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  • Redding claims first WorldSBK win after thrilling five-way battle

    Redding claims first WorldSBK win after thrilling five-way battle

    Jerez, 1 August 2020: The long wait for race action in MOTUL FIM Superbike World Championship came to an end with a thrilling Race 1 for the Pirelli Spanish Round at the Circuito de Jerez – Angel Nieto. Scott Redding (Aruba.IT Racing – Ducati) claimed a hard-fought victory to claim his first WorldSBK win; the first time since 2004 that there have been four different winners in the first four races.

    Reigning Champion Jonathan Rea (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK) made a good start from the front row to take the lead from polesitter Scott Redding (Aruba.IT Racing – Ducati) while Toprak Razgatlioglu (PATA YAMAHA WorldSBK Official Team) was also able to jump from fifth to move into second; pushing Redding down into third place.

    Redding had to fight his way past Toprak Razgatlioglu on Lap 11 to move back into second place, passing Turkish rider into Turn 6 to move into second place before instantly starting to apply the pressure to Rea. It took just three more laps before Redding would make the move for the lead.
    The race winning move came on Lap 14 out of 20 when Scott Redding (Aruba.IT Racing – Ducati) passed Jonathan Rea (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK) down into Turn 6; using the power of his Ducati to get alongside before forcing the five-time WorldSBK Champion wide to claim the race lead and his first victory since moving to WorldSBK.

    Rea came home in second place ahead of Razgatlioglu, who had to fend off a last-lap charge from Chaz Davies (Aruba.IT Racing – Ducati) to hold on to third place. Davies tried to make moves at the right-hander of Turn 1 and around the outside of the Turn 6 hairpin, but he ran wide; Razgatlioglu holding on to take third place with Davies in fourth.

    Loris Baz (Ten Kate Racing Yamaha) was the top Independent rider in the race with fifth place, running in the lead quartet for the majority of the race before a late charge from Davies moved him down to fifth place. Michael Ruben Rinaldi (Team GOELEVEN) continued his impressive weekend with a sixth-place finish from a 10th place start.

    Alvaro Bautista (Team HRC) finished in seventh place, four seconds away from Rinaldi and almost in a race of his own in the latter stages as he finished eight seconds clear of eighth-placed Marco Melandri (Barni Racing); the Italian finishing an impressive eighth place after making up 11 places throughout the race. Alex Lowes (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK), who led the Championship coming into the race, finished in ninth after being passed by Melandri in the latter stages.

    Bautista’s Team HRC teammate, Leon Haslam, was 10th ahead of Garrett Gerloff (GRT Yamaha WorldSBK Junior Team) and Christophe Ponsson (Nuova M2 Racing) scoring points on his return to the Championship as the privateer team brought Aprilia back to the Championship as part of a wildcard plan.

    Xavi Fores (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing) finished in 13th place with Sandro Cortese (OUTDO Kawasaki TPR) and Eugene Laverty (BMW Motorrad WorldSBK Team) rounding out the points-paying positions. Sylvain Barrier (Brixx Performance), debutant Lorenzo Gabellini (MIE Racing Althea Honda Team) and teammate Takumi Takahashi were the last classified runners.

    Tom Sykes (BMW Motorrad WorldSBK Team) was running in the leading group but suffered a technical issue as he approached Turn 1 in the early stages of the race, ruling him out of contention in the early stages of the race. He was able to take the bike back to the pit lane despite the issue. Sykes was able to re-join the race on Lap 12; the issue not proving to be terminal.

    Sykes’ issue was not the only issue during the race as Michael van der Mark (PATA YAMAHA WorldSBK Official Team) retired from the race on Lap 8, lots of smoke coming out the back of his bike forcing him to retire from Race 1 as he was running in the top 10. Federico Caricasulo (GRT Yamaha WorldSBK Junior Team) suffered a high speed crash at Turn 4 but was able to ride the bike back to the pit lane, although it ended his race, while Leandro ‘Tati’ Mercado (Motocorsa Racing) also suffered a crash at Turn 6.
    P1 Jonathan Rea (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK) : 
    What a hot day! I think everybody suffered a lot. I can’t breathe, it’s so hot and humid, it’s so difficult to breathe. When I was behind in the beginning, I couldn’t really focus that well because it was too hot from the two bikes in front. I just did what I could and I knew everyone was going to be suffering a little bit so I tried to use that to my advantage with my training where I put myself into a darker place to suffer more it’s worth it. To get the first pole position and win I’m very happy.

    P2 Scott Redding (ARUBA.IT Racing – Ducati) : 
    Pretty good actually, it was nice to get that information for the 20 laps. We didn’t do a long run all weekend. I was struggling with the front tyre towards the end, it was moving a lot and I had a few warnings but I tried to keep the rhythm quite fast in the beginning to break up the group. When I saw it was Scott and Toprak there, I was able to relax a little bit, but when Scott came past he had a little bit extra so congratulations to him. I want to thank my team because they gave me a really good bike today and we can make a small step for tomorrow.

    P3 Toprak Razgatlioglu (PATA YAMAHA WorldSBK Official Team) : 
    Today is not easy for me, it’s not easy for all riders because it’s incredibly hot. I tried my best for third position, I am happy with the podium again. Tomorrow we need to a good setup. We are happy, let’s see tomorrow.”

    #ESPWorldSBK at Circuito de Jerez – Ángel Nieto – Race 1.

    1. Scott Redding (ARUBA.IT Racing – Ducati)
    2. Jonathan Rea (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK) +1.147
    3. Toprak Razgatlioglu (PATA YAMAHA WorldSBK Official Team) +2.252
    4. Chaz Davies (ARUBA.IT Racing – Ducati) +2.699
    5. Loris Baz (Ten Kate Racing Yamaha) +3.301
    6. Michael Ruben Rinaldi (Team GOELEVEN) +6.367
  • Mazepin takes first-ever win; Jehan Daruvala slips to P12

    Mazepin takes first-ever win; Jehan Daruvala slips to P12

    Silverstone, 1 August 2020: Nikita Mazepin’s astonishing turnaround of form has continued in Round 4, as he followed up his first Formula 2 podium, in the previous round, with his first-ever victory, in the Feature Race at Silverstone, ahead of UNI-Virtuosi’s Guanyu Zhou.

    The Hitech racer took just one point from the first four races, but has added 51 to his tally since then and cruised to a comfortable victory for Hitech Grand Prix’s second win in as many races.

    Starting from eighth, Guanyu Zhou worked wonders on the alternate strategy. Pitting with seven laps to go, he returned in P8 and made a late dash to the podium, getting past Christian Lundgaard for second on the penultimate tour of the circuit.

    Having looked so strong early on in the afternoon, Lundgaard was also beaten by Yuki Tsunoda on the last lap, with the Carlin racer putting in a stunning drive of his own, from ninth.

    UNI-Virtuosi’s duo suffered contrasting fortunes, as Callum Ilott was forced to start from the pits, having originally qualified in second place. The Briton will at least be pleased to have recovered to fifth place.

    Round 4 had started so brightly for Felipe Drugovich, but the polesitter endured a tough day at the office on Saturday, falling back to seventh.

    Championship leader Robert Shwartzman struggled in Qualifying on Friday and was unable to make up much ground in the Feature Race, finishing outside of the points in 14th, and failing to extend his lead at the top of the Championship.

    AS IT HAPPENED

    Starting on the front row, Ilott would have gone to bed last night dreaming of a historic home victory at Silverstone, but the Briton must have thought he was having a nightmare at the start of the Feature Race. His UNI-Virtuosi machine failed to get going on the formation lap due to a lack of power, and he was forced to start from the pitlane.

    The sun had returned after a gloomy morning in Northamptonshire, but it was still 10 degrees cooler than during the sizzling hot Qualifying on Friday. Just like the weather, Drugovich wasn’t as hot as the previous day. The MP Motorsport driver had made the hard tyres his own in the opening three rounds, but struggled to get them going off the line.

    Schumacher’s start however was scorching. Starting from third on the medium compound, the German flung his PREMA around Drugovich, making the most of the gap left by Ilott to swing to the right and dive ahead for the race lead.

    Drugovich’s demotion didn’t stop there, the MP Motorsport racer fell down as far as fourth, with Mazepin and Lundgaard both getting ahead as well.

    Mazepin, who had also started on the medium tyres, was straight on the wheel tracks of Schumacher and made his move when the DRS window opened on Lap 3. The in-form Hitech racer made a daring manoeuvre around the outside of Stowe, finding enough grip to go the long way around Schumacher and into the lead.

    Four laps in and Drugovich had finally turned on the hard tyres, but he’d already lost a lot of ground on his rivals, sitting in fourth and stuck in traffic. He eyed up a move on Lundgaard, but daren’t take the risk, with the pit window for those on the option-prime strategy not far off.

    Mazepin and Schumacher pitted from the lead on Lap 8 and returned in 13th and 14th after swift stops from their teams. Lundgaard changed his boots on the following lap and this handed Drugovich back P1. The Brazilian was on the alternate strategy and required a gap of at least 30s to stand any chance of retaining first after his own stop.

    Mazepin made light work of moving up to eighth, with the gap standing at just 25s. Schumacher was struggling though – he got held up in traffic and this allowed Lundgaard to sweep ahead of him.

    Drugovich pitted with 10 laps remaining and returned all the way down in 12th, but on the faster medium tyre. The remainder of those on the alternate tyre, which included Zhou, followed within the next three laps, which handed Mazepin back the lead.

    Schumacher was back where he started, in third, but the German was struggling with grip and his pace had deserted him. He had Louis Delétraz in his mirrors, and eventually succumbed to the Swiss driver.

    Zhou returned from his pit stop in eighth and what followed next was astonishing. He made light work of switching on the medium tyres and instantly dispatched of his teammate, Ilott, before lunging ahead of Jehan Daruvala, Schumacher, Tsunoda and Delétraz within a single lap to put himself provisionally on the podium.

    It looked as if second would prove a place to far for the Chinese driver, but he caught up with Lundgaard in rapid time and the Dane had little choice but to let him pass.

    Having looked good for a podium, Delétraz wilted and allowed both Tsunoda and Ilott ahead of him. Tsunoda then made a last lap leap on Lundgaard for third to snatch a podium at the death.

    Unlike the ART Grand Prix driver, Mazepin was not going to be caught, and even on the hard tyres, his pace remained relentless. He crossed the chequered flag with a margin of 5.3s over Zhou.

    Tsunoda completed the podium, while Lundgaard held on to fourth and Ilott fifth. Delétraz kept sixth, ahead of Drugovich, Dan Ticktum, Schumacher and Nobuharu Matsushita.

    Shwartzman remains at the top of the Drivers’ Championship with 81 points, but Ilott has closed the gap to just eight between them after the Russian failed to score any points. Lundgaard remains third on 55, while Mazepin has leapt to fourth on 52. Zhou is up to fifth with 51 points.

    There has been a change in the lead in the Teams’ Championship, with UNI-Virtuosi leapfrogging to first with 124, ahead of PREMA Racing on 122. ART are third ahead of Hitech and Carlin.

    KEY QUOTE – NIKITA MAZEPIN (HITECH GRAND PRIX)

    “I am extremely happy, but it is a little bit difficult to put how I feel into words because it was reasonably unexpected. There was so much going on that I wasn’t really thinking about leading the race.

    “I am extremely happy because it really feels like a nice string of progression and I am very chuffed for the team. They gave me a fantastic car, which helped me to look after those tyres, and make them last the race on a difficult track like Silverstone where tyres are an issue.

    “To come away with my first win the Formula 2 Championship after having my first podium last weekend, makes me extremely motivated and extremely happy and I am very much looking forward to the rest of the season.”

    WHAT’S NEXT?

    Ticktum will look to add a win to his trophy collection from reverse grid pole in the Sprint Race on Sunday, at 10.10 am (local time), 2.30 pm IST.

  • The buzz is missing at Silverstone: Hamilton

    The buzz is missing at Silverstone: Hamilton

    DRIVERS
    1 – Lewis HAMILTON (Mercedes)
    2 – Valtteri BOTTAS (Mercedes)
    3 – Max VERSTAPPEN (Red Bull Racing)
    TRACK INTERVIEWS
    (Conducted by Jenson Button) 
     
    Q: Lewis, not the easiest route to that pole position but an amazing couple of laps there in Q3?
    Lewis HAMILTON: Yeah, ultimately, obviously there is a relatively big gap between us and third place, but it doesn’t matter. At the end of the day Valtteri is pushing me right to the limit and he’d been doing such a fantastic job all weekend and I made some changes going into qualifying and it was worse, so it was a real struggle out there. This track is just awesome because, as you know, with a gust of wind, you have a head wind, a tail wind, a cross wind in different parts of the circuit. It’s like juggling balls whilst you’re on a moving plate, at high speed. Then, obviously we had that spin. Qualifying is a lot about confidence building, as you know, and damn, I had that spin. I was already down, I was struggling through the first section every lap and I don’t know how but with some deep breaths I managed to compose myself and Q3 started off the right way. It still wasn’t perfect the first laps but still a really clean lap and the second one even better. It never gets old for sure.
     
    Q: I bet. As you can see this is quite an unusual British Grand Prix. I know how you love the fans, it really does lift you here. Have you got a message for the guys who aren’t able to be here today?
    LH: Yeah, honestly… look, you see them [the grandstands], all empty here. Normally you have the sirens going off, you see the flags everywhere, you see smoke and the atmosphere here is buzzing normally. You normally get out of the car and there is a different energy, so we definitely miss them. But hopefully they are happy with that turnaround back home and I again just want to say a huge thank you to the team, the guys at the factory, not far away from here, who are constantly working tirelessly to push us forwards, develop and we’re continuing to do so and I’m really proud to be a part of it.
     
    Q: Valtteri, it was looking so strong through Q1, Q2 and this guy, after a spin, was just, just able to pip you in Q3? 
    Valtteri BOTTAS: Yeah, it was a pretty good qualifying in Q3 really. I felt really comfortable with the car and with both tyre compounds and I was really just waiting for Q3 to get everything right. But by the time of Q3 I started to drift a bit more with the rear end than I was hoping. I don’t really know, Lewis found more than me, so ultimately he did a really good job today. It’s disappointing and I need to look into it. 
     
    Q: Looking to tomorrow, it looks like it’s a two-horse race tomorrow, you guys are so far in front of the rest. Are you able to do anything with the strategy, to find a different way to the finish line to challenge Lewis?
    VB: I think my long run performance this weekend has been really good and I believe there will be opportunities and Lewis last year managed to win it from second place with a different strategy to me, so yeah, everything is still wide open and no doubt the guys will try to mix it up behind so we will see.
     
    Q: Max, it must be really tricky after a session like that. You’ve got the maximum out of the car and you’re a second behind the guys in front pretty much. What can you take from this qualifying session?
    Max VERSTAPPEN: Well, I think the lap itself at the end of Q3 was pretty good, but you could see of course very early onwards in qualifying they were just way too fast, like they have been the last few races. You just have to accept that. You try to do the best we can and that’s P3 for us. So I’m pretty pleased with that. Also, after Hungary, to come back and be P3 in qualifying I think is a good start. In the race, you know, again, it’s different. Automatically you’re a little bit closer in the race. I don’t say I’m going to fight them but at least you have a fighting chance starting third.
     
    Q: We know you’re going to fight them, Max. How is the car around here. We all know Silverstone is a very open track, very windy today. Does that have a big effect on what the car is doing?
    MV: With these new type of cars from the last few years they are very sensitive to wind because they are that big and that wide. And especially here in Silverstone, you could really feel, like yesterday, for example, it was really tricky in the low-speed corners and today the wind changes and it becomes a completely different car. Luckily, in the right way, because today it was a lot more fun to drive. But yes, it is very sensitive.
     
    PRESS CONFERENCE
     
    Q: Lewis, pole number 91 was certainly a very good one. What were your expectations going into Q3. Did you think a 24.3 was possible? 
    LH: Well, honestly I don’t really know what the previous records are or laps that we have done in previous years here. I don’t really look at that. It’s not really necessarily the number I’m looking at. What matter is what the position is. I don’t even really look at the time when I come across the line. I’m generally just trying to make sure that I’m up on my previous best time. But it’s pretty incredible the performance here this weekend. This track is really one of the best tracks in the world, especially when the wind is right, like today, and the temperatures are just right. It’s so fast and flowing. The speed that we’re able to carry through Maggotts and Becketts is… I remember when I did my first test here I never would have thought that one day we would be doing the speeds we are at some stage. And then secondly, this team is remarkable and I’m incredibly grateful to everyone who continues to do a great job back at the factory and also here during the weekends, because bit by bit we continue to step forwards. We’re still powering ahead, we’re not resting on the performance that we have, we’re trying to push the boundaries and the limits and that’s the most impressive thing I think about this team.
     
    Q: Awesome in Q3 Lewis, bit of a wake-up call for you in Q2. Just talk us through that incident down at Luffield?
    LH: Yeah, it really wasn’t a nice qualifying session for me. We’d made some big changes overnight, we went out in FP3 and the car was actually feeling… night and day difference probably for everyone with the wind change, and the track temperature change… and the car was feeling pretty good but the easy thing is to stay where you are and just leave it and hope for the best but we’re always, as I said, looking to move forwards and so made a couple of subtle changes and it was worse and you’re stuck with that once the qualifying starts. So, I had this inconsistency with the balance of the car and I was struggling and obviously I got into Q2, had that big snap and spin – which is my first spin in some time. Luckily the tyres were fine. We came in, I got to go back out on another fresh set, which was fine, but then it’s just really trying to recompose yourself and get yourself back in line because it’s really just building blocks when you go through qualifying. And that was probably the hardest turnaround, I would say, knowing that Valtteri had just been putting in quick lap after quick lap. So to go into Q3 with a kind of fresh reset mentally, and putting in those two laps, yeah, I feel great. But Valtteri’s been pushing me all weekend. He’s incredibly quick here, so I think I had a tenth-and-a-half advantage to him after the first lap and I knew that he would pick up some pace in that second run, so the pressure was still on to go out and do better. So, really grateful. While we really, really missed the roar of the fans and the energy of the fans here this weekend, hopefully back home they enjoyed that today.
     
    VB: As Lewis says, it was quick lap after quick lap from you but you talked earlier about the rear end causing you a few problems in Q3. Can you talk to us a little bit more about that? Where was it causing you problems?
    VB: It was a pretty smooth session otherwise. Had some really clean laps and could really build on lap by lap. The car was feeling pretty good, just the balance of the car throughout the qualifying was drifting a bit more towards oversteer. I don’t know if the track temp was getting higher or what was it but on both runs in Q3 I really struggled to attack the slow speed corners as I did before – and the same in Turn 12 – Turn 13. I started to struggle with the rear end – just a bit snappy. And at the same time Lewis obviously had a perfect lap in the end – or at least near to perfection. It was a pretty impressive lap time and I just couldn’t quite match it with the balance I had but otherwise it was OK. Obviously a bit disappointed being second, as it was a strong session otherwise – but yeah, that’s the usual. It is tomorrow that counts but at this point really thankful the car is so strong. It’s amazing and the team is doing such a great job with it and it’s a pleasure to drive.
     
    Q: Max, talk us through your session and how good your lap was in Q3. And then just tell us, are you surprised or not by the gap to Lewis Hamilton. One Second.
    MV: No, I’m not surprised. We are clearly still learning about the car, trying to improve it. But I think overall the qualifying itself was pretty OK. I mean, I was pretty much all the time in third. There’s not much more I think I could do. I think also my final lap in Q3 was pretty good. I had a bit of a moment out of the last corner but… it’s just a big gap and just tried to do the best we can and for us, that’s third at the moment. So we did that. Yeah, it’s a better position than seventh, let’s say that, to start the race.
     
    Q: Can you take the fight to Mercedes tomorrow?
    MV: Normally not, but we just hope to have a clean start and from there onwards I just try to do the best I can in the car and if that’s try to follow them a bit, we can be happy with that and score some points.
     
    VIDEO CONFERENCE
     
    Q: (Alex Kalinauckas – Autosport) Question to both of the Mercedes drivers please. It looked like you struggled quite a lot yesterday in practice, obviously it was very, very hot and windy but in a different direction. Was that cured by the changing conditions today, particularly the lower temperatures, or was it just significant set-up gains that you guys found overnight? Thank you.
    LH: I think it was probably a mixture of both. I think really fantastic work by the engineers overnight just analysing where we were and how to perfect the balance of the car. Part of it was that, and then I think today, just being 10°C cooler – or whatever it is – and the wind being in a slightly different direction, really shifted things I think for us. And the hotter it got for us yesterday, it got generally worse for us. We have understood that overnight and we corrected that today.
     
    Anything to add to that Valtteri?
    VB: No, that’s all.
     
    Q: (Christian Menath – motorsport-magazin.com) Question for both Mercedes drivers. Do you expect to be allowed to use different race strategies to race each other tomorrow?
    LH: Honestly, I think it’s the same as always. We have a philosophy and an approach as a team and we just continue to… we don’t change things unnecessarily. So, I don’t think that there will be any difference here. Also, it’s not really of a benefit. Today it is quite clear which strategy on tracks like this, just like last year. Actually, it was a little bit less clear, I think perhaps, than last year but it’s generally pretty straightforward, so it’s unlikely we’re going to change anything.
     
    Q: Valtteri, what do you have to do to beat the guy on your left?
    VB: For sure we’ll try everything. It’s still very close between us in the championship points, so of course I’m going to do everything I can and of course will look overnight with the engineers what we can do and if there’s anything different I can do. But yes, we have a certain philosophy and usually the car ahead can kind of choose the strategy a bit more, as a bit of a priority, which is fair enough. That’s how it goes – but you never know. We saw a pretty different race from mine and Lewis’ side last year. So, we’ll see.
     
    Q: (Scott Mitchell – The Race) Max, Christian Horner was telling us yesterday that the team made a big effort to try and understand the data gained from Hungary and putting it into action here. Do you feel that the car is more well sorted than it was in Hungary, and now it’s just a question of pace or are you still struggling to find exactly where the balance is?
    MV: I think, yeah, compared to Hungary it’s for sure better. Hungary was not really good. Of course, there are still things that need to be improved and we are working on it, but I think it’s now just purely working on balance as well, yeah, finding more performance in that. We do understand where it’s coming from; now it’s just time, of course, to put different parts onto the car and make it faster.
     
    Q: (Phil Duncan – PA) Lewis, you usually used to have 140,000 people coming here to watch you race at Silverstone and cheer you on. How much of a motivating factor would it be to deliver that win to them watching at home tomorrow, particularly given everything that’s going on in the world at the moment? And secondly, is there any sort of movement on your new Mercedes contract?
    LH: To the second part, no, there’s no discussion at all, nothing decided. Yeah, obviously with the… I kept it in mind. Normally when I approach this weekend there this much much different feeling, I think it’s part excitement and also nerves when you come to this race, knowing how many people do come. And that nervousness is just really through just wanting to excel and deliver for everybody, because you go on a pretty incredible journey together. And so I try to keep that in mind still this weekend; whilst I didn’t have that same feeling coming, knowing that no-one’s going to be here, and I just really tried to remember how… reminisce the last years and try and somehow get that energy and utilise it today which is not so easy but I do, as I said, I hope… I can’t imagine how many people watching and if it’s the same energy-wise back home where they are, if it’s the same as it is when we’re at the track. But I hope this gives some people some hope.
     
    Q: (Edd Straw – The Race) Max, obviously last year Red Bull had some struggles at the start of the season but the upgrades introduced, Canada through to France, that sort of time, really switched on the car and got it going. Do you think something similar can happen this year in terms of relatively small changes, with time can really unlock the potential? Do you think there’s a slightly wider ranging problem that will take a little bit longer to sort out and make the car both have the performance and the consistency that you need?
    MV: I didn’t think, yeah, for sure we can improve the car quite a bit, but the problem is that the gap is so big to the guys ahead that it will be very hard to close so yeah, I believe the guys are working flat out of course to improve the car, so I’m confident they can do that but of course also the others are not standing still so yeah, we have a lot of hard work in front of us but let’s see what we can do.
     
    Q: (Alex Kalinauckas – Autosport) To Max: looking at what we saw in practice yesterday when it was very, very hot and you were able to get close to the Mercedes’ times on the long runs, and then there’s a big gap today when the temperature comes down, do you think that Red Bull is closer to Mercedes when the temperatures are higher?
    MV: Oh yeah, but we would still be quite a few tenths down. I don’t think the warm weather makes such a big difference. If it would have been 35 degrees today I would still be third, so it wouldn’t… it would have helped me maybe a little bit but not that much.
     
    Q: (Scott Mitchell – The Race) To all three: obviously Nico Hulkenberg is back on the grid, very last minute. He is basically three Grand Prix weekends and three pre-season test days behind you guys so I guess he’s physically going through what you went through on the first day of Barcelona testing, except he hasn’t spent the last few months physically preparing for that. How difficult do you think he’ll find it in the Grand Prix with I guess, mainly on his neck, how big a challenge do you think it is?
    LH: Definitely not the best one to come to, your first practice, your first race for the neck. Copse is flat out so it’s a pretty intense combination of corners so I wouldn’t be surprised if this morning he woke up with quite a few bruises and sore but he’s generally always been really in good shape. I saw him walking in, he looked like he never left. But think it’s even more so, it’s probably the prep is a big part, your understanding of the car, that’s probably the biggest part. When you don’t know the car, you don’t know the tools you have or the simulations that the team uses. I can’t even tell you how far behind he is with that. But he is a great driver but if anyone can do it. It will be him, for sure.
    MV: I could see after the first practice his neck was hanging to one side. He has quite a long neck so that is also… that’s not nice to have in F1. It’s tough, because I spoke to him about it  back in the day when he was still in F1 fulltime. He didn’t enjoy that. It’s tough, you can train as much as you want; the first time you go in an F1 car with these speeds, especially around here, you will be sore. You can train every day with your neck but the first time it’s always going to be sore so I’m 100 per cent sure of course, when he woke up today he felt it. But anyway, it doesn’t matter to him anyway, he’s happy to be here and he should be here anyway because I think he still deserves his spot on the grid.
    VB: Yeah, I’m sure he will be sore and as you said, he’s probably not been prepared, physically, to drive a Formula 1 like we all did for the first race but I think he’s done really good, I think it’s a big challenge for him, with such short notice, he was setting some good lap times but obviously big experience from the past. I hope he has a good race tomorrow.

  • Mercedes’ Hamilton sets blistering pace to take British GP pole

    Mercedes’ Hamilton sets blistering pace to take British GP pole

    Silverstone, 1 August 2020: Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton set a blistering pace at Silverstone to take the seventh British Grand Prix pole position of his career with a new track record time of 1:24.303. Valtteri Bottas will line up alongside his Mercedes team-mate on the front row, while Max Verstappen qualified in third place for Red Bull Racing, a full second behind Hamilton. 

    Botta held sway early in the sesson, with the Finn taking control of Q1, two hundredths of a second clear of Verstappen, with Hamilton third and Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc in fourth place. Friday afternoon’s fastest man, Lance Stroll of Racing Point, slotted into fifth place ahead of Red Bull’s Alex Albon who set an opening time of 1:26.565 as he attempted to recover from missin out on the second half of FP2 following a crash and most of FP3 as a electrical issue with his RB16 left him stranded in the team’s garage. 

    After making a mistake on his first run, Hamilton improved on his next and he rose above Verstappen with a lap of 1:25.900. That wasn’t enough to dislodge Bottas, though, as the Finn had also improved to 1:25.801. 

    With three minutes left in the session the men in danger in the drop zone were Haas’ Kevin Magnussen in P16 followed by the Alfa Romeo cars of Kimi Räikkönen and Antonio Giovinazzi, the Williams of Nicholas Latifi and the second Haas of Romain Grosjean. 

    Giovinazzi was able to leapfrog Räikkönen to take P17 and Latifi dropped to the foot of the order when he spun off at Luffield, but none of the bottom five was able to escape elimination. 

    It was a different story further up, as behind the pace-setting Mercedes drivers, Verstappen and Stroll, Nico Hulkenberg put in a good lap in the second Racing Point to climb to P5 ahead of AlphaTauri’s Pierre Gasly and Renault’s Esteban Ocon. Ferrari’s Sebastian Vettel made a late jump up the order, too, claiming P8 ahead of team-mate Charles Leclerc. That meant that Albon progressed to Q2 in P10, ahead of Renault’s Daniel Ricciardo, McLaren’s Carlos Sainz, Williams’ George Russell, the second AlphaTauri of Daniil Kvyat and the second McLaren of Lando Norris. 

    At the start of Q2 Mercedes, Red Bull, Racing Point all sent their drivers out on medium tyres, with Leclerc also opting for the yellow-banded compound. Bottas led the way in the opening runs by beating his 2019 pole time with a new track marker of 1:25.015. 

    Hamilton, though, made a mistake on his first flying lap and spun at Luffield. The incident resulted in gravel being spread across the track and the red flags were soon displayed so that the surface could be cleared. 

    Under the red flags Bottas headed the order in front of Verstappen and Leclerc. Ocon was fourth ahead of Sainz, Norris and Vettel. Strolll was eighth and Alex ninth ahead of Hulkenberg. In the drop zone were Russell, Hamilton, Ricciardo, Gasly and Kvyat, with the latter three being unable to set a time due to Hamilton’s spin. 

    Hamilton was the first out on track for the final runs and he claimed P2 with a medium-tyre time of 1:25.347, pushing him safely through to Q3. Albon, though, was in trouble. On track on softs for his final run of the session, he couldn’t find the time required and his lap of 1:26.545 was only good enough for 12thplace and he was eliminated along with P11 driver Gasly, 13th-placed Hulkenberg, Kvyat and Russell. 

    Both Mercedes drivers backed out of their final lap on softs, as did third-placed Verstappen and they, along with Leclerc and Stroll, will start the race on medium tyres. Sainz made it through to Q3 in fourth place ahead of Leclerc, Ocon and Ricciardo. Norris went through in eighth ahead of Vettel and Leclerc. 

    In Q3, Hamilton set blistering pace to take control of qualifying for the first time and the Briton powered past his team-mate’s earlier track record to claim P1 with a lap of 1:24.616. Verstappen slotted into third place behind Bottas with a time of 1:25.763 and that left him two tenths of a second clear of Stroll in fourth. Leclerc’s first run netted him fifth place ahead of team-mate Vettel, Norris, Sainz and the Renaults of Ocon and Ricciardo. 

    Bottas managed to exactly match his team-mate’s opening time in the final runs but there was simply not stopping Hamilton as he found even more time to claim his seventh Silverstone pole position with a time of 1:24.303. Verstappen took P3 behind Bottas thanks to an improvement of four tenths of a second to 1:25.325, while Leclerc was left with fourth place ahead of Norris, with Stroll in sixth. Leclerc was set to be investigated after the session for a possible unsafe release in front of the Canadian Racing Point driver. Sainz qualified in P7, with Ricciardo and Ocon in eighth and ninth respectively. The final top 10 place was taken by Sebastian Vettel. 

    2020 FIA Formula 1 British Grand Prix – Qualifying
    1 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 1:24.303 6 251.564
    2 Valtteri Bottas Mercedes 1:24.616 0.313 6 250.633
    3 Max Verstappen Red Bull/Honda 1:25.325 1.022 6 248.550
    4 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 1:25.427 1.124 6 248.254
    5 Lando Norris McLaren/Renault 1:25.782 1.479 6 247.226
    6 Lance Stroll Racing Point/Mercedes 1:25.839 1.536 6 247.062
    7 Carlos Sainz Jr. McLaren/Renault 1:25.965 1.662 6 246.700
    8 Daniel Ricciardo Renault 1:26.009 1.706 6 246.574
    9 Esteban Ocon Renault 1:26.209 1.906 6 246.002
    10 Sebastian Vettel Ferrari 1:26.339 2.036 6 245.631
    11 Pierre Gasly AlphaTauri/Honda 1:26.501 1.486 4 245.171
    12 Alexander Albon Red Bull/Honda 1:26.545 1.530 6 245.047
    13 Nico Hülkenberg Racing Point/Mercedes 1:26.566 1.551 6 244.987
    14 Daniil Kvyat AlphaTauri/Honda 1:26.744 1.729 4 244.484
    15 George Russell Williams/Mercedes 1:27.092 2.077 6 243.508
    16 Kevin Magnussen Haas/Ferrari 1:27.158 1.357 9 243.323
    17 Antonio Giovinazzi Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 1:27.164 1.363 9 243.306
    18 Kimi Räikkönen Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 1:27.366 1.565 9 242.744
    19 Romain Grosjean Haas/Ferrari 1:27.643 1.842 9 241.977
    20 Nicholas Latifi Williams/Mercedes 1:27.705 1.904 7 241.806

  • Kush Maini tops Friday session 2 in British F3

    Kush Maini tops Friday session 2 in British F3

    Oulton Park, 31 July 2020: Hitech GP’s Kush Maini returned to the top of the testing timesheets after posting the quickest time in session two on Friday morning.

    Maini’s effort of 1m31.945s was slightly slower than this morning’s outright pace, but was enough to ensure he topped the testing times for the fourth time in six sessions so far this weekend. Maini was just 0.025s quicker than session one pace setter Kaylen Frederick (Carlin), with Louis Foster just 0.004s further behind for Double R Racing. 

    Lanan’s Bart Horsten was fourth fastest, the Australian almost four-tenths further back and 0.058s ahead of Carlin’s Nazim Azman, who enjoyed his best session of the weekend so far. 

    Nico Varrone set the sixth fastest time for Chris Dittmann Racing, less than a tenth clear of Douglas Motorsport’s Kiern Jewiss, with his teammate Ulysse De Pauw in eighth, just 0.013s ahead of Varrone’s teammate Josh Skelton. 

    Hillspeed’s Oliver Clarke completed a top-10 covered by just eight tenths of a second, with Lanan’s Piers Prior 11th and only 0.084s further back. Benjamin Pedersen was 12th fastest for Double R and a tenth clear of Josh Mason, with Hillspeed’s Sasakorn Chaimongkol in 14th and 0.007s away from Mason. 

    Manaf Hijjawi and Reece Ushijima completed the 16 cars that participated in the session. The third session of the day starts at 14.15 UK time.

    BRDC British F3 Championship, Oulton Park, Friday test session two result:

    1. Kush Maini, Hitech GP, 1m31.945s
    2. Kaylen Frederick, Carlin, +0.025s
    3. Louis Foster, Double R Racing, +0.029s
    4. Bart Horsten, Lanan Racing, +0.412s
    5. Nazim Azman, Carlin, +0.470s
    6. Nico Varrone, Chris Dittmann Racing, +0.514s
    7. Kiern Jewiss, Douglas Motorsport, +0.598s
    8. Ulysse De Pauw, Douglas Motorsport, +0.745s
    9. Josh Skelton, Chris Dittmann Racing, +0.758s
    10. Oliver Clarke, Hillspeed, +0.822s
    11. Piers Prior, Lanan Racing, +0.906s
    12. Benjamin Pedersen, Double R Racing, +1.056s
    13. Josh Mason, Lanan Racing, +1.191s
    14. Sasakorn Chaimongkol, Hillspeed +1.198s
    15. Manaf Hijjawi, Douglas Motorsport, +1.261s
    16. Reece Ushijima, Hitech GP, +1.547s

  • Drugovich takes maiden F2 pole; Jehan Daruvala P7

    Drugovich takes maiden F2 pole; Jehan Daruvala P7

    Silverstone, 31 July 2020: Rookie Felipe Drugovich’s incredible start to life in Formula 2 continued in Silverstone as he took his, and MP Motorsport’s, first-ever pole position in the Championship here on Friday. In the four rounds of the season so far, the Brazilian has transformed himself from an unlikely underdog to a championship contender and beat out home hero Callum Ilott for first by 0.139s.

    Indian racer Jehan Daruvala took P7 for the Feature race which will be YouTubed live on Formula 1 channel at 8.30 pm IST. “

    “P7, the first half of qualifier was really good but in the second half, I had traffic on the warm laps and couldn’t really get the tires in the window for my push laps. Anyways, positive qualifying and looking forward to the race tomorrow,” said the Mumbai-born 21-year old tagging his sponsors @Winway and @pap_sc and his team @CarlinRacing on Twitter.

    Despite Britain enjoying its hottest day of the year to date, clouds had begun to form over Silverstone in the late afternoon and teams were warned of the possibility of rain ahead of Qualifying. This prompted the entire grid to head straight onto the track, desperate to get a strong lap time on the board, just in case.

    Jehan Daruvala during the qualifying session on Friday. @DaruvalaJehan twitter

    Louis Delétraz led the pack but it was Yuki Tsunoda at the top of the timesheets in the early stages, as the Carlin racer set the benchmark at 1m 40s. Jack Aitken has struggled so far in 2020 but was desperate to find form for his home event and found enough pace to go four hundredths faster than Tsunoda to take P1.

    His time at the top didn’t last long though, as Carlin returned to provisional pole. But this time, it was Tsunoda’s teammate, Jehan Daruvala, who went fastest.

    Drugovich has made a habit of punching above his weight this season, and the Brazilian stunned the grid with a near perfect tour of Silverstone for provisional pole. The MP Motorsport racer caught the eye with a personal best first sector, but it was in the middle of the track where he truly came alive, going 0.5s faster than anyone else.

    Ilott looked to react, but couldn’t match Drugovich for pace and missed out on first by 0.1s and settled for second. Mick Schumacher had been left frustrated earlier in the session when a fast lap was spoiled by the Trident of Roy Nissany, who appeared to get in the PREMA driver’s way, and left the German down in the midfield. He suffered no such issue in the second half of the session, setting three green sectors to take third in the dying minutes.

    Having used up their tyres, and with the track cooling down, no one could improve at the chequered flag, which meant a maiden pole position for Drugovich, ahead of Ilott and Schumacher.

    Christian Lundgaard was good enough for fourth, ahead of Nikita Mazepin, who continued Hitech Grand Prix’s improved form of late. Aitken was sixth, ahead of Daruvala, Guanyu Zhou, Tsunoda and Delétraz. Drugovich will be in search of his second victory of the season in tomorrow’s Feature Race at 3.45 pm (local time).

  • Lance Stroll tops FP2; Albon crashes; Hulk 7th fastest

    Lance Stroll tops FP2; Albon crashes; Hulk 7th fastest

    Silverstone, 31 July 2020: Racing Point’s Lance Stroll set the pace in the second practice session ahead of Sunday’s FIA Formula 1 British Grand Prix. The Canadian eclipsed Red Bull Racing’s Alex Albon by just under a tenth of a second. There was trouble for Albon, however, with the Thai driver crashing out soon after his qualifying run. 

    Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc led the way on medium compound tyres in the initial stages of the session with a lap of 1:28.773s on the medium rubber but he was soon pushed out of top spot by Red Bull’s Max Verstappen and by Albon who were also running mediums. Mercedes’ Valtteri Bottas then moved clear on medium tyres with a lap of 1:27.731s.

    The switch to soft tyres for qualifying runs began shortly before the halfway point of the 90-minute session, with Albon one of the first out on track on the red-banded compound. He swiftly moved back to the top of the order with a lap of 1:27.363.

    However, Stroll then edged him out with a lap of 1:27.274. Verstappen might have beaten both but on midway through his soft tyre run he came across Grosjean in the middle of track through Maggots/Becketts. Verstappen was forced to abandon his lap. 

    Bottas and team-mate Lewis Hamilton then bolted on soft tyres but could not match Stroll or Albon, with Bottas taking third, 0.157 off top spot, and Hamilton a further 0.15 behind.

    The session was then red-flagged when Albon lost the rear of his RB16 midway through Stowe corner and slid hard into the barriers. The impact heavily damaged the rear and left-hand side of the car and brought out the red flags. 

    Carlos Sainz finished sixth ahead of Nico Hulkenberg, who finished 0.636s off his new team-mate. Pierre Gasly took eighth for AlphaTauri, with Daniel Ricciardo and Kimi Räikkönen rounding out the top 10.

    Elsewhere, Sebastian Vettel’s troubled day continued, and after completing just two laps in the morning he missed a large part of FP2 as Ferrari changed the pedals on his car after he had reported something being loose in his cockpit.

    2020 FIA Formula 1 British Grand Prix – Free Practice Two 
    1 Lance Stroll Racing Point-BWT Mercedes RP20 Racing Point 29 1:27.274 
    2 Alex Albon Red Bull Racing-Honda RB16 Red Bull 13 1:27.364 0.090
    3 Valtteri Bottas Mercedes F1 W11 EQ Power+ Mercedes 30 1:27.431 0.157
    4 Charles Leclerc Ferrari SF1000 Ferrari 30 1:27.570 0.296
    5 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes F1 W11 EQ Power+ Mercedes 27 1:27.581 0.307
    6 Carlos Sainz Jr. McLaren-Renault MCL35 McLaren 35 1:27.820 0.546
    7 Nico Hulkenberg Racing Point-BWT Mercedes RP20 Racing Point 28 1:27.910 0.636
    8 Pierre Gasly AlphaTauri-Honda AT01 AlphaTauri 31 1:27.997 0.723
    9 Daniel Ricciardo Renault R.S.20 Renault 30 1:28.112 0.838
    10 Kimi Raikkonen Alfa Romeo Racing-Ferrari C39 Alfa Romeo 35 1:28.159 0.885
    11 Lando Norris McLaren-Renault MCL35 McLaren 26 1:28.169 0.895
    12 Esteban Ocon Renault R.S.20 Renault 35 1:28.219 0.945
    13 Antonio Giovinazzi Alfa Romeo Racing-Ferrari C39 Alfa Romeo 31 1:28.256 0.982
    14 Max Verstappen Red Bull Racing-Honda RB16 Red Bull 23 1:28.390 1.116
    15 Daniil Kvyat AlphaTauri-Honda AT01 AlphaTauri 29 1:28.426 1.152
    16 Romain Grosjean Haas-Ferrari VF-20 Haas 27 1:28.564 1.290
    17 George Russell Williams-Mercedes FW43 Williams 26 1:28.771 1.497
    18 Sebastian Vettel Ferrari SF1000 Ferrari 23 1:28.860 1.586
    19 Kevin Magnussen Haas-Ferrari VF-20 Haas 27 1:28.898 1.624
    20 Nicholas Latifi Williams-Mercedes FW43 Williams 35 1:29.958 2.684

  • Jehan Daruvala clocks second-fastest time in practice

    Jehan Daruvala clocks second-fastest time in practice

    Silverstone, 31 July 2020: Ace Indian racer Jehan Daruvala came second, only less than half a second off the pace than teammate, Yuki Tsunoda, who topped Free Practice for the third time in four rounds, as Carlin claimed a 1-2 finish at their home event. The Mumbai-born Daruvala is in second place, 0.4s further back, but had enough pace to show off, and is looking forward to a good weekend to add to his 10 points from the first two rounds.

    The field were glad to see some sunshine after a rather wet start to the 2020 season, and wasted no time in getting out on track, with all 22 of the grid setting a flying lap at the first opportunity.

    Mick Schumacher was the first around the British circuit, stretching his legs and taking a scenic tour of Silverstone, as he tried to warm up his boots.

    There was an early yellow flag as Giuliano Alesi spun off track and came to a halt, on his second lap of the circuit. When things got back underway, we got the familiar site of Yuki Tsunoda at the top of the Free Practice leaderboard.

    His teammate Jehan Daruvala nestled in behind him, while UNI-Virtuosi looked in solid form once more, taking third and fourth in the early stages.

    Tsunoda pushed the limits slightly too hard, spinning at Copse and bringing out a brief yellow flag. The Red Bull junior would thankfully get going again.

    Felipe Drugovich managed to get a lap in ahead of the spin, jumping up to third. The MP Motorsport racer looks much more confident on the hard tyres, which brought him great success in the opening two rounds in Austria.

    Tsunoda’s time of 1:40.563 could not be bettered in the second half of the session, as the field focused on gathering data and getting laps under their belts.

    Callum Ilott and Guanyu Zhou remained fourth and fifth, ahead of Dan Ticktum, Louis Deletraz and Nikita Mazepin. Christian Lundgaard and Marcus Armstrong completed the top ten.

    Tsunoda will look to turn his early form into pole position when Qualifying takes place at 5pm (local time) 9.30 pm IST.

    No.CarDRIVERTEAMTIMELapsKM/H
    17 Yuki TSUNODACarlin1:40.563  21210.888
    28Jehan DARUVALACarlin1:41.03321209.907
    315Felipe DRUGOVICHMP Motorsport1:41.06319209.845
    44Callum ILOTT  UNI-Virtuosi1:41.18220209.598
    53Guanyu ZHOUUNI-Virtuosi1:41.34820209.255
    62Dan TICKTUMDAMS1:41.35719209.236
    711Louis DELETRAZCharouz Racing System1:41.42820209.090
    824Nikita MAZEPINHitech Grand Prix1:41.49618208.950
    96Christian LUNDGAARDART Grand Prix1:41.51216208.917
    105Marcus ARMSTRONGART Grand Prix1:41.55720208.824
    1120Mick SCHUMACHERPREMA Racing1:41.67120208.590
    121Sean GELAELDAMS1:41.71818208.494
    1325Luca GHIOTTOHitech Grand Prix1:41.76718208.393
    1421Robert SHWARTZMANPREMA Racing1:41.77819208.371
    1512Pedro PIQUETCharouz Racing System1:41.97220207.974
    1614Nobuharu MATSUSHITAMP Motorsport1:41.99421207.929
    1722Roy NISSANYTrident1:42.22119207.468
    1816Artem MARKELOVBWT HWA RACELAB1:42.40822207.089
    199Jack AITKENCampos Racing1:42.68717206.526
    2023Marino SATOTrident1:43.32619205.249
    2110Guilherme SAMAIACampos Racing1:44.55619202.834
    1117Giuliano ALESIBWT HWA RACELAB1:59.0293178.171
  • Nico Hulkenberg to replace Perez at Silverstone

    Nico Hulkenberg to replace Perez at Silverstone

    Silverstone, 31 July 2020: Nico Hülkenberg will drive for BWT Racing Point F1 Team in this weekend’s British Grand Prix, lining up alongside Lance Stroll.

    Nico’s experience of racing in contemporary Formula 1 and his strong track record ensure he is the ideal driver to stand in for Sergio Perez this weekend.

    In a bid to minimise disruption and ensure the best possible chance of building upon the team’s strong start to the 2020 campaign, Nico’s familiarity with the team will prove invaluable.

    Nico’s association with the team began in 2011 as reserve driver, before graduating into a race seat for 2012.

    He raced for the team between 2014 and 2016 as a regular Top 10 finisher in the Drivers’ Standings.

    His 177 Grand Prix starts make him the 25th-most experienced F1 driver, and he was racing in the sport as recently as 2019.
    A Few Words
    Otmar Szafnauer, CEO & Team Principal BWT Racing Point F1 Team:
    “Having to find a replacement for Sergio at short notice is no easy task, but in Nico we’ve got a fantastic supersub who the team knows very well. He’s certainly being thrown in at the deep end, but he’s a fast learner and I’m sure he will get up to speed quickly.”
    Nico Hülkenberg
    “I was on my way to the Nürburgring for another racing project when the call from Otmar came. That was less than 24 hours ago, so it feels a bit surreal for me right now, but I like a good challenge and this is certainly one. It’s obviously a difficult situation for Racing Point and Checo. He’s a buddy of mine, an old team-mate and I wish him a speedy recovery. I’ll step in and try do the best I can for the team!”
  • Sergio Perez to miss British Grand Prix weekend

    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.