Your basket is currently empty!
Category: Formula 1
-

Sergio Perez to miss British Grand Prix weekend
Silverstone, 31 July 2020: Following the announcement that Sergio has tested positive for COVID-19 at the Silverstone Circuit ahead of the Formula 1 Pirelli British Grand Prix, the Racing Point F1 team regrets to announce that he will be unable to participate in this weekend’s race.
Sergio is physically well and in good spirits, but he will continue to self-isolate under the guidelines of the relevant public health authorities, with safety the ultimate priority for the team and the sport.
The entire team wishes Sergio well and looks forward to welcoming him back into the cockpit of the RP20 soon.
Our intention is to race two cars on Sunday. We will communicate the next steps for our British Grand Prix weekend in due course.Formula 1 statement
Following today’s announcement that Sergio Perez of the BWT Racing Point Formula 1 Team produced an inconclusive test result for COVID-19 at the Silverstone Circuit ahead of the 2020 FIA Formula 1 British Grand Prix, the FIA and Formula 1 can now confirm that the result of his re-test is positive.
Perez has entered self-quarantine in accordance with the instructions of the relevant public health authorities and will continue to follow the procedure mandated by those authorities.With the assistance of the local organiser of the British Grand Prix, local health authorities and the FIA COVID-19 delegate, a full track and trace initiative has been undertaken and all close contacts have been quarantined.
The procedures set out by the FIA and Formula 1 have provided for swift containment of an incident that will have no wider impact on this weekend’s event.
-

Hungarian Grand Prix race analysis
Starting with this race-Monday, a young F1 enthusiast and fan from Delhi, Malhaar Khaladkar, will do an analysis of the race weekend, every Monday after the F1 race.
By Malhaar Khaladkar*
New Delhi, 20 July 2020: Rain before the start of the race meant that the track was wet. Therefore, the whole grid started on the intermediates, barring two cars of Magnussen and Romain Grosjean which started on the wets. Verstappen crashed his car in turn 12 during the lap to the grid. He managed to recover his car on to the grid but damaged the suspension and front wing. Red Bull mechanics had a monumental task to get the car ready before the start, they did so with 20 seconds remaining.
Mercedes were expected to dominate given their qualifying pace. Behind them were the Racing Points and Ferraris. Verstappen was looking to make up ground after an underwhelming qualifying. Behind him were two McLarens and the sole Alpha Tauri of Gasly. Ricciardo and Russel started in P11 & P12 respectively. Albon had a torrid time on Saturday being the only 13th. Behind him was the other Renault and Williams. Haas had cars in P16 & P18, Kvyat slotting between them and Alfa Romeo occupied the last row.
As the formation lap ended, both Haas’s pit for slick tyres which turned out to be an excellent decision. Kvyat wanted to do the same but he was instructed to stay out. Hamilton arguably had the best start and behind him was Stroll in turn 1. Bottas jumped the start and then bogged down, getting overtaken by 5 cars. Cars starting on the right side of the circuit had worse starts compared to cars starting on the left i.e. on the racing line. Nicholas Latifi in the Williams was running P10 after a quick start.

Graphics courtesy Pirelli F1 Media By Lap 5 everyone had switched to slick tyres with Hamilton in the lead. Verstappen overcut Stroll to be in P2, while the strategy gamble by Haas at the start meant that Magnussen and Grosjean were running P3 & P4 for a brief time. Leclerc struggled with the degradation on his soft tyre compared to the medium tyres of other cars. Due to strategy, his race was compromised. Both McLarens lost time while pitting, thus, ran outside of the points-paying position. Raikkonen in his Alfa Romeo ran in P11 briefly before being handed a 5-second time penalty for starting on the wrong grid slot.
The expected rain did not arrive and passed to the south of the circuit. Around lap 29 the second round of pitstops occurred with Vettel putting on the hard tyres. Others followed in till lap 37 for either the medium or the hard tyres. Bottas caught up to Verstappen in P2 but was unable to pass him as following another car at this circuit is very difficult. Meanwhile Hamilton had a 22 second, over a pit stop lead to Verstappen.
Mercedes executed a very similar strategy to last year as they pit Bottas on lap 49 for a set of hard tyres to hunt down Verstappen for last 21 laps. Bottas did catch him with two laps to go, but was unable to pass him. Hamilton took a free pitstop on lap 66 to switch to soft tyres and gun for the fastest lap of the race. He set a track record of 1:16.627 on the last lap. Lance Stroll achieved the highest position of the season with P4. Behind him were the second Red Bull of Albon and Vettel. Perez recovered to P7 after a bad start and Ricciardo finished in P8 in his Renault. Haas achieved first points of the season as Magnussen finished P9 on road, but got demoted to P10 after both Haas cars were awarded a time penalty of 10-seconds due to using driver aids on formation lap. Sainz was P9, maintaining McLaren’s record of finishing in top 10 in Hungary since the turbo hybrid era. Leclerc due to bad strategy missed out on points. Behind him were Kvyat, Norris and Ocon. Both Alfa Romeo and Williams lacked pace to challenge the top 10. Gasly was the sole retirement in the race due to power unit problems.
The Hungarian GP proved that the Mercedes W11 was strong at low downforce circuits i.e. Austria and high downforce circuit like Hungary. They are the class of the field. Behind them Racing Point have shown better understanding of their car and improvement in pace. They outqualified both Red Bulls and matched them in race pace. The favourite contenders for the win, Red Bull had balance issues the whole weekend. The car understeered in some corners and oversteered in others. This was evident in their qualifying pace. They had much better race pace as Verstappen was able to fight off Bottas and Albon was able to overtake Vettel on track. Their upgrades, specifically the rear wing endplates and floor did not give them the gains they expected and worsened the balance of the car.

Pirelli Graphics The Ferraris were much improved this weekend. They got both cars in Q3 and one finished in P6. If they had got the strategy right, both cars could have finished in the points. This track inherently suited their car with lack of straights and twisty corners. Ferrari front wing and floor upgrades seemed to improve their pace marginally as the balance and pace of the car improved. McLaren had predicted they would struggle after Friday as the car was having balance issues through the weekend. Due to this, neither of the driver was comfortable with the car and was able to extract maximum pace. Renault once more finished in P8 showing signs of improvement in the closely packed midfield. Ricciardo put a mammoth 40+ laps stint on the medium tyres which gave him the tyre offset in the second stint. The tyre advantage wasn’t enough for him to overtake as the Renault is not the outright fastest car in the midfield.
Alpha Tauri could’ve scored points with Gasly but they were struck with reliability gremlins. Haas achieved points and outraced one of the Ferrari cars due to good strategy. On pure pace, they would not have achieved points. Alfa Romeo is arguably the slowest car in qualifying while their race pace is not encouraging either. Williams have improved their qualifying pace immensely mixing it with the midfield and George Russel out-qualifying a Red Bull. They still lack race pace but as evident from qualifying it’s a matter of when they unlock it rather than if they have the pace.
*Malhaar Khaladkar is an intern with INDIAinF1 and will be writing on F1 and technical aspects of the sport. The passionate student is also a keen student of the sport. This is his first article. We invite your comments below.
-

Facile win for Hamilton; Verstappen staves off Bottas challenge for second
Budapest, 19 July 2020: Lewis Hamilton took a dominant and record-equalling eighth Hungarian Grand Prix with the Briton untroubled after starting from pole position in the third round of the FIA Formula 1 World Championship here on Sunday. Hamilton crossed the line almost nine seconds ahead of Red Bull Racing’s Max Verstappen to match Michael Schumacher’s single event win record.
Verstappen made a fantastic recovery to second place after almost exiting the race before it event started. The Red Bull slid off track on his lap to the grid and hit the barriers, breaking his front wing and damaging his front left suspension.
However, brilliant work by his crew on the grid to repair the damage meant Verstappen was alble to start and after a lightning start he rose to third and then claimed second place in the first round of pit stops.
The race start was incident-packed as eventual third-place finisher Valtteri Bottas made a tentative start that initially carried a suspicion of a jump start and dropped back. Verstappen, though, made a brilliant start and as Hamilton led away Verstappen powered through from P7 on the grid to challenge Racing Point’s Lance Stroll. The Canadian held his line through Turn 3, however, and Verstappen settled into P3 ahead of the Ferraris of Vettel and Leclerc.
The situation changed rapidly, though. Both Haas drivers pitted before the start of the race to change tyres, with Kvyat joining them at the end of lap one. Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc and Bottas, who replays later showed was stationary when the lights went out, then pitted at the end of lap two to take on dry tyres. Vettel also pitted but his stop was a troubled on as a stream of cars came into pit lane and the Ferrari crew failed to find a gap into which he could be released. Vettel lost a large amount of time and dropped back from fourth.
Hamilton, too, pitted for medium tyres, which promoted Verstappen to the lead.
It was a brief spell at the top, though, as Verstappen also headed for the pit lane to shed his intermediate tyres. He took medium tyres and rejoined in P2.
After 12 laps Hamilton led Verstappen by a whopping 9.4 seconds with the prescient Magnussen in third place ahead of Stroll and Bottas who had charged through the pack. The second Haas of Romain Grosjean was in sixth place ahead of Leclerc.
Behind them Alex Albon had muscled his way through from 13thon the grid to ninth place behind Vettel and when the German locked up at Turn 12 and drifted wide, Albon breezed past to take P8. He then closed up on Leclerc and the two began a tough tussle for seventh place, with Vettel soon joining the contest.
Albon made a couple of moves that were sternly rebuffed by Leclerc but at the end of lap 17 he made a better exit out of the final corner and got close enough to launch a brave move down the inside into Turn 1. Leclerc moved to resist but Albon was already alongside and out of the corner he drew away from the Ferrari and settled into seventh place. Vettel then also got past Leclerc who was struggling on soft tyres.
At the front, Hamilton was fully in control and on lap 24 he held a 12-second advantage over Verstappen, who was also comfortable in P2, 15.5s ahead of Stroll. Bottas now held fourth place ahead of Magnussen, with Grosjean in sixth ahead of Albon who was three seconds behind.
By lap 28 that gap had narrowed to just 0.7s and on the following lap he closed up on the pit straight and powered past the Haas through Turn 1 to move to P6. The next target, 7.7s seconds up the road, was Magnussen.
At the end of lap 30, Vettel made his second stop of the race from P9, taking on hard tyres and after dropping to P11 he soon began setting fastest laps as he tried to close the gap to McLaren’s Carlos Sainz.
Bottas then made his second stop at the end of lap 33 and he took on a set of mediums as the forecast rain stayed away. Albon then made his second stop at the end of lap 35 and the crew got him away from the pit box with a set of hard tyres onboard in a solid 2.7s. He rejoined in P10.
The pit window was now firmly open and Stroll headed in for mediums and then Verstappen made his second stop, taking on hard tyres in a fantastic 2.0s stop. Hamilton then pitted for medium tyres. He rejoined in the lead ahead of Verstappen while Bottas, who had successfully undercut Stroll, was now third and well clear of the Racing Point.
The Finn now pushed hard on his new tyres and he quickly began to reel in Verstappen. On lap 40 he was 5.3 seconds behind the Red Bull man and by lap 45 the Finn was just 1.3s behind the Dutchman. Behind them Vettel had risen to fifth after his early second stop but Albon was closing in and lapping quicker than the Ferrari.
With five laps left, Albon found himself 1.1s behind Vettel, while Bottas had closed to just four seconds behind Verstappen. And Albon claimed P5 when Vettel ran wide into Turn 2 on the following lap.
On lap 69, Bottas closed to within a second of Verstappen. At the end of the lap Verstappen made a good exit from the final Turn and that left him with a gap of almost eight tenths to Bottas, and that was enough to keep Bottas at bay for the final lap.
Ahead, Hamilton claimed his eighth Hungarian Grand Prix victory with a new race lap record of 1:16.627. Verstappen then crossed the line to take a brilliant second place, with Bottas third. Stroll scored his best result since the 2019 German Grand Prix with fourth and Albon finished in a superb fifth place after starting 13th on the grid.
Behind Albon , Vettel took sixth for Ferrari ahead of the second Racing Point of Sergio Pérez. Daniel Ricciardo enjoyed a good race to P8 ahead of Kevin Magnussen and the final point on offer went to McLaren’s Carlos Sainz.
2020 FIA Formula 1 Hungarian Grand Prix – Race
1 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 70 1:36’12.473
2 Max Verstappen Red Bull/Honda 70 1:36’21.175 8.702
3 Valtteri Bottas Mercedes 70 1:36’21.925 9.452
4 Lance Stroll Racing Point/Mercedes 70 1:37’10.052 57.579
5 Albon ander Albon Red Bull/Honda 70 1:37’30.789 1’18.316
6 Sebastian Vettel Ferrari 69 1:36’17.961 1 Lap
7 Sergio Pérez Racing Point/Mercedes 69 1:36’19.099 1 Lap
8 Daniel Ricciardo Renault 69 1:36’20.049 1 Lap
9 Kevin Magnussen Haas/Ferrari 69 1:36’32.396 1 Lap
10 Carlos Sainz McLaren/Renault 69 1:36’34.468 1 Lap
11 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 69 1:36’52.962 1 Lap
12 Daniil Kvyat AlphaTauri/Honda 69 1:36’57.822 1 Lap
13 Lando Norris McLaren/Renault 69 1:36’58.561 1 Lap
14 Esteban Ocon Renault 69 1:36’59.437 1 Lap
15 Romain Grosjean Haas/Ferrari 69 1:37’04.897 1 Lap
16 Kimi Räikkönen Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 69 1:37’06.078 1 Lap
17 Antonio Giovinazzi Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 69 1:37’26.709 1 Lap
18 George Russell Williams/Mercedes 69 1:37’27.844 1 Lap
19 Nicholas Latifi Williams/Mercedes 65 1:37’02.721 5 Laps
Pierre Gasly AlphaTauri/Honda 15 22’50.273 Power Unit -

To be second is like a victory today: Max Verstappen
DRIVERS
1 – Lewis HAMILTON (Mercedes)
2 – Max VERSTAPPEN (Red Bull Racing)
3 – Valtteri BOTTAS (Mercedes)
TRACK INTERVIEWS
(Conducted by Martin Brundle)
Q: Lewis, your 86thgrand prix victory, just five behind Michael Schumacher’s seemingly unassailable record. You just had it covered. Brilliant drive.
Lewis HAMILTON: Thank you. Believe it or not, still pushing out there, particularly for the fastest lap at the end, but the management… what I want to say is a huge congratulations to everyone back at home at the factory, even more on the engine department at HPP. Those guys have done such a fantastic job of improving this year as well. Honestly, it was one of my favourite races to have raced and whilst I was on my own for the race it was just a different kind of challenge. Of course we had great pace but it couldn’t have been without these great guys that are working, that did great pit stops, great strategy, and right at the end there, because I was managing those mediums for a long, long time, so right at the end there it was great to get on the fresh tyre and get the extra point.
Q: Your eighth victory here and you’re back in the lead of the world championship. Bit of a misfire in round one but you’re right back in it now.
LH: I think round one was multiple different punches that I wasn’t perhaps ready for, but I re-focused, which I try to do between every race, and the last two have been fantastic and I think this weekend on point throughout the weekend so I need to keep this up.
Q: Congratulations Max. You went from the barriers on the formation lap (sic) to splitting the mighty Mercedes-Benz and the fans’ driver of the day. What an afternoon you’ve had?
Max VERSTAPPEN: Yeah, it was not how I wanted it in the beginning of course, ending up in the barriers with the laps to the grid, but the mechanics did an amazing job to fix the car. I don’t know how they did it but yeah, incredible. So to pay them back with second place I’m very pleased with that. I think the first lap was very crucial. And from there on I think we had the right calls and we had good pace so we just kept doing our own thing and of course to be able to split the two Mercedes cars is good for us.
Q: And how did the car feel? Your mechanics finished it with literally seconds to spare to get your wheels on to make sure you didn’t get a grid penalty. Was it handling OK?
MV: Yeah, it was good – like new! So it was just on time but everything was working as normal.
Q: At what point did you decide Valtteri was not coming past you?
MV: You never know. I was just trying to do my own pace and I could see he was catching like a second a lap. Of course following here is quite tricky so as soon as he was within 1.5 seconds it was more difficult for him. But then of course on the last lap we also had traffic which didn’t make it easier for me on those old tyres but we managed to hang on and very happy with second.
Q: Does that feel like a sort of victory to you?
MV: I thought I was not going to race so to be second is like a victory today.
Q: Valtteri, P3, quite an interesting race, quite a challenge.
Valtteri BOTTAS: Yeah, it was a pretty bad for race for me to be honest. Starting second, obviously you aim to win the race, but yeah, I lost it at the start. I reacted to a light on my dash that went off. I don’t know what it was something changed on my dash and I reacted to that instead of the start light and I had anti-stall, so then I had to do the start again, so I lost it there.
Q: The stewards were obviously happy that you were still in your start box and not moving when the actual lights went out, so no problem there?
VB: Yeah, no problem, but obviously I lost many places and it made the race very difficult for me. I was fighting until the end and it was pretty close to me but still good points.
Q: You needed one more lap and it was worth the gamble to put those tyres on at the end?
VB: I think it was worth the gamble, yes. I think it really gave me the difference in the tyre life but it didn’t quite pay off today.
Q: Onwards and upwards, two rounds at Silverstone, super high speeds and your car should be mighty around there?
VB:I think the car will hopefully good there. Yeah, I look forward to Silverstone but plenty to learn from this weekend to be stronger at Silverstone.
PRESS CONFERENCE
Q: [Question and answer cut off]
LH: …. We’ve got as close as we’ve ever got before and I think that’s what’s you’re seeing today. It’s a great team performance.
Q: Lewis, how hard were you pushing for the bulk of that race? And how hard was it to get the medium tyre to last the distance?
LH: The medium tyre definitely wasn’t, I would say, a great tyre, I think. For sure it was a better tyre than the soft for the stints. I would probably say the hard tyre definitely had more legs on it. But, obviously, to start on that tyre was… what we had done in qualifying was strong. Once I got in the lead I got that gap and I was able to manage those tyres and match Max’s times, which was positive. Then he had a couple of drops in time at some stage and I was able to maintain that while still managing those tyres. I’m constantly trying to improve how I’m managing those tyres through that stint. We don’t know when they’re going to go off. But they actually lasted really long and even to the end of that stint on the medium they were still performing quite well, they still had some rubber left. But they pitted me after Max after had done his stop and after that again it was just trying to manage that gap. It did happen to be growing during the time. Being that is it quite cool today, you can’t really back off a lot because you lose temperature in the tyres so it was still important that I stayed on top of it, otherwise when tyre temperatures drop and that’s when they degrade more.
Q: Max, it hasn’t been a straightforward weekend for you or the team here in Hungary. It’s a painful memory, but could you just talk us through the incident on the way to the grid?
MV: Yeah, so I basically locked up and I came off the brakes, tried to brake again, locked again, and I just went straight on. I was already struggling the whole lap for grip and then basically just locked up and I couldn’t get out of it so I just went straight into the wall. I thought the race was over but I managed to reverse the car out of the wall. And yeah, it’s like a ‘never give up’ mentality, still. Bring the car to the grid and see what happens, right? I could have jumped out there and say it’s over but clearly you could see that after the mechanics, they did an amazing job to repair that car and I was just very happy to start the race. The first lap was really good and from the onwards we made the right calls with strategy, when to box and what tyre to put on, and to be able to split the two Mercedes cars in the race after such a difficult weekend for us is a great result and something we definitely didn’t expect.
Q: Valtteri, how worried were you after the start that you might get a penalty?
VB: I didn’t really think about it because it doesn’t really change anything if your start to worry about it. It’s done and the start was ruined anyway. I was just really focused on the race and the situation and trying to get back to the front as quickly as possible and maximise every situation. Then, for a while, when you don’t hear anything, yeah, you think ‘OK, it should be fine’ and I guess you’re still within the limits. Obviously a pretty odd situation and quite disappointing because it really compromised my race.
VIDEO CONFERENCE
Q: (Alan Baldwin – Reuters) Max, amazing drive. Some words about what you were thinking for those minutes when your mechanics were working on the car. You went off for the anthem and everything else. You seemed very calm, but I guess it was the opposite. Can you let us know what you were thinking at that moment?
MV: No, I was very calm. I was like ‘let’s see if they are going to make it’ and if not then that’s it, that’s the race done, and the whole disappointing weekend would have been completed, you know. But they did an amazing job, so I was really fired up to get back in the car and show them that the effort was not for nothing, let’s say it like that. Yeah, crazy. It was a crazy 10 to 12 minutes.
Q: Max, what did the team management say to you? Helmut Marko, Christian Horner, people like that?
MV: Nothing. I didn’t speak to them. I just shook hands before the race once I sat in the car, when the car was prepared – repaired. I mean, what can you say? You can have a whole conversation but I hit the wall, there is damage, try to fix the damage and then we’ll see.
Q: (Andrew Benson – BBC) Question for Lewis. Obviously the fastest lap at the end is always a bit of a risk. What was the thinking behind that? Obviously it’s extra points. Are you thinking it’s a close championship with Valtteri this year and he’s the only opposition and you’re going to need every point you’ve got, looking back to 2016 and things that can go wrong and that sort of thing? Just talk us through what the thinking behind that was and the risks that you might have been going through in your head.
LH: Good question. Well, ultimately we have to weigh-up the risks and… I mean I didn’t push so much that I was going to make a mistake and go off. So it was a fully controlled lap. Look, I’ve lost World Championships in the past by one point, so I know how crucial it is to maximise on every moment and we’re in a year when you don’t know what reliability is going to be like; you don’t know how long the season’s going to be. So, yes, Valtteri had a great, particularly, first race. At the time he had the fastest lap, I had the gap, and felt that it was necessary to get that point, particularly as I felt that I’d earned the gap that I had. But things like the extra pit stop, coming in, all these different things do add to the risk factors. But, look, we’re a professional team and so long as we continue to do… y’know, keep our heads on, stay focussed, I believe it was the right decision to make.
Q: (Christian Menath – motorsport-magazin.com) Question for Valtteri. Can you explain the problem you had at the start? More in detail? Which lights did you see on the steering wheel? The shifting lights or the display? And, following up for Valtteri as well, you talked a lot about consistency last year, that you’re still missing against Lewis. Do you think today was a day when you missed this consistency again?
VB: Yes, so at the start, the best way I can describe it – I’m still slightly… I don’t know in detail what kind of lights went on but yes, I was looking at the start lights and, there was the five lights on, so really just waiting for them to go off, and just before when the lights went off, something either turned on or off, I believe it was the main page of the dash changed to different colour or something – a pretty bright colour. That’s all what needed for me to react. I thought the lights went off, and anyway, I was kind of half-seeing the start lights because of the Halo and the position I was, so yeah. It was an odd situation. That’s all what I can explain now. I’m sure we’re going to review onboards and what exactly happened and I will make sure that nothing is going to be changing on the dash any more just at a crucial moment – because we don’t want any distraction like that in a sensitive moment. That obviously made this weekend one of those inconsistent weekends that you try to avoid. But it has happened, so what can I do? Learn from this, move on, still very much in the game, it’s just one bad race and if you end up on the podium in a bad race for you, that’s still OK, and nothing is lost yet so there’s no point for me take any hit in the confidence on anything that I’m doing. I think otherwise it was a strong race from my side. Just a bad weekend. Not going to let it affect. Move on and try to gain some points in Silverstone.
Q: (Edd Straw – The Race) Question for Max. Obviously you said it’s been a difficult weekend. There’s car problems, parts going on and off. It’s clear the team’s looking for answers. Do you have those answers, and are you confident there’s a short-term development direction that can make this the car you know it can be – or are you concerned that, given the opposition you’re up against with a couple of great drivers and a great car at Mercedes, you’ve lost too much time and you’ve got too much to make up in a short amount of time?
MV: Yeah, I think it will be very hard, of course, to beat them but I think it’s important for us now to understand where it went wrong and then, of course, correct it and try to learn from it and try to get it back on track. And as soon, of course, as you head into the right direction, then of course very quickly you can put a good amount of parts on the car – but first we need to really understand where the main critical problem is in the car.
Max, how close have you got to understanding what that problem is?
MV: We’re getting there, yep!
Q: (Phil Duncan – PA) Question for Lewis. I know you probably won’t care but do you think there’s a danger of this Championship becoming a bit of a procession, given how well you’re driving and good the Mercedes car is this season?
LH: Not from my seat position, no! We’re working our arse off, and we’re going to continue to do that. Look, I mean, I don’t know what’s going to happen over these next races. Would I like more battle from other teams? Absolutely. But, that’s… I think the Red Bulls have been doing a great job and I think, I’m sure at some stage they’re going to make some improvements as we get into the season. The race that we had last year, for example, was fantastic, and I enjoy particularly battling with other teams. I did expect this weekend the Red Bulls to be very, very strong but I’m not quite sure what happened through qualifying, what it might be but, again, in the race, they definitely were stronger. But I think it was a pretty flawless effort from the team this weekend. In all areas, really delivered. So I think it was a little bit difficult for sure to compete when you are bringing that 100 per cent. But I’m hopeful we will still find some challenges up ahead. So, we shall see.
Q: (Alex Kalinauckas – Autosport) Question for Lewis. After the sort of reliability concerns early on, particularly race one and then obviously you had pressure from Max in race two in Austria, you’ve come here to Hungary, there was a massive gap in qualifying, everyone up to fifth is lapped, you had a pitstop in hand over Max to be able to take over at the end there, and a minute to Stroll in fourth place. So, have we seen everything that your 2020 car has to offer now?
LH: To this point of the year, yes. I definitely didn’t leave anything on the table today, I would say. The thing is, we all go back now and the way we work is that we… there’s a couple of minutes of everyone smiling and then everyone’s dead serious – if not already they’re dead serious. You get in there and sometimes you really have to ask them: “are you guys happy?” and then like: “Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.” And then we get back to work. We get our headsets on and we talk about the car. And when we talk about the car it’s not ‘everything was great’, it’s ‘this could be better, this could be better, that could be better.’ Valtteri is really great with his input and I think we try to push the team forwards, and everyone is just working to see how they can improve. No matter if there is or is not a gap between ourselves and another team, we just keep pushing and keep elevating and I think for me that’s the most impressive thing about this team.
Q: (Laurence Edmondson– ESPN) Valtteri, you were closing in on Max towards the end of that race after taking on new tyres, were you confident, when you started that final stint that you would catch him, and do you see it as a missed opportunity or was it actually quite good that you got as close as you did?
VB: Of course, I need to see more data from the race and the big picture of the race. I’m sure the team is going to analyse in theory what was the best thing to do. At that time it felt like a good thing to do because the tyre difference between me and Max was quite minimal. If I would not stop and everyone knows how difficult it is to overtake on this track so yeah, I was quite happy at that point, to stop, because I knew there was a bigger tyre difference at the end and it nearly worked. Obviously there were quite a few backmarkers I had to go through, lost a bit of time during that and in the end it was a matter of one extra lap or two laps whatever so pretty close. Yeah, you can see the big picture but yeah, it was obvious in the end I was quite a bit quicker, obviously thanks also to fresher tyres but that was not quite enough but everything will be analysed, for sure.
Q: Max, if I can just ask you: how concerned were you by Valtteri’s pace at the end of the race?
MV: I was a bit like last year… I was just trying to focus on my own pace. I can’t suddenly go half a second faster so I was just trying to manage the tyres. It was all looking quite good, of course but then at the end there was a bit of traffic and as soon as you get within like three seconds you get the disturbed and especially when you are on older tyres that’s not very nice so yeah, the last three laps were quite tricky but we managed to hang on so of course very happy with that. Yeah, the tyres still felt pretty OK towards the end.
Q: (Andrew Benson – BBC) To both Max and Lewis: Lewis you made something like eight seconds in three laps on the rest of the field and Max, you were up to third on the first lap. In tricky wet conditions like that, can you both explain how you judged the conditions, the risk versus reward, what’s going through your mind in those sort of situations and what you’re thinking about when you’re gaining that sort of advantage on other people?
LH: Yeah, good question I think. Every time we do those starts, sometimes people are on your tail and you feel like you’re on the limit and obviously you’re slightly wooden or the other person is finding more grip and then there are sometimes you just pull these gaps and the others are – I don’t know – caught sleeping or just not as comfortable, whatever you want to say. I think, me personally, it was, as I said, very, very slippery in those laps to the grid, really helped me gauge where the track was but already when we started that lap it dried quite a lot even from doing those laps to the grid and we waited, just in 15 minutes or whatever, it had dried quite a lot and there is this balance of going over the limit and easily risking it, it’s not a sprint, it’s a marathon race, you know, so you’ve really got to be cautious not to throw it all away and of course when you’re in the lead, you don’t have any turbulence from the car ahead so it makes it a little bit easier to manage it and try and find the right balance. When you’re behind other cars like Max was it’s a lot harder but we were just talking just now how great his start must have been to go down the outside of everyone and not… I need to watch it back because I don’t know what everyone else was doing on the inside to leave a gap completely open for Max but I know what that feels like… I think my first Grand Prix in Melbourne, everyone was on the inside and I went round the outside and so I empathise and know what it’s like to see that window and go for it and he obviously did a great job to recover from the laps to the grid.
MV: Yeah, I think it’s like a bit of feeling instinct. You can’t plan this before you go into a race like never. Every start is different. Of course you can look at previous starts or whatever, gives you an idea of what can happen and what can go wrong but every start is different. Of course, every year you’ve got different cars around you so just anticipating and then yeah, the start itself was pretty decent but then I at one point going to the inside so I knew of course there was going to be a bit of kind of a traffic jam into the corner so I was going round the outside, I know there is grip anyway, I think I’ve done enough wet laps around here that I know there is grip there and it worked out. Everybody was focusing on the inside, trying to block each other and yeah, I could just go around the outside. That also makes your race because if I would have stayed in seventh then suddenly you’re really in for a struggle to try and get past those cars so once I got into third I could see I was faster than the Racing Points so they boxed and I continued one more lap and I think that was a good call, to jump them. Because also you don’t want to go too quickly to a slick, you don’t want to be the first one and risk that when you are in the top three and so doing one extra lap… it never really hurts that bad.
Q: Max, on the topic of risk versus reward, your first flying lap through turn 12 after your incident, were you a little bit more reserved?
MV: No, no. Like the first lap you go round anyway looking a bit around, OK, everything is settled but I just had really cold tyres on the lap to the grid and I locked up and just went straight so I knew… OK, I’ll go a bit rearwards on the brake bias just to make sure that’s not going to happen again but it’s not like you’re going to drive through that corner like a granny, you know. You have to keep on pushing.
Q: (Alan Baldwin – Reuters) Lewis, you’re now leading the championship and you’re heading for home with two races at Silverstone. Normally that would be (in front of) tens of thousands of fans there, waiting to cheer you on, but that’s not going to happen this year. You spoke at the beginning of the week about what a lift it was just to have a few fans at the airport waiting there cheering you. I just wondered if you could speak about what it’s going to be like at Silverstone, home race, no fans, what you can maybe give the fans in way of compensation?
LH: I don’t want to be a debby downer or be negative but it is, unfortunate, the circumstances around the world. I’m just so grateful that we are back at work and we are so fortunate, all of us here, to be back at work and have our jobs and be able to compete again, but absolutely, the atmosphere for me, it’s night and day different. Here, it’s usually great weather most of the time and then there’s such a fantastic crowd here and obviously Silverstone, particularly, is just… there’s nothing like it. The whole year… it’s the highlight of my year, the support is insane. It grows every year and I get to interact with the fans differently on that weekend and it’s such an honour and privilege to be able to perform well and win a Grand Prix in your home country. I think people will be watching and I definitely know that the fans that go every year are going to miss it terribly. We did a test there before the first race and it was so empty and that’s what we’re going to experience when we go back but we’ve just got to remain focused and not get distracted by that or get down by it either. I’ve also felt that fans give you extra time because they just give you so much energy and it really lifts you up and you’re bubbling, you’re walking on a cloud. Obviously we won’t have that but I do interact with my fans and I don’t know what the solution is moving forward to have a better way of interacting with them, particularly during this time but I guess that’s something I will try to discover as we go along. But I just always want to send positive messages up to my fans and then to really encourage people out there. I see so many people who are not taking Covid period as seriously as others and some are really taking it seriously and I just want to encourage everyone to continue to… hopefully, I think, we are doing really great as a sport, showing everyone’s wearing a mask. There’s for sure, more we can do because there’s probably a little bit too much waste with all these re-useable masks but it’s great to see everyone taking the precautions, keeping the gaps, the distances and we have to encourage the rest of the world to do the same.
Q: (Alex Kalinauckas – Autosport) Max, just going back to the very very start when you were on the grid and getting in the car again after the incident. What had you been told about what needed to be repaired, and what were you thinking of doing on the warm-up lap, just to make sure everything was OK and obviously how it felt around the first lap?
MV: Yeah, like the track rod was broken I think, the pull rod was broken so not the easiest things to quickly change but they did an amazing job to do that.
LH: They did that in 12 minutes?!
MV: Yeah, 12 minutes they managed to repair that, which is crazy. I was sitting in the car, I could see the mechanics screaming at each other like ten seconds, five seconds, put the wheel on, everything. I don’t know if final piece of tape on the suspension to make sure it was sticking. I put my thumbs up and they were like, yeah, yeah, it’s fixed, so I said OK, well then here we go, let’s see. I was doing the formation laps, I was checking the wheels, I was like this feels alright, yep and during the race, nothing happened, nothing weird happens so it was fully repaired. So yeah, crazy.
Ends -

It’s quite humbling to be honest, says Hamilton
DRIVERS
1 – Lewis HAMILTON (Mercedes)
2 – Valtteri BOTTAS (Mercedes)
3 – Lance STROLL (Racing Point)TRACK INTERVIEWS
(Conducted by Paul Di Resta)
Q: Lewis you had a pretty dominant pole position last weekend in Austria and you’ve come here and, it’s just flashed up on the screen, you’ve scored your 90th pole position in F1. What does that mean?
Lewis HAMILTON: Crazy. I have to pinch myself. It just doesn’t register. It’s quite humbling to be honest. I gess to work with an incredible group of people, without whom I wouldn’t be able to have the opportunity to do so. So massively thankful to the everyone back home and the guys here who do such an amazing job. And Valtteri doesn’t make it easy for me at all. It requires absolute perfection when it comes to doing laps and qualifying like that is one of the things I enjoy doing most.
Q: Watching onboard the car looks on rails. You’re connected with aren’t you?
LH: I’m definitely connected with it. She’s definitely not on rails. I’m sure it looks like that compared to some other people but it was nicely hooked up today and not far off the rails.
Q: You’re going for your eighth win at a single event to match Michael Schumacher. You must be pretty confident you can achieve that given where you’re starting?
LH: Oh man, it’s a long run down to Turn 1 so nothing is a given here. We’ve just got to do the work this evening and ultimately I’ve got to deliver on the start tomorrow. It is quite a long race and we don’t know what this weather is going to do fort us tomorrow but for sure I’ll have my head down and I’ll be focusing as hard as I can to bring home a 1-2 for the team.
Q: Valtteri, all the way to the end there, you just out missed by a tenth but I guess you must be pretty happy to qualify on the front row?
Valtteri BOTTAS: Yeah, of course, I knew, I saw in FP3 that it was going to be a close battle with Lewis at least and I think as a team we were again on a really strong level and pretty far from other teams, which is good for us. My laps were OK. At the end the Q3 lap was actually really good but I just couldn’t go faster and Lewis did a great job today to get the pole, as always. It’s going to be a bit of a drag race between us into Turn 1 so I look forward to that.
Q: You’re still the championship leader and you’re alongside him and the run to Turn 1 is important. Is that your best tactic tomorrow, to get a clean run to Turn 1?
VB: Yeah, of course, if you look at the points it’s a good situation but what I need is to win races to maintain that. That’s going to be the only goal tomorrow and I’m sure the first lap will be interesting.
Q: Lance, congratulations. The car has looked very good this weekend. I guess you must be pretty delighted with where you are. You’ve showed signs this year of being up the front, it’s not worked out, but you got the job done today?
Lance STROLL: Yeah, thank you. Very happy at the moment. That car was really strong all the way through qualifying throughout the whole weekend really. We’ve had the pace and it was just about piecing it together during that qualifying session. So, really great job by all the guys. I’m really pleased with the session and now sights set on tomorrow and I’m going to try to grab some big points.
Q: I got a bit nervous in Q2 when you went back out on a set of mediums. You must have as well as the times were pretty closed.
LS: For sure, it was a gamble, no doubt. It was a gamble but that’s going to put us in a good position tomorrow, so I’m really happy that I got through on the mediums and my lap at the end really felt like it was spot on, so it always feels great when you put it together at the end qualifying.
PRESS CONFERENCE
Q: Lewis, congratulations. What a Q3 session for you. 1.1 seconds faster than last year’s pole. How did that final lap feel?
LH: It felt great. In general, qualifying altogether felt really solid. The team have done an incredible job. Valtteri and I, we owe it really to this great group of people back at the factory and here who are just constantly pushing the bar higher. I’m really proud to work with them and to get to drive a car like this around the track is really awesome. Turn 11 was really flat for us today, which is quite insane, the speeds we go through there. It’s quite impressive to see how far the technology has advanced. Valtteri did a great job today, applying a lot of pressure, but Hungary has always been a good hunting ground for me. But I’m aware that qualifying isn’t everything here and it’s a long race and a long run down to Turn 1. I want to say a big congrats to Lance as well, it’s awesome to have the three Mercedes up here.
Q: Lewis, where are the gains from last year, where does the lap feel differently particularly?
LH: The high speed particularly is quite a lot different, so Turn 4, Turn 8 and particularly Turn 11. But it’s a little bit everywhere I would say. The efficiency of the car through the low and medium-speed corners is definitely better than last year but the high speed particularly, as I was saying, you can nearly take it flat, whereas before it was a little lift.
Q: Valtteri, great lap and so close to Lewis at the end. Little bit of frustration from you, how do you feel?
VB: Yeah, for sure. I saw in practice that it was going to be a close battle between us in qualifying and practice three didn’t feel too bad. To be honest in the beginning of the qualifying until the end of Q3 I was struggling in the first sector mainly, so Turn 1 braking, I wasn’t so comfortable there, so I lost a little bit of time. Turn 2 also, I struggled a little bit with snappiness from the rear end of the car. I think when the track improved the car was starting to come together and at the end I have to say the lap was pretty good actually, so I thought I might have a chance with that lap really, but Lewis was just a tenth or under quicker so ultimately he did a better job in qualifying and that’s why he’s on pole.
Q: How’s the long run pace of the car?
VB: I think it’s pretty strong from the small amount of data we managed to gather in practice one. Of course we missed a lot of the running practice two so a lot of question marks there but I think overall the package we have should be good in the race as well.
Q: Lance, a fantastic qualifying session for you and the team. Can we start talking about your expectations coming into the session. What were you expecting?
LS: I gotta say well done to the whole team for bringing this package to Hungary. I think we have been very competitive from FP1, right from the first lap. The car has come such a long way from where we were this time last year. We has a 17.5 in qualifying last year. Of course there are some track differences this year and all, but we improved more than three seconds from our qualifying time last year, which is really good. So hats off to them. They’ve been working extremely hard at developing this car and brining this package to the first race. So really happy. My qualifying overall was really good. My expectations? I didn’t really have too many expectations coming into qualifying. I knew there were a few things I had to work on going into qualifying. I wasn’t really piecing it together during free practice and throughout qualifying I was improving a few corners and then at the end on the last lap I pieced it all together and it was really a good lap. I’m really pleased. Qualifying is always fun when you nail it at the end and that’s what happened today.
VIDEO CONFERENCE
Q: (Andrew Benson – BBC) Lewis, is this the best car you’ve ever driven, and can you give some insight into how the team do it. How do they keep producing these incredible cars, year after year, moving forward in this way?
LH: I don’t really remember driving the last car [to Valtteri] Do you remember driving the last car? Ultimately, it is an evolution of last year’s car so, without doubt it is a better can than last year. We go through a whole season and during the season Valtteri and I work closely together to point out the issues and the limitations with these cars and we work closely with our engineers to advance it and, with the designers, we have quite a lot of meetings back at the factory together to make sure we leave no stone unturned. There’s no big-headedness or ignorance between any of the engineers and between us. There’s just a real transparent discussion and no idea is too big or bold. We just continuous push at that. I think we continue to inspire each other and then the guys back at the factory are hungry. They want to break down… continue to raise the bar, and they are the best at what they do. It’s impressive to see each year. There’s an incredible amount of confidence that I have in them, naturally from these years, and I think we go from strength to strength as our relationship grows, as our understanding of each other, as how we work, continues to improve.
Q: Lewis, can I just throw that question to Valtteri as well. How do Mercedes keep doing it?
VB: I think Lewis really answered it very well. Working very united and so many talented people. And when the team works very synchronised, the results are going to be good. Obviously it comes also from the top, how the team is led. Different people in the correct positions makes a big difference. I think as a team I can see everyone just peaking, weekend after weekend, year after year, which is really enjoyable and really impressive to be part of.
Q: (Christian Menath – motorsport-magazin.com) Question for Lance – actually two questions. Your qualifying records haven’t been great the last years but every single time the car is good it seems like you come alive as well. Do you have an explanation for that? And secondly, it seems like you’re in a league of your own as Racing Points. Do you expect to be allowed to race each other tomorrow?
LS: Yeah, I mean, I’ve driven a pretty bad car the first couple of years in F1 and it didn’t give me a lot of confidence. So I struggled as a driver to drive around some of the limitations. Last year, as well. Last year was a big learning year for me. I learned a lot about myself and about my strengths and my weaknesses. And I just worked on them over the course of last season and coming into this season. And that ultimately leads to better results and better qualifyings. So yeah, that pretty much sums it up. I think it’s just been some hard work away from the track and just learning on my end of what I’ve got to do better and how I can be better, how I can get more out of myself. So, that’s really been most of it. And then yeah, in terms of where we stand relative to the others. Like I said earlier, big hats off to everyone at the team, everyone at the factory for designing this car and yeah, we’ve come such a long way from where we were last year, that it’s really amazing and it’s really a lot of fun to drive this car, I must say. It’s a whole different experience to last year’s car. It puts a big smile on my face, for sure. Doing a quali lap around here, when the balance is right and you’re driving. It’s coming together, it’s a real flow and it was a lot of fun out there today.
Q: And Lance, part two of that question. Will you be allowed to race your team-mate tomorrow?
LS: Yes. He’s starting fourth? Yeah, I guess so. Everyone’s entitled to race out there. I hope we get to race hard. He’s going to fight for the podium, I’m going to fight for the podium. Haven’t been on the podium in, it’s been like, two or three years, so I’m hoping we can have a good start and a good race. It’s been a while since I stood on a podium. I could do that again one of these days, that was nice.
Q: (Edd Straw – The Race) Question for Lewis and Valtteri. How much of a shock is it to see how much Red Bull are struggling, and to look at the timesheets and see Max Verstappen 1.4s down, given they were expected to give you a bit more of a fight this weekend?
LH: I didn’t know that was the case. That is a really big gap. Definitely wasn’t expecting them to be as off as they have been this weekend – because this has been a… you saw the pace of them last year. This is not a power circuit, it is more about the car, the mechanical grip and aero package. We would have definitely thought that they would have… I thought they had a better package than today’s results show. I don’t know if they’ve all had great laps or not but still, either way, that’s a big, big gap.
Valtteri?
VB: Very surprising for sure. I was expecting them to be maybe potentially closer here than in Austria. Also, I don’t know the details about how their session went. Was it nothing clean or was their other issues? But the whole weekend they’ve not really been that close – so yeah, just surprising. Obviously I don’t know the details why.
Q: (Luke Smith – Autosport) Question for Lance, congratulations on a really good result. You said about you drove poor cars in the early part of your career and I guess every F1 driver wants to be in the best-possible machinery to really prove what they can do, particularly on a weekend when there’s been a lot of discussion about what Racing Point’s line-up will look like in 2021, how big of a statement is this for you to have made, qualifying so highly and being in the mix for a podium tomorrow?
LS: I’m not too bothered about that. I’m just happy for myself and for my team for everyone that works so hard, week-in, week-out to achieve the best possible result. The rest is just kind of irrelevant. I’m just happy about the result today and we’ll see what the future holds. Not sure.
Q: (Dieter Rencken – Racing Lines/Racefans.net) To both Mercedes drivers: when you have a dominant car as you currently have, which makes it a lot easier to pull out top drawer performances, does this in any way devalue your ability and in turn, does it in any way affect your market value?
VB: I’m not really a professional of market values and I don’t really think about those things. I just want to drive the car as fast as I can and I want to achieve my goals. Obviously the goal for me today was to be on pole position; I missed it by a tenth or less so I didn’t reach my goal, but that’s my (unclear) I just think about that really, nothing else, but I wouldn’t see why it would devalue Lewis’s pole today or my P2. Obviously, yes, we have a gap to the other teams but I think between me and Lewis we are really pushing each other to the next level as well and with the fine details, we are both able to find all the time session by session. For sure that helps, you know. I don’t think about that really.
LH: I think, at the end of the day, we perform at the highest level that there is here in Formula 1. We still go out there and it’s not that easy for us, it’s just a different platform of course, if our car handles perhaps better than some people’s. But we’re not just drivers, the drivers work with our brands and our image helps also bring in funds which enables us to do what we do. We’ve got a great marketing team, we’ve got a fantastic sponsorship team, we’ve got the best in every department, basically, and without having the best in every department, we probably wouldn’t be where we are today so no, I don’t think it devalues us, I think it strengthens us as a team.
Q: And Lewis, how good was what you did behind the wheel today? You’ve had a lot of pole positions, this was number 90 but was this one of your better ones?
LH: Honestly, I don’t remember all the laps I’ve done. Every time we go into qualifying, I’m always trying to raise the bar. Obviously Valtteri gets faster and faster as the years go on and the challenge gets tougher and tougher so I have to remain focused, I have to continue to pull out the best laps I could possibly deliver in order to stay ahead of him because he’s driving exceptionally well. Obviously the rain hit qualifying, the last one was I think… those are the days that you can really show your capabilities. I think today was a solid lap, absolutely very very happy with how qualifying went and obviously it’s very close. There’s always improvements that you can make; it’s very very surreal to have the… it doesn’t seem real to have 90 poles.
Q: (Abhishek Takle – Mid-day) To Lewis and Valtteri: Mercedes have proven their dominance at two different types of circuit. Do you see the title battle staying out as a fight between you two now, especially given that you’re going to have fewer races this season than you normally would, which gives your rivals less time to make up any ground on you?
LH: Whatever the case, it’s intense. We are performing at the absolute maximum of our capabilities, we’re really right on the ragged edge. Yes we’ve got a fast car but we’re on the ragged edge of that and we’re throwing that thing round. We’d like to believe that anyone else can do it so that’s what we’re going to continue to do. It’s very close between us. The great thing about Valtteri and I as team partners, we really help push the team together in the same direction. Valtteri is not asking for one thing and I’m asking for another; there’s great harmony within the team because of the respect that we have and that just adds a bonus to our working environment.
VB: Yeah, I think the question for now, of course we’ve seen… we’ve performed really well on two different types of tracks. Obviously it’s still early days in the season but of course we’re going to be in a strong position and we look at the situation, I think the main (fight for the) title is going to be between me and Lewis but yeah, I think we need to just really focus on our performance and of course you never know, some teams might improve more and so we just keep pushing and we’ll see but for now it looks like that.
Q: Valtteri, how exciting is it for you that it might be a two horse race between you and Lewis?
VB: Well, I’m excited. I can’t wait to have more races and race and improve and get good results and whether it’s just the title fight between one driver one car, it’s how it is. If it’s more, that’s also fine.
Q: (Alex Kalinauckas – Autosport) To both Mercedes drivers: how close do you expect Racing Point to get to you in the race, especially considering how quick that car looks as they came through the field at the last race?
LH: It’s impressive to see them improving and getting on top of the car. It’s incredible to see them on the second row. It’s great to have a mix-up, a little bit more of a mix-up. They’ve shown great performance in the last two races so I’m really excited for them, happy for the drivers and looking forward to seeing what they can do. Fight them as hard as we can tomorrow. We are racing together so expect them to be on form.
Q: (Phil Duncan – PA) Lewis, I know you’ve sort of spoken about the 90 poles but it’s now 22 more than any other driver managed. More than Schumacher, 25 more than Senna. It’s a staggering number in many ways. Can you tell us more what it means to you?
LH: You know I’m not one for numbers. As I said, when I was driving into the pit lane and I saw 90 up there, I completely forgot that I even had 89 before and I don’t really know where the second person is so but of course I’ve been living my dream since I’ve been in Formula 1 and today it just doesn’t seem real. But what I have to continue to remind myself is that every single weekend I still have to deliver, I cannot just show up and they won’t climb on their own. I have to come here and do the due diligence, I have to do the homework, I have to continue to push the engineers, in the tyre department, in the engine department, the vehicle dynamics, all over and really try and extract the maximum from them, because otherwise this guy’s going to catch up. Obviously he’s right next to me so yeah, I think that’s the thing that makes me most happy is that coming into a weekend, not always delivering one hundred percent which it needs, one hundred percent to beat Valtteri. It’s incredible. -

Hamilton takes pole with a Hungaroring record
Budapest, 18 July 2020: Lewis Hamilton powered to a record-equalling seventh career Hungarian Grand Prix pole position as he smashed the track record at the Hungaroring to beat team-mate Valtteri Bottas by a tenth of a second. The Briton’s blistering final Q3 time of 1:13.447 was enough to hand him his 90thcareer pole and to match Michael Schumacher’s benchmark at the Budapest circuit. Land Stroll finished third for Racing Point and the young Canadian will line up alongside fourth-place team-mate Sergio Pérez.
In Q1 Bottas set the early benchmark at 1:15.484, with Hamilton a tenth further back. Max Verstappen’s ’s first run yielded a lap of 1:16.136 that initially left him sixth, while Alex Albon was tenth thanks to a time of 1:16.683.
Hamilton lowered the marker with his second run, which stopped the clock at 1:15.420. That put him six hundredths of a second clear of Bottas and three tenths ahead of third-placed Lance Stroll, with the Canadian’s Racing Point team-mate Sergio Pérez fourth ahead of Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc and Verstappen .
Further back, Albon improved to 1:16.428, though as others also made gains he dropped to P11. Verstappen then dropped to seventh when Daniel Ricciardo put in a decent lap of 1:16.111.
With three minutes remaining, George Russell put in a good lap of 1:15 585 to jump to third and that pushed Albon down into the drop zone. Russell’s excellent lap sparked a frenzy of activity as teams sent out their drivers to make the most of the improving track. Albon jumped to P7 but eventually progressed in P11 and Verstappen also found safety with P8 in the final runs.
At the top of the order, though, was Racing Point’s Pérez with the Mexican leading the way with a lap of 1:14.681. Team-mate Lance Still was two tenths slower in P2 ahead of Hamilton and McLaren’s Carlos Sainz and Lando Norris. Sebastian Vettel was sixth ahead of Bottas and Verstappen .
Eliminated at the end of Q1 were Haas’ Kevin Magnussen, AlphaTauri’s Daniil Kvyat, the second Haas of Romain Grosjean and the Alfa Romeo cars of Antonio Giovinazzi and Kimi Räikkönen.
The top four from Q1 all went out on medium tyres at the start of the second session, as did the Renaults of Daniel Ricciardo and Esteban Ocon. And Hamilton quickly rose top of the timesheet with an impressive lap of 1:14.261. Bottas was almost three tenths off that pace in P2, with Vettel third thanks to a soft-tyre time of 1:15.131 and Verstappen lay P4 0.017s behind the German, though he was unhappy with the handling of his RB16.
Albon was struggling, however, and after the first runs the Thai driver found himself in P13 with a time of 1:15.715 – 1.4s off the pace and almost six tenths off Verstappen . Also in trouble were 11thplace Leclerc who was ahead of Russell and Albon, while Ocon held P14 ahead of Latifi.
In the final runs both Mercedes drivers went out on track on soft tyres but with no real threat from behind both Bottas and Hamilton backed out of their laps. The Racing Point drivers opted for a second set of mediums and initially it looked as though that strategy might be risky as Norris jumped to P3 and Leclerc then vaulted out of the danger zone to usurp him.
However, AlphaTauri’s Pierre Gasly was reporting an engine issue, removing one potential threat and then Albon failed to make any improvement on his first run time. Complaining about traffic, the Thai driver was ultimately eliminated in P13.
Verstappen , though, made the most of the final run and he went through to Q3 in P3 behind the Mercedes drivers and ahead of Leclerc. Norris took fifth place ahead of Vettel, while Stroll went through on medium tyres in P7. Perez, who finished ninth behind Sainz, also went through on the yellow-banded tyres, while Gasly made it to Q3 in P10 despite his engine woes.
Hamilton led the way in the opening runs of Q3 with the Briton setting another new record time of 1:13.613. That put him more than three tenths clear of Bottas and Stroll. Verstappen , meanwhile, slotted into P4 with an opening time 1:14.849. That left him a tenth ahead of Norris, while Sainz was sixth ahead of the Ferraris of Vettel and Leclerc. Pérez was ninth after his lap time was deleted for running wide, while Gasly did not take part because of engine issues.
Hamilton went even faster in his final run to seal a record-equalling seventh pole position at the Hungaroring with a time of 1:13.447. Bottas got close with his final flyer and the Finn was able to claim a front row place with a time just one tenth behind his team-mate’s.
Behind them, third place for Stroll amounted to his best qualifying result since P2 at the Italian Grand Prix in 2017 and the Canadian took the front of row three 0.168s ahead of Perez. Row three will be filled by the Ferraris of Vettel and Leclerc with the four-time champion ahead by just six hundredths of a second.
Verstappen ’s problems continued though and though he went out for a final flyer there was no improvement in poise or pace with the RB16 and the Dutchman qualified in P7 thanks to his opening run time. He’ll start the race on row four, alongside McLaren’s Lando Norris who finished ahead of team-mate Carlos Sainz and Gasly.
2020 FIA Formula 1 Hungarian Grand Prix – Qualifying
1 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 1:13.447 6 214.734
2 Valtteri Bottas Mercedes 1:13.554 0.107 6 214.422
3 Lance Stroll Racing Point/Mercedes 1:14.377 0.930 6 212.049
4 Sergio Pérez Racing Point/Mercedes 1:14.545 1.098 6 211.571
5 Sebastian Vettel Ferrari 1:14.774 1.327 6 210.923
6 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 1:14.817 1.370 6 210.802
7 Max Verstappen Red Bull/Honda 1:14.849 1.402 6 210.712
8 Lando Norris McLaren/Renault 1:14.966 1.519 5 210.383
9 Carlos Sainz McLaren/Renault 1:15.027 1.580 5 210.212
10 Pierre Gasly AlphaTauri/Honda 1:15.508 1.247 5 208.873
11 Daniel Ricciardo Renault 1:15.661 1.400 6 208.450
12 George Russell Williams/Mercedes 1:15.698 1.437 5 208.348
13 Alexander Albon Red Bull/Honda 1:15.715 1.454 6 208.302
14 Esteban Ocon Renault 1:15.742 1.481 6 208.227
15 Nicholas Latifi Williams/Mercedes 1:16.544 2.283 5 206.046
16 Kevin Magnussen Haas/Ferrari 1:16.152 1.471 9 207.106
17 Daniil Kvyat AlphaTauri/Honda 1:16.204 1.523 9 206.965
18 Romain Grosjean Haas/Ferrari 1:16.407 1.726 8 206.415
19 Antonio Giovinazzi Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 1:16.506 1.825 12 206.148
20 Kimi Räikkönen Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 1:16.614 1.933 12 205.857 -

Bottas tops FP3; Sergio Perez third fastest
Budapest, 18 July 2020: Valtteri Bottas topped the final practice for the Hungarian Grand Prix, edging out team-mate Lewis Hamilton by four-hundredths of a second and beating third-placed Sergio Pérez of Racing Point by just under two-tenths of a second as Mercedes-powered cars took the top three spots in FP3, ahead of the Hungarian Grand Prix, the third round of the FIA Formula 1 world championship here.
A busy opening phase, in which teams attempted to make up for the time lost in a wet FP2 yesterday afternoon, saw top spot swap hands regularly with Ferrari’s Sebastian Vettel in P1 early on thanks to a soft-tyre lap of 1:17.639.
Red Bull Racing’s Max Verstappen then moved ahead with a lap of 1:17.033 set on the medium tyres but Bottas and Hamilton took over with Styria winner Hamilton going quickest with a lap of 1:16.472.
Pushing to match the pace of the Mercedes pair, Verstappen then spun in Turn 12, though he was able to quickly regain control and he managed to avoid damage. Hamilton too went wide at the tricky corner and has his time deleted.
When the move was made to new softs for qualifying runs it was Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc who made the first move and the Monegasque racer took top spot with a lap of 1:15.781 in a much more competitive looking Ferrari.
Bottas then moved backl to P1 with a good lap of 1:15.437 and after Hamilton was forced to abandon his first attempt and then failed to make significant improvements on his next run, the Finn’s lap remained the benchmark until the chequered flag. H
Sergio Perez put his Racing Point third, which shunted Leclerc to fourth, but the Ferrari driver’s pace was good enough to allow him to split the Racing Points, with Lance Stroll fifth at the flag. Verstappen finished sixth, though the Red Bull driver ended the session 0.647 off Bottas’ pace.
Lando Norris was seventh for McLaren ahead of Vettel and Pierre Gasly, while Daniel Ricciardo rounded out the top 10.
2020 FIA Formula 1 Hungarian Grand Prix – Free Practice 3
1 Valtteri Bottas Mercedes 1:15.437 18 209.069
2 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 1:15.479 0.042 20 208.953
3 Sergio Pérez Racing Point/Mercedes 1:15.598 0.161 16 208.624
4 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 1:15.781 0.344 19 208.120
5 Lance Stroll Racing Point/Mercedes 1:16.033 0.596 15 207.430
6 Max Verstappen Red Bull/Honda 1:16.084 0.647 18 207.291
7 Lando Norris McLaren/Renault 1:16.193 0.756 18 206.995
8 Sebastian Vettel Ferrari 1:16.351 0.914 18 206.567
9 Pierre Gasly AlphaTauri/Honda 1:16.453 1.016 20 206.291
10 Daniel Ricciardo Renault 1:16.508 1.071 14 206.143
11 Carlos Sainz McLaren/Renault 1:16.545 1.108 21 206.043
12 Alexander Albon Red Bull/Honda 1:16.582 1.145 19 205.943
13 Esteban Ocon Renault 1:16.706 1.269 20 205.611
14 George Russell Williams/Mercedes 1:16.847 1.410 23 205.233
15 Romain Grosjean Haas/Ferrari 1:16.866 1.429 15 205.183
16 Kevin Magnussen Haas/Ferrari 1:17.086 1.649 14 204.597
17 Daniil Kvyat AlphaTauri/Honda 1:17.292 1.855 15 204.052
18 Antonio Giovinazzi Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 1:17.496 2.059 20 203.515
19 Kimi Räikkönen Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 1:17.527 2.090 25 203.433
20 Nicholas Latifi Williams/Mercedes 1:17.650 2.213 17 203.111 -

Vettel sets fastest time in FP2, ahead of Bottas
Budapest, 17 July 2020: Ferrari’s Sebastian Vettel set the fastest time of a wet second practice at the Hungaroring, beating Mercedes’ Valtteri Bottas by just under three-tenths of a second in a session that saw only 13 drivers set a time,
After an overcast opening session in the morning, a steady rain began to fall in the run-up to the afternoon session and with no sign of improvement on the immediate horizon, the first third of the session was quiet as teams stayed in their garages.
Sergio Pérez was the first man to set a time, just before the half hour mark, and the Mexican slotted into P1 with a lap of 1:43.862s set on extreme wet tyres.
He was joined on the track shortly afterwards by team-mate Lance Stroll who lowered the benchmark to 1:42.380. That remained the top time for a long spell but eventually Vettel eclipsed the time with a lap of 1m41.564s, also on the extreme wets. He then chipped away at the time to lower it 1:40.464s at the one-hour mark. It would remain the target for the rest of the session.
Bottas joined the action just after the hour and he immediately moved into second place. The Finn later tried intermediate tyres but did not improve.
The championship leader’s team-mate Lewis Hamilton took to the track shortly after Bottas emerged, but the Styrian Grand Prix winner put in just a single installation lap on inters and did not set a time.
Third place in the session wen to McLaren’s Carlos Sainz took the placing in the last third of the session. Stroll and Pérez finished fourth and fifth, ahead of AlphaTauri’s Pierre Gasly, who had missed the morning session due to a suspected power unit issue.
Red Bull’s Max Verstappen made a late run on wets to take P7 with the Dutchman setting a time of 1:42.820s. Haas’ Romain Grosjean and Alfa Romeo’s Kimi Räikkönen were eighth and ninth respectively and the top 10 order was completed by Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc The remaining drivers to set times were Antonio Giovinazzi, Lando Norris and Daniil Kvyat.
2020 FIA Formula 1 Hungarian Grand Prix – Free Practice 2
1 Sebastian Vettel Ferrari 1:40.464 12 156.987
2 Valtteri Bottas Mercedes 1:40.736 0.272 5 156.563
3 Carlos Sainz McLaren/Renault 1:41.784 1.320 6 154.951
4 Lance Stroll Racing Point/Mercedes 1:42.380 1.916 6 154.049
5 Sergio Pérez Racing Point/Mercedes 1:42.470 2.006 5 153.914
6 Pierre Gasly AlphaTauri/Honda 1:42.588 2.124 7 153.737
7 Max Verstappen Red Bull/Honda 1:42.820 2.356 4 153.390
8 Romain Grosjean Haas/Ferrari 1:43.335 2.871 6 152.625
9 Kimi Räikkönen Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 1:43.471 3.007 16 152.425
10 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 1:43.725 3.261 10 152.052
11 Antonio Giovinazzi Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 1:44.411 3.947 9 151.053
12 Lando Norris McLaren/Renault 1:46.000 5.536 5 148.788
13 Daniil Kvyat AlphaTauri/Honda 1:47.422 6.958 7 146.819
14 Esteban Ocon Renault 1
15 Daniel Ricciardo Renault 1
16 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 1
17 Nicholas Latifi Williams/Mercedes 2
18 George Russell Williams/Mercedes 2
19 Alexander Albon Red Bull/Honda 3
20 Kevin Magnussen Haas/Ferrari 1 -

I love back-to-back races, says Hamilton
Spielberg, 12 July 2020: The top-3 drivers who attended the FIA Sunday press conference are:
1 – Lewis HAMILTON (Mercedes); 2 – Valtteri BOTTAS (Mercedes); 3 – Max VERSTAPPEN (Red Bull Racing)
TRACK INTERVIEWS (Conducted by Martin Brundle )
Q: Lewis, congratulations, normal service resumes: pole position, victory. You had it covered today.
Lewis HAMILTON: Firstly, I just want to say a big thank you to my team and everyone back at the factory. This has been… what a weird year it is but it is great to be back up here and to be driving and to be driving with this kind of performance. The team did a fantastic job with the strategy and then it was just for me to keep it together, stay off the kerbs and bring it home.
Q: You didn’t quite get the point for fastest lap, that went to Carlos Sainz in the McLaren on a fresh set of tyres, but you had to look after the car a little bit through the race did you?
LH: Yeah, well I tried to get the fastest lap but of course on 40 lap-old mediums I wasn’t going to get it over someone on new, fresh tyres. But that’s OK, I’m so grateful to be back in first place and honestly it feels like a long time coming, obviously since the last race last year, and to come back this weekend after a difficult weekend last week, this is a great, great step forwards.
Q: It was certainly a champion’s drive and we get to race again just next weekend don’t we?
LH: I love this. I love back-to-backs. Can we just go back-to-back all year long. I might need a holiday in between though!
Q: Valtteri, you’re still leading the world championship, that’s the good news, but Lewis had the pace today.
Valtteri BOTTAS: Yeah, Lewis started from the pole, he had a good start, so he could really control the race and there was not so much happening as last weekend. But from my side, I think today was damage limitation, so still got good points, still leading, so it’s not too bad. Yesterday was not ideal so that’s why no 25 points today.
Q: A good fight with Max. You got past him, he got past you, but eventually you got the job done in the end. Exciting at Turn 4 there?
VB: Yeah, it was a good battle with him. Obviously I think I had quite a bit more pace than him at the end as we extended the first stint, but yeah racing closely is always good fun.
Q: So you can leave Austria and head to Hungary very satisfied?
VB: Could have been more satisfied but it’s been a not bad first couple of races so looking forward to next week.
Q: Great drive Max, you tried your best to split the Mercedes and gave it everything you had.
Max VERSTAPPEN: Yeah, I tried but we’re just a bit too slow, so I pushed as hard as I could and also when Valtteri was trying to pass me I tried to make it a bit difficult. I knew he was going to get by one lap later but it was at least fun because the rest of the race was pretty boring. A podium is good but still a lot of work to do.
Q: You got points on the board. Can you find any speed between now and next weekend? Have you got any goodies, any presents coming in the car?
MV:I don’t know yet. We’ll look into it and then we’ll see next week.
PRESS CONFERENCE
Q: Lewis, many congratulations. It’s been a pretty dominant couple of days for you with that pole position yesterday and the win today. Now, races are never as easy as they look, or are they? Were there any concerns for you today?
LH: Thank you. It’s never easy. It was a challenge this weekend, especially with the Red Bulls really picking up their pace on Friday and we obviously had some sort of issue that we were able to rectify from Friday afternoon. Nothing major. And also, the team did a fantastic job over the week to improve on some of the issues we had in the last race. Today, being able to attack a little bit more and really utilise the car… I think the Red Bulls…. well Max, was quite quick today, so it just shows that they’re definitely not a pushover. I think they’ve done a fantastic job so we’ve got to stay on our toes. We’ve got to go to places like Hungary, where the shorter Red Bull is usually very, very strong. Otherwise, it’s been a great two days and a great way to bounce back from a difficult weekend in the first weekend, where Valtteri was incredibly strong and just a big, big thank you to everyone back at the factory and everyone here who has stayed. The team has stayed all week and been in every single day, not leaving a stone unturned, so that’s a huge confidence boost.
Q: Valtteri, P4 on the grid to P2 at the flag. You mentioned damage limitation earlier. How was the performance of the car?
VB: I think the performance of the car was great, obviously yesterday as well I should have been stronger. There was obviously some things affecting the performance but even from my side the lap was not that clean and I should have been at least P2, so that’s why in some things I’m going to have a look in the mirror why today was a bit more difficult and could have been possibly a good battle with Lewis. But I think, from where I started and how the race went, I think it felt like I and us as a team, we could really maximise everything, so being able to, as a team, get the first 1-2 of the year, only the second race, is obviously really impressive. Like Lewis said, I’m just really thankful for everyone. It’s a privilege to drive for this team. But, of course, I’m not 100 per cent happy because I didn’t win. That’s how it goes as a driver but Lewis did a great job this weekend and… yeah… still points-wise it’s still early days and everything is looking good, so that’s why I can’t wait for the future.
Q: Max, you were carrying some front wing damage for a large proportion of that race. How much was that compromising the performance of the car?
MV: I don’t know, I didn’t look in the data. I was just pushing as hard as I could to try and stay with them, y’know? But clearly, it’s still not good enough. The gaps, compared to the guys behind were massive. I was a bit shocked. I tried everything I could but it’s still not enough. So, we’ve still got some work to do but to bounce back from zero points last week to a podium now is a good start – but I think, as a team, we want to win and we want to fight for the Championship and if you want to fight for the Championship of course you need to win races, so yeah, we need to look into it. I think we were losing quite a bit on the straight as well. So it’s a bit of both at the moment. Just need to keep on working harder to try and close the gap.
VIDEO CONFERENCE
Q: (Alex Kalinauckas – Autosport) Lewis, how much was the gearbox issue over the kerbs, how much did that affect you again today and did you have to drive within yourself as a result – or were you able to push flat-out throughout?
LH: No, it wasn’t a problem today. The guys did a great job during the week, understanding what the issue was. It was nothing particularly major but of course it could have had quite large consequences, so, they did a great job to rectify it and we haven’t really heard them mention it since we started the weekend. So, we were able to drive as normal today.
Q: (Scott Mitchell – The Race) Max, you said you haven’t dived into the data. Can you just talk a little bit through how the car was changing and handling through the race. Heard you talking about some traction issues or driveability issues at times. How was the car for you as the race developed?
MV: It was OK. Of course when the tyres are dropping off automatically you struggle a little more with the balance but there was nothing like dramatic, just the last 10-12 laps I started to struggle with the tyres but that’s it.
Q: (Dieter Rencken – Racing Lines) Max, we heard you querying the timing of your pitstop, and then you seemed to run out of tyres towards the end. Do you believe that was the decisive factor?
MV: No, we were just too slow so we can do whatever we want: pitting early, late or the same, I don’t think it’s going to change the end result. So, at the time I thought we were pitting a bit early, and I knew of course that towards the end of the race I was going to run out of tyres but yeah, it is what it is. I said also on the radio at one point, never mind, just get on with the job.
Q: (Mark Hughes – The Race) Question for Max. In the initial part of the race it looked like you were hanging on to Lewis reasonably well but then they seemed to step it up. Is that a problem that you had or do you think that they just had performance in hand?
MV: No, I think it’s more just Lewis pace-managing. Of course, he knows my lap times, that the gap is not closing or growing. I’m just doing my laps. There’s always a bit of margin but if I would push more, Lewis would push more, so yeah. You could see once you have to push a bit more and you have the tyres to do so, then I’m just a bit too slow.
Q: Max, how confident are you that you’re going to be more competitive in Hungary next weekend?
MV: Well, we’ll just find out, don’t we! Honestly, at the moment I’m not really… I don’t know. That’s the simple answer: I don’t know. But I hope it’s going to be a bit better.
Q: (Andrew Benson – BBC) Valtteri, we know all athletes have strong self-confidence, but when Lewis has a weekend like he has this weekend and a performance on Saturday like he did, how hard is it to keep that belief that you can beat him to the Championship?
VB: I think in any sport, and especially in Formula 1 – it’s quite a special sport, it’s quite easy to doubt yourself – but for the moment I have no reason to. Obviously over the years you find the right tools, how to find your confidence and the trust in yourself and what you are doing. I have no reason to doubt any of my ability or skills. I know Lewis had a strong weekend. He did a good job. Also, based on last weekend, I know what I’m capable of. So, I really feel many improvements in my driving since last year – so that’s why I’m confident it’s going to be a good battle for the Championship this year. So, I’m not going to let one weekend, even multiple weekends, drag me down. I’ve learned that. Just going to focus on the job and improving myself as we go.
Q: (Mathias Brunner – Speedweek.com) For Max: how and when did the damage to the front wing happen, and how much of a difference did that make to the balance of the car?
MV: I didn’t know that. They just suddenly told me that I had damage to the front wing, so honestly I don’t think it was doing that much. It’s of course not ideal but I also realised that my rear end plates were also falling off, like a few bits. I don’t know, the balance is just fine but it’s just not fast enough over a lap so we just need to work on a bit of power on the straights and a bit more grip.
Q: But was the front wing damage as bad as Spain 2018; do you remember that?
MV: Yeah, that was not so lovely. It was fine, yeah, there is a bit of the endplate missing but honestly they told me that I suddenly had wing damage and honestly, while driving, it felt alright.
Q: (Alex Kalinauckas – Autosport) Max, you said that you were shocked by the gap to the guys behind. Now that includes your teammate so I just wondered how costly was it today, not having Alex up there with you, particularly when it looked like Mercedes were waiting to play the threat of the undercut against you with Valtteri?
MV: No, it wouldn’t have mattered, at the end. No. I don’t think so. It’s of course nicer, also for himself, to be up there but I don’t think today it would have mattered like last year, for example, in Hungary or whatever.
Q: (Mark Hughes – The Race) Valtteri, when you came out after your stop, much newer tyres than Max, you were catching immediately but then it seemed to stabilise and it looked as though it wasn’t going to happen and then you seemed to get a second wind. What was going on there?
VB: Yeah, initially it was good. I think why the lap time stabilised, I don’t know if it was shown on TV but I went through quite a bit of traffic, there were many backmarkers and there was actually some of them, it was pretty shocking that sometimes I spent more than a lap with them having blue flags and just not moving away. They were racing each other in front of me and not really caring that they had blue flags so I hope that will be looked into so I think that’s why I lost quite a bit of momentum that time and then finally got again through pretty good free air and managed to find the rhythm again and really then it was pretty consistent and the car felt good and the pace was good so I think that was it.
Q: (Andrew Benson – BBC) Lewis, we saw you do a black power salute, both stand on the car after the race and on the podium. There was another anti-racism protest before the race, it looked a bit messier than last week with not everybody there. Have you thought about how you’re going to continue this push through the rest of the year and how are you going to bring the rest of the Formula One drivers along with you?
LH: Well, we’re learning along the way. I think this weekend the drivers spoke after the drivers’ briefing about what we intended to do. The question was how long do we… some people were asking how do we have to continue to do this? Some felt like they’d… one was enough last week and I just had to encourage them that racism is here, going to be here for probably longer than our time here and people of colour who are subject to racism don’t have time to take a moment to protest and that be it. We’ve got to continue to push for equality and really to raise awareness of it so I don’t really know what else we can do moving forward but for me to have Valtteri and my team also lining and acknowledging and kneeling before the start of the race I think was really huge and I’m incredibly grateful for their understanding and this contribution to it. I think we’ve really got to think as a sport what we can do because of course those are nice signs but passion is needed, it needs taking. It’s great to… as I said before… to see Chase being so kind as to donate $1m and it’s great to see the FIA to step up and also give me a $1m but if you don’t know the problem then you can’t fix it and you know $1m doesn’t really go that far so a lot of work needs to go on with Formula 1, the FIA do really need to be a part of it and I think the drivers need to be a part of it also as we have great voices and platforms. For me, as a team, we’re keeping the car black all year long so it is… we’re going to be fighting and pushing for it all year and me personally, I think this is going to be a lifelong thing for me.
Q: (Scott Mitchell – The Race) For all three: we’re obviously all done with the double header at the same track, the first time that’s happened in F1 history. Just wanted to know what your take is from it. Were you surprised that it was exactly the same format two weekends in a row? Do you think there was a missed opportunity not to try something different and do you think that when we do it at Silverstone, just simply changing one of the step of tyre compounds, is really going to shake things up one weekend to the next?
MV: Well, yeah, I didn’t really do a race last week so for me this was basically the first race. It was fine. Mixing tyre compounds? Well, you can only really, on most of the tracks, go harder because they don’t really allow you to go softer because then probably you end up blistering and stuff and you don’t want to go with even harder tyres so… I don’t know. I don’t really think there’s a lot of option to play with because simply I don’t think they allow us to use softer tyres for safety reasons. I don’t know really what you can do. Yeah, they stopped about the reverse grid but yeah, it would have been a bit weird to know that if you retire in the first race as I had, then you start from pole in the second. I don’t know what you can do and I honestly think it’s fine. It’s more important that we are racing.
LH: I’ve not watched the races so it’s difficult to have the same perspective as you will because we’re in this bubble, it’s a bit of a different viewpoint. I definitely think we should be trying to be more creative maybe, but I don’t know what that is, I don’t have the answers for it but just shifting a tyre is not going to make any difference, literally no difference really for us. It’s a question of format: if you’re going to do back-to-back, it’s a shame we can’t reverse the circuit and go the other way but obviously that was never in the game plan when designing these circuits so… Reverse of grid? I think it would just be mayhem, if you put us all… if we qualified at the front and then you put us last it would be a bit of a difficult one and we would probably just end up not trying to qualify for the front so, it is a difficult one. I wonder if there are other series that are doing anything different that we could look into. We have these two races in Silverstone and we could definitely do something to spice it up, particularly for the second one I think.
VB: I think we saw two different races even though it is the same place. Obviously the weather played a part and mixed things up a bit yesterday and it was a completely different kind of race weekend even though it was the same format, the same track. I think that’s the beauty of the sport, there are always so many unknowns and so many things that can happen, so for me it’s not really a big issue. But, yes, I agree with Lewis, I think we could be creative, it just needs to be done in the right way. I don’t know what’s the right way but I know Silverstone has lots of track layout options but who knows.
Q: (Dieter Rencken – Racing Lines/racefans.net) – To all three, based on what Lewis said and the conversation you’ve just had. Lewis you said during the podium interview you love racing, double-header bring it on etc. How many races in a row do you think your system could take? We’ve got another one coming up next weekend. How many in a row do you think we can handle?
LH: Me, as a driver, I feel that we can do a lot of back-to-back races, the three days in between are definitely enough. So, in this kind of season I think it’s fine, but it’s not just about me, it’s about a large group of people who are on the road constantly and are going to be away from their families even longer. It’s such a challenging time to have to stay in your bubble and not see people. I think it’s really going to be heavy for our team members. I know they love racing but they do have families they would love to see, so I really hope things in the world get a bit better for us. But I think we will manage. I don’t there is anything currently that we can’t achieve if we all pull together.
VB:I really have the same feeling as Lewis. From a drivers’ point of view we are really committed to this sport, like any team member is, and we just love racing, so it’s hard to put a hard limit from a driver’s point of view. At least we are in Europe so travelling distances arte pretty easy so that makes things easier, so triple-headers I don’t really see them as an issue, even if there will be many of them. But, for sure, there are many team members who have families, small kids at home, and it’s not fair to be such a long time away from their family. But it is how it is.
MV: I agree with Lewis and Valtteri. It’s good that it’s all in Europe at the moment as that makes travelling a bit easier. But I do think that after here or four weeks it’s good to go home and have a bit of time off. Not only for the driver but especially for the mechanics, you know, with a family. Otherwise they could file for divorce and you don’t want that to happen! It’s good to visit family and friends and that it’s not only F1 in your head. Sometimes you need to relax and think about other stuff, because F1 is not everything. It’s part of your life but there are also other things you have to do.
Q: Are you going to squeeze in a sim race on that weekend off between Hungary and…?
MV: No! I did it a bit too much, so I’m on a break, a long break hopefully!
-

Hamilton wins Styrian GP for his 85th win overall
Spielberg, 12 July 2020: Lewis Hamilton dominated Formula 1’s first Styrian Grand Prix to take his first victory of the 2020 season and his 85thwin overall. Valtteri Bottas finished in P2 to complete a Mercedes 1-2, while Max Verstappen took Red Bull Racing’s first podium of the 2020 season third place./ There was a disaster for Ferrari, however, with Charles Leclerc taking out team-mate Sebastian Vettel early in the opening lap and then being forced out of the race himself as a result of damage sustained in the incident.
At the start, pole sitter Hamilton got away well at the start as Verstappen came under pressure from Carlos Sainz. The Dutchman and the Spaniard went wheel to wheel through Turn 1 but on the run up the hill towards Turn 3 Max emerged ahead to hold second place ahead of the McLaren with Bottas in fourth.
Further back though, there was trouble. Ferrari’s Sebastian Vettel and Charles Leclerc tried to occupy the same space through Turn 3. The pair collided and Vettel lost his rear wing. Both Ferrari drivers limped back to the pits and Vettel was forced to retire as the Safety Car was released.
The track went green at the end of lap three and Hamilton made a good restart to keep Verstappen behind, with Sainz and Bottas still third and fourth. Leclerc, meanwhile, was still struggling with damage and he too was soon forced to retire.
On lap six Bottas snuck past Sainz to take third place, 4.2s behind Verstappen who was now 1.6s behind race leader Hamilton. Albon was settled in fifth and the Thai driver now began to rein in the McLaren ahead.
On lap eight he seized an opportunity and after closing right up to Sainz into Turn 3 he powered past the McLaren on the run to Turn 4. Sainz dropped to P5 ahead of the Renaults of Esteban Ocon and Daniel Ricciardo, with the Australian on medium tyres.
The order at the front then settled as the field began to work through the first stint. Behind the Mercedes and Red Bull cars on lap 19, Sainz held fifth ahead of Renault’s Ricciardo who had got past Ocon on the run to Turn 4. Racing Point’s Lance Stroll was now eighth ahead of team-mate Sergio Pérez, with AlphaTauri’s Pierre Gasly in 10th.
With Verstappen beginning to come under pressure from Bottas, the Team pitted the Dutchman at the end of lap 24. He took on a set of medium tyres and rejoined in third place.
Two laps later Esteban Ocon headed for the pit lane but this time it was not for new tyres. The Renault driver was suffering with technical issues and retired from the race.
Hamilton pitted from the lead at the end of lap 27 and took on mediums but Bottas, who now led, stayed out and extended his first stint to the end of lap 34. He then took on medium tyres and emerged in third place ahead of Albon. The Finn was now a little over eight seconds behind Verstappen .
Albon then pitted on the next lap and the Thai driver also took medium tyres to then rejoin in seventh place. Ricciardo, Norris and Perez then made their stops and Albon was soon back up to fourth.
On lap 43 Hamilton led Verstappen by almost five seconds, while Bottas had taken a two seconds out of his deficit to the Dutchman and was now six seconds adrift of the Red Bull. Albon was a lonely fourth, 30 seconds behind Bottas and four seconds clear of Ricciardo, while Stroll was sixth ahead of team-mate Pérez. Sainz was eighth ahead of Alfa Romeo’s Kimi Räikkönen who had yet to stop, and Norris was tenth.
Pérez then moved past Stroll on lap 47 with a good move in Turn 6 and on lap 49 the Mexican swept past Ricciardo on the run to Turn 4 to claim fifth place. Stroll then closed on the Australian whose pace was looking increasingly laboured.
Pérez now began to exert some pressure on Albon and on lap 54 he was just two seconds behind the Thai driver. The Mexican then set the fastest lap of the race to take seven tenths of a second out of the gap to Albon . Bottas was also beginning to close on Verstappen and on lap 64 the Mercedes driver had cut the gap to 1.8s.
On lap 66 Bottas attacked and the Finn powered past on the run to Turn 4. Verstappen wasn’t having any of it though and despite some front wing damage from earlier in the race and ageing medium tyres he fought back brilliantly to reclaim second before the end of the lap.
In the end though, Bottas though simply had too much pace for the Dutch ace and on the next lap he made a move again on the back straight and this time there was nothing he could do.
At the end of lap 70 Albon came under heavy pressure from Pérez and when the Mexican attacked there was contact. Pérez emerged worse off, with a damaged front wing, while Albon was able to continue.
There was drama just behind as well as Stroll attacked Ricciardo for P6. The pair went wide through Turn 1 and Norris pounced. He moved past both and then pushed on to reel in Perez at the end of the final lap.
Ahead Hamilton crossed the line to win the first Styrian Grand Prix ahead of Bottas. Verstappen took third ahead of Albon with Norris in fifth. Pérez held onto sixth, just ahead of Stroll and Ricciardo. Sainz was ninth and AlphaTauri’s Daniil Kvyat took the final point.
However, following the race, Renault protested Racing Point’s cars. The French car manufacturer lodged complaints about both Sergio Perez and Lance Stroll’s cars alleging that Racing Point had breached the rules by not using a design that had been fully created by itself.
2020 FIA Formula 1 Styrian Grand Prix – Race
1 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 71 1:22’50.683
2 Valtteri Bottas Mercedes 71 1:23’04.402 13.719
3 Max Verstappen Red Bull/Honda 71 1:23’24.381 33.698
4 Alexander Albon Red Bull/Honda 71 1:23’35.083 44.400
5 Lando Norris McLaren/Renault 71 1:23’52.153 1:01.470
6 Sergio Pérez Racing Point/Mercedes 71 1:23’53.070 1:02.387
7 Lance Stroll Racing Point/Mercedes 71 1:23’53.136 1:02.453
8 Daniel Ricciardo Renault 71 1:23’53.274 1:02.591
9 Carlos Sainz McLaren/Renault 70 1:23’09.726 1 Lap
10 Daniil Kvyat AlphaTauri/Honda 70 1:23’20.934 1 Lap
11 Kimi Räikkönen Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 70 1:23’28.802 1 Lap
12 Kevin Magnussen Haas/Ferrari 70 1:23’29.073 1 Lap
13 Romain Grosjean Haas/Ferrari 70 1:23’29.618 1 Lap
14 Antonio Giovinazzi Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 70 1:23’34.373 1 Lap
15 Pierre Gasly AlphaTauri/Honda 70 1:23’49.170 1 Lap
16 George Russell Williams/Mercedes 69 1:22’52.830 2 Laps
17 Nicholas Latifi Williams/Mercedes 69 1:22’56.474 2 Laps
Esteban Ocon Renault 25 30’59.954 Retirement
Charles Leclerc Ferrari 4 6’57.102 Retirement
Sebastian Vettel Ferrari 1 1:41.037 Retirement










