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Category: Formula 1
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Charles Leclerc in F1 Championship lead with emphatic victory
Melbourne, 10 April 2022: Charles Leclerc did not sweat a bit as he took an easy and commanding victory to lead the Formula 1 (F1) World championship in the 2022 FIA Formula 1 Australian Grand Prix amidst greenish celebration as podium winners celebrated with champagne at Albert Park on Sunday. Russel got the first podium for Mercedes taking third behind Sergio Perez, who salvaged a second place for Red Bull.
F1 returns to Melbourne for the first time since 2019, and is proving a brilliantly fun location, with the fans out in force and it was nice to see packed stands and the crowds flocking to the podium ceremony reminding the good old pre-Covid days. The crowd favourite and son of the soil Daniel Ricciardo finished his McLaren in sixth but the sportive crowd cheered every good move and soaked in the atmosphere.
Charles Marc Perceval Leclerc is a Monégasque racing driver, and is the current hero making the Prancing horse dance once again in Formula One as he brought his Scuderia Ferrari to the chequeuered flag over 20 seconds clear of Red Bull Racing’s Sergio Pérez and the third-placed Mercedes of George Russell who finished ahead of his teammate, the 7-time champion, Lewis Hamilton.
Meanwhile, the defending World Champion Max Verstappen, exited the race soon after the half way point with a mechanical problem, as he slowly steered his way out of the track and parked the car. Soon a small fire broke out and he guided the Marshals to put it out and the care was taken out later.
When the lights went out at the start, polesitter Leclerc got away well, with Verstappen just behind, but it was Pérez who got the best getaway and as they powered towards Turn 1 the Mexican moved to the left to put pressure on his team-mate. Verstappen held his line and as he moved left for the first corner Pérez was forced to back off. That allowed fast-starting Lewis Hamilton to slip through to third place.
Behind the top four, George Russell had also made a good start in the second Mercedes and he passed McLaren’s Lando Norris to claim fifth place, with Ricciardo seventh ahead of Alpine’s Esteban Ocon and the AlphaTauri of Pierre Gasly.
Worst affected by the start was Carlos Sainz. On hard tyres, the second Ferrari driver struggled for grip when the lights went out and he was swamped by rivals and dropped to 14th. His struggles ended on lap two. Sainz passed Haas’ Mick Schumacher on the run to Turn 9, but he went too deep, and as he tried to turn he lost the rear of the Ferrari and spun into the gravel trap. Beached in the run off area, he had no option but to retire from the race.
The Safety Car was released and when racing got underway again on lap seven Leclerc managed the restart well and the order at the front remained unchanged. The Ferrari driver began to carve out a gap to Verstappen and by lap nine he was 1.4 seconds ahead of the lead Red Bull. Pérez, meanwhile, was beginning to put pressure on Hamilton and on lap 10 he went around the outside of the Mercedes in Turns 3 and 4 to reclaim third place.
As the first stint evolved Leclerc’s pace increased and by lap 16 the race leader was just over eight seconds clear of Verstappen, with Pérez four seconds further back in third. Verstappen was suffering with front-left graining and at the end of lap 18 he dived for the pits. In a 2.9 stop he moved to the hard tyre and emerged behind the McLarens in P7. Pérez pitted at the end of lap 20 and after a 2.5s switch to hard tyres he rejoined in P9.
Leclerc made his first stop at the end of lap 21 and after taking on hard tyres he resumed in the lead, though Verstappen’s undercut had halved the gap between the front pair. Hamilton also pitted at the end of lap 21 and after fitting hard tyres he was able to rejoin ahead of Pérez in fifth place. However, the Mexican quickly closed in and on lap 23 he powered past the Mercedes.
On lap 24 though the Safety Car was again deployed when Aston Martin’s Sebastian Vettel crashed on the exit of Turn 4. Mercedes reacted quickly and pitted Russell. He took on hard tyres and rejoined in third place, ahead of Fernando Alonso, who was still on his starting hard tyres. Pérez was now fifth ahead of Hamilton, while Haas’ Kevin Magnussen, also on his starting hard tyres, was now seventh ahead of Norris and Ricciardo.
The Safety Car left the track at the end of lap 26 and once again Leclerc managed the restart well to keep Verstappen at bay. Behind them, Pérez was losing ground behind Alonso as the wily Alpine driver was proving hard to clear. However, when DRS was enabled, the Red Bull driver was able to close up to the Spaniard at the start of lap 30 and on the run to Turn 3 he powered past the Alpine to take fourth place. He was now just over a second behind Russell.
The Mexican continued to harry the Mercedes driver and Russell’s engineer was soon on the radio telling his driver to prioritise tyre management over position. The Briton relented and on lap 27 Pérez swept past to take third.
At the front, though, the pattern from the first stint was repeating and by lap 38 Leclerc was over five seconds clear of the lead Red Bull. And then, at the start of the following tour, disaster struck for Verstappen. He crossed the line to start the lap but almost immediately he lost drive and was forced to pull over at the side of the track at the exit of Turn 1 to retire from the race.
After a brief Virtual Safety Car period, racing resumed and Leclerc now led Pérez by 11 seconds. The lone Red Bull was now four seconds ahead of Russell and Hamilton was fourth ahead of Norris and Ricciardo. In seventh place, having profited from the earlier Safety Car was Alex Albon, though the Williams driver was still on starting hard tyres. Alpine’s Esteban Ocon held eighth place ahead of Aston Martin’s Lance Stroll and the AlphaTauri of Pierre Gasly.
Stroll was under heavy pressure from Gasly and was warned (and handed a five-second penalty), for weaving on the track in defence of ninth place. However, despite the pressure building behind him the Canadian continued to resist. Ahead the obstacle of the slow Aston Martin benefited Albon and Ocon and on lap 49 the pair were nine seconds clear of the Stroll train. Gasly was growing increasingly frustrated, but on lap 50 he eventually saw an opportunity and he muscled his way past Stroll into Turn 1 to take P9.
At the front, and with five laps remaining, Leclerc was a whopping 20 seconds clear of Pérez as the Mexican throttle back to ensure P2. Russell was now three seconds behind the Red Bull, with Hamilton fourth ahead of Norris and Ricciardo. Albon at last pitted at the end of the penultimate lap and after bolting on soft tyres he emerged in 10thplace.
And at the end of 58 laps, having led from start to finish, Leclerc crossed the line to take his second victory of the season and the point for fastest lap. Twenty seconds later Pérez took the flag for his first podium finish of the season and Russell took his first podium of the campaign in third.
Behind the top three, Hamilton finished fourth ahead of Norris and Ricciardo and Ocon took seventh ahead of Alfa Romeo’s Valtteri Bottas. Gasly was ninth and after starting from the back of the grid having been disqualified from qualifying due to a fuel irregularity, Albon took the final point on offer with a well-worked 10th place.
2022 FIA Formula 1 Australian Grand Prix – Race
1 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 58 1:27’46.5482 Sergio Pérez Red Bull 58 1:28’07.072 20.524
3 George Russell Mercedes 58 1:28’12.141 25.593
4 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 58 1:28’15.091 28.543
5 Lando Norris McLaren/Mercedes 58 1:28’39.851 53.303
6 Daniel Ricciardo McLaren/Mercedes 58 1:28’40.285 53.737
7 Esteban Ocon Alpine/Renault 58 1:28’48.231 1’01.683
8 Valtteri Bottas Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 58 1:28’54.987 1’08.439
9 Pierre Gasly AlphaTauri/Red Bull 58 1:29’02.769 1’16.221
10 Alexander Albon Williams/Mercedes 58 1:29’05.930 1’19.382
11 Zhou Guanyu Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 58 1:29’08.243 1’21.695
12 Lance Stroll Aston Martin/Mercedes 58 1:29’15.146 1’28.598
13 Mick Schumacher Haas/Ferrari 57 – 1 lap
14 Kevin Magnussen Haas/Ferrari 57 – 1 lap
15 Yuki Tsunoda AlphaTauri/Red Bull 57 – 1 lap
16 Nicholas Latifi Williams/Mercedes 57 – 1 lap
17 Fernando Alonso Alpine/Renault 57 – 1 lap
Max Verstappen Red Bull 38 – Retirement
Sebastian Vettel Aston Martin/Mercedes 22 – Spun off
Carlos Sainz Ferrari 1 – Spun off -

Charles Leclerc beats Verstappen to Aussie GP pole
Melbourne, 9 April 2022: Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc beat Red Bull Racing’s Max Verstappen by almost three tenths of a second to take his second pole position of the season in an Australian Grand Prix qualifying session that was disrupted by two red flag periods. Sergio Pérez qualified third but the Mexican driver was due to visit the stewards after the session to discuss a possible yellow flag infringement during Q2.
Q1 began with both Ferraris heading out on track soon after the pit lane opened and Leclerc immediately moved to P1 with a lap of 1:19.391. McLaren’s Lando Norris slotted into second just under four tenths off the Ferrari driver.
Leclerc’s team-mate Carlos Sainz took over at the top with a lap of 1:19.791 as Verstappen and Pérez began their first flying laps. The Mexican’s effort, a 1:19.307, took him to P2, while Max moved to fourth place, a tenth off his team-mate.
Leclerc was finding time on his second run, however, and he climbed back to the top of the order with the first sub 1m19s time as posted a lap of 1:18.881. Verstappen was also on another push lap and with a purple final sector he took second place 0.044s behind Leclerc.
Norris, meanwhile, improved to 1:19.280 to demote Pérez to fifth place and the Red Bull driver dropped another two positions when Alpine’s Fernando Alonso and Alfa Romeo’s Valtteri Bottas took fourth and fifth respectively.
With six minutes left Verstappen found more pace to claim P1 with a lap of 1:18.580. Pérez posted a lap of 1:18.834 to claim second place ahead of Leclerc. The top six then retired to the pit lane as the battle to escape the Q1 drop intensified.
However, with two minutes remaining the session was halted when Nicholas Latifi collided with Lance Stroll. Latifi, on a slow lap, pulled over to let Stroll past, but his fellow Canadian was on a cool down lap. The Williams man went to pass the Aston Martin driver on the right on the run to Turn 5 but Stroll was already moving across the track and the pair tangled, with Latifi’s car wrecked in the heavy collision.
The session was red-flagged for 15 minutes and the delay gave the Aston Martin mechanics enough time to complete repairs to Sebastian Vettel’s car which had been damaged in a crash in final practice.
The German pushed hard to post a solid time on a crowded track but in the end he could only find his way P18 and he was eliminated along with Williams’ Alex Albon and Haas’ Kevin Magnussen in P16 and P17 respectively and the unfortunate Stroll and Latifi.
In Q2 Verstappen was first out on track, with Pérez not far behind. Verstppen crossed the line in 1:18.611, marginally off his Q1 best, to take top spot, with his team-mate second. Alonso then split the Red Bulls as Leclerc made his way to fourth ahead of Norris.
On his second run Verstappen was unable to find more time, but Pérez did better and his 1:18.340 took him 0.271 clear of his team-mate at the top of the timesheet. The Mexican’s lap was under scrutiny, however, with stewards noting that he may not have slowed for yellow flags when Mercedes’ George Russell was forced to use the escape road at Turn 11. The incident was due for investigation after the session.
Sainz went for his final run of the segment and his lap of 1:18.739 boosted him to third place behind Verstappen. Leclerc then split the Red Bulls with a lap of 1:18.606. Sainz, though, improved again and when the flag fell he rose to second just over a tenth of a second behind Pérez and ahead of Leclerc and fourth-placed Verstappen.
AlphaTauri’s Pierre Gasly was the first man eliminated at the end of Q2 ahead of Alfa Romeo’s Valtteri Bottas, Yuki Tsunoda in the second AlphaTauri, Zhou Guanyu in the second Alfa Romeo and Haas’ Mick Schumacher.
Verstappen was again on track early in Q3 but the Dutchman’s opening run featured a small lock up in the penultimate corner and he crossed the line in 1:18.399. Pérez then took top spot just 0.001s behind his team-mate. Leclerc was running quickly though and his 1:18.239 was good enough for provisional pole.
The session was then red-flagged when Alonso crashed at Turn 11. The Alpine driver reported that he had lost hydraulics and could not change gear as he went into the right-hander. The timing of the crash was not good for Sainz. The Ferrari driver caught the red flag just as he crossed the line and his first flyer of the top-10 shootout was lost.
When the session resumed for the final runs, Pérez put in a good lap but he missed out on beating Leclerc’s first-run benchmark, again by 0.001s. Verstappen made a good gain took top spot with a lap of 1:18.254. Leclerc was one of the last on track, though, and the Ferrari driver was able to find more pace than all his rivals and he claimed his second pole position of the season with a lap of 1:17.868.
Fourth place went to Norris. Lewis Hamilton took fifth for Mercedes, a tenth of a second ahead of team-mate George Russell and Daniel Ricciardo was seventh in the second McLaren. Esteban Ocon took eight place for Alpine but there was disappointment for Sainz who ran wide in Turn 6 on his final lap. The Spaniard finished the session in ninth place ahead of Alonso.
2022 FIA Formula 1 Australian Grand Prix – Qualifying
1 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 1:17.868 8 244.012
2 Max Verstappen Red Bull 1:18.154 6 243.119
3 Sergio Pérez Red Bull 1:18.240 9 242.852
4 Lando Norris McLaren/Mercedes 1:18.703 6 241.424
5 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 1:18.825 10 241.050
6 George Russell Mercedes 1:18.933 9 240.720
7 Daniel Ricciardo McLaren/Mercedes 1:19.032 6 240.419
8 Esteban Ocon Alpine/Renault 1:19.061 6 240.330
9 Carlos Sainz Ferrari 1:19.408 1.540 6 239.280
Fernando Alonso Alpine/Renault – 2
11 Pierre Gasly AlphaTauri/Red Bull 1:19.226 8 239.830
12 Valtteri Bottas Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 1:19.410 8 239.274
13 Yuki Tsunoda AlphaTauri/Red Bull 1:19.424 7 239.232
14 Zhou Guanyu Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 1:20.155 5 237.050
15 Mick Schumacher Haas/Ferrari 1:20.465 8 236.137
16 Alexander Albon Williams/Mercedes 1:20.135 11 237.109
17 Kevin Magnussen Haas/Ferrari 1:20.254 11 236.758
18 Sebastian Vettel Aston Martin/Mercedes 1:21.149 3 234.147
19 Nicholas Latifi Williams/Mercedes 1:21.372 8 233.505
Lance Stroll Aston Martin/Mercedes – 2 -

Charles Leclerc fastest in FP2: Australian GP
Melbourne, 8 March 2022: Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc went quickest in the second practice for the 2022 FIA Formula 1 Australian Grand Prix, beating early-season title rival Max Verstappen of Red Bull Racing by more than two tenths of a second, with Carlos Sainz third in the other Ferrari.
The afternoon session got underway with a few drops of rain in the air but it had no effect on running and four minutes into the session McLaren’s Lando Norris set the early benchmark with a lap of 1:21.852. The Briton was soon bounced out of top spot by team-mate Ricciardo, who posted a lap of 1:21.793 to claim P1.
The McLaren drivers’ private battle was then disrupted by Ferrari, with Leclerc going quickest with a lap of 1:20.898. The Monegasque driver’s team-mate Carlos Sainz might have beaten that but after going quickest in the middle sector he made a mistake in Turn 13 and hit traffic in the latter stages of the lap. With 11 minutes on the clock, Alfa Romeo’s Vallteri Bottas, a 2019 winner here with Mercedes, jumped to the top of the order with a lap of 1:20.432.
The field began to make the move to soft tyres for performance runs as the first third of the session elapsed and Sainz vaulted to the top of the leaderboard with a time of 1:19.979. Leclerc slotted into second on 1m20.175s, with Bottas third thanks to his earlier time.
Sainz went for another lap on the soft tyres, but was forced to abandon the effort when he came across the slow moving AlphaTauri of Yuki Tsunoda.
Leclerc, though, managed a clean lap and he rose to P1 with a lap of 1:19.771. Sainz wasn’t done, however, and with purple times in the first and third sector, the Spaniard posted a time of 1:19.568 to reclaim top spot.
The tussle between the two Ferrari drivers looked like it might define the session, but just before the midpoint of the session, Alpine’s Fernando Alonso popped up with a lap of 1:19.537 to claim P1.
The Ferraris were on track again, however, and Sainz once again took first place with a time of 1:19.376, with Leclerc second a tenth behind.
Bahrain GP winner Leclerc was still finding lap time however and he logged an impressive lap of 1m18.978 to once again make his way to P1 – and there he would stay until the chequered flag fell.
Verstappen, meanwhile, was having a more difficult session. Early on he complained of not being able to get his RB18 turned in and later on he struggled to get a clean lap on soft tyres with one run being disrupted by traffic and another being scuppered by a mistake in the penultimate corners. Eventually, though, he found a good lap but even though he ran quickest in the middle sector, he missed out on top spot with a lap of 1:19.223 that left him second to Leclerc by 0.245.
With the performance runs completed the field then moved back to harder compounds to explore longer runs in the time remaining. With 11 minutes remaining the red flags were briefly shown when part of Stroll’s front wing broke and came to rest on the track.
With Sainz third, Alonso was left with fourth place ahead of the second Red Bull of Pérez. Esteban Ocon took fifth in the second Alpine and Bottas ended the hour in P7. Norris finished eighth for McLaren with Pierre Gasly taking P9 for AlphaTauri ahead of the second McLaren of Ricciardo.
Further back, Aston Martin’s Sebastian Vettel, returning after sitting out the opening two events due to testing positive for COVID-19, also missed out on the second practice in Melbourne as his team couldn’t ready his car following the engine issue that had halted his progress late in the first practice session.
2022 FIA Formula 1 Australian Grand Prix – Free Practice 2
1 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 1:18.978 27 240.583
2 Max Verstappen Red Bull 1:19.223 0.245 22 239.839
3 Carlos Sainz Ferrari 1:19.376 0.398 27 239.377
4 Fernando Alonso Alpine/Renault 1:19.537 0.559 22 238.892
5 Sergio Pérez Red Bull 1:19.658 0.680 20 238.529
6 Esteban Ocon Alpine/Renault 1:19.842 0.864 25 237.980
7 Valtteri Bottas Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 1:20.055 1.077 25 237.346
8 Lando Norris McLaren/Mercedes 1:20.100 1.122 24 237.213
9 Pierre Gasly AlphaTauri/Red Bull 1:20.142 1.164 27 237.089
10 Daniel Ricciardo McLaren/Mercedes 1:20.203 1.225 24 236.908
11 George Russell Mercedes 1:20.212 1.234 25 236.882
12 Yuki Tsunoda AlphaTauri/Red Bull 1:20.424 1.446 30 236.257
13 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 1:20.521 1.543 23 235.973
14 Lance Stroll Aston Martin/Mercedes 1:20.611 1.633 28 235.709
15 Zhou Guanyu Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 1:21.063 2.085 23 234.395
16 Kevin Magnussen Haas/Ferrari 1:21.191 2.213 23 234.025
17 Alexander Albon Williams/Mercedes 1:21.912 2.934 28 231.966
18 Mick Schumacher Haas/Ferrari 1:21.974 2.996 22 231.790
19 Nicholas Latifi Williams/Mercedes 1:22.307 3.329 24 230.852
20 Sebastian Vettel Aston Martin/Mercedes – -

Perez gets maiden career pole but Verstappen turns tables on Sunday
Max Verstappen took his first victory of the season after an intense battel with Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc as Red Bull scored points for the first time in 2022. Carlos Sainz finished third, giving Ferrari a double podium for the second consecutive race while Polesitter Sergio Perez had to settle for P4.
By Malhaar Khaladkar
New Delhi, 28 March 2022: Sergio Perez outqualified his decorated teammate Max Verstappen only the second time in his Red Bull career, as the world champion had to settle for P4 on Saturday. Perez had his hands full with the two Ferrari’s close behind. Another shock on Saturday came from the 7-time world champion Lewis Hamilton, who exited in Q1 for the first time since 2017, that too on pure pace.
As the lights went out, the top 2, Perez and Leclerc maintained position. Meanwhile, Verstappen sneaked past Sainz for P3 on lap 1. Behind, Mercedes’ George Russell got past Esteban Ocon to run in P5 by lap 3 and teammate Hamilton recovered to P10 by lap 15.Laps 5-7 saw an enticing battle between Alpine teammates Ocon and Fernando Alonso for P6. With Ocon later being instructed by the team to hold position on Alonso.
Sainz in P4 dropped back from the top three cars. The gap between Perez and Leclerc hovered around 3s as the pitstop window opened on around lap 13. Top 5 cars were on medium tyres. With there being a significant advantage of undercut, Ferrari called Leclerc saying, “box to overtake”. Essentially meaning whatever Perez does, do the opposite. Red Bull acted on this, to avoid getting undercut and pitted Perez on lap 15 for hard tyres. Lady luck was not on Perez’s side as Williams’ Nicholas Latifi crashed in the final corner, bringing out a virtual safety car and then the full safety car. With the race neutralised everyone took advantage and pitted bar Kevin Magnussen, Hamilton and Nico Hulkenberg who started on the hard tyres.

Oracle Red Bull drier Max Verstappen of the Netherlands celebrates after winning the F1 Grand Prix of Saudi Arabia at the Jeddah Corniche Street Circuit on March 27, 2022 Photo by Mark Thompson/Getty Images for Red Bull Content Pool Naturally Perez lost out to Leclerc and Verstappen who emerged in P1 and P2 respectively. While the Mexican did momentarily overtake Sainz, he had to give back the position at the restart as the Ferrari was ahead on the safety car line 1 while exiting form the pits. Safety car came in on lap 21 as racing got underway.
By lap 25 Hamilton passed Magnussen for P6, both running on hard tyres still yet to make a pitstop. At the front Leclerc managed to keep Verstappen out of DRS range as the Ferrari was faster in sector 1 with all the high-speed corners while Red Bull used its straight-line speed advantage in sectors 2 and 3.
Alonso in P7 reported loss of power as his car slowed down on lap 35. As Alonso slowed down, so did McLaren’s Ricciardo as he halted on the pit lane entrance. A VSC was deployed as Magnussen and Hulkenberg pitted to change their hard tyres and onto the mediums. Hamilton running in P6, just missed the pitlane and after it was closed for 3 laps to clear the cars halted on the pit entrance. Hamilton finally pitted on lap 40 for medium tyres and emerged in P12.
The VSC ended on lap 41, with Verstappen closing the gap within a 1s to Leclerc as the Dutchman’s tyres were up to temperature. At the end of lap 41 Verstappen got past Leclerc before the final corner. Leclerc employing the same technique he did in Bahrain of letting Verstappen through then overtaking him on the next straight. On lap 43 both locked up going into the final corner vying for DRS onto the start finish straight. Leclerc was still able to maintain the lead.
Verstappen continued his hunt for the lead as he closed up to Leclerc at the end of lap 46. Using DRS he overtook the Monegasque into turn 1. Leclerc did not lose touch as he was still within 1s of Verstappen, but the Red Bull was able to keep in front owing to better straight line speed.
At the chequered flag Verstappen took his first victory of the season finishing just 0.549s ahead of Leclerc. Sainz achieved another podium with Perez finishing in P4. Mercedes’ Russell maximised his race by finishing in P5, ahead of Alpine’s Ocon who beat McLaren’s Lando Norris by 0.107s at the finish line. P8 was Pierre Gasly for AlphaTauri and P9 was Magnussen for Haas. Hamilton could only finish P10 as safety car ruined his race strategy.
Zhou Guanyu finished in P11 for Alfa Romeo ahead of the Aston Martin duo of Nico Hulkenberg and Lance Stroll in P12 and P13 respectively. Retirees from the race were Williams duo Alex Albon and Latifi, Valtteri Bottas of Alfa Romeo and Alonso and Ricciardo. Yuki Tsunoda was unable to start his race due to an electrical issue with his AlphaTauri while Mick Schumacher’s car was not built by Haas after suffering a heavy crash in Saturday qualifying.
Red Bull and Ferrari were closely matched on both race and qualifying pace. Both exhibited their advantage in different areas, Red bull were faster in the speed traps while Ferrari gained their time in the corners. Red Bull are still on the backfoot with their double DNF in the first round, but this championship has a long way to go. Mercedes were again third best, in no man’s land as described by Toto Wolff. Hamilton’s set up tweak meant the car became undrivable in qualifying, hence, the Britain’s exit in Q1. Russell maximised their performance in P5, while Mercedes still believes that porpoising is 99% responsible for their problems.
Alpine showcased good pace as they headed the midfield in qualifying and the race. Reliability issues hampered them from achieving a double points finish. Alfa Romeo had question marks over how their car would perform in high speed corners and Jeddah gave encouraging answers. Bottas qualified in the top 10 and was running in the same before having to retire the car. Haas struggled compared to Bahrain but still showed positive signs with Q3 appearance and points in the race. They went into the race on a backfoot as Schumacher crashed his car on Saturday hence, not starting the race on Sunday.
McLaren had an encouraging race weekend after having a dismal time in Bahrain. Although they were unable to make it to Q2, Norris finished P7 and possible they could have had a double points finish had it not for Ricciardo’s retirement from the race. The McLaren car lacks downforce compared to rivals but that weakness was not evident at a low-drag high speed circuit like Jeddah. It remains to be seen how they perform over the coming races. AlphaTauri were on a similar footing to Haas as one car made it to Q3 and points finish. Though the team admitted they need to fix their reliability issues if they want to maximise their results. They have had two retirements in two races now. Aston Martin struggled with porpoising and Williams struggled with balance issues throughout the weekend as both drivers struggled to get the car in its optimum window.
Saturday Qualifying Results were:
P1: Sergio Perez- 11 (Red Bull) P2: Charles Leclerc- 16 (Ferrari) P3: Carlos Sainz- 55 (Ferrari) P4: Max Verstappen- 1 (Red Bull) P5: Esteban Ocon- 31 (Alpine) P6: George Russell- 63 (Mercedes) P7: Fernando Alonso- 14 (Alpine) P8: Valtteri Bottas- 77 (Alfa Romeo) P9: Pierre Gasly- 10 (AlphaTauri) P10: Kevin Magnussen- 20 (Haas) P11: Lando Norris- 4 (McLaren) P12: Daniel Ricciardo- 3 (McLaren) P13: Zhou Guanyu- 24 (Alfa Romeo) P14 Mick Schumacher- 47 (Haas) P15: Lance Stroll- 18 (Aston Martin) P16: Lewis Hamilton- 44 (Mercedes) P17: Alex Albon- 23 (Williams) P18: Nico Hulkenberg- 27 (Aston Martin) P19: Nicholas Latifi- 6 (Williams) P20: Yuki Tsunoda- 22 (AlphaTauri) Note – Ricciardo penalised 3 grid places for impeding another car during qualifying. Tsunoda failed to set a time within the Q1 107% requirement – races at stewards’ discretion. Schumacher withdrawn from the race following a qualifying accident.
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This car (Red Bull) is a step forward but still a lot of things to look at, says Max Verstappen
Jeddah (Saudi Arabia), 27 March 2022: Following the Round 2 of the FIA Formula 1 World Championship, the first three drivers, winner Max VERSTAPPEN (Red Bull), Charles LECLERC, 2nd, (Ferrari) and Carlos SAINZ, 3rd, (Ferrari) attended the mandatory FIA Press Conference after the Track interviews conducted by David Coulthard.
Track interviews:
Q: Max Verstappen, well, what a race; 2022 is go! it wasn’t the start you needed in Bahrain but this was a brilliant weekend for you and some really close and respectful racing with Charles.
Max VERSTAPPEN: Yeah, it was really tough, but a good race. I mean, we were battling hard at the front and yeah, we just tried to play the long game. They were really quick through corners, we were quick on the straight. But the tyres were wearing out quite quick around here. You could see at the end, I think we had a little bit more pace, so I just tried to get by. It wasn’t easy, playing smart tricks in the last corner, but eventually I managed to get ahead. But even after that he was constantly in the DRS and then with the yellow flags in the last lap, just knowing how much you should lift, whether it was allowed or not. It was tough but I’m really happy that we finally kickstarted the season.
Q: Just put us in the cockpit with, as you say, smart tricks running into the DRS, we’re just seeing the lock up, you both locked up going to where the DRS line is, we can see it on the screen behind you, and then coming onto the start/finish for the pass. This strategy you’re having to deploy, this is a new form of racing.
MV: Yeah, it seems like once you get quite close, because I think the cars, when you get to within half a second, you actually can have a good exit. And I think that makes a lot more tricky to actually do the pass, let’s say in the last corner compared to last year, so it’s a lot harder to plan your pass.
Q: OK, well, you are the winner tonight, so congratulations. Charles Leclerc. Well, you did everything in that grand prix right. I take my hat off to you in terms of when you first allowed Max to overtake you into the last corner, the dummy you threw, I thought you had a problem. But you were strategically making sure you had the DRS. That was some smart racing.?
Charles LECLERC: Yeah, it was, but it wasn’t enough today. But oh my god, I really enjoyed that race. Again, it’s hard racing, but fair. And every race should be like this. So it was fun. I’m of course disappointed. I wanted to win today. We just missed. I mean, we had two very different configurations with Max and Checo and both the Ferraris. We were quite quick in the corners, but quite slow in the straight, because we put more downforce and so it was extremely difficult for me to cover Max in the straights, but it’s like this, and he did a great job and it was a fun race.
Q: Did I hear correctly, you were on the radio congratulating Max, acknowledging that this was a great battle. The respect is there.
CL: Oh, yeah. It’s always been there, especially when you finish a race like this, honestly. I mean, we are on a street track, we’ve been pushing like I’ve rarely pushed before, to the absolute limits and we take risks at the end. So of course there is respect, but I’m a bit disappointed.
Q: Carlos, a little bit of confusion before the safety car start. We heard you on the radio very clearly, the safety car line here a little bit tricky when you come out of the pit lane. Overall your thoughts on your race?
Carlos SAINZ: Yeah it was close call there with Checo but in the end I think he got a bit unlucky with a safety car obviously but the rules are the rules and I think I was just ahead at the safety car line and it was my position then, and since then it was all about holding on to P3. The Red Bulls were super quick in the last 10 laps after the tyres cooled down on the safety car, on the virtual. They were flying and they were putting pressure on us. For me this race was a bit of progress from Bahrain. I think I managed to find a bit more rhythm with the car. Still some tenths to find but I think I will end up getting there.
PRESS CONFERENCE
Q: Many congratulations to the top three finishes of the FIA Formula 1 Saudi Arabian Grand Prix in third place, Carlos Sainz. In second place, Charles Leclerc. And taking his first victory of 2022, and the 21st victory of his Formula 1 career, our winner, Max Verstappen. What a race Max, more tremendous racing between you and Charles, crossing the line just half a second apart. What were those closing laps like from your point of view?
MV: Qualifying laps! It was tough. I didn’t really feel that happy on the medium. All the time, when you would get close to the car ahead the tyres would die. So there was not much racing going on there. So it was a little bit frustrating to just sit there and wait for the right lap to pit so you could go onto the other tyres, because as soon as we went on to the hard tyre I had a much better feeling. So then I of course tried to stay close with Charles after the safety car restart and, yeah, I was just trying to keep the gap more or less the same. And that was basically it, you know, just trying to match the lap times, trying to get a bit closer, then he was pulling away a bit. I got a bit closer again. And yeah, then of course, we had the VSC at the end. And then it’s always a bit of a question mark, you know, what’s going to happen after with the tyres, of course, because they cooled down a lot, but it seemed like we had quite a good first few laps on that restart. I had a good feeling with the car and the tyres were still only holding on quite well through the high speed. And of course, I then had a few good opportunities, but Charles really played it smart in the last corner. So it was not easy for me to actually get by. And of course then I had to line myself up again to have another go at it. And eventually I had the go and I got ahead but then once I was ahead it was really like four laps flat out trying to stay ahead because Charles was consistently in my DRS. So yeah, it was quite tough out there.
Q: It was great to watch and a real game of cat and mouse. Were you having to apply some old karting tactics out there?
MV: Well, in go-karting you can rub a bit, you know, with the sidepods and stuff. That’s unfortunately not possible anymore in Formula cars. But we have done that in the past. I think we are okay.
Q: And Max from a performance point of view, how was the car? Do you feel you’ve taken a step forward since Bahrain?
MV: Difficult to say if it’s a step forward, but I think we are always learning and of course every track is different as well, in terms of what you need from the car, so still a lot of things to look at. Because clearly yesterday I wasn’t very happy and also in the first stint it still wasn’t how I would have liked it to be. But having said that, I think in general, being the car following you just open up your tyre a bit sooner and it’s not great out there. Because as soon as I felt like I was in clean air, the car actually did change a bit in balance. So yeah, we’ll have a look but still quite a few things of course to get on top of because it’s a very new car still.
Q: Charles, coming to you now. It was very close in the end. Did you enjoy the fight, and did the yellow flag on the penultimate lap cost you?
CL: I definitely enjoyed the fight. It’s obviously disappointing to lose the win so late in the race but it was a fun fight. It was very difficult because we had two cars that were in a very different place. I was very strong in the first sector, in all the corners, and basically much less strong in the straights. So it was very, very tricky. I tried to have the DRS in the last corner. It worked twice but it didn’t the last time and then obviously there was this yellow flag. I don’t know if we are speaking about the same yellow flag but I think the one where I could have had a chance to at least be alongside was the one into Turn 1 where I had no DRS there, so this was a little bit of a shame but it’s part of the game! We’ll try again next race.
Q: Now, you talked earlier about being able to push hard throughout the race. So, tell us about the tyres. How consistent were they tonight?
CL: They were consistent, but the first run was a bit more difficult. I think we did a great job by managing those Mediums, because it wasn’t easy following Checo. But, towards the end we actually had quite a good pace on those Mediums. And then on the Hard, it felt nice whenever I had a little bit of margin I felt like I could keep the gap to Max but then obviously with the Safety Cars with the Virtual Safety Cars as soon as he got within DRS range, everything became a bit trickier there. But yeah, it’s like this.
Q: And Charles, tell us about that first pit stop. Lots of radio chat between you and the pit wall. Were you ready to pit or was it all an effort to try and persuade Red Bull to put Pérez in?
CL: No, no. We were ready to pit. I mean, yes we basically went for the opposite to Checo in front, and he boxed that lap, so yeah, I think we did the right choice.
Q: Carlos coming to you, another podium many congratulations. First up, were you happier with the car here than you were seven days ago in Bahrain?
CS: I was happier than in Bahrain, definitely. There’s been a bit of progress done from my side of the garage, with the feeling with the car. Also, having the opportunity to come to this track, one hundred days only after we were here with last year’s car has given me a much clearer picture of the type of corner and the two or three corners that I’m still lacking with this car – because it’s quite clear for me now, it has given me a great opportunity to understand fully the magnitude of how much I need to adapt and how much I need to get the car bit more to my liking. I felt like today we did a small step in the right direction and you know still… well, while I’m still not 100 per cent with the car, to keep bringing the points and the podiums is important, until I will get back to 100 per cent and it will be time to join these guys at the top for the fights.
Q: Talk us through the start. It seems you made a very good getaway but lost out to Max on the exit of Turn 2. How much did that compromise your race?
CS: Yeah, it’s a very narrow start here. So I had a very good launch out of the start. And then I was squeezed a bit in between Checo and Charles, and I had to lift and this gave Max the opportunity to go on the inside, and pass me outside of Two with a better run. I was just basically a bit unlucky because I think I was just boxed in, due to my good start and I had to lift. So yeah, the good thing is that it was a good start and they’re going to be important for this year. Those good starts. And we need to keep them up.
QUESTIONS FROM THE FLOOR
Q: (Frédéric Ferret – L’Equipe) Question to Charles and Max. Two questions in fact. The VSC, it seems that Max, you closed the gap to Charles. Is there a way to be clever under VSC? And second question, how do you manage to fight for the DRS, and be second as a driver?
CL: For the VSC I mean, I don’t know. This is probably more a question for Max. And I’m pretty sure that if there is a way, he won’t say it now, in front of everyone. But yeah, I felt at one point that Max was closer, but actually, I think at the actual restart, I don’t think it was the case. But we’ll look into it anyway. And yeah, I knew that the strength of Max and the Red Bull in general, this weekend was the straight line speed. So I basically knew that if I was leaving Max with a DRS behind for the main straight, I will basically be overtaken very easily. So, I just wanted that, DRS, so on the first lap, I braked very early and I got the DRS and manage to overtake back on the run to Turn One. And then the second one, obviously Max knew that I was going to do that, so we both braked quite early, but I still managed to stay in front at the end. And the third time, it didn’t work out for me. But yeah, I just tried to do the best I could to keep the position but it wasn’t enough today.
Q: Max?
MV: To be honest, I was a little bit surprised myself that it did look a little bit closer, but I don’t know how close Charles was, of course to zero, you know, with the delta. That’s always a bit of a question mark. But also, sometimes it depends a bit where the restart is: if it’s in a corner for somebody in front or not. I think I was still on a bit more of the straight side and had a bit of a better run into Turn Four as well. So, it’s a bit tricky. And yeah, I think, like Charles said, you know, you always try to of course have a good run with the DRS into the final zone, where then you have a lot of fast corners where you cannot pass so, of course you know Charles played is very smart there, but also, it seemed like their defence/attack mode is very powerful. So, for me also, even more top speed. It was very hard to nail the overtake, but eventually it worked.
Q: (Christian Menath – motorsport-magazin.com) Question for Max and Charles. Max, you already mentioned earlier that it was not fun to drive behind another car. But the battle you had at the end, the other ones being overtaken, having the chance to re-overtake and so on. Do you think we could have seen this kind of battle with last year’s cars or only with this year’s cars?
MV: I think the cars are better to follow, it just depends on the tyre. Like the hard tyre was capable of following closer, the other compounds – and this depends on the track – but they just fall apart. Like, as soon as you follow for a few laps, they just open up. And I think it’s also a little bit of a thing … probably tyres, but also the weight of the car pushes you over the tyre edge. So, this is something we need to look at for the future. Because yeah, we improved the following with the cars, and I think probably the racing, but if the tyres don’t let you, due to whatever reason, if it’s the weight of the actual car, that’s a bit of a shame, because in the first stint, I think we could have actually raced a bit more if the tyre didn’t die. Because everyone was basically struggling with the same thing at one point. So yeah, we need to understand that a bit better.
CL: Yeah, very similar, very similar comments. But it is definitely a step forward compared to last year in terms of following. The balance of the car is much more predictable, compared to last year’s car where it was very difficult to understand whether you will lose the front, or the rear being behind. This helps us to have the confidence, to actually push behind someone and to be a bit closer. So, it is a step forward but, as Max said, I think there are other things that we can probably look out for the future to make it even better.
Q: (Erwin Jaeggi – motorsport.com) Question for all three: it has been suggested earlier that one could lose DRS when the new technical regulations prove to be successful. What do you think after this race? Do you think if we should keep DRS because it’s a technical aspect as well? Or do you think everyone should scrap DRS when the new technical rules prove to be a success?
MV: Well, if I didn’t have DRS today I would have never passed. I think we are still too sensitive for that. And of course, some tracks are easier to pass than others. But for me at the moment, if DRS wouldn’t be there, I would have been second today.
CL: Yeah, I think we still need DRS for now.
CS: I agree, I think without DRS passing would be reduced significantly. So I think we are still better off with DRS. What we might need to consider maybe is the speed delta that there is with the DRS might be a bit too much, which gives the car behind maybe too much of a speed delta [so] that sometimes the overtake is done before the braking. And you’d much rather have the two cars battling under braking rather than passing like in the highway. Now, that is sometimes what can happen. So maybe we need to have a look at this but we definitely need DRS nowadays.
Q: (Matt Kew – Autosport) Max was this battle with Charles more satisfying after similar circumstances over DRS detection in Bahrain? And was that battle playing on your mind today?
MV: Every battle is different but yeah, well, it’s just smart racing and good racing, you know, so just have to deal with it, adjust to it. And yeah, it was a lot of fun. It was not easy but a lot of fun.
Q: (Jesus Balseiro – Dairio AS) Carlos, you’re not entirely happy with your feel of the car but it is still two podiums in two races, so what are the good things you’re taking from this start of the season with Ferrari?
CS: Well, the fact is that as you say you I’m not feeling 100% but I felt like this weekend we already did a step in the right direction and this gives me hope that if we keep working like this then I should just keep getting better and better every race. It might need a bit of more trial and error, try in one direction, maybe not getting it right and coming back. But yeah, as I said before, I was here 100 days ago with a car that gave me a lot of confidence and I was super quick around here with last year’s car, and coming to this track and doing the same lap 100 days later with a car that doesn’t give me exactly what I need or, or the way I feel, makes me realise exactly what I need to work on and where I need to put the car for the future. So it’s going to be a… it has given me a greater overview of the situation, and I know exactly what to do for future races and in which type of corner I need to work on.
Q: (Andrew Benson – BBC) To both Max and Charles, initially, in the middle stint of the race, it looked like Charles kind of had things under control. But then after the VSC, Max, you were all over the back of him. Charles were you struggling with tyres at that point? We saw you have a couple of snaps at the last corner. And Max, we heard you being asked to manage through the high speed. Do you both feel that tyre management or tyre usage was the decisive point in the race? And Max just to you, because we didn’t hear from you yesterday, after all the events of the weekend and the drivers nearly strike and so on. Are you comfortable racing in Saudi Arabia?
CL: Yeah so for the tyre management, I don’t think we did anything wrong, there. Yeah, I don’t think it is the reason why we lost a win today. I forgot what I wanted to say. Alright, go ahead. Oh, yeah. All right. Yeah.
MV: Yeah, that middle bit. I was just trying to stay with Charles without hurting the tyres too much because that was a bit my problem in the first stint, to see what would happen in the last 10 laps or 15 laps. And yeah, then of course, that VSC happens so the tyres also cooled down quite a bit. But then yeah, when I started to fully push, seemed like we had good pace. So that’s why I think I could actually push up to Charles a little bit. So yeah, a lot happier on the hard tyre in general with degradation. And about the race here, well, we had a lot of guarantees that of course, we would be safe but I think after this weekend, all the drivers also together, we will speak with F1 and of course also the team bosses to see what’s happening for the future.
CL: I’m back. So yeah, I think the point where we struggled the most is whenever Max got the DRS basically, because our weaknesses were just bigger, the straight-line speed difference was much bigger. We were still quick in the corners, but not enough to have that margin to cover. So from that moment onwards, it was a bit more difficult for us.
Q: (Beatrice Zamuner – F1analisitechnica.com) Carlos, can you just explain the nature of the problem you had on your car before the race? And did you fear you could not take part in the race at any point?
CS: I am not sure if I’m allowed to go into detail about the problem. I think it’s better you ask the team exactly what happened. What I know is that there was a bit of tension there because we were obviously about to go to the grid and the mechanics and everyone just did a great job to put everything back together to have the chance to race today. So a big thank-you to them. These things happen and it was important, you know, to get out there to score the points today. So good job.
Q: (Christian Menath – motorsport-magazine.com) Carlos, do you think it was a bit unfair that you got the position back after the restart or not before, that you had no chance to attack Max?
CS: It definitely was very strange. I think as a sport we need to keep analysing these things because we could simplify things so much more if Checo would have just given me the position during the safety car which basically would have given me an opportunity to fight Max at the restart and would have given Checo on opportunity to fight me to get the position but what happened is that I was obviously fighting Checo, but I knew that Checo was going to give me a position quickly and he couldn’t fight me because he was going to give me a position back so in the end, we created a mess that for me is unnecessary, given the fact that we did six laps behind the safety car and there were
millions of opportunities for Checo to let me by and have a good fight at the restart. If I would have get passed by Russell for example, what would we have done and would Checo have had to let by Russell and me, which would have been tremendously unfair for him too or then Checo doesn’t give me back the position because there’s Russell in between me and him and it’s tremendously unfair for me. So I don’t know, it’s just these kind of things that as a sport we need to keep getting better at because I think we need to simplify things and just make it more quicker and easier for everyone to understand and even for the drivers to go racing with a much clearer mind.
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Max Verstappen pips Charles Leclerc for Jeddah win
Jeddah, 27 March 2022: Max Verstappen took his first victory of the 2022 FIA Formula One World thanks to a late overtaking move past Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc in a nail-biting finish to the Saudi Arabian Grand Prix here on Sunday. Carlos Sainz took third place for Ferrari, while pole-position man and early race leader Sergio Pérez was forced to settle for fourth after he was disadvantaged by a safety car period just after his first pit stop.
When the lights went out for the start, Pérez made a good start and powered into the lead. Fellow front-row starter Leclerc was slower off the line and he was quickly put under pressure by Sainz and Verstappen.
As they approached Turn 1, Leclerc moved right to defend from team-mate Sainz and that gave Verstappen the opportunity to attack on the inside. Leclerc managed to hold P2, but Verstappen went round Sainz on the outside of the next corner to rise to third place.
At the front, though, Pérez was beginning to stretch his legs. With a clear track ahead the Mexican began to forge a gap and by lap six he was more than 2.5s clear of Leclerc, with Verstappen 1.3s off the lead Ferrari and three seconds clear of Sainz. Further back, Mercedes’ George Russell took fifth from Alpine’s Esteban Ocon and the Frenchman was also passed by team-mate Fernando Alonso.
The order at the top remained static until Pérez made his first pit stop at the end of lap 15. The Mexican switched to hard tyres in a 2.9s second stop and emerged in fifth place. However, timing of the stop proved to unfortunate, as almost as soon as he rejoined the action, the VSC was deployed due to a crash for Nicholas Latifi in the final corner. The virtual caution quickly being replaced by the physical safety car.
Verstappen immediately pitted along with Leclerc and Sainz and when the trio emerged from the pit lane Leclerc led behind the safety car with Verstappen second. Pérez was now down in third place ahead of Sainz and Russell. Behind them Haas’ Kevin Magnussen and Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton, both of whom had started on hard tyres, now occupied sixth and seventh respectively.
The safety car left the track at the end of lap 20 and Leclerc held the lead ahead of Max. Pérez, meanwhile, was advised by race engineer that he would have to give up third place to Sainz on the restart as he had passed the Ferrari under the safety car when the Spaniard was leaving the pit lane. As the field exited Turn 1 Pérez slowed and Sainz cruised past to take P3.
As the second stint developed the battle at the front between Leclerc and Verstappen ebbed and flowed and by lap 29 the Dutch driver was just 1.4s behind his Monegasque rival. Behind them, Sainz held third place ahead of Pérez, while Russell was fifth. Hamilton meanwhile, had risen to sixth after passing Magnussen.
The complexion of the race changed again on lap 37 when Daniel Ricciardo suffered a mechanical problem and halted his McLaren just short of the pit entry. The VSC was deployed and Haas’ Kevin Magnussen pitted for new tyres.
Almost simultaneously Fernando Alonso, also suffering with a mechanical issue, parked his Alpine close to Ricciardo’s car and the pit lane was closed by race control as marshals rushed to push the McLaren and the Alpine into the pit lane.
The VSC ended on lap 41 and Verstappen immediately went on the attack. The pit lane entry was then opened and Hamilton pitted for medium tyres and he emerged in P12.
At the front, Verstappen was now closing on Leclerc and on lap 42 he used DRS to close right up to the Ferrari driver. The world champion attacked at the end of the lap and swept past the Ferrari under DRS. Leclerc immediately struck back and using drag reduction on the main straight at the start of lap 43 he powered past Verstappen to retake the lead.
At the end of the lap Verstappen attacked again, again closing up to Leclerc under DRS ahead of Turn 27. However, this time he locked up and Leclerc held the lead as they began lap 44.
With five laps to go Verstappen switched the attack to Turn 1. Leclerc was alive to the threat however and he positioned his car well to fend off the assault. Verstappen was determined to continued the fight and he again closed rapidly. At the end of the lap put his car almost alongside the Ferrari and that gave him the perfect opportunity at the start of lap 47. With the aid of DRS on the main straight he swept past the Ferrari to take the lead.
Leclerc wasn’t finished, however, and almost immediately he was on the attack, looking to pressure Verstappen into a mistake. The Dutchman resisted and when the yellow flags were shown for an incident between Lance Stroll and Alex Albon, the Monegasque driver had to back out of any attack.
He would have one last chance, at the end on the final lap, but while Leclerc got close in Turn 27 it wasn’t enough and Verstappen held position to take his first victory of 2022.
Behind them, Sainz took third while Pérez was forced to settle for fourth place. Fifth place went to Russell, with Ocon sixth ahead of McLaren’s Lando Norris. Pierre Gasly was eighth for AlphaTauri, while Magnussen’s tyre gamble under the VSC saw him finish ninth ahead of Hamilton who took the final point on offer.
2022 FIA Formula Saudi Arabian Grand Prix – Race
1 Max Verstappen Red Bull 50 1:24’19.293
2 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 50 1:24’19.842 0.549
3 Carlos Sainz Ferrari 50 1:24’27.390 8.097
4 Sergio Pérez Red Bull 50 1:24’30.093 10.800
5 George Russell Mercedes 50 1:24’52.025 32.732
6 Esteban Ocon Alpine/Renault 50 1:25’15.310 56.017
7 Lando Norris McLaren/Mercedes 50 1:25’15.417 56.124
8 Pierre Gasly AlphaTauri/Red Bull 50 1:25’22.239 1’02.946
9 Kevin Magnussen Haas/Ferrari 50 1:25’23.601 1’04.308
10 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 50 1:25’33.241 1’13.948
11 Zhou Guanyu Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 50 1:25’41.508 1’22.215
12 Nico Hülkenberg Aston Martin/Mercedes 50 1:25’51.035 1’31.742
13 Lance Stroll Aston Martin/Mercedes 49 – 1 lap
14 Alexander Albon Williams/Mercedes 47 – Not running
Valtteri Bottas Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 36 – Retirement
Fernando Alonso Alpine/Renault 35 – Retirement
Daniel Ricciardo McLaren/Mercedes 35 – Retirement
Nicholas Latifi Williams/Mercedes 14 – Retirement
Yuki Tsunoda AlphaTauri/Red Bull 0 – Not started
Mick Schumacher Haas/Ferrari 0 – Withdrawn -

Sergio Perez takes maiden career pole; Max P4, Hami P16
Jeddah, 26 March 2022: Red Bull Racing’s Sergio Pérez claimed his first career pole position at the Jeddah Corniche Circuit, beating Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc by two hundredths of a second to claim top spot in qualifying for the Saudi Arabian Grand Prix here on Saturday. Carlos Sainz was third for Ferrari while defending world champion Max Verstappen will line up fourth for tomorrow’s race.
At the beginning of Q1, Haas’ Kevin Magnussen was the first to lay claim to P1, with the Danish driver climbing to the top of the timesheetr with a lap of 1:30.425.
It might have been expected that the Red Bulls of Verstappen and Pérez would usurp the Haas driver when they took to the track but they didn’t get the chance. With just over six minutes on the clock the session was halted when Nicholas Latifi crashed at Turn 13. The Canadian lost the rear of his Williams on entry and slid off into the barriers on the right-hand side of the track. The incident forced both Red Bulls to abandon their opening runs and they returned to the pits to await the restart.
After an almost eight-minute delay the action resumed and Verstappen promptly jumped to the top of the order with a lap of 1:29.330. His stay there was short however, and he dropped to third as Sainz took P1 with a lap of 1:28.855 and Leclerc slotted into P2 just under two tenths behind his team-mate. Verstappen was already building towards another run, though, and when he crossed the line at the end of his flying lap he split the Ferraris with a lap 1:29.928.
Seven-time champion Lewis Hamilton was in trouble, however. As the final runs began the Mercedes deriver was in 16th position and at risk. He crossed the line in 1:30.343, which boosted him to 15th but when Aston Martin’s Lance Stroll crossed the line two tenths ahead, Hamilton fell back into the drop zone and he was eliminated. It was the first time since the 2017 Brazilian Grand Prix that the seven-time champion had failed to make it out of Q1.
Eliminated behind Hamilton were Williams’ Alex Albon, Aston Martin’s Nico Hulkenberg, the unfortunate Latifi and AlphaTauri’s Yuki Tsunoda who only completed two laps before a fuel system issue ruled him out of the Q1 running.
At the top of the order, Sainz took P1 ahead of Verstappen, Leclerc and Russell, while Alfa Romeo’s Valtteri Bottas took fifth ahead of Pérez at the end of the first segment.
In the first runs of Q2 it was Leclerc who set the pace, with the Ferrari putting in a good lap of 1:28.883 to claim P1. Pérez slotted into second place just five hundredths of a second behind the Monegasque driver, with Verstappen two hundredths further back in third place and Sainz fourth.
The session was then red flagged when Mick Schumacher crashed heavily in Turn 9. The medical car was quickly on the scene and Schumacher was extracted from the wreckage and taken by ambulance to the medical centre. The FIA later confirmed that Schumacher appeared unhurt but that he was being taken to hospital for precautionary checks.
After almost an hour the session resumed and it was Ferrari who made the moves at the top of the order, with Sainz posting a lap of 1:28.686 to take top spot ahead of Leclerc who improved to 1:28.780. Pérez couldn’t find an improvement on his lap and progressed to Q3 in third place thanks to his earlier lap. Verstappen started his lap but then backed out of the attempt and his first lap of the middle phase saw him through to Q3 in fourth place ahead of Alpine’s Fernando Alonso. Behind them, Bottas went through in sixth ahead of AlphaTauri’s Pierre Gasly, Magnussen, the second Alpine of Esteban Ocon and Russell.
Ruled out at the end of Q2 were the McLarens of Lando Norris and Daniel Ricciardo, in P11 and P12 respectively, followed by Alfa Romeo’s Zhou Guanyu, Schumacher, who qualified 14th, and Stroll.
In the first runs of Q3, Sainz was quickest and the Ferrari man claimed provisional pole with a lap of 1:28.402. That put him four hundredths of a second clear of Leclerc. Pérez, looking increasingly comfortable on the high-speed track, powered to P3 just a tenth behind Leclerc. Verstappen was not happy, however, and complaining that “he had no grip on this tyre” the world champion was eighth at the end of the opening laps with a time of 1:29.239, almost three tenths off his Q2 time.
And in the final runs it was Pérez who rose to the top. Leclerc, first of the front runners out on track, set a tough benchmark at 1:28.225. Sainz, following, couldn’t find an improvement and had to rely on his opening time. Pérez, though, was flying and when he crossed the line he stopped the clock at 1:29.200 to claim his first career pole position.
Verstappen, meanwhile, was forced to settle for fourth place on the grid ahead of Ocon, Russell, Alonso and Bottas. Gasly will line up ninth and the top 10 was rounded out by Magnussen.
2022 FIA Formula 1 Saudi Arabian Grand Prix – Qualifying
1 Sergio Pérez Red Bull 1:28.200 7 252.000
2 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 1:28.225 0.025 8 251.928
3 Carlos Sainz Ferrari 1:28.402 0.202 8 251.424
4 Max Verstappen Red Bull 1:28.461 0.261 8 251.256
5 Esteban Ocon Alpine/Renault 1:29.068 0.868 5 249.544
6 George Russell Mercedes 1:29.104 0.904 5 249.443
7 Fernando Alonso Alpine/Renault 1:29.147 0.947 6 249.323
8 Valtteri Bottas Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 1:29.183 0.983 7 249.222
9 Pierre Gasly AlphaTauri/Red Bull 1:29.254 1.054 7 249.024
10 Kevin Magnussen Haas/Ferrari 1:29.588 1.388 6 248.095
11 Lando Norris McLaren/Mercedes 1:29.651 0.965 7 247.921
12 Daniel Ricciardo McLaren/Mercedes 1:29.773 1.226 8 247.584
13 Zhou Guanyu Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 1:29.819 1.278 6 247.457
14 Mick Schumacher Haas/Ferrari 1:29.920 1.234 5 247.179
15 Lance Stroll Aston Martin/Mercedes 1:31.009 2.323 6 244.222
16 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 1:30.343 1.488 11 246.022
17 Alexander Albon Williams/Mercedes 1:30.492 1.637 9 245.617
18 Nico Hülkenberg Aston Martin/Mercedes 1:30.543 1.688 10 245.478
19 Nicholas Latifi Williams/Mercedes 1:31.817 2.962 4 242.072
Yuki Tsunoda AlphaTauri/Red Bull – 2 -

FIA Statement on Mick Schumy’s check up
26 March 2022:The FIA advises that an incident occurred during Qualifying for the 2022 FIA Formula 1 Saudi Arabian Grand Prix today, 26/03/22, involving car #47, Mick Schumacher.
Assessment at the Medical Centre revealed no injuries, and he has been transferred to King Fahad Armed Forces Hospital, Jeddah, for precautionary checks.–
Update: The driver has left hospital and the precautionary checks revealed no injuries. -

Leclerc ends Ferrari’s 45-race winless run:
Charles Leclerc ended Ferrari’s 45 race winless run by winning the opening race of the new era regulations as Carlos Sainz completed a Ferrari one-two. Red Bull suffered a double DNF gifting Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton the final podium spot.
By Malhaar Khaladkar
London, 21 March 2022: A complete overhaul of regulations, new drivers and promise of closer racing meant this was a hotly-anticipated season opener in recent history. Pole position for Ferrari on Saturday was claimed by Charles Leclerc on reigning world champion Max Verstappen, as both lined up on the front row. Excitement was at its highest as Ferrari had seemingly moved to the front of the grid with world champions Mercedes slipping back.
The race got off to a clean start as Leclerc and Verstappen maintained their positions. Carlos Sainz stayed in P3 as Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton made up a position to run in P4. Red Bull’s second driver Sergio Perez slipped from P4 to P6. Between the two ran F1 returnee Kevin Magnussen in the Haas. Valtteri Bottas, who had qualified in P6 for his new team Alfa Romeo had a bad getaway and fell to P14 by end of lap 1.
Hamilton was chasing Sainz’s Ferrari as Perez remained behind the two. Hamilton lost DRS as Sainz pulled away due to the Ferrari F1-75 naturally being faster than the Mercedes W13. On lap 9, Perez passed the Briton as Hamilton was defenceless against the faster Red Bull. Meanwhile, teammate George Russell had slotted into P6.
Hamilton was the first to pit out of anyone, seemingly tyre degradation on the new 18-inch Pirelli tyres was higher than anticipated. Mercedes chose the hard tyres for the 7-time Formula 1 world champion. Of the leaders, Verstappen pitted first hoping to undercut, putting on another set of soft tyres on lap 14. Ferrari responded duly on the next lap by bringing in Leclerc for soft tyres, mirroring the reigning world champion. As Leclerc emerged out of the pit lane his lead was slashed from 3.5s to 0.3s, Verstappen right on his heels.
Verstappen made a move on Leclerc on lap 17, using DRS to slingshot past in turn 1, only for the Ferrari driver to return the favour by using DRS at turn 4. Exactly same scenario took place on lap 18 as well. On lap 19 Verstappen again dived down the inside of Leclerc at turn 1, this time locking up his front wheels and going deep. The Monegasque passing him again, this time way before they reached turn 4. Verstappen backed off as he tried to cool his brakes and tyres.Hamilton pitted again as the hard tyres were too slow, this time choosing mediums and emerging in a net P5. Russell seemed to mirror new teammate Hamilton’s strategy.
Verstappen made his second pitstop on lap 30, going for the medium tyres. Leclerc once again responded on the next lap y doing the same, this time though emerging with a comfortable lead with Verstappen out of the crucial 1s window. Meanwhile both Sainz and Perez pitted on lap 33 to run P3 and P4 respectively. Sainz and Perez pitted for the third time on lap 43 for soft tyres to make it to the end of the race. With nothing to lose and a large gap to the cars behind, Verstappen pitted too on lap 43 for soft tyres. The Mercedes cars responding as well, with Hamilton pitting on lap 44 and Russell on lap 45, both for soft tyres. Leclerc was left with a choice to make, with a large enough gap to Verstappen to pit and emerge in the lead or go to the end of the grand prix.
Leclerc had his answer on lap 46, as Pierre Gasly’s AlphaTauri spat flames from the back of the car making him the first retiree of the season. A Honda sourced Red Bull powertrain engine having issues was bad omen for the rest of the race. Leclerc pitted for soft tyres on lap 46 as the safety car was called out. During the SC period Verstappen complained of power steering issues making it harder to drive the car with Red Bull telling him to keep out and retire if only it gets worse.
By the time safety car came to the pits everyone was on the soft tyre. On the restart Leclerc pulled away with Verstappen struggling. Seemingly now Sainz was trying to hunt for P2. Behind, Hamilton was trying to chase Perez for P4. Suddenly Verstappen slowed down before the final corner on lap 54 as he lost power and trundled back to the pits, out of the race. It promoted Sainz to P2 with Hamilton chasing Perez for P3 now. On the final lap as the leaders made their wayround turn 1, Perez lost power, locking his rear axle and spinning around, both Red Bull cars out of the race with Hamilton on the podium against all odds.
Leclerc capped of a fantastic win with Sainz coming home for a Ferrari one-two. Hamilton achieved his 183rd career podium as teammate Russell finished in P4. Magnussen finished in P5, Haas scoring points for the first time since 2020 Hungarian GP. Bottas finished P6 in Alfa Romeo with rookie teammate Zhou Guanyu scoring points on debut as he finished in P10. Alpine too got a double points result as Esteban Ocon and Fernando Alonso crossed the line in P7 and P9 respectively. AlphaTauri’s Yuki Tsunoda achieving P8, the sole point scorer for any Red Bull powertrain powered cars.
Mick Schumacher finished just outside the points for Haas ahead of Lance Stroll in the Aston Martin in P12 and another F1 returnee Alex Albon in the Williams in P13. McLaren endured a horrible race as Daniel Ricciardo finished in P14 ahead of teammate Lando Norris in P15. Williams’ Nicholas Latifi finishing in P16 ahead of “super-sub” Nico Hulkenberg in P17 who subbed in for the unwell Sebastian Vettel at Aston Martin.
Ferrari and Red Bull look to have the strongest car going to these new era regulations. Qualifying was close but race pace wise Ferrari seemed to have the advantage. Ferrari’s advantage also coming from a new engine which works well at low-speed traction and power delivery to the rear wheels. Red Bull will be worried about the reliability problems. First one with Gasly is still being investigated while Red Bull seemed to think problems for Verstappen and Perez were both similar in nature. With F1 back to racing in a week it remains to be seen if they will be able to identify and fix these problems. Mercedes were a clear third in terms of pace, lacking around 0.5s to the leaders both in qualifying and race pace. The team said it is looking ways to cut down drag on the W13 a that is what held them back. They are also looking to fix porpoising which has plagued the car since its hit the track, making them lose performance.
Haas and Alfa Romeo have made a step forward as they looked to have a clear advantage on the rest of the field behind them. Both being Ferrari powered cars, the engine has been a significant part in helping them overtake their rivals. Alpine and AlphaTauri looked closely matched but it is too early in the season to judge who has a clear advantage over who.
McLaren have been the biggest team to fall off the leaders in these new rules as the team and drivers admitted the car lacks overall downforce compared to its competitors. That compounded with brake cooling issues that limited their testing time means the Woking squad are on a backfoot going into the rest of the season. Aston Martin have suffered porpoising issues as well, with the team admitting they have lost around 0.75s just by running a higher ride height to avoid porpoising. Williams look to be last in the field as they were on average 2-2.5s off the pace of the leaders.
With these new cars, the development curve is very steep with the engineers experimenting to get these cars working at their peak level. With such a steep development curve we can expect a lot of new upgrades on them hence, changing the pecking order of the field race by race.
Saturday Qualifying Results were:
P1: Charles Leclerc- 16 (Ferrari) P2: Max Verstappen- 1 (Red Bull) P3: Carlos Sainz- 55 (Ferrari) P4: Sergio Perez- 11 (Red Bull) P5: Lewis Hamilton- 44 (Mercedes) P5: Valtteri Bottas- 77 (Alfa Romeo) P7: Kevin Magnussen- 20 (Haas) P8: Fernando Alonso- 14 (Alpine) P9: George Russell- 63 (Mercedes) P10: Pierre Gasly- 10 (AlphaTauri) P11: Esteban Ocon- 31 (Alpine) P12: Mick Schumacher- 47 (Haas) P13: Lando Norris- 4 (McLaren) P14: Alex Albon-23 (Williams) P15: Zhou Guanyu- 24 (Alfa Romeo) P16: Yuki Tsunoda- 22 (AlphaTauri) P17: Nico Hulkenberg- 27 (Aston martin) P18: Daniel Ricciardo- 3 (McLaren) P19: Lance Stroll- 18 (Aston Martin) P20: Nicholas Latifi- 6 (Williams) -

Charles Leclerc leads a Scuderia Ferrari 1-2; Hamilton third
Sakhir, 20 March 2022: The Prancing Horse began its season with a stunning dance of success as the two Ferraris romped home with Charles Leclerc leading team-mate Carlos Sainz to a 1-2 finish, that gave Ferrari the perfect start to the 2022 FIA Formula One World Championship Scuderia’s first one-two finish in almost three years brightened up the Bahrain Grand Prix for the Tifosi.
Starting on pole, Leclerc put in a polished performance to cross the line to claim his first win since Italy 2019 after leading the race from the start, while Sainz claimed second place and his seventh career podium finish in a dramatic final sequence of laps that saw defending world champion Max Verstappen and Red Bull team-mate Sergio Pérez exit the race. Verstappen was forced to retire from the season-opening Bahrain Grand Prix after suffering steering issues, while Pérez suffered an engine-related spin that robbed him of second place just a lap from the chequered flag.
When the lights went out at the start, Verstappen made a good start from the front row but ahead of him pole sitter Charles Leclerc also got away well. And the as the pair went into Turn 1 the Ferrari driver managed to hold onto the lead despite pressure on the outside from Verstappen .
Behind them, Pérez made a good start but to his left Carlos Sainz bogged down slightly. And as the Ferrari driver clawed his way up to speed he moved across to defend against Pérez’s charge. The Red Bull was forced to the inside line and as the field flowed through Turn 1 Pérez lost places to Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton and Haas’ Kevin Magnussen.
The Mexican was soon on the attack though and on lap three he closed up to Magnussen who had locked up at Turn 4. The Danish driver’s mistake allowed Sergio to pass with ease and he began to chase down Hamilton. Pérez was on the seven-time champion’s gearbox on lap nine and with the aid of DRS he muscled his way past the Briton into Turn 4 to return to fourth place.
At the front, Leclerc began to draw away from Verstappen as the opening stint developed and by lap 13 the Monegasque driver, who started the race on new softs, was almost six seconds ahead of Verstappen , who began on used tyres.
Red Bull then pitted the world champion on lap 14 and the undercut proved powerful. Leclerc made his first stop at the end of the following tour and when he rejoined Verstappen was right behind the Ferrari.
Verstappen attacked on lap 17 into Turn 1. He passed the Ferrari, but with following easier in the 2022 cars, Leclerc immediately fought back, retaking the lead in Turn 4. Verstappen stayed close and attacked again in the same place on the following lap. But despite once again getting past the Ferrari in Turn 1, Leclerc again stole back the lead in Turn 4. Verstappen tried once again on the next lap, but this time he locked up on entry and Leclerc was able to comfortably hold his lead.
Behind them, Sainz was being pushed hard by Pérez who took medium tyres in his first pit stop. After the action at the start of the stint, the remainder of the second phase of the race counted down without any significant movement at the front.
Verstappen made his second pit stop, for medium tyres, on lap 31, again seeking the undercut, but once again Ferrari reacted and thanks to a quicker pit stop the Italian squad managed to get the Leclerc back out in the lead, with Verstappen also complaining that he had gone too easy on his tyres on his out lap.
Sainz and Pérez made their second visits to the pit lane at the end of the next tour and the Red Bull driver went for a second set of softs in order to attack Sainz who had moved to medium compound Pirellis. But though Pérez was the fastest man on the track for a spell, Sainz was able to hold position and as the laps counted down Pérez’s times began to fade.
Behind the leading quartet, with 20 laps remaining, Hamilton held fifth place, though the Briton was almost 15 seconds behind the Red Bull driver. The Mercedes driver’s new team-mate George Russell was sixth and Kevin Magnussen in the surprise package Haas was seventh ahead of AlpaTauri’s Pierre Gasly, the Alpine of Esteban Ocon and the second AlphaTauri of Yuki Tsunoda.
Red Bull brought both Verstappen and Pérez in for a third stop on lap 44 and both took on soft tyres. That dropped Verstappen behind Sainz and Pérez fell to fifth behind Hamilton. However Ferrari reacted by pitting Sainz, while Mercedes brought Hamilton in. That boosted Pérez back to fourth place behind Sainz. Leclerc stayed on track to maintain position at the head of the field. It was at this point that Verstappen began to complain of heavy steering.
On lap 46, Gasly pulled over at the side of the track just after Turn 3 with the rear of his AlphaTauri on fire. The safety car was deployed and Leclerc pitted. Verstappen , meanwhile, was continuing to struggle but despite his difficulties the champion stayed out on track as the Safety Car picked up the race leaders, who were now closely bunched with 10 laps to go.
When the safety car left the track Verstappen’s problems were compounded as he reported he felt that he was also losing battery power. His engineers informed him that it was not a battery issue but the champion continued to lose ground. On lap 55 he slowed dramatically and the field swept past as he limped to the pit lane to retire.
Pérez moved up to third place and initially the Mexican driver was able to hold off Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton. But then with just two laps to go the Mexican radioed the Team to say he was losing power. Hamilton closed on and at the start of the final lap Pérez spun in Turn 1. “I lost the engine,” he yelled as Hamilton powered past.
Behind the top three of Leclerc, Sainz and Hamilton, Russell took a well worked fourth place after starting ninth. Magnussen claimed fifth place for Haas, with Alfa Romeo’s Valtteri Bottas in sixth ahead of Alpine’s Esteban Ocon, AlphaTauri’s Yuki Tsunoda, and the second Alpine of Fernando Alonso. Alfa Romeo rookie Guanyu Zhou took 10th place to score a point on his Formula 1 debut.
2022 FIA Formula 1 Bahrain Grand Prix – Race
1 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 57 1:37’33.584
2 Carlos Sainz Ferrari 57 1:37’39.182 5.598
3 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 57 1:37’43.259 9.675
4 George Russell Mercedes 57 1:37’44.795 11.211
5 Kevin Magnussen Haas/Ferrari 57 1:37’48.338 14.754
6 Valtteri Bottas Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 57 1:37’49.703 16.119
7 Esteban Ocon Alpine/Renault 57 1:37’53.007 19.423
8 Yuki Tsunoda AlphaTauri/Red Bull 57 1:37’53.970 20.386
9 Fernando Alonso Alpine/Renault 57 1:37’55.974 22.390
10 Zhou Guanyu Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 57 1:37’56.648 23.064
11 Mick Schumacher Haas/Ferrari 57 1:38’06.158 32.574
12 Lance Stroll Aston Martin/Mercedes 57 1:38’19.457 45.873
13 Alexander Albon Williams/Mercedes 57 1:38’27.516 53.932
14 Daniel Ricciardo McLaren/Mercedes 57 1:38’28.559 54.975
15 Lando Norris McLaren/Mercedes 57 1:38’29.919 56.335
16 Nicholas Latifi Williams/Mercedes 57 1:38’35.379 1’01.795
17 Nico Hülkenberg Aston Martin/Mercedes 57 1:38’37.413 1’03.829
18 Sergio Pérez Red Bull 56 – 1 lap
19 Max Verstappen Red Bull 54 – 3 laps
10 Pierre Gasly AlphaTauri/Red Bull 44 – Retirement









