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Category: Formula 1
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F1 TV PRO app launched in India ahead of 2023 F1 season
Bengaluru, 21 Feb 2023: Formula 1 launched F1 TV Pro in India ahead of the 2023 FIA Formula 1 World Championship season. The digital platform will broadcast all race weekends, including practice and qualifying sessions, F1 Sprint events and Grand Prix.
Fans can subscribe to F1 TV Pro for ₹399 ($3.99) a month or ₹2,999 ($29.99) annually. Fans who sign up to the service early in the season will also benefit from a free seven-day trial for a limited time only, a release said here on Tuesday.
With access to live telemetry, all 20 driver onboard cameras and team radio channels, as well as in-depth pre- and post-race analysis and an extensive content library containing thousands of hours of archive footage of the sport’s most iconic moments, fans can become totally immersed in the drama and excitement of F1.
F1 TV Pro offers fans the opportunity to follow FIA Formula 1 Championship closer than ever. Starting with the FORMULA 1 GULF AIR BAHRAIN GRAND PRIX on 5th March, 2023 will feature 23-race schedule across five continents, including the Formula 1 Singapore Airlines Singapore Grand Prix and inaugural F1 Heineken Silver Las Vegas Grand Prix.
Fans in India will also be able to tune-in to the Porsche Supercup series and FIA Formula 2 and 3 sessions and races. Fans can follow the progress of Formula 2 drivers Jehan Daruvala and Kush Maini as they vie for the F2 crown and look to make the step up to Formula 1.
Ian Holmes, Director of Media Rights and Content Creation at Formula 1 said: “We are delighted to launch F1 TV Pro for our fans in India. With Formula 1’s growing global footprint, it is vital that our fans all around the world can watch and enjoy the drama and excitement of Formula 1. With access to live race footage, expert commentary, on-board cameras and team radios, F1 TV Pro will provide fans with a best-in-class service to follow the upcoming Formula 1 season.”
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Abu Dhabi GP: Verstappen wins as Leclerc holds off Perez for second
Max Verstappen wins F1 Abu Dhabi GP as Charles Leclerc secured second after fending off Sergio Perez in the battle for second.
It was a clean start from the drivers at the front with Max Verstappen leading F1 Abu Dhabi GP from Red Bull teammate Sergio Perez as Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc was third from Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton fourth after a run-in with Ferrari’s Carlos Sainz.
The Spaniard tried an inside move as Hamilton went off to keep the place. There was no further investigation in two separate investigations but the Brit gave up fourth with the Brit in fifth. McLaren’s Lando Norris was sixth from Mercedes’ George Russell.
Alpine’s Esteban Ocon was seventh from Aston Martin’s Sebastian Vettel as Alpine’s Fernando Alonso rounded out the Top 10. While the leaders were ahead, the fight between Sainz, Hamilton, Norris and Russell continued on for fourth and sixth place.
Having given up the place, Hamilton came back on Sainz to retake fifth as Russell cleared Norris for sixth. The Brit then tried a move on the Spaniard but it didn’t work. They continued to tussle as Ocon and Vettel started their battle for eighth.
The German took the Frenchman but he came back on him with Alonso joining in. Just ahead of them, Sainz stayed on Hamilton’s tail and eventually passed him to retake fourth with Russell also clearing his teammate who seemed to be suffering a bit.
The pit stop game started but the order remaining the same with Verstappen leading Perez and Leclerc. There was a slow stop for Russell which turned into an unsafe release after he was released in front of an incoming Norris to pit.
Russell was handed a 5s penalty for it with teammate Hamilton keeping him in check. Vettel went long on his first stint as Alonso retired due to a problem with a potential water leak. It was another reliability issue which he has been talking about all-season long.
Verstappen kept his F1 Abu Dhabi GP lead from Perez but Leclerc kept the Mexican in check, with Sainz in fourth from Russell, Hamilton, Norris, Ocon, Aston Martin’s Lance Stroll and AlphaTauri’s Yuki Tsunoda in the Top 10 points position.
Perez pitted the second time to drop to sixth but Verstappen, Leclerc and Sainz were trying for a one-stop which left the Mexican to not only catch them but also pass. At the back, Haas’ Mick Schumacher and Williams’ Nicholas Latifi had a coming together.
The German went for an inside move but a minor touch led to them spinning as Schumacher was handed a 5s time penalty for causing a collision. Sainz and Russell pitted for a second time with Verstappen and Leclerc trying to do a one-stop.
It started to get tasty with Hamilton trying to keep Perez off for third. The Mexican eventually got around to pass him in his chase of Leclerc. Hamilton was fourth with Sainz and Russell catching him as Norris was a lonely seventh from Ocon.
Stroll passed both Vettel and Ricciardo to ninth with the Australian being chased by the German along with Tsunoda for the final point. Up front, Hamilton was forced to retire due to a hydraulic problem after he was caught by Sainz and eventually passed too.
Verstappen held off well to win F1 Abu Dhabi GP from Leclerc who secured second after keeping off Perez in the Top 3. Sainz was fourth from Russell with Norris in sixth ahead of Ocon, Stroll, Ricciardo and Vettel in the Top 10, as the German scored the final point.
Aston Martin and Alfa Romeo tied on points in the championship but the latter’s fifth place finish helped them to keep the position. Tsunoda ended up 11th with Guanyu behind him in 12th from Williams’ Alexander Albon, Gasly and Bottas in the Top 15.
Schumacher 16th from Haas’ Kevin Magnussen as both Hamilton and Latifi were classified despite not seeing the chequered flag. Everyone from Tsunoda onward ended up a lap down on the leaders to end the 2022 F1 season.
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Abu Dhabi GP: Verstappen takes final pole from Perez, Leclerc
Max Verstappen took F1 Abu Dhabi GP pole in a Red Bull 1-2 with Sergio Perez second and Charles Leclerc third.
Q1:
The first part in F1 Abu Dhabi GP qualifying saw the Red Bull pair lead the way with Max Verstappen (1m12.754s) heading Sergio Perez, as the Ferrari pair followed with Carlos Sainz ahead of Charles Leclerc to comfortably make it in Q2.
It was a mighty lap through the traffic for Aston Martin’s Sebastian Vettel to make it in Q2 after ending up sixth. It was close for Alpine’s Fernando Alonso who was struggling in the session as he just made it in Q2 by 0.052s in 15th.
Haas’ Kevin Magnussen (1m25.834s) missed it in 16th from AlphaTauri’s Pierre Gasly (1m25.859s), with Alfa Romeo’s Valtteri Bottas (1m25.892s) also out in 18th from Williams’ Alexander Albon (1m26.028s) and Nicholas Latifi (1m26.054s).
Q2:
The second part in F1 Abu Dhabi GP qualifying saw Red Bull’s Perez lead the way with a 1m24.419s lap as Mercedes’ Hamilton was second after the team selected an out of position run for both him and Russell, who was fourth in early part.
But the order changed in the final run where Perez maintained the top spot with Leclerc improving to second being 0.098s off with teammate Sainz up to third. Despite the traffic troubles with the Red Bull, Vettel still maintained his pace to be in Q3.
It was a miss for Alpine’s Alonso (1m25.096s) by 0.028s in Q3 with AlphaTauri’s Yuki Tsunoda (1m25.219s) in 12th from Haas’ Mick Schumacher (1m25.225s), Aston Martin’s Lance Stroll (1m25.359s) and Alfa Romeo’s Zhou Guanyu (1m25.408s).
Q3:
The final part in F1 Abu Dhabi GP qualifying saw Mercedes doing an out of position run again, as Red Bull’s Verstappen had provisional pole with a 1m23.988s lap as he and Perez in third were separated by Ferrari’s Sainz, while Leclerc was fourth.
Despite a close call, Verstappen actually bettered his previous lap to set a 1m23.824s lap to take F1 Abu Dhabi GP pole from Perez (1m24.052s), who had some help from the Dutchman. Crucially the Mexican was ahead of Leclerc (1m24.092s) who was third from Sainz (1m24.242s).
Hamilton (1m24.508s) looked good but was only fifth from Russell (1m24.511s), with Norris (1m24.769s) taking best of the rest in seventh from Alpine’s Esteban Ocon (1m24.830s), Vettel (1m24.961s) and McLaren’s Daniel Ricciardo (1m25.045s) in the Top 10.
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Abu Dhabi GP: Perez fastest from Verstappen in FP3
Red Bull pair led the Mercedes pair in FP3 of F1 Abu Dhabi GP as Sergio Perez was fastest from Max Verstappen and Lewis Hamilton.
There was some action in FP3 of F1 Abu Dhabi GP at Yas Marina circuit, with Red Bull pair leading the Mercedes pair and McLaren separating them and the Ferrari pair. It was Sergio Perez on top with a 1m24.982s lap from Max Verstappen (1m25.134s).
The Dutchman did a late lap but in qualifying, it would be deleted for track limits. Lewis Hamilton (1m25.222s) was third from George Russell (1m25.395s), with the two running different rear wings. The former is under investigation for not slowing under red flag.
McLaren’s Lando Norris (1m25.518s) slotted in fifth. The Brit had his brakes heated up which was same for teammate Daniel Ricciardo, while Aston Martin’s Sebastian Vettel having one too. The McLaren led the Ferrari pair who weren’t feeling superb.
Charles Leclerc (1m25.571s) was sixth after his late lap with Carlos Sainz (1m25.605s) just behind him, as Ricciardo (1m25.950s) was eighth from Vettel (1m26.012s) and Williams’ Alexander Albon (1m26.051s), who lost a bit of a car part from the rear on his final lap.
The Alpine pair were 11th and 12th with Esteban Ocon ahead of Fernando Alonso, where the Frenchman caught out the stewards. They raised the yellow flag for him thinking he was stopping but replays showed him just slowing for other cars.
AlphaTauri’s Yuki Tsunoda was 13th from Alfa Romeo’s Valtteri Bottas, who dropped a bit of a pace in FP3. AlphaTauri’s Pierre Gasly was 15th after causing a red flag. His wheel cover came off after a kerb ride which needed to be recovered.
The Frenchman managed to return to the track after the mechanics fixed it up. Aston Martin’s Lance Stroll was 16th from Haas’ Kevin Magnussen & Mick Schumacher, Alfa Romeo’s Zhou Guanyu was 19th and Williams’ Nicholas Latifi 20th.
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Abu Dhabi GP: Verstappen quickest in FP2 from Russell, Leclerc
Max Verstappen was fastest in FP2 of F1 Abu Dhabi GP from George Russell and Charles Leclerc under the floodlights.
The FP2 session in F1 Abu Dhabi GP was mostly sedate as well under the floodlights at Yas Marina circuit as Red Bull’s Max Verstappen returned to the cockpit to lead the standings with a 1m25.146s lap from Mercedes’ George Russell (1m25.487s).
Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc (1m25.599s) was third to make it three different teams in the Top 3, as Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton (1m25.761s) was fourth from Red Bull’s Sergio Perez (1m25.852s) and Ferrari’s Carlos Sainz (1m25.932s) to make it the Top 3 teams in the Top 6 of the standings.
The Alpine pair led the best of the rest pack with Esteban Ocon (1m26.038s) ahead of Fernando Alonso (1m26.043s), while McLaren’s Daniel Ricciardo (1m26.124s) was eighth despite some floor troubles. Alfa Romeo’s Valtteri Bottas (1m26.300s) ended up in 10th.
The other McLaren of Lando Norris was 11th from Aston Martin’s Sebastian Vettel, who did have a run-off moment along with Verstappen and Leclerc. The Ferraris were also trialing experimenting with different wheel covers in the session.
Alfa Romeo’s Zhou Guanyu was 13th from Aston Martin’s Lance Stroll with the lead AlphaTauri of Yuki Tsunoda in 15th. Williams’ Alexander Albon was 16th from Haas’ Mick Schumacher, as teammate Kevin Magnussen was 17th.
The Dane had a moment with Hamilton, where he almost blocked him in the corner. AlphaTauri’s Pierre Gasly was 19th where he couldn’t set his best time on the soft tyres, with Williams’ Nicholas Latifi rounding the 20 runners.
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Brazil GP: Russell scores first F1 win from Hamilton, Sainz
George Russell secured his first F1 win in Brazil GP as Mercedes got their first in 2022 in a 1-2 with Lewis Hamilton P2 and Carlos Sainz P3.
Having won the sprint race, Mercedes’ George Russell made a clean start in F1 Brazil GP at Interlagos to lead from teammate Lewis Hamilton as Red Bull pair of Max Verstappen and Sergio Perez slotted in third and fourth behind them.
Perez had McLaren’s Lando Norris on his left at Turn 1 but managed to stay ahead, with he Brit keeping the Ferrari pair at bay where Charles Leclerc was ahead of Carlos Sainz – both of them opting for the medium tyres to start the grand prix.
Aston Martin’s Sebastian Vettel was eighth with AlphaTauri’s Pierre Gasly and Haas’ Mick Schumacher in the Top 10, gaining from the collision between Haas’ Kevin Magnussen and McLaren’s Daniel Ricciardo which is under investigation.
After a brief safety car period to clear the cars of Magnussen and Ricciardo, the re-start saw Russell lead the way in F1 Brazil GP but Hamilton and Verstappen made contact at Turn 2-3 sequence where the Dutchman tried to take the inside line.
With no space, they touched which dropped Verstappen to back and needing a pit stop, while Hamilton dropped to eighth. Moments later, Norris and Leclerc came together after the Brit ran a bit on the kerb and was thrown on the track.
He clipped Leclerc which sent onto the barrier but he managed to continue on. He was forced to pit, with both the incidents under investigation. Russell led the way from Perez and Sainz, with Norris in fourth from Vettel, Gasly and Schumacher.
Hamilton was eighth from Aston Martin’s Lance Stroll and Alfa Romeo’s Valtteri Bottas in the Top 10. Both Verstappen and Norris were handed 5s time penalty for causing a collision as Hamilton started to make inroads and was up to fourth after clearing four cars.
Russell started to extend his lead from Perez and Sainz, with Hamilton gaining on them. Norris kept Vettel at bay for fifth as Gasly was seventh from Schumacher. Bottas passed Stroll for ninth who dropped out of the Top 10 with Alpine’s Esteban Ocon in 10th.
With Russell leading Perez, Sainz decided to pit early for a soft switch. His right-rear brakes seemingly was on fire when he came in but it cooled down by the time he headed out. Both Leclerc and Verstappen also pitted again after their initial stop for damage.
Russell kept the lead after his stop even though Hamilton was leading F1 Brazil GP. Perez was third in the order with Sainz fourth. Post the pit stop for Hamilton, he was down to fourth but got third when Sainz decided for a second stop a few laps later.
Bottas gained from the pit stops to be fifth from Vettel, as Ocon was seventh from Norris, whose 5s pit stop and a steering wheel issue dropped him to eighth. The Brit had Leclerc on his tail, with Schumacher in the Top 10 from Verstappen.
The German’s pit stop was under investigation after it was spotted that a Alfa Romeo member was strolling near their pit box. After Hamilton caught Perez and passed him for second, both pitted few laps later for their final stop.
Russell continued to lead F1 Brazil GP after his stop but Sainz was close behind him. Hamilton was down to third from Perez as Bottas was fifth. A Virtual Safety Car was deployed soon for Norris, who stopped at the side of the track due to an issue.
Sainz and Alonso pitted for tyre change, as the full safety car was then deployed as it became difficult to get the car in. It was Russell in the F1 Brazil GP lead from Hamilton, Perez, Sainz, Bottas, Leclerc, Vettel, Ocon, Alonso and Verstappen in the Top 10.
After Williams’ Alexander Albon and Nicholas Latifi were allowed to get back onto the lead lap, AlphaTauri’s Yuki Tsunoda seemingly wasn’t allowed which kept him in the pack. Russell continued to lead F1 Brazil GP from Hamilton and Perez.
The Mexican had Sainz on his tail along with Leclerc, with Alonso gaining places to be sixth from Bottas, who was cleared by Verstappen for seventh. Ocon was up to eighth after Bottas’ lock-up at Turn 1. Vettel rounded out the Top 10.
Up front, Russell had control over Hamilton as Sainz was up to third but not troubling the Mercedes ahead, with Leclerc, Alonso and Verstappen managing to clear Perez who was struggling on the medium tyres. Bottas and Vettel were in the Top 10.
Finally, Mercedes broke the winless jinx of 2022 F1 season as Russell took his career first in Brazil GP in a 1-2 finish from Hamilton. Sainz was third despite pleas from Leclerc to let him pass thinking about the championship standings.
Likewise, Verstappen retained seventh from Perez despite a late call from Red Bull, as Alonso ended up fifth ahead of them. Ocon in eighth made merry for Alpine as Bottas ninth from Stroll who passed Vettel late in the race to be 10th.
Gasly was 12th from Guanyu with Schumacher dropping to 14th after early Top 10 run as Albon, Latifi and Tsunoda rounded out the 17 runners. DNF: Norris, Ricciardo, Magnussen.
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Brazil GP: Russell wins sprint race after passing Verstappen
George Russell passed Max Verstappen to win F1 Brazil GP sprint win from Carlos Sainz and Lewis Hamilton in the Top 3.
Pole-sitter Kevin Magnussen made a good start in his Haas in F1 Brazil GP sprint race as Red Bull’s Max Verstappen had to defend from Mercedes’ George Russell starting on the medium tyres with the Dutchman staying in front of the Brit.
McLaren’s Lando Norris stayed in front of Ferrari’s Carlos Sainz as Alpine’s Esteban Ocon kept sixth after a fight against teammate Fernando Alonso going into Turn 4. The Spaniard was forced onto the kerbs as he kept himself behind in the order.
Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton was eighth in points, with Red Bull’s Sergio Perez and Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc rounding the Top 10. At the front, Magnussen managed to lead for a lap or two before Verstappen took the sprint race lead with the Dane dropping behind.
He lost to both Russell and Sainz, who cleared Norris for fourth and moved up to third. The Brit lost to Hamilton who cleared Ocon. The Frenchman had a tangle with Alonso in the final corner where the Spaniard damaged his front wing and forced him to pit.
Hamilton was up to fourth with Perez up in fifth after passing Magnussen and Norris who were sixth and seventh. Ocon dropped to 10th with Leclerc in eighth from AlphaTauri’s Pierre Gasly and Aston Martin’s Lance Stroll and Sebastian Vettel.
The two had a squabble for track position where Stroll moved across to his left at Turn 1 with Vettel on the grass. The Canadian was eventually handed a 10s penalty for dangerous moved as the German eventually passed him for 10th on the order.
Up front, Verstappen started to be pressured on by Russell. The Brit stuck to his tail and tried a move for multiple laps but the Dutchman kept him at bay. He was helped by a brief yellow for Williams’ Alexander Albon stopping at the side.
But it didn’t deter Russell who eventually got through Verstappen at Turn 1 to lead the F1 Brazil GP sprint race with the Dutchman soon losing his touch with the Brit after noting of damage. He had Sainz and Hamilton on his tail in a three-way fight for second.
And soon Sainz made a move on Verstappen to snatch second. They made contact at Turn 1 with the Dutchman losing endplate of his front wing. He fended off Hamilton for couple of laps but he had too much at hand to eventually lose out to the Brit for third.
He dropped long behind in fourth as Perez started to close in on Verstappen. Leclerc was up to sixth as Norris passed Magnussen for seventh in the Top 8. Vettel was just outside points after passing Gasly for ninth as three drivers were put under investigation.
It was down to grid positioning for Hamilton, McLaren’s Daniel Ricciardo and Alfa Romeo’s Zhou Guanyu with the incident to be investigated after the race. At the front, Russell eased in to win the F1 Brazil GP sprint win from Sainz who fended off Hamilton.
Verstappen was fourth from Perez, Leclerc, Norris and Magnussen in the Top 8 points position, with Vettel and Gasly rounding the Top 10. Ricciardo ended up 11th from Stroll, who eventually dropped to 17th after his 10s time penalty.
It promoted Haas’ Mick Schumacher to 12th where he also had a moment with the Canadian. Guanyu was 13th from Alfa Romeo teammate Valtteri Bottas, with Alonso recovering to 15th from AlphaTauri’s Yuki Tsunoda.
Stroll was 17th from Ocon who dropped like a stone after his early contact with Alonso with the Alpine pair far behind in the fight for fourth. Williams’ Nicholas Latifi – the other on the medium tyres – was 19th after Albon retired.
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Brazil GP: Ocon fastest in dry FP2 from Perez, Russell
Esteban Ocon set the pace in FP2 of F1 Brazil GP ahead of Sergio Perez and George Russell, with the sprint race to come.
With a dry weather at Interlagos, Alpine’s Ocon set the pace in FP2 of F1 Brazil GP with a 1m14.604s lap as he was faster from Red Bull’s Perez (1m14.788s) and Mercedes’ Russell (1m14.916s) in the Top 3. The session was relatively clean with no mishap whatsoever.
The other Alpine of Fernando Alonso (1m15.049s) was fourth on the medium tyres, with Red Bull’s Max Verstappen (1m15.098s) in fifth ahead of Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton (1m15.137s) as AlphaTauri’s Pierre Gasly (1m15.636s) was seventh from both the Haas drivers in the pack.
Mick Schumacher (1m15.684s) was ahead of his teammate Kevin Magnussen (1m15.815s) in eighth and ninth with the Dane gearing up for a pole start later in the sprint race. McLaren’s Lando Norris (1m15.851s) was 10th, feeling much better after food poisoning on Thursday.
The latter two set the pace on the medium tyres. The lead Ferrari or Carlos Sainz was 11th in the order with teammate Charles Leclerc 13th. AlphaTauri’s Yuki Tsunoda was 12th in between, as McLaren’s Daniel Ricciardo slotted in 14th.
The first of Alfa Romeo was of Valtteri Bottas in 15th from the lead Williams of Nicholas Latifi. The pair of Aston Martin were 17th and 18th where Lance Stroll was ahead of Sebastian Vettel as Alfa Romeo’s Zhou Guanyu ended up 19th from Williams’ Logan Sargeant who picked up one more superlicense point.
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Brazil GP: Perez quickest in FP1 as Top 3 separated by 0.008s
Sergio Perez led the way in FP1 of F1 Brazil GP from Charles Leclerc and Max Verstappen with Top 3 separated by 0.008s.
The all-important FP1 session in F1 Brazil GP at Interlagos due to it being a sprint weekend saw Red Bull lead the way where Sergio Perez (1m11.853s) headed from Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc (1m11.857s), who set a late lap to be second – only 0.004s away.
In fact, Max Verstappen (1m11.861s) in third was only 0.008s behind Perez as Ferrari’s Carlos Sainz (1m12.039s) was fourth with a new ICE installed in his car. The Spaniard is to get a 5-place grid penalty as he headed the Mercedes pair who also put in a late lap.
Lewis Hamilton (1m12.040s) had to undertake multiple laps to be third after his initial quick lap was hampered due to a wide moment. George Russell (1m12.0.55s) was sixth from Aston Martin’s Sebastian Vettel (1m12.157s) with Haas’ Mick Schumacher (1m12.314s) in eighth.
Alfa Romeo’s Valtteri Bottas (1m12.466s) in ninth and AlphaTauri’s Pierre Gasly (1m12.467s) made it four different cars in the latter part of the Top 10, with Alpine’s Fernando Alonso just missing out. But the Spaniard set his best time on the medium tyres.
As did his teammate Esteban Ocon in 13th behind Williams’ Alexander Albon on the soft tyres. There were twitchy moments for multiple drivers including Verstappen, Sainz, Gasly and Alonso where the Frenchman complained of the car sliding too much.
Aston Martin’s Lance Stroll was 14th after he faced some issues during the session which the team could fix, with McLaren’s Lando Norris in 15th on the medium tyres. The Brit started the weekend after a late scare due to food poisoning.
Nyck de Vries was on standby after a seat fit on Thursday. Haas’ Kevin Magnussen was 16th from Williams’ Nicholas Latifi with Alfa Romeo’s Zhou Guanyu 18th, AlphaTauri’s Yuki Tsunoda 19th and McLaren’s Daniel Ricciardo 20th – the latter two were on the medium tyres.
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Mexico GP: Verstappen takes record-breaking 14th win of 2022 season
Max Verstappen put on a dominant show to win F1 Mexico GP from Lewis Hamilton and Sergio Perez to break a record.
It was a clean start from pole-sitter Max Verstappen in F1 Mexico GP in his Red Bull on the soft tyres as the two Mercedes drivers had a hefty fight where Lewis Hamilton managed to clear teammate George Russell who tried a move on the Dutchman.
A kerb moment in Turn 2-3 allowed Red Bull’s Sergio Perez to pass Russell for third as the Ferrari pair of Carlos Sainz and Charles Leclerc gained places to be fifth and sixth with Alpine’s Fernando Alonso also jumping up to seventh in the order.
Alfa Romeo’s Valtteri Bottas had a slow start to be eighth with McLaren’s Lando Norris dropping to 10th behind Alpine’s Esteban Ocon. The fight outside the Top 10 saw McLaren’s Daniel Ricciardo pass Alfa Romeo’s Zhou Guanyu for 12th after few laps of battle.
It was a solid start from Aston Martin pair of Sebastian Vettel and Lance Stroll who were up to 14th and 15th but the Canadian had AlphaTauri’s Pierre Gasly chasing him. The Frenchman locked-up and forced the Canadian off to pass him.
Gasly was handed a 5s penalty with 11 superlicense points. At the front, Verstappen continued to lead well from Hamilton and Perez. The Mexican was first to pit among the front runners but a slow stop dropped him behind the Ferrari pair.
Verstappen went late and managed to clear both the Ferrari drivers and come out in third. Mercedes waited a bit and eventually pitted Hamilton to switch to the hard tyres who soon had Perez on his tail. Russell – without stopping – led the way in F1 Mexico GP.
He wanted stay longer but his slow times forced them to switch strategy and put on the hard tyres where he returned to track in fourth. Verstappen got the F1 Mexico GP lead from Hamilton, Perez, Russell, Sainz and Leclerc in the Top 6.
Alonso was seventh from Ocon who leapfrogged Bottas in the pits but the Finn was close on his tail in the fight for eighth, as Norris was 10th. Just outside the Top 10, AlphaTauri’s Yuki Tsunoda had to fend off Ricciardo in the fight for 11th.
The Australian pressed on and tried a move on the inside but Tsunoda turned in as there was a clumsy touch which put the Japanese off. Both managed to continue on but the AlphaTauri suffered way too much damage to continue on and was forced to retire.
The incident was put under investigation as Ricciardo was handed a 10s time penalty. But McLaren wasted no time and allowed him to Norris which got him close to Bottas and he passed the Finn for ninth. He then set off in the chase of the two Alpine cars.
He eventually did so. Ocon first passed Alonso and the Ricciardo followed. The Australian then passed the Frenchman to be seventh as he then had to stretch out a 10s lead to remain in the points where Norris was chasing Bottas for 10th.
The Brit eventually passed the Finn for what became ninth after Alonso retired due to power unit issue. The Spaniard was extremely angry post the retirement as he was in the car and on the radio as Virtual Safety Car was deployed to clear the car.
At the front, Verstappen had a comfortable F1 Mexico GP win by 15.186s to register a record-breaking 14th win in a season with two more races to go. Hamilton was second as Perez was third from Russell, who took away the fastest lap on the final lap.
Sainz was fifth from Leclerc, with Ricciardo in seventh as he managed to retain the track position despite the 10s time penalty. Ocon was eighth from Norris as Bottas kept 10th despite the late push from Gasly and Albon towards the end.
Guanyu ended up 13th from Vettel, Stroll with the Haas pair of Mick Schumacher in 16th from Kevin Magnussen while Williams’ Nicholas Latifi was 18th – everyone from Ricciardo to the Dane ended up a lap down while the Canadian was down by two laps.








