Category: Formula 1

  • Italian GP: Verstappen beats Leclerc as he inches closer to 2022 title

    Italian GP: Verstappen beats Leclerc as he inches closer to 2022 title

    Max Verstappen climbed up from seventh to win F1 Italian GP with Charles Leclerc in second from George Russell.

    It was a clean getaway in F1 Italian GP at Monza from Charles Leclerc in his Ferrari from Mercedes’ George Russell, who had to take avoiding action at Turn 1. Red Bull’s Max Verstappen moved up to third from seventh by the end of Lap 1.

    McLaren’s Daniel Ricciardo was fourth from AlphaTauri’s Pierre Gasly, with McLaren’s Lando Norris in sixth after a slow start. Alpine’s Fernando Alonso slotted in seventh from Williams’ Nyck de Vries, Alfa Romeo’s Zhou Guanyu and Aston Martin’s Lance Stroll in the Top 10.

    Outside the points, Ferrari’s Carlos Sainz and Red Bull’s Sergio Perez started to climb up the order but Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton was kinda stuck. Among the three, the Spaniard was the man on charge as he was up in the Top 5 in no time.

    Perez was following him but he pitted early with front-right brakes issues with the Mexican dropping to last. Aston Martin’s Sebastian Vettel, meanwhile, slowed to retire after power unit issue with the Virtual Safety Car deployed.

    Ferrari called Leclerc early and returned third with Verstappen leading from Russell. Behind the Monegasque was Sainz who cleared Ricciardo on re-start. The Australian came under pressure from Gasly too where the Frenchman passed him at Turn 1.

    But since he went off, he gave back the place, while Alonso cleared Norris for sixth. The Brit came back on him to retake the place as Ricciardo and Gasly pitted where the Australian kept track position over the Frenchman.

    At the front, Ferrari switched Leclerc to a two-stop after Verstappen extended his first stint and took the F1 Italian GP lead from the Monegasque, who had to recover a lot after his second stop. Russell slotted in third on the hard tyres from Sainz.

    Perez was fifth from Ricciardo as Hamilton passed Gasly and Norris at one go to be seventh. The McLaren driver pitted late and a slow stop cost him track position but he got through his teammate to be seventh behind Hamilton in the order.

    Ricciardo was eighth from Gasly, as de Vries hung on the final points place handsomely. The Dutchman had Guanyu on his tail as the two got to fight for points after retirement for Alonso and also Stroll earlier in the grand prix.

    While it looked like the end would be smooth but a late safety car for Ricciardo changed a bit after the Australian faced power unit issue. The front-runners pitted with Verstappen leading from Leclerc, Russell, Sainz and Hamilton in the Top 5.

    Perez was sixth from Norris with Gasly, de Vries and Guanyu in the Top 10. With the delay in recovering the car, the F1 Italian GP ended under the safety car with Verstappen winning from Leclerc, Russell, Sainz, Hamilton, Perez, Norris, Gasly, de Vries and Guanyu.

    Outside the points, Alpine’s Esteban Ocon was 11th from Haas’ Mick Schumacher, Bottas, AlphaTauri’s Yuki Tsunoda, Williams’ Nicholas Latifi and Haas’ Kevin Magnussen.

    DNF: Ricciardo, Stroll, Alonso, Vettel

  • Italian GP: Leclerc secures pole from Verstappen amid host of penalties

    Italian GP: Leclerc secures pole from Verstappen amid host of penalties

    Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc took F1 Italian GP pole at Monza with Carlos Sainz in third behind Red Bull’s Max Verstappen.

    Q1:

    The first part in F1 qualifying in Italian GP at Monza saw Ferrari practice tow where Charles Leclerc was aided by Carlos Sainz to lead the way after setting a 1m21.280s lap with the two separated by just the 0.068s gap.

    But Red Bull’s Max Verstappen did another lap to faster with a 1m20.922s lap ahead of Leclerc and Sainz. Amid lap deletions, both the Aston Martin and Haas drivers were knocked out as replays showed big moment for Mick Schumacher at Turn 1.

    Williams’ Nicholas Latifi (1m22.587s) was knocked out in 16th after a moment at Turn 1 on his fast lap as new teammate Nyck de Vries made it in despite his fast lap getting deleted. Aston Martin’s Sebastian Vettel (1m22.636s) was 17th from Lance Stroll (1m22.748s).

    The last row of the grid had the Haas pair with Kevin Magnussen (1m22.908s) in 19th from Schumacher (1m23.005s), where the Dane’s quick lap was also deleted. It didn’t matter though as he was already set to be knocked out.

    Q2:

    The second part in F1 qualifying at Monza saw Ferrari’s Sainz set strong pace to start the session with a 1m20.878s lap as teammate Leclerc was second after going around the second time. His initial lap was ruined by a moment at Turn 1.

    Red Bull’s Verstappen was third as AlphaTauri decided to end Yuki Tsunoda’s session early, with the Japanese driver not venturing out to set a lap. The final quick lap for Williams’ de Vries got destroyed at Turn 4 when he went off to take recovery action.

    Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton too had a slight gravel moment in the corner. Alpine’s Esteban Ocon (1m22.130s) was knocked out in 11th after helping his teammate, with Alfa Romeo’s Valtteri Bottas (1m22.235s) in 12th from de Vries (1m22.71s) and Alfa Romeo’s Zhou Guanyu (1m22.577s).

    Q3:

    The third part in F1 qualifying in Italian GP saw Ferrari pair lead he way provisionally, with Sainz on top after setting a 1m20.584s lap. Leclerc rightly slotted in second from the Red Bull pair of Verstappen and Perez, with Mercedes’ George Russell in fifth.

    Lack of grip for Alpine’s Fernando Alonso forced him to abort his first quick lap where they decided to run in the gap. The final run saw Ferrari’s Leclerc improve to a 1m20.161s lap to take F1 Italian GP pole at the team’s home event at Monza.

    Verstappen (1m20.306s) ended up second from Sainz (1m20.429s), Perez (1m21.206s) and Hamilton (1m21.524s) but all of them have penalties. Mercedes’ George Russell (1m21.542s) in sixth will end up second for the Sunday’s race.

    McLaren’s Lando Norris (1m21.584s) ended up seventh. He led teammate Daniel Ricciardo (1m21.925s) in eighth, while AlphaTauri’s Pierre Gasly (1m22648s) ninth and Alpine’s Fernando Alonso 10th, where the latter couldn’t set a lap time at all.

  • Italian GP: Verstappen back on top in FP3 from Leclerc

    Italian GP: Verstappen back on top in FP3 from Leclerc

    Red Bull bounced back to lead FP3 session in F1 Italian GP with Sergio Perez slotting in third behind Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc.

    It was a bounce back from Red Bull in FP3 session of F1 Italian GP after Verstappen set the pace with a 1m21.252s lap as teammate Perez (1m21.848s) also did well in third in his recovery run behind Ferrari’s Leclerc (1m21.599s).

    The other Ferrari of Carlos Sainz (1m21.897s) was fourth as he is under investigation for impeding against Alfa Romeo’s Valtteri Bottas. The Monegasque noted of trouble at Turn 6 when discussing with his team about improving his lap time.

    The mix behind had three different teams closely packed together, with Alpine’s Fernando Alonso (1m22.306s) in fifth from McLaren’s Lando Norris (1m22.319s) and Mercedes’ George Russell (1m22.357s). A late lap from AlphaTauri’s Yuki Tsunoda (1m22.430s) put him in eighth.

    The other Alpine of Esteban Ocon (1m22.506s) was pushed to ninth from Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton (1m22.567s) as Alfa Romeo’s Zhou Guanyu dropped outside Top 10 where the Swiss outfit continued its fine run in F1 Italian GP practice thus far.

    AlphaTauri’s Pierre Gasly was 12th from the Williams pair of Nicholas Latifi and Nyck de Vries, with the Dutchman replacing Alexander Albon who is undergoing appendicitis operation. He had a decent session but it included a gravel moment too.

    McLaren’s Daniel Ricciardo was a lowly 15th along with Alfa Romeo’s Bottas, as Aston Martin’s Sebastian Vettel was 17th from Haas pair of Kevin Magnussen and Mick Schumacher, where the German managed just the eight laps.

    Prior to the session, Haas found a clutch issue which took them time to fix and they managed to in the end, to give Schumacher some lap time. The 20 runners were rounded out by Aston Martin’s Lance Stroll.

    In terms of the power unit elements, Sainz, Ocon and Magnussen joined others to take their fifth ICE and hit themselves with a grid penalty. Additionally, Sainz and Magnussen took their fifth TC, MGU-H, whereas Sainz took his sixth MGU-K.

  • Italian GP: Sainz keeps Ferrari on top in FP2 from Verstappen

    Italian GP: Sainz keeps Ferrari on top in FP2 from Verstappen

    Ferrari’s Carlos Sainz ended up fastest in FP1 of F1 Italian GP with teammate Charles Leclerc in third behind Red Bull’s Max Verstappen.

    The FP2 session was smoothly run too in F1 Italian GP at Monza but with one red flag stoppage to recover the stricken car of Haas’ Mick Schumacher. The engine cut off for the German who was already down on laps after missing FP1 for Antonio Giovinazzi.

    He also had a Turn 1 moment early in the session along with Sainz and Verstappen. The Spaniard headed the FP2 standings with a 1m21.664s after he set his best lap post the red flag stoppage, with teammate Leclerc (1m21.857s) in third who had Turn 1 off too.

    Sainz took his fourth CE to go with his fifth MGU-K and third ES. Verstappen (1m21.807s) slotted in between the two Ferrari drivers, with McLaren’s Lando Norris (1m22.338s) doing a good job to be fourth from Mercedes’ George Russell (1m22.386s).

    Red Bull’s Sergio Perez (1m22.394s) was sixth from Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton (1m22.503s), with both the Mercedes cars suffering ERS deployment. The Alpine pair were eighth and ninth, with Esteban Ocon (1m22.728s) ahead of Fernando Alonso again (1m22.752s).

    The Top 10 was rounded by Williams’ Alexander Albon (1m22.835s), who had a heavy gravel moment towards the end of the session. McLaren’s Daniel Ricciardo was 11th from the Alfa Romeo pair of Zhou Guanyu and Valtteri Bottas in 12th and 13th.

    The Finn twice had gravel moment, with the AlphaTauri pair in 14th and 15th where Pierre Gasly ahead of Yuki Tsunoda where the latter set his best time on the medium tyres. The Japanese is to see the stewards for failing to slow for yellow flag.

    Haas’ Kevin Magnussen was 16th from the Aston Martin pair as Sebastian Vettel returned to the cockpit to be 17th and ahead of Lance Stroll. Williams’ Nicholas Latifi slotted in 19th as Schumacher rounded the 20 runners.

  • Italian GP: Leclerc leads Sainz by 0.077s in FP1 as several set for penalty

    Italian GP: Leclerc leads Sainz by 0.077s in FP1 as several set for penalty

    Ferrari ended up 1-2 to start the F1 Italian GP weekend with Charles Leclerc ahead of Carlos Sainz, as Mercedes’ George Russell was third.

    It was a relatively smooth FP1 session in F1 Italian GP at Monza as Ferrari ended up 1-1 where Leclerc (1m22.410s) was faster than Sainz (1m22.487s) by 0.077s. The two led the Mercedes pair where Russell (1m22.689s) was third from Lewis Hamilton (1m22.831s).

    Replays showed a moment between Russell and Sainz where the Brit almost crashed into the back of the Spaniard at Turn 5 chicane. Red Bull’s Max Verstappen (1m22.840d) slotted in fifth where he also had a racey moment with McLaren’s Lando Norris in the middle of the session.

    The Dutchman couldn’t set a better pace as his team continued to work on his rear wing. The Alpine pair of Esteban Ocon (1m23.075s) and Fernando Alonso (1m23.099s) were sixth and seventh, with AlphaTauri’s Yuki Tsunoda (1m23.260s) eighth from Alfa Romeo’s Valtteri Bottas (1m23.394s).

    McLaren’s Daniel Ricciardo (1m23.511s) rounded the Top 10 where the Australian managed to beat teammate Norris, who was only 16th. Williams’ Alexander Albon continued his good run in 11th from Alfa Romeo’s Zhou Guanyu.

    AlphaTauri’s Pierre Gasly was 13th after a Turn 1 moment early in the session, with Red Bull’s Sergio Perez unable to set a good lap in 14th from Aston Martin’s Lance Stroll. As noted, Norris was 16th from the Haas pair in 17th and 18th.

    It was Kevin Magnussen ahead of Antonio Giovinazzi, who got a FP1 chance in place of Mick Schumacher but it wasn’t part of the young drivers’ session. Nyck de Vries for Aston Martin was part of it in 19th, having replaced Sebastian Vettel.

    This was the Dutchman’s third FP1 chance after Williams and Mercedes. He was on-course for a better lap with five minutes remaining, but for a slight off on the gravel which hampered his run, as Williams’ Nicholas Latifi ended up 10th.

    The power unit penalty list from the FIA was also revealed during the FP1 session of F1 Italian GP, with the likes of Bottas and Tsunoda going for their sixth ICE of the 2022 season, Verstappen on his fifth and Hamilton and Perez on their fourth.

    In terms of TC and MGU-H, Bottas took his seventh, Tsunoda sixth and Hamilton his fourth to incur penalty. On the MGU-K side, Tsunoda took his sixth, Sainz his fifth and Hamilton his fourth, while the Spaniard took his third ES of the season.

  • Max Verstappen defends well a challenging question from Indian F1 journalist Niharika

    Max Verstappen defends well a challenging question from Indian F1 journalist Niharika

    Zandvoort (The Netherlands), 5 Sept. 2022: Popular Indian F1 journalist Niharika Ghorpade (Sportskeeda) who is not afraid of asking tough questions, threw a challenging query to the reigning world champion Max Verstappen. For asking a follow-up question in the post race Presser, Niharika Ghorpade got trolled. However, the Dutch driver gave a calculated reply and cleverly defended himself before sending back a subtle message to his arch-rival Lewis Hamilton. She was unjustly attacked on Twitter and Instagram by Hamilton fans but the Indian journalist knows her sport and is known for calling a spade, a spade!

    Read Niharika Ghorpade’s article in Sportskeeda here!

    Verstappen answer is given first before the other transcripts:

    Niharika’s Question: Max, Lewis suggested that your dominance this year is credited to Adrian Newey and to Red Bull. Do you think that’s valid, and also do you think anybody else in your car, any other driver, could have been as dominant as you are?

    MV: There’s a lot of that is down to the team, of course, as also how Lewis won his championships. That’s how it goes in Formula 1. Your car is super-important, but I think when you’re an exceptional driver like of course Lewis is as well, you make a difference over your team-mate at the time, because in very crucial races as well. For example, for me, I think one that stood out as well for him, was Turkey, when it was very slippery – just staying calm, not making mistakes. You end up winning a race like that and that’s what, at the end of the day, what good drivers do. They do make the difference compared to other fast drivers but not as good. So, yeah, the car is very dominant in Formula 1 but of course between team-mates, only one can win, and that’s where you have to make the difference.

    The following top-3 drivers attended the post-race FIA Press Conference at the Dutch Grand Prix on Sunday: 1 – Max VERSTAPPEN (Red Bull Racing), 2 – George RUSSELL (Mercedes) and 3 – Charles LECLERC (Ferrari).

    The track interviews were conducted by former F1 driver David Coulthard. 

    Q: Max, what a way to win your home Grand Prix. What a difference a week makes. You had to fight, fight, fight all the way.

    Max VERSTAPPEN: Yeah, it was not a straightforward race. We had to push the whole race. Of course, with the Safety Car, Virtual Safety Car, making the right calls, it was always bit of a question mark, but it worked out really well. Once we got back to the Soft tyres we had great pace again.

    Q: At any point during the race did you ever doubt? Because it looked like Lewis Hamilton, with track position, had Mercedes covered him off, then, you know, it could have been a different story.

    MV: Yeah, I mean, before that Safety Car I thought it was OK to the end with the Hard tyres, even though we were a bit slower. But then of course, the Safety Car came out and I said ‘I don’t think we’re going to keep it up if we just if we don’t pit’. So we went for the Soft tyres. But then of course I dropped back to third. Then George pitted as well. I had a good run on the restart. We have a bit more top speed, so that helps to attack into Turn 1. And from there onwards we had a really good balance in the car again.

    Q: That restart with the Safety Car was crucial. I didn’t expect you to get the pass done at the restart, but that’s what your full focus was.

    MV: Yeah, we timed it really well out of that last corner into the banking and then you could see the draft was quite strong and we got ahead, so incredible to win again.

    Q: Max on the slowing down lap, there are fireworks, there’s a sea of orange smoke. Can you put into words just what this victory means in comparison to all others?

    MV: It’s always special to win your home Grand Prix. It was already last year. This year, I have to say I had to work for it even more. So yeah, an incredible weekend and I’m really happy we got the Dutch Grand Prix.

    Q: Quick word for your fans.

    MV: Unbelievable support. And I’m really happy that all of you guys came here to support me. So proud to be Dutch.

    Q: Congratulations, Max Verstappen, the winner of the Dutch Grand Prix. George Russell, wow! You were a little bit out of place in qualifying but you never lost faith. You said you have a quick race car. Second place. Congratulations.

    George RUSSELL: Yeah, firstly a huge thank you to all the crowd here. It’s been an incredible reception. It’s a really special feeling for all of us drivers to come racing in Zandvoort and in Holland. So thank you very much.

    Q: Now George, you’re going to be happy with that second place but your team-mate will feel that he was maybe a little bit out of position. When you passed him, there was there was a little… What was going on there? It almost looks like you are going to hit the back of him?

    GR: Yeah, we like to keep it close, you know, always. But you know, I think as a team today we showed incredible pace. I know the team result wasn’t quite what we hoped for. But this gives us a lot of confidence and a lot of faith moving forward. So, I think it’s incredible see three different teams on the podium and you know we, as Mercedes, are slowly getting closer to that top step so let’s keep on pushing.

    Q: Yeah, it shows just how competitive Formula 1 is. George, congratulations on your second place. Charles, congratulations. Third place, not, of course, the result you would have looked for today but the race just slipped away. Can you can you talk us through the key moments that saw you find yourself dropped from second to third.

    Charles LECLERC: To be to be honest I mean much better was difficult to do. We were a little bit unlucky with the VSC. I don’t know if this will have changed anything, Max was too quick today. And then there was the Mercedes that were flying on the Hard tyres. We struggled to find the feeling on those tyres. So we’ll analyse that, but yeah, it’s P3 for us today.

    Q: The battle with Lewis? Fairly straightforward towards the ends?

    CL: Yeah, I mean, Lewis was struggling a little bit. He was on a used set. I had a bit more grip. We managed to overtake him, but they were still managing to keep those tyres very well on the last lap. So it wasn’t easy, but at the end, we made it stick.

    Q: The gap increases in the championship. I know you take one race at a time and you never give up but what is your feeling now in the championship challenge?

    CL: Well, as I said in Spa, now the gap is really big. So we’ll take it race by race, try to maximise our potential. And let’s see what’s possible.

    PRESS CONFERENCE

    Q: A very warm welcome to the top three finishers of the FIA Formula 1 Dutch Grand Prix. In third place, Charles Leclerc. In second place, George Russell. And taking his 10th win of this 2022 campaign and his 30th career win in Formula 1, our winner, Max Verstappen. What a weekend for you Max, another win from pole in front of your Dutch fans, just please sum up what this means to you?

    MV: Yeah, it was not a straightforward race, you know. So then I think it’s extra rewarding to win the race. We couldn’t really do our preferred strategy to the end and that I think made it a little bit more difficult for us, up until the last Safety Car, because I think we were just a bit more competitive on the softer compounds. But then, of course, with that late Safety Car, we could switch back to the preferred tyre, the Soft one, and we could get back into lead.

    Q: You’ve explained it all beautifully now, but how difficult was it to stay on top of everything during the race itself?

    MV: Yeah, it was just difficult. I think I gave my opinions about what I wanted with tyres. Like, I said, don’t use the Hard tyre. But we had to, because of the VSC. It came out a bit unfortunate. And then we went out and we were clearly lacking a little bit of pace on that Hard compared to the Mercedes cars on the Medium. I think the gap was still big enough to manage it to the end. But they would have definitely gotten a lot closer than I think the 11-and-a-half seconds it was at the time. But yeah, then Safety Car came out and then there’s no way that you can stay out on a Hard tyre. So we had to box, but I didn’t request it. You have to trust your team as well to make the right calls and they did. So they boxed me. We put a Soft tyre on. And of course, then we dropped back. But then also, of course, George also pitted for Softs and then we were back into P2. And yeah, surprisingly, we had a really good restart and then with the extra top speed we have over Mercedes, I could get a run into Turn 1.

    Q: When you look at the race as a whole, were you surprised that it was Mercedes, ultimately challenging you today and not Ferrari?

    MV: I was just surprised that they were that quick on the harder compounds. I have to say these tyres are very stiff, you know, the C1, C2. And they just didn’t seem to really switch on for us as good as they did for them. That’s I think what made it a little bit more complicated for us today. But then, once we were able to switch back to the Soft, we could counter it. But yeah, I expected probably them to be a little bit slower. And I expected Ferrari to be a little bit faster.

    Q: Now, Max, this magical season continues for you. And in your seven years at Red Bull. Is this the most at one that you felt with the car and with the team?

    MV: Yes, but I think that’s normal because of just spending more time with everyone and of course, being part of the team for an even longer period of time. So, I think that’s what you hope for, right? Like every year you continue, that you feel even more at one with the team. With the car it’s a tricky one. Because, of course, when the regulations change then maybe sometimes you have to start over. And I have to say that in the beginning of the year it was a bit of adaptation, which is not fully to my liking. But also, like I’ve explained before, the car was quite heavy. And I think naturally with reducing the weight it all felt a bit more agile.

    Q: George coming to you, great job as well. Your best result of the season so far from P6 on the grid. Do you feel you extracted the absolute maximum from it?

    GR: Yeah, I think so. I think if you told me before the race, I’d be finishing P2, I’d have definitely been very happy with that. But I think we, as a team, thought we had a shot at victory today. And we roll the dice going with that one-stop strategy from the off. And, you know, the pace of the Mercedes today was just absolute flying. So really proud of the job we’ve done as a team to keep on improving and show how fast our race car is. But obviously, starting a little bit further down the grid, it’s always going to be challenging, but no, for us, as a team, incredible race. Sorry for Lewis that he obviously wasn’t on the podium with us because he did an excellent job and deserve to be sat here too.

    Q: As Max just said, your pace on the hard tyre was phenomenal. Did that surprise you?

    GR: Yes and no. I think the car was really feeling good this weekend from lap one. On Friday, I knew it was going to be a much better weekend than we had in Spa. I think Spa played against us. Zandvoort probably towards us. So, I’m not sure how our Monza performance is going to be I think it’ll probably be somewhere between the two. Hopefully closer to what we saw this weekend, but I think it’s really promising we have so much race pace.

    Q: Do you feel got the car was back where it was at Hungary?

    GR: I think there’s no surprises there because these are two very similar circuits: high downforce; a lot of medium speed corners. And that’s where the car really comes into its own. So, you know, we go into some very different circuits in the upcoming races. But globally, we’re bringing a lot of performance to the car. And, as I said, I think we have a car that’s capable of fighting victory, we just need to be able to start a little bit higher up the order.

    Q: Charles, coming to you. Well done to you as well, another podium. Is there anything more you could have done today to challenge Max?

    CL: Not really, we just didn’t have the pace. We didn’t… we weren’t quick enough. So this is the main focus at the moment, to try and bring back the speed that we had at the beginning of the season. We seem to have lost it, a little bit of pace in the in the long runs especially.

    Q: Have you lost it or have the cars around you gained some pace, long run pace?

    CL: No-no, I think everybody is obviously improving but in the last races, we’ve been struggling more a bit more in race pace. Now Mercedes is also in the fight and they are very quick. They were extremely quick today, especially on the Harder compounds. I think our pace on the Soft was really good at the beginning. We had used tyres, Max was on new, so I think the difference was more or less what we expected. But then, on the new Medium, we were slower than expected, for sure.

    Q: And were you surprised by the pace of Mercedes today?

    CL: Yes, definitely. On the Harder compounds? Yes.

    Q: Charles, can you just throw it forward for people who want a preview for Monza next weekend? What can we expect from you and Ferrari there?

    CL: On paper, it’s not our best track, unfortunately. But anyway, I’m really looking forward to go there. We always have a massive amount of support. And for that, I’m really looking forward to it. But I think the performance on paper will be a bit more difficult than this weekend, unfortunately.

    QUESTIONS FROM THE FLOOR

    Q: (Alex Kalinauckas – Autosport) Max, at what point did you realise that Mercedes was going to be a real threat for the win? Was it when Lewis and George were flying on the Hards? At the same time, George, when you had that Hard tyre on, before the Virtual Safety Car, how hard were you guys pushing to make it to the finish? Thanks.

    MV: I have to say, when I swapped to the Medium, of course, I was catching them, which is normal because I had a newer tyre, they were still doing good lap times, I have to say. And then yes, as soon as they swapped to the Hard, I was quite interested to see their pace, because I never really wanted to go to a Hard tyre. But yeah, when I heard the lap times, I was like… ‘that’s quite quick’. And I was trying to push up a bit. But they were still a few tenths faster. So yeah, very surprising that they made it work, that tyre around here. But then I knew, of course, it might get close to the end of the race, with the way our strategies were playing out. But then, of course, the gap after the VSC was still getting big enough to manage. But yeah, clearly, they were quick in the race.

    GR: Yeah, I think we had nothing to lose; we were pushing absolutely flat out and we knew that was our only opportunity to fight for victory. And, you know, pre-race, in our strategy meetings, we said, we need to be bold in our decisions to be able to fight for victory. And I think, starting on that Medium, it was clear that the others were going to be doing a two-stop. And, as I said, we just absolutely went for it. And when we saw Max in our sights, that was really exciting. It was probably, for me personally, the most enjoyable race I’ve ever had in Formula 1, just being able to push so hard for so long on such an exceptional circuit as well. I think it was really quite fun.

    Q: George after the performance of the car today, do you remain even more convinced that this car can win this season?

    GR: There’s no doubt we’ve got the race pace to be able to win. Absolutely sure of that. And had we been starting P2/3/4 we probably could have won the race today. And, ultimately it’s going to come down to our qualifying performance on a Saturday. If we continue to qualify P6 and P8 as we have done in the last two race weekends, we’re going to really struggle to win a race. But we need to find a bit more magic in qualifying as we showed in Budapest.

    Q: (Ronald Vording – Motorsport.com) Max, when you pitted during the Safety Car it seemed that you had to overtake two Mercedes car on track for the win. Personally, were you surprised by their decision to pit one car and to take the buffer away and did it make things a bit more straightforward at the end of the race for you?

    MV: It’s always easy to speak afterwards, but I think the call George made was the right one at the end because I think with the pace we had on the Soft, I would have overtaken both of them because the grip difference was quite big at the end – it turned out to be.

    Q: (Niharika Ghorpade – Sportskeeda) Max, Lewis suggested that your dominance this year is credited to Adrian Newey and to Red Bull. Do you think that’s valid, and also do you think anybody else in your car, any other driver, could have been as dominant as you are?

    MV: There’s a lot of that is down to the team, of course, as also how Lewis won his championships. That’s how it goes in Formula 1. Your car is super-important, but I think when you’re an exceptional driver like of course Lewis is as well, you make a difference over your team-mate at the time, because in very crucial races as well. For example, for me, I think one that stood out as well for him, was Turkey, when it was very slippery – just staying calm, not making mistakes. You end up winning a race like that and that’s what, at the end of the day, what good drivers do. They do make the difference compared to other fast drivers but not as good. So, yeah, the car is very dominant in Formula 1 but of course between team-mates, only one can win, and that’s where you have to make the difference.

    Q: (Jaap de Groot – Masters Magazine) Continuing from the last question, Max, when you won your first world title, you wondered if you ever could produce the same intensity and your will to win. But it seems now instead that you’re bringing winning to a next level.

    MV: It’s a whole team effort, you know, and the intensity is different. It’s also a completely different season. But I think I don’t need to tell anyone in the team, the motivation we have, to always try to improve and to win races, even when we win races, we still want to do better. And also, today we will look at a lot of things that we can do better but I think that’s what you always need to have, that kind of approach, always wanting to do more, wanting to do better, because that’s how you stay on top because if you stand still, of course, people at the end will overtake you.

    Q: (Marijn Abbenhuijs – AD Sportwereld) Max, Helmut Marko just told us how impressed he is with you, with your ability to stay calm and extremely focused, even in circumstances like this, these chaotic circumstances. Do you have moments of realisation that you think: ‘well, how special is this? What is going on in my world at the moment?’

    MV : When you’re on the grid, you’re not thinking about how special everything is.  I’m focused on what I have to do in the car. You go through all the procedures so it’s nice, of course, to see all the crowd and the craziness and I appreciate it a lot but I think also, as a sportsman, you focus on your job, right? And that’s what you do throughout the race. And then of course, after the race, you take it all in and of course, this was a very special weekend for me, to see, all of these fans come out and support me. It’s been incredible but of course for those one and a half hours, you are fully focused on the job.

    Q: (Alex Kalinauckas – Autosport) George, with what happened to Lewis after the safety car restart, what you feared would happen to you as well, if you’ve been left out on those mediums? And also when you came by him, how close were you to making contact? It like you had to check up a little bit.

    GR: I think as a team it was an incredibly difficult decision because had we both pitted, we would have conceded the position to Max.  Had we both stayed out, we probably both would have lost out to Max as well so the best chance we as a team had of victory was splitting the cars, one to stay ahead of Max, one to stay behind and see what happened. If you could have just got those tyres restarted, it could have been different but it was always going to be very, very challenging for him, but I’m sure Lewis…  he wanted to go for it. As a racing driver and where we are at the moment as a team, we want to win. And we’re obviously really happy with the points, just being consistent, getting them on the board but ultimately no one remembers who finishes second in a championship. So we want to we want to win a race. And yeah, I think obviously with that overtake with Lewis, just a bit of confusion and I came out just as he defended, and yeah, it could a bit nasty, but it’s nothing but respect between the two of us. So yeah, all good.

    Q: (Ronald Vording – Motorsport.com) Max, last week you said that Spa-Francorchamps tracks suits your car perfectly well, and that it would be more tricky on a high downforce circuit. Today was more tricky but still you won at the Hungaroring, you’ve won here, so is it fair to say that the Red Bull car does not have any real weakness anymore at this stage of the season?

    MV: Not real weaknesses but we know at some places where we are stronger than others, we know on a high downforce track that it’s a bit of a more difficult situation to get the best out of our package. But I think if you look at the whole season, of course, you have more tracks with kind of medium downforce levels and I think our car is very efficient. So that’s why I think we’re all looking forward to Monza.

  • Dutch GP: Verstappen wins; Safety car periods ruins Hamilton’s day

    Dutch GP: Verstappen wins; Safety car periods ruins Hamilton’s day

    Zandvoort, 4 Sept. 2022: Max Verstappen took his 10th win of the season at the end of a strategically complicated Dutch Grand Prix defined by two safety car periods, one Virtual and one physical. George Russell finished second for Mercedes ahead of Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc.

    Verstappen led from pole in early stages of the race but the result was thrown into question when it became clear that Mercedes might spring a surprise by targeting a one-stop strategy.

    As Verstappen stuck to a two-stop plan, Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton seized the lead ahead of team-mate George Russell. However, two safety car periods swung the pendulum back towards Verstappen and when Hamilton elected to stay out on medium tyres and the Dutchman moved to soft tyres under the final SC, Verstappen roared past the Briton at the restart to take the lead and victory.

    At the start of the race Verstappen made a good getaway and he took the lead ahead of Leclerc and the second Ferrari of Carlos Sainz.

    Behind the top three, Sergio Pérez tried to attack Hamilton on the run to the first corner, but the Mercedes driver defended well. Hamilton then tried to go down the inside of Sainz but the pair made slight contact. Hamilton was then slow through the banked Turn 3 but managed to again hold off Pérez to keep fourth place.

    Verstappen then began to pull a gap to Leclerc and after seven laps he was 1.5s ahead of the Ferrari driver. Meanwhile, behind the top five, Geroge Russell in the other Mercedes was sixth ahead of McLaren’s Lando Norris, while Aston Martin’s Lance Stroll was eighth ahead of Alpine’s Esteban Ocon and the 10th-placed Haas of Mick Schumacher.

    Pérez pitted at the end of lap 14 and jumped Sainz as Ferrari bungled the Spaniard’s pit stop. Leclerc then pitted from second at the end of lap 17 and Verstappen made his first stop on following lap. The Red Bull driver moved to medium tyres and rejoined in P3 as Hamilton moved into the lead ahead of team-mate Russell.

    With new tyres on board, Verstappen began to chase down the leading Mercedes cars and on lap 23 the Dutchman was 2.6s behind Russell. On lap 28, aided by DRS, the World Champion breezed past the Mercedes around the outside on the approach to Turn 1.

    He quickly began to close on the race leader, with the result that Hamilton pitted. He took on hard tyres. Russell then pitted at the end of lap 31 for hard tyres and he came out in fifth place. Verstappen now led the race, eight seconds clear of Leclerc, with Pérez in third place. The top three were all on a two-stop strategy. Hamilton and Russell sat in fourth and fifth places respectively, with both Mercedes drivers on a one-stop race. Sainz now held sixth place ahead of Norris, Stroll and the Alpine cars of Fernando Alonso and Ocon.

    Hamilton then passed Pérez as he set about narrowing the gap to Verstappen who still needed another stop. However, on lap 44, the complexion of the race changed when AlphaTauri’s Yuki Tsunoda hit trouble., and after a confusion about the issue, the Japanese driver was eventually told to stop. He pulled over at the side of the track and the VSC was deployed.

    Verstappen pitted at the end of lap 48 taking on hard tyres and took on hard tyres and rejoined in the lead. Mercedes switched Hamilton and Russell to medium tyres. Hamilton came out in P2 with Russell third ahead of Leclerc.

    The race changed again on lap 55. Valtteri Bottas’ Alfa Romeo ground to a halt at the end of the pit straight and the yellow flags were flown and a lap later the safety car was deployed.

    Verstappen pitted and took on soft tyres. Mercedes then pitted Russell who took on softs. Behind the SC, Hamilton, on mediums, now led ahead of Max on softs, with Russell third ahead Leclerc and Checo, who was on mediums.

    The SC left the track on lap 60 and Verstappen on quicker soft tyres, powered past the Mercedes on the pit straight to take the lead and 12 laps later the win. Hamilton was passed in the closing staged by Russell and Leclerc but the Briton managed to hang on to fourth place ahead of Pérez who inherited fifth when Sainz was handed a late five-second penalty for an unsafe release. Alpine’s Fernando Alonso took sixth ahead of Norris and Sainz finished eighth ahead of Alpine’s Esteban Ocon and Aston Martin’s Lance Stroll.

    2022 FIA Formula 1 Dutch Grand Prix – Race
    1 Max Verstappen Red Bull 72 1:36’42.773
    2 George Russell Mercedes 72 1:36’46.844 4.071
    3 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 72 1:36’53.702 10.929
    4 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 72 1:36’55.789 13.016
    5 Sergio Pérez Red Bull 72 1:37’00.941 18.168
    6 Fernando Alonso Alpine/Renault 72 1:37’01.527 18.754
    7 Lando Norris McLaren/Mercedes 72 1:37’02.079 19.306
    8 Carlos Sainz Jr. Ferrari 72 1:37’03.689 20.916
    9 Esteban Ocon Alpine/Renault 72 1:37’03.890 21.117
    10 Lance Stroll Aston Martin/Mercedes 72 1:37’05.232 22.459
    11 Pierre Gasly AlphaTauri/Red Bull 72 1:37’09.782 27.009
    12 Alexander Albon Williams/Mercedes 72 1:37’13.163 30.390
    13 Mick Schumacher Haas/Ferrari 72 1:37’15.768 32.995
    14 Sebastian Vettel Aston Martin/Mercedes 72 1:37’18.780 36.007
    15 Kevin Magnussen Haas/Ferrari 72 1:37’19.642 36.869
    16 Zhou Guanyu Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 72 1:37’20.093 37.320
    17 Daniel Ricciardo McLaren/Mercedes 72 1:37’20.537 37.764
    18 Nicholas Latifi Williams/Mercedes 71 1:37’24.851 1 lap /42.078
         Valtteri Bottas Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 53 1:10’40.476 Retirement
         Yuki Tsunoda AlphaTauri/Red Bull 43 58’27.741 Retirement

  • Dutch GP: Verstappen beats Leclerc by 0.021s to take home pole

    Dutch GP: Verstappen beats Leclerc by 0.021s to take home pole

    Red Bull’s Max Verstappen edges out Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc by 0.021s to take F1 Dutch GP pole with Carlos Sainz third.

    Q1:

    The first part of F1 qualifying in Dutch GP at Zandvoort saw Red Bull’s Max Verstappen lead the pack with a 1m11.317s lap with a safe distance to Ferrari pair where Mercedes’ George Russell and Lewis Hamilton got in to be second and third initially.

    But Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc put in another quick lap to be second and close to Verstappen, with Russell retaining third. But late rumble saw the Dutchman still remain on top as Hamilton improved to second from AlphaTauri’s Yuki Tsunoda.

    The late improvements put Ferrari’s Carlos Sainz in danger in 14th, as Alfa Romeo’s Zhou Guanyu was the first to be knocked out in 16th with 1m11.961s lap as Haas’ Kevin Magnussen (1m12.041s) was 17th after a moment on his quick lap.

    McLaren’s Daniel Ricciardo (1m12.081s) also lost in the final sector to be only 18th as Aston Martin’s Sebastian Vettel (1m12.391s) was sadly 19th after his wide moment on what looked like a fast lap. Williams’ Nicholas Latifi (1m13.353s) ended up 20th.

    Q2:

    The second part in F1 qualifying at Dutch GP saw red flag to start it off after a fan threw a flare on track. He was removed by the organisers as the session resumed post that. The initial run had Verstappen on top with a 1m10.927s lap.

    He headed Hamilton and Red Bull’ Sergio Perez in third, with the Ferrari pair far off in the second half of the Top 10. In the end, Sainz was fastest with a 1m10.814s lap after a late improvement with Russell slotting in second from Verstappen.

    It was heavy knockout zone in Q2 with both Alpines out where Esteban Ocon (1m11.605s) led teammate Fernando Alonso (1m11.613s) in 12th and 13th, who had a moment on his final lap and complained of traffic but it didn’t look like one.

    They slotted behind AlphaTauri’s Pierre Gasly (1m11.512s). Alfa Romeo’s Guanyu (1m11.704s) pitted eventually to be 14th while Williams’ Alexander Albon (1m11.802s) also did not venture out for a final lap to be 15th.

    Q3:

    The final part in F1 qualifying at Dutch GP saw Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc show some pace on his first quick lap of 1m10.456s which was 0.059s faster than Verstappen to take provisional pole, as Hamilton slotted in third from Sainz and Perez.

    There was another flare moment but was quickly taken off as the final lap saw a big fight between Verstappen (1m10.342s) and Leclerc (1m10.363s) where the Dutchman took F1 Dutch GP pole by 0.021s, as Sainz (1m10.434s) rounded out the Top 3 positions.

    Hamilton (1m10.648s) was fourth from Perez (1m11.077s), who spun off at the final corner bringing out the yellow flags. Russell (1m11.147s) was sixth from McLaren’s Lando Norris (1m11.174s), Haas’ Mick Schumacher (1m11.442s), Tsunoda (1m12.556s) as Aston Martin’s Lance Stroll did not take the track due to a mechanical issue.

  • Dutch GP: Leclerc remains on top in FP3 from Russell, Verstappen

    Dutch GP: Leclerc remains on top in FP3 from Russell, Verstappen

    Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc kept himself on top in FP3 of F1 Dutch GP as Mercedes’ George Russell got himself in second from Red Bull’s Max Verstappen.

    It was fairly stable FP3 session in F1 Dutch GP at Zandvoort, as Ferrari maintained its top position where Leclerc was quickest with a 1m11.632s lap. Red Bull started off well early in the session, but both Ferrari and Mercedes upped their pace by the end.

    In fact, George Russell sneaked to second pushing Max Verstappen to third as Ferrari’s Carlos Sainz was fourth from Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton and Red Bull’s Sergio Perez with the Top 3 F1 teams not far off from each other.

    Perez was involved in a moment with the Ferrari pair late in the session, as Alpine’s Fernando Alonso in seventh from Aston Martin’s Sebastian Vettel. It was a good show from the Haas pair too with Mick Schumacher in ninth.

    Teammate Kevin Magnussen was just outside in 11th behind McLaren’s Lando Norris. The other Aston Martin of Lance Stroll was 12th from Williams’ Alexander Albon with AlphaTauri’s Pierre Gasly in 14th after a heavy moment on the grass.

    He smashed the DRS box in the process but was unharmed. Teammate Yuki Tsunoda was 16th from McLaren’s Daniel Ricciardo, with the Australian also having an off moment. The Alfa Romeo pair ended up 18th and 19th in a lowly show.

    It was Valtteri Bottas ahead of Zhou Guanyu, while Williams’ Nicholas Latifi rounded out the 20 runners.

  • Dutch GP: Leclerc tops FP2 from Sainz by 0.004s after another red flag

    Dutch GP: Leclerc tops FP2 from Sainz by 0.004s after another red flag

    Ferrari pair led the way in FP2 of F1 Dutch GP with Charles Leclerc ahead of Carlos Sainz, with Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton in third.

    It was a much more sedate FP2 session in F1 Dutch GP but there a red flag stoppage after AlphaTauri’s Yuki Tsunoda beached himself with about 10 minutes to go. It already started late after double red flag during the F2 qualifying which delayed the session.

    The Ferrari pair led the way with Charles Leclerc (1m12.345s) ahead of Carlos Sainz (1m12.349s) by 0.004s, with Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton (1m12.417s doing well in third with McLaren’s Lando Norris (1m12.448s) also doing well in fourth from the other Mercedes of George Russell (1m12.655s)

    In another good show, Aston Martin’s Lance Stroll (1m12.746s) was sixth from Alpine’s Fernando Alonso (1m12.848s), with Red Bull’s Max Verstappen (1m13.048s) only eighth after he got some track time in FP2, having lost most of it in FP1 due to gearbox issue.

    The other Alpine of Esteban Ocon (1m13.305s) was ninth from McLaren’s Daniel Ricciardo (1m13.362s), whose session ended early due to oil leak. He led AlphaTauri’s Tsunoda in 11th, with Red Bull’s Sergio Perez struggling a bit in 12th after not getting a clean lap.

    Haas’ Mick Schumacher slotted in 13th from Aston Martin’s Sebastian Vettel, with the lead Alfa Romeo of Zhou Guanyu in 15th. AlphaTauri’s Pierre Gasly did not have a great lap to be 16th with Williams’ Alexander Albon in 17th.

    The Thai got a decent time in FP1 but couldn’t repeat that in FP2, as Alfa Romeo’s Valtteri Bottas and Haas’ Kevin Magnussen struggled in 18th and 19th from Williams’ Nicholas Latifi.