Tag: Carlos Sainz

  • Carlos Sainz powers to sixth career pole: Mexico City GP

    Carlos Sainz powers to sixth career pole: Mexico City GP

    Mexico City, 26 October 2024: Carlos Sainz powered to his sixth career pole position beating Max Verstappen and Lando Norris by more than two tenths of a second to claim top spot on the grid for the 2024 FIA Formula 1 Mexico City Grand Prix. At the other end of the timesheet, though, there were shock Q1 exits for McLaren’s Oscar Piastri and for home hero Sergio Pérez. 

    “A great couple of laps,” said Sainz of his final runs at the Autódromo Hermanos Rodríguez. “A lot of times around Mexico you always have the feeling like you cannot put a lap together and it’s extremely difficult with how much sliding there is. But today, honestly, my two laps of Q3 were pretty much identical, almost perfect. And yeah, I just put two really solid laps in Q3, enough for pole.”

    Earlier at the start of Q1, there was drama in the closing moments when Piastri and Pérez were both dumped out of the session. For Pérez the issue was a lack of confidence under braking and ahead of the final runs the Mexican found himself rooted to the bottom of the timesheet. In normal circumstances, a final run would have provided the platform for a vault to safety, but this time Pérez failed to make the jump and he exited in P18. 

    Piastri, meanwhile, had a late lap time deleted and then, during a last-ditch final flyer, the Australian made a mistake on his final run, taking too much kerb in Turn 12, It was an error the McLaren driver said cost him “a second” of time and he was ruled out in P17. 

    At the top of the timesheet, Norris looked to have pace in hand as he beat Sainz and Verstappen by almost three tenths of a second. And the McLaren driver carried that good form into Q2. He again went quickest, this time eclipsing Verstappen and Sainz by two tenths, with Charles Leclerc fourth ahead of the Mercedes cars of George Russell and Lewis Hamilton. 

    Behind them, in the final seconds of the session, Yuki Tsunoda lost control of his RB and the Japanese driver spun into the barriers. The crash brought out the red flags and the clutch of drivers behind Tsunoda were all denied a final run. 

    It meant that Tsunoda exited in P11, but his crash also denied 12th placed team-mate Liam Lawson another attempt and the New Zealander dropped out ahead of fellow hopefuls Fernando Alonso, Lance Stroll and Valtteri Bottas. 

    At the start of Q3 Verstappen went out on track early and the Dutchman posted a good time of 1:16.368. However, within moments the Red Bull driver’s lap was deleted for going beyond track limits in Turn 2 and he dropped to P10. Norris, meanwhile, had a poor opening and ahead of the final runs he sat in fifth. Sainz though was on fire and the Spaniard took provisional pole with a lap of 1:16.055, a sizeable 0.360s ahead of Leclerc, Russell and Hamilton 

    Verstappen went late at the end of Q3 but though the Dutchman found an improvement and crossed the line in 1:16.171 it wasn’t enough to deny Sainz who took a superb pole as the only man to dip below 1m16s with his P1 time of 1:15.946. Norris also improved, but with the McLaren driver later saying  he had found the limit of his car in Q1 and Q2, he had to settle for third. 

    Leclerc, who suffered a snap of oversteer on his final lap, was left with fourth ahead of Russell and Hamilton, while Kevin Magnussen is set to start seventh for Haas ahead of Alpine’s Pierre Gasly, Williams’ Alex Albon and the second Haas of Nico Hülkenberg.

    2024 FIA Formula 1 Mexico City Grand Prix – Qualifying
    1 Carlos Sainz Ferrari 1:15.946 – –
    2 Max Verstappen Red Bull/Honda RBPT 1:16.171 0.225 
    3 Lando Norris McLaren/Mercedes 1:16.260 0.314 
    4 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 1:16.265 0.319 
    5 George Russell Mercedes 1:16.356 0.410 
    6 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 1:16.651 0.705 
    7 Kevin Magnussen Haas/Ferrari 1:16.886 0.940 
    8 Pierre Gasly Alpine/Renault 1:16.892 0.946 
    9 Alexander Albon Williams/Mercedes 1:17.065 1.119 
    10 Nico Hülkenberg Haas/Ferrari 1:17.365 1.419 
    11 Yuki Tsunoda RB/Honda RBPT 1:17.129 1.183 
    12 Liam Lawson RB/Honda RBPT 1:17.162 1.216 
    13 Fernando Alonso Aston Martin/Mercedes 1:17.168 1.222 
    14 Lance Stroll Aston Martin/Mercedes 1:17.294 1.348 
    15 Valtteri Bottas Sauber/Ferrari 1:17.817 1.871 
    16 Franco Colapinto Williams/Mercedes 1:17.558 1.612 
    17 Oscar Piastri McLaren/Mercedes 1:17.597 1.651 
    18 Sergio Pérez Red Bull/Honda RBPT 1:17.611 1.665 
    19 Esteban Ocon Alpine/Renault 1:17.617 1.671 
    20 Zhou Guanyu Sauber/Ferrari 1:18.072 2.126 

  • Carlos Sainz leads Ferrari 1-2 in Australia: Max logs a rare DNF

    Carlos Sainz leads Ferrari 1-2 in Australia: Max logs a rare DNF

    Albert Park (Melbourne), 24 March 2024: Carlos Sainz claimed an emotional first victory of the season at the 2024 FIA Formula 1 Australian Grand Prix, coming back from illness to lead a Ferrari 1-2 finish as Charles Leclerc took second place, with Lando Norris third for McLaren on an afternoon on which championship leader Max Verstappen failed to finish. 

    Just two weeks ago, Sainz was forced to miss the Saudi Arabian Grand Prix when he had to undergo surgery to remove his appendix, but in Melbourne a sensational recovery to victory was sealed within a few laps of the start. 

    When the lights went, pole position man Verstappen got away well ahead of front row starter Sainz and took the lead into Turn 1 with Norris third ahead Norri. By the end of lap one the Dutchman was almost out of DRS range of the lead Ferrari and it looked like the three-time champion was settling into his customary dominance. 

    However, in Turn 7, Verstappen suddenly slid wide and though he recovered Sainz was able to use the following DRS zone to power past the Dutchman and steal the lead. 

    Verstappen was quickly on the radio telling his team his car felt “loose”, but his issues escalated moments later when smoke began to pour from the rear right of his car. 

    With his brakes on fire, Verstappen was forced to slow and though he managed to limp back to the pits, it was clear his race was over – the first time the Red Bull driver has failed to finish since the same event in 2022. 

    Released into clean air, Sainz now began to pull out a gap and by lap 7 he was two-seconds clear of Norris and Leclerc. The Spaniard was then able to manage his tyres through the opening stint and the first round of pit stops. 

    Behind him Norris was being put under pressure by Leclerc, but the Ferrari driver dived to the pits at the end of lap nine giving the McLaren driver brief respite. Norris tried to go longer on his starting Medium tyres but Leclerc’s undercut worked well and when Norris pitted he’d not only been bypassed by Leclerc but also by his team-mate Oscar Piastri, who had also stopped for new tyres. Then Sainz pitted at the end of lap 16 and that 

    Bumped Hard-tyre starter Fernando Alonso into the lead, but within seconds, Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton suddenly slowed and pulled over at the side of the track, his race ended by a power unit failure. The VSC was deployed and Alonso took advantage, pitting for Medium tyres, and gaining time as the field slowed around him. 

    That put Sainz back in the lead, with Leclerc in P2 ahead of Piastri and Norris. Alonso dropped to fifth place after his tyre change, ahead of Sergio Pérez who was gaining ground on fresh Hard tyres. On lap 27 the Mexican dispatched Alonso with ease, powering past the Aston Martin driver under DRS on the run to Turn 9. 

    At half distance, Sainz was six seconds clear of Leclerc who had dropped out of his team-mate’s dirty air. With Norris on fresher tyres than his team-mate, McLaren switched its drivers, a swap that left Pérez in P5, 11 seconds off Piastri.

    The final round of pit stops left the order at the top unchanged and as the final stint unfolded it became clear that the gaps were solidifying. While the top five order held to the flag, there was late drama behind them when, a lap from home, a tight battle for P6 between Alonso and Russell went wrong. Russell appeared to lose downforce behind the slower Alonso into Turn 6 and slid hard into the barriers on the left side of the track. Though Russell was unhurt, his wrecked Mercedes ended up on its side in the middle of the track. 

    A Virtual Safety Car slowed the pack through the final lap, leaving Sainz to score a remarkable win on his return from surgery, with Leclerc taking P2 to seal as Ferrari 1—2. Norris claimed the final podium place ahead of team-mate Piastri and Pérez. Alonso came home in sixth place but was placed under by the Steward for the incident with Russell, while Lance Stroll finished seventh in the second Aston. Yuki Tsunoda delivered a good result for RB with P8 and the final points places were taken by the Haas cars of Nico Hülkenberg and Kevin Magnussen. 

    “It’s not only the last two weeks. It’s the whole start to the year in general, how the year started with the news of the non-renewal,” said Sainz afterwards. “Then you get yourself fit. You get yourself ready for the start of the season, pushing flat out. And then you get to Bahrain. You do a good podium. You say, ‘OK, now the season is starting well and I can keep the momentum going’. And suddenly, boom, you’re missing a race in Jeddah and the operation. Long days in bed, not knowing if I was going to be back in time. Obviously, a lot of unknowns. Am I going to be back fit? Am I going to be back feeling still good with the car? And then suddenly you come back and win. So, yes, what I said on the radio: life is a roller coaster sometimes, but it can be really nice and good to you sometimes. Just letting it sink in and enjoying the moment.”

    2024 FIA Formula 1 Australian Grand Prix – Race 
    1 Carlos Sainz Jr. Ferrari 58 1:20’26.843 
    2 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 58 1:20’29.209 2.366
    3 Lando Norris McLaren 58 1:20’32.747 5.904
    4 Oscar Piastri McLaren 58 1:21’02.613 35.770
    5 Sergio Pérez Red Bull Racing 1:21’23.152 56.309
    6 Fernando Alonso Aston Martin 58 1:21’47.835 1’20.992
    7 Lance Stroll Aston Martin 58 1:22’00.065 1’33.222
    8 Yuki Tsunoda RB 58 1:22’02.444 1’35.601
    9 Nico Hülkenberg Haas 58 1:22’11.396 1’44.553
    10 Kevin Magnussen Haas 57 1:20’30.924 1 lap /4.081
    11 Alexander Albon Williams 57 1:20’31.852 1 lap /5.009
    12 Daniel Ricciardo RB 57 1:20’38.351 1 lap /11.508
    13 Pierre Gasly Alpine 57 1:21’07.796 1 lap /40.953
    14 Valtteri Bottas Sauber 57 1:21’09.169 1 lap /42.326
    15 Zhou Guanyu Sauber 57 1:21’11.136 1 lap /44.293
    16 Esteban Ocon Alpine 57 1:21’20.822 1 lap /53.979
    17 George Russell Mercedes 56 1:18’04.734 Accident
         Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 15 21’18.426 Power Unit
         Max Verstappen Red Bull Racing 3 4’14.672 Brakes
         Logan Sargeant Williams 0 – Withdrawn

  • Max Verstappen takes pole in Melbourne: Sainz P2

    Max Verstappen takes pole in Melbourne: Sainz P2

    Albert Park (Melbourne), 23 March 2024: Red Bull Racing’s Max Verstappen took his third straight pole position of 2024 with a blistering final lap of Q3 that left him almost three tenths of a second clear of Ferrari’s Carlos Sainz, with Sergio Pérez third in the second Red Bull. 

    Verstappen had struggled for car balance throughout practice sessions in Melbourne and even as he worked through the opening two sessions of qualifying the Dutchman was unhappy with the handling of his Red Bull RB20. But following tweaks made after Q2 the three-time champion found a sweet spot and powered clear of his rivals. 

    “So far this weekend it’s been a bit tough to find a good balance in the car,” he said after taking his 35th career pole position. “Even throughout qualifying, Q1, Q2, I didn’t really feel like fighting for pole. But then we made some little tickles on the car and that seemed to help me in Q3 to really push it to the limit. Both of my laps I felt quite happy with it. I mean, there are always things that you can improve, but overall, I am satisfied with the performance.”

    Sainz’s front-row start represents a good result for the Spanish driver who is returning following surgery to last time out in Bahrain to remove his appendix. 

    “It’s been a tough couple of weeks, a lot of days in bed, waiting for this moment, to see if I could be here today,” he said. “To make it to this weekend and then obviously to put it on the front row after leading through qualifying, I was almost not believing it, especially after how tough it’s been. But very happy to be here, very happy to be challenging the Red Bulls this weekend.”

    Sainz led the way in Q1, setting a lap of 1:16.731, ahead of Ferrari Pérez who took P2 thanks to a lap of 1:16.805. Verstappen took third place just 0.014 behind his team-mate. The Dutchman wasn’t happy with his RB20 however, complaining about understeer.

    Eliminated at the end of Q1 were Haas’ Nico Hülkenberg in P16 ahead of Alpine’s Pierre Gasly. RB’s Daniel Ricciardo was also dumped out of the session when he plummeted from P10 to P18 after his final lap was deleted for overstepping track limits in Turn 5. Sauber’s Zhou Guanyu was slowest in the session and exited in P19.

    At the start of Q2 it was Verstappen, on fresh tyres, who made the most of the first runs,  the champion taking P1 with a lap of 1:16.387 that put him little over two tenths ahead of McLaren’s Oscar Piastri. Sainz and Leclerc, on used tyres, took third and fourth places, ahead the second McLaren of Lando Norris. 

    With fresh Soft tyres on board, Sainz then moved ahead, taking top spot with a lap of 1:16.189. 0.198s ahead of Verstappen, who stayed in the garage for the final laps. That gave Leclerc an opportunity and in the final moments the Monegasque driver posted a lap of 1:16.304 to bump Verstappen down to third. 

    There was no place in the top-10 shootout for Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton who exited in P11 ahead of Williams’ Alex Albon, Sauber’s Valtteri Bottas, the Haas of Kevin Magnussen and Alpine’s Esteban Ocon.

    With Sainz in charge through the opening two segments and with Leclerc also quick, it looked like Ferrari had the upper hand, but in the minutes before the green lights were lit to start the top-10 shootout, whatever adjustments Verstappen’s team made to his car paid off and in the opening runs of Q3, the Dutchman stamped new authority on the session as he took provisional pole ahead of Sainz and Leclerc.

    And he tightened his grip on pole with his final flying lap. The Dutchman ended the session as the only driver to dip below 1m16s and his time of 1:15.915 was good enough to beat Sainz by 0.270s with Pérez a further nine hundredths of a second back in third. 

    Fourth place went to Norris, but Leclerc slumped to fifth after a mistake on his final flyer forced him to abandon his bid for pole. Piastri will start sixth ahead of Russell and Tsunoda, with the Astons of Alonso and Stroll in ninth and tenth. 

    2024 FIA Formula 1 Australian Grand Prix – Qualifying 
    1 Max Verstappen Red Bull Racing 1:15.915 – –
    2 Carlos Sainz Ferrari 1:16.185 0.270 
    3 Sergio Pérez Red Bull Racing 1:16.274 0.359 
    4 Lando Norris McLaren 1:16.315 0.400 
    5 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 1:16.435 0.520 
    6 Oscar Piastri McLaren 1:16.572 0.657 
    7 George Russell Mercedes 1:16.724 0.809 
    8 Yuki Tsunoda RB 1:16.788 0.873 
    9 Lance Stroll Aston Martin 1:17.072 1.157 
    10 Fernando Alonso Aston Martin 1:17.552 1.637 
    11 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 1:16.960 1.045 
    12 Alexander Albon Williams 1:17.167 1.252 
    13 Valtteri Bottas Sauber 1:17.340 1.425 
    14 Kevin Magnussen Haas 1:17.427 1.512 
    15 Esteban Ocon Alpine 1:17.697 1.782 
    16 Nico Hülkenberg Haas 1:17.976 2.061 
    17 Pierre Gasly Alpine 1:17.982 2.067 
    18 Daniel Ricciardo RB 1:18.085 2.170 
    19 Zhou Guanyu Kick Sauber 1:18.188 2.273 

  • Carlos Sainz wins, breaks the RedBull win streak: Singapore Grand Prix

    Carlos Sainz wins, breaks the RedBull win streak: Singapore Grand Prix

    Singapore, 17 Sept. 2023: Carlos Sainz took a well worked Sinagpore Grand Prix to end Red Bull Racing’s 15-race winning streak, with the Ferrari driver beating Lando Norris to the flag as the leading pair held of a late-race Mercedes charge that left Lewis Hamilton with third place following a final-lap crash for George Russell. Championship leader Max Verstappen was forced to settle for fifth place at the flag. 

    At the start, Sainz led from pole, while Ferrari team-mate Leclerc, starting from third on the the grid, got a good start on Soft tyres to steal P2 from Russell as they went into Turn 1. Behind the top three, Norris held fourth place on the approach to Turn 1, but behind him Hamilton launched an overambitious attack from P5 and he cut the corner, emerging in third behind the Ferraris. The Briton soon handed the places back. 

    Further back, Verstappen, starting on Hard tyres, was soon up to P10 after AlhaTauri’s Liam Lawson dropped back to 12th at the start and he then passed the Haas cars of Nico Hülkenberg and Kevin Magnussen, to move to eighth place by the start of lap 7.

    Sainz, meanwhile, was controlling the race well. On lap 10, the Spaniard led team-mate Leclerc by 1.3s, with Russell a further 1.5s behind in third place. Norris held fourth ahead of Hamilton and Aston Martin’s Fernando Alonso, while Esteban Ocon in seventh was coming under pressure from Max who was just 0.8s behind. 

    The race now became a tactical battle ahead of the first pit stop window, with the Ferrari drivers lapping slowly to protect their tyres and bunching the field behind. And with no real gaps to drop into the benefit of an undercut was diminished. 

    The stalemate was broken on lap 20 when Williams’ Logan Sargent lost control in Turn 8 and hit the barriers. He was able to get going but with his front wing trapped under his car, debris began to break off and as the American made it back to the pit lane, the Safety Car was deployed. 

    The top seven cars all immediately dived into the pits. The hadr-tyre shod Red Bulls stayed out and when Sainz emerged in the lead, Verstappen was in P2, ahead of Russell, with Peerez in P4, ahead of Norris and Leclerc who had lost time and position during the pit stops when he was held in his box because of traffic.

    The Safety Car left the track at the end of lap 22 and Sainz controlled the re-start well to keep Verstappen at bay. The Red Bull drivers were only flirting with the top spots, however, and over the course of the following laps their aged Hard tyres began to fade badly and they fell back to the lower half of the top 10. 

    At half distance, Sainz led Russell by just 0.8 seconds with Norris 0.7s further back. Hamilton was right on the McLaren driver’s tail, while Leclerc was two seconds behind the second Mercedes. 

    Pérez made his sole pit stop at the end of lap 39, followed on the next lap by Verstappen. They rejoined with Verstappen in P15 and Pérez two places further back. 

    On lap 43, Alpine’s Esteban Ocon lost power and pulled over at close to the pit exit, triggering a Virtual Safety Car. Williams’ Alex Albon and Alfa Romeo’s Zhou Guanyu both headed for the pits, as did Russell and Hamilton, Mercedes stacking their pit stop and gambling on having greater pace than the cars ahead in the final stages. 

    On lap 52, Sainz led Norris by 1.4s, with Leclerc almost five seconds behind the McLaren. Following their stop under the VSC, Russell, lapping over a second quicker than Leclerc was just 1.2 seconds behind the Monegasque driver, with Hamilton just behind. And on lap 54 the Mercedes drivers pounced, both powering past Leclerc who was defenceless on much older Hard tyres. 

    With pace in abundance the Mercedes pair began to close in on Norris and Sainz, but the lead Ferrari driver was alive to the threat and he cleverly allowed Norris to stay within DRS range to boost the McLaren driver’s chances against Russell. 

    Russell’s patience and precision ran out of the final lap. The Englishman closed up to Norris but when the McLaren driver clipped the wall, the Mercedes man followed his line too closely and hit the wall harder. He arrowed off track and up an escape road in a shower of sparks, his race over. 

    And a few hundred metres later, having nursed his tyres through each stint and driven a smart, tactically astute race, Sainz crossed the line to take his second grand prix win ahead of Norris and Hamilton. 

    Leclerc was left with fourth place, but behind him Red Bull staged a late race recovery that saw Verstappen rise from 15th after his pit stop to fifth at the flag ahead of Alpine’s Pierre Gasly and McLaren’s Oscar Piastri. Pérez, went on a charge, muscling through to P8, though the Mexican driver was summoned to the stewards after the race after appearing to elbow Albon off track as he moved through the order. Lawson took two well-earned points for AlphaTauri and the final point on offer went to Magnussen. 

    2023 FIA Formula 1 Singapore Grand Prix – Race 
    1 Carlos Sainz Ferrari 62 1:46’37.418 
    2 Lando Norris McLaren 62 1:46’38.230 0.812
    3 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 62 1:46’38.687 1.269
    4 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 62 1:46’58.595 21.177
    5 Max Verstappen Red Bull 62 1:46’58.859 21.441
    6 Pierre Gasly Alpine 62 1:47’15.859 38.441
    7 Oscar Piastri McLaren 62 1:47’18.897 41.479
    8 Sergio Pérez Red Bull 62 1:47’31.952 54.534
    9 Liam Lawson AlphaTauri 62 – 
    10 Kevin Magnussen Haas 62 – 
    11 Alexander Albon Williams 62 – 
    12 Zhou Guanyu Alfa Romeo 62 – 
    13 Nico Hülkenberg Haas 62 – 
    14 Logan Sargeant Williams 62 – 
    15 Fernando Alonso Aston Martin 62 – 
    16 George Russell Mercedes 61 – Accident
         Valtteri Bottas Alfa Romeo 51 – Retirement
         Esteban Ocon Alpine 42 – Retirement
         Yuki Tsunoda AlphaTauri 0 – Accident damage
         Lance Stroll Aston Martin 0 – Withdrawn

  • Carlos Sainz takes pole followed by George Russell: Singapore Grand Prix

    Carlos Sainz takes pole followed by George Russell: Singapore Grand Prix

    Singapore, 16 Sept. 2023: In a close-fought qualifying session at the Marina Bay Street Circuit, Ferrari’s Carlos Sainz took pole position for the Singapore Grand Prix, beating Mercedes’ George Russell and the second Ferrari of Charles Leclerc as championship leader Max Verstappen and Red Bull team-mate Sergio Pérez were dumped out in Q2.

    In the final runs of Q3, Sainz and Leclerc looked to have handed Ferrari a front-row lockout, with Sainz, on a 1:30.984, 0.079s ahead of his team-mate but Russell, one of the last on track at the end of a dramatic session put in a lap of 1:31.056 to edge ahead of Leclerc by just seven thousandths of a second and take a first front-row place since the Australian Grand Prix. 

    McLaren’s Lando Norris took fourth place in the session, just under three tenths off the pace, with Lewis Hamilton fifth in the second Mercedes. Kevin Magnussen handed Haas a positive result with sixth place while Fernando Alonso out Aston Martin seventh, after the Silverstone-based team had earlier seen Lance Stroll crash heavily at the end of Q1. Esteban Ocon was eight for Alpine ahead of Haas’ Nico Hülkenberg and the final top-10 spot was taken by AlphaTauri’s impressive Liam Lawson. 

    There was no place in the top-10 shootout for either Red Bull, however. Max Verstappen endured a torrid session, struggling for grip throughout and branding his RB19 “shocking’ after Lawson beat him to P10 by the tiny margin of 0.007s. The Dutchman’s misery was compounded by being placed under investigation for two separate incidents, first for apparently impeding in the pit lane during Q1 and then for a possible block of AlphaTauri’s Yuki Tsunoda during the middle segment. 

    Verstappen’s team-mate Sergio Pérez was also ruled out at the end of Q2 with the Mexican driver spinning late in the session and qualifying in P13 behind Alpine’s Pierre Gasly. Alex Albon qualified 14th for Williams, while Tsunoda ended the night in 15the place. 

    Earlier at the end of Q1 Stroll brought out the red flags when he crashed heavily at the final corner while attempting to drag himself out of the drop zone as the track rapidly improved at the end of the session.

    Tsunoda had hauled himself to an unlikely P1 with Pérez climbing to P2 ahead of Haas’ Nico Hülkenberg and it looked like progress to the next segment would in part be defined by when drivers crossed the line. That led to queuing at the end of prep laps and Race Officials indicated that the potentially dangerous traffic jam would also be looked at after the session. 

    Stroll’s crash meant that Alfa Romeo’s Valtteri Bottas was knocked out in P16 ahead of McLaren’s Oscar Piastri, Williams’ Logan Sargeant and Zhou Guanyu in P19 in the second Alfa. The unfortunate but uninjured Stroll qualified in 20th place. 

    2023 FIA Formula 1 Singapore Grand Prix – Qualifying
    1 Carlos Sainz Ferrari 1:30.984 – –
    2 George Russell Mercedes 1:31.056 0.072 
    3 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 1:31.063 0.079 
    4 Lando Norris McLaren 1:31.270 0.286 
    5 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 1:31.485 0.501 
    6 Kevin Magnussen Haas 1:31.575 0.591 
    7 Fernando Alonso Aston Martin 1:31.615 0.631 
    8 Esteban Ocon Alpine 1:31.673 0.689
    9 Nico Hülkenberg Haas 1:31.808 0.824 
    10 Liam Lawson AlphaTauri 1:32.268 1.284 
    11 Max Verstappen Red Bull 1:32.173 1.189 
    12 Pierre Gasly Alpine 1:32.274 1.290 
    13 Sergio Pérez Red Bull 1:32.310 1.326 
    14 Alexander Albon Williams 1:33.719 2.735 
    15 Yuki Tsunoda AlphaTauri – – –
    16 Valtteri Bottas Alfa Romeo 1:32.809 1.825 
    17 Oscar Piastri McLaren 1:32.902 1.918 
    18 Logan Sargeant Williams 1:33.252 2.268 
    19 Zhou Guanyu Alfa Romeo 1:33.258 2.274 
    20 Lance Stroll Aston Martin 1:33.397 2.413
     

  • Carlos Sainz tops timesheets in FP2: Singapore Grand Prix

    Carlos Sainz tops timesheets in FP2: Singapore Grand Prix

    Singapore, 15 Sept. 2023: Carlos Sainz topped the timesheet in the second practice for the 2023 FIA Formula 1 Singapore Grand Prix, beating Ferrari team-mate Charles Leclerc by juts 0.018s as Max Verstappen finished in eighth place.

    It was Sainz who set the session’s early benchmark, with the Spanish driver posting a lap of 1:34.150 on Medium-compound Pirelli tyres, but as the clicked towards the 10-minute mark that time was beaten by Aston Martin’s Fernando Alonso who took top spot with a lap of 1:33.964. Sainz was soon back on top, however, with a lap of 1:33.303, before making another improvement at the quarter mark to 1:33.213, with Alonso back in P2. 

    With almost a third of the session gone, Yuki Tsunoda, in a heavily revised AlphaTauri, jumped to second place with a lap of 1:33.483, but further back there was little joy for world champion Max Verstappen with the Dutchman languishing in ninth place and grumbling over the radio about the poor balance of his car before pitting for adjustments. 

    Leclerc was much more comfortable on the streets of Marina Bay and the Monegasque driver reclaimed top spot just before  the 20-minute mark with a medium-tyre lap of 1:32.974, 0.239s quicker than Sainz in second.

    A lull followed as teams prepped for quali sims, with Sainz one of the first on track on Soft tyres, followed soon after by Leclerc. And in their intra-team duel, it was Sainz who came out on top with a 1:32.120s, just 0.018s ahead of his team-mate as Alonso slotted into third ahead of McLaren’s Lando Norris, Alfa Romeo’s Valtteri Bottas and AlphaTauri’s Liam Lawson. 

    Hamilton then emerged and took P3 from Alonso, while George Russell sandwiched the Aston Martin driver by taking fifth place. 

    After a long spell in the Red Bull garage for set-up changes, Verstappen eventually emerged at the halfway mark but he only managed the sixth quickest time, a sizeable 0.732s behind Sainz. Alonso then improved to third, although the Aston Martin driver was still 0.358s behind Sainz. 

    Like his team-mate Red Bull’s Sergio Pérez was also struggling with his RB19 and after the Mexican’s first attempt on Softs put him eighth and more than 0.8s off the pace he told his engineer that it “was just not coming” and that the rear end of his car was stepping out “massively”. 

    With 20 minutes left Russell moved to third and that brought to an end any major improvements on soft tyres, with the bulk of the field moving to harder compounds for the remainder of the session. 

    Elsewhere, there was trouble for Alex Albon. Having set his fastest lap on the hard tyre, a power unit issue after five laps ensured Williams driver could not make a quali run. 

    2023 FIA Formula 1 Singapore Grand Prix – Free Practice 2
    1 Carlos Sainz Ferrari 1:32.120 26 193.052
    2 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 1:32.138 0.018 27 193.014
    3 George Russell Mercedes 1:32.355 0.235 25 192.561
    4 Fernando Alonso Aston Martin 1:32.478 0.358 25 192.305
    5 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 1:32.585 0.465 23 192.082
    6 Lando Norris McLaren 1:32.711 0.591 23 191.821
    7 Sergio Pérez Red Bull 1:32.812 0.692 23 191.613
    8 Max Verstappen Red Bull 1:32.852 0.732 23 191.530
    9 Kevin Magnussen Haas 1:33.017 0.897 25 191.190
    10 Valtteri Bottas Alfa Romeo 1:33.105 0.985 24 191.010
    11 Nico Hülkenberg Haas/Ferrari 1:33.139 1.019 22 190.940
    12 Liam Lawson AlphaTauri 1:33.285 1.165 27 190.641
    13 Esteban Ocon Alpine 1:33.361 1.241 25 190.486
    14 Lance Stroll Aston Martin 1:33.390 1.270 25 190.427
    15 Oscar Piastri McLaren 1:33.461 1.341 23 190.282
    16 Yuki Tsunoda AlphaTauri 1:33.477 1.357 27 190.250
    17 Zhou Guanyu Alfa Romeo 1:33.575 1.455 25 190.050
    18 Pierre Gasly Alpine 1:33.824 1.704 24 189.546
    19 Logan Sargeant Williams 1:34.327 2.207 28 188.535
    20 Alexander Albon Williams 1:35.558 3.438 5 186.106

  • Carlos Sainz pole delights Tiffosi; Leclerc P3

    Carlos Sainz pole delights Tiffosi; Leclerc P3

    Monza (Italy), 2 Sept. 2023: Carlos Sainz sent Ferrari’s home fans wild with delight at Monza as he narrowly claimed pole position for tomorrow’s 2023 FIA Formula 1 Italian Grand Prix, beating championship leader Max Verstappen by just over one hundredth of a second, with Charles Leclerc third in the other Ferrari. 

    Carlos Sainz says: What a Saturday! It’s so special to get pole position here, in front of all the tifosi. I had a very good feeling from the car already on Friday and today we confirmed our pace. Q3 was always on the limit and we all took big risks in the fight for this pole. When I finally crossed the line and I heard the tifosi screaming like crazy and jumping on the grandstands I knew we had it!
    The weekend is not over yet, we want more, and for that we need to stay focused and prepare well for tomorrow. It’s going to be a challenging race but we’ll give it everything to fight for the win and give the tiffosi around the world something to keep cheering us on!

    Sainz took provisional pole in the first runs of Q3 but when Verstappen went quicker than Leclerc to rise to P1 on his final run it looked like the Red Bull driver was on course for his ninth pole of the season. Sainz was the last of the frontrunners on track, however, and after setting the fastest Sector 2 time of all, the Spaniard claimed the fourth pole position of his career, 0.013s ahead of Verstappen. 

    At the start of Q1, run on Hard tyres as the Alternative Tyre Allocation returned, It was Alex Albon who set the early pace, with the Williams driver posting a lap of 1:22.123 to top the timesheet ahead of Mercedes’ George Russell. 

    After having his first lap deleted for exceeding track limits, Verstappen then jumped to the top of the order with a lap of 1:21.573, a little over three tenths of a second ahead of team-mate Sergio Pérez, with the Ferraris of Carlos Sainz and Charles Leclerc in third and fourth places respectively. 

    Both Red Bull drivers sat out the final runs but Verstappen’s earlier lap was good enough to keep him in top spot. 

    It was Albon who came closest to toppling the Dutchman, with the Williams driver taking P2 less than a tenth off the pace. Leclerc claimed P3 a further tenth of a second behind, while AlphaTauri’s Yuki Tsunoda took fourth place ahead of Pérez.

    At the other end of the timesheet, there was no place in Q2 for Alfa Romeo’s Zhou Guanyu who was eliminated in P16 ahead of Alpine’s Pierre Gasly and Esteban Ocon, Haas’ Kevin Magnussen and last-placed Aston Martin man Lance Stroll. 

    Having switched to the mandated Medium tyres for Q2, Verstappen was first on track and the Dutch set the a target time of 1:21.035. Pérez crossed the line just under four tenths off that to claim P2 before Sainz moved ahead of both with a lap of 1:20.991. Leclerc then took third ahead of Albon, with Pérez dropping to P5 at the end of the first runs. 

    Verstappen then seized control in the final runs, posting a lap of 1:20.937 to take P1. Leclerc slotted into P2, four hundredths of a second behind, while Sainz abandoned his final run and finished in third, ahead of Pérez who improved to 1:21.240 on his final flyer. 

    Ruled out at the end of Q2 were Tsunoda in P11 and his AlphaTauri team-mate Liam Lawson who impressed in P12 ahead of Haas’ Nico Hülkenberg, Alfa Romeo’s Valtteri Bottas and Williams’ Logan Sargeant. 

    The Red Bulls were once again first on track at the start of Q3, this time on the quickest Soft compound tyres, but it was Ferrari who seized the initiative in the opening runs, with Sainz taking provisional pole thanks to a lap of 1:20.532. That put the Spaniard three hundredths of a second ahead of Leclerc, with Verstappen in P3, 0.099s off top spot. 

    Verstappen jumped to P1 with his final flyer but Sainz claimed pole by the narrow margin of 0.013s, with Leclerc in third place ahead of Russell while Pérez took P5 thanks to a lap of 1:20.688. He was followed by Albon who took sixth ahead of McLaren’s Oscar Piastri, with Hamilton in eighth ahead of Norris and Aston Martin’s Fernando Alonso. 

    2023 FIA Formula 1 Italian Grand Prix – Qualiyfing
    1 Carlos Sainz Ferrari 1:20.294 – –
    2 Max Verstappen Red Bull Racing 1:20.307 0.013 0.016
    3 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 1:20.361 0.067 0.083
    4 George Russell Mercedes 1:20.671 0.377 0.470
    5 Sergio Pérez Red Bull Racing 1:20.688 0.394 0.491
    6 Alexander Albon Williams 1:20.760 0.466 0.580
    7 Oscar Piastri McLaren 1:20.785 0.491 0.612
    8 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 1:20.820 0.526 0.655
    9 Lando Norris McLaren 1:20.979 0.685 0.853
    10 Fernando Alonso Aston Martin 1:21.417 1.123 1.399
    11 Yuki Tsunoda AlphaTauri 1:21.594 1.300 1.619
    12 Liam Lawson AlphaTauri 1:21.758 1.464 1.823
    13 Nico Hülkenberg Haas 1:21.776 1.482 1.846
    14 Valtteri Bottas Alfa Romeo 1:21.940 1.646 2.050
    15 Logan Sargeant Williams 1:21.944 1.650 2.055
    16 Zhou Guanyu Alfa Romeo 1:22.390 2.096 2.610
    17 Pierre Gasly Alpine 1:22.545 2.251 2.803
    18 Esteban Ocon Alpine 1:22.548 2.254 2.807
    19 Kevin Magnussen Haas 1:22.592 2.298 2.862
    20 Lance Stroll Aston Martin 1:22.860 2.566 3.196

  • We still have issues to sort out, says race winner Max

    We still have issues to sort out, says race winner Max

    Miami, 9 May 2022: Following drivers attended the post-race Press Conference on Sunday from right: Max VERSTAPPEN (Red Bull Racing); Charles LECLERC (Ferrari); Carlos SAINZ (Ferrari)

    TRACK INTERVIEWS were conducted by Willy T Ribbs) 

    Q: Welcome to Miami. Thank you. Great job.

    Carlos SAINZ: Nice and warm.

    Q: How was the car? And the tyres? And how are you physically?

    CS: I’ve been better! Obviously after the crash from Friday, I still had a bit of neck pain going into the race, but I had to manage it and I fought through it, especially with Checo at the end on the Medium tyre, he was very difficult to keep him behind. But we managed to get the podium, which is a decent result.

    Q: I saw you could race. You could race him right down into the hole down there. And did you get what you wanted out of the tyres here, given the heat?

    CS: It wasn’t easy at all. It’s been a tough race with the tyres, with the heat. The car was moving and sliding a lot. But in the end, we got what we deserved, I think, which is a decent P3. And we can build it up from here.

    Q: Hey, this is the biggest event in the world right now. And you’re on the podium. Great job, baby.

    CS: Thank you. I want more, but it’s not bad.

    Q: Charles ‘Chuck’ Leclerc, you and Verstappen have been rumbling with each other since you were kids on go-karts. And you put on another great show here. How are you feeling physically? How’s the car, chassis-wise and tyres?

    Charles LECLERC: It was a very difficult race, physically. We struggled quite a bit with the Medium tyres, especially in the first stint and got overtaken there. And it made our race a bit more difficult from that moment onwards. On the hard we were very competitive and towards the end, I thought I could get Max at one point. But today they had the advantage in terms of pace. But it was fun. And it’s amazing to see so many people again, I kept saying it, but yeah, it’s great to have so many Ferrari fans too in the grandstand. So thank you for your support.

    Q: Well, you and Max are going to put on a show at every race in this World Championship. I can’t wait to see more. Put on a great show.

    CL: Yeah, I hope so too. I mean, we need to keep pushing. Upgrades will be very important throughout the year. And I hope now that we can do a step up but from next race onwards. But yeah, it’s been tight since the beginning of the season. And that’s what we’d like to see.

    Q: Awesome job, baby. Awesome job. All right, champ. Hey, Muhammad Ali told me that when you’re champ, Christmas Day is every day, so another Christmas. Welcome to Miami.

    Max VERSTAPPEN: Thank you very much. I mean, it was an incredible Grand Prix. Very physical as well, but I think we kept it exciting until the end.

    Q: Well, you’re strong. I mean, you went hard on the car. I mean, you kept the tyres underneath you, plus you’re in good shape son, you’re ready to get into the boxing ring?

    Max VERSTAPPEN: I think I’ll stick to racing but I appreciate a lot of course boxing. It felt a bit like it out there in terms of how we feel right now. But yeah, incredibly happy the winning here in Miami. It was an incredible Sunday for us.

    PRESS CONFERENCE

    Q: Welcome to the top three finishers of the 2022 FIA Formula 1 Miami Grand Prix. In third place, Carlos Sainz. In second place Charles Leclerc. And taking the 23rd win of his Formula 1 career and his third win of this 2022 campaign, our race winner, Max Verstappen. Max, very well done. That was a beautifully executed race from third on the grid. Given how the weekend started on Friday. How sweet does this victory feel?

    MV: Yeah, I mean, of course, it’s a very good comeback. I didn’t even do a start. So I didn’t know what to expect in the actual start. But we had a good launch. And I saw the opportunity to go around the outside in Turn 1 so I tried. And luckily, it worked, so then, I just tried to see the pace, of course, Charles in front of me, and I think already from the start, it was very close. I just couldn’t get into the DRS initially. But then, at one point, I think Charles started to struggle a bit more with the front tyres, and it seemed like our car was very good on the Medium compound. So once I got ahead, I think that basically made my race, because I opened up the gap. And basically, once we did the pit stop and put the hard tyre on we were actually very closely matched in pace. So yeah, that was very crucial, of course, to get that gap. But then, of course, I was not very happy with that Safety Car, but of course, fully understandable with what happened. And of course, I think you cannot be too disappointed about it. Because also in the past, I mean, it has benefited me in some other races. So I knew of course, it’s was going to be a tough one to the end already. Because it was quite physical out there. So I knew of course, well now the next 10 laps, I think it was, we have to be flat out, so on a track like this is not easy. I was struggling a bit initially with the tyre temps, like I was sliding around a bit too much for my liking, but then once the tires came back up to temperature, I think I had a little bit more pace and of course, pulled out of the DRS which was very crucial around here.

    Q: You got out of that DRS. But how much pressure was Charles putting you under in those closing laps?

    MV: He was trying everything to try and have a go. And it was not easy, of course, to stay ahead because it’s easy to make a mistake around here in certain places.

    Q: And can you just elaborate on the physical nature of this race? Is it comparable to let’s say the Singapore Grand Prix?

    MV: Yeah, pretty similar. It’s very hot in Sector 2 as well. And of course because this is a day race, with the sun out there, it makes it really hot. So I was very happy once we always got to the straight because that gave you a bit of air. Also in the Safety Car just clicking your visor one step up, you know to have a bit more air coming it was pretty nice.

    Q: It’s been a good race for you and your team in the Championship. Do you feel you’re on a bit of a roll now?

    MV: We’re still having a few issues we have to solve. I mean we are quick, but as you can see, my Friday was terrible, you know, which is not great if you want to have a good weekend. And also Checo had a few issues in the race, so we have to be on top of that, but clearly there is a lot of potential, we just need to make sure it’s reliable.

    Q: Charles, coming to you, a great race by you as well, you look very racy in those closing laps just how good was your car today?

    CL: It was good, especially on the Hard, I think we were we were strong. On the Medium, as Max said, we struggled a little bit after five, six laps with the front tyres and then… yeah, we struggled and basically lost the race on that stint, losing the lead and then losing quite a bit of race time there, because of the front degradation. We need to look at that and be on top of it for the next race. Apart from that, I think on the Hard, we were we were very competitive or at least as competitive as Max, and after the Safety Car I really thought that we will have a shot to actually take back the lead – but it wasn’t enough. But yeah, it’s like this again, I think we’ll have to analyse the end of the run on the Medium, which is the weak point of this race.

    Q: Aside from tyre degradation, what were the biggest differences between your cars today?

    MV: The colour!

    CL: Yeah, the colour. The straight-line speed also a little bit. But again, I think it’s just the characteristics of both cars. Red Bull are quite quick in a straight; we are quite quick in the medium and high speed – but today I have to say that I was quite surprised that we were struggling quite a bit more than them in the slow speed corners. So, that was also a weakness on the Medium tyres, and we need to look at that.

    Q: Charles, you’re still 19 points ahead of Max. But do you need to see a reaction from Ferrari now?

    CL: In a race we need to, especially on the softer compounds, on the Medium, Soft, it seems that it’s been already two races that in terms of race pace, they seem to be a bit stronger and managing those tyres better. Then, in qualifying, we always managed to put those tyres in the right window, which helps us but on the on the long runs, we struggle a bit more compared to them.

    Q: Carlos. You mentioned something about your neck to Willy T Ribbs a little bit earlier. Are you okay?

    CS: Well, yeah. Obviously, I’m coming back from a pretty heavy crash on Friday. So, I wasn’t feeling 100 per cent today, but maybe also the fact that I haven’t done the last two races. So also, the neck feels that. And it’s a combination of those two things that maybe I was paying a bit the price and at some stages of the race I couldn’t push 100 per cent.

    Q: After these last couple of races, when you didn’t go racing lap, how much of a relief is this podium for you?

    CS: It’s not so much a relief – but it’s needed. I think I needed to complete a race distance, to get the body back to shape, and also get the feel for the car on used tyres, high fuel. I was still doing a couple of mistakes out there during the race, just because I was trying the car and trying myself out there. The important thing is that we got a full race in, but at some stages of the race I was pretty quick and also the battles and the feeling with the car in battle with Checo, you know what to do with the battery, with the tyres, I think it gave me a good understanding of what to do in the future.

    Q: Just tell us a little bit more about that battle with Checo? It looked pretty tight.

    CS: Yeah, I mean, on a new Medium, against me on a on a very used Hard, he had everything on the cards, you know, to pass me on, on the first two, three laps, in the warm-up phase of the tyre. And I was pretty sure that, once I got the tyres up to temperature, I could maybe stay, more or less, ahead. But yeah, I think we did a good job on defending, manage all the battery. They’re also pretty quick on the straight, which doesn’t help. I think it was a tough, tough defence, but it was good.

    QUESTIONS FROM THE FLOOR

    Q: (Alex Kalinauckas – Autosport) The same question to Max and to Charles please. Could you just talk us through the rundown the pit straight where Max got ahead into T1? And Charles, in particular, was there anything you could have done maybe to defend a little bit harder there? Or is it just not worth it?

    CL: Well, it’s always worth it when you are fighting for the lead. To be honest with the experience I had from FP1, FP2, FP3, inside there, it was a disaster, the grip on Friday and Saturday. So, I did not expect Max to have that much grip. But actually, I think it was much better for the race today. So, looking back at the race, you can always do something better but I thought that, at that moment, it was the right thing to stay on the racing line and try to optimise the braking point, which I did – but it didn’t work out.

    MV: It’s just a decision that you make at the time, right? From both sides. I went right and Charles defends in the way he does. And then after the corner, you realise what is best, right? It could have worked for Charles; could have worked for me. It worked for me this time. It is just because… I mean we’re going at such high speed you have to make these decisions in like, milliseconds, so…

    Q: (Laurence Edmondson – ESPN) A question to all three drivers. Can I just get your thoughts on the event this weekend? How spectacular you found it. And also, to Max, does it mean anything more to win the first race in Miami?

    MV: I think it was an incredible atmosphere. I mean, it was really incredibly well organised. Really nice to see that. It’s not easy to put an event on like this. But yeah, they did an amazing job, and I had a lot of fun, driving around. I think track-wise, we can improve a few areas. But I have say in the race, I do think Sector 1 was quite fun. I do think Sector 2 can be maybe a bit…  would have been nice if it could have been a bit faster and flowing for an F1 car like we have right now. You know: super long, heavy, wide. The 14-15 chicane is a bit of a tricky combination. And if it means more, I mean it’s another 25 or 26 points, right? It’s a nice venue, that’s for sure, but still you know you have the same amount of points what you can gain.

    CL: Yeah, the atmosphere was incredible. And it’s great to see how much interest the sport has got in the last few years. And yeah, organisation was great. Loads of people, good weather. So yeah, it was amazing to be here.

    CS: I think it was a mega event, put together… not easy on the first event to put such a well-organised venue. So many people coming, so many people in the paddock… for me the paddock was incredibly full!

    MV: The helmet we had on the podium. We needed that in the paddock.

    CS: Yeah, it was crazy. So yeah, congrats. I look forward to coming back here in the future. And I think, between FIA and ourselves, we can do a better job with the tarmac, we can do a better job with some corner combinations, and we can put together an even better show in the future.

    Q: (Scott Mitchell – The Race) Max, you’ve talked a little bit about this but I guess this season has been a case of you either have high peaks or high frustrations.  At its most extreme it’s been you either win, or you haven’t finished. But this weekend, we’ve heard you talk a few times about things just not being quite right, need to make things a bit smoother. How urgent is that side of things? Because it’s obviously… the most dramatic element is the retirement issues but if you’re not having clean weekends, then obviously that’s going to add up if that continues.

    MV: Well, yeah, it’s both, right? I mean, of course, now my side, I had a lot of issues on Friday, which compromises your weekend, and especially yesterday. And I mean, of course, the day everything went well with the start but it also could have been the other way around. And then you of course again, can say like, well, fair enough, because if you missed almost whole Friday, what can you do about it? So we just have to nail down a really positive weekend without issues. I think of course, Imola, we had that, but it’s still a bit of a hit and miss too much. So we just have to make sure that we are more reliable and more on top of things. But as you can see the car is quick. I’m very happy about that, I mean, if you would be slow and reliable, that’s probably also not a good thing.

    Q: (Jesus Balseiro – Diaro AS) Carlos, did you consider changing the tyres at the last Safety Car? And if so, why did you stick with the used ones?

    CS: No, because I would have lost position to Checo and in general, you want to keep track position, especially during the podium. I think you want to keep that position. I knew Checo was going to pit because he had a new medium. Our alternative was I use of soft or a new hard which for me, both of them were not good enough for 10/12 laps to go like it was the case. So we were better off staying out on our used hard which I think it was the right call because in the end we managed to keep him behind. But it was tight, I think as I said before, he had all everything, all the cards to actually pass me and  yeah, a bit surprised that we stayed ahead because it was a tight, tight battle.

    Q: (Jeff Gluck – The Athletic) What should they do about the tarmac, for all three of you? Does it need to be resurfaced before you come back next year?

    MV:  I think offline can be a bit better. I think it was a bit nice today. I was a bit surprised… like in the start, you know, going around the outside of the expected grip, but then actually, during the race, it got worse and worse again. And we had good examples lately with new tracks where we had good tarmac like Saudi actually, it was pretty grippy. So yeah, we have to just look at that, first of all that you know, racing line… of course, the racing line has a bit more grip than offline. But I think the difference here is a bit too much in places. So yeah, we’ll see what we can do there and of course, besides that, I think like Carlos and myself mentioned, with the layout, I think we can make some bits also a bit more exciting, especially Sector 2.

    Q: (Safid Deen – USA Today) About the chicane under the highway do you guys feel like that was challenging from a race perspective? Or would you like to see that completely changed or adjusted moving forward?

    CS: I think it’s a chicane that we this generation of cars that are heavy, that are wide, just when you go around those two apex kerbs, it almost feels like you need a bit of luck to get around it and you sometimes get it on a weird angle and the car bounces a lot, then sometimes you nail it and you gain a tenth or two. It’s a corner that is just a bit unnatural and it’s a corner that I think it can be easily manipulated to look a bit different and create a better combination, you know. I think it’s still needed because there’s not a lot of space there and you need to be quite slow approaching 16 because there’s no runoff. So we need something slow, we need something tight. It’s just the nature of the two curves there, the way they’re put together which is no issue.  It’s a new track that you’re always going to go through these phases and we’re already in touch with FOM, with Ross and his team to actually sort it out and put together a better piece of circuit.

    MV: Yeah, I think if I would have been in a go kart, it would be a nice chicane to take, but not in an F1 car like we have at the moment. Like Carlos said, I think the kerb combination…I mean, I remember in the four laps I did on Friday, I almost knocked myself out because I hit the first kerb and your head just bounced from left to right, like at least five, six times, but really bad. If you just take it a tiny bit too much, just because it’s so long, so wide, so stiff and super heavy that little kerb what it is, it’s just not made for it to be honest. So maybe we have to change the kerb layout already, that it’s a bit more of a progressive ramp and it looks a bit nicer to go over. Maybe that helps already. But yeah, it’s so slow  and I think our cars look way better if it’s a bit more of a flowing combination.

    CL: I think I’m the only driver on the grid that actually liked this chicane.

    MV: And you liked the kerb?

    CL: Yeah, I enjoyed it. But on the other hand, I agree that for racing action, I think we can do something better because following wasn’t easy on that part, also for visibility it’s quite difficult once you have a car in front because you need to be so precise on the kerbs, as mentioned already. That it makes it even more difficult to follow. But apart from that I actually quite enjoyed it.

    Q: (Alex Kalinuakas – Autosport) Max two questions actually:  first of all did you have any reliability dramas in the race,  any engine problems like Checo had? And also how important during those last few laps ahead of Charles after the safety car, was it you to get a good exit from the chicane after he closed up through the twisty bits?

    MV: No, I had no issues luckily. I mean, everything was running very smooth for me so that was very positive. I think I had all my bad luck on Friday. And yeah, during those laps, yeah, it was very tricky, I mean, I was struggling a lot with actually the cold tyres hitting the kerbs. So going through the chicane was not easy. I made a few mistakes there a few times. But yeah, so it was very important to get a good run out of the chicane and actually also turn 16 onto the straight but of course with the extra top speed we had today that of course also helps.

    Q: (Jerry Bonkowski – Autoweek) Charles, quick question. Do you like being the hunter or the hunted? You and Max obviously are so close together in the points right now, which do you prefer, being ahead of him or behind him?

    CL: Well, I think we have been in only one position since the beginning of the season, which means we are hunted for now. I quite like this position to be honest, because it means that you are doing something right. But it is also true that it’s two races that the gap is slowly closing down. But yeah, I don’t I don’t really mind to be honest whichever position I am in, I just want to be the most competitive out there. And at the moment, it seems that Red Bull has the upper hand in the in the races.

    Q: Max your thoughts?

    MV: I like the position I’m in at the moment, knowing that the car is quick. And for example, end of last year, of course, I was the one who was being hunted. And that was actually not a great position because I knew that we didn’t have the pace anymore. I knew it was going to be very tricky to the end. So yeah, just depends a bit of how competitive you are as well.

    Ends

  • Leclerc leads Sainz in a wet FP1 session of Emilia Romagna GP

    Leclerc leads Sainz in a wet FP1 session of Emilia Romagna GP

    Ferrari ended up 1-2 in a wet FP1 of F1 Emilia Romagna GP with Charles Leclerc ahead of Carlos Sainz and Red Bull’s Max Verstappen P3.

    It was a wet start to F1 Emilia Romagna GP in Imola with several drivers going off in the opening moments on the wet tyres. By the end of the session, they moved to intermediate compound but they still kept on going off due to damp conditions.

    After the races in Bahrain, Saudi Arabia and Australia, this was their first time on a wet circuit with the 2022 generation of F1 cars. This was also the first chance for teams and drivers to try out the wet and intermediate tyres.

    Pre-session, the FIA updated about new ICE, TC, MGU-H and MGU-K for Ferrari’s Carlos Sainz and Alpine’s Esteban Ocon, while Williams’ Alexander Albon took a new ES and CE. There were loads of offs as mentioned above with some having multiple.

    The two Ferrari drivers were among the multiple list with both Charles Leclerc and Carlos Sainz having moments, with McLaren’s Lando Norris even calling out the red flag. Fortunately, the Brit managed to drive back onto the track after brief beached moment.

    The likes of Williams’ Nicholas Latifi, Aston Martin’s Lance Stroll, Haas’ Kevin Magnussen had moments along with Alpine duo of Esteban Ocon and Fernando Alonso. Alfa Romeo’s Valtteri Bottas had a spin post the chequered flag but managed to not hit the barrier.

    In terms of the standings, Ferrari ended up 1-2 with Leclerc (1m29.402s) leading from Sainz (1m30.279s), while Red Bull’s Max Verstappen (1m30.867s) in third from Haas pair of Magnussen and Mick Schumacher in the Top 5.

    The other Red Bull of Sergio Perez slotted in sixth from Alpine’s Alonso with Aston Martin’s Sebastian Vettel, AlphaTauri’s Yuki Tsunoda and Mercedes’ George Russell in the Top 10. Alfa Romeo’s Bottas was 11th from AlphaTauri’s Pierre Gasly.

    Behind him was Alpine’s Ocon in 13th with McLaren pair of Norris and Daniel Ricciardo in 14th and 15th. Aston Martin’s Stroll was 16th from Williams’ Albon, Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton, Alfa Romeo’s Guanyu Zhou and Williams’ Latifi.

    Among the 20 runners, Hamilton set his time on the wet compound after he complained of lack of grip due to lack of downforce all-through the session. With no more practice run before qualifying later, it leaves teams with little chance to change things due to the restrictions of F1 sprint weekend.

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  • Sergio Perez quickest in FP 1 ahead of Carlos Sainz

    Sergio Perez quickest in FP 1 ahead of Carlos Sainz

    Monaco, 20 May 2021: Red Bull Racing’s Sergio Pérez topped the timesheet in the opening practice session for this weekend’s Monaco Grand Prix, beating Ferrari’s Carlos Sainz and Red Bull team-mate Max Verstappen. There was misfortune, though, for home favourite Charles Leclerc who was sidelined by a technical issue for the bulk of the session.

    The opening minutes of the hour saw Sainz quickly get into the groove as he traded P1 times with championship leader Lewis Hamilton. The Spaniard should have been joined in that exchange by team-mate Leclerc but after 10 minutes the Monegasque driver headed back to the pits with a gerarbox issue. He would take no further part in the session.

    Back on track, Sainz was steadily chipping away at his times and eventually the Ferrari driver worked his way down to a lap of 1:13.388 on this weekend’s C4 medium compound tyre.

    Hamilton and Mercedes’ team-mate Bottas edged close to the Spaniard’s time with Hamilton taking P2 behind the Ferrari man. Verstappen then appeared to split the Mercedes as the half hour mark approached.

    Alpine’s Fernando Alonso then had a close call as he clipped the barriers in the final corner, damaging his front wing and bringing out the yellow flags.

    Verstappen then jumped to the top of the leaderboard with a lap of 1:13.191, set on the C3 hard tyre.

    His tenure was brief, however. Both Mercedes drivers edged past the Dutchman’s benchmark with Hamilton taking P1 thanks to a lap of 1:12.995.

    Sainz then retook first place by three hundredths of a second before AlpahTauri’s Pierre Gasy’s bolted on soft tyres to take P1 with a lap of 1:12.929.

    With 15 minutes to go Verstappen moved to the top on 1:12.648s using medium tyres and team-mate Perez got into the mix with a P2 time of 1:12.817 set on soft tyres.

    In the final moments Pérez jumped ahead of his teammate with a session-best time of 1m12.487. Sainz shuffled Verstappen to third with a medium-tyre lap of 1:12.606.

    Gasly took fourth for AlphaTauri, just under half a second off Pérez, while Hamilton finished fifth ahead of Bottas. Lando Norris, who yesterday signed a new long-term contract with McLaren, finished seventh ahead of Aston Martin’s Sebastian Vettel. Yuki Tsunoda finished ninth in the second AlphaTauri ahead of Alfa Romeo’s Kimi Räikkönen.

    2021 FIA Formula 1 Monaco Grand Prix – Free Practice 1
    1 Sergio Pérez Red Bull/Honda 1:12.487 36 165.729
    2 Carlos Sainz Ferrari 1:12.606 0.119 32 165.457
    3 Max Verstappen Red Bull/Honda 1:12.648 0.161 39 165.361
    4 Pierre Gasly AlphaTauri/Honda 1:12.929 0.442 37 164.724
    5 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 1:12.995 0.508 34 164.575
    6 Valtteri Bottas Mercedes 1:13.131 0.644 36 164.269
    7 Lando Norris McLaren/Mercedes 1:13.236 0.749 31 164.034
    8 Sebastian Vettel Aston Martin/Mercedes 1:13.732 1.245 33 162.930
    9 Yuki Tsunoda AlphaTauri/Honda 1:13.746 1.259 39 162.899
    10 Kimi Räikkönen Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 1:14.081 1.594 31 162.163
    11 Lance Stroll Aston Martin/Mercedes 1:14.090 1.603 33 162.143
    12 Antonio Giovinazzi Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 1:14.106 1.619 27 162.108
    13 Fernando Alonso Alpine/Renault 1:14.205 1.718 37 161.892
    14 Nicholas Latifi Williams/Mercedes 1:14.268 1.781 41 161.754
    15 Daniel Ricciardo McLaren/Mercedes 1:14.281 1.794 36 161.726
    16 Esteban Ocon Alpine/Renault 1:14.320 1.833 37 161.641
    17 Nikita Mazepin Haas/Ferrari 1:14.616 2.129 33 161.000
    18 Mick Schumacher Haas/Ferrari 1:14.801 2.314 35 160.602
    19 George Russell Williams/Mercedes 1:14.840 2.353 35 160.518
    20 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 1:19.618 7.131 4 150.885