Category: Formula 1

  • Max Verstappen quickest in FP2 after Russel top FP1:

    Max Verstappen quickest in FP2 after Russel top FP1:

    Max Verstappen set the fastest time of the second free practice session for the 2023 FIA Formula 1 Miami Grand Prix but Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc brought running to a halt when he crash late in the session. 

    Ferrari driver Leclerc and team-mate set the early pace, but the first really representative time came from Red Bull’s Sergio Perez who set a time of 1:30.757 and then by his team-mate Max Verstappen who stopped the clock at 1:30.146.

    Sainz then posted a lap of 1m30.128s, and Leclerc became the first driver to get under 1m30s with a lap of 1:29.497. 

    Verstappen put in another quick lap that edged him close to the Monegasque driver and then with his next attempt he finally pushed through to the top of the order with a 1:29.380.

    All of the early P1 times had been set on medium compound Pirelli tyres but McLaren’s Lando Norris then emerged on soft tyres and the Briton jumped to top spot with a lap of 

    1:28.741. Aston Martin’s Fernando Alonso moved to P2 before being supplanted by Sainz, but Norris’ time proved good enough to stand for some time. 

    It was Verstappen who eventually toppled the McLaren driver, the Dutchman posting a 1:28.255. The champion then lowered the benchmark to 1:27.930 as drivers began to switch to longer runs. 

    Ten minutes from the end of the session the red flags came out when Leclerc crashed at Turn 7. The incident resulted in a five-minute stoppage as the damaged Ferrari was rescued. When running resumed it was solely to get more running on the harder compounds and there were no significant improvements in lap time. 

    Behind Verstappen. Sainz finished second with Leclerc third. Pérez ended the session in fourth, almost half a second behind his team-mate. 

    Alonso was left with fifth place with the Spaniard having moved past Norris just before Leclerc’s crash. Lewis Hamilton finished seventh ahead of Aston Martin’s Lance Stroll, as Esteban Ocon and Alex Albon completed the top 10.


    2023 FIA Formula 1 Miami Grand Prix – Free Practice 2
    1 Max Verstappen Red Bull Racing 23 1:27.930 
    2 Carlos Sainz Ferrari 26 1:28.315 0.385
    3 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 20 1:28.398 0.468
    4 Sergio Perez Red Bull Racing 24 1:28.419 0.489
    5 Fernando Alonso Aston Martin 25 1:28.660 0.730
    6 Lando Norris McLaren 24 1:28.741 0.811
    7 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 23 1:28.858 0.928
    8 Lance Stroll Aston Martin 23 1:28.930 1.000
    9 Esteban Ocon Alpine 25 1:28.937 1.007
    10 Alex Albon Williams 26 1:29.046 1.116
    11 Pierre Gasly Alpine 22 1:29.098 1.168
    12 Kevin Magnussen Haas 22 1:29.171 1.241
    13 Zhou Guanyu Alfa Romeo 27 1:29.181 1.251
    14 Valtteri Bottas Alfa Romeo 26 1:29.189 1.259
    15 George Russell Mercedes 21 1:29.216 1.286
    16 Oscar Piastri McLaren MCL60 McLaren 24 1:29.339 1.409
    17 Nico Hulkenberg Haas VF-23 Haas 22 1:29.393 1.463
    18 Yuki Tsunoda AlphaTauri AT04 AlphaTauri 25 1:29.613 1.683
    19 Nyck de Vries AlphaTauri AT04 AlphaTauri 25 1:29.928 1.998
    20 Logan Sargeant Williams FW45 Williams 27 1:30.038 2.108

  • Sergio Perez wins Azerbaijan Sprint ahead of Verstappen

    Sergio Perez wins Azerbaijan Sprint ahead of Verstappen

    Baku, 29 April 2023: Sergio Pérez took the first Sprint win of his career with a controlled drive to victory in Baku that saw him pass Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc midway through the race in the Sprint race ahead of the FIA Formula 1 Championship here on Sunday .

    Third place in the 17-lap race went to Max Verstappen. The championship leader dropped to fourth at the start after being hit by George Russell but later passed the Mercedes drive to take the P3 medal.

    When the lights went out at the start, Leclerc got away well from the front of the grid to take the lead. Pérez matched the Ferrari drive off the line and tucked in behind, but Verstappen was slow to start and he was quickly put under pressure by Russell. Verstappen had the upper hand in Turn 1 but Russell was more aggressive at the next corner. He locked up on cold tyres, however, and collided with the Red Bull, gouging a hole in the sidepod of Versatppen’s RB19. The Dutchman had to give way to the Briton as they headed onto the straight towards Turn 3. 

    Moments later the Virtual Safety Car was deployed when AlphaTauri’s Yuki Tsunoda hit the wall in Turn 14 and with debris on the track the physical Safety Car was released at the end of lap three. 

    The SC left the track at the end of lap five. Leclerc managed the restart well ahead of Pérez but it was Verstappen who reacted best to Leclerc’s acceleration and he ambushed Russell just after they crossed the start-finish line. The Dutchman dived down the inside of the Mercedes and powered past the Mercedes into Turn 1. 

    Behind them, Carlos Sainz also reacted well and he muscled past Lewis Hamilton under braking into Turn 1 to take P5. Hamilton, forced wide, also surrendered position to the opportunistic Fernando Alonso who tucked in behind Sainz and stole P6. 

    On lap 8, with DRS back in play after the resumption, Pérez closed up to Leclerc and as they roared along the long straight toward Turn 1 he swept past the Ferrari to take the lead. 

    Two laps later, Leclerc lost the DRS boost of being within a second of Pérez and Verstappen tried to close in. The Ferrari driver responded, though, and he briefly pushed his way back into DRS of the race leader as Verstappen drifted out of range of Leclerc.

    Pérez was now in firm control and on lap 14 he stretched his lead to 1.3 seconds and from there sailed serenely on to take a superbly managed first Sprint win. 

    Verstappen managed to close up to within a second of Leclerc on the penultimate lap but the Ferrari driver was wily enough to harvest energy in the right places and was able to keep restrict the Dutchman to third at the flag. 

    Behind the top three, Russell took fourth place ahead of Sainz and Alonso and Hamilton and the final point on offer went to Lance Stroll in the second Aston Martin. 

    2023 FIA Formula 1 Azerbaijan Grand Prix – Sprint 
    1 Sergio Pérez Red Bull/Honda RBPT 17 – 
    2 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 17 4.463
    3 Max Verstappen Red Bull/Honda RBPT 17 5.065
    4 George Russell Mercedes 17 8.532
    5 Carlos Sainz Ferrari 17 10.388
    6 Fernando Alonso Aston Martin/Mercedes 17 11.613
    7 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 17 16.503
    8 Lance Stroll Aston Martin/Mercedes 17 18.417
    9 Alexander Albon Williams/Mercedes 17 21.757
    10 Oscar Piastri McLaren/Mercedes 17 22.851
    11 Kevin Magnussen Haas/Ferrari 17 27.990
    12 Zhou Guanyu Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 17 34.602
    13 Pierre Gasly Alpine/Renault 17 36.918
    14 Nyck de Vries AlphaTauri/Honda RBPT 17 41.626
    27 Nico Hülkenberg Haas/Ferrari 17 48.587
    16 Valtteri Bottas Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 17 49.917
    17 Lando Norris McLaren/Mercedes 17 51.104
    18 Esteban Ocon Alpine/Renault 17 1’00.621
         Yuki Tsunoda AlphaTauri/Honda RBPT 2 – Retirement
         Logan Sargeant Williams/Mercedes 0 – Withdrawn

  • Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc takes Baku pole ahead of Max Verstappen: F1

    Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc takes Baku pole ahead of Max Verstappen: F1

    Baku (Azerbaijan), 28 April 2023: Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc took a superb first pole position of 2023 in Qualifying for Sunday’s FIA Formula 1 Azerbaijan Grand Prix, beating Red Bull’s Max Verstappen by almost two-tenths of a second after nothing could separate the pair in the opening runs of Q3. 

    Verstappen’s opening time in the final segment of Qualifying was swift 1:40.455, and that was matched, to the thousandth by Leclerc. However, the Red Bull driver claimed the provisional pole by virtue of having set the time first. 

    But there was no denying the Ferrari driver in the final runs as a brave final lap gave him a 0.188s advantage over Verstappen, who said he had suffered from a warm-up issue on his last lap. Sergio Pérez, meanwhile, went quicker than Leclerc in the first sector on his final flyer, but the Mexican lost time later in the lap and was forced to settle for third. 

    Earlier, at the start of the one-hour session, Verstappen took an early Q1 lead with a lap of 1:41.887. That put him two-tenths of a second ahead of Leclerc. Pérez, meanwhile, was down in fifth place after a tricky opening run that left with an opening time of 1:43.373. 

    There was no time for the Mexican to immediately improve, however, as the red flags were displayed soon after when Nyck de Vries hit the wall in Turn 3. The Dutch driver attempted to carry too much speed into the 90˚ left-hander and went straight into the barriers at the corner exit. 

    When the session eventually resumed, running was brief, as the red flags came out again almost immediately. Pierre Gasly also crashed in Turn 3 with the Alpine driver hitting the wall with the rear right side of his car. He was able to keep going to the next escape road, but with the barriers requiring repair, the session had to be stopped. 

    When the action restarted, Pérez jumped to the top of the order with a 1:41.756. Verstappen bypassed that to take P1 with a lap of 1:41.398 before heading back to the garage. Leclerc slotted into third place ahead of Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton and McLaren’s Lando Norris moved to fifth. 

    Pérez went for another run, but with little pressure coming from behind, the Mexican abandoned the attempt in the final sector and headed back to the pit lane.

    Leclerc continued his attempt, however, and he took P1 with a time of 1:41.269, 0.129 ahead of Verstappen. Aston Martin’s Fernando Alonso moved to third place and Peerez progressed to fourth ahead of Mercedes’ George Russell.

    At the wrong end of the Q1 timesheet, Alfa Romeo’s Zhou Guanyu was ruled out in P16 along with the Haas cars of Nico Hülkenberg and Kevin Magnussen and the unfortunate Gasly and de Vries. 

    Aston Martin’s Fernando Alonso set the first solid time of Q2 with a 1:41.400, but Pérezbeat that time to take P1 with a lap of 1:41.131 before Verstappen slotted into P2, 0.062s behind his team-mate. Leclerc then took P1 with a lap of 1:41.037 and with just under four minutes remaining the Red Bulls headed back out on track for their final runs. 

    In the end, with no improvement coming in his final sector, Pérez chose to back out of his final run. Verstappen, though, went purple in all three sectors and took P1 with a lap of 1:40.822. 

    The shock elimination at the end of the session was Russell. The Mercedes driver was edged out of the final segment by team-mate Hamilton, by just 0.004s. Also out at the end of the middle segment were Alpine’s Esteban Ocon, Williams’ Alex Albon, Alfa Romeo’s Valtteri Bottas, and the second Williams of Logan Sargeant. 

    Pérez was the first on track at the start of Q3 and the Mexican opened his account with a lap of 1:40.563. Behind him, Verstappen was quicker, and the champion claimed the provisional pole with a lap of 1:40.445. There was nothing in terms of time to separate the Dutchman from Leclerc, however. The Ferrari driver crossed the line in an identical time, though Verstappen took P1 thanks to crossing the line first. 

    For the final runs, Leclerc went out ahead of the two Red Bull drivers, with Pérez ahead of Verstappen on track. 

    Leclerc crossed the line in 1:40.203 and though Pérez went quicker than the Ferrari driver through the opening sector, he lost time in the middle of the track. It was a similar story for Verstappen. The champion lost time in the second sector and when he crossed the line he was just under two-tenths off the Ferrari and on the front row. Pérez had to settle for a row two berth ahead of Sainz.

    Fifth place in Qualifying went to Hamilton, with Alonso sixth. Seventh place went to Norris, while Yuki Tsunoda took an excellent eighth place for AlphaTauri. Lance Stroll was ninth for Aston Martin and the final top-10 place went to Oscar Piastri in the second McLaren. 

    2023 FIA Formula 1 Azerbaijan Grand Prix – Qualifying 
    1 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 1:40.203 
    2 Max Verstappen Red Bull Racing 1:40.391 0.188
    3 Sergio Pérez Red Bull Racing 1:40.495 0.292
    4 Carlos Sainz Ferrari 1:41.016 0.813
    5 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 1:41.177 0.974
    6 Fernando Alonso Aston Martin 1:41.253 1.050
    7 Lando Norris 1:41.281 1.078
    8 Yuki Tsunoda AlphaTauri 1:41.581 1.378
    9 Lance Stroll Aston Martin 1:41.611 1.408
    10 Oscar Piastri McLaren 1:41.611 1.408
    11 George Russell Mercedes 1:41.654 1.451
    12 Esteban Ocon Alpine 1:41.798 1.595
    13 Alex Albon Williams 1:41.818 1.615
    14 Valtteri Bottas Alfa Romeo 1:42.259 2.056
    15 Logan Sargeant Williams 1:42.395 2.192
    16 Zhou Guanyu Alfa Romeo 1:42.642 2.439
    17 Nico Hulkenberg Haas 1:42.755 2.552
    18 Kevin Magnussen Haas 1:43.417 3.214
    19 Pierre Gasly Alpine 1:44.853 4.650
    20 Nyck de Vries AlphaTauri 1:55.282 15.079

  • All set for Red Bull Showrun: David Coulthard raises the curtain for media in Mumbai

    All set for Red Bull Showrun: David Coulthard raises the curtain for media in Mumbai

    Mumbai, 11 March 2023: The exciting gala programme of the Red Bull Showrun has come to India again. And it’s time for motorsports fans in India to steer their attention back on the streets of Mumbai. The acclaimed Red Bull Formula 1 car would be on display and the former F1 driver David Coulthard, will take you on a course of delight and fun as he attempts one more run in India following his 2009 first show and the high-altitude show in the Himalayas a few years later by the Red Bull team.

    “There is a lot of change in India since my last visit in 2009, the city has grown big and Formula 1 continues to grow in popularity and Red Bull happens to be very successful with the sport and very successful in India and even during the dominant period for Lewis (Hamilton) and Mercedes, Red Bull car was able to put in strong performances,” said Coulthard.

    “Make sure not to blink, and soak in the whiff of burnt rubber as a mean machine from a decorated team whizzes past you,” said a Red Bull quote and for Do’s and Don’ts tomorrow visit the Red Bull page here.

    Multiple race-winner and veritable legend David Coulthard is all set to bring the adrenaline-pumping roar of his engine to the Maximum City. The only team to have won the Indian Grand Prix returns to India after famously conquering the world’s highest motorable road at Khardung-la, dazzling Mumbaikars at the Bandra-Worli Sea Link, and delighting Delhi with some slick moves at the iconic Rajpath boulevard. Be there to witness it live. The curtains were off at a Press Conference attended by the Photo Editor and adviser of this site, Srinivasa Krishnan in Mumbai today.

    David Coulthard speaking to the media at Mubai on Saturday. Photos by Srinivasa Krishnan exclusively for for INDIAinF1.com

    Our own Suhail Chandhok, put the spotlight on David Coulthard. The run will be on:

    Date: 12th March, 10am onwards (gates open at 8am)

    Venue: Bandra Bandstand, Mumbai

  • Alonso reveals a bit of insights about Aston Martin to Indian reporter Niharika’s query

    Alonso reveals a bit of insights about Aston Martin to Indian reporter Niharika’s query

    The following drivers Max VERSTAPPEN (Red Bull Racing – Winner); Sergio PÉREZ (Red Bull Racing – 2nd) and Fernando ALONSO (Aston Martin – 3rd) attended the FIA post-race Press Conference.

    The ace Indian reporter Niharika Ghorpade took up the tyres issue with the popular driver Fernando Alonso, who got a historic podium for Aston Martin. Her question (and the answer) is given before the full transcript.

    Q: (Niharika Ghorpade – Sportskeeda) Question to Fernando. Yesterday, Checo mentioned that the strong point of your team is tyre management, and that your team banks on that on race day. So how much did that play into effect, compared to other areas in performance, and also, when it comes to your race pace, at some point in this race, you will almost matching the two drivers next to you. If it weren’t for the start, do you think you could have been slightly closer to them within the race?

    FA: I think on the tyres, yes. It seems that this is one is strength of our car, some legacy from last year as well, because Aston Martin was very strong on Sundays last year as well. So yeah, let’s try to keep that theme on the car and just improve the Saturdays, which was maybe the weak point of last year for the team. And also yesterday, we were not mega-competitive. So let’s work on that. And yeah, on the race pace, obviously we lost time in the first stint. I just sat behind the Mercedes. In the middle stint I have to pass George and Valtteri. And then on the final stint I had to pass Lewis and Carlos. So, all in all, I’m sure that you lose 10 or 15 seconds on all those battles. So if we are 40 seconds behind the leader, we could have been maybe 20 seconds, or 30 seconds. Yeah, not real fight – yet – to Red Bull.

    TRACK INTERVIEWS (Conducted by Nico Rosberg) 

    Q: Fernando, how awesome was that start to the season. P3 for you there.

    Fernando ALONSO: Yeah. Thank you. First of all, I think congrats to Lance, my team-mate, you know, he had the surgery 12 days ago and now he’s fighting right with everybody. So yeah, amazing for the team. It was a great weekend and, yeah, finishing on the podium in the first race of the year, this is just amazing, you know, what Aston Martin did over the winter to have the second best car in race one, this is just unreal.

    Q: How did it feel to pass that Ferrari and Sainz, and that Mercedes and Hamilton out on track there? I mean, you were shouting on the radio?

    FA: Yeah, obviously, I would love to start in front of them and then use the pace. But yeah, we had not the best start today and we had to pass on track. So yeah, it felt like more exciting, more adrenaline for sure. So people enjoyed it. We did enjoy as well. So let’s go into Jeddah.

    Q: Great. And you have more wind tunnel time as well. Do you think that’s going to play into it, your development rate of the car?

    FA: I hope so. But we will not get much next year!

    Q: Alright, let’s move on to… who’s coming next Sergio or Max. Sergio is coming next. Sergio, that’s a dream start for the team, isn’t it, with a one-two here in Bahrain?

    Sergio PÉREZ: Yeah it’s a great start. I mean, when we look back at last year, and how we started here, it’s really nice. It’s a nice comeback. As a team, you know, we worked really hard over the winter. So it’s great to see all the boys enjoying the first race. And yeah, we have a strong package. So yeah, it was important today to get both cars until the end.

    Q: But of course you are also fighter and you want to win. Which area is it you still need to like work on most to try and to try and get closer to Max and beat him?

    SP: Well, I think today was really that start that really put me out of contention from the race. But it was all about minimising the damage. So finishing second is the maximum I could do today. It’s a long season. I think I’m getting closer every single session.

    Q: So you’re confident you’re going to give him a run for his money?

    SP: Yeah, certainly. I think I’m feeling comfortable with the car and we have a strong package. So, yeah, I will do my best.

    Q: Thank you. We’ll move on to Max now. The race winner. Max, what a dream start and what an awesome drive there.

    Max VERSTAPPEN: Yeah, it was a very, very good first stint, where I basically made my gap. And from there onwards it was all about just looking after the tyres, because you never really know what’s going to happen later on in the race. So we just wanted to make sure that we had the right tyres and in good condition as well. So yeah, of course, very happy to finally also win here in Bahrain.

    Q: True, your first win here. Were there any issues during the race? I mean, you were complaining a little bit about downshifts and also the car balance not being so great throughout the whole weekend.

    MV: Nothing big, just little things you always want to fine tune so I think they’re quite easy to get on top of.

    Q: And are you looking forward to Jeddah? Different kind of track.

    MV: Very, very different.

    Q: But you’re very confident now that you can get on top of the balance issues and everything and be just as strong?

    MV: I think we have a good race package. I mean, of course it will depend a bit, race to race, but we can definitely fight with this. And yeah, also a big thank you to the team, you know, over the winter what they’ve done again, to give us such a quick race car again.

    PRESS CONFERENCE

    Q: Max, your first win in Bahrain, it was the perfect way to kick off 2023. You delivered what you’ve been threatening to do in testing. You must be delighted?

    MV: Yeah, I mean, it was a really good race. I do think it was important to have that first stint where I could open up a gap a little bit and after that I could look after my tyres quite well. But also the car was working well – a bit like what we’ve seen in testing and the long runs we’ve done throughout the weekend. But you still of course need to show that in the race. You never know really what can happen to you throughout the race. But yeah, we were on top of things. And it was quite straightforward. But yeah, I think also, with all the calls and pit stops, we did a good job.

    Q: You said yesterday that you weren’t that happy with the balance of your car over one lap? Was it much better today in the race?

    MV: Yeah, but you know, in the long run, you anyway have quite a different car, and you never really are able to push to the limit. So naturally, that was less of an issue anyway, when I was already not happy in the beginning of the weekend. But I do think that there are still a few things that need to be looked at. But for now, we’re happy. And then tomorrow, once we get back home, we’ll get on top of everything before we get to Jeddah.

    Q: Max, were there any issues for you at all? I mean, you came on the radio at one point, talking about some rear locking. How serious was that? Any other issues?

    MV: It happens here and there. I mean, this is not something new. This has happened also in the last year or two years. This is something we are consistently working on and trying to make better. But yeah, I think overall, nothing too big of a concern.

    Q: OK, and will this stunning pace that we’ve seen today translate elsewhere, to Saudi for example?

    Max Verstappen: Well, Saudi is quite a different track to this one. You have a lot more like straights, fast corners, and a lot less deg. And I think here we were particularly good on the deg. So I do expect in terms of race pace that everyone is closer in Jeddah.

    Q: How much confidence, Max, do you take from this performance this weekend?

    MV: It has been a great start for us, for the for the whole team, you know, so this is not something we were used to! So yeah, we are very happy at the moment. But yeah, we always keep working.

    Q: Alright, many congratulations to you. Very well done. Checo, coming to you now. We saw great pace from you in that race. But it seemed it all came on done at the start. Is that is that the case?

    SP: Yeah, that was really the case, missing out to Charles on that first stint. It was really difficult to get by him. He had the new tyres. So you could see the difference on that first stint. And as soon as I was getting a bit closer to him, trying to attack him earlier on, I will just deg and destroy my tyres. So I had to be really patient and get my way through it. And once he did, I was able to drive some fast laps and, let’s say, that my tyres and on the second stint were in better shape than his and I was able to get through. But yeah, it was just too late. It was just a few laps too many, too late, and that put us quite behind Max. Once that happened, we basically just maintained the gap throughout the race. So we had no chance to fight for the win. But today was all about minimising the bad start. And we’ve got plenty of things to analyse, to try to improve and get this consistency throughout the season.

    Q: It must have been an interesting fact finding mission for you being behind the Ferrari in that first and what did you learn about that car?

    SP: Yeah, I actually learned a lot about their car, you know: where they are weak, where they’re strong, or stronger than us. So yeah, I think I need to make sure that it stays fresh for my engineers later in the briefing.

    Q: Go on, share it with us now. And are you happy with where you’ve got the car? Do you feel confident in the RB19?

    SP: Yeah, I’m comfortable. I’m comfortable with the car. I’m happy. I think we’ve got some work to do. I think we, both drivers are pushing the car in the same direction, which is good. And yeah, I think it’s been an amazing start to the season. Yeah, our best ever start ever, so very different to last year.

    Q: Fernando coming to you, podium number 99 of your career. Your first podium here in Bahrain since you won in 2010. Just how sweet is this moment for you?

    FA: It is! Obviously, a perfect start for this project. We didn’t expect to be that competitive. I think the aim in 2023 was, you know, getting the mix in the midfield, maybe leading that midfield and get close to the top three teams eventually. But even a podium maybe was not in the radar in 2023. And, and we found ourselves second best car today in Bahrain, or the whole weekend, like just behind Red Bull. So, this is, yeah, a little bit of a surprise. But we are extremely proud, happy with the job done at Silverstone in the factory. So big congratulations to everyone. Let’s enjoy this moment and build from here, hopefully a good 2023 campaign and get closer and closer to the top guys.

    Q: So, are you having to reset your expectations for the rest of this season? Given what’s happened today and this weekend?

    FA: Let’s see. I think, like, I have the same feeling from testing, like, too good to be true. And you’re always expecting that something will get… you will get a step back and you will get back to reality. But it seems real, the performance. Let’s see in Jeddah. I am curious to go to Jeddah and Australia. Very different circuits. I think Max touched on before, high-speed corners, very little degradation. I think in Bahrain, we were strong in things that maybe we don’t find in Jeddah, and Australia. So, if we are strong in the next two races, I think we will have a very good 2023.

    Q: Final one from me. Can you talk us through those overtakes on Hamilton and Sainz? How much did you enjoy them?

    FA: I obviously did enjoy them because I ended-up in front. That’s always the same thing in any battle. But yeah, we say it’s always the same, but when you fight at the front, with these great drivers, great champions, it is more intense, more adrenaline when you are wheel to wheel. So yeah, I didn’t want to have any mistake, or any contact because obviously when you are P12, you lose nothing, but today, we were fighting for big things. And yeah, I was happy. And the car was very nice to drive. That was probably our strength, all through testing. And this weekend, even though the race felt very long, the last 10 laps, because I wanted to see the chequered flag and being on the podium, the car was very good to drive and I could have driven for another hour or something, just alone on track.

    Q: You mentioned contact there. Was there any contact between you and Lance?

    FA: Yeah, apparently into Turn 4. I thought it was George. But I saw the replay on TV later on, and it was Lance. So yeah, he had a very good start because, you know, he was alongside me into Turn 4. We got lucky. Obviously the two cars, they didn’t have any problems and we could continue. It was our lucky day. For many things, you know, for this contact, and also to be both cars with strong points. So, I’m very happy for the team because they deserve it.

    QUESTIONS FROM THE FLOOR

    Q: (Frédéric Ferret – L’Equipe) Question to Fernando. Is there any weakness in your car that you already can make it better? And we heard you were speaking about something on your car at the end, avoiding the kerb. Did you have any concern about it?

    FA: No. But, you know, we had a very comfortable position. So, I slowed down the pace and I informed the team that you know, I could go faster, but I was avoiding the kerbs and just bringing the car home. So yeah, I mean, there are a couple of areas that we have to improve that I will not share. But I think the most important point is that the new Aston Martin is just a new car, a new project. This is just the beginning. You know, this is not the final car, this is just the starting car of this concept that we changed over winter. I think some of the top teams they just kept the philosophy that they had last year. Red Bull or Ferrari they kept more of the same shapes. Just, fine-tuning things and making perfection of that good baseline that they had. For us, it was much more difficult. We have to change 95% of the car. So, I guess there is more to learn from the car, and there is more to come on our side. So full trust in our team, obviously they know what they do. So let’s hopefully improve soon.

    Q: (Jesús Balseiro – Diario AS) Question to Fernando, could you elaborate how was your move over Lewis on Turn 10?

    FA: Yeah, I think we were not very fast on the straight. So, eventually you normally pass into Turn 1 or into Turn 4. And I think I pass Lewis into Turn 10 and Carlos into Turn 11. So not the normal places, because we could not match their straight-line speed. So, yeah, we had to make some moves in the corners before Turn 10 and Turn 11 and change trajectory, and then get the overtake done, I think to Lewis was more playing a surprise move there, because no one overtakes into Turn 10, let’s say. And then with Carlos, it was close into Turn 10 again, he closed the door, and then I have a better exit into Turn 11. But, yeah, we need to see that because obviously, we will love to pass just on the main straight like everyone does.

    Q: (Niharika Ghorpade – Sportskeeda) Question to Fernando. Yesterday, Checo mentioned that the strong point of your team is tyre management, and that your team banks on that on race day. So how much did that play into effect, compared to other areas in performance, and also, when it comes to your race pace, at some point in this race, you will almost matching the two drivers next to you. If it weren’t for the start, do you think you could have been slightly closer to them within the race?

    FA: I think on the tyres, yes. It seems that this is one is strength of our car, some legacy from last year as well, because Aston Martin was very strong on Sundays last year as well. So yeah, let’s try to keep that theme on the car and just improve the Saturdays, which was maybe the weak point of last year for the team. And also yesterday, we were not mega-competitive. So let’s work on that. And yeah, on the race pace, obviously we lost time in the first stint. I just sat behind the Mercedes. In the middle stint I have to pass George and Valtteri. And then on the final stint I had to pass Lewis and Carlos. So, all in all, I’m sure that you lose 10 or 15 seconds on all those battles. So if we are 40 seconds behind the leader, we could have been maybe 20 seconds, or 30 seconds. Yeah, not real fight – yet – to Red Bull.

    Q: (Alex Kalinauckas – Autosport) Another question to Fernando, please. In both your battles with Lewis Hamilton and Carlos Sainz, you had big moments at Turn 4. It looked like the car suddenly snapped left on you. Can you just talk through the two incidents there and what was causing that? Thanks.

    FA: I think we know what is causing that, but I will keep it for me. We’re still working. As I said, the car is very new. We need to learn more from the car, I need to get used to the car. So those moments were more coming from me getting used to the car, getting used to the driving input, feedback from the steering wheel and power assistance. So things that they are not 100% tailormade yet.

    Q: (Ronald Vording – motorsport.com) Max, but Checo can add if he wants to. Given the balance issues that we talked about on Friday and Saturday are you surprised to see how big the gap actually is in the first race compared to the first non-Red Bull car? And secondly, you talked about Jeddah a little bit; we can see the data that Ferrari at least made a step in their top speed so what do you expect from Ferrari in Jeddah?

    MV: Yeah, I think I already said before that the one lap performance to the race is very different in balance requirements anyway. So even like I said before, on Friday, I was unhappy with the one lap performance, my long runs were still okay, so not really surprised. I’m just, of course, happy that it worked out like this but Jeddah is going to be quite different again. Our car seems quite strong in high speed but you’re right, I think Ferrari is quite quick on the straight which in Jeddah, of course, is very nice to have, let’s say like that. But yeah, time will tell. It’s really hard to know.  We’ve only really driven these cars here in Bahrain so we just have to wait and see. We’ll, of course, try and get there in the best shape possible and then we’ll find out throughout practice where we are exactly.

    SP: Oh, it’s nice to see three Red Bull cars on the podium!

    Q: (Carlos Miguel – Marca) Fernando and the Red Bull drivers: for Alonso…

    SP: We are all Red Bull drivers.

    Q: (Carlos Miguel – Marca) Fernando, after that podium, do you think of the 33rd victory? And I ask after to the Red Bull drivers.

    FA: Yep. I would say yes because when you are P3 in race one, there are 22 opportunities this season. And even last year, I remember in Canada, wet qualifying, we were in the first row of the grid. You know, anything can happen in 22 races with different conditions. And, you know I will try my best to do have the opportunity. Maybe we need some help. Last year, we needed some help from the top teams just to get the podium. Maybe this year, if there is this help or there is some retirements in front of us or some problems maybe it’s more than a podium. So let’s hope for that.

    Q: (Carlos Miguel – Marca) Question for Max and Checo, do you read that Fernando could be a contender for the championship this year?

    MV: I hope so for Fernando as well because he has had a few years where there was not really a possibility to fight at the front so I’m happy to see him sitting here already in race one. I think also again, I mentioned it before, but at Aston Martin they really have the spirit and drive, they want to win and they’ve hired a lot of good people. So I guess it can only get better for them. And I think for this year, difficult to say if they’re going to challenge for the championship, but race wins are definitely on the table. I’ve been in the same position where some races I’m finishing 20 to 40 seconds behind the winners and you still win two or three races a year because sometimes they are some tracks which really suit your car and everything just comes together and you can win a race with maybe sometimes a bit of help or luck. But for sure they have a really strong package. And now of course it’s all about developing it further.

    SP: I’m first of all very happy to see Aston and Fernando up here. I think it’s been a tremendous effort and it’s great to see Fernando in his first race for the team on the podium. I think they certainly have a very good car. They will be a contender for sure in a few tracks. You know that the seasons in Formula 1 are extremely long, so anything can happen. So yeah, it’s just nice to see Fernando and Aston.

    Q: Fernando, when did you last feel this positive? This upbeat after race one of a season?

    FA: I think 2013. Yeah, we were leading the championship, I think, after Barcelona. So we had a contender package but after that I think I didn’t feel as good as now.

    Q: (Aaron Deckers – Racing News 365) Last year, Aston Martin ended up seventh in the constructor championship.  Obviously, with the new rules, is this the ultimate proof that now Aston Martin is fighting for the podium, that the rules are working since last year?

    FA: I don’t think so. No. I think you need to have the vision and the ambition of Lawrence Stroll, or our leadership and our management because the opportunities are there for everybody but it seems that only one team is willing to do whatever it takes to win. And you know, I’m proud to be part of this organisation.

    MV: Yeah, Fernando’s absolutely right.  I think you mentioned all of it and I think it doesn’t matter if it was the previous generation or this one. I think if you have the right people in charge, and they really want to win and they hire the right people, anything is possible.

    SP: Nothing more to add.

    Q: (Luke Smith – The Athletic) Max, this is the first time in 12 years that Red Bull have won the opening race of the F1 season, how different do things feel at the team, compared to say this time last year when there was the double DNF start?  And what does that say about the rest of the season, the strength that you can carry through the  year ?

    FA: A double DNF would be nice. 

    MV: Well, last year was very disappointing, of course. That normally was a P2. I do think our mentality also has changed a bit compared to a few years ago, in terms of how we are operating and how we are developing a car. And yeah, it’s great to finally have a car which is able to win from the start. And it also helps the car’s not so overweight. It’s perfectly fine now. But yeah, this is a great start but we also know that throughout the season you have to keep on developing. Of course, we are on that, but we hope of course that’s going to be more than the other teams because you have to try and keep that advantage going.

    Q: (Alex Kalinauckas – Autosport) Checo, just going back to the very start of the race what happened there? How come you weren’t able to follow Max from second?

    SP: Yeah, I basically lost the position to Charles and that very much defined my race. As I say, he was very strong on that first stint and every time I could get close to him, I was just taking off my tyres so it was very important for me to get to lap 15/16 and still having a good tyre which I could push and make a bit of a tyre delta so I could get by him and once that happened, Max was just too far down the line.

    Ends

  • Alonso powers Aston Martin to a podium; Verstappen leads Red Bull 1-2

    Alonso powers Aston Martin to a podium; Verstappen leads Red Bull 1-2

    Max Verstappen dominated the opening round of the 2023 FIA Formula One World Championship, cruising to victory in the Bahrain Grand Prix as Red Bull team-mate Sergio Pérez sealed a 1-2 finish for Red Bull and Fernando Alonso claimed his first podium as an Aston Martin driver. There was disappointment for Ferrari, though, as Charles Leclerc retired from the race with an engine issue. 

    At the start of the race, Verstappen got away well and took the lead. Alongside him on the front row, team-mate Pérez bogged down and the Mexican driver was swamped from row two by Ferrari’s Leclerc and Carlos Sainz. Leclerc got past into Turn 1 but Pérez resisted the assault of Sainz and settled into third place ahead of the Spanish driver and the fifth-placed Mercedes of Lewis Hamilton. 

    Behind the top five, Mercedes’ George Russell was sixth but the Aston Martin pair of Alonso and Lance Stroll clashed in Turn 4. Alonso managed to hold on to seventh but Stroll dropped back to ninth behind Alfa Romeo’s Valtteri Bottas after getting a late-braking move wrong.

    At the front, Verstappen quickly began to pull away from the field and by the start of lap 10 the world champion was a full seven seconds clear of Leclerc. 

    Leclerc was the first of the leaders to pit, with the Ferrari driver taking on hard compound tyres on lap 14. Sainz followed his team-mate immediately and they rejoined the race in P5 and P6 respectively. 

    Versatppen was called in a lap later and when he stopped for a set of soft tyres he ceded the lead to Pérez. The Mexican then made his first stop of the race on lap 17. Like his team-mate, the Mexican bolted on another set of soft tyres and as Verstappen retook the lead, Pérez slotted into third place behind Leclerc. 

    Pérez then began to hunt down the Ferrari ahead, and on lap 25 he closed within DRS range. He quickly went on the attack and powered past the Monegasque driver under braking into Turn 1 to take P2. 

    At the front, Verstappen was in cruise control and after moving to hard tyres in the final round of pit stops he emerged over 11 seconds ahead of his team-mate, who after his final stop, had pulled out his own 11-second gap to Leclerc.

    The major battle was now between Alonso and Hamilton and on lap 39 the Spaniard made a superb move past the seven-time champion into Turn 10 to steal fifth place. The Aston Martin driver then began to chase down Sainz. 

    What looked like a stable podium order then changed on lap 40 when Leclerc suffered an engine issue. The Ferrari driver pulled over at the side of the track and was forced to retire, meaning that, under the Virtual Safety Car, Sainz inherited third place, just 2.5s clear of Alonso. On lap 43 that gap shrunk to under a second and three laps later, after a bruising sequence of corners, he powered past his compatriot in Turn 11. 

    At the front, the Red Bull pair were in complete control, exemplified by Pérez’s race engineer Hugh Bird telling his driver “there’s no pressure from behind, just stroke it home”. 

    And after 57 laps the defending champions did just that. Verstappen took the flag comfortably ahead of his team-mate to seal the first Bahrain GP win of his career and 12 seconds later Pérez sealed Red Bull first one-two finish at the Bahrain International circuit and his 27th career podium finish. Verstappen’s dominance was driven home by the 38.6-second advantage he had over third-placed Alonso who gave Aston Martin its first podium place since the 2021 Azerbaijan Grand Prix when Sebastian Vettel finished second. 

    Behind the top three, Sainz held onto fourth place ahead of Hamilton, while Stroll climbed back to a creditable sixth place to complete a good day for his team. Russell finished seventh in the second Mercedes ahead of Bottas, while Alpine’s Pierre Gasly put in a super drive from the back of the grid to take two points for ninth place. The final point on offer went to Williams’ Alex Albon. 

    2023 FIA Formula 1 Bahrain Grand Prix – Race 
    1 Max Verstappen Red Bull Racing 57 1:33’56.736 
    2 Sergio Pérez Red Bull Racing 57 1:34’08.723 11.987
    3 Fernando Alonso Aston Martin 57 1:34’35.373 38.637
    4 Carlos Sainz Ferrari 57 1:34’44.788 48.052
    5 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 57 1:34’47.713 50.977
    6 Lance Stroll Aston Martin 57 1:34’51.238 54.502
    7 George Russell Mercedes 57 1:34’52.609 55.873
    8 Valtteri Bottas Alfa Romeo 57 1:35’09.383 1’12.647
    9 Pierre Gasly Alpine 57 1:35’10.489 1’13.753
    10 Alexander Albon Williams 57 1:35’26.510 1’29.774
    11 Yuki Tsunoda AlphaTauri 57 1:35’27.606 1’30.870
    12 Logan Sargeant Williams 56 1:33’57.872 1 lap /1.136
    13 Kevin Magnussen Haas 56 1:34’13.493 1 lap /16.757
    14 Nyck de Vries AlphaTauri 56 1:34’19.259 1 lap /22.523
    15 Nico Hülkenberg Haas 56 1:34’35.647 1 lap /38.911
    16 Zhou Guanyu Alfa Romeo 56 1:34’36.385 1 lap /39.649
    17 Lando Norris McLaren 55 1:34’03.372 2 laps /6.636
         Esteban Ocon Alpine 41 1:10’19.566 Retirement
         Charles Leclerc Ferrari 39 1:04’46.118 Power Unit
         Oscar Piastri McLaren/Mercedes 13 22’22.585 Retirement

  • Indian reporter Niharika raises spotlight on Aston Martin at Bahrain FIA press meet

    Indian reporter Niharika raises spotlight on Aston Martin at Bahrain FIA press meet

    The following drivers attended the post-qualifying session FIA Press Conference for the Bahrain GP, the first round of the FIA Formula 1 World Championship. 1 – Max VERSTAPPEN (Red Bull Racing), 2. Sergio Perez (Red Bulll Racing), 3. Charles Leclerc (Ferrari).

    At the start of the season Aston Martin has been looking good and the experienced Indian F1 reporter in Bahrain asked the three drivers present to give their views on it.

    Q: (Niharika Ghorpade – Sportskeeda) From the data in the last two days, where do you think Aston Martin fits in because they were already looking good FP1 to FP3? And do you see the field bunching up more after the first three tracks, which are very different in characteristics?

    CL: Oh, they’ve shown a very promising race pace in FP2, but again, FP2,  it’s very difficult to judge because you don’t know the fuel level they had in the car. But I think they will be strong in the race, probably quicker than what they’ve shown in qualifying, even though they were pretty close. But yeah, let’s wait and see tomorrow.

    MV: Yeah, for sure, they look very competitive. And I think already not only this year but last year. Their car was maybe not that amazing but I think in race pace, they were always quite strong compared to their competitors. So they probably took that also into this year. So for sure, they will be very competitive in the race, but a bit difficult to tell. But again, like I said before, a lot of things can happen throughout the race, with certain safety car moments or whatever, you need to make the right calls at the right time as well. You don’t even need to have the fastest car then of course to win

    SP: Well, they’ve been really strong, in the conditions yesterday, today so yeah, definitely expected them to be around us and obviously for tomorrow they will be a threat so it will be very close battle I think with a few cars racing each other throughout the race and you know, if there is a safety car at the right time for you, then it can change the story with this track  that is pretty high deg.

    Earlier TRACK INTERVIEWS (Conducted by David Coulthard) 

    Q: Charles, we saw you getting out of the car and we suddenly thought, is there an issue with the Ferrari but it’s strategic?

    Charles LECLERC: No, there wasn’t any issue. I think we were in a fight for pole, which was a good surprise, to be honest, because I did not expect that after testing and after the free practices that were a little bit difficult. We managed to find that pace for the quali lap, which was great. However, we need to keep in our mind that in the race run we seem to be a little bit on the back foot compared to Red Bull. And I think we are in a better place starting third with new tyres than starting first with old, or a bit further up [than third]. I don’t know if we will have gotten pole or not. But it would have been close.

    Q: Now you were the pole king last year. That session, though, as we were watching the times being traded between yourselves, the Red Bull, the Aston Martin or Fernando, it seems a lot tighter. It’s certainly a lot tighter than what the pre-season testing had predicted.

    CL: Yes. I hope it will also be like that on the race runs. But yeah, it was very, very close actually. Aston Martin was really quick. Mercedes, also, was really quick at some points of the qualifying. And we are much closer than what we expected, which is looking good for the future. I think it makes Formula 1 more exciting. So I’m looking forward to the rest of the races.

    Q: There’s a glint in your eye. Do you have a feeling about tomorrow?

    CL: Well, again, let’s say that in the race run we seem to have a bit of a weakness for now. Having a new tyre will help us tomorrow. But I don’t know how much the picture will change with that. But it’s going in the right direction at least.

    Q: Well done. Thank you, a top-three finish. We’re going to hear now from Checo Pérez. Checo, pretty tight there with Max, just a tenth between you. It’s been tight all weekend. How was your lap? Did you leave anything behind?

    Sergio PÉREZ: Yeah, I mean, it has been a really tight qualifying. I don’t remember such a tight qualifying battle from Q1 to Q2, you know, the competition it’s really marginal. So you cannot leave anything on the table to maximise your grid position. In the end I wasn’t totally comfortable with the balance. I believe, certainly, that you can always improve a tenth on your lap. But I think to get this start for the team is really special. 

    Q: You say you’re not comfortable with the balance. This is all about one-lap performance. Of course, the race tomorrow it’s about those long runs. Do you think the balance will be more suited to the race run for you? 

    SP: Yeah, if anything, we prepared much more to do the race. You know, we have more of a Sunday race car at the moment underneath us. We knew we had to do some compromises for quali, which we ended up doing. They were not ideal, but hopefully tomorrow it pays out and we can have a very strong race car. 

    Q: Well, that’s ominous for your competition to know that was a compromised qualifying car. And you’ve just put it in P2! Congratulations. Thank you. And now it’s time to hear from our pole position man. Max, congratulations, your 21st pole position on your father’s 51st birthday. So that’s a good father’s present.

    Max VERSTAPPEN: Yeah. I hope he was watching. I’m pretty sure he was watching. But yeah, I think it’s been a bit of a tough start to the weekend yesterday and today, not really finding my rhythm. But luckily, in qualifying, I think we managed to put the best pieces together. And, of course, very happy to be on pole, and for the whole team, coming off of last year and again having such a strong car with Checo up there as well. Yeah, it’s amazing. And I’m looking forward to tomorrow.

    Q: Put us in the cockpit. There’s been some minor changes to the floor heights, minor changes to the construction of the Pirelli tyre. How does the car feel relative to the first evolution, year one of this regulation?

    MV: Well, I think compared to last year everyone knows a bit more what they’re doing with the car. So naturally, I think you already start off better and more competitive. And then, yeah, the changes I think slowed down the car bit, but we are still going faster. So that’s of course a great thing to see. And I think again, you know, throughout the year, you will see that everyone is increasing their performance again, a lot and that’s the beautiful thing about Formula 1.

    Q: Did you honestly expect it to be so tight? You know, the gap to Ferrari. Fernando Alonso was not that far away as well.

    MV: I was actually positively surprised being on pole after the struggles I had in practice. So that’s positive and normally our race car is better. So let’s see.

    PRESS CONFERENCE

    Q: Max, this was the moment of truth and you’ve continued where you left off last year. How happy does this make you?

    MV: I’m particularly happy because my whole weekend up until qualifying was very difficult. I couldn’t really find the comfortable balance I had in testing and I was just struggling a lot to just get the car together, really. I went into Q1 and everything already felt a bit better, but it was still not, let’s say, perfect. So yeah, I’m very happy then in Q3 that we could put these laps in. I still think it’s not perfect, but in a better direction. So, for sure, for the next race we will have to analyse a bit why from the test to the race weekend it’s so different for us, and also for me driving wise. But nevertheless, we are sitting here with two cars. So coming off last year I think this is again a very strong start for us. So yeah, very happy with that.

    Q: How much have you had to change the car this weekend?

    MV: A lot. I went left and right and back to the middle and found a bit of a compromise. So that’s a bit unusual that you make such big changes. But, like I said, luckily in qualifying that’s probably the best balance I’ve had throughout the weekend so far.

    Q: Given those struggles, how good was that final lap in Q3?

    MV: Yeah, the laps were good. Yeah, you come out of qualifying and you always immediately analyse your lap, right? And yeah, overall, pretty pleased.

    Q: So what about the race? How confident are you feeling in the long run?

    MV: That should normally be our stronger point than the one-lap pace. So hopefully we can show that again tomorrow.

    Q: Checo, coming to you now. This is Red Bull’s first front row start, here in Bahrain. So a great result for the team. Anything more to come from you in qualifying on that final lap?

    SP: Just like Max said, you know, the balance has been really different from testing. We’ve done plenty of kilometres here but we came to the race weekend and we found a very different balance to testing. So, we’ve been working our way through, we’ve been making massive changes from one side to the other. I think in the end, we knew we had to compromise a bit the quali-pace for tomorrow’s race. So hopefully that will pay out tomorrow. Generally, I wasn’t that comfortable with my balance in Qualifying. But I think, as I progress, I was able to learn my way around the balance I had and get a good Q3 lap in the end, but not enough to beat Max.

    Q: Checo, you talk about how the balance has changed from testing to this weekend. Can you just tell us a little bit more about that? What have been the struggles exactly?

    SP: Well, I wouldn’t go too much in detail. It’s just that we found quite a different car to what we had in testing and we don’t understand what’s the reason behind it: could be wind; the relative temperature; many variants that I think after the weekend, we will have a bit more of an idea. But for now, we’ve got a focus for tomorrow.

    Q: Is this the same car that you had in testing? Or has it got upgrades on it?

    SP: As far as I know, it’s the same.

    Q: Okay, looking ahead to tomorrow. Where do you see the main challenges coming from? Do you think Charles is going to be quick? Can you challenge Max for the win?

    SP: Well, the Ferraris definitely picked up throughout. I think there were sandbagging a bit through the first days of testing and in during the weekend. They’re definitely there. They’re very strong. So, I will expect them to be in the fight for tomorrow’s race. And you can already see, you know, that it is not only Red Bull and Ferrari there are plenty of other teams that have joined the competition. So, I mean, if you don’t get a perfect lap in Q2, Q1, you really have to put more tyres on, so yeah, the competition has increased certain for this season. 

    Q: Charles, coming to you, Checo says you’ve been sandbagging until now. Is that the case?

    CL: I don’t know. Definitely not as much as…

    MV: Maybe you found a sandbag in the car?

    CL: I didn’t find it myself. And I’m not aware of it. I mean, we found a lot of performance in Qualifying. But I mean, ‘a lot of performance’, we were in the fight, which is something that I probably did not expect. So, it’s a good surprise. To tell you where we found the performance, I’m not really sure, so we need to look into that. Because as much as we need to understand the bad days, I think we also need to understand the good days. That’s how we will improve but good that it’s like that. But we also need to be realistic. I mean, those guys, and also Aston Martin, seems to be really, really quick in the race. Which is why I think, we made that choice in Q3 to be willing to lose one or two positions at the start, but having new tyres to put all the chances on our side, which I’m sure is the right choice. But let’s see tomorrow.

    Q: Look, if you had another go in Q3, do you think pole position would have been possible?

    CL: I mean, I hate saying yes, it will have been or… I mean, it’s difficult to say but for sure, seeing the margin on the first set, I knew there was a bit of time to find. So, it will have been close.

    Q: Just looking ahead to tomorrow, the long run pace of the car versus Red Bull. How do you see it?

    CL: They are quick, they are really quick. Hopefully we have another good surprise tomorrow. Of course, for now, we don’t know in which conditions they were running in FP2 when they were doing the race simulations. Looking at FP2, they are very quick.

    QUESTIONS FROM THE FLOOR

    Q: (Frédéric Ferret – L’Equipe) Question to Charles. We saw that a small part of your car fell down on Q1. Do you think you missed some performance without it?

    CL: I don’t think so. I haven’t seen the team but I was told on the radio that it was all fine.

    Q: (Alex Kalinauckas – Autosport) Another question to Charles on the same topic, please. What was the part that fell off? And what did they feel like when you braked for Turn One because we saw you locking up? Was it a result of that?

    CL: The part I honestly don’t know. Because I haven’t seen any images of it whatsoever.

    MV: It was the sandbag.

    CL: Yeah, probably! But the lock-up I think was just me being too optimistic in braking for Turn One. I don’t think it’s… I mean, I didn’t feel anything particularly weird.

    Q: (Luke Smith – The Athletic) Max, you said in the TV interview before coming here that it was a positive surprise to get pole. What’s your reasoning behind that? Were you surprised because the other teams were so close? And it was a tough fight? Or was it more of a surprise that you got the most out of the car given the balance issues you discussed?

    MV: Yeah, I mean, after testing I was very happy and then then I jumped in the car in FP1 and it was a big shock. I just couldn’t get the balance right through all the practice sessions. And that’s why I think what we achieved in qualifying was very good. I mean, qualifying to race is anyway a different car in terms of how it behaves, but you still want to be quick over one lap and that was a big struggle for me. Yeah, we just need to analyse everything what got onto the car for the race weekend, even if it’s the same part but new, just to check everything for next weekend again.

    Q: (Christian Menath – Motorsport-Magazin.com) Question first part for you Charles: would you be happy with P3 tomorrow? And for the Red Bull drivers, who do you think is your main competitor in the race?

    CL: No, I think we are only happy if we win. But again, realistically, they seem to be very, very quick. So I think in those weekends where we are a little bit underneath, that’s exactly those weekend that we need to maximise and, and try to get what we can in terms of points. So yeah, if a win is possible tomorrow, I will go for it. If not, we’ll try and get the maximum points.

    MV: They are all very close to us. Of course, we have shown really good race pace but we still need to show that tomorrow, and a lot of things can happen also during a race, which sometimes is not in your control. So yeah, we just, of course, need to focus on ourselves and try to do the best we can. And hopefully no crazy things will happen.

    Q: (Ronald Vording – Motorsport.com) Max but the other two can add if the if they want to. Are you surprised that the field as a whole seems to be much closer this year? The gap between you and Nick in P19 in Q1 was only 1.1s Are you surprised by that? And secondly, is it extra proof that the direction that F1 went in really pays off now?

    MV: Not really a surprise. If you look at most of the cars, they all copied each other so everyone is getting smarter over the years anyway, with the same regulations. And if you see that one car, particularly, is doing quite well over a year, you’ll try to copy some things and that’s why of course, naturally everyone is getting closer and in general, of course, understanding the car bit better.

    SP: Yeah, certainly the competition is a lot closer now. You can see it straight from Q1. You cannot do a mistake, even if you are in a top car. So yeah, that’s nice in a way. And  it will only get closer as the season progresses. So we welcome the competition.

    CL: Yeah, for the field closer, I will probably wait and see tomorrow so in the race pace, but in qualifying for sure, it seems that we are all closer, which I think is great. It’s more exciting and qualifying sessions like Q1 and Q2, which for us, for the top teams, whenever we had that big margin we could do a little bit of whatever we want. Now it seems to be a bit more on the limit so it’s nice.

    Q: Checo, you know, a lot of a lot of the people in that team very well. You’ve been having a few chats? Got inside information?

    SP: Yeah, they’re very good on tyres. I know John is really good guy, and they’re very good. They generally have been really strong. I think that’s one of the strongest points of them. They rely a lot on that. The way they operate when I was there, it was always biased to the race weekend so I think tomorrow we can expect a very strong Aston Martin.

    Q: (Jeremy Satis – AutoHebdo) Charles,  obviously race pace was a bit of a weakness compared to Ferrari last year for you. Are you optimistic that you made a step forward on this?

    CL: Again, the goal is to always try and improve. I think we improved our process of… throughout the race trying to take care more of these tyres but if I look in FP2 we are still quite a bit slower than Red Bull in terms of pace and tyre degradation. So we still need to see tomorrow and see where we are exactly but if we focus on ourselves, yes, I feel like we have done a step forward but I’m not sure it’s enough.

    Q: (Alex Kalinauckas – Autosport) First to Charles and then to the two Red Bull drivers: Charles, can you please just explain what do you expect to gain by using that extra set of softs at the start tomorrow? Is it really going to be a big benefit does the team feel and again the  Red Bull drivers, do you feel that potentially could be a threat at the start of the race tomorrow?

    CL: Well, a bit more grip but yeah, I don’t know if it will be a game changer.

    MV: Everyone said we don’t need an out lap so it should be okay.

    Q: (Claire Cottingham – Racefans.net) There’s going to be a change to the qualifying format later this year, going to be tested at two races beginning at Imola in which you have to use hard tyres in Q1,  medium tyres in Q2 and soft tyres in Q3. What differences if any will this make to how you approach the qualifying sessions? And would it have made much difference if that format had been in place today? Can I just get your thoughts on that?

    MV: I hope it’s not going to be cold in Imola, otherwise it’s going to be quite tricky but yeah, it’s the same for everyone but I don’t think we need to actually do these kinds of things in qualifying. I don’t really see the benefit of it. It’s better if we make sure that all the cars are close to each other and more competitive instead of spicing things up in that way, which I think is probably for the show.

    SP: Yeah, just think it’s for the show. I think we don’t need that when you see the qualifying we had today, how close everything was.  We do not really need to change anything. But we’ll see, we’ll see once we try it but I don’t think there’s a need to change something that is working well.

    CL: Yeah, I don’t feel there was a need for change for that but let’s try and see.

    Ends

  • Max Verstappen on pole as Red Bull lockout front row: F1 season opener

    Max Verstappen on pole as Red Bull lockout front row: F1 season opener

    Defending FIA Formula One world champion Max Verstappen took his first pole of 2023 with the quickest time in Qualifying for the season-opening Bahrain Grand Prix. Verstappen’s team-mate Sergio Pérez took second place to as Red Bull locked out the front row. Charles Leclerc took third place, though the Ferrari driver missed the final run of Q3 as he opted to save a set of tyres for the race.

    At the start of Q1, Leclerc was one of the first to kick off a flying lap but as the Ferrari driver began his lap a piece of his right wheel brow broke off and then, as he locked up into Turn 1, a second element flew off the underside of his car. 

    With debris on the racing line, the session was red-flagged with four minutes on the clock. 

    Following an eight-minute delay, the session resumed and the Red Bulls were quickly on track, along with the rest of the field. Verstappen climbed to the top of the timesheet with a lap of 1:31.295, but the Dutchman was almost immediately eclipsed by Aston Martin’s Fernando Alonso and then by Leclerc. It was the Ferrari star’s team-mate Carlos Sainz who staked the biggest claim to top spot in the opening runs with the Ferrari driver taking P1 with a lap of 1:30.993. 

    In the final runs of the opening segment Aston Martin’s Lance Stroll, Haas’ Nico Hulkenberg and William’s Alex Albon all jumped into the top 10 but despite their advances, Sainz took top spot from Russell and Leclerc. 

    There was no place in Q2, though, for Williams’ Logan Sargeant. The Williams rookie was eliminated in P16 ahead of Haas’ Kevin Magnussen, McLaren rookie Oscar Piastri, AlphaTauri’s Nyck de Vries and Alpine’s Pierre Gasly who had his final time deleted for track limits in Turn 15. 

     In the opening runs of Q2, Verstappen took control, with the Dutchman taking P1 with a lap of 1:30.503, 0243s ahead of Pérez who slotted into P2. Verstappen’s lap left him 0.398s clear of third-placed Hamilton, with his Mercedes team-mate George Russell in fourth place ahead of Alonso and the Ferrari duo of Sainz and Leclerc. 

    Red Bull opted to keep its drivers in the garage for the final runs of Q2 and when the final times arrived, it was Leclerc who took top spot with a time of 1:30.282. Verstappen’s opening time was good enough to hold on to second place, while Russell took third ahead of Hamilton, Sainz and Alonso. That left Pérez with seventh place and the Q3 order was rounded out by Hulkenberg, Alpine’s Esteban Ocon and Stroll. Out went McLaren’s Lando Norris in P11, Alfa Romeo’s Valtteri Bottas and Zhou Guanyu, AlphaTauri’s Yuki Tsunodo and 15th-placed Albion. 

    Verstappen again set the pace in the opening runs of the final segment. The Dutchman went purple in the first and final sectors to set a P1 time of 1:29.897, with Leclerc second on 1:30.000. Pérez slotted into third place, 0.234 off his team-mate, while Alonso took fourth place ahead of Russell. 

    Leclerc oddly opted to sit out the final runs, choosing instead to save a set of tyres for the race start, and that left the door open for Verstappen to stretch away from the field. The Dutchman obliged and thanks to a strong middle sector he found almost two tenths of a second to claim pole with a lap of 1:29.708. Pérez also found time to leapfrog Leclerc and take P2 to lock out the front row for tomorrow’s race. 

    2023 FIA Formula 1 Bahrain Grand Prix – Qualifying 
    1 Max Verstappen Red Bull Racing 1:29.708 
    2 Sergio Perez Red Bull Racing 1:29.846 0.138
    3 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 1:30.000 0.292
    4 Carlos Sainz Ferrari 1:30.154 0.446
    5 Fernando Alonso Aston Martin 1:30.336 0.628
    6 George Russell Mercedes 1:30.340 0.632
    7 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 1:30.384 0.676
    8 Lance Stroll Aston Martin 1:30.836 1.128
    9 Esteban Ocon Alpine 1:30.984 1.276
    10 Nico Hulkenberg Haas 1:31.055 1.347
    11 Lando Norris McLaren 1:31.381 1.673
    12 Valtteri Bottas Alfa Romeo 1:31.443 1.73
    13 Zhou Guanyu Alfa Romeo 1:31.473 1.765
    14 Yuki Tsunoda AlphaTauri 1:32.51a0 2.802
    15 Alexander Albon Williams – –
    16 Logan Sargeant Williams 1:31.652 1.944
    17 Kevin Magnussen Haas 1:31.892 2.184
    18 Oscar Piastri McLaren 1:32.101 2.393
    19 Nyck de Vries AlphaTauri 1:32.121 2.413
    20 Pierre Gasly Alpine 1:32.181 2.473

  • Sergio Perez quickest in FP1: F1 Season Opener

    Sergio Perez quickest in FP1: F1 Season Opener

    Bahrain, 3 March 2023: Red Bull Racing’s Sergio Pérez went quickest in first practice for the opening race of the 2023 FIA Formula One World Championship, the Bahrain Grand Prix, beating Aston Martin’s Fernando Alonso by almost half a second. Defending champion Max Verstappen finished in third place in the other Red Bull car. 

    Pérez staked his claim to P1 early in the session, posting a time of 1:35.069 before Alonso bypassed that as Verstappen joined the fray with a third-place time almost four tenths shy of his team-mate’s. 

    Alonso held sway for the first 10 minutes of running before Pérez once again moved ahead with a lap of 1:34.343. 

    But as the session headed for its half way point, the Mexican driver bolted on a set of soft tyres and posted a lap of 1:32.758 to put some distance between himself and his rivals. Verstappen followed soon after, but the defending champion was only to get to a time just over six tenths off the pace set by Pérez. 

    McLaren’s Lando Norris then moved to third place on soft tyres, though the Briton was 1.4s down on Pérez’s benchmark, and Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc made his way to fourth place. 

    Both were demoted, though, when Alonso moved to soft tyres and he set a time of 1:33.196 to take P3 0.438s off Pérez.

    With Leclerc fifth, sixth place went to Lance Stroll who was at the wheel of the Aston Martin AMR23 for the first time after suffering hand injuries in a pre-season bicycle accident. The Canadian worked his way into the session slowly but eventually made his way to 1:34.298 a tenth of a second ahead of Haas’ Kevin Magnussen.

    Zhou Guanyu was eighth quickest for Alfa Romeo with team-mate Valtteri Bottas just behind. 

    Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton rounded out the top 10 order with team-mate George Russell in P11 though either attempted a soft tyre run in the session 

    New-season rookie Oscar Piastri was 12th for McLaren ahead of AlphaTauri’s Yuki Tsunoda, while F1 returnee Nico Hülkenberg was 14th for Haas. Esteban Ocon took 15th place of Alpine ahead of full-season rookie Nyck de Vries of AlphaTauri and Pierre Gasly finished in P17 ahead of new Williams recruit Logan Sargeant, who beat team-mate Alex Albon. The timesheet was propped up by Ferrari’s Carlos Sainz. 

    2023 Bahrain Grand Prix – Free Practice 1 
    1 Sergio Pérez Red Bull/Honda RBPT 1:32.758 21 210.043
    2 Fernando Alonso Aston Martin/Mercedes 1:33.196 0.438 22 209.056
    3 Max Verstappen Red Bull/Honda RBPT 1:33.375 0.617 21 208.655
    4 Lando Norris McLaren/Mercedes 1:34.165 1.407 21 206.904
    5 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 1:34.257 1.499 17 206.702
    6 Lance Stroll Aston Martin/Mercedes 1:34.298 1.540 17 206.613
    7 Kevin Magnussen Haas/Ferrari 1:34.402 1.644 20 206.385
    8 Zhou Guanyu Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 1:34.575 1.817 18 206.007
    9 Valtteri Bottas Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 1:34.689 1.931 20 205.759
    10 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 1:34.917 2.159 13 205.265
    11 George Russell Mercedes 1:34.966 2.208 20 205.159
    12 Oscar Piastri McLaren/Mercedes 1:34.997 2.239 24 205.092
    13 Yuki Tsunoda AlphaTauri/Honda RBPT 1:35.015 2.257 20 205.053
    14 Nico Hülkenberg Haas/Ferrari 1:35.043 2.285 22 204.993
    15 Esteban Ocon Alpine/Renault 1:35.105 2.347 20 204.859
    16 Nyck de Vries AlphaTauri/Honda RBPT 1:35.402 2.644 25 204.222
    17 Pierre Gasly Alpine/Renault 1:35.455 2.697 22 204.108
    18 Logan Sargeant Williams/Mercedes 1:35.749 2.991 24 203.482
    19 Alexander Albon Williams/Mercedes 1:36.018 3.260 15 202.911
    20 Carlos Sainz Ferrari 1:36.072 3.314 21 202.797

  • Perez quickest on Day 3: F1 testing comes to a close

    Perez quickest on Day 3: F1 testing comes to a close

    Sakhir (Bahrain), 25 Feb 2023: Sergio Pérez set the fastest time of the three days of pre-season testing in Bahrain with the Mexican racer beating Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton by more than three tenths of a second as Valtteri Bottas took third spot for Alfa Romeo ahead of Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc.

    As his defending champion team-mate Max Verstappen had done on the opening day of testing, Pérez spent the full day at the wheel of the RB19 and in hot temperatures the Red Bull driver, like many others, spent the morning session focusing on longer runs. 

    As the heat eased through the afternoon, however, drivers began to bolt on softer compound tyres as they explored the performance potential of their new cars with just over a week to go until the opening race of the season. 

    Hamilton took top spot in the afternoon with a lap of 1:30.781, with the seven-time champion using the softer C5 compound tyres to set a time that pushed him ahead of the morning’s quickest driver Charles Leclerc. Leclerc’s team-mate Carlos Sainz got to within two hundredths of his team-mate to sit third. 

    After spending the day on the C3 compound, Pérez then went a step softer and on the C4 tyres powered to the top of the timesheet with a lap of 1:30.616 on the slower C4 tyres. Hamilton improved but he still sat 0.048s behind the Red Bull. 

    And then, in the final hour, Pérez put clear water between himself and his rivals with a lap of 1:30.305 on C4s to boost his lead to 0.359s. That looked like being the final order but late in the session Bottas put in a good C5 lap of 1:30.82 to steal third from Leclerc, with Sainz in fifth. 

    AlphaTauri’s Yuki Tsunoda finished a creditable sixth with a C4 time of 1:31.261, two tenths off Sainz and 0.956s off the pace set by Pérez. Tsunoda’s lap pushed Haas’ Kevin Magnussen out to seventh place ahead of Mercedes’ morning runner George Russell. 

    Aston Martin’s Fernando Alonso and Felipe Drugovich took ninth and tenth places respectively as the Silverstone team enjoyed a positive end to their test phase. Lando Norris finished 11th for McLaren, though the Briton completed just 35 laps across the day, with his best time being set on C3 tyres.

    Pierre Gasly was 13th for Alpine ahead of Williams’ Alex Albon and Alpine’s Esteban Ocon. Haas driver Nico Hulkenberg finished 15th ahead of McLaren’s morning runner Oscar Piastri and Nyck de Vries propped up the timesheet. 

    2023 Formula 1 Pre-season Test – Bahrain, Day 3
    1 Sergio Pérez Red Bull Red Bull 133 1:30.305  
    2 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes Mercedes 65 1:30.664 0.359
    3 Valtteri Bottas Alfa Romeo Ferrari 131 1:30.827 0.522
    4 Charles Leclerc Ferrari Ferrari 67 1:31.024 0.719
    5 Carlos Sainz Ferrari Ferrari 76 1:31.036 0.731
    6 Yuki Tsunoda AlphaTauri Red Bull 79 1:31.261 0.956
    7 Kevin Magnussen Haas Ferrari 95 1:31.381 1.076
    8 George Russell Mercedes Mercedes 83 1:31.442 1.137
    9 Fernando Alonso Aston Martin Mercedes 80 1:31.450 1.145
    10 Felipe Drugovich Aston Martin Mercedes 77 1:32.075 1.770
    11 Lando Norris McLaren Mercedes 37 1:32.160 1.855
    12 Pierre Gasly Alpine Renault 56 1:32.762 2.457
    13 Alex Albon Williams Mercedes 136 1:32.793 2.488
    14 Esteban Ocon Alpine Renault 76 1:33.257 2.952
    15 Nico Hulkenberg Haas Ferrari 77 1:33.329 3.024
    16 Oscar Piastri McLaren Mercedes 44 1:33.655 3.350
    17 Nyck de Vries AlphaTauri Red Bull 87 1:38.244 7.939