself with work to do. I was able to pull Jonny in and it was kind of similar to yesterday in that we didn’t have much tyre left at the end, front and rear. It seemed like Jonny was able to dig in during those last couple of laps. Full credit to him because he did a good job. I was on my limit; I couldn’t do anything more. I think I cooked everything coming through the pack and that’s all the bike had. I’m really happy with that, it was a solid weekend. The bike, in many ways, is feeling pretty solid and it’s a good base to start from for next weekend.”P3 Alvaro Bautista (Team HRC)
“The test helped us to make a step forward, but everybody tested here so we’re all in the same condition. I’m so happy with this podium as this is the result of the hard work we are doing. We are on the way to our target, which is to win. We are still a bit far away, but I am so happy. I want to thank HRC, Honda and my team. My mechanics worked hard during the weekend because we had a lot of problems and they spent a lot of time working on my bike, so they deserve this podium.” -

Robert Shwartzman leads Prema 1-2; Jehan Daruvala P16
Spa Francorchamps, 30 August 2020: Robert Shwartzman returned to the top of the FIA Formula 2 Championship with his third victory of the season in the Sprint Race at Spa-Francorchamps, finishing nine seconds ahead of his teammate Mick Schumacher in a PREMA one-two.
Indian racer Jehan Daruvala had a forgettable day once again and finished P16 following a 10-second penalty that was applied after the race.
Callum Ilott began the day in first place in the standings but suffered an early retirement in the very first lap after a coming together with Yuki Tsunoda.
With Ilott out of contention, Shwartzman knew that the Championship lead was on offer, but needed to keep the risk low and the points high. The Russian made the most of an early collision between race leaders Roy Nissany and Dan Ticktum to fire into first, and closed out a controlled victory from there.
Ticktum battled on determinedly after the collision, but couldn’t hold on to a points’ finish, eventually falling back to ninth at the flag, while Nissany’s day ended in retirement.
Ilott’s teammate Guanyu Zhou had a much better time of things, taking his fifth podium of the year behind the PREMAs in third.
AS IT HAPPENED

Mich Schumacher takes a brilliant second during the sprint race of the Formula 2 Championship at Circuit de Spa on Sunday. Photo by Clive Mason via Getty Images This was as good as it got for the Charouz Racing System driver, who then started to drop down the order, opening up an intense battle for the final podium spot. Guanyu Zhou was the first to stake his claim, but Schumacher’s own attempt was far more convincing, as he wrestled ahead of the UNI-Virtuosi man for third.
Shwartzman had scuttled off down the road by this point, building up a 7s lead over Ticktum, who was busy watching those behind him in his rear-view mirrors.
The DAMS’ driver looked to be standing his ground, but locked up under the pressure of Schumacher’s challenge and opened himself up to a move. The PREMA racer remained patient and eventually got ahead down the Kemmel Straight. Zhou followed through one lap later, taking the final podium spot.
The top three eased to the chequered flag, with Nikita Mazepin taking fourth and Luca Ghiotto fifth, followed by Delétraz and Christian Lundgaard. Artem Markelov scored his first points of 2020 in P8, while Ticktum fell back in the closing laps and ended the day in ninth, out of the points.
Shwartzman now leads Ilott in the Drivers’ Championship by exactly 10 points, with 132 in total. Tsunoda remains third on 111, with Schumacher fourth and Mazepin fifth. In the Teams’ Championship, PREMA sit first with 238 points, ahead of UNI-Virtuosi on 214 and Hitech Grand Prix on 152. Carlin are fourth ahead of ART Grand Prix.
KEY QUOTE – ROBERT SHWARTZMAN (PREMA RACING)
“I have finally gotten back to first place – it had been a while since Hungary. I am really happy, and I want to say a big thank you to the team. They did a really great job and the car has been good all weekend. Yesterday, I made a mistake which influenced our result a bit.
“Today, I had a decent start and was P3 out of Turn 1. The guys in front were quite aggressive so I was being a bit cautious with them. They crashed and collided, and I used that opportunity to get past them.
“After that, I just kept up my pace and I am really happy to have the win and the fastest lap as well.”
F2 Sprint race, Top-three: 1. Robert Shwartzman, Prema Racing, 42:44.391; 2. Mick Schumacher, Prema Racing, 42:53.416; 3. Guanyu Zhou, UNI-Virtuosi, 42:55.584.
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Logan Sargeant reclaims lead with dominant F3 win
Spa Francorchamps, 30 August 2020: Logan Sargeant reclaimed the Championship lead in emphatic fashion, taking his second win of the season in a PREMA one-two in the FIA Formula 3 Race 2 at Spa-Francorchamps. The American brushed off a late challenge from teammate Frederik Vesti to finish 0.8s ahead at the chequered flag.
Sargeant lost first place in the standings to fellow PREMA racer Oscar Piastri in Race 1 on Saturday, but battled back in resounding style by rising from third place in the early stages and managing out a convincing victory.
Title rival Liam Lawson recovered from a difficult start to nab the final podium place, but was never really in a position to challenge the top two, finishing nearly 8s behind.
Piastri worked hard but could only manage sixth place after a 5s time penalty for leaving the track and gaining an advantage curtailed his attempts to get further forward.
AS IT HAPPENED
The cars lined up on a cold and foggy morning in Spa, but Richard Verschoor was hot off the line, pulling away smoothly when the lights went out. Lawson looked to be feeling the chill – he was sluggish at the start and had fallen to fifth by the first turn.
Sargeant gladly collected second from the Hitech Grand Prix racer and set about challenging Verschoor for the lead. The PREMA man ensured he got through the first corner cleanly, and then lined up the Dutchman at the second. Darting down the left-hand side of him, Sargeant ran out of road and was forced on a trip through the run-off. He returned to the tarmac ahead of Verschoor but handed back the place as it was gained off-track.
The American only needed one more lap to finish the job, lunging ahead of the MP Motorsport man down the main straight and clinching the position at La Source. His teammate was making moves too. Vesti picked off Lawson first, before flinging his PREMA down the side of Olli Caldwell for a place on the podium. A couple of laps later and he had Verschoor in his pocket as well, firing past the reverse polesitter for second place behind Sargeant.
The field were given a breather as Pierre-Louis Chovet dumped his Hitech into the barriers and brought out a Virtual Safety Car. The Frenchman was quickly out of the car, and out of the race.
Caldwell couldn’t sustain his early pace when racing resumed and began to plummet down the order, falling all the way to ninth behind teammate David Beckman. It was a similar story for Verschoor, whose time in first place had become a distant memory. The MP man dropped to sixth as a DRS train of Théo Pourchaire, Lawson and Alex Smolyar all dived ahead.
Pourchaire was so busy battling for second, that he was caught off guard by Lawson behind him. The Hitech driver had quickly caught up and put his DRS to use with a gentle dive down the side of him.
The ART Grand Prix driver then immediately fell into the clutches of teammate Smolyar, dropping from third to fifth in a matter of corners. It didn’t get any better for him in the final laps, as Piastri flung around the side of him two laps later.
Having looked so measured out in front since passing Verschoor, Sargeant was under pressure for the first time on Sunday as Vesti began to reel him in. The American was trying to manage the gap, but couldn’t keep him out of DRS range. PREMA certainly weren’t about to hold them back, as Vesti’s engineer told him on the radio, “you can do this, come on!”
In the end, Vesti couldn’t make it work, and was forced to settle for second at the chequered flag behind Sargeant. Nearly 8s back, Lawson claimed the final podium place ahead of Smolyar. Piastri’s 5s time penalty, for leaving the track and gaining an advantage during his earlier overtake of Verschoor, dropped him to sixth behind Pourchaire. Verschoor managed seventh, ahead of Lirim Zendeli, Beckmann and Sebastián Fernández.
Sargeant now leads teammate Piastri by seven points in the Drivers’ Championship, with 152 overall. The Australian is second ahead of Beckmann on 111 points, just 0.5 ahead of Lawson. Pourchaire sits in fifth place. In the Teams’ Championship, PREMA remain first with 387.5 points, ahead of Trident on 199.5 and ART Grand Prix on 172. Hitech are fourth ahead of MP Motorsport.
KEY QUOTE – LOGAN SARGEANT (PREMA RACING)
“Fortunately, we were able to get the win today, which was super important after the technical problems that we had yesterday. It was a tough race as I had Fred pushing really hard behind me, but we were able to withstand the pressure and take our second win of the season.”
F3 Top-three – Podium result: 1. Logan Sargeant, Prema Racing, 37:52.233; 2. Frederik Vesti, Prema Racing, 37:53.034; 3. Liam Lawson, Hitech Grand Prix, 38:00.969.
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Tsunoda promoted to Feature race victory: F2
Spa, 29 August 2020: Nikita Mazepin crossed the line first, but it was Yuki Tsunoda who clinched a second FIA Formula 2 victory in the Feature Race at Spa-Francorchamps. A late time penalty for the Hitech Grand Prix driver dropped him down to second in dramatic circumstances.
The duo had diced back and forth for the entire race after a slow pitstop lost Tsunoda track position and gave Mazepin the provisional race lead. Tsunoda tried several moves to pass the Russian late on, but Mazepin clung on for the chequered flag before the Stewards felt his defending had been a little too strong. Mazepin was given a 5s time penalty for forcing the Red Bull junior off the road, costing him the win and dropping him to second.
Mick Schumacher took a cool and controlled fifth podium of 2020, steering clear of any drama to boost his own title chances and put him within 28 points of the Championship lead.
Robert Shwartzman clinched fifth and took a chunk out of Callum Ilott’s lead at the top of the standings, with the UNI-Virtuosi man finishing back in 10th.
AS IT HAPPENED
Ahead of the Feature Race, the motorsport community united in loving memory of Anthoine Hubert, who tragically passed away in Spa-Francorchamps one year ago. Anthoine’s mother Nathalie joined Juan Manuel Correa and members of the F2 paddock, along with several Formula 1 drivers and team members, in a minute’s silence on the grid to pay their respects to the late Frenchman.
Tsunoda got a clean getaway from pole, but so did Mazepin from second and the Russian pulled up alongside him heading into the first turn. Going wheel-to-wheel, the Carlin racer had the inside line and held his nerve, braking latest and retaining the position.
Having missed the opportunity to steal first, Mazepin was suddenly drawn into the crowd behind him and Nobuharu Matsushita fizzed ahead for P2.
It was a mixed start for the top 10, Shwartzman was sluggish off the line and fell to seventh, as his teammate Schumacher lunged ahead into fourth place. Louis Delétraz was another to get away well and found himself in fifth at the exit of Turn 1. Meanwhile, Championship leader Ilott had already made up two places to P10.
Having momentarily slipped back, Mazepin reclaimed second from a helpless Matsushita on Lap 3. The MP Motorsport driver’s soft Pirellis were already looking battered and bruised and he lost further places to Schumacher and Delétraz.
Matsushita’s day then got even worse. The Japanese driver had been reeled in by teammate Drugovich and the Brazilian attempted to dart to the right of him, but he ran out of room and the two came to blows. Drugovich attempted to back out of the move but clipped the right rear of Matsushita, destroying the tyre and sending him spinning into the barriers. Matsushita clambered safely out of the car, with a Virtual Safety Car deployed, but his day was over while Drugovich required a fix-up in the pits.
Mazepin and Schumacher were the first to drop the soft tyres for mediums. Tsunoda followed from first a lap later, but his stop was a poor one and he lost track position to Mazepin, who was now leading the drivers on the prime strategy. On the alternate strategy, Guanyu Zhou inherited the race lead with a 5s gap over second-placed Pedro Piquet. The UNI-Virtuosi driver was amongst the last on the medium tyres to pit, returning in P6, but he instantly lost three places to Luca Ghiotto, Dan Ticktum and Piquet due to cold rubber. His teammate Ilott followed through not long after.
Zhou’s pitstop handed Mazepin the lead for the first time, but Tsunoda was only just over a second behind and fast gaining on him. It took him two laps, but the Carlin racer caught the Russian and attempted a daring move down the inside, but Mazepin refused to surrender the place, giving Tsunoda no choice but to back out and bounce across the kerbs.
Zhou’s tyres were finally warm, as he got a move on and regained the positions he’d lost after his pitstop. The Renault junior picked off Ilott first, before lunging ahead of Ghiotto as well.
Roy Nissany was also on the charge. The Trident man’s decision to opt for the alternate strategy was paying dividends, as he fired past Ilott and eyed up Ghiotto as well before making a DRS-enthused move on the Hitech driver down the inside for P8.
Mazepin thought he had begun to edge away at the front, but Tsunoda was clearly just biding his time and he caught up again with two laps ago. Attempting a near identical move to the first on the Hitech driver, Tsunoda inched ahead but was forced wide again which returned him to second.
Mazepin crossed the line in first but was swiftly informed of a crushing 5s time penalty for forcing the Carlin driver off the road during the aforementioned move, promoting Tsunoda up to first and dropping Mazepin to second.
Nothing changed behind them, as Schumacher closed out his fifth podium of the season. Delétraz settled for fourth, ahead of Shwartzman, Ticktum and Zhou.
Nissany sealed his highest ever F2 finish in P8, followed by Ghiotto and Ilott. In the Drivers’ Championship, Ilott remains in first with 122 points, seven ahead of Shwartzman. Tsunoda is up to third on 111 points, while Schumacher is fourth and Mazepin fifth. In the Teams’ Championship, PREMA Racing are back on top with 209 points, five ahead of UNI-Virtuosi. Hitech Grand Prix are third, ahead of Carlin and ART Grand Prix.
KEY QUOTE – YUKI TSUNODA (CARLIN)
“I am really happy to take P1 in the Feature Race. This is 100% for Anthoine Hubert. A big thanks to Carlin, Red Bull and Honda. It was not an easy situation, and I was a little bit unlucky during the pitstop, but after that I just pushed until the end as much as I could.
“Like Hubert last year, he pushed every lap, every race, and I just drove like him. I maybe couldn’t win in the race, but the final result is P1 and I am really happy with that.”












