Tag: F1

  • 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

  • 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!”
  • Facile win for Hamilton; Verstappen staves off Bottas challenge for second

    Facile win for Hamilton; Verstappen staves off Bottas challenge for second

    Budapest, 19 July 2020: Lewis Hamilton took a dominant and record-equalling eighth Hungarian Grand Prix with the Briton untroubled after starting from pole position in the third round of the FIA Formula 1 World Championship here on Sunday. Hamilton crossed the line almost nine seconds ahead of Red Bull Racing’s Max Verstappen to match Michael Schumacher’s single event win record. 

    Verstappen made a fantastic recovery to second place after almost exiting the race before it event started. The Red Bull slid off track on his lap to the grid and hit the barriers, breaking his front wing and damaging his front left suspension. 

    However, brilliant work by his crew on the grid to repair the damage meant Verstappen was alble to start and after a lightning start he rose to third and then claimed second place in the first round of pit stops. 

    The race start was incident-packed as eventual third-place finisher Valtteri Bottas made a tentative start that initially carried a suspicion of a jump start and dropped back. Verstappen, though, made a brilliant start and as Hamilton led away Verstappen powered through from P7 on the grid to challenge Racing Point’s Lance Stroll. The Canadian held his line through Turn 3, however, and Verstappen settled into P3 ahead of the Ferraris of Vettel and Leclerc. 

    The situation changed rapidly, though. Both Haas drivers pitted before the start of the race to change tyres, with Kvyat joining them at the end of lap one. Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc and Bottas, who replays later showed was stationary when the lights went out, then pitted at the end of lap two to take on dry tyres. Vettel also pitted but his stop was a troubled on as a stream of cars came into pit lane and the Ferrari crew failed to find a gap into which he could be released. Vettel lost a large amount of time and dropped back from fourth. 

    Hamilton, too, pitted for medium tyres, which promoted Verstappen to the lead. 

    It was a brief spell at the top, though, as Verstappen also headed for the pit lane to shed his intermediate tyres. He took medium tyres and rejoined in P2. 

    After 12 laps Hamilton led Verstappen by a whopping 9.4 seconds with the prescient Magnussen in third place ahead of Stroll and Bottas who had charged through the pack. The second Haas of Romain Grosjean was in sixth place ahead of Leclerc. 

    Behind them Alex Albon had muscled his way through from 13thon the grid to ninth place behind Vettel and when the German locked up at Turn 12 and drifted wide, Albon  breezed past to take P8. He then closed up on Leclerc and the two began a tough tussle for seventh place, with Vettel soon joining the contest.

    Albon  made a couple of moves that were sternly rebuffed by Leclerc but at the end of lap 17 he made a better exit out of the final corner and got close enough to launch a brave move down the inside into Turn 1. Leclerc moved to resist but Albon  was already alongside and out of the corner he drew away from the Ferrari and settled into seventh place. Vettel then also got past Leclerc who was struggling on soft tyres. 

    At the front, Hamilton was fully in control and on lap 24 he held a 12-second advantage over Verstappen, who was also comfortable in P2, 15.5s ahead of Stroll. Bottas now held fourth place ahead of Magnussen, with Grosjean in sixth ahead of Albon  who was three seconds behind. 

    By lap 28 that gap had narrowed to just 0.7s and on the following lap he closed up on the pit straight and powered past the Haas through Turn 1 to move to P6. The next target, 7.7s seconds up the road, was Magnussen.

    At the end of lap 30, Vettel made his second stop of the race from P9, taking on hard tyres and after dropping to P11 he soon began setting fastest laps as he tried to close the gap to McLaren’s Carlos Sainz. 

    Bottas then made his second stop at the end of lap 33 and he took on a set of mediums as the forecast rain stayed away. Albon  then made his second stop at the end of lap 35 and the crew got him away from the pit box with a set of hard tyres onboard in a solid 2.7s. He rejoined in P10. 

    The pit window was now firmly open and Stroll headed in for mediums and then Verstappen made his second stop, taking on hard tyres in a fantastic 2.0s stop. Hamilton then pitted for medium tyres. He rejoined in the lead ahead of Verstappen while Bottas, who had successfully undercut Stroll, was now third and well clear of the Racing Point. 

    The Finn now pushed hard on his new tyres and he quickly began to reel in Verstappen. On lap 40 he was 5.3 seconds behind the Red Bull man and by lap 45 the Finn was just 1.3s behind the Dutchman. Behind them Vettel had risen to fifth after his early second stop but Albon  was closing in and lapping quicker than the Ferrari. 

    With five laps left, Albon  found himself 1.1s behind Vettel, while Bottas had closed to just four seconds behind Verstappen. And Albon  claimed P5 when Vettel ran wide into Turn 2 on the following lap. 

    On lap 69, Bottas closed to within a second of Verstappen. At the end of the lap Verstappen made a good exit from the final Turn and that left him with a gap of almost eight tenths to Bottas, and that was enough to keep Bottas at bay for the final lap. 

    Ahead, Hamilton claimed his eighth Hungarian Grand Prix victory with a new race lap record of 1:16.627. Verstappen then crossed the line to take a brilliant second place, with Bottas third. Stroll scored his best result since the 2019 German Grand Prix with fourth and Albon  finished in a superb fifth place after starting 13th on the grid. 

    Behind Albon , Vettel took sixth for Ferrari ahead of the second Racing Point of Sergio Pérez. Daniel Ricciardo enjoyed a good race to P8 ahead of Kevin Magnussen and the final point on offer went to McLaren’s Carlos Sainz.

    2020 FIA Formula 1 Hungarian Grand Prix – Race 
    1 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 70 1:36’12.473 
    2 Max Verstappen Red Bull/Honda 70 1:36’21.175 8.702
    3 Valtteri Bottas Mercedes 70 1:36’21.925 9.452
    4 Lance Stroll Racing Point/Mercedes 70 1:37’10.052 57.579
    5 Albon ander Albon Red Bull/Honda 70 1:37’30.789 1’18.316
    6 Sebastian Vettel Ferrari 69 1:36’17.961 1 Lap
    7 Sergio Pérez Racing Point/Mercedes 69 1:36’19.099 1 Lap
    8 Daniel Ricciardo Renault 69 1:36’20.049 1 Lap
    9 Kevin Magnussen Haas/Ferrari 69 1:36’32.396 1 Lap
    10 Carlos Sainz McLaren/Renault 69 1:36’34.468 1 Lap
    11 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 69 1:36’52.962 1 Lap
    12 Daniil Kvyat AlphaTauri/Honda 69 1:36’57.822 1 Lap
    13 Lando Norris McLaren/Renault 69 1:36’58.561 1 Lap
    14 Esteban Ocon Renault 69 1:36’59.437 1 Lap
    15 Romain Grosjean Haas/Ferrari 69 1:37’04.897 1 Lap
    16 Kimi Räikkönen Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 69 1:37’06.078 1 Lap
    17 Antonio Giovinazzi Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 69 1:37’26.709 1 Lap
    18 George Russell Williams/Mercedes 69 1:37’27.844 1 Lap
    19 Nicholas Latifi Williams/Mercedes 65 1:37’02.721 5 Laps
    Pierre Gasly AlphaTauri/Honda 15 22’50.273 Power Unit

  • It’s quite humbling to be honest, says Hamilton

    It’s quite humbling to be honest, says Hamilton

    DRIVERS
    1 – Lewis HAMILTON (Mercedes)
    2 – Valtteri BOTTAS (Mercedes)
    3 – Lance STROLL (Racing Point)

    TRACK INTERVIEWS
    (Conducted by Paul Di Resta) 

     
    Q: Lewis you had a pretty dominant pole position last weekend in Austria and you’ve come here and, it’s just flashed up on the screen, you’ve scored your 90th pole position in F1. What does that mean?

    Lewis HAMILTON: Crazy. I have to pinch myself. It just doesn’t register. It’s quite humbling to be honest. I gess to work with an incredible group of people, without whom I wouldn’t be able to have the opportunity to do so. So massively thankful to the everyone back home and the guys here who do such an amazing job. And Valtteri doesn’t make it easy for me at all. It requires absolute perfection when it comes to doing laps and qualifying like that is one of the things I enjoy doing most.
     
    Q: Watching onboard the car looks on rails. You’re connected with aren’t you?
    LH: I’m definitely connected with it. She’s definitely not on rails. I’m sure it looks like that compared to some other people but it was nicely hooked up today and not far off the rails.
     
    Q: You’re going for your eighth win at a single event to match Michael Schumacher. You must be pretty confident you can achieve that given where you’re starting? 
    LH: Oh man, it’s a long run down to Turn 1 so nothing is a given here. We’ve just got to do the work this evening and ultimately I’ve got to deliver on the start tomorrow. It is quite a long race and we don’t know what this weather is going to do fort us tomorrow but for sure I’ll have my head down and I’ll be focusing as hard as I can to bring home a 1-2 for the team.
     
    Q: Valtteri, all the way to the end there, you just out missed by a tenth but I guess you must be pretty happy to qualify on the front row?
    Valtteri BOTTAS: Yeah, of course, I knew, I saw in FP3 that it was going to be a close battle with Lewis at least and I think as a team we were again on a really strong level and pretty far from other teams, which is good for us. My laps were OK. At the end the Q3 lap was actually really good but I just couldn’t go faster and Lewis did a great job today to get the pole, as always. It’s going to be a bit of a drag race between us into Turn 1 so I look forward to that.
     
    Q: You’re still the championship leader and you’re alongside him and the run to Turn 1 is important. Is that your best tactic tomorrow, to get a clean run to Turn 1?
    VB: Yeah, of course, if you look at the points it’s a good situation but what I need is to win races to maintain that. That’s going to be the only goal tomorrow and I’m sure the first lap will be interesting.
     
    Q: Lance, congratulations. The car has looked very good this weekend. I guess you must be pretty delighted with where you are. You’ve showed signs this year of being up the front, it’s not worked out, but you got the job done today?
    Lance STROLL: Yeah, thank you. Very happy at the moment. That car was really strong all the way through qualifying throughout the whole weekend really. We’ve had the pace and it was just about piecing it together during that qualifying session. So, really great job by all the guys. I’m really pleased with the session and now sights set on tomorrow and I’m going to try to grab some big points.
     
    Q: I got a bit nervous in Q2 when you went back out on a set of mediums. You must have as well as the times were pretty closed.
    LS: For sure, it was a gamble, no doubt. It was a gamble but that’s going to put us in a good position tomorrow, so I’m really happy that I got through on the mediums and my lap at the end really felt like it was spot on, so it always feels great when you put it together at the end qualifying.
     
    PRESS CONFERENCE
     
    Q: Lewis, congratulations. What a Q3 session for you. 1.1 seconds faster than last year’s pole. How did that final lap feel? 
    LH: It felt great. In general, qualifying altogether felt really solid. The team have done an incredible job. Valtteri and I, we owe it really to this great group of people back at the factory and here who are just constantly pushing the bar higher. I’m really proud to work with them and to get to drive a car like this around the track is really awesome. Turn 11 was really flat for us today, which is quite insane, the speeds we go through there. It’s quite impressive to see how far the technology has advanced. Valtteri did a great job today, applying a lot of pressure, but Hungary has always been a good hunting ground for me. But I’m aware that qualifying isn’t everything here and it’s a long race and a long run down to Turn 1. I want to say a big congrats to Lance as well, it’s awesome to have the three Mercedes up here.
     
    Q: Lewis, where are the gains from last year, where does the lap feel differently particularly?
    LH: The high speed particularly is quite a lot different, so Turn 4, Turn 8 and particularly Turn 11. But it’s a little bit everywhere I would say. The efficiency of the car through the low and medium-speed corners is definitely better than last year but the high speed particularly, as I was saying, you can nearly take it flat, whereas before it was a little lift.
     
    Q: Valtteri, great lap and so close to Lewis at the end. Little bit of frustration from you, how do you feel? 
    VB: Yeah, for sure. I saw in practice that it was going to be a close battle between us in qualifying and practice three didn’t feel too bad. To be honest in the beginning of the qualifying until the end of Q3 I was struggling in the first sector mainly, so Turn 1 braking, I wasn’t so comfortable there, so I lost a little bit of time. Turn 2 also, I struggled a little bit with snappiness from the rear end of the car. I think when the track improved the car was starting to come together and at the end I have to say the lap was pretty good actually, so I thought I might have a chance with that lap really, but Lewis was just a tenth or under quicker so ultimately he did a better job in qualifying and that’s why he’s on pole.
     
    Q: How’s the long run pace of the car?
    VB: I think it’s pretty strong from the small amount of data we managed to gather in practice one. Of course we missed a lot of the running practice two so a lot of question marks there but I think overall the package we have should be good in the race as well.
     
    Q: Lance, a fantastic qualifying session for you and the team. Can we start talking about your expectations coming into the session. What were you expecting?
    LS: I gotta say well done to the whole team for bringing this package to Hungary. I think we have been very competitive from FP1, right from the first lap. The car has come such a long way from where we were this time last year. We has a 17.5 in qualifying last year. Of course there are some track differences this year and all, but we improved more than three seconds from our qualifying time last year, which is really good. So hats off to them. They’ve been working extremely hard at developing this car and brining this package to the first race. So really happy. My qualifying overall was really good. My expectations? I didn’t really have too many expectations coming into qualifying. I knew there were a few things I had to work on going into qualifying. I wasn’t really piecing it together during free practice and throughout qualifying I was improving a few corners and then at the end on the last lap I pieced it all together and it was really a good lap. I’m really pleased. Qualifying is always fun when you nail it at the end and that’s what happened today.
     
    VIDEO CONFERENCE
     
    Q: (Andrew Benson – BBC) Lewis, is this the best car you’ve ever driven, and can you give some insight into how the team do it. How do they keep producing these incredible cars, year after year, moving forward in this way?

    LH: I don’t really remember driving the last car [to Valtteri] Do you remember driving the last car? Ultimately, it is an evolution of last year’s car so, without doubt it is a better can than last year. We go through a whole season and during the season Valtteri and I work closely together to point out the issues and the limitations with these cars and we work closely with our engineers to advance it and, with the designers, we have quite a lot of meetings back at the factory together to make sure we leave no stone unturned. There’s no big-headedness or ignorance between any of the engineers and between us. There’s just a real transparent discussion and no idea is too big or bold. We just continuous push at that. I think we continue to inspire each other and then the guys back at the factory are hungry. They want to break down… continue to raise the bar, and they are the best at what they do. It’s impressive to see each year. There’s an incredible amount of confidence that I have in them, naturally from these years, and I think we go from strength to strength as our relationship grows, as our understanding of each other, as how we work, continues to improve.
     
    Q: Lewis, can I just throw that question to Valtteri as well. How do Mercedes keep doing it?
    VB: I think Lewis really answered it very well. Working very united and so many talented people. And when the team works very synchronised, the results are going to be good. Obviously it comes also from the top, how the team is led. Different people in the correct positions makes a big difference. I think as a team I can see everyone just peaking, weekend after weekend, year after year, which is really enjoyable and really impressive to be part of.
     
    Q: (Christian Menath – motorsport-magazin.com) Question for Lance – actually two questions. Your qualifying records haven’t been great the last years but every single time the car is good it seems like you come alive as well. Do you have an explanation for that? And secondly, it seems like you’re in a league of your own as Racing Points. Do you expect to be allowed to race each other tomorrow?
    LS: Yeah, I mean, I’ve driven a pretty bad car the first couple of years in F1 and it didn’t give me a lot of confidence. So I struggled as a driver to drive around some of the limitations. Last year, as well. Last year was a big learning year for me. I learned a lot about myself and about my strengths and my weaknesses. And I just worked on them over the course of last season and coming into this season. And that ultimately leads to better results and better qualifyings. So yeah, that pretty much sums it up. I think it’s just been some hard work away from the track and just learning on my end of what I’ve got to do better and how I can be better, how I can get more out of myself. So, that’s really been most of it. And then yeah, in terms of where we stand relative to the others. Like I said earlier, big hats off to everyone at the team, everyone at the factory for designing this car and yeah, we’ve come such a long way from where we were last year, that it’s really amazing and it’s really a lot of fun to drive this car, I must say. It’s a whole different experience to last year’s car. It puts a big smile on my face, for sure. Doing a quali lap around here, when the balance is right and you’re driving. It’s coming together, it’s a real flow and it was a lot of fun out there today.
     
    Q: And Lance, part two of that question. Will you be allowed to race your team-mate tomorrow?
    LS: Yes. He’s starting fourth? Yeah, I guess so. Everyone’s entitled to race out there. I hope we get to race hard. He’s going to fight for the podium, I’m going to fight for the podium. Haven’t been on the podium in, it’s been like, two or three years, so I’m hoping we can have a good start and a good race. It’s been a while since I stood on a podium. I could do that again one of these days, that was nice.
     
    Q: (Edd Straw – The Race) Question for Lewis and Valtteri. How much of a shock is it to see how much Red Bull are struggling, and to look at the timesheets and see Max Verstappen 1.4s down, given they were expected to give you a bit more of a fight this weekend?

    LH: I didn’t know that was the case. That is a really big gap. Definitely wasn’t expecting them to be as off as they have been this weekend – because this has been a… you saw the pace of them last year. This is not a power circuit, it is more about the car, the mechanical grip and aero package. We would have definitely thought that they would have… I thought they had a better package than today’s results show. I don’t know if they’ve all had great laps or not but still, either way, that’s a big, big gap.
     
    Valtteri?
    VB: Very surprising for sure. I was expecting them to be maybe potentially closer here than in Austria. Also, I don’t know the details about how their session went. Was it nothing clean or was their other issues? But the whole weekend they’ve not really been that close – so yeah, just surprising. Obviously I don’t know the details why.
     
    Q: (Luke Smith – Autosport) Question for Lance, congratulations on a really good result. You said about you drove poor cars in the early part of your career and I guess every F1 driver wants to be in the best-possible machinery to really prove what they can do, particularly on a weekend when there’s been a lot of discussion about what Racing Point’s line-up will look like in 2021, how big of a statement is this for you to have made, qualifying so highly and being in the mix for a podium tomorrow?
    LS: I’m not too bothered about that. I’m just happy for myself and for my team for everyone that works so hard, week-in, week-out to achieve the best possible result. The rest is just kind of irrelevant. I’m just happy about the result today and we’ll see what the future holds. Not sure.
     
    Q: (Dieter Rencken – Racing Lines/Racefans.net) To both Mercedes drivers: when you have a dominant car as you currently have, which makes it a lot easier to pull out top drawer performances, does this in any way devalue your ability and in turn, does it in any way affect your market value?
    VB: I’m not really a professional of market values and I don’t really think about those things. I just want to drive the car as fast as I can and I want to achieve my goals. Obviously the goal for me today was to be on pole position; I missed it by a tenth or less so I didn’t reach my goal, but that’s my (unclear) I just think about that really, nothing else, but I wouldn’t see why it would devalue Lewis’s pole today or my P2. Obviously, yes, we have a gap to the other teams but I think between me and Lewis we are really pushing each other to the next level as well and with the fine details, we are both able to find all the time session by session. For sure that helps, you know. I don’t think about that really.
    LH: I think, at the end of the day, we perform at the highest level that there is here in Formula 1. We still go out there and it’s not that easy for us, it’s just a different platform of course, if our car handles perhaps better than some people’s. But we’re not just drivers, the drivers work with our brands and our image helps also bring in funds which enables us to do what we do. We’ve got a great marketing team, we’ve got a fantastic sponsorship team, we’ve got the best in every department, basically, and without having the best in every department, we probably wouldn’t be where we are today so no, I don’t think it devalues us, I think it strengthens us as a team.


    Q: And Lewis, how good was what you did behind the wheel today? You’ve had a lot of pole positions, this was number 90 but was this one of your better ones?
    LH: Honestly, I don’t remember all the laps I’ve done. Every time we go into qualifying, I’m always trying to raise the bar. Obviously Valtteri gets faster and faster as the years go on and the challenge gets tougher and tougher so I have to remain focused, I have to continue to pull out the best laps I could possibly deliver in order to stay ahead of him because he’s driving exceptionally well. Obviously the rain hit qualifying, the last one was I think… those are the days that you can really show your capabilities. I think today was a solid lap, absolutely very very happy with how qualifying went and obviously it’s very close. There’s always improvements that you can make; it’s very very surreal to have the… it doesn’t seem real to have 90 poles.
     
    Q: (Abhishek Takle – Mid-day) To Lewis and Valtteri: Mercedes have proven their dominance at two different types of circuit. Do you see the title battle staying out as a fight between you two now, especially given that you’re going to have fewer races this season than you normally would, which gives your rivals less time to make up any ground on you?
    LH:  Whatever the case, it’s intense. We are performing at the absolute maximum of our capabilities, we’re really right on the ragged edge. Yes we’ve got a fast car but we’re on the ragged edge of that and we’re throwing that thing round. We’d like to believe that anyone else can do it so that’s what we’re going to continue to do. It’s very close between us. The great thing about Valtteri and I as team partners, we really help push the team together in the same direction. Valtteri is not asking for one thing and I’m asking for another; there’s great harmony within the team because of the respect that we have and that just adds a bonus to our working environment.
    VB: Yeah, I think the question for now, of course we’ve seen… we’ve performed really well on two different types of tracks. Obviously it’s still early days in the season but of course we’re going to be in a strong position and we look at the situation, I think the main (fight for the) title is going to be between me and Lewis but yeah, I think we need to just really focus on our performance and of course you never know, some teams might improve more and so we just keep pushing and we’ll see but for now it looks like that.


    Q: Valtteri, how exciting is it for you that it might be a two horse race between you and Lewis?
    VB: Well, I’m excited. I can’t wait to have more races and race and improve and get good results and whether it’s just the title fight between one driver one car, it’s how it is. If it’s more, that’s also fine.
     
    Q: (Alex Kalinauckas – Autosport) To both Mercedes drivers: how close do you expect Racing Point to get to you in the race, especially considering how quick that car looks as they came through the field at the last race?
    LH: It’s impressive to see them improving and getting on top of the car. It’s incredible to see them on the second row. It’s great to have a mix-up, a little bit more of a mix-up. They’ve shown great performance in the last two races so I’m really excited for them, happy for the drivers and looking forward to seeing what they can do. Fight them as hard as we can tomorrow. We are racing together so expect them to be on form.


    Q: (Phil Duncan – PA) Lewis, I know you’ve sort of spoken about the 90 poles but it’s now 22 more than any other driver managed. More than Schumacher, 25 more than Senna. It’s a staggering number in many ways. Can you tell us more what it means to you?
    LH: You know I’m not one for numbers. As I said, when I was driving into the pit lane and I saw 90 up there, I completely forgot that I even had 89 before and I don’t really know where the second person is so but of course I’ve been living my dream since I’ve been in Formula 1 and today it just doesn’t seem real. But what I have to continue to remind myself is that every single weekend I still have to deliver, I cannot just show up and they won’t climb on their own. I have to come here and do the due diligence, I have to do the homework, I have to continue to push the engineers, in the tyre department, in the engine department, the vehicle dynamics, all over and really try and extract the maximum from them, because otherwise this guy’s going to catch up. Obviously he’s right next to me so yeah, I think that’s the thing that makes me most happy is that coming into a weekend, not always delivering one hundred percent which it needs, one hundred percent to beat Valtteri. It’s incredible.

  • Hamilton takes pole with a Hungaroring record

    Hamilton takes pole with a Hungaroring record

    Budapest, 18 July 2020: Lewis Hamilton powered to a record-equalling seventh career Hungarian Grand Prix pole position as he smashed the track record at the Hungaroring to beat team-mate Valtteri Bottas by a tenth of a second. The Briton’s blistering final Q3 time of 1:13.447 was enough to hand him his 90thcareer pole and to match Michael Schumacher’s benchmark at the Budapest circuit. Land Stroll finished third for Racing Point and the young Canadian will line up alongside fourth-place team-mate Sergio Pérez.

    In Q1 Bottas set the early benchmark at 1:15.484, with Hamilton a tenth further back. Max Verstappen’s ’s first run yielded a lap of 1:16.136 that initially left him sixth, while Alex Albon was tenth thanks to a time of 1:16.683. 

    Hamilton lowered the marker with his second run, which stopped the clock at 1:15.420. That put him six hundredths of a second clear of Bottas and three tenths ahead of third-placed Lance Stroll, with the Canadian’s Racing Point team-mate Sergio Pérez fourth ahead of Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc and Verstappen . 

    Further back, Albon improved to 1:16.428, though as others also made gains he dropped to P11. Verstappen  then dropped to seventh when Daniel Ricciardo put in a decent lap of 1:16.111.

    With three minutes remaining, George Russell put in a good lap of 1:15 585 to jump to third and that pushed Albon down into the drop zone. Russell’s excellent lap sparked a frenzy of activity as teams sent out their drivers to make the most of the improving track. Albon jumped to P7 but eventually progressed in P11 and Verstappen  also found safety with P8 in the final runs. 

    At the top of the order, though, was Racing Point’s Pérez with the Mexican leading the way with a lap of 1:14.681. Team-mate Lance Still was two tenths slower in P2 ahead of Hamilton and McLaren’s Carlos Sainz and Lando Norris. Sebastian Vettel was sixth ahead of Bottas and Verstappen . 

    Eliminated at the end of Q1 were Haas’ Kevin Magnussen, AlphaTauri’s Daniil Kvyat, the second Haas of Romain Grosjean and the Alfa Romeo cars of Antonio Giovinazzi and Kimi Räikkönen. 

    The top four from Q1 all went out on medium tyres at the start of the second session, as did the Renaults of Daniel Ricciardo and Esteban Ocon. And Hamilton quickly rose top of the timesheet with an impressive lap of 1:14.261. Bottas was almost three tenths off that pace in P2, with Vettel third thanks to a soft-tyre time of 1:15.131 and Verstappen  lay P4 0.017s behind the German, though he was unhappy with the handling of his RB16.

    Albon was struggling, however, and after the first runs the Thai driver found himself in P13 with a time of 1:15.715 – 1.4s off the pace and almost six tenths off Verstappen . Also in trouble were 11thplace Leclerc who was ahead of Russell and Albon, while Ocon held P14 ahead of Latifi. 

    In the final runs both Mercedes drivers went out on track on soft tyres but with no real threat from behind both Bottas and Hamilton backed out of their laps. The Racing Point drivers opted for a second set of mediums and initially it looked as though that strategy might be risky as Norris jumped to P3 and Leclerc then vaulted out of the danger zone to usurp him.

    However, AlphaTauri’s Pierre Gasly was reporting an engine issue, removing one potential threat and then Albon failed to make any improvement on his first run time. Complaining about traffic, the Thai driver was ultimately eliminated in P13. 

    Verstappen , though, made the most of the final run and he went through to Q3 in P3 behind the Mercedes drivers and ahead of Leclerc. Norris took fifth place ahead of Vettel, while Stroll went through on medium tyres in P7. Perez, who finished ninth behind Sainz, also went through on the yellow-banded tyres, while Gasly made it to Q3 in P10 despite his engine woes. 

    Hamilton led the way in the opening runs of Q3 with the Briton setting another new record time of 1:13.613. That put him more than three tenths clear of Bottas and Stroll. Verstappen , meanwhile, slotted into P4 with an opening time 1:14.849. That left him a tenth ahead of Norris, while Sainz was sixth ahead of the Ferraris of Vettel and Leclerc. Pérez was ninth after his lap time was deleted for running wide, while Gasly did not take part because of engine issues. 

    Hamilton went even faster in his final run to seal a record-equalling seventh pole position at the Hungaroring with a time of 1:13.447. Bottas got close with his final flyer and the Finn was able to claim a front row place with a time just one tenth behind his team-mate’s. 

    Behind them, third place for Stroll amounted to his best qualifying result since P2 at the Italian Grand Prix in 2017 and the Canadian took the front of row three 0.168s ahead of Perez. Row three will be filled by the Ferraris of Vettel and Leclerc with the four-time champion ahead by just six hundredths of a second. 

    Verstappen ’s problems continued though and though he went out for a final flyer there was no improvement in poise or pace with the RB16 and the Dutchman qualified in P7 thanks to his opening run time. He’ll start the race on row four, alongside McLaren’s Lando Norris who finished ahead of team-mate Carlos Sainz and Gasly. 

    2020 FIA Formula 1 Hungarian Grand Prix – Qualifying
    1 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 1:13.447 6 214.734
    2 Valtteri Bottas Mercedes 1:13.554 0.107 6 214.422
    3 Lance Stroll Racing Point/Mercedes 1:14.377 0.930 6 212.049
    4 Sergio Pérez Racing Point/Mercedes 1:14.545 1.098 6 211.571
    5 Sebastian Vettel Ferrari 1:14.774 1.327 6 210.923
    6 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 1:14.817 1.370 6 210.802
    7 Max Verstappen Red Bull/Honda 1:14.849 1.402 6 210.712
    8 Lando Norris McLaren/Renault 1:14.966 1.519 5 210.383
    9 Carlos Sainz McLaren/Renault 1:15.027 1.580 5 210.212
    10 Pierre Gasly AlphaTauri/Honda 1:15.508 1.247 5 208.873
    11 Daniel Ricciardo Renault 1:15.661 1.400 6 208.450
    12 George Russell Williams/Mercedes 1:15.698 1.437 5 208.348
    13 Alexander Albon Red Bull/Honda 1:15.715 1.454 6 208.302
    14 Esteban Ocon Renault 1:15.742 1.481 6 208.227
    15 Nicholas Latifi Williams/Mercedes 1:16.544 2.283 5 206.046
    16 Kevin Magnussen Haas/Ferrari 1:16.152 1.471 9 207.106
    17 Daniil Kvyat AlphaTauri/Honda 1:16.204 1.523 9 206.965
    18 Romain Grosjean Haas/Ferrari 1:16.407 1.726 8 206.415
    19 Antonio Giovinazzi Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 1:16.506 1.825 12 206.148
    20 Kimi Räikkönen Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 1:16.614 1.933 12 205.857

  • Bottas tops FP3; Sergio Perez third fastest

    Bottas tops FP3; Sergio Perez third fastest

    Budapest, 18 July 2020: Valtteri Bottas topped the final practice for the Hungarian Grand Prix, edging out team-mate Lewis Hamilton by four-hundredths of a second and beating third-placed Sergio Pérez of Racing Point by just under two-tenths of a second as Mercedes-powered cars took the top three spots in FP3, ahead of the Hungarian Grand Prix, the third round of the FIA Formula 1 world championship here. 

    A busy opening phase, in which teams attempted to make up for the time lost in a wet FP2 yesterday afternoon, saw top spot swap hands regularly with Ferrari’s Sebastian Vettel in P1 early on thanks to a soft-tyre lap of 1:17.639.

    Red Bull Racing’s Max Verstappen then moved ahead with a lap of 1:17.033 set on the medium tyres but Bottas and Hamilton took over with Styria winner Hamilton going quickest with a lap of 1:16.472. 

    Pushing to match the pace of the Mercedes pair, Verstappen then spun in Turn 12, though he was able to quickly regain control and he managed to avoid damage. Hamilton too went wide at the tricky corner and has his time deleted. 

    When the move was made to new softs for qualifying runs it was Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc who made the first move and the Monegasque racer took top spot with a lap of 1:15.781 in a much more competitive looking Ferrari.

    Bottas then moved backl to P1 with a good lap of 1:15.437 and after Hamilton was forced to abandon his first attempt and then failed to make significant improvements on his next run, the Finn’s lap remained the benchmark until the chequered flag. H

    Sergio Perez put his Racing Point third, which shunted Leclerc to fourth,  but the Ferrari driver’s pace was good enough to allow him to split the Racing Points, with Lance Stroll fifth at the flag. Verstappen finished sixth, though the Red Bull driver ended the session 0.647 off Bottas’ pace. 

    Lando Norris was seventh for McLaren ahead of Vettel and Pierre Gasly, while Daniel Ricciardo rounded out the top 10.

    2020 FIA Formula 1 Hungarian Grand Prix – Free Practice 3
    1 Valtteri Bottas Mercedes 1:15.437 18 209.069
    2 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 1:15.479 0.042 20 208.953
    3 Sergio Pérez Racing Point/Mercedes 1:15.598 0.161 16 208.624
    4 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 1:15.781 0.344 19 208.120
    5 Lance Stroll Racing Point/Mercedes 1:16.033 0.596 15 207.430
    6 Max Verstappen Red Bull/Honda 1:16.084 0.647 18 207.291
    7 Lando Norris McLaren/Renault 1:16.193 0.756 18 206.995
    8 Sebastian Vettel Ferrari 1:16.351 0.914 18 206.567
    9 Pierre Gasly AlphaTauri/Honda 1:16.453 1.016 20 206.291
    10 Daniel Ricciardo Renault 1:16.508 1.071 14 206.143
    11 Carlos Sainz McLaren/Renault 1:16.545 1.108 21 206.043
    12 Alexander Albon Red Bull/Honda 1:16.582 1.145 19 205.943
    13 Esteban Ocon Renault 1:16.706 1.269 20 205.611
    14 George Russell Williams/Mercedes 1:16.847 1.410 23 205.233
    15 Romain Grosjean Haas/Ferrari 1:16.866 1.429 15 205.183
    16 Kevin Magnussen Haas/Ferrari 1:17.086 1.649 14 204.597
    17 Daniil Kvyat AlphaTauri/Honda 1:17.292 1.855 15 204.052
    18 Antonio Giovinazzi Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 1:17.496 2.059 20 203.515
    19 Kimi Räikkönen Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 1:17.527 2.090 25 203.433
    20 Nicholas Latifi Williams/Mercedes 1:17.650 2.213 17 203.111

  • Vettel sets fastest time in FP2, ahead of Bottas

    Vettel sets fastest time in FP2, ahead of Bottas

    Budapest, 17 July 2020: Ferrari’s Sebastian Vettel set the fastest time of a wet second practice at the Hungaroring, beating Mercedes’ Valtteri Bottas by just under three-tenths of a second in a session that saw only 13 drivers set a time, 

    After an overcast opening session in the morning, a steady rain began to fall in the run-up to the afternoon session and with no sign of improvement on the immediate horizon, the first third of the session was quiet as teams stayed in their garages. 

    Sergio Pérez was the first man to set a time, just before the half hour mark, and the Mexican slotted into P1 with a lap of 1:43.862s set on extreme wet tyres.

    He was joined on the track shortly afterwards by team-mate Lance Stroll who lowered the benchmark to 1:42.380. That remained the top time for a long spell but eventually Vettel eclipsed the time with a lap of 1m41.564s, also on the extreme wets. He then chipped away at the time to lower it 1:40.464s at the one-hour mark. It would remain the target for the rest of the session. 

    Bottas joined the action just after the hour and he immediately moved into second place. The Finn later tried intermediate tyres but did not improve.

    The championship leader’s team-mate Lewis Hamilton took to the track shortly after Bottas emerged, but the Styrian Grand Prix winner put in just a single installation lap on inters and did not set a time.

    Third place in the session wen to McLaren’s Carlos Sainz took the placing in the last third of the session. Stroll and Pérez finished fourth and fifth, ahead of AlphaTauri’s Pierre Gasly, who had missed the morning session due to a suspected power unit issue.

    Red Bull’s Max Verstappen made a late run on wets to take P7 with the Dutchman setting a time of 1:42.820s. Haas’ Romain Grosjean and Alfa Romeo’s Kimi Räikkönen were eighth and ninth respectively and the top 10 order was completed by Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc The remaining drivers to set times were Antonio Giovinazzi, Lando Norris and Daniil Kvyat.

    2020 FIA Formula 1 Hungarian Grand Prix – Free Practice 2
    1 Sebastian Vettel Ferrari 1:40.464 12 156.987
    2 Valtteri Bottas Mercedes 1:40.736 0.272 5 156.563
    3 Carlos Sainz McLaren/Renault 1:41.784 1.320 6 154.951
    4 Lance Stroll Racing Point/Mercedes 1:42.380 1.916 6 154.049
    5 Sergio Pérez Racing Point/Mercedes 1:42.470 2.006 5 153.914
    6 Pierre Gasly AlphaTauri/Honda 1:42.588 2.124 7 153.737
    7 Max Verstappen Red Bull/Honda 1:42.820 2.356 4 153.390
    8 Romain Grosjean Haas/Ferrari 1:43.335 2.871 6 152.625
    9 Kimi Räikkönen Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 1:43.471 3.007 16 152.425
    10 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 1:43.725 3.261 10 152.052
    11 Antonio Giovinazzi Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 1:44.411 3.947 9 151.053
    12 Lando Norris McLaren/Renault 1:46.000 5.536 5 148.788
    13 Daniil Kvyat AlphaTauri/Honda 1:47.422 6.958 7 146.819
    14 Esteban Ocon Renault 1 
    15 Daniel Ricciardo Renault 1 
    16 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 1 
    17 Nicholas Latifi Williams/Mercedes 2 
    18 George Russell Williams/Mercedes 2 
    19 Alexander Albon Red Bull/Honda 3 
    20 Kevin Magnussen Haas/Ferrari 1 

  • I love back-to-back races, says Hamilton

    I love back-to-back races, says Hamilton

    Spielberg, 12 July 2020: The top-3 drivers who attended the FIA Sunday press conference are:

    1 – Lewis HAMILTON (Mercedes); 2 – Valtteri BOTTAS (Mercedes); 3 – Max VERSTAPPEN (Red Bull Racing)

    TRACK INTERVIEWS (Conducted by Martin Brundle ) 

    Q: Lewis, congratulations, normal service resumes: pole position, victory. You had it covered today.

    Lewis HAMILTON: Firstly, I just want to say a big thank you to my team and everyone back at the factory. This has been… what a weird year it is but it is great to be back up here and to be driving and to be driving with this kind of performance. The team did a fantastic job with the strategy and then it was just for me to keep it together, stay off the kerbs and bring it home. 

    Q: You didn’t quite get the point for fastest lap, that went to Carlos Sainz in the McLaren on a fresh set of tyres, but you had to look after the car a little bit through the race did you? 

    LH: Yeah, well I tried to get the fastest lap but of course on 40 lap-old mediums I wasn’t going to get it over someone on new, fresh tyres. But that’s OK, I’m so grateful to be back in first place and honestly it feels like a long time coming, obviously since the last race last year, and to come back this weekend after a difficult weekend last week, this is a great, great step forwards. 

    Q: It was certainly a champion’s drive and we get to race again just next weekend don’t we?

    LH: I love this. I love back-to-backs. Can we just go back-to-back all year long. I might need a holiday in between though!

    Q: Valtteri, you’re still leading the world championship, that’s the good news, but Lewis had the pace today. 

    Valtteri BOTTAS: Yeah, Lewis started from the pole, he had a good start, so he could really control the race and there was not so much happening as last weekend. But from my side, I think today was damage limitation, so still got good points, still leading, so it’s not too bad. Yesterday was not ideal so that’s why no 25 points today.

    Q: A good fight with Max. You got past him, he got past you, but eventually you got the job done in the end. Exciting at Turn 4 there?

    VB: Yeah, it was a good battle with him. Obviously I think I had quite a bit more pace than him at the end as we extended the first stint, but yeah racing closely is always good fun.

    Q: So you can leave Austria and head to Hungary very satisfied?

    VB: Could have been more satisfied but it’s been a not bad first couple of races so looking forward to next week.

    Q: Great drive Max, you tried your best to split the Mercedes and gave it everything you had.

    Max VERSTAPPEN: Yeah, I tried but we’re just a bit too slow, so I pushed as hard as I could and also when Valtteri was trying to pass me I tried to make it a bit difficult. I knew he was going to get by one lap later but it was at least fun because the rest of the race was pretty boring. A podium is good but still a lot of work to do. 

    Q: You got points on the board. Can you find any speed between now and next weekend? Have you got any goodies, any presents coming in the car? 

    MV:I don’t know yet. We’ll look into it and then we’ll see next week. 

    PRESS CONFERENCE

    Q: Lewis, many congratulations. It’s been a pretty dominant couple of days for you with that pole position yesterday and the win today. Now, races are never as easy as they look, or are they? Were there any concerns for you today? 

    LH: Thank you. It’s never easy. It was a challenge this weekend, especially with the Red Bulls really picking up their pace on Friday and we obviously had some sort of issue that we were able to rectify from Friday afternoon. Nothing major. And also, the team did a fantastic job over the week to improve on some of the issues we had in the last race. Today, being able to attack a little bit more and really utilise the car… I think the Red Bulls…. well Max, was quite quick today, so it just shows that they’re definitely not a pushover. I think they’ve done a fantastic job so we’ve got to stay on our toes. We’ve got to go to places like Hungary, where the shorter Red Bull is usually very, very strong. Otherwise, it’s been a great two days and a great way to bounce back from a difficult weekend in the first weekend, where Valtteri was incredibly strong and just a big, big thank you to everyone back at the factory and everyone here who has stayed. The team has stayed all week and been in every single day, not leaving a stone unturned, so that’s a huge confidence boost. 

    Q: Valtteri, P4 on the grid to P2 at the flag. You mentioned damage limitation earlier. How was the performance of the car?

    VB: I think the performance of the car was great, obviously yesterday as well I should have been stronger. There was obviously some things affecting the performance but even from my side the lap was not that clean and I should have been at least P2, so that’s why in some things I’m going to have a look in the mirror why today was a bit more difficult and could have been possibly a good battle with Lewis. But I think, from where I started and how the race went, I think it felt like I and us as a team, we could really maximise everything, so being able to, as a team, get the first 1-2 of the year, only the second race, is obviously really impressive. Like Lewis said, I’m just really thankful for everyone. It’s a privilege to drive for this team. But, of course, I’m not 100 per cent happy because I didn’t win. That’s how it goes as a driver but Lewis did a great job this weekend and… yeah… still points-wise it’s still early days and everything is looking good, so that’s why I can’t wait for the future. 

    Q: Max, you were carrying some front wing damage for a large proportion of that race. How much was that compromising the performance of the car?

    MV: I don’t know, I didn’t look in the data. I was just pushing as hard as I could to try and stay with them, y’know? But clearly, it’s still not good enough. The gaps, compared to the guys behind were massive. I was a bit shocked. I tried everything I could but it’s still not enough. So, we’ve still got some work to do but to bounce back from zero points last week to a podium now is a good start – but I think, as a team, we want to win and we want to fight for the Championship and if you want to fight for the Championship of course you need to win races, so yeah, we need to look into it. I think we were losing quite a bit on the straight as well. So it’s a bit of both at the moment. Just need to keep on working harder to try and close the gap. 

    VIDEO CONFERENCE

    Q: (Alex Kalinauckas – Autosport) Lewis, how much was the gearbox issue over the kerbs, how much did that affect you again today and did you have to drive within yourself as a result – or were you able to push flat-out throughout?

    LH: No, it wasn’t a problem today. The guys did a great job during the week, understanding what the issue was. It was nothing particularly major but of course it could have had quite large consequences, so, they did a great job to rectify it and we haven’t really heard them mention it since we started the weekend. So, we were able to drive as normal today. 

    Q: (Scott Mitchell – The Race) Max, you said you haven’t dived into the data. Can you just talk a little bit through how the car was changing and handling through the race. Heard you talking about some traction issues or driveability issues at times. How was the car for you as the race developed?

    MV: It was OK. Of course when the tyres are dropping off automatically you struggle a little more with the balance but there was nothing like dramatic, just the last 10-12 laps I started to struggle with the tyres but that’s it. 

    Q: (Dieter Rencken – Racing Lines) Max, we heard you querying the timing of your pitstop, and then you seemed to run out of tyres towards the end. Do you believe that was the decisive factor?

    MV: No, we were just too slow so we can do whatever we want: pitting early, late or the same, I don’t think it’s going to change the end result. So, at the time I thought we were pitting a bit early, and I knew of course that towards the end of the race I was going to run out of tyres but yeah, it is what it is. I said also on the radio at one point, never mind, just get on with the job.

    Q: (Mark Hughes – The Race) Question for Max. In the initial part of the race it looked like you were hanging on to Lewis reasonably well but then they seemed to step it up. Is that a problem that you had or do you think that they just had performance in hand?

    MV: No, I think it’s more just Lewis pace-managing. Of course, he knows my lap times, that the gap is not closing or growing. I’m just doing my laps. There’s always a bit of margin but if I would push more, Lewis would push more, so yeah. You could see once you have to push a bit more and you have the tyres to do so, then I’m just a bit too slow. 

    Q: Max, how confident are you that you’re going to be more competitive in Hungary next weekend?

    MV: Well, we’ll just find out, don’t we! Honestly, at the moment I’m not really… I don’t know. That’s the simple answer: I don’t know. But I hope it’s going to be a bit better. 

    Q: (Andrew Benson – BBC) Valtteri, we know all athletes have strong self-confidence, but when Lewis has a weekend like he has this weekend and a performance on Saturday like he did, how hard is it to keep that belief that you can beat him to the Championship?

    VB: I think in any sport, and especially in Formula 1 – it’s quite a special sport, it’s quite easy to doubt yourself – but for the moment I have no reason to. Obviously over the years you find the right tools, how to find your confidence and the trust in yourself and what you are doing. I have no reason to doubt any of my ability or skills. I know Lewis had a strong weekend. He did a good job. Also, based on last weekend, I know what I’m capable of. So, I really feel many improvements in my driving since last year – so that’s why I’m confident it’s going to be a good battle for the Championship this year. So, I’m not going to let one weekend, even multiple weekends, drag me down. I’ve learned that. Just going to focus on the job and improving myself as we go. 

    Q: (Mathias Brunner – Speedweek.com) For Max: how and when did the damage to the front wing happen, and how much of a difference did that make to the balance of the car? 

    MV: I didn’t know that. They just suddenly told me that I had damage to the front wing, so honestly I don’t think it was doing that much. It’s of course not ideal but I also realised that my rear end plates were also falling off, like a few bits. I don’t know, the balance is just fine but it’s just not fast enough over a lap so we just need to work on a bit of power on the straights and a bit more grip. 

    Q: But was the front wing damage as bad as Spain 2018; do you remember that? 

    MV: Yeah, that was not so lovely. It was fine, yeah, there is a bit of the endplate missing but honestly they told me that I suddenly had wing damage and honestly, while driving, it felt alright.

    Q: (Alex Kalinauckas – Autosport) Max, you said that you were shocked by the gap to the guys behind. Now that includes your teammate so I just wondered how costly was it today, not having Alex up there with you, particularly when it looked like Mercedes were waiting to play the threat of the undercut against you with Valtteri? 

    MV: No, it wouldn’t have mattered, at the end. No. I don’t think so. It’s of course nicer, also for himself, to be up there but I don’t think today it would have mattered like last year, for example, in Hungary or whatever. 

    Q: (Mark Hughes – The Race) Valtteri, when you came out after your stop, much newer tyres than Max, you were catching immediately but then it seemed to stabilise and it looked as though it wasn’t going to happen and then you seemed to get a second wind. What was going on there? 

    VB: Yeah, initially it was good. I think why the lap time stabilised, I don’t know if it was shown on TV but I went through quite a bit of traffic, there were many backmarkers and there was actually some of them, it was pretty shocking that sometimes I spent more than a lap with them having blue flags and just not moving away. They were racing each other in front of me and not really caring that they had blue flags so I hope that will be looked into so I think that’s why I lost quite a bit of momentum that time and then finally got again through pretty good free air and managed to find the rhythm again and really then it was pretty consistent and the car felt good and the pace was good so I think that was it. 

    Q: (Andrew Benson – BBC) Lewis, we saw you do a black power salute, both stand on the car after the race and on the podium. There was another anti-racism protest before the race, it looked a bit messier than last week with not everybody there. Have you thought about how you’re going to continue this push through the rest of the year and how are you going to bring the rest of the Formula One drivers along with you? 

    LH: Well, we’re learning along the way. I think this weekend the drivers spoke after the drivers’ briefing about what we intended to do. The question was how long do we… some people were asking how do we have to continue to do this? Some felt like they’d… one was enough last week and I just had to encourage them that racism is here, going to be here for probably longer than our time here and people of colour who are subject to racism don’t have time to take a moment to protest and that be it. We’ve got to continue to push for equality and really to raise awareness of it so I don’t really know what else we can do moving forward but for me to have Valtteri and my team also lining and acknowledging and kneeling before the start of the race I think was really huge and I’m incredibly grateful for their understanding and this contribution to it. I think we’ve really got to think as a sport what we can do because of course those are nice signs but passion is needed, it needs taking. It’s great to… as I said before… to see Chase being so kind as to donate $1m and it’s great to see the FIA to step up and also give me a $1m but if you don’t know the problem then you can’t fix it and you know $1m doesn’t really go that far so a lot of work needs to go on with Formula 1, the FIA do really need to be a part of it and I think the drivers need to be a part of it also as we have great voices and platforms. For me, as a team, we’re keeping the car black all year long so it is… we’re going to be fighting and pushing for it all year and me personally, I think this is going to be a lifelong thing for me. 

    Q: (Scott Mitchell – The Race) For all three: we’re obviously all done with the double header at the same track, the first time that’s happened in F1 history. Just wanted to know what your take is from it. Were you surprised that it was exactly the same format two weekends in a row? Do you think there was a missed opportunity not to try something different and do you think that when we do it at Silverstone, just simply changing one of the step of tyre compounds, is really going to shake things up one weekend to the next? 

    MV: Well, yeah, I didn’t really do a race last week so for me this was basically the first race. It was fine. Mixing tyre compounds? Well, you can only really, on most of the tracks, go harder because they don’t really allow you to go softer because then probably you end up blistering and stuff and you don’t want to go with even harder tyres so… I don’t know. I don’t really think there’s a lot of option to play with because simply I don’t think they allow us to use softer tyres for safety reasons. I don’t know really what you can do. Yeah, they stopped about the reverse grid but yeah, it would have been a bit weird to know that if you retire in the first race as I had, then you start from pole in the second. I don’t know what you can do and I honestly think it’s fine. It’s more important that we are racing. 

    LH: I’ve not watched the races so it’s difficult to have the same perspective as you will because we’re in this bubble, it’s a bit of a different viewpoint. I definitely think we should be trying to be more creative maybe, but I don’t know what that is, I don’t have the answers for it but just shifting a tyre is not going to make any difference, literally no difference really for us. It’s a question of format: if you’re going to do back-to-back, it’s a shame we can’t reverse the circuit and go the other way but obviously that was never in the game plan when designing these circuits so… Reverse of grid? I think it would just be mayhem, if you put us all… if we qualified at the front and then you put us last it would be a bit of a difficult one and we would probably just end up not trying to qualify for the front so, it is a difficult one. I wonder if there are other series that are doing anything different that we could look into. We have these two races in Silverstone and we could definitely do something to spice it up, particularly for the second one I think. 

    VB: I think we saw two different races even though it is the same place. Obviously the weather played a part and mixed things up a bit yesterday and it was a completely different kind of race weekend even though it was the same format, the same track. I think that’s the beauty of the sport, there are always so many unknowns and so many things that can happen, so for me it’s not really a big issue. But, yes, I agree with Lewis, I think we could be creative, it just needs to be done in the right way. I don’t know what’s the right way but I know Silverstone has lots of track layout options but who knows. 

    Q: (Dieter Rencken – Racing Lines/racefans.net) – To all three, based on what Lewis said and the conversation you’ve just had. Lewis you said during the podium interview you love racing, double-header bring it on etc. How many races in a row do you think your system could take? We’ve got another one coming up next weekend. How many in a row do you think we can handle? 

    LH: Me, as a driver, I feel that we can do a lot of back-to-back races, the three days in between are definitely enough. So, in this kind of season I think it’s fine, but it’s not just about me, it’s about a large group of people who are on the road constantly and are going to be away from their families even longer. It’s such a challenging time to have to stay in your bubble and not see people. I think it’s really going to be heavy for our team members. I know they love racing but they do have families they would love to see, so I really hope things in the world get a bit better for us. But I think we will manage. I don’t there is anything currently that we can’t achieve if we all pull together. 

    VB:I really have the same feeling as Lewis. From a drivers’ point of view we are really committed to this sport, like any team member is, and we just love racing, so it’s hard to put a hard limit from a driver’s point of view. At least we are in Europe so travelling distances arte pretty easy so that makes things easier, so triple-headers I don’t really see them as an issue, even if there will be many of them. But, for sure, there are many team members who have families, small kids at home, and it’s not fair to be such a long time away from their family. But it is how it is. 

    MV: I agree with Lewis and Valtteri. It’s good that it’s all in Europe at the moment as that makes travelling a bit easier. But I do think that after here or four weeks it’s good to go home and have a bit of time off. Not only for the driver but especially for the mechanics, you know, with a family. Otherwise they could file for divorce and you don’t want that to happen! It’s good to visit family and friends and that it’s not only F1 in your head. Sometimes you need to relax and think about other stuff, because F1 is not everything. It’s part of your life but there are also other things you have to do.

    Q: Are you going to squeeze in a sim race on that weekend off between Hungary and…?

    MV: No! I did it a bit too much, so I’m on a break, a long break hopefully!

  • Team reps welcome Mugello and Sochi races

    Team reps welcome Mugello and Sochi races

    TEAM REPRESENTATIVES – Toyoharu TANABE (Honda), Guenther STEINER (Haas), Frédéric VASSEUR (Alfa Romeo)
     
    Q: Question to all three of you: we’ve had calendar announcements this morning with races confirmed at Mugello and Sochi in September. I would love to get your thoughts on that first of all. Fred, perhaps we could start with you?
    Frédéric VASSEUR: I think it is good news. We are going in the right direction, to add more and more races. Thanks to Formula 1 to take care of this. I think it’s a great job and, step-by-step, we are building-up a nice calendar.
     
    Q: Guenther?
    Guenther STEINER: Yeah, the same as Fred. It’s fantastic the job is done because it must be very difficult to get events organised at the moment. I think they do a great job, so at least we get a substantial calendar together, what it seems to be like. Now they’ve got a few more and then we should have a nice season. It’s very good for us. It’s very good for the fans and for Formula 1 in general. So, very good and I hope they keep on pushing to have a few more and then we should be good.
     
    Q: Tanabe-san?
    Toyoharu TANABE: Yes, I agree with them. Yes it’s good for all Formula 1 fans and then manufacturers and teams. I would like to say thank you for the people working very hard to establish this schedule and I hope we can go there to have a Formula 1 race.
     
    VIDEO CONFERENCE
    Q: (Luke Smith – Autosport) Question for Tanabe-san. We saw both Red Bull cars were hit with power unit problems during the race last weekend. Could you expand a bit of what the issue was? Was it an issue on the Red Bull side or the Honda side. Are there any concerns of it emerging again this weekend? We know Austria’s quite a difficult race for the cars in terms of cooling in particular.
    TT: The two incidents were not related. On the Max car we had a mechanical trouble problem which led to an electronic problem on the PU but that’s not related to the PU in the end. On Alex’s car we saw some unusual data after he ran over the gravel and then it accelerated and then exceeded our limit, so we stopped the car. We had a very short period between the last race and today. We applied very simple and basic, primitive counter-measure. We changed all related electronic parts on the car, on the PU. We are still investigating the very detail but it looks, the various reasons, related to this problem. From the P1 running, the car runs OK. We will keep watching and then monitor. During the long run and also the race.
     
    Q: (Erik van Haren – De Telegraaf) Do you think Honda is able to match the power of the Mercedes engine this year? And what’s the difference between the upgraded Honda engine in Austria and the first one in testing?
    TT: I think it’s a little bit difficult to tell the difference between PU power in the four PU manufacturers. Many functions related to the speed and lap time. We think we need to work a little bit more hard to catch up the top runner. The difference between Australia and here, the first race this year, mainly we cannot work on the big change because of the shutdown. Mainly reliability and minor changes. We had time to apply some things, even limited time. So, how can I say? Kind of housekeeping work. That’s it.
     
    Q: (Laurence Edmondson – ESPN) Another power unit question but to Guenther and Fred. We saw that all the Ferrari-powered cars seemed to be a little bit slower on the straight than their rivals. Is that something that you noticed, and have you had an explanation from Ferrari as to why the power has gone down compared to last year?
    GS: Obviously it became apparent that there is a speed-deficit on the straights and we are slower than last year. All Ferrari-powered cars, I think we can say that openly. I think people are working hard to find out what it is, as Tanabe-san said, it’s very difficult to judge other people’s performance of the engine, you know? Because you don’t have any data, you’ve got just speed data but the speed of the car eventually, a drag level and so on. For sure we’re working hard to find out why, in qualifying, here in Austria, we were faster, and for sure the same as Fred is doing – not that I need to speak for Fred because he can do that himself. In the race I think it was less prominent, the difference. We didn’t have a good race, obviously, but I think there still needs to be work going into it and do see what is what here actually. And then we can find a conclusion and move on and sort out if there is a problem.
     
    Q: Fred, let’s get your thoughts?
    FV: I’m OK with Guenther. The situation is known and now we have to work on all sides. I trust Ferrari to be able to be able to recover as much as possible. My job – and it’s not in my hands, our job is to push on the chassis side and on the driver and to do a good job. The race pace was decent but we were able to match the cars in front of us. The deficit was a bit more important in quali.
     
    Q: (Scott Mitchell – The Race) Question for Tanabe-san. Can you just talk through exactly what you’re able to do between races to identify faults like you had least weekend? There isn’t much time, so how do you action staff in the UK and Japan to perform your analysis?
    TT: As soon as we got the logging data, we analysed the data at the track, and then later we checked the car, and then, especially for Alex’s car, we removed the parts from the PU and there’s some shipped to Sakura R&D in Japan and some shipped to Milton Keynes and then we run those parts from the suspect PU, run on dyno and recreate very similar conditions as race. Then we analyse that data again.
     
    Q: (Abhishek Takle – Mid-Day) Question to all three, mostly to Guenther and Fred. There’s been a lot of talk about the biosphere and the bubble and Charles having gone back to Monaco and Valtteri having gone back also to Monaco. Do you know exactly what you are and aren’t allowed to do in maintaining this biosphere? And Tanabe-san, you’ve got, as an engine supplier, you’ve got staff working across different teams. How do you make sure you keep the bubble and biosphere intact?
    FV: The rule is clear, we were allowed to go back to the factory for serious reasons. I don’t want to comment for the Charles story or Valtteri but the rule is clear that you have to perform the test again before going back to the track. I did one, two days ago, and another one this morning. I think it’s the safest place in the world. Everybody did tonnes of tests and I think that the rule is respected by everybody.
     
    Q: Guenther, your take on it?
    GS: Yeah, as Fred said, it’s a very safe place here, you know? There is clear rules that when you come in here, you need to be tested, so I don’t know what happened with Charles and Valtteri but maybe it’s a story on social media – but if they get checked in the beginning I think that’s OK and it’s quite clear what you have to do and what not to do here. So, we all know that and what I’ve seen, all the people working in F1 are very disciplined. I think we try our best. For sure mistakes happen – always – but nobody’s trying to undermine the issue intentionally or try to be smart about it. I feel very safe here. If any of us get it here, I will be very surprised.
     
    Q: Tanabe-san, is it complicated by you supplying multiple teams?
    TT: Yes. It is a little bit difficult for us to work separately but for our members to be safe, also teams safe, we completely follow the FIA direction, also team direction. Maybe the same as this conference, we use web meeting as much as we can and then we communicate between the two teams’ members. So far it’s worked well but definitely we keep working on our safety. That’s very important for us and then Formula 1.
     
    Q: (Luke Smith – Autosport) Question for Fred. I just wanted to know if there are any future plans for Robert Kubica in terms of his practice outings this year? We saw him make his first appearance of the season today. What more is he going to be doing in terms of FP1 sessions through this season?
    FV: We plan to do four or five sessions during the season but the issue with the new calendar is that we have also to reschedule everything. He is racing in DTM also, it means we have to find solutions but we will do it. I think it’s a great added value for the team in terms of understanding of the car and he’s bringing a nice contribution.
     
    Q: (Dieter Rencken – Racing Lines) Good-day Gentleman. Obviously the budget cap has been reduced substantially now to $145million but given that a driver is a performance differentiator, or is accepted as being one, would you like to see driver salaries, either capped and/or included in the budget cap? That’s to the two team principals.
    GS: I have nothing against a driver cap or a driver salary cap, whatever you want to call it. I don’t see a problem for us in it because we are so far off it, whatever it will be. So, I’m not pushing it or anything but I think at some stage it will be a good idea to put it in the budget cap, because, as you said, it’s a performance differentiator. So for sure if you spend a lot of money on a driver then you cannot do other things. That should level the playing field even more and I think the salaries would adjust by themselves and they would end up lower than they are now. So, I think, I’m not faced with the problem, to be high in salaries because we are not even at the budget cap, so in the end, any of these proposals, I will be OK with it, so long as the amount is within some reason.
    FV: I’m OK with Guenther. The only point is that it would be a bit strange to exclude the highest salary of the team and not to include the drivers. If we are taking this direction we have to include everybody into the cost cap.
     
    Q: (Scott Mitchell – The Race) To all three please, but mainly the two team principals. We’re straight back into a ‘normal’ grand prix weekend schedule. We didn’t have the opportunity in the end to try a reverse grid qualifying race for the second part of the double header. I just wanted to know what you make of it being an identical format the second week in a row. Do you think this was a missed opportunity to try to do something different?
    FV: Spielberg would have been difficult because to base the classification on the result of race one would have been a bit difficult because you can have the temptation to stop the race if you are not into the points. But I think I was positive for this for the rest of the season, for Silverstone and if we have to do another development later into the season I think it was a good opportunity. It’s also part of the skill of the drivers to be able to overtake but let’s see for the future. But we have tons of things to sort out this season.
     
    Q: Guenther, missed opportunity?
    GS: Yes, I agree. In my opinion we should have done it and as Fred said it would have been difficult as it was the first race but we could have used the standing from last year’s World Championship to start the qualifying race, or something like this. There would be other opportunities to do that, how to start that one. Hopefully it comes back on the agenda that we do this. And as I’ve always said, if it doesn’t work we need to brave enough to say it didn’t work and go back to what we know from, before. Sometimes trying helps because there is not a lot we can lose. Again, I hope it comes back and we try it and then we know and we are not sitting here speculating whether it is a missed opportunity or not. It worked or it didn’t and we move one and come up with the next good idea if this didn’t work.
     
    Q: Tanabe-san?
    TT: I have no comment.
     
    Q: (Dieter Rencken – Racing Lines/racefans.net) A question for Tanabe-san. The way that I understand it at the moment, Honda is committed to Formula 1 until the end of 2021. Is there any talk about extending that commitment? Has any decision been taken in Japan about possibly remaining in Formula 1 after that period?
    TT: I’m not involved in the contract scene very much but I just heard that the discussion is underway. I haven’t heard any result yet. That’s the current status.
     
    Q: Tanabe-san, how does the freezing of the power unit development affect you and your plans for 2021 and beyond?
    TT: The freezing is not what we want. But that decision is, I think, the right reaction and the right decision for all of the manufacturers and teams considering this social situation. I think people need to work very hard on how to optimize, how to use the PU with kind of the same spec. We need to spend more time on that kind of simulation or analysing.
     
    Q: Guenther, coming to you. Frustrating weekend for the team last weekend. Has team owner Gene Haas set the team any goals for this season?
    GS: No. it’s very difficult to set goals in a season like this. I think that went out of the window at the start of the season, when we didn’t know if we were starting. With the shutdown it’s just that the financial situation has changed. We obviously have less income and so on. You cannot put a goal on a season like this – he knows that. I think we try to do our best and make him happy. It’s very difficult in the moment, as we saw last weekend, a frustrating weekend. But you never give up. You keep on working and everybody is working hard to make the situation better within our means.
     
    Q: (Dieter Rencken – Racing Lines/racefans.net) A question for the two team principals. Jean Todt said last week that there were Concorde Agreement discussions happening. A) Were you two involved and invited, and B) How do you see the progress on the Concorde Agreement please?
    FV: Yeah, the discussions are ongoing. For sure, we stop a little bit the discussions during the COVID system and the new regulation answer, but now we are back to the topic and I hope we will have be able to finalise an agreement in the next few weeks.
    GS: As Fred says, the discussions have started again. To answer one of Dieter’s questions, we were involved in the beginning on the Concorde Agreement, obviously a lesser amount than the big teams as they have more things to sort out but otherwise FOM was trying to be as fair as possible with all 10 teams.
     
    Q: One last question from me to Fred. More points for Antonio last weekend. Little bit disappointed not to see you cutting his hair after the race, as you did last year. What’s the bet with him for 2020?
    FV: He did it for me.
    GS: He wants it for him the hair; that’s what he wants!
    FV: I think he did a good second part of the season last year and he didn’t race the two years before and we have to keep it in mind. He did a strong second part of the season and it was a good start to 2020. Now, we have to keep the same pace and the same path for the next few races but it’s not just a matter to score points on the first one, but we have to be consistent and it will be the target for everybody in the team, including Antonio.

    From Left: Otmar SZAFNAUER (Racing Point), Mario ISOLA (Pirelli), Claire WILLIAMS (Williams) at the second FIA Friday Press Meet. An FIA image
    From Left: Otmar SZAFNAUER (Racing Point), Mario ISOLA (Pirelli), Claire WILLIAMS (Williams) at the second FIA Friday Press Meet. An FIA image

    TEAM REPRESENTATIVES – Otmar SZAFNAUER (Racing Point), Mario ISOLA (Pirelli), Claire WILLIAMS (Williams)

    Q: A quick question from me to start. We’ve had calendar announcements from Formula 1 with confirmation of races at Mugello and Sochi. I’d love to get your reaction on that please?

    Claire WILLIAMS: Firstly, I think Formula 1, the FIA, everybody has done an extraordinary job to bring us all back racing and to do it so safely. I imagine it’s incredibly hard work trying to co-ordinate where we are going racing after these initial eight races that have been confirmed, so to hear that more races have been put on the calendar is great news. Clearly we want to go racing as much as possible in the safest possible way. Russia we know. Mugello is an unknown – I think we used to go testing there many, many moons ago. Yeah, we’re looking forward it. I think it will give the engineers a challenge. But I think it’s fantastic that F1 is putting all these new races on the calendar.
    Mario ISOLA: Yeah, I fully agree with Claire. It’s great to be back, it’s great to have a calendar now made of 10 races. Mugello is a circuit that we know, because we raced there with other series. It’s quite hard on tyres, so we need to be well prepared for this circuit. In mid-September it’s also possible to have high temperatures. Last time we went there with a Formula 1 car was 2012, so a long time ago. But happy to have a second race in Italy. We are Italians so we like the idea to have a second race in Italy. I hope it will be a great race and a great celebration of this very nice circuit.
     
    Q: First time since 2006 that we’ll have two races in Italy. And Otmar, please?
    Otmar SZAFNAUER: There isn’t much else to say. I agree with Claire and Mario. It’s wonderful to see two more races added and I think that’s testament to the hard work that was done to make sure that we can race safely. We’ve shown that in the first weekend and with the second weekend coming up now and if we stick to the protocols that have been put in place then it looks like we can race safely and that will mean many more races after Russia as well.
     
    Q: (Christian Nimmervoll – motorsport.com) A question to Otmar. You have Checo under contract until 2022 and presumably Lance is on a long-term commitment as well. So, are you at this point in a position to provide a firm no towards being able to offer Sebastian Vettel a drive for 2021?
    OS: Well, like I’ve said before, it’s flattering that everyone this that a four-time world champion would come to our team, but maybe that’s because the car is a bit quicker now. You’re absolutely right, we have long contracts with both our drivers, so it would only be logical that we don’t have space.
     
    Q: (Dieter Rencken – Racing Lines/racefans.net) A driver is generally accepted as being a performance differentiator. Given that we differentiate performance via the budget cap on aero etc, how do you feel about including driver salaries within the budget cap or alternatively having a capo on a driver’s salary? And do you believe that any form of cap would possibly chase away the superstars from the sport?
    OS: I’m definitely in favour of including the driver salaries within the cap because it forces teams to make those decisions. Do you spend your money on a driver or do you take one that doesn’t cost you so much and spend it elsewhere on performance. To answer your first questions, Dieter, I’m in favour of having the salaries within the budget cap. Your second one is a hypothetical one as to if that happens will the superstars go do something else? I believe that even having the driver salaries within the cap their salaries would still be higher than what they would get at other racing series.
    CW: I would tend to agree with Otmar. As you say, Dieter, drivers are performance differentiators and in order to get a much more equitable playing field in this sport, as the financial regulations are there to do, then I think it’s absolutely critical that anyone who is performance related should be part of that cost cap. I wholeheartedly agree with it. And again, as Otmar said, I think that the likelihood of drivers being discouraged from participating in our sport would probably be minimal, just simply because this is the highest echelon of motorsport and it’s a destination where drivers want to be racing.
     
    Q: On the subject of drivers, George said yesterday that his future is in your hands. What are your plans for him?
    CW: I feel quite a lot of pressure, George’s future being in my hands. George is on a three-year contract with the team, he’s in his second year and he’s done a fantastic job for Williams. Everybody knows how difficult it was for all of us last year, not least for George, and he always held his head up high and he always went out there with an incredibly positive outlook, even in moments that were difficult for him and we’re incredibly appreciative of that at Williams. George is a great talent. He’s clearly got huge ambitions and we want to be able to give him the machinery that he can get out there and score points with, but at the moment we’ve got two driver contracted to the team for 2021 and I’m reluctant to say anything else on the matter.
     
    Q: (Luke Smith – Autosport) Claire, I just wondered if you could give an update on the team’s look for a possible investor or buyer. You said in the announcement a couple of months ago there was a three to four-month window you were looking at. Are there any updates you can give at this point?
    CW: Only to say that we are happy with the process and how it is going so far. We have received a number of interesting potential investors and we are talking to those at the moment and they are of a high quality, which we are delighted about and we continue to go through that process at the moment. As you said, at the start of it we anticipated that it would taker three to four months and we’re still on that timeline at the moment.
     
    Q: (Abishek Takle – Mid-day) Question to Claire and Otmar. As team principals, in terms of maintaining this biosphere, what exactly are you allowed and not allowed to do between races when it comes to travel and things like that, and activities away from the track? And for Mario, as a supplier, how difficult is it for you with people working across multiple teams to maintain the biosphere?
    OS: We’ve been pretty strict and discipline is what you need in order to maintain the biosphere. For example, we’re all in the same hotel and when we get back to the hotel our team are not allowed to go out in the town fort dinner for example, we have to eat dinner together within the hotel. We travel in little groups as well and those groups stay together at the track too. When we’re here in the paddock we make sure we stay within our team and we don’t have interaction with others. I think it’s important to have that vigilance and if we do that and follow the protocol then I’m very confident that we’ll all stay safe.
    CW: We’ve followed the same protocols that Otmar has outlined. We haven’t been able to all be in the same hotel as one team but the team has remained in its bubble and we have been very careful to ensure that those guidelines are being adhered to by all our team personnel. It’s not easy, when everyone is away. It’s hard and you want to be able to go out, but we want to be able to do the right thing by our sport. A lot of people have put a lot of hard work in behind the scenes to make sure that is safe to go racing again and we don’t want to do anything to jeopardise that. So we have stayed within our bubble away from the race track, not going out, and obviously we have followed all the guidelines that have been put in place while we’re here. I think that Formula 1 has done a fantastic job in the first week that we have been away. I know that there have been north of 4,000 tests that have taken place and not one has returned back as a positive. That is testimony to all the hard work that everybody is putting in in order to make sure that we respect the protocols that have been put in place.
    MI: We instituted similar protocols to the teams, the difference is that we have people everywhere across the teams. That is why we… at the beginning we decided to keep a Pirelli bubble rather than allocating engineers inside a team bubble and thanks to the co-operation of the teams we now have an area that is dedicated to Pirelli. It is not easy to work like that because obviously without any access to the garage our engineers have no possibility to check the tyres and to take data and measurements but it is necessary so we are happy to continue with this approach for as long as it is necessary to do that. We have to give a clear indication to our personnel but also to rely on individual responsibility because obviously that is the main point, strict protocols and procedures but explaining how important it is to follow these procedures, not just telling them you have to stay in your room at the hotel and that’s all, but to make them aware of the risks and consequences if they behave in not the way we want.
     
    Q: (Alan Baldwin – Reuters) Claire, if I can just follow up Luke’s earlier question. You mentioned you were talking to a number of potential investors. When you initially announced this, you talked about anything was on the table including the potential sale of the team. I wondered if any of the parameters have changed, whether you’re now talking more about an investment than an outright sale?
    CW: No, the parameters haven’t changed, Alan, and obviously, as everybody knows, Williams is a listed company, we have to operate as per the takeover code and panel and their guidelines, that they dictate and that’s why the strategic review process is as it is. We are looking for either investment into the team, the disbursement of a minority or a majority shareholder or core sales. We’re still thinking along any of those lines. The options are available to us and it will be the board’s decision as to the best option that’s put on the table.
     
    Q: (Scott Mitchell – The Race) To all three of you, but starting with the two team principals: we’ve obviously not got a reverse grid qualifying race this weekend. Just wanted to know if you feel that this has been a missed opportunity and what do you think the reasons are for having an identical second weekend at the same track?
    OS: Well, we discussed the reverse grid qualifying. As you saw, even last weekend, this track can be really hard on brakes. We saw, perhaps, some brake failures and unfortunately, to have a reverse grid and then go into parc fermé and then have another race, our car, for example, wouldn’t have been able to do that, to have a short race and then with the same car finish a race. I think those types of decisions have to be made early enough, before the design process starts, such that you can design the car for those parameters. And as far as was it a missed opportunity? I think the weather will show us that although the same track, we’re going to have two different races here.
    CW: For somebody who for many years has always been espousing the real DNA of our sport, funnily enough I was fairly in favour of the reverse grid, but maybe that would come as no surprise. I would have loved to have seen a Williams line up on pole. But you know, it does go against, I think, the true DNA of our sport and I’m not a person that actually thinks that Formula 1 needs these kind of gimmicky things, I suppose, if I can call them that, to make the sport more exciting. I think that the sport is incredibly exciting. I think invariably, pretty much every race we go to delivers some incredibly exciting racing and I think Austria, the first race that we’ve been to last weekend, did exactly that and I’m sure, as Otmar just said, with the weather conditions that we’re anticipating over the next 24 hours, I think it could be a very different race that we’ll have on Sunday as well. I’m sure the fans at home are just delighted that we’re all back racing and that we’re giving them something to watch, some sport to watch on a Saturday and Sunday afternoons and we just need to put on a good show, and I’m sure that we will.
    MI: Yes, I think it’s not very easy to take the right decision or to consider that a missed opportunity. I remember when we were in lockdown a number of proposals had been discussed on how to make the second race at the same circuit more interesting, or creating some unpredictability. That was one of the proposals on the table. Another one is what we are going to implement at Silverstone, for example, with the different compound choices. So any idea is good. Then we have to consider the pros and cons and come to a final decision, so I don’t think it’s a missed opportunity, it’s just a decision that was taken, involving the majority of the people.
     
    Q: Mario, staying with you, it’s the first races for the 18 inch Formula 2 tyres last weekend. What feedback did you get from the teams and the drivers?
    MI: It was a very positive weekend, talking about Formula 2. We had great racing. Comments from drivers were positive. The 18 inch tyres are different compared to what they are used to drive but I believe that was a great start. Last year we had some indication during the development that was a very good product so happy to have these 18-inch tyres in Formula 2. We have the possibility to collect useful data also for F1 in 2022. Obviously we are talking about two completely different championships and cars but it’s nice to see this product in a real race environment and not during a test, it’s totally different so it’s good information for us.
     
    Q: (Laurence Edmondson – ESPN) Another question to Claire: since the start of the year, we’ve seen ROKIT disappear as your title sponsorship. Can you give any more details on exactly how that relationship broke down and has it left any shortfall in income that will actually impact the performance and any updates coming to the car this year?
    CW: As you would probably imagine, for legal reasons I can’t go into any further detail around the termination of our ROKIT sponsorship except to say that we terminated it and yet we fulfilled all of our contractual obligations with ROKIT. Unfortunately, it was a fantastic partnership for us at the beginning and we’re incredibly disappointed that we’re in this situation but it is what it is and we have to move on. We have some very clever people at Williams that manage our money and we’ve managed to secure the funding in order to keep us racing this year so that doesn’t change. So it has no impact on what we are able to do this season, whether that be with regards to the upgrades that we had planned etc. But apart from that, I’m afraid I can’t say a whole lot more.
     
    Q: (Chris Medland – Racer) Question for both team principals: we’ve had some more races on the calendar added today but we don’t have a full schedule confirmed yet. Obviously that’s where it’s got to be at the moment but is there anything from a sporting perspective that you find difficult or challenging from the basis that you started the season not knowing how many points you’re actually racing for?
    OS: Yeah, for sure it’s difficult to plan. I’ll give you an example: we’re working hard on upgrading this car and it would be really nice to know the entire schedule so you can plan your upgrades, as one example. But I think, also, having triple headers… I remember a couple of years back we had one and I think all the teams complained at that point. It was too difficult and now it seems like they’re coming thick and fast. We have to get through this period, I think it’s great that we’re adding races even if it is a triple header we’ll figure out how to do it and like Claire said earlier, I think the racing was fantastic in the first one that we had and I believe that we’ll have some great racing throughout the year, even at the newer circuits that we haven’t been to for a while.
    CW: Yeah, I would just be echoing everything that Otmar said, I suppose. The only thing that I would add is that clearly we’ve got challenges with the new schedule. We’ve got racetracks that we don’t know, that we haven’t been to. We can’t necessarily plan because we don’t know what races are coming down the line later on in the season. We’ve got a rough estimate that we’re working to but that obviously could change. But I suppose for us, the most important thing, and certainly when we had come back from Australia and we didn’t know what a potential season could look like, the very fact that we are going racing, the very fact that F1 are working so hard to put as many races on the calendar as possible, is really all the focus, certainly at Williams, for a team like ours that is so wholly reliant on that prize fund money, we need as many races on the calendar as possible, to just make sure that that prize fund pot doesn’t get depressed even further than it has already been over having lost the first – however many – eight races at the beginning of this year, yes, there are challenges but we’re prepared to meet them and do our best to work against those challenges in order to ensure that we have as many races on the schedule as possible this season.
     
    Q: Mario, on this topic, how much notice does Pirelli need prior to an event?
    MI: We made a schedule to agree with the FIA and FOM the time we need in terms of weeks. It is not easy for us to produce and deliver the tyres in time but obviously with this idea to have a fixed allocation, we are a bit more flexible. We can start the production even if we don’t know the calendar exactly so having a stock of tyres that is available we speed up also the delivery of the tyres, we try to give our contribution to make it possible, but as you can imagine, it’s a challenge.
     
    Q: (Dieter Rencken – Racefans/racefans.net) To the two team principals: last week Jean Todt said that they were visiting the Concorde Agreement discussions last weekend. How involved have the two of you been in terms of the Concorde Agreement recently and how hopeful are you that it will all be signed fairly soon, so that Formula 1 has a direction for next year?
    CW: I think prior to Australia and corona taking over, I think that we had reached a fairly – certainly at Williams, anyway – a fairly good point with the Concorde negotiations but corona has obviously put a pause on those discussions, but I know that F1 are looking to put those up now sooner rather than later and clearly to get that signed would be beneficial for the sport as a whole but certainly for our team, particularly, based on the situation that Williams is in at the moment, so we’re looking forward to picking it up and moving it forward and closing it out sooner rather than later, as I said.
    OS: Recently there hasn’t been much activity around Concorde, not a lot of work, but I anticipate that will change in the near future.
     
    Q: (Christian Nimmervoll – Motorsport.com) Claire, there were reports recently that Toto Wolff has a five per cent shareholder in Williams, which is a bit confusing because in 2016 it was communicated that he sold off all his remaining shares and he has cut his final ties to Williams. Can you clarify if those reports are correct and if yes, where does this shareholding originate from?
    CW: So the reports weren’t correct. Toto, as everybody knows, bought a shareholding a long time back now, back in 2010 from Frank and Patrick. He then, obviously, subsequently joined Mercedes and as part of that move he obviously had to divest his shareholding. Brad Hollinger, who is one of our minority shareholders at Williams and a non-exec director, bought the majority of those shares from Toto but has not completed on that remaining five per cent so they have returned to Toto’s hands. Toto has not bought new shares in the business in the recent past or the near past. It was just an issue with a transaction.
     
    Q: (Philip Horton – Motorsportweek.com, via email) Claire, how pleasing was it to be back racing again last weekend. Can you be confident that this isn’t specific to one track and when are you planning to bringing your next updates?
    CW: I’m smiling under my mask at that question! Last weekend was a lovely turning point for the team and I know I mustn’t get carried away, I know it was race one, but we have talked for so many months now about the work that we have been doing at the team, behind the scenes, to bring about that change in performance. It’s been an incredibly difficult two years for everybody at Williams, to keep turning up, I have to congratulated the team both here and at the factory, because everybody has put in so much effort and everybody particularly coming racing, it’s been incredibly difficult to keep turning up, knowing that we wouldn’t get out of Q1, that there was no chance of scoring points etc and so it was really wonderful to show the world that we have delivered on our promises of bringing progress to our team and to be able to close that gap to P8/P9. We have a long way to go still but it certainly felt like exoneration on Sunday, that we had shown that we had made a step forward. We’ve got work still to do, as I said, but it just feels wonderful to go racing again. That’s why Williams is in this sport, to race and to do that on Sunday was wonderful, as I said, and I hope that we continue to do that over the balance of this season.
     
    Q: (Alan Baldwin – Reuters) For the two team principals on the COVID protocol: we know how important these races are for both Formula 1 and the teams financially, to get the season done. We’ve seen what appeared to have been some breaches of the COVID protocol. I wondered how concerned either of you are that this bubble may not hold up because of the actions of individuals?
    OS: That is a concern of mine. I make sure our team and we have other team members as well – we brought our health and safety officer, for example, to the first race to make sure that there are no breaches at all in our team. It’s a difficult thing to do when you have 80 people to look after and you just have to make sure that we communicate with them, they understand the risks, they understand the reason for the protocols and once you have a good understanding yourself it’s a lot easier to adhere to the protocols. First and foremost, I try to do that with our team but secondly, I think the FIA should look further and make sure that everybody is doing it. We saw, for example, in some of the support race paddocks, they’re not quite as vigilant as we are and then come into our paddock and… We all have to stay vigilant because, like you say, if there is an outbreak here and we have to miss races, that would be disastrous.
    CW: Yeah, I don’t want to necessarily comment on any particular breaches. I don’t think it’s my place to do so. All I can say is that in what Otmar has said, we are doing the best that we can in our team to ensure that everybody within Williams adheres to the protocols that have been put in place and respects the guidelines.
     
    Ends

  • Renault confirms Alonso for 2021 F1 season

    Renault confirms Alonso for 2021 F1 season

    Renault DP World F1 Team is pleased to confirm Fernando Alonso alongside Esteban Ocon in its driver line-up for the 2021 season.

    With 314 Grand Prix starts, 32 wins and 97 podiums, Fernando joins Renault DP World F1 Team for the upcoming seasons. Given the strong historic and emotional bond between the team and Fernando Alonso – Renault and Fernando won their two world championship titles together in 2005 and 2006 – this decision is both bold and meaningful for the future.

    Renault, with its values, is one of the greatest brands in Formula 1. Fernando is a great driver returning to F1 enriched by other experiences and willing to build with his much-loved team. The tenets of work, surpassing oneself and ingenuity as well as Fernando’s DNA defined by tenacity and pure talent make this union an obvious one. He will be an asset in the many efforts to win back the title and will give meaning to Renault’s commitment to the highest level of motorsport. The desire is to build a team around two complementary drivers, combining experience and youth, and pooling their values and talent in the service of the project. Fernando’s fighting spirit should benefit the whole team and allow everyone to achieve their goals.

    Alonso file photo courtesy Toyota

    Cyril Abiteboul, Managing Director, Renault Sport Racing:
    “The signing of Fernando Alonso is part of Groupe Renault’s plan to continue its commitment to F1 and to return to the top of the field. His presence in our team is a formidable asset on the sporting level but also for the brand to which he is very attached. The strength of the bond between him, the team and the fans make him a natural choice. In addition to past successes, it is a bold mutual choice as well as a project for the future. His experience and determination will enable us to get the best out of each other to take the team towards the excellence that modern Formula 1 demands. He will also bring to our team, which has grown very fast, a culture of racing and winning to overcome hurdles together. Alongside Esteban, his mission will be to help Renault DP World F1 Team prepare for the 2022 season in the best possible conditions.”

    Fernando Alonso:
    “Renault is my family, my fondest memories in Formula One with my two World Championship titles, but I’m now looking ahead. It’s a great source of pride and with an immense emotion I’m returning to the team that gave me my chance at the start of my career and which now gives me the opportunity to return to the highest level. I have principles and ambitions in line with the team’s project. Their progress this winter gives credibility to the objectives for the 2022 season and I will share all my racing experience with everyone from the engineers to the mechanics and my team-mates. The team wants and has the means to get back on the podium, as do I.”