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Tag: F1
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Spanish GP: Leclerc remains on top in FP2 from Mercedes duo
Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc stayed on top in FP2 of F1 Spanish GP with Mercedes duo of George Russell and Lewis Hamilton doing a better job in second and third.
Much like how FP1 was, the FP2 session in F1 Spanish GP was sedate as well with Ferrari’s Leclerc leading the standings after setting a 1m19.670s lap. He led the two Mercedes duo in a surprise finish with Russell (1m19.787s) second and Hamilton (1m19.874s) third.
Leclerc’s teammate Carlos Sainz (1m19.990s) slotted in fourth with the first of Red Bull of Max Verstappen (1m20.006s) in fifth whereas his teammate Sergio Perez (1m20.632s) was seventh behind Alpine’s Fernando Alonso (1m20.203s).
The Mexican had his first chance this weekend after Juri Vips got his chance in FP1. After a difficult first part Aston Martin’s Sebastian Vettel (1m20.703s) was eighth from Alpine’s Esteban Ocon (1m20.745s) and Haas’ Mick Schumacher (1m20.757s) in the Top 10.
The German’s teammate Kevin Magnussen was 12th behind AlphaTauri’s Pierre Gasly with his teammate Yuki Tsunoda in 14th behind Aston Martin’s Lance Stroll. McLaren’s Daniel Ricciardo slotted in 15th with Alfa Romeo’s Valtteri Bottas in 16th.
The Finn though couldn’t see-through the season due to engine issue as he stopped on track causing a Virtual Safety Car. He was ahead of his teammate Guanyu Zhou as he led Williams pair of Alexander Albon and Nicholas Latifi.
The Thai racer is under investigation for impeding Sainz earlier in the session. The standings was rounded out by McLaren’s Lando Norris whose off moment damaged his floor and for that he couldn’t do more than three laps in the session.
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The car should be engineered well not to have back-and-neck issues: Mick Schumy
PART ONE – Charles LECLERC (Ferrari), Valtteri BOTTAS (Alfa Romeo), Mick SCHUMACHER (Haas), Sergio PÉREZ (Red Bull Racing), Fernando ALONSO (Alpine)
Q: Valtteri, we’ll start with you. Before we come on to the racing, you’ve already just got back from America. Tell us what you’ve been doing after Miami.
Valtteri BOTTAS: I think it’s already a couple of days ago, I came back. I was planning to come back earlier. But bit of issues with the travels. But yeah, stayed in the US. I love Colorado. So again, just exploring a bit more that area and yeah, had a good week.
Q: Now let’s, let’s bring it on to performance. You didn’t get many laps at this racetrack during pre-season testing. Does that put you at a disadvantage to those that did?
VB: For sure, would love to have more laps in the first test but. you know, every team, every driver has been here for so many times. So I think we got some data from the test. And anyway, I feel like the cars are quite different already now than in the first test, at least in our team. So, no big concerns. I think the main thing for this weekend is to prove that the upgrades we have worked well. And we go from there.
Q: In what areas of performance do you need to feel more performance from the Alfa?
VB: We still need better stability in high-speed corners, which is going to be a good test here because of the entry into Turn Nine. But also, the reliability is not still where it should be. So, hopefully we can have a nice and clean weekend and without any issues. That will be good.,
Q: Let’s come on to the hometown hero now. Fernando Alonso. Fernando was back in Barcelona. It’s a full house this weekend. Just how excited are you to be racing?
Fernando ALONSO: Yeah, it is great. Obviously we have only one opportunity in the year to race at home so ready to maximise it and enjoy every single minute of the weekend. Hopefully we put a clean weekend on our side, Friday Saturday and Sunday with not too many issues and we can score points finally.
Q: What does maximising the weekend mean for you and Alpine at the minute?
FA: Well, at the moment we have been quite fast on Friday and Saturdays but then on Sunday we – for different reasons – our own mistakes, reliability, bad luck, whatever, we didn’t score as many points as we wanted. So, we want to change this year from Barcelona and have a good run on consecutive races in the points from now on.
Q: You’ve been having a bit of fun since Miami as well. Tell us what you’ve been up to, specifically with Aleix Espargaró.
FA: Well, with both Aprilia guys. Last Tuesday, we had some fun on my hometown in Oviedo, on my circuit. And they came to visit us, together with Castrol, our sponsor. I was riding some mini bikes and they were running also with us and then go-karts and Clios, so it was a fun day.
Q: Now talking of doing something different Mick Schumacher, you certainly did something different after Miami. How was the NASCAR?
Mick SCHUMACHER: Yeah, quite different, actually. I mean, first time I was a passenger. It felt quite scary going through the banking. As it was, I was thinking we’re gonna slip down but it was actually fine. And then yeah, I got to drive myself. I was impressed about how much grip you have on the oval itself. But the car just doesn’t stop. It feels like they’re no brakes. You push as hard as you want, but the car doesn’t stop. So yeah, we had a good time. Good to feel something different, good to do something different, so very much thank you for that.
Q: Let’s talk about the Miami Grand Prix. Now it was a painful end to your race there. Having watched the incident with Sebastian Vettel back on television. What conclusions have you drawn?
MS: Yeah, well, obviously, I think everything got a bit heated in that situation, for different reasons. And with Sebastian, we spoke about it afterwards. I think we all concluded that, we all could have done something different, something better. You know, it’s unfortunate. Obviously, I think we were all in the points of that time. Yeah, hopefully on to better race this weekend.
Q: Well, let’s bring it on to this weekend. You had limited running here in pre-season testing. You’ve got no updates on the car this weekend. Are you expecting a tough one?
MS: No, I don’t think so. I mean, the car has so much potential, still to be exploited. I think that we’ll keep focusing on that. Some teams do bring updates, but you never know if they work or not. So, that’s also a factor. I think that we’re okay. And I’m just excited to get out there.
Q: Charles, coming to you. We’re talking upgrades. Ferrari have got some this weekend, what are you expecting from them?
Charles LECLERC: Well, hopefully it will be good ones and enough to be in front of Red Bull again. It’s been close since the beginning of the season. And every time they’ve brought upgrades, they, in the first part, came closer and closer and now I think are a bit in front, especially in terms of race pace. So, I hope it will be enough for us to jump back in front.
Q: Where’s the focus? Is it straight-line speed at the minute?
CL: A little bit of everything. Obviously straight-line speed, I think also slow-speed corners, they seemed to be very strong in Miami in slow-speed corners. So, a little bit of this, of both of these areas.
Q: And Charles, Ferrari had a very successful pre-season test here at Barcelona, given that you’re running the upgrades as well how confident are you coming into the weekend?
CL: To be honest, I don’t know how much it means that we had good winter testing here because it was a long time ago and already from that moment to now, all the teams have done quite a big step forward. I’m pretty sure that we’ll see all the steps forward from this weekend onwards, because of the upgrades. So, I think it will be all down to how much we’ll improve the car with what we put on the car this weekend. And how much Red Bull will improve the car with… if they have anything new on the car for this weekend. But I don’t think that is going to be a massive difference to what we’ve seen since the beginning of the season. It has been very close and I hope it will remain the same, but hopefully we will just have the edge for here.
Q: Charles, one final one for me. You’ve driven two 1970s Ferraris in recent weeks. Niki Lauda’s 1974 car at the Monaco Historic last weekend, and then of course, Gilles Villeneuve’s ’79 car a couple of weeks ago. Which one do you prefer?
CL: Well, Niki’s one was amazing, until the failure where it was a bit less amazing there. But to be honest, the one of Gilles, that I that I drove, I had the museum tyres, so I couldn’t push at all: they were very, very old tyres. It was difficult to go over 100kph, so I had a lot more fun into Niki’s car.
Q: Sergio, can we start by talking about Miami, you finished fourth but of course, you were nursing that technical issue. Without that, do you think you could have challenged and maybe beaten Carlos Sainz, and got on the podium?
Sergio PÉREZ: Yeah, I certainly believe that we had the pace to do so, especially at the end with the when we went for the new tyres, which, by the way, had such a deficit on the straight-line speed that it was really hard to get Carlos and I had to go for it when I had a small opportunity. And I just went deep into it, into Turn One. But I think, definitely without the issue, we could have done a double podium. And it was a shame that it cost us a lot of points, but on the other hand was good that we were able to finish the race because at some point it look really, really bad.
Q: How concerned are you about these lingering reliability issues?
SP: Well, they have… we’ve lost a lot of points already in these first races with reliability. So, I really hope that we are able to sort them out because, if this keeps happening during the weekend, if we’re not able to do all the miles through a weekend, they become very costly. They are able to compromise your weekend. So, we are working really hard and we believe that we are in a good position now.
Q: And Checo, how concerned are you about the upgrades that Ferrari are bringing this weekend and the potential pace that they may have?
SP: They’re gonna be strong, we know. And it will be interesting to see how much of a step they’re able to take. It’s a very long season. And we will just keep, keep pushing.
QUESTIONS FROM THE FLOOR
Q: (Adam Cooper – Motosport.com) Question for all of you. Carlos said yesterday, he’s concerned about long-term back and neck issues because of the bouncing and generally stiffer suspensions of these cars. He wants to start a debate with F1 and the FIA on it. Any thoughts on that subject? Are you having issues?
SP: I don’t particularly have any issues, but certainly, by all the teams, by pushing the cars and pushing the aero, it becomes a problem. We all want to have more load in the car, but then there’s a compromise that you have to make, by not having too much porpoising in it. So, at the moment, I think it’s really up to the driver and team to decide how much you push it. Or how much you can take with you. But I don’t think it’s a big concern for us.
Q: Charles, you’re driving the same car as Carlos, how much of an issue is it for you?
CL: Yeah, I think I think it also depends on drivers, because Carlos seems to be a bit more sensitive to it, compared to me, where I don’t struggle as much – but I definitely agree with him, that it should be something that shouldn’t happen with those cars. We got better with it but there are some teams that are still struggling with it much more than we do, but for them, I cannot speak. Looking at onboards, some cars look much worse than others. We were definitely on the bad side at the beginning of the year. We got better, but still, it’s definitely something that we should look at.
Q: Mick?
MS: Yeah, I think I agree with everything said. Personally, I don’t have a problem with it but also, I think that we as a sport shouldn’t have to deal with that issue. I think the car should be well-engineered to not have that problem. And I’m sure that for the future, we won’t have it. Just because now we know that it kind-of created it. I’m pretty sure we’ll fix it.
FA: Yeah, more or the same thing. We don’t suffer much of that effect. So, for us it’s good. But we are aware that other teams, maybe they have bigger problems, and they will fix it for sure.
VB: Not much to add. I think it’s always a compromise, know how, much you’re willing to take. But it seems to be a common issue. Some teams more. I think we’re not one of the worst ones. It’s been reasonable for now. And I think my back is already destroyed since 2015. So I don’t know if it makes any difference!
Q: (Matt Kew – Autosport) Question to Fernando. You said in a recent interview that you don’t have an immediate desire to go and do the Indy 500 again. Does that mean your triple crown ambition is over? What’s changed your mind? And maybe most importantly, what would change your mind so you would go back and do that event?
FA: Well, I will see, when the time arrives. At the moment, sometimes have to answer questions about what I will do in three or four years’ time, and if I will go back to Indy. Right now, you know, before the Spanish Grand Prix, or Miami, or whatever, my head obviously is totally focused on the race weekend and Formula 1 right now. And I see myself racing here for a few more years. And after that, I don’t know. I cannot say yes, I cannot say no to the Indy 500. What is for sure is that now, it is not in my head because I’m fully focused here. So that probably was the answer.
Q: (Jesus Balseiro – Diario AS) Question to Fernando, you lost some points in Miami because of a second penalty. And you can comment after that. What do you think about that penalty?
FA: Well, it was unfair. Or, we believe that it was very unfair. It was just incompetence from the stewards. They were not very professional, I think, in Miami. I missed one corner, and then I gave back the time on the lap – but obviously, after you miss one corner, there is the sector time, just after that corner. So they saw the pink colour, and yeah, they took the decision without asking any proofs. So we arrive after the race with all the proofs, and all the time back that we gave, and they were just packing up. They were not even in the room. So here, we came there, we show them all the data. So they said ‘give us five minutes’. And then they found themselves with the hands tied, probably because they issue already the penalty. And they didn’t know how to get back from that document. So it was it was very bad. And honestly, I mean, it’s already the past, but it is something that should not happen in in Formula 1, you know, with professionalism, and the standards that Formula 1 has right now.
Q: (Luke Smith – Autosport) Fernando, to follow up on that, the FIA has done a lot this year to restructure its stewarding process and with the Race Control operations. Have you seen an improvement year on year compared to what we had last year…
FA: Not.
Q: … You still feel there are issues that need to be fixed?
FA: We saw a couple of things already that proves that we still need to improve a lot. Racing is… I mean, you need to have some knowledge about racing, before being a Race Director, or try to monitor a race. And I don’t think that that knowledge is in place at the moment. So I know there is a new Race Director here, I think Freitas has a lot more experience, with WEC and with all the categories, I think, at the top level, and I think that will already improve things. But yeah, he was not… I mean, even the accidents that we had in Miami, you know, with Carlos and Esteban. We pushed to have some barriers there and some tyres or TecPro, whatever, and no-one did anything. So, when you don’t have that knowledge of racing, it’s difficult to talk.
Q: (Samarth Kannal – F1.com) Charles, yesterday, Carlos said that he didn’t want to take the risk of driving a historic F1 car, because you have Championship-contending machinery. Do you feel the same – and maybe has it changed your mind now?
CL: No, it doesn’t. Because to be honest, before that, I think all the checks that had to be done, was done. Obviously there was a shakedown of this car the Thursday before. The failure that happened was on a screw of the brake pads. And it’s impossible to know. Then, of course, fighting for a Championship like this, I’ll think twice before doing it again in the future. But yeah, it’s also part of our job. And sometimes we need to go into those cars. And it’s always also an honour for me, I’m very happy and very proud to be driving those cars. And always a pleasure too – but yeah, it’s always a balance you need to find, and of course, when you’re fighting for the Championship… but just overall, to be honest, because it’s for safety in general. I had a lot of fun. And this was unfortunate. But again, it was just unlucky.
Q: (Claire Cottingham – Race Fans) Fernando, another question for you. Are you worried that safety is being compromised now? You mentioned obviously, nothing was changed after Carlos and Esteban’s crash? So, is there a concern for safety if you’re out there racing?
FA: No, I don’t think so. I think safety has been good, and probably this year we have the safest cars you know and circuits and everything… environment is very safe now in Formula 1. So, we just need to keep improving. We are the only one driving the cars and feeling the crashes and things like that in our bodies. So, when we feel something that is needed. I think we should be listened to. In Miami, or some other examples, we didn’t have that because it seems that the focus is in another place.
Q: (Carlos Miquel – Marca) Fernando, maybe 20 Spanish Grand Prix for you – or something – 21… 23 for me, OK! Do you feel the same fever on Sunday when you hear the people and all the people is with you?
FA: Yeah, sure. Sure. The feeling is always the same, has been always the same. And it will not be different on Sunday. As I said before, it is very special to race at home. We only can experience once a year and we feel extremely lucky for that. There are other drivers on the grid that they don’t have even the home grand prix, so we feel privileged for that and thankful for that. I’m ready to enjoy every second. And on Sunday, when you see the fans and when you hear the national anthem, and everything, it is a special Sunday.
Q: (Chris Medland – Racer) Sorry, it’s another question for Fernando – but if the other drivers want to add their thoughts afterwards, that’d be great. Fernando, just in general, you’ve been in F1 a long time. There’s a sell-out here, all three days, we’re told, and the interest in the sport seems to be booming every race we now go to. Why do you think we’ve seen that growth in popularity, especially over the last say, three, four or five years that has come on so rapidly?
FA: I don’t know. I think from… yeah, as you said a couple of years ago, especially when Liberty Media took control. I think we saw a few steps as a sport. We open the sport to more people here at the paddock there is more access, we start doing a lot of things outside the track as well. Drivers involved on those. And yeah, I think it was always going on the good direction. Also, we are living in a very different world now, with the digital platforms, giving access to many, many things that were unthinkable 10 years ago, 15 years ago. So, all that I think made the sport a little bit more open and that people can really enjoy now. Before they saw Formula 1, like something unreachable, or something very difficult to understand how to follow.
Q: Let’s get some other thoughts on this. Valtteri?
VB: To me, it feels like now, like every race weekend… for sure, it’s all about racing – but there’s a bit more into it. Like, just from my side, it feels like the atmosphere is a bit more like an event than a race. There’s other things happening: concerts and there’s DJs playing just before the start and stuff like that. I’ve personally felt much more energy in the last year or so, then than ever before, during my career. So, I think they’ve done a great job on many things. And like Fernando said, it’s so much more accessible nowadays than it used to be. But also, thanks to the technology.
Q: Charles?
CL: Yeah, I think the access, that’s been more and more open throughout the years, I think also Drive To Survive, obviously has been a big help for Formula 1. To help the people to understand a little bit more the sport in a simpler way. And to actually put a face on the people that are in the background and working every day to try and make their car go faster. Also the places that we go in the US, it’s becoming bigger and bigger. Thanks again to Netflix. And I think people are just loving the sport. And the title fight last year too, I think helped the sport, so hopefully we can have a similar fight this year until the very last race.
FA: … and good-looking drivers!
Q: (Luke Smith – Autosport) Charles also question about the classic car tests you’ve done recently. I know you appreciate Ferrari’s history, and know the long line of drivers you’re following. Can you talk a bit about the connection you’ve got to – say – to Niki and Gilles. And to be able to drive their cars, it is an emotional thing at all, to be able to sample what they drove?
CL: Of course it is! I mean, it’s… they are drivers that I’ve never seen in real life but obviously you get to see a lot now with social media, you get to see a lot of their fights etc. And you only appreciate how much risk they were taking once you actually get into one of their cars, and see what were the safety that they had at that time. And what it meant to be actually fighting wheels-to-wheels at those speeds, with those cars. I think also it’s great to experience what it was like, and what it’s like now. It’s very different now, it’s so much faster – but it’s also so much safer. And we don’t have that much the safety in mind, as much as they probably did once they were once they were racing. But yeah, I got to meet Niki few times in the paddock in the past. And yeah, they are just legends of our sports. Of course, it’s always amazing to be to be driving their cars.
Q: (Edd Straw – The Race) Question for all drivers. Going back to the topic about the bouncing and the stiffness of the cars, although you’re not necessarily too concerned about the physical effects, is this generation of cars harder on your bodies than the previous generation of cars? Not just for those who are porpoising, but purely the stiffness? And are you feeling there’s more discomfort, greater recovery time needed? Is it a significant step? Or is it just the case that F1 drivers have always had to go through this? And that’s just part of the job and it’s normal?
VB: In terms of the ride, yeah, for sure, it’s the most difficult car, or more demanding car, that I’ve had ever in my career. But I still like cornering speeds, if we compare, for example, to last year, some type of corners, we had G-forces last year, but it’s not far off now. So overall, I think I would say it’s up there. It’s difficult to say if there’s any big difference, let’s say. to last year, but definitely with the bouncing and with the ride, there’s been a couple of races that felt a bit more sore than maybe some years before. So yeah, but I think the body will get used to it. And yeah, just a bit more recovery work may be needed to after certain races.
FA: I don’t think so. I don’t think that they are too strong on the body or, or too physical. I mean, there is this bouncing effect, which is uncomfortable for sure but I’m not sure that, compared to the cars in the past, it’s too different. Or when I started with the Minardi in 2001, that car was not very comfy. And we didn’t have power steering or anything like that. So they were very physical, or in IndyCar is 100 times worse. Or in Endurance. You drive with Sebastian Buemi’s seat for 24 hours, you know, because you have to share the seat with a teammate, or in karting, we used to break one or two ribs every winter when we test. So, I think we have a lot of comfort at the moment.
Q: Mick?
MS: Yeah, well, it’s similar to Formula 2, in terms of ride, so yeah, I guess it’s not too new for me. But I think obviously, with more races coming now, obviously the time for recovery is a bit less. I think that’s also something we’ll have to keep in mind, but also I think the mental side for a lot of drivers, and especially the teams, engineers and mechanics, who have a life at home. You have to try and keep it in a minimum of adding races I would say.
CL: Yeah, I don’t know in terms of ride, bouncing, kerb-riding, I’m not sensitive at all. I don’t know why, I just don’t feel those things. I guess it’s good with those cars but yeah, apart from that physically it’s okay. I mean, it’s similar. It’s at a similar level to last year for me.
SP: Yeah, very similar to Charles.
Q: (Jérémy Satis – AutoHebdo) Question for Charles, since Imola, Red Bull seem to have the advantage on Sundays, especially with the tyre degradation. Barcelona is a pretty abrasive track in those conditions. So, do you particularly worry about it?
CL: I think… I mean, a particular development only for tyre degradation is very tricky, if not impossible. I think it’s all relative to pace. They seem to have a bit more pace enhance into the race, so they can take it a bit more easy in the first laps and then when they start to push then they are just quicker, which was the case for the last two races. And for us, it was the case in Australia, by example. So, yeah. If we gain a bit of pace and hope to be in front, I’m pretty sure that tyre management will come with it, and it will also be better.
DRIVER GROUP 2: Pierre GASLY (AlphaTauri), Esteban OCON (Alpine), Sebastian VETTEL (Aston Martin), Max VERSTAPPEN (Red Bull), Nicholas LATIFI (Williams)
Q: We’ll start with Pierre. Pierre, let’s throw it back a couple of weeks frustrating race for you in Miami, what might have been possible in that race without the contact from Alonzo earlier?
Pierre GASLY: Honestly, I don’t really want to think about what could have happened, what would have happened. It was unfortunate because we’re on for a potential, good couple of good points and they would have been well needed. It wasn’t an easy race we had a problem early on after lap three with our floor, and we were still managing it pretty well, but yeah, unfortunate. I think the good thing is we showed some good pace. Best quali of the year there and we showed some good pace in the race. And then that’s what we need to do, keep that momentum and build on it for this weekend.
Q: Well, how confident are you of doing that this weekend?
PG: Well, no upgrade on our side. But still, as I said, we showed some good potential, we know the car can be fast. That midfield is extremely tight. So we can’t leave anything on the table. Because one or two tenths move you up, up and down by six or seven places in the ranking. So just, you know, it puts pressure on ourselves to deliver and be at 100% of our potential, which is what we’re going to focus on and hopefully have a problem-free weekend, which hasn’t really been the case since the start of the year. So we just need to really focus on our job and execute everything perfectly.
Q: One final one for me. You’ve been busy since Miami. You’ve been globetrotting a bit just tell us what you’ve been up to?
PG: I’ve been up to a lot of things in my personal life. Because you know, I like to do things. I like to explore. I like to travel. So, I’ve been travelling a bit, surfing a little bit trying to get better. I do need more lessons before I can call it surfing. But, you know, we are getting there. And then yeah, I’m just fully energised for this weekend. Excited, happy, positive and ready to rock.
Q: Nicholas, coming to you. Look, we’re back in Barcelona, a track that you and the team both know well. How much do you think the FW44 is going to improve this weekend? What are you expecting?
Nicholas LATIFI: Yeah, I mean, I think from winter testing to now there’s naturally been little progressions and small evolutions on the car to add some speed. I mean, I wouldn’t say anything in the way of a big upgrade package, but there’s definitely stuff on the car that’s going to make it quicker than what from what it wasn’t winter testing. So I think, yeah, from this weekend we have some little weight saving parts and things like that. So obviously hoping to be a little bit more competitive. It’s always interesting coming back here after winter testing and you kind of have that not so much a back-to-back comparison but let’s say a kind of for like-for-like, obviously taking the track temperature and all that stuff out of it. So yeah it’s going to be interesting to see. I mean, obviously a lot of big changes up and down the pitlane as well with various packages. So yeah, whether the order changes are not or stays similar, I think it’s should be an exciting weekend.
Q: And Nicholas, what about your own performance in the car and your own understanding of the car? Do you feel you’re on top of it now?
NL: I mean, I feel in Miami there was some good steps made and I mean, to be honest, I’m hoping that this track there will be some bigger steps, just you know, due to the nature of the track. We all know this track very well. And, again, we’ve had, you know, a few street races in a row, with Imola, a very mixed condition weekend. And obviously the next races are about three street races in a row, as well. So yeah, like I’ve been saying, when you don’t have that, that feeling that you’re clicking with a car like you want it’s maybe not as easy to build that on, on street tracks. So yeah, I’m hoping this weekend will be another good step in that direction.
Q: Best of luck with that. Thank you. Esteban, coming to you. I feel we have to throw it back a couple of weeks to start with tremendous race from you in Miami. P 20. On the grid to P8. What are your expectations coming into that race?
Esteban OCON: Yeah, thank you. No, it was it was definitely a great race and a great recovery from the crash obviously on Saturday. Yeah, it was a tough one. Very hot. Not feeling obviously 100%. Still very sore from the impact from the day before. But yeah, the team did an awesome job. They made the strategy perfect. And we benefited from that Safety Car pit-stop at the end. So yeah, it was very solid. So I’m pretty pleased with that. Obviously, we’re going this weekend on a track that we know a lot better, that we know by heart. We had good performance last year, we qualified fifth. Obviously, very different characteristics this this year, but yeah, I look forward to see what we can do and also to compare with the others, because we’ve seen some interesting new bits from everywhere around us. We are going to have also a few things but yeah, it’s going to be an interesting one.
Q: And just this feel a bit of a home race for you? The paternal side of you family from lives just down the road?
EO: Exactly, yeah. Around the circuit, I have most of my family from my dad’s side that live around here. It is a home race for Fernando and half a home race for me. So yeah, I’m very happy to be back in Barcelona.
Q: Best of luck this weekend. Max coming to you now. Can we start off track? I think you’ve been having a bit of fun since Miami. How much air is it possible to get on a jet ski?
Max VERSTAPPEN: I haven’t found that yet. I’m still trying. Depends on the wave you get as well. So I’m trying to find the big ones.
Q: On track this weekend, a lot of your rivals are bringing upgrades here. What’s the situation at Red Bull?
MV: Not really updates, just a little weight reduction. I mean, our car is still a bit fat, so trying to slim it down. So that’s what we’re trying to do.
Q: And when you see what’s happening elsewhere on the grid, especially at Ferrari, what are you expecting from them? Where do you think the main challenge is going to come from this weekend?
MV: Well, if you look at the of course, the last few races, it must be them, right? So they’re, they’re coming with a few upgrades. So it’s going to be interesting to see how much that’s going to give them but at the end of the day we just have to focus on our package. And I mean, we all know this track quite well. So just need to make sure that, you know, we have a clean weekend starting from today.
Q: Max, what about overtaking? 23 of the 31 races at this track have been won from pole position? Do you expect something similar with these cars? Or do you think we might see more overtaking at the front but also elsewhere?
MV: Well, you might run a bit closer, but it’s still a track, which I think is tough to overtake on. But I think the aim is always to not overtake to try and start upfront that that’s the goal.
Q: Thanks, Max and Sebastian coming to you now. Milk first or cereal first? That seemed to be the killer question last week when you were in London. Can you just tell us about the day? What was the highlight for you?
Sebastian VETTEL: Yeah, maybe the kids and you know, their honesty? Your asked about milk first or cereal first. And most adults would probably laugh at it. But I think it goes to show that kids don’t have, you know, presumptions, they’re just happy to explore. And there is no right or wrong. So there’s lots of things that we can learn from children. But yeah, I definitely enjoyed the day. And obviously, there was a variety of things that I did but the highlight probably was the kids, the atmosphere as well was very loud. So I enjoyed that.
Q: What about this weekend, Sebastian? It seems like it’s a big one for Aston Martin, lots of upgrades on the car. What are you expecting?
SV: Not really having much expectations. We know that it’s a very different looking car. We’ve had a big push in the factory to make the bits for two cars. And it will be very interesting to see how it behaves on track. I think that’s what we are looking forward to. I’m very curious to see the performance. We don’t expect a massive jump straightaway. But we do believe in the concept and believe that there’s more performance to gain down that road. So yeah, it will be interesting to get a feel and get the hands on the car.
QUESTIONS FROM THE FLOOR
Q: (Ed Spencer – Motorlat) Sebastian, what did you learn from your recent trip to London, considering you did very well on Question Time? And could you explain why is there a bandage on your left knee?
SV: Yeah, I burned myself on the motorbike last week. It’s not that bad, but better to cover it. And then I think the trip to London was, as I said, very interesting. Obviously, I visited the boys prison in Feltham, and then the school in Waterloo. And had the evening with Question Time. But I think you know, it’s always interesting to meet different people in different circumstances, different ages or different groups of ages. But, you know, it goes to show that… I don’t know, what I learned or what I take from it, is that I have been very, very lucky the way I’ve been brought up. I’ve had lots of love around me. My parents taking the time and having the opportunity to look after me. Visiting the kids in Waterloo, you know, which is in London, one of the biggest cities in the world, one of the richest cities in the world. But yet you go off the main road, just by a block or two, and you find kids that a lot of their path is already drawn. And they don’t have anywhere near the opportunities and possibilities or love that I had and enjoyed. So they might find themselves in a dead-end road and be stuck there. Which is shocking, you know, because as I said, there’s so much possibility around in London, so much money around in London. But yet, so much you can still improve. And it’s not that different. It’s not a London problem. Generally with big cities you have the same, in German cities or other cities around the world. So I find that very inspirational. And, you know, it really kicks off the need that we have to do something. And if we can raise awareness, raise attention, that’s a good thing. And ultimately, if we can just help a few of those kids, it’s already a big achievement. But ideally, a lot of these children to have a better life than maybe it would look on paper.
Q: (Edd Straw – The Race) Question for Esteban, regarding the crash in Miami, Carlos Sainz said yesterday he wants a proper explanation for why Tecpro wasn’t put there, which obviously would have potentially been better news for you. Have you had a proper explanation from the FIA? Has there been any dialogue for why that change wasn’t made Friday into Saturday? Are you satisfied with that situation?
EO: Yes, I am actually. I had a chat with the Race Director, yesterday. We had a one-hour chat on all of these situations and why it hasn’t been explained. They’ve had a lot of work done and analysis on the trajectory of both my car and Carlos’ car and on what could have been the best solution and there will be changes on the track next year on that regard for safety. And yeah, everything’s been listen [to], acknowledged and action will be done. So yeah, I was very reassured with the chat we had and very pleased with the outcome of it.
Q: (Silja Rulle – Bild) Seb, your favourite football team Eintracht Frankfurt won the Europa League? How did you follow that match and how do you feel about that?
SV: I was watching on TV. Obviously. When it went down to the wire and with penalties, it was very exciting and I got very nervous. But yeah, I think we got lucky in the end, like in penalties you always do. But I think it was deserved and an incredible achievement. So, as a fan, obviously, I’m super happy. And yeah, to see the excitement… I’ve been in the stadium many times and it would have been nice to be there. But also in Frankfurt in the stadium, it was packed, a lot of people watching and following. So yeah, a lot of celebrations going on also yesterday in Frankfurt, so yeah, it was special and like winning… it felt like you know, like winning in a lottery. So, for the club, I think it’s amazing, for the players. So something that probably they will remember for forever. For sure, as a fan, we will.
Q: (Ronald Vording – Motorsport.com) It’s a question to Max. In recent weeks, we’ve heard some comments by Ferrari about the budget cap and the development of the Red Bull Car. First of all, what do you make of it? And secondly, how confident are you that Red Bull can maintain this development speed throughout the season?
MV: Thank you. Well, it’s very simple. I mean, it’s the same for everyone. So I don’t see any issues regarding that.
Q: (Alan Baldwin – Reuters) Nicholas, there was a report last week from a well-known Canadian reporter based in Toronto, about your departure from Williams and your replacement. I wondered what your reaction was to this premature report of your departure. And also I noticed that you haven’t been tempted by redhead on this weekend.
NL: Yeah, on the red hair dye, I didn’t want it to wash off in the helmet, so I opted not to partake in that. But I think most of the team members had it washed out in the shower. So, no more red hair in the paddock for now. And yeah, the report, when I saw that I just kind of laughed a little bit because obviously it was not the case at all, I’m still here. I mean there are always rumours circulating around. I think that’s the nature of the sport. But yeah, I mean, I was definitely a bit surprised to see it from I’d say a well-known reporter, without any real foundation behind it. So yeah, I just kind of laughed a bit at it really.
Q: (Arjan Schouten – AD Sportwereld) Max for the first time in your career you’re not the only Dutchy in a Formula 1 weekend, free practice with Nyck de Vries, you to know each other already for a long time. Can you share your thoughts on his career, the importance of this day for him and maybe his future potential for the sport?
MV: Yeah, Nick and I are good friends, you know, we hang out quite a bit in Monaco, so for him it’s a very nice opportunity today. But also the other hand, I mean, it’s an FP1 session, there’s not much really to win. I think you just have to do your job with the team, you know, and I’m sure he will. So you just needs to enjoy it. And then of course, we will see what happens in the future in terms of opportunities. I mean, who knows what’s going to happen for him? Of course, I wish him the very best in an opportunity, possibly in Formula 1, but if not he’s doing a great job anyway in Formula E at this time. And also, of course, last year, so it’s a bit difficult to tell. But yeah, I hope he has a lot of fun today.
(Q: Luke Smith – Autosport) Seb, you really held your own up against a couple of the UK’s top, prominent politicians? Is there a career in politics? Would that ever interest you for life after F1?
SV: No.
Q: (Adam Cooper, Motorsport.com) A question for all of you, Carlos said yesterday, he’s concerned about long-term, neck and back issues because of the bouncing and generally stiff suspensions of these cars. He wants to start a dialogue with F1 and the FIA about that. Have you had any issues? Are these cars harder on your bodies than previous F1 cars you’ve driven?
PG: Then he’s got to work out more. I mean, jokes apart, yeah, for sure. I think long-term, if the car stays like this for 10 years, it could become a concern. But already, I think from what we’ve seen from the start of the year until now, there has been a lot of progress made on our side – obviously very different from one car to another – but yeah, it can be a conversation, but I believe by the end of the year we won’t even have this issue anymore.
NL: Yeah, I think like Pierre said, from the beginning of the year, maybe from for more teams it seemed to be much more of a problem with the bouncing and the stiffness, obviously, other teams still having that and still struggling with it. But, you know, I think irrespective of these cars, the modern generation of cars with the high amounts of G forces and things like that, potentially long-term there is the possibility to have some negative effects, you know, like, spinal disc degeneration and things like that, which I think, irrespective of this year’s car, just driving these cars, with such high Gs for so many years, could have negative effects. And even probably for taller drivers that maybe sit a little bit more squished in the car, and potentially more, let’s say, not anatomically correct, maybe Esteban can relate to that, as well, maybe some other drivers of my height or similar. So, yeah, maybe something to speak about, but I think it is improving.
EO: Yeah, for sure. They’re tougher to drive than the last couple of years. They are, you know, more stiff on the bumps, lower to the ground. It’s big hits. But I forgot how tough, you know… I didn’t drive any competition go-kart for 10 years or something and I’ve been back in that for day with Fernando at his go-kart track with the riders, the Aprilia racing riders. And I forgot how tough and how stiff that was, and how much hit I was I was getting when I was younger, basically in go-kart racing. So in comparison, yeah, this is a very comfy ride, I can tell you. So yeah, it’s still fine.
MV: I think it’s very simple. If you just raise your rear ride height, you will not have it, but you lose performance. So if he just raises his rear ride height, it will be fine. It’s just a give and take. I mean, it’s not nice, but I know there’s more lap time in it by running it lower, so you run it low, even if it’s not comfortable.
Q: Are recovery time is longer after each Grand Prix?
MV: Not really, if you have a good massage.
Q: Thank you. Sebastian?
SV: I think every sport is taking its toll on your body, depending on the sport. So…
MV: I mean for us to talk about like our bodies. I mean, if you compare it to some other sports, I think We are very lucky that what we do.
SV: So, surely the loads on the… I mean, that’s what Carlos I think was directing to, the loads on the spine. And this between the vertebras is exceptionally high compared to other sports. But then like I said, every sport is particular and probably takes the toll on your body. It’s for you to take care of that and try and prevent as much as you can. To a certain point, I think you can, to another degree, you probably cannot. So, yeah, I don’t know, time will tell if you see these guys, in 50 years’ time, and their backs. But yeah, I think every sport is developing as well. And yeah, I think the discomfort we have through the due to the porpoising shouldn’t last forever. I think teams will figure it out at some point.
Q: (Sam Hall – GPFans) Seb, back to Question Time again. The sport was described as gas guzzling on the programme. Do you regret not mentioning the engines and how efficient they are, the most the most efficient engines in the world, rather than just saying that you would consider leaving the sport?
SV: But the question is, what do these efficient and most efficient engines in the world help or contribute to everyday people commuting in and out to work, to wherever? What does this engine help or bring you, which benefit? That’s very questionable. It’s very complex. It’s a fascinating technology. Don’t get me wrong, as a fan and from an engineering point of view it’s fascinating. But how much do you transfer to the road? Other than to stick a hybrid on the on the car, to the road car? Not much. So you have to be true. You have to be true and tell the truth. And I think that’s important. So looking forward, obviously F1 is stuck with this engine for a while. And you know, the question that you that you have to raise is: is it enough? Are we doing enough? And considering you know how deep we are in the poo, sorry to say like this, but you know, where the world is going and you look at the climate crisis or breakdown, the answer is we’re not doing enough, and especially in… how did they put it, a gas-guzzling sport, which is true, I think we are at the spotlight, and we have to do more than just do what we do. I think we can’t do enough. That’s the answer.
Q: (Louis Dekker – NOS) Nicholas, do you enjoy having a new Dutch kid on the block for one hour in FP1? Or does it create a certain kind of tension?
NL: Yeah, I mean, for me and my job, I find it doesn’t really change much. I think for the overall team perspective, I think it’s good to get a…it’s nice to have a new opinion on the car. Obviously, Nick’s been doing some stuff in the simulator as well to prepare. You know, even though it’s by no means the same car but he has some comparisons who obviously driving the Mercedes last year, just as George did every now and then. So to see what kind of experience he can bring and knowledge, his opinion on the car, I think it’s very useful for the team. But from my perspective, and how I carry out my FP1 session, it doesn’t really change much in terms of my preparation for the race weekend.
Q: (Samarth Kanal – F1.com) Sebastian, what’s triggered this kind of empathy that you’ve found and this desire to go on and speak about big issues and stuff? Because, forgive me, you didn’t really seem to have that at Red Bull? Is it the fact that you’ve got world titles? Or is it the fact that you’re at Aston Martin, what’s triggered it?
SV: No, there’s no sort of one experience that kicked it off. I feel I shouldn’t be the exception, I feel that we should all feel like this, because it is addressing all of us and it will impact… it is already impacting on all of us today. And it will do more so in the future, the younger you are the more so, and for generations to come even more. I often get the question, why is this important to you? This is not important to me, this is important to all of us. And I don’t see why it cannot be. How can you ignore? Even if you don’t care, which I can see some people do not, but you don’t have that luxury anymore, to not care. Because, you know, it’s the foundation of all of what we do. So without drifting away, I see you know, this is extremely important, certainly why? Yeah, looking back, I mean, there was a time where obviously I wasn’t as aware. But I think the moment you become more and more aware, the moment I became a father, you’re thinking more about the future. So certain things probably do change. But like I said, unfortunately, kids today, kids like Max or the next generation, young drivers or even younger than Max and kids after that, they will not have that luxury of not caring, even if they don’t, it will impact them. And I think it’s for all of us to think of what we can do to shift change to raise awareness and yeah, it’s something we cannot run away from unless you want to race on the moon which I don’t think it’s as exciting, there’s not much downforce on the moon.
Q: (Ed Spencer – Motorlat) A question to all of you does Formula 1 Need three race directors?
SV: I don’t know. I think it’s good to have the right variety of personnel. I mean, there’s a lot of races, so maybe it’s a smart one to split the job but yeah, I think it will only help to share different opinions, different views, so why not? I don’t I don’t see a problem with it.
MV: I mean, we are trying it out at the moment right, so I guess time will tell what is the best way forward I guess.
EO: I’m not an expert on that topic.
NL: I don’t really have much else to add.
PG: Copy, paste. Agree.
DRIVER GROUP 2: Pierre GASLY (AlphaTauri), Esteban OCON (Alpine), Sebastian VETTEL (Aston Martin), Max VERSTAPPEN (Red Bull), Nicholas LATIFI (Williams)
Q: We’ll start with Pierre. Pierre, let’s throw it back a couple of weeks frustrating race for you in Miami, what might have been possible in that race without the contact from Alonzo earlier?
Pierre GASLY: Honestly, I don’t really want to think about what could have happened, what would have happened. It was unfortunate because we’re on for a potential, good couple of good points and they would have been well needed. It wasn’t an easy race we had a problem early on after lap three with our floor, and we were still managing it pretty well, but yeah, unfortunate. I think the good thing is we showed some good pace. Best quali of the year there and we showed some good pace in the race. And then that’s what we need to do, keep that momentum and build on it for this weekend.
Q: Well, how confident are you of doing that this weekend?
PG: Well, no upgrade on our side. But still, as I said, we showed some good potential, we know the car can be fast. That midfield is extremely tight. So we can’t leave anything on the table. Because one or two tenths move you up, up and down by six or seven places in the ranking. So just, you know, it puts pressure on ourselves to deliver and be at 100% of our potential, which is what we’re going to focus on and hopefully have a problem-free weekend, which hasn’t really been the case since the start of the year. So we just need to really focus on our job and execute everything perfectly.
Q: One final one for me. You’ve been busy since Miami. You’ve been globetrotting a bit just tell us what you’ve been up to?
PG: I’ve been up to a lot of things in my personal life. Because you know, I like to do things. I like to explore. I like to travel. So, I’ve been travelling a bit, surfing a little bit trying to get better. I do need more lessons before I can call it surfing. But, you know, we are getting there. And then yeah, I’m just fully energised for this weekend. Excited, happy, positive and ready to rock.
Q: Nicholas, coming to you. Look, we’re back in Barcelona, a track that you and the team both know well. How much do you think the FW44 is going to improve this weekend? What are you expecting?
Nicholas LATIFI: Yeah, I mean, I think from winter testing to now there’s naturally been little progressions and small evolutions on the car to add some speed. I mean, I wouldn’t say anything in the way of a big upgrade package, but there’s definitely stuff on the car that’s going to make it quicker than what from what it wasn’t winter testing. So I think, yeah, from this weekend we have some little weight saving parts and things like that. So obviously hoping to be a little bit more competitive. It’s always interesting coming back here after winter testing and you kind of have that not so much a back-to-back comparison but let’s say a kind of for like-for-like, obviously taking the track temperature and all that stuff out of it. So yeah it’s going to be interesting to see. I mean, obviously a lot of big changes up and down the pitlane as well with various packages. So yeah, whether the order changes are not or stays similar, I think it’s should be an exciting weekend.
Q: And Nicholas, what about your own performance in the car and your own understanding of the car? Do you feel you’re on top of it now?
NL: I mean, I feel in Miami there was some good steps made and I mean, to be honest, I’m hoping that this track there will be some bigger steps, just you know, due to the nature of the track. We all know this track very well. And, again, we’ve had, you know, a few street races in a row, with Imola, a very mixed condition weekend. And obviously the next races are about three street races in a row, as well. So yeah, like I’ve been saying, when you don’t have that, that feeling that you’re clicking with a car like you want it’s maybe not as easy to build that on, on street tracks. So yeah, I’m hoping this weekend will be another good step in that direction.
Q: Best of luck with that. Thank you. Esteban, coming to you. I feel we have to throw it back a couple of weeks to start with tremendous race from you in Miami. P 20. On the grid to P8. What are your expectations coming into that race?
Esteban OCON: Yeah, thank you. No, it was it was definitely a great race and a great recovery from the crash obviously on Saturday. Yeah, it was a tough one. Very hot. Not feeling obviously 100%. Still very sore from the impact from the day before. But yeah, the team did an awesome job. They made the strategy perfect. And we benefited from that Safety Car pit-stop at the end. So yeah, it was very solid. So I’m pretty pleased with that. Obviously, we’re going this weekend on a track that we know a lot better, that we know by heart. We had good performance last year, we qualified fifth. Obviously, very different characteristics this this year, but yeah, I look forward to see what we can do and also to compare with the others, because we’ve seen some interesting new bits from everywhere around us. We are going to have also a few things but yeah, it’s going to be an interesting one.
Q: And just this feel a bit of a home race for you? The paternal side of you family from lives just down the road?
EO: Exactly, yeah. Around the circuit, I have most of my family from my dad’s side that live around here. It is a home race for Fernando and half a home race for me. So yeah, I’m very happy to be back in Barcelona.
Q: Best of luck this weekend. Max coming to you now. Can we start off track? I think you’ve been having a bit of fun since Miami. How much air is it possible to get on a jet ski?
Max VERSTAPPEN: I haven’t found that yet. I’m still trying. Depends on the wave you get as well. So I’m trying to find the big ones.
Q: On track this weekend, a lot of your rivals are bringing upgrades here. What’s the situation at Red Bull?
MV: Not really updates, just a little weight reduction. I mean, our car is still a bit fat, so trying to slim it down. So that’s what we’re trying to do.
Q: And when you see what’s happening elsewhere on the grid, especially at Ferrari, what are you expecting from them? Where do you think the main challenge is going to come from this weekend?
MV: Well, if you look at the of course, the last few races, it must be them, right? So they’re, they’re coming with a few upgrades. So it’s going to be interesting to see how much that’s going to give them but at the end of the day we just have to focus on our package. And I mean, we all know this track quite well. So just need to make sure that, you know, we have a clean weekend starting from today.
Q: Max, what about overtaking? 23 of the 31 races at this track have been won from pole position? Do you expect something similar with these cars? Or do you think we might see more overtaking at the front but also elsewhere?
MV: Well, you might run a bit closer, but it’s still a track, which I think is tough to overtake on. But I think the aim is always to not overtake to try and start upfront that that’s the goal.
Q: Thanks, Max and Sebastian coming to you now. Milk first or cereal first? That seemed to be the killer question last week when you were in London. Can you just tell us about the day? What was the highlight for you?
Sebastian VETTEL: Yeah, maybe the kids and you know, their honesty? Your asked about milk first or cereal first. And most adults would probably laugh at it. But I think it goes to show that kids don’t have, you know, presumptions, they’re just happy to explore. And there is no right or wrong. So there’s lots of things that we can learn from children. But yeah, I definitely enjoyed the day. And obviously, there was a variety of things that I did but the highlight probably was the kids, the atmosphere as well was very loud. So I enjoyed that.
Q: What about this weekend, Sebastian? It seems like it’s a big one for Aston Martin, lots of upgrades on the car. What are you expecting?
SV: Not really having much expectations. We know that it’s a very different looking car. We’ve had a big push in the factory to make the bits for two cars. And it will be very interesting to see how it behaves on track. I think that’s what we are looking forward to. I’m very curious to see the performance. We don’t expect a massive jump straightaway. But we do believe in the concept and believe that there’s more performance to gain down that road. So yeah, it will be interesting to get a feel and get the hands on the car.
QUESTIONS FROM THE FLOOR
Q: (Ed Spencer – Motorlat) Sebastian, what did you learn from your recent trip to London, considering you did very well on Question Time? And could you explain why is there a bandage on your left knee?
SV: Yeah, I burned myself on the motorbike last week. It’s not that bad, but better to cover it. And then I think the trip to London was, as I said, very interesting. Obviously, I visited the boys prison in Feltham, and then the school in Waterloo. And had the evening with Question Time. But I think you know, it’s always interesting to meet different people in different circumstances, different ages or different groups of ages. But, you know, it goes to show that… I don’t know, what I learned or what I take from it, is that I have been very, very lucky the way I’ve been brought up. I’ve had lots of love around me. My parents taking the time and having the opportunity to look after me. Visiting the kids in Waterloo, you know, which is in London, one of the biggest cities in the world, one of the richest cities in the world. But yet you go off the main road, just by a block or two, and you find kids that a lot of their path is already drawn. And they don’t have anywhere near the opportunities and possibilities or love that I had and enjoyed. So they might find themselves in a dead-end road and be stuck there. Which is shocking, you know, because as I said, there’s so much possibility around in London, so much money around in London. But yet, so much you can still improve. And it’s not that different. It’s not a London problem. Generally with big cities you have the same, in German cities or other cities around the world. So I find that very inspirational. And, you know, it really kicks off the need that we have to do something. And if we can raise awareness, raise attention, that’s a good thing. And ultimately, if we can just help a few of those kids, it’s already a big achievement. But ideally, a lot of these children to have a better life than maybe it would look on paper.
Q: (Edd Straw – The Race) Question for Esteban, regarding the crash in Miami, Carlos Sainz said yesterday he wants a proper explanation for why Tecpro wasn’t put there, which obviously would have potentially been better news for you. Have you had a proper explanation from the FIA? Has there been any dialogue for why that change wasn’t made Friday into Saturday? Are you satisfied with that situation?
EO: Yes, I am actually. I had a chat with the Race Director, yesterday. We had a one-hour chat on all of these situations and why it hasn’t been explained. They’ve had a lot of work done and analysis on the trajectory of both my car and Carlos’ car and on what could have been the best solution and there will be changes on the track next year on that regard for safety. And yeah, everything’s been listen [to], acknowledged and action will be done. So yeah, I was very reassured with the chat we had and very pleased with the outcome of it.
Q: (Silja Rulle – Bild) Seb, your favourite football team Eintracht Frankfurt won the Europa League? How did you follow that match and how do you feel about that?
SV: I was watching on TV. Obviously. When it went down to the wire and with penalties, it was very exciting and I got very nervous. But yeah, I think we got lucky in the end, like in penalties you always do. But I think it was deserved and an incredible achievement. So, as a fan, obviously, I’m super happy. And yeah, to see the excitement… I’ve been in the stadium many times and it would have been nice to be there. But also in Frankfurt in the stadium, it was packed, a lot of people watching and following. So yeah, a lot of celebrations going on also yesterday in Frankfurt, so yeah, it was special and like winning… it felt like you know, like winning in a lottery. So, for the club, I think it’s amazing, for the players. So something that probably they will remember for forever. For sure, as a fan, we will.
Q: (Ronald Vording – Motorsport.com) It’s a question to Max. In recent weeks, we’ve heard some comments by Ferrari about the budget cap and the development of the Red Bull Car. First of all, what do you make of it? And secondly, how confident are you that Red Bull can maintain this development speed throughout the season?
MV: Thank you. Well, it’s very simple. I mean, it’s the same for everyone. So I don’t see any issues regarding that.
Q: (Alan Baldwin – Reuters) Nicholas, there was a report last week from a well-known Canadian reporter based in Toronto, about your departure from Williams and your replacement. I wondered what your reaction was to this premature report of your departure. And also I noticed that you haven’t been tempted by redhead on this weekend.
NL: Yeah, on the red hair dye, I didn’t want it to wash off in the helmet, so I opted not to partake in that. But I think most of the team members had it washed out in the shower. So, no more red hair in the paddock for now. And yeah, the report, when I saw that I just kind of laughed a little bit because obviously it was not the case at all, I’m still here. I mean there are always rumours circulating around. I think that’s the nature of the sport. But yeah, I mean, I was definitely a bit surprised to see it from I’d say a well-known reporter, without any real foundation behind it. So yeah, I just kind of laughed a bit at it really.
Q: (Arjan Schouten – AD Sportwereld) Max for the first time in your career you’re not the only Dutchy in a Formula 1 weekend, free practice with Nyck de Vries, you to know each other already for a long time. Can you share your thoughts on his career, the importance of this day for him and maybe his future potential for the sport?
MV: Yeah, Nick and I are good friends, you know, we hang out quite a bit in Monaco, so for him it’s a very nice opportunity today. But also the other hand, I mean, it’s an FP1 session, there’s not much really to win. I think you just have to do your job with the team, you know, and I’m sure he will. So you just needs to enjoy it. And then of course, we will see what happens in the future in terms of opportunities. I mean, who knows what’s going to happen for him? Of course, I wish him the very best in an opportunity, possibly in Formula 1, but if not he’s doing a great job anyway in Formula E at this time. And also, of course, last year, so it’s a bit difficult to tell. But yeah, I hope he has a lot of fun today.
(Q: Luke Smith – Autosport) Seb, you really held your own up against a couple of the UK’s top, prominent politicians? Is there a career in politics? Would that ever interest you for life after F1?
SV: No.
Q: (Adam Cooper, Motorsport.com) A question for all of you, Carlos said yesterday, he’s concerned about long-term, neck and back issues because of the bouncing and generally stiff suspensions of these cars. He wants to start a dialogue with F1 and the FIA about that. Have you had any issues? Are these cars harder on your bodies than previous F1 cars you’ve driven?
PG: Then he’s got to work out more. I mean, jokes apart, yeah, for sure. I think long-term, if the car stays like this for 10 years, it could become a concern. But already, I think from what we’ve seen from the start of the year until now, there has been a lot of progress made on our side – obviously very different from one car to another – but yeah, it can be a conversation, but I believe by the end of the year we won’t even have this issue anymore.
NL: Yeah, I think like Pierre said, from the beginning of the year, maybe from for more teams it seemed to be much more of a problem with the bouncing and the stiffness, obviously, other teams still having that and still struggling with it. But, you know, I think irrespective of these cars, the modern generation of cars with the high amounts of G forces and things like that, potentially long-term there is the possibility to have some negative effects, you know, like, spinal disc degeneration and things like that, which I think, irrespective of this year’s car, just driving these cars, with such high Gs for so many years, could have negative effects. And even probably for taller drivers that maybe sit a little bit more squished in the car, and potentially more, let’s say, not anatomically correct, maybe Esteban can relate to that, as well, maybe some other drivers of my height or similar. So, yeah, maybe something to speak about, but I think it is improving.
EO: Yeah, for sure. They’re tougher to drive than the last couple of years. They are, you know, more stiff on the bumps, lower to the ground. It’s big hits. But I forgot how tough, you know… I didn’t drive any competition go-kart for 10 years or something and I’ve been back in that for day with Fernando at his go-kart track with the riders, the Aprilia racing riders. And I forgot how tough and how stiff that was, and how much hit I was I was getting when I was younger, basically in go-kart racing. So in comparison, yeah, this is a very comfy ride, I can tell you. So yeah, it’s still fine.
MV: I think it’s very simple. If you just raise your rear ride height, you will not have it, but you lose performance. So if he just raises his rear ride height, it will be fine. It’s just a give and take. I mean, it’s not nice, but I know there’s more lap time in it by running it lower, so you run it low, even if it’s not comfortable.
Q: Are recovery time is longer after each Grand Prix?
MV: Not really, if you have a good massage.
Q: Thank you. Sebastian?
SV: I think every sport is taking its toll on your body, depending on the sport. So…
MV: I mean for us to talk about like our bodies. I mean, if you compare it to some other sports, I think We are very lucky that what we do.
SV: So, surely the loads on the… I mean, that’s what Carlos I think was directing to, the loads on the spine. And this between the vertebras is exceptionally high compared to other sports. But then like I said, every sport is particular and probably takes the toll on your body. It’s for you to take care of that and try and prevent as much as you can. To a certain point, I think you can, to another degree, you probably cannot. So, yeah, I don’t know, time will tell if you see these guys, in 50 years’ time, and their backs. But yeah, I think every sport is developing as well. And yeah, I think the discomfort we have through the due to the porpoising shouldn’t last forever. I think teams will figure it out at some point.
Q: (Sam Hall – GPFans) Seb, back to Question Time again. The sport was described as gas guzzling on the programme. Do you regret not mentioning the engines and how efficient they are, the most the most efficient engines in the world, rather than just saying that you would consider leaving the sport?
SV: But the question is, what do these efficient and most efficient engines in the world help or contribute to everyday people commuting in and out to work, to wherever? What does this engine help or bring you, which benefit? That’s very questionable. It’s very complex. It’s a fascinating technology. Don’t get me wrong, as a fan and from an engineering point of view it’s fascinating. But how much do you transfer to the road? Other than to stick a hybrid on the on the car, to the road car? Not much. So you have to be true. You have to be true and tell the truth. And I think that’s important. So looking forward, obviously F1 is stuck with this engine for a while. And you know, the question that you that you have to raise is: is it enough? Are we doing enough? And considering you know how deep we are in the poo, sorry to say like this, but you know, where the world is going and you look at the climate crisis or breakdown, the answer is we’re not doing enough, and especially in… how did they put it, a gas-guzzling sport, which is true, I think we are at the spotlight, and we have to do more than just do what we do. I think we can’t do enough. That’s the answer.
Q: (Louis Dekker – NOS) Nicholas, do you enjoy having a new Dutch kid on the block for one hour in FP1? Or does it create a certain kind of tension?
NL: Yeah, I mean, for me and my job, I find it doesn’t really change much. I think for the overall team perspective, I think it’s good to get a…it’s nice to have a new opinion on the car. Obviously, Nick’s been doing some stuff in the simulator as well to prepare. You know, even though it’s by no means the same car but he has some comparisons who obviously driving the Mercedes last year, just as George did every now and then. So to see what kind of experience he can bring and knowledge, his opinion on the car, I think it’s very useful for the team. But from my perspective, and how I carry out my FP1 session, it doesn’t really change much in terms of my preparation for the race weekend.
Q: (Samarth Kanal – F1.com) Sebastian, what’s triggered this kind of empathy that you’ve found and this desire to go on and speak about big issues and stuff? Because, forgive me, you didn’t really seem to have that at Red Bull? Is it the fact that you’ve got world titles? Or is it the fact that you’re at Aston Martin, what’s triggered it?
SV: No, there’s no sort of one experience that kicked it off. I feel I shouldn’t be the exception, I feel that we should all feel like this, because it is addressing all of us and it will impact… it is already impacting on all of us today. And it will do more so in the future, the younger you are the more so, and for generations to come even more. I often get the question, why is this important to you? This is not important to me, this is important to all of us. And I don’t see why it cannot be. How can you ignore? Even if you don’t care, which I can see some people do not, but you don’t have that luxury anymore, to not care. Because, you know, it’s the foundation of all of what we do. So without drifting away, I see you know, this is extremely important, certainly why? Yeah, looking back, I mean, there was a time where obviously I wasn’t as aware. But I think the moment you become more and more aware, the moment I became a father, you’re thinking more about the future. So certain things probably do change. But like I said, unfortunately, kids today, kids like Max or the next generation, young drivers or even younger than Max and kids after that, they will not have that luxury of not caring, even if they don’t, it will impact them. And I think it’s for all of us to think of what we can do to shift change to raise awareness and yeah, it’s something we cannot run away from unless you want to race on the moon which I don’t think it’s as exciting, there’s not much downforce on the moon.
Q: (Ed Spencer – Motorlat) A question to all of you does Formula 1 Need three race directors?
SV: I don’t know. I think it’s good to have the right variety of personnel. I mean, there’s a lot of races, so maybe it’s a smart one to split the job but yeah, I think it will only help to share different opinions, different views, so why not? I don’t I don’t see a problem with it.
MV: I mean, we are trying it out at the moment right, so I guess time will tell what is the best way forward I guess.
EO: I’m not an expert on that topic.
NL: I don’t really have much else to add.
PG: Copy, paste. Agree.
GROUP 4 – Yuki TSUNODA (AlphaTauri), Carlos SAINZ (Ferrari), Daniel RICCIARDO (McLaren), Lewis HAMILTON (Mercedes), George RUSSELL (Mercedes)
Q: Belated happy birthday to you, Yuki. First up, how were the celebrations in Milan?
Yuki TSUNODA: Why do you know I was in Milan? Yes, I was in Milan and I was spending it with friends. Yes, it was nice, kind of relaxed, chilling birthday. Yup, we didn’t bring any updates as a team but I had an update on my side so hopefully that 22-year-old will work well in driving but anyway, it was a good birthday.
Q: Let’s talk about updates on the car. Have you got anything new this weekend here in Barcelona?
YT: No. Yeah, I mean, no, really.
Q: So how confident do you feel coming into this weekend because it was a strong qualifying performance by the team in Miami last time out? Do you think you can carry that through to the Spanish Grand Prix?
YT: Have to see how the other teams’ pace is. Yeah, we went through to Q3 last time in Miami. That was really good as a team. To be honest we didn’t really expect that for that one but yes, it was good qualifying. This time, also a lot of teams going to bring updates so we will see how those updates go. Hopefully that won’t work well as expected but it’s still a new race week in Barcelona, on the tracks that have experience of most so we will see how that works.
Q: Let’s come to the local hero now, Carlos Sainz. You were back on the podium in Miami, Carlos, what would it mean to you to do that again here in front of your home fans?
CS: Yeah, it would be for sure a good result just to stand on that podium – new podium that the circuit has done in front of the whole crowd. But we want that bit more than that, you know. I think everyone and myself, we want that first win and we will try and get it, we will try and fight for it. Hopefully, the upgrades give us a bit of a hand against the battle with Red Bull. I’ve been feeling some progress has been done in the last few races so yeah, we’re ready for it.
Q: And what about the reception you’ve received here at home? Has it been different this year to previous seasons?
CS: It’s been amazing, I mean, it’s a full crowd. We’re expecting 300,000 people across the whole weekend, 100,000 on Sunday, It’s first time in many years that it’s full, you know, and my homegrown grandstand was sold out in a matter of two hours, so there’s a big hype, you know, around the city, the Grand Prix. I think Formula 1 is growing everywhere and Spain is also part of that.
Q: And do you get any crazy gifts? What is it like coming into the track? Can you just give us a bit of background?
CS: No, Spaniards are not… you don’t receive crazy gifts. It’s more in Japan that this happens, no, but the Spanish, a few Spanish flags, a lot of cheering, a lot of support, a lot of positivity, you know, keep pushing, you know, this kind of thing that puts you in a good mood and puts you… gives you good vibes and puts you in a good mood going into the weekend.
LH: I got some gifts yesterday.
CS: You did? Maybe because you’re coming from outside, but for us, locals, we know what we like.
Q: George, coming to you now, another really strong race from you in Miami last time out. You’re now the only driver on the grid to have finished every race in the top five. What’s your reaction to that stat?
George RUSSELL: That’s all we’re going for, we’re not going for the championship this year, just top five every race, obviously, so it’s a meaningless stat. There’s only one that matters and that’s the championship order. And obviously good to stay consistent but the Ferrari and Red Bulls are sort of clawing away from us at the moment and we need to find some more lap time and find some more pace to try and turn that around.
Q: How confident are you doing that this weekend, finding more lap time?
GR: Yeah, I think we’re confident we can find more lap time but obviously every single team are bringing up updates to the car so if we make our car half second quicker and Ferrari make their car half a second quicker, we’re in the exact same boat as we were before, so, you know, we’re not just racing against a stopwatch we’re racing against the competition. And we have to wait and see but I think this weekend will be interesting for us, I don’t think we’re going to suddenly find that killer switch, which is going to put us on the top step of the podium, but maybe we’ll get some good answers to… point us in the right direction.
Q: Well Daniel, McLaren are bringing a lot of upgrades… half a second?
Daniel RICCIARDO: Who told you that?
Q: Using the stat that George used, half a second a lap. What are you expecting from them?
DR: Yeah, I mean, obviously you’re expecting to go a little quicker but it’s,… I guess, it’s as George touched on, like it’s all relative and even if it’s a second, you know, if everyone else finds more then it’s ‘ah, OK’ so… Well, if it’s a second I’ll be stoked if it’s a second. But yeah, so we’ll see today, we’ll see how much it gives us and then obviously how much it changes the order. I imagine the whole field or whoever’s… I think everyone’s probably brought upgrades, it’ll like bunch the field up, because we’ve all learned over the course of the first few races and understood the cars a little better. So I guess everyone’s going to trend in in a similar direction.
Q: And Daniel, can we just get your thoughts on being here in Barcelona with this huge crowd? It was here back in 2013 that you scored your first podium…
DR: ’14.
Q: Of course it was. But just tell us, being back here, that first podium, what does it mean to you?
DR: I mean, it’s very familiar place for all of us and because we raced here, pre F1 in junior categories, and then obviously we’ve been coming here for testing for years so it’s a place we know very well but I will say like, even getting into the track this morning, it seems like everyone’s out in kind of full force already. Crowds are pretty good big and the paddock’s pretty full and lively so yeah, you know, you can tell like… I guess the sport is growing and has grown since then so if I was on the podium this weekend, then yeah I’d probably be looking down at more fans than I was in 2014.
Q: And Lewis, thanks for waiting, coming to you now, you have an incredible record at this track. Of course, you won here last year. Just talk us through your prospects for the weekend?
Lewis HAMILTON: I really don’t know. I’m hoping it’s… every time I arrive into the weekend I’m hoping that the prospects are good. We’re working as hard as we can as a team to progress. And we have some upgrades it’s not a big upgrade like Daniel’s, but it’s… You know, I’m really proud of the team for what they’ve put together and I hope that when we get in the car, we noticed it.
Q: The car looked very different when we were here in pre-season testing so will it be useful to-back-to- back what you’ve got now with what you had?
LH: Yeah, definitely. It’s a great test track here in Barcelona and it was the first time we drove the car. We have the data from that and we can remember the feeling that we had during that time as well so… we did have bouncing back then also but it’d be interesting to see the parallels and just see how much we’ve progressed since then.
QUESTIONS FROM THE FLOOR
Q: (Claire COTTINGHAM – Racefans) Lewis, both in Melbourne and Miami, the World TV feed showed you expressing that you aren’t happy with the team’s strategy and that you needed to talk about it afterwards. Do you have any concerns about the team’s strategy? And is it a bit unfair when they’re showing these messages? Do you think it’s unfairly shown, do you think is not quite how you mean it, if you know what I mean?
LH: Well, firstly, we continue to work hard. I don’t have any problems with strategy. We learn every weekend, we have great discussions before and afterwards. We’ve been a little bit unfortunate. I definitely feel that…I mean, it’s no secret that for those that are watching, and for what is broadcast it’s hard for probably any of you to really truly understand what it’s like in the car. Your emotions are higher than ever, your heart rate is very high. And maybe a woman would understand, maybe having to give the answers during some difficult scenarios, but yeah, I mean, it’s never the same as you know, when you’re cool and chill and just having a normal conversation with someone. But when your heart rate’s as high as it is, you don’t always have the best answers to everything. But also there’s just… just shows there’s a lot of passion, it’s that that desire to do well.
Q: (Sam Hall – GP Fans) Lewis, talking to Pierre yesterday, he was after a common sense conclusion to the jewellery saga and the questions about whether you should be allowed to wear jewellery or not? Have you had any continuing conversations with the FIA or Mohammed? And what has been the outcome of those discussions?
LH: I haven’t had any discussions with anybody since the last time I spoke on Sunday at the last race. So what I’m aware of is that those who are married are allowed to wear their wedding ring. So… yeah,
GR: You just need to get married then. You just need to get married then.
LH: No, no. You first.
Q: (Alan Baldwin – Reuters) Lewis, we’ve got a new race director this weekend and it was an interview given last week with Mohammed Ben Sulayem in a British newspaper suggesting that Michael Masi might not be out of the frame for the race directorship at some point in the future. And there’s a follow-up suggesting that you were very annoyed at the suggestion. Can you just clarify what your thoughts are on that whether Michael Masi – if he were to come back – whether you would find that acceptable?
LH: I only heard of that story like a couple of days ago firstly, and I haven’t spoken to anyone and particularly I’ve actually not done an interview for that newspaper for at least probably 10 years, something like that. So it’s inaccurate as are some of the… most of the stories, but I don’t really have a particular feeling about it. I mean, yeah, not given it any thought, I don’t know what Mohammed has said, I’ve not read his story, I don’t know what he is… I don’t know what his agenda is.
Q: (Luke Smith – Autosport) Lewis question for you, it’s been a tricky start to the season but it’s often in these bits of adversity where teams and drivers, they can learn a lot about themselves and make big steps. What have you learned about yourself through this early part of the year? And George, what qualities have you seen in Lewis as a leader trying to help turn the team around as we get into the rest of the season?
LH: Well firstly, I wouldn’t say that I’m the leader. George and I work equally as hard together, I would say, to help drive the team and be a part… row just as hard as everyone else in the team. But yeah, I mean, just always through adversity and challenging times, you always learn more about yourself, how you deal with things, how you reflect on things, how you are able to turn negatives into positives. And I wouldn’t say I’ve learned particularly much more that I knew most of the stuff so I will say that past experiences have helped during this phase. And, yeah, I would say to just reassuring just the strength that I know I have mentally, and also just reassuring us that I still love my job, I still love the challenge even if it’s not fighting for wins, I’m still enjoying this battle that we’re having internally in terms of trying to… with the car, I mean, and trying to chase down these other guys.
GR: Yeah, it’s been inspiring to see how Lewis works and gets the most out of the whole team. And I think that’s been one of the big things I’ve seen with joining Mercedes, seeing how Lewis does things, how Toto does things, the culture that is ingrained within everybody. It’s sort of relentless, they’re always striving for more, never being complacent and seeing how everybody’s pulling together at the moment to try and resolve these issues we’re facing, as I said, it inspires and it’s also motivating for myself as well, because you learn how the best in the business do it and you need to continuously push yourself for more. So I think I’m in a really privileged position to be teammates with Lewis and be part of Mercedes.
Q: (Giles Richards -The Guardian) Lewis and George as well. Toto said this weekend is going to be the decision-making time for whether they – Mercedes – admits they made a mistake with the concept of the car this year. You’ve been driving it, I’m just wondering what your feelings are about the design of the car, and how it would feel if the team did say, actually, we hold hands up, we got it wrong?
GR: I think this weekend is for sure going to be important as most weekends are, but I think, you know, Rome wasn’t built in a day and it’s taken time to firstly recognise what the problems are, develop things back at the factory to try and resolve these problems, and then try and implement them and obviously we don’t get much track time. And Miami was a first taste of the direction we need to take and this weekend will be the second taste and I think we’ll have a good conclusion after this weekend, if we can continue down the path that we’ve chosen, or we need to go down a different path. So yes, that’s exciting but I think if this is the path, we’re not going to suddenly see us, as I said before, on the top step of the podium, but either way, we will have a positive outcome from this weekend.
LH: Yeah, not really, a huge amount to add to what George has said, I’m not a designer so I can’t… I don’t want to say that I have an opinion on whether design is right or wrong. It looks a little bit different to some others but I think it looks unique and that’s what we stand for, as a team, just always innovating and coming up with interesting concepts. But I think as Toto said, you know, we will understand from this weekend whether where we are is the right direction, and if not, we’ll band up and we’ll move in another direction. But I think it won’t mean that we have to start from scratch, I don’t think, it will just probably be a side step in another direction.
Q: (Louis Dekker – NOS) Lewis and George, it’s about your colleague Nyck de Vries, I wonder what can a driver bring to a new team in one hour of free practice? And can you tell me something about his role in your team?
GR: I think slightly counter-intuitively. I personally don’t think it’s correct to be getting drivers in for FP1, to showcase what they can do in front of the world in 60 minutes, in 10 laps in a car they’ve barely driven and be judged off this. And this is, you know, speaking from my own experience of the number of FP1 sessions. And you know the pressure is going to be immense now we’re putting even more pressure on these guys to go out there and try and prove them are… they always going to be judged how they get on, but that’s just the way the game is at the moment and I’m sure he’ll do a great job and to be honest, Nyck’s been very useful for me personally, at the races. He’s always watching the on-board videos and looking at the data and telling me to look at this, that or the other if he notices anything. So having somebody like Nyck, who is pretty on it, he’s got his head screwed on, and he knows what he’s talking about, has been beneficial for us as a team.
LH: He’s a great guy. Great lad. And…
Q: Are you pleased to see him getting his…
LH: No, I agree with George in that sense of that, yeah, I mean, you look at sometimes further down the order that they just send a driver out on light fuel, and it’s not a lot of laps, I mean, maybe 20 or so laps, it’s a lot of pressure. But it can be a fun opportunity but I don’t think they should be judged on that for sure. But Nyck, I don’t think we’ll be judged on it. I think it’s more for him to get a good feel. Hopefully his feeling can have… then he can have a bigger impact on simulation tools but he’s an integral part of our team and works closely with us all in the background. He always comes with a great smile and positive energy.
Q: (Phil Duncan – PA) Just following on from something that Carlos said yesterday about these new cars having an impact – a long term impact on drivers’ health. I just want to ask Lewis and George for their opinions on that, particularly because you guys have had a lot of the porpoising. And whether you think it’s, you know, bad for the back, for the neck, the heads, is it dangerous, are these cars dangerous do you think in that aspect?
LH: I think it probably applies more to the younger ones. For me, I’m a lot older and my back’s in good health.
GR: I thought it’d be the opposite.
LH: Yeah, I don’t know. Carlos can’t even touch his toes.
GR: He walked in on a zimmer frame.
CS: I didn’t understand, sorry. I’m a bit switched off. But I didn’t say… I heard him saying that the cars were dangerous and I’ve never said that. I just said that the cars, with the technology that we have nowadays, maybe to have us bouncing like crazy out there and suffering from this phenomenon is for the long term – maybe I open a debate, you know, to see if we can do something different with these regulations that, by the way I’m a big fan of because they’ve improved the racing and all that. But maybe there’s something a bit softer that we can find for the future.
LH: Definitely, when you have it, when it’s hardcore when you’ve had it, it’s when we’re having to lift off down the straight, halfway down the straight, or even earlier than halfway down the straight, yeah, there’s potential long term consequences. But I think we’re OK now,
GR: I’d love to… It would be quite cool if we were able to share some sort of numbers with you guys and probably confidential so ask the team what’s possible but, you know, when you’re going down the straight at over 200 miles an hour and you’re smashing up and down on the ground, sure, you wouldn’t choose to have it that way. And the cars are obviously extremely rigid, and they’re not meant to be a comfortable ride and I guess you can almost compare it to like the footballers – I don’t know what era it was in 60s, 70s, 80s when they had the massively heavy footballs and there was research done and analysis done that there were health consequences for these chaps who were heading the ball and things were changed. So, you know, Formula 1 is the centre of innovation, there’s no reason why we can’t find a scientific solution for this.
Q: Daniel, you’ve got lots of experiences What’s your thoughts on it?
DR: I’m one of the lucky ones, but I watch their on-boards and jaw’s wide open like, yeah, I’m also…
There’s the discomfort, but even from a visibility like I’m like, how can they see their turning point?
CS: We don’t.
DR: Yeah, it’s, it’s pretty gnarly. So I don’t wish to be in that position
Q: Throwing it forward a week to Monaco, is it going to be that much harder?
LH: It’s slower. We’re much slower in Monaco in a straight line so it shouldn’t be a problem.
Q: And in terms of visibility and seeing turn in points?
LH: We’re going slower on the straight so hopefully we won’t have bouncing there but yeah, I mean, if it was bouncing we’re not going to be seeing much.
Q: (Alan Baldwin – Reuters) Lewis, on the jewellery subject. Can you just give us an update on whether you’ve got to get your piercings removed from Monaco? I mean, there were some comments you made in Miami suggesting that you’re minded not to but I just wondered if there’s been any change of thought on that.
LH: I haven’t, there’s no news update.
Q: (Edward Spencer – Motorlat) Carlos, you’re qualifying record compared to Charles is currently 0 for five. How much pressure have you got on your shoulders this weekend knowing that you could really do with out-qualifying him for the first time this season?
CS: Yeah, the target is not only to out-qualify Charles but to out-qualify everyone who is with a competitive car but so far this season – it is not a secret that he found his groove very quickly with this new car. I’m struggling to get on top of it. Even if I’m struggling you know I’m a tenth off in pretty much every qualifying so it’s not like I’m miles away. I feel like I’m within reach and that it could change any weekend as soon as I figure a bit my head around the exact way that I need to drive the car and the exact way I need to set it up for my liking. So the record might not be great and I’m not particularly proud about it. But we are about… yeah, the last few qualifyings have been fighting for pole position, so it’s not that I’m lacking a lot.
Ends
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Spanish GP: Leclerc leads Sainz by 0.079s in FP1
Ferrari led the way in FP1 of F1 Spanish GP with Charles Leclerc ahead of Carlos Sainz, whereas Red Bull’s Max Verstappen slotted in third.
After the trip to Miami, the F1 circus returned to Europe with the Spanish GP where a lot of teams brought certain updates with Aston Martin having a ‘second car’ which looked very similar to the Red Bull especially the sleak sidepod area.
It was a relatively smooth session with couple of impeding charges, both of which will be looked after the session. The first one was between Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton and Alpine’s Fernando Alonso, with the second one between a Red Bull and Mercedes’ George Russell.
In terms of the standings, Ferrari led the way with Leclerc setting the fastest time of 1m19.828s which was 0.079s faster than Sainz’s time of 1m19.907s. Red Bull’s Verstappen slotted in third with a 1m20.164s lap, which was 0.3s behind.
Mercedes’ Russell (1m20.590s) was fourth with Alpine’s Alonso (1m20.768s) in between the two Mercedes cars where Hamilton (1m20.811s) was sixth. The FIA document confirmed that both the Mercedes drivers took a new ICE, TC, MGU-H and MGU-K.
McLaren’s Lando Norris (1m21.279s) was seventh where AlphaTauri’s Pierre Gasly (1m21.422s) was in a sandwich with Daniel Ricciardo (1m21.737s) in ninth. The Top 10 was then rounded out by AlphaTauri’s Yuki Tsunoda (1m21.814s).
Alpine’s Esteban Ocon was 11th from Aston Martin’s Lance Stroll, with Alfa Romeo’s Robert Kubica in 13th who filled in for Guanyu Zhou in FP1. The Chinese racer took a new MGU-K alongside the two Mercedes drivers. The Haas pair followed in 14th and 15th.
Kevin Magnussen was ahead of Mick Schumacher with Aston Martin’s Sebastian Vettel – with a new ES – slotted in 16th from Alfa Romeo’s Valtteri Bottas. The first of the young drivers to fulfill the mandated session was Nyck de Vries for Williams in 18th.
He led teammate Nicholas Latifi, while Red Bull’s young driver Juri Vips was 20th, who replaced Sergio Perez.
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We still have issues to sort out, says race winner Max
Miami, 9 May 2022: Following drivers attended the post-race Press Conference on Sunday from right: Max VERSTAPPEN (Red Bull Racing); Charles LECLERC (Ferrari); Carlos SAINZ (Ferrari)
TRACK INTERVIEWS were conducted by Willy T Ribbs)
Q: Welcome to Miami. Thank you. Great job.
Carlos SAINZ: Nice and warm.
Q: How was the car? And the tyres? And how are you physically?
CS: I’ve been better! Obviously after the crash from Friday, I still had a bit of neck pain going into the race, but I had to manage it and I fought through it, especially with Checo at the end on the Medium tyre, he was very difficult to keep him behind. But we managed to get the podium, which is a decent result.
Q: I saw you could race. You could race him right down into the hole down there. And did you get what you wanted out of the tyres here, given the heat?
CS: It wasn’t easy at all. It’s been a tough race with the tyres, with the heat. The car was moving and sliding a lot. But in the end, we got what we deserved, I think, which is a decent P3. And we can build it up from here.
Q: Hey, this is the biggest event in the world right now. And you’re on the podium. Great job, baby.
CS: Thank you. I want more, but it’s not bad.
Q: Charles ‘Chuck’ Leclerc, you and Verstappen have been rumbling with each other since you were kids on go-karts. And you put on another great show here. How are you feeling physically? How’s the car, chassis-wise and tyres?
Charles LECLERC: It was a very difficult race, physically. We struggled quite a bit with the Medium tyres, especially in the first stint and got overtaken there. And it made our race a bit more difficult from that moment onwards. On the hard we were very competitive and towards the end, I thought I could get Max at one point. But today they had the advantage in terms of pace. But it was fun. And it’s amazing to see so many people again, I kept saying it, but yeah, it’s great to have so many Ferrari fans too in the grandstand. So thank you for your support.
Q: Well, you and Max are going to put on a show at every race in this World Championship. I can’t wait to see more. Put on a great show.
CL: Yeah, I hope so too. I mean, we need to keep pushing. Upgrades will be very important throughout the year. And I hope now that we can do a step up but from next race onwards. But yeah, it’s been tight since the beginning of the season. And that’s what we’d like to see.
Q: Awesome job, baby. Awesome job. All right, champ. Hey, Muhammad Ali told me that when you’re champ, Christmas Day is every day, so another Christmas. Welcome to Miami.
Max VERSTAPPEN: Thank you very much. I mean, it was an incredible Grand Prix. Very physical as well, but I think we kept it exciting until the end.
Q: Well, you’re strong. I mean, you went hard on the car. I mean, you kept the tyres underneath you, plus you’re in good shape son, you’re ready to get into the boxing ring?
Max VERSTAPPEN: I think I’ll stick to racing but I appreciate a lot of course boxing. It felt a bit like it out there in terms of how we feel right now. But yeah, incredibly happy the winning here in Miami. It was an incredible Sunday for us.
PRESS CONFERENCE
Q: Welcome to the top three finishers of the 2022 FIA Formula 1 Miami Grand Prix. In third place, Carlos Sainz. In second place Charles Leclerc. And taking the 23rd win of his Formula 1 career and his third win of this 2022 campaign, our race winner, Max Verstappen. Max, very well done. That was a beautifully executed race from third on the grid. Given how the weekend started on Friday. How sweet does this victory feel?
MV: Yeah, I mean, of course, it’s a very good comeback. I didn’t even do a start. So I didn’t know what to expect in the actual start. But we had a good launch. And I saw the opportunity to go around the outside in Turn 1 so I tried. And luckily, it worked, so then, I just tried to see the pace, of course, Charles in front of me, and I think already from the start, it was very close. I just couldn’t get into the DRS initially. But then, at one point, I think Charles started to struggle a bit more with the front tyres, and it seemed like our car was very good on the Medium compound. So once I got ahead, I think that basically made my race, because I opened up the gap. And basically, once we did the pit stop and put the hard tyre on we were actually very closely matched in pace. So yeah, that was very crucial, of course, to get that gap. But then, of course, I was not very happy with that Safety Car, but of course, fully understandable with what happened. And of course, I think you cannot be too disappointed about it. Because also in the past, I mean, it has benefited me in some other races. So I knew of course, it’s was going to be a tough one to the end already. Because it was quite physical out there. So I knew of course, well now the next 10 laps, I think it was, we have to be flat out, so on a track like this is not easy. I was struggling a bit initially with the tyre temps, like I was sliding around a bit too much for my liking, but then once the tires came back up to temperature, I think I had a little bit more pace and of course, pulled out of the DRS which was very crucial around here.
Q: You got out of that DRS. But how much pressure was Charles putting you under in those closing laps?
MV: He was trying everything to try and have a go. And it was not easy, of course, to stay ahead because it’s easy to make a mistake around here in certain places.
Q: And can you just elaborate on the physical nature of this race? Is it comparable to let’s say the Singapore Grand Prix?
MV: Yeah, pretty similar. It’s very hot in Sector 2 as well. And of course because this is a day race, with the sun out there, it makes it really hot. So I was very happy once we always got to the straight because that gave you a bit of air. Also in the Safety Car just clicking your visor one step up, you know to have a bit more air coming it was pretty nice.
Q: It’s been a good race for you and your team in the Championship. Do you feel you’re on a bit of a roll now?
MV: We’re still having a few issues we have to solve. I mean we are quick, but as you can see, my Friday was terrible, you know, which is not great if you want to have a good weekend. And also Checo had a few issues in the race, so we have to be on top of that, but clearly there is a lot of potential, we just need to make sure it’s reliable.
Q: Charles, coming to you, a great race by you as well, you look very racy in those closing laps just how good was your car today?
CL: It was good, especially on the Hard, I think we were we were strong. On the Medium, as Max said, we struggled a little bit after five, six laps with the front tyres and then… yeah, we struggled and basically lost the race on that stint, losing the lead and then losing quite a bit of race time there, because of the front degradation. We need to look at that and be on top of it for the next race. Apart from that, I think on the Hard, we were we were very competitive or at least as competitive as Max, and after the Safety Car I really thought that we will have a shot to actually take back the lead – but it wasn’t enough. But yeah, it’s like this again, I think we’ll have to analyse the end of the run on the Medium, which is the weak point of this race.
Q: Aside from tyre degradation, what were the biggest differences between your cars today?
MV: The colour!
CL: Yeah, the colour. The straight-line speed also a little bit. But again, I think it’s just the characteristics of both cars. Red Bull are quite quick in a straight; we are quite quick in the medium and high speed – but today I have to say that I was quite surprised that we were struggling quite a bit more than them in the slow speed corners. So, that was also a weakness on the Medium tyres, and we need to look at that.
Q: Charles, you’re still 19 points ahead of Max. But do you need to see a reaction from Ferrari now?
CL: In a race we need to, especially on the softer compounds, on the Medium, Soft, it seems that it’s been already two races that in terms of race pace, they seem to be a bit stronger and managing those tyres better. Then, in qualifying, we always managed to put those tyres in the right window, which helps us but on the on the long runs, we struggle a bit more compared to them.
Q: Carlos. You mentioned something about your neck to Willy T Ribbs a little bit earlier. Are you okay?
CS: Well, yeah. Obviously, I’m coming back from a pretty heavy crash on Friday. So, I wasn’t feeling 100 per cent today, but maybe also the fact that I haven’t done the last two races. So also, the neck feels that. And it’s a combination of those two things that maybe I was paying a bit the price and at some stages of the race I couldn’t push 100 per cent.
Q: After these last couple of races, when you didn’t go racing lap, how much of a relief is this podium for you?
CS: It’s not so much a relief – but it’s needed. I think I needed to complete a race distance, to get the body back to shape, and also get the feel for the car on used tyres, high fuel. I was still doing a couple of mistakes out there during the race, just because I was trying the car and trying myself out there. The important thing is that we got a full race in, but at some stages of the race I was pretty quick and also the battles and the feeling with the car in battle with Checo, you know what to do with the battery, with the tyres, I think it gave me a good understanding of what to do in the future.
Q: Just tell us a little bit more about that battle with Checo? It looked pretty tight.
CS: Yeah, I mean, on a new Medium, against me on a on a very used Hard, he had everything on the cards, you know, to pass me on, on the first two, three laps, in the warm-up phase of the tyre. And I was pretty sure that, once I got the tyres up to temperature, I could maybe stay, more or less, ahead. But yeah, I think we did a good job on defending, manage all the battery. They’re also pretty quick on the straight, which doesn’t help. I think it was a tough, tough defence, but it was good.
QUESTIONS FROM THE FLOOR
Q: (Alex Kalinauckas – Autosport) The same question to Max and to Charles please. Could you just talk us through the rundown the pit straight where Max got ahead into T1? And Charles, in particular, was there anything you could have done maybe to defend a little bit harder there? Or is it just not worth it?
CL: Well, it’s always worth it when you are fighting for the lead. To be honest with the experience I had from FP1, FP2, FP3, inside there, it was a disaster, the grip on Friday and Saturday. So, I did not expect Max to have that much grip. But actually, I think it was much better for the race today. So, looking back at the race, you can always do something better but I thought that, at that moment, it was the right thing to stay on the racing line and try to optimise the braking point, which I did – but it didn’t work out.
MV: It’s just a decision that you make at the time, right? From both sides. I went right and Charles defends in the way he does. And then after the corner, you realise what is best, right? It could have worked for Charles; could have worked for me. It worked for me this time. It is just because… I mean we’re going at such high speed you have to make these decisions in like, milliseconds, so…
Q: (Laurence Edmondson – ESPN) A question to all three drivers. Can I just get your thoughts on the event this weekend? How spectacular you found it. And also, to Max, does it mean anything more to win the first race in Miami?
MV: I think it was an incredible atmosphere. I mean, it was really incredibly well organised. Really nice to see that. It’s not easy to put an event on like this. But yeah, they did an amazing job, and I had a lot of fun, driving around. I think track-wise, we can improve a few areas. But I have say in the race, I do think Sector 1 was quite fun. I do think Sector 2 can be maybe a bit… would have been nice if it could have been a bit faster and flowing for an F1 car like we have right now. You know: super long, heavy, wide. The 14-15 chicane is a bit of a tricky combination. And if it means more, I mean it’s another 25 or 26 points, right? It’s a nice venue, that’s for sure, but still you know you have the same amount of points what you can gain.
CL: Yeah, the atmosphere was incredible. And it’s great to see how much interest the sport has got in the last few years. And yeah, organisation was great. Loads of people, good weather. So yeah, it was amazing to be here.
CS: I think it was a mega event, put together… not easy on the first event to put such a well-organised venue. So many people coming, so many people in the paddock… for me the paddock was incredibly full!
MV: The helmet we had on the podium. We needed that in the paddock.
CS: Yeah, it was crazy. So yeah, congrats. I look forward to coming back here in the future. And I think, between FIA and ourselves, we can do a better job with the tarmac, we can do a better job with some corner combinations, and we can put together an even better show in the future.
Q: (Scott Mitchell – The Race) Max, you’ve talked a little bit about this but I guess this season has been a case of you either have high peaks or high frustrations. At its most extreme it’s been you either win, or you haven’t finished. But this weekend, we’ve heard you talk a few times about things just not being quite right, need to make things a bit smoother. How urgent is that side of things? Because it’s obviously… the most dramatic element is the retirement issues but if you’re not having clean weekends, then obviously that’s going to add up if that continues.
MV: Well, yeah, it’s both, right? I mean, of course, now my side, I had a lot of issues on Friday, which compromises your weekend, and especially yesterday. And I mean, of course, the day everything went well with the start but it also could have been the other way around. And then you of course again, can say like, well, fair enough, because if you missed almost whole Friday, what can you do about it? So we just have to nail down a really positive weekend without issues. I think of course, Imola, we had that, but it’s still a bit of a hit and miss too much. So we just have to make sure that we are more reliable and more on top of things. But as you can see the car is quick. I’m very happy about that, I mean, if you would be slow and reliable, that’s probably also not a good thing.
Q: (Jesus Balseiro – Diaro AS) Carlos, did you consider changing the tyres at the last Safety Car? And if so, why did you stick with the used ones?
CS: No, because I would have lost position to Checo and in general, you want to keep track position, especially during the podium. I think you want to keep that position. I knew Checo was going to pit because he had a new medium. Our alternative was I use of soft or a new hard which for me, both of them were not good enough for 10/12 laps to go like it was the case. So we were better off staying out on our used hard which I think it was the right call because in the end we managed to keep him behind. But it was tight, I think as I said before, he had all everything, all the cards to actually pass me and yeah, a bit surprised that we stayed ahead because it was a tight, tight battle.
Q: (Jeff Gluck – The Athletic) What should they do about the tarmac, for all three of you? Does it need to be resurfaced before you come back next year?
MV: I think offline can be a bit better. I think it was a bit nice today. I was a bit surprised… like in the start, you know, going around the outside of the expected grip, but then actually, during the race, it got worse and worse again. And we had good examples lately with new tracks where we had good tarmac like Saudi actually, it was pretty grippy. So yeah, we have to just look at that, first of all that you know, racing line… of course, the racing line has a bit more grip than offline. But I think the difference here is a bit too much in places. So yeah, we’ll see what we can do there and of course, besides that, I think like Carlos and myself mentioned, with the layout, I think we can make some bits also a bit more exciting, especially Sector 2.
Q: (Safid Deen – USA Today) About the chicane under the highway do you guys feel like that was challenging from a race perspective? Or would you like to see that completely changed or adjusted moving forward?
CS: I think it’s a chicane that we this generation of cars that are heavy, that are wide, just when you go around those two apex kerbs, it almost feels like you need a bit of luck to get around it and you sometimes get it on a weird angle and the car bounces a lot, then sometimes you nail it and you gain a tenth or two. It’s a corner that is just a bit unnatural and it’s a corner that I think it can be easily manipulated to look a bit different and create a better combination, you know. I think it’s still needed because there’s not a lot of space there and you need to be quite slow approaching 16 because there’s no runoff. So we need something slow, we need something tight. It’s just the nature of the two curves there, the way they’re put together which is no issue. It’s a new track that you’re always going to go through these phases and we’re already in touch with FOM, with Ross and his team to actually sort it out and put together a better piece of circuit.
MV: Yeah, I think if I would have been in a go kart, it would be a nice chicane to take, but not in an F1 car like we have at the moment. Like Carlos said, I think the kerb combination…I mean, I remember in the four laps I did on Friday, I almost knocked myself out because I hit the first kerb and your head just bounced from left to right, like at least five, six times, but really bad. If you just take it a tiny bit too much, just because it’s so long, so wide, so stiff and super heavy that little kerb what it is, it’s just not made for it to be honest. So maybe we have to change the kerb layout already, that it’s a bit more of a progressive ramp and it looks a bit nicer to go over. Maybe that helps already. But yeah, it’s so slow and I think our cars look way better if it’s a bit more of a flowing combination.
CL: I think I’m the only driver on the grid that actually liked this chicane.
MV: And you liked the kerb?
CL: Yeah, I enjoyed it. But on the other hand, I agree that for racing action, I think we can do something better because following wasn’t easy on that part, also for visibility it’s quite difficult once you have a car in front because you need to be so precise on the kerbs, as mentioned already. That it makes it even more difficult to follow. But apart from that I actually quite enjoyed it.
Q: (Alex Kalinuakas – Autosport) Max two questions actually: first of all did you have any reliability dramas in the race, any engine problems like Checo had? And also how important during those last few laps ahead of Charles after the safety car, was it you to get a good exit from the chicane after he closed up through the twisty bits?
MV: No, I had no issues luckily. I mean, everything was running very smooth for me so that was very positive. I think I had all my bad luck on Friday. And yeah, during those laps, yeah, it was very tricky, I mean, I was struggling a lot with actually the cold tyres hitting the kerbs. So going through the chicane was not easy. I made a few mistakes there a few times. But yeah, so it was very important to get a good run out of the chicane and actually also turn 16 onto the straight but of course with the extra top speed we had today that of course also helps.
Q: (Jerry Bonkowski – Autoweek) Charles, quick question. Do you like being the hunter or the hunted? You and Max obviously are so close together in the points right now, which do you prefer, being ahead of him or behind him?
CL: Well, I think we have been in only one position since the beginning of the season, which means we are hunted for now. I quite like this position to be honest, because it means that you are doing something right. But it is also true that it’s two races that the gap is slowly closing down. But yeah, I don’t I don’t really mind to be honest whichever position I am in, I just want to be the most competitive out there. And at the moment, it seems that Red Bull has the upper hand in the in the races.
Q: Max your thoughts?
MV: I like the position I’m in at the moment, knowing that the car is quick. And for example, end of last year, of course, I was the one who was being hunted. And that was actually not a great position because I knew that we didn’t have the pace anymore. I knew it was going to be very tricky to the end. So yeah, just depends a bit of how competitive you are as well.
Ends
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Max Verstappen passes both Ferraris to win inaugural Miami GP
Miami (USA), 8 May 2022 (3am 9 May IST): Max Verstappen passed the Ferraris of Charles Leclerc and Carlos Sainz to win the inaugural Miami Grand Prix despite a late Safety Car that saw championship leader Leclerc put the defending champion under intense pressure in the closing stages of a thrilling race at the new Miami International Autodrome.
Verstappen’s third win of the season was set-up at the race start. Polesitter Leclerc made a good getaway to take the lead but Verstappen, on the clean side of the grid in P3, also got away well. As the field raced towards Turn 1, the Dutchman drew alongside second-placed Sainz, and taking a wide line into the first corner he held his line and his nerve to pass the Spaniard.
Pérez held fourth place behind Sainz while Valtteri Bottas claimed P5 for Alfa Romeo and AlphaTauri’s Pierre Gasly took sixth. Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton dropped back after locking up into Turn 1 behind Pérez and after he banged wheels with Alpine’s Fernando Alonso who made a good start to briefly rise to seventh. Hamilton recovered quickly and when DRS was enabled he passed Alonso and then on lap six moved past Gasly to rise to sixth.
At the front, Verstappen shadowed Leclerc through the opening phase of the race and on lap eight he closed right up to the Ferrari down the long back straight. He couldn’t make the move stick into Turn 17 but as they crossed the line to begin the next tour, Verstappen got DRS again and swept past the championship leader into Turn 1 to take the lead.
The Dutch driver quickly began to build a gap to the Ferrari driver and when Leclerc locked his front right midway through lap 12, the Dutchman’s advantage extended to 2.5s.
Behind the leaders on lap 15, Sainz still led Pérez with the Ferrari driver 1.8s ahead of the Red Bull. On lap 18 Pérez began to close in on Sainz and at the start of lap 20 he edged toward DRS range of the Spaniard but suddenly the Mexican’s pace flagged and at the end of lap 20 he had dropped four seconds to the Ferrari.
He radioed his pit wall to report a loss of power and after being told to switch a sensor he was told to carry on. He continued to lose time, however, and on lap 23 he was eight seconds behind Sainz.
Behind the top four, Bottas held fifth but as cars behind him made their first pit stops, Mercedes’ George Russell, who had started on hard tyres, rose to sixth ahead of team-mate Hamilton who had made his first tyre change.
At the end of lap 24 Leclerc made his first visit to the pit lane and after taking on hard tyres he rejoined in fourth place, eight seconds behind Pérez. Verstappen pitted at the end of lap 26 and in a 2.4s stop he took on hard tyres and emerged in P2, seven seconds behind new leader Sainz.
At the end of lap 27 Sainz made his way into the pit lane with Pérez also turning towards the pit lane behind him. Sainz’s crew had a problem with their driver’s front right in a slow 5.4s stop and Pérez closed to within five seconds of Sainz. The Mexican was still nursing a drop in power, however, and he once again began to drop back from the Ferrari man.
Verstappen, meanwhile, now led Leclerc by almost eight seconds with Sainz a further 10s back in third. Behind fourth-placed Pérez, Russell, still in need of a first pit stop, now held fifth ahead of Bottas and Hamilton.
On lap 41, the shape of the race changed. Pierre Gasly went wide through two corners and after drifting off track slowly rejoined. However, he failed to see Lando Norris behind and the two made contact. The McLaren driver’s right rear tyre punctured and after spinning luridly he came to a halt in the middle of track. After a brief VSC the physical Safety Car was deployed.
Verstappen and Leclerc stayed on track behind the SC but Red Bull pitted Pérez and he was able to take on fresh medium tyres and rejoin ahead of Bottas to hold fourth ahead of Hamilton and Russell who benefited from a free stop to bolt on a set of medium tyres.
The Safety Car left the track at the end of lap 46 Verstappen controlled the restart well to hold the lead. Pérez, on new mediums, attacked Sainz. He couldn’t make the move stick, however, and he had to settle back into fourth to plot another assault.
When DRS enabled Pérez shadowed the Spaniards again and on lap 52 he attacked again into Turn 1. But he went too deep into the corner and Sainz eased his way past the locked up Mexican to stay in third.
The battle for the lead was just as intense. Leclerc closed in on the Dutchman and with the aid of DRS made repeated attacks. But, with better straight-line speed, Verstappen was able to keep the Ferrari at bay and on lap 53 he began to pull away slightly from his title rival. On lap 54 Verstappen broke DRS and his eventual victory was sealed.
The Dutch driver took his third win of the season, and the point for fastest lap, almost four seconds ahead of Leclerc, while Sainz managed to hold off Pérez to take his ninth career podium with third place.
Behind Pérez, Russell passed Hamilton in the closing stages to take fifth place ahead of Hamilton and Bottas who made a mistake late on that allowed the Mercedes cars to pass. Alpine’s Esteban Ocon benefited from a free stop under the Safety Car to rise from the back of the grid to eighth at the flag ahead of team-mate Fernando Alonso and the final point went to Williams’ Alex Albon.
2022 FIA Formula 1 Miami Grand Prix – Race
1 Max Verstappen Red Bull Racing 57 1:34’24.258
2 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 57 1:34’28.044 3.786
3 Carlos Sainz Ferrari 57 1:34’32.487 8.229
4 Sergio Pérez Red Bull 57 1:34’34.896 10.638
5 George Russell Mercedes 57 1:34’42.840 18.582
6 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 57 1:34’45.626 21.368
7 Valtteri Bottas Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 57 1:34’49.331 25.073
8 Esteban Ocon Alpine/Renault 57 1:34’52.644 28.386
9 Fernando Alonso Alpine/Renault 57 1:34’56.386 32.128
10 Alexander Albon Williams/Mercedes 57 1:34’56.623 32.365
11 Daniel Ricciardo McLaren/Mercedes 57 1:35’00.160 35.902
12 Lance Stroll Aston Martin/Mercedes 57 1:35’01.284 37.026
13 Yuki Tsunoda AlphaTauri/Red Bull 57 1:35’04.404 40.146
14 Nicholas Latifi Williams/Mercedes 57 1:35’14.194 49.936
15 Mick Schumacher Haas/Ferrari 57 1:35’37.563 1’13.305
16 Kevin Magnussen Haas/Ferrari 56 – 1 lap
17 Sebastian Vettel Aston Martin/Mercedes 54 – Collision
Pierre Gasly AlphaTauri/Red Bull 45 – Accident damage
Lando Norris McLaren/Mercedes 39 – Collision
Zhou Guanyu Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 6 – Retirement -

Charles Leclerc takes pole as Ferrari lockout front row
Miami, 7 May 2022 (3am 8 May – IST): Formula 1 points leader Charles Leclerc took his third pole position of the season as Carlos Sainz claimed second place to hand Ferrari a front-row lockout in qualifying for the inaugural Miami Grand Prix. Defending world champion Max Verstappen will line up in third place on the grid alongside Red Bull team-mate Sergio Pérez.
Early in Q1 Verstappen, who was still getting to grips with the new Miami International Autodrome after completing just 15 laps on a disrupted Friday, took top spot with a lap of 1:30.235 and he was quickly joined at the top of the order by Pérez who opened with a lap that left him half a second off his team-mate’s pace.
However, with just over seven minutes left in the session, Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc vaulted to the top of the timesheet with a lap of 1:29.474, with team-mate Carlos Sainz in P2, sixth tenths behind the Monegasque driver. Behind them the McLarens of Daniel Riccirado and Lando Norris took third and fourth respectively.
Verstappen was on another push lap, however, and when he next crossed the line he jumped up to P2, 0.362 behind Leclerc. Pérez then moved up to fourth behind Sainz thanks to a lap of 1:30.246.
With two minutes to go Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton was the biggest potential casualty of the session, with the seven-time champion lying in 18th place. However, despite traffic in the early part of his lap, the Briton rose to fifth as the chequered flag came out.
At the top of the order Pérez went for another lap at the end of the session, and as Leclerc claimed P1 ahead of Verstappen, the Mexican improved to third place ahead of Sainz with a lap of 1:30.55.
There would be no place in the second segment though for Haas’ Kavin Magnussen, the Dane being eliminated in 16thplace ahead of Alfa Romeo’s Zhou Guanyu and the Williams cars of Alex Albon and Nicholas Latifi. Alpine’s Esteban Ocon didn’t take part in the session having damaged his chassis in a crash in the final practice session.
Verstappen again took top spot at the end of the first runs of Q2 with a lap of 1:29.202, 0.471s ahead of Pértez who was in turn five hundredths of a second ahead of Sainz, with Leclerc in fourth.
With just under six minutes left in the segment, Leclerc rose to P1 with a lap of 1:29.130. That put him seven hundredths of a second ahead of Max and half a second ahead of third-placed Sergio.
In the final runs of the segment, Norris jumped from the elimination zone to split the Bulls and take third place and Pérez went through to Q3 in fourth ahead of Sainz. Alfa Romeo’s Valtteri Bottas progressed in sixth place ahead of Hamilton and Aston Martin’s Lance Stroll. Alpha Tauri also made it to the final top-10 shootout, with Yuki Tsunoda in P9 ahead of team-mate Pierre Gasly.
Eliminated at the end of the middle segment were Alpine’s 11th-placed Fernando Alonso followed by Mercedes’ George Russell, the second Aston Martin of Sebastian Vettel, McLaren’s Daniel Ricciardo and Haas’ Mick Schumacher.
In the opening runs of Q3, Verstappen took provisional pole with a lap of 1:29.991. That put him just over six hundredths of a second ahead of Leclerc with Sainz third. Pérez slotted into fourth place.
But in the final runs it was Leclerc who found the most pace and the Ferrari driver took his third pole position of the season with a lap of 1:28.796. Sainz looked like he might challenge for his maiden pole as he went quicker than his team-mate in the opening two sectors. The Spanish driver took too much out of his tyres though and when he crossed the line he found himself in P2 just under two hundredths of a second off P1. Verstappen made a mistake in Turn 6 that compromised his final attempt. He backed out of the lap and had to settle for third place on the grid.
Behind them Bottas slotted into fourth place, but Checo was finding more time and the Mexican’s final lap of 1:29.036 put him next to Max on row two ahead of the Finn. Hamilton meanwhile took sixth for Mercedes ahead of Gasly, Norris, Tsunoda and Stroll.
2022 FIA Formula 1 Miami Grand Prix – Qualifying
1 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 1:28.796
2 Carlos Sainz Ferrari 1:28.986 0.190
3 Max Verstappen Red Bull Racing 1:28.991 0.195
4 Sergio Perez Red Bull Racing 1:29.036 0.240
5 Valtteri Bottas Alfa Romeo 1:29.475 0.679
6 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 1:29.625 0.829
7 Pierre Gasly AlphaTauri 1:29.690 0.894
8 Lando Norris McLaren 1:29.750 0.954
9 Yuki Tsunoda AlphaTauri 1:29.932 1.136
10 Lance Stroll Aston Martin 1:30.676 1.880
11 Fernando Alonso Alpine 1:30.160 1.364
12 George Russell Mercedes 1:30.173 1.377
13 Sebastian Vettel Aston Martin 1:30.214 1.418
14 Daniel Ricciardo McLaren 1:30.310 1.514
15 Mick Schumacher Haas 1:30.423 1.627
16 Kevin Magnussen Haas 1:30.975 2.179
17 Zhou Guanyu Alfa Romeo 1:31.020 2.224
18 Alex Albon Williams 1:31.266 2.470
19 Nicholas Latifi Williams 1:31.325 2.529
20 Esteban Ocon Alpine -

Michael Jordan is super inspiring, says Gasly after a dinner with the giant
DRIVER GROUP 1 – Lewis HAMILTON (Mercedes), Pierre GASLY (AlphaTauri), Alex ALBON (Williams), Sergio PÉREZ (Red Bull), Lance STROLL (Aston Martin)
Q: Lewis, you’re up first of all. How’s Miami been so far for you?
Lewis HAMILTON: It’s been great. The weather is incredible. And we’ve had such a warm welcome here. So just been happy to be out here and, yeah, been out on the water. Great training. And yeah, the ambience in the town is incredible.
Q: …bit of golf as well.
LH: I did something with Tom [Brady]. Yeah, but I’m not really very good!
Q: Lewis, let’s quickly talk from a performance point of view, what can we expect from you and Mercedes this weekend?
LH: You can expect that we’ll begin giving it our all, and trying our best. There’s been a huge amount of work going on in the background. Everyone working as hard as they can; you can see we got to a new rear wing, for example. So, I’m just grateful for everyone continue to keep their heads down. And for the amazing, hard work that everyone is putting in.
Q: Do you think you’ll be closer to the pace?
LH: I don’t anticipate much change in that sense.
Q: Pierre, coming to you now. Well, first up, how was dinner with Michael Jordan?
Pierre GASLY: Well, it was by far the best dinner I ever had really. Honestly, super, super inspiring. Really special evening, just to learn, you know, like the experience and to be able to hear from such a successful guy. I don’t think there was anyone else that inspired me more since I was a kid. And yeah, I mean, it was very, very special.
Q: You even managed to get him to try your helmet on?
PG: Yeah, I did. He did. Yeah, we exchanged. So, I gave him one of one of my helmets and gave me a pair of Jordans. So that was pretty cool. But no, mainly just to hear his experience, his career, the mentality, the leadership that he has. Even at his age, he’s so competitive and it was just an amazing, amazing evening.
Q: Let’s talk on track quickly. Slightly disappointing race for you last time out in Imola. Although you did have a good battle with the man on your right, Lewis Hamilton. Where is the pace of the AlphaTauri at the minute, relative to the opposition?
PG: Well, we’re still trying to figure out, obviously from track to track it changes. Imola, we got it wrong from qualifying onwards and we were involved in a crash in the sprint, started from the back and, as we saw, was impossible to overtake. So, clearly fighting with Lewis was not for the positions we like, but I think there is more than that. And now we’ll find out in Miami what we can do. But yeah, we can clearly fight for the top 10. I’m confident for that. And that’s what we will push for.
Q: Alex coming to you now. Tell us about your experiences in Miami so far this week.
Alex ALBON: I arrived pretty late. So I haven’t seen too much of the place but it’s been pretty good. It’s hot, very humid. And yeah, my girlfriend was competing maybe two hours away in Fort Myers, so I was out a little bit earlier, watching her play but that was that was about it.
Q: Quick trip to the hair salon by the looks of things…
AA: Yeah, it looks red on the on the camera there. Yeah, we got it dyed before Melbourne and we finished 10th and then as the dye faded away, we finished 11th In Imola. So it started to affect the performance! So, we re-dyed it, hoping for more points!
Q: Well, you finished 11th In Imola, but it was actually still have a great race by you. What can we expect this weekend from Williams?
AA: Yeah, it was a great race in Imola, and I think we’re fighting at the heels for points. It’s been two good races where we started out of position just with some issues or with a disqualification from Melbourne. So hopefully we can have a bit more of a smoother weekend this time around, especially for the qualifying, and we’ll see. It seems like a very tricky circuit. I do believe that being a new circuit, there’s a bit more opportunity in that. Hopefully we can hit the ground running and be ahead of a few others.
Q: Sergio, coming to you now. What chance of you making a full-time switch to the Miami Marlins baseball team?
Sergio PÉREZ: I don’t think so! I think I’ll stick with what I’m doing for now! There was not much talent!
Yeah, but was it fun? Just tell it tell us about the whole experience.
SP: It’s obviously a very nice experience, to be there with the players learning from another sport. There were a few fans there. So, it’s always nice to learn from other sports.
Q: It was another strong performance for you at Imola last time out. Do you see any reason why you and Red Bull can’t be the pace-setters this weekend?
SP: I think we were pretty confident we’re going to be in fight, but it obviously depends on many factors. I think none of us have been used to these track temperatures. We haven’t driven under these track temperatures that we are expecting. So, it will be interesting how the tyres cope with it, and to see which team are able to adapt the best.
Q: Lance coming to you now. What’s been the highlight of your stay in Miami so far?
Lance STROLL: Oh, just you know, it’s great to be here, the sunshine. Yeah, it’s a fun city and I always enjoy coming to Miami. Yeah, I’ve got some friends around this week. Yeah, now it’s time to go racing. So really looking forward to it.
Q: What is the mood in the camp? Because it was a much better race for Aston Martin last time out. Is everyone very buoyed by what happened at Imola?
LS: It was great to get both cars in the points in Imola. I think it was a big boost for the team. We have to see how we go this weekend. I mean, we’re going to be, you know, pushing hard and coming up with some ideas, setting up the car and try to find some more pace and see how we go.
QUESTIONS FROM THE FLOOR
Q: (Jordan Bianchi – The Athletic) This is for all five drivers. Impressions of the track so far, during the track walk, and if you guys have done any sim work, and what you’ve taken away from that?
LS: Well, it looks fun, it looks challenging. It’s tight, a lot of walls, a combination of high-, low-speed corners with some long straights. So hopefully, we see some good racing. I think there’s some good overtaking opportunities, into 17, into the hairpin. I’m sure it’ll be fun to drive and be a good show on Sunday.
SP: I think it will be a nice track to drive. It will be interesting to see the grip level, the asphalt looks a bit different. Some places, it looks like it’s already opening up. But other than that, I think it’s going to be a great race. The circuit really has long straights, so for racing, should be a good a good circuit for racing. And yeah, we should give a good, fun race for the fans.
AA: It was a tricky one, I found. I felt like it was one of the… it took me one of the longest circuits to get up to speed, at least on the on the simulator. It seems very technical. And just doing the track walk yesterday, the kerbs seem to be different to what we’re used to. Sometimes there are no curbs at all. So, I think track limits are going to be a big topic this weekend. But I’m excited. I feel like it’s obviously a good track. And I think it favours the racing, especially. The racing should be good.
PG: Yeah, I think it’s going to be a cool track. Similar comments to the guys: very, very long straight, so I guess, good for overtaking, should be quite a lot of action on Sunday. And yeah, quite interesting. This very high-speeds first section, very tight second section, so they will be a compromise to find but all in all, I think they came up with a great track design.
LH: Yeah, not much more to add to these guys. It looks great.
Q: (Phil Duncan – PA) For you Lewis. The FIA seems to be continuing with its clampdown on jewellery. You said before that you’ll continue to wear it. I just wanted to know whether you’ll stand by that. And if it gets to a position where they say oh, you can’t race if you’re wearing the jewellery would you still race? And also, do you feel like you’re being singled out a bit by the FIA, given you’re the driver who probably wears probably the most jewellery on the grid?
LH: I definitely do wear… I couldn’t get any more jewellery on today. I mean, I don’t really have a lot more to add than what I already said the last time I was in front of you guys, and we spoke about it. It’s… I feel like it’s almost like a step backwards if you think of the steps we’re taking as a sport, and the more important issues and causes that we need to be focused on and really pushing. I think we made such great strides as a sport. Look, we’re here in Miami, this is such a small thing. I’ve been using… I’ve been in the sport 16 years, I’ve been wearing jewellery for 16 years, in the car only I only ever have my earrings on, and my nose ring, which I can’t even remove. So, it seems unnecessary for us to get into this spat. And so, I’ll try to communicate and work with Mohammed. I think, you know, I’m here to be an ally of the sport, of Mohammad and Formula 1. And as I said, I think we’ve got bigger, bigger fish to fry, bigger things to do more impact to have. So, I think that’s really where the focus should be.
Q: (Chris Medland – Racer) For all the drivers. From next year, we’ll have three races in the US. Knowing the kind of home support you guys have enjoyed in your own home races, what do you think an American driver on the grid would do for the sport over here? And are you guys surprised that over the last 20 years, we maybe haven’t had more get close, or get on to the grid?
LH: It doesn’t really surprise me: I think it’s perhaps more a cultural thing. You know, here in the States. It’s the NFL, it’s NBA. It’s NASCAR, IndyCar. And I mean, in my 16 years of coming over here, it’s been such a slow build, trying to bring awareness of the sport. Unfortunately, the Americans have to wake up at odd times in order to watch a grand prix. But I think this new step that’s been taken, into bringing awareness, the Netflix show, has really just brought in that amazing fan base, a sport fan base that we have, that there is here in the US. And maybe now’s the time to start focusing on how we can include more people here, because it’s such a diverse country. I’m sure there’s some amazing drivers here somewhere, as they’ve got so many great sporting talents. So, it’d be a good mission for us to find the next one.
PG: I agree with what Lewis said. I think the culture is the main difference. Coming here four or five years ago, I remember all the fans knew about NASCAR, not many knew about Formula 1. I think to see the evolution, the exposure we got as a sport over the last two, three years, it’s been very impressive and now the fan base is just growing massively. And we can feel it, as drivers, when we see Austin last year: 450,000 people coming over the weekend was a very, very special and unique atmosphere. So now very excited to come back here more often with Miami, with Vegas. I’m sure with that exposure we’re getting now, more and more people are going to get into the sport and yeah, hopefully we will see more of them in the future.
AA: Yeah, I think same comments as the two of my right. I guess it’s Alexander Rossi was maybe the last one in Formula 1? It seems like, for now at least, a lot of the drivers who’ve got close have come towards the European side to learn how to race, in terms of Formula 3, Formula 2 and that side of things. I see it now with Logan [Sargeant] in the Williams young driver programme. He’s going that way as well. But it seems like right now, it’s a great catalyst for everything to start happening over here. And I’m sure once nce that level starts to help… I think there’s just going to be more people arriving, more younger kids interested in Formula 1, and that’s just going to help everything. And then the talent is going to come.
SP: Yeah, I think, in my case, for example, coming from this part of the world, it’s definitely harder for us because you have to go at a very young age to Europe, I think. Otherwise, it’s just harder, because you have to grow up with the best drivers in the world at a very young age, and just develop throughout. In the circuits, with the tyres with the racing. I think they have a lot of talent over here. Hopefully soon we can have an American-based driver because it will be good for the sport. But it’s certainly quite hard to do that, because just by being on this side of the world.
LS: Yeah, it would be great to see an American driver in the sport. I think it would definitely expand the American audience. But, like Checo said, the ladder to Formula 1 is more simple when you race in Europe, come from Europe. If you’re over on the side of the world, we got to move over to Europe to compete in Formula 3 and all that that stuff, and it’s not so simple. But yeah, there’s definitely a lot of talent here, and be great to see an American driver in the future.
Q: (Jenna Fryer – Associated Press) For Lewis. You manifested this race back in 2017, I guess. You love the US. I’m wondering, has the atmosphere and the event lived up to what you manifested? And what do you think of that marina?
LH: It definitely is what I expected from Miami. Already, just going through the city, seeing events everywhere. The buzz… I was just in New York, and I would just remember just walking through the streets, and I heard someone talking about ‘hey, you going to Miami?’ and they didn’t know I was there. There’s just talk on the streets: this race, and the excitement. I’ve been to a couple of Super Bowls. This kind of feels like a similar vibe. And what a great place for us to have it, y’know, and around this incredible stadium. I think it’s gonna be an amazing spectacle. And also really cool for people across in Europe, and around the rest of the world to see just how great Miami is.
Q: And the Marina?
LH: It’s stunning! Like Monaco, not as many yachts I don’t think I’ve seen, but I was out there yesterday, just catching the sun and doing some jet surfing, which was pretty awesome. I saw some dolphins, which is nice.
Q: (Tom Cary – Daily Telegraph) Lewis, another one for you. Just to follow up on Phil’s question earlier. Sorry, apologies is going back to something that you’ve spoken about a lot. But if the FIA really insists on this issue with the jewellery, what is the solution? I mean, you say you can’t take it off. They say you have to: what was the end game here?
LH: I really don’t know. As I said, I can’t remove at least two of them. One, I can’t really explain where it is. And, what I can say is that it’s platinum that I have, so it’s not magnetic. It’s never been a safety issue in the past. I’ve had, in 16 years, so many MRI scans and not had to take out the platinum, for example, because it’s not been an issue. So yeah. I mean, if they stopped me, then so be it. We got a spare driver, so we’re ready and prepped for the weekend. There’s lots of doing the city anyway, so I’ll be good either way.
Q: (Giles Richards – The Guardian) Another one for you, Lewis. You said this season is for your toughest since 2009, in terms of the car. Just wondering if you could tell us, in difficult times like these, could you share who you take inspiration from: people, friends, family, team members or people outside the sport: where you where you draw inspiration to carry on?
LH: I wouldn’t say there was one individual during this time that I I’m focused on. I think I look all around me, and I see I tried to ignore the negative that I see. I’m not really watching the news a lot, but there’s so many inspiring characters out there. And I think just continuously proving that you never give up, you keep pushing. And I love working with this team. Being in a team is such a privilege and working with so many people towards a common goal. And everyone lifted each other up. I’ve had amazing conversations with my team mates in this past week. Incredible how supportive everyone has been through the difficult times, and then we’ve had the most incredible times together. So, you know, a couple of bad races is not going to stop us in our tracks. This is where we unite: this is where we learn more about ourselves as individuals; this is where we, we grow the most. And it makes that eventual success – which I have no doubts we will eventually get to – taste even better.
Q: (Nathan Brown – USA Today) Lewis, at the start of your Formula 1 career, the US Grand Prix took place at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway. Now, from what we’ve seen, from Miami, what we expect to see at Vegas next year, do you feel like a track in a venue that was really built around the history rather than the spectacle of the event, would have a fit on the Formula 1 calendar down the road?
LH: Look I’m a bit old school. So of course, I love the history, particularly in certain circuits. But the older I get, the more I realise it’s about the people. We could go to the middle of nowhere that has very few people, not great accommodation, not great community and for us, as individuals, driving on a track that’s historic is cool – but it’s about the people. And the people really do make… we’ve experienced with pandemic, no one being in there and that’s just no atmosphere. It was like a test day. It was not enjoyable. And now we’re seeing hundreds of thousands of people turn up to the race, energised, excited, keen to learn more. And so, I think the fans are at the heart of what this sport is about, they create it. So for me, it’s, I think, being in cities where we can really engage in communities and actually also have an impact. When you go to those… I love Nürburgring, for example, but there’s not a diverse community there. We’re not actually impacting the place there. Here, we can do something. Yesterday, I met a bunch of kids from diverse backgrounds, who now want to get into engineering and STEM subjects and so, it’s way cooler for me.
Q: (David Wilson – Miami Herald) For Lewis, kind of following up on what you were just saying. Everyone’s saying Miami, but really we’re in Miami Gardens, which is the largest majority black city in Florida. Does that have any significance to you? To race in a city like this?
LH: It definitely does have a significance. I think just, as I said, just like in my 16 years… The first five or 10, maybe five years or so, I didn’t see many people of colour in the grandstands. When I was on stage, very, very few people of colour, you know, not as diverse as I’d hoped. And as I said, yesterday, I was standing on stage and I’m seeing I’m seeing the crowd as… it couldn’t be any more diverse. And that’s amazing for me, to not be the only one there, which is nice to see. And it’s just it’s just great to be seeing that we’re tapping into those different cultures, those different communities who perhaps once didn’t think it was for them because they didn’t see someone that looked like them in the sport, maybe. And I think that’s the super encouraging. And as I said, there’s more to do in terms of encouraging these young kids not only to be NFL players or basketball players but… education is key and STEM subjects can lead to so many different avenues. And you can be a racing driver, also. So it’s pretty neat.
Q: (Ian Parkes – New York Times) To the other for drivers, aside from Lewis, do you guys have any sympathy for Lewis’s position with regard to the piercings debate? Is he right? Are there bigger fish to fry? And just to conclude with yourself, Lewis, we’re assuming you’ve made your position clear to the FIA, regarding your piercings, and if so, what was their response? Thank you.
PG: I do understand. I do, I do believe there are bigger, bigger things to focus on. And I appreciate FIA are looking after our safety. That’s also their priority and our priority. My personal case, I have also religious item that I wear with me, when I’m racing, which are important to me, which I don’t feel comfortable not having was me driving the car. And I do feel it’s a little bit personal. We should have the freedom to do what feels right for us. At the end of the day, we have the responsibility to go out there put our life at risk. And I do feel it should be a personal choice, but I respect the FIA and their will to always improve the safety. But I’ll appreciate a talk with them, to see if we can find a better solution than such a strict decisions as they made. So we’ll see what we can do.
AA: I think Pierre sums it up well. There’s not really much to add to that. I still agree with Lewis’s comments, I understand. It’s our bodies at the same time as well. Like everything when you’re older, you’re prepared to have those consequences if, you want to do what you want to do, then so be it. You have a freedom for yourself. So yeah, that’s all.
SP: I fully agree with Pierre and Alex in this case is good, from the FIA point of view to look after our safety because at the end of the day, it’s for us. But as Lewis said, he’s been in this sport for so many years, and he’s been doing it, and he already has them with him, so it’s, it’s not like that easy to remove them. So I think it would be good to find a compromise, to work together with them. And, and yeah, just make sure that we are all in the same line and not against each other. And I think that will be the important thing.
LS: Nothing more to add, really. I think it’s great that the FIA is looking out for our safety but little things like a little piece of jewellery and stuff, I think it’s our own responsibility, as well to just accept the risk of something happening, wearing a bracelet or ring or whatever that might be. I get the big picture. But, I think there’s other things to focus on. Definitely bigger fish to fry,
Q: Lewis, anything you want to add about your discussions with the FIA?
LH: I’m willing to sign a waiver to take the responsibility away from them in that respect if I need to. But I think, Iike Pierre was just saying, it’s about individuality and being who you are. And I did try Mohammad for example this morning, but I’m sure he was super busy. But I sent him a message, just reassuring him that I want to be an ally, I don’t want to fight with you guys over this. This is very silly: let’s have great weekend. But I’ve not heard back yet. So, maybe he’s texted me. I don’t know. But I try and speak to him before the race.
Q: (Luke Smith – Autosport) Lewis after the race in Imola, Helmut Marko said, when you were lapped by Max, he said maybe Lewis thought he should have stopped last year. The day after, I think you put up a post on Instagram saying ‘I’m working on a masterpiece – it’s up to me when I’m finished’. When you hear comments like that from Helmut, does that motivate you even more just to fight back and get further up the order and back to the top of the game?
LH: I mean, I don’t listen to those silly comments to be honest. Ultimately, I mean, there’s a… it’s been interesting to see there’s quite a lot of disrespectful comments that I’ve seen over time, but it’s to be expected. And yeah, I just keep my head down. I know who I am. I know what I do. I love what I do. Going through a tough time. We didn’t come out of the starting blocks the way we wanted, but we’re fighters. And if you don’t know that about me, then you just don’t know me and that’s totally fine. I’ll doing my best to huddle up and group up with the team and fight as hard as we can.
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Verstappen leads Red Bull 1-2 in Emilia Romagna GP after misery for Leclerc
Red Bull ended up 1-2 with Max Verstappen winning F1 Emilia Romagna GP from Sergio Perez as McLaren’s Lando Norris rounded the podium in third.
The pre-race rain made it an intermediate start for all in F1 Emilia Romagna GP as Red Bull’s Max Verstappen got a good start to lead from teammate Sergio Perez after an average getaway for both the Ferrari cars with McLaren’s Lando Norris moving to third.
Charles Leclerc dropped to fourth as teammate Carlos Sainz spun out after being tagged by McLaren’s Daniel Ricciardo in Turn 3-4 area. The Spaniard suffered another retirement as the Australian pitted to drop back in the order with the safety car deployed.
Replays showed Alfa Romeo’s Valtteri Bottas also hitting the back of Ricciardo in that moment, while separately Haas’ Mick Schumacher spun on a wet patch when his rear wing touched the sidepod of Alpine’s Fernando Alonso which shed itself later on.
The re-start worked well for Verstappen as he led Perez, Norris and Leclerc in the Top 4, with Haas’ Kevin Magnussen in fifth from Mercedes’ George Russell who climbed up five places to be sixth ahead of Bottas, Alonso in the Top 10.
Aston Martin’s Sebastian Vettel was ninth from AlphaTauri’s Yuki Tsunoda, as up ahead Leclerc challenged Norris for third to take it. Behind him, Magnussen was being pressured on by Russell and Bottas where the Brit tried to get by the Dane.
He did it once but lost out. He hustled again and got through him for fifth as Bottas followed suit on the next lap to take sixth with Magnussen dropping to seventh. Vettel slowly started to catch him with Tsunoda a bit far off in ninth.
Aston Martin’s Lance Stroll held off Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton in the battle for 10th as Alonso was forced to retire after part of his sidepod came lose. The drivers started to slip and slide more on a drying track in the wait of rain to pit.
With no rain in the horizon, drivers started to pit after Ricciardo started the chain. There was some chaos with slow stops for Hamilton and Bottas. The Brit had to avoid Ocon who was released on his way with the stewards putting it under investigation.
Ocon was handed a 5s time penalty for unsafe release, as Verstappen led the way in the front. Teammate Perez had Leclerc all on his back in the fight for second with Norris remaining in third from Russell and Bottas who retained sixth despite the slow stop.
Vettel gained on Magnussen to be seventh with Tsunoda ninth from Stroll in the Top 10. Ocon was 11th from Williams’ Alexander Albon, AlphaTauri’s Pierre Gasly and Hamilton, who dropped to 14th after the slow stop from his team.
The race steadied itself as drivers had to get through the race on the same set of tyres. The biggest moment for the camera crew was Verstappen lapping Hamilton towards the end of the race when the Brit was trying to get through Gasly.
While things were stable ahead, Tsunoda passed Magnussen for eighth as outside the Top 10, Albon continued to trouble Gasly and Hamilton in the fight for 12th. In a twist, Ferrari called in Leclerc for soft tyres with Red Bull doing the same with Perez and Verstappen.
Leclerc came out behind Norris but he got back the place and hurried Perez. In doing so, the Monegasque spun but managed to continue on. He was forced to pit for the front wing and dropped to ninth but regained eighth from Magnussen.
At the front, Norris gained a place to third while Russell in fourth had Bottas on his tail in the closing stages. Tsunoda was long way off in sixth from Vettel who had a charging Leclerc on his tail. He eventually passed him in his pursuit of Tsunoda.
His title challenger Verstappen dominated to win F1 Emilia Romagna GP in a Red Bull 1-2 with Perez second from Norris in the Top 3. The Dutchman also scored the fastest lap, as Russell held off Bottas to finish fourth by 0.675s.
Leclerc ended up sixth from Tsunoda, Vettel, Magnussen and Stroll in the Top 10 where Aston Martin scored double points to open their account in 2022. Ocon was 11th despite his penalty as Albon eventually held off Gasly and Hamilton for 12th.
Zhou was 15th from Williams’ Nicholas Latifi with Schumacher 17th and Ricciardo 18th. Everyone from Stroll until the Australian ended up a lap down. DNF: Alonso, Sainz.
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Verstappen overtakes Leclerc to win Emilia Romagna GP’s sprint race
Red Bull’s Max Verstappen came back on Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc to win F1 Emilia Romagna GP Sprint Race with Sergio Perez in third.
It was dry start to F1 Emilia Romagna GP Sprint race as Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc got the lead at Turn 1 from pole-sitter Red Bull’s Max Verstappen who initially got away well but it wasn’t enough which allowed McLaren’s Lando Norris to be on par with him too.
But Verstappen kept second from Norris as Haas’ Kevin Magnussen remained fourth despite a small hit from McLaren’s Daniel Ricciardo who lost out to Red Bull’s Sergio Perez for fifth. The Mexican tried an inside move but had to change line and go on the outside.
Alpine’s Fernando Alonso did not have a good start to drop to seventh from Ferrari’s Carlos Sainz in the points position, as Aston Martin’s Sebastian Vettel and Alfa Romeo’s Valtteri Bottas rounded out the Top 10. His teammate Guanyu Zhou did not last long.
In his fight against AlphaTauri’s Pierre Gasly, the Frenchman’s front right tangled with the left rear of Zhou which send him into a spin onto the barrier. The safety car was deployed as the stewards noted no further action on either drivers for the incident.
Magnussen, meanwhile, was shown the black and white flag for weaving. The re-start worked well for Leclerc who continued to lead from Verstappen and Norris, as Perez passed Magnussen to fourth and Sainz passed Alonso for seventh.
The moves started to come through as Perez passed Norris for third as Sainz cleared both Magnussen and Ricciardo to be fifth. The Dane dropped to seventh from Bottas who had a drag race fight against Alonso to take eighth from the Spaniard.
Behind, Haas’ Mick Schumacher passed Vettel for 10th as the German came under pressure from Mercedes’ George Russell, AlphaTauri’s Yuki Tsunoda and Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton. Amid all of this, Verstappen closed in on Leclerc out of nowhere.
He waited for couple of laps to eventually get through Leclerc to lead the F1 Emilia Romagna GP and win the first sprint event of 2022 at Imola. The Monegasque ended up second, nearly three seconds behind as Perez rounded out the Top 3.
Verstappen will start Sunday’s F1 Emilia Romagna GP from pole with Leclerc beside him and their teammates Perez and Sainz behind in third and fourth. McLaren’s Norris did well in fifth from Ricciardo, as Bottas and Magnussen got the last of the points in Top 8.
Alonso started fifth but ended up ninth from Schumacher in the Top 10 as Russell could only manage 11th from Tsunoda, Vettel and Hamilton with Aston Martin’s Lance Stroll rounding the Top 15 runners and starting order for Sunday’s race.
Much like those around him, Alpine’s Esteban Ocon couldn’t do much to be 16th from AlphaTauri’s Gasly who recovered to pass Williams pair of Alexander Albon and Nicholas Latifi.
DNF: Zhou.
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Russell ends on top in dry FP2 of Emilia Romagna GP
Mercedes’ George Russell was fastest in dry FP2 of F1 Emilia Romagna GP from Red Bull’s Sergio Perez and Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc.
It was mostly dry in FP2 of F1 Emilia Romagna GP after the wet running on Friday. Rain, though, is predicted for Saturday’s sprint race and also Sunday’s grand prix which makes the dry running less valuable from the weekend point of view.
Still, F1 teams and drivers got good amount of track time apart from McLaren duo Lando Norris and Daniel Ricciardo, with both facing separate issues during the course of FP2. While the Brit could do couple of laps before he was hit by brake problems.
Teammate Ricciardo didn’t run at all after McLaren found some issue with his power unit ahead of the session. It was same for Alfa Romeo’s Valtteri Bottas who sat out after his side found out engine issue as well before the session.
On track, it was mixed strategy as Mercedes’ George Russell led the way with a 1m19.457s lap on the soft compound, with Red Bull’s Sergio Perez (1m19.538s) in second and Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc (1m19.740s) third – where the Mexican set his best time on medium tyre.
Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton (1m19.992s) slotted in fourth from Alpine’s Fernando Alonso (1m20.174s), with Ferrari’s Carlos Sainz (1m20.258s) in sixth, Red Bull’s Max Verstappen (1m20.371s) seventh where the latter duo set their best time on the medium compound.
AlphaTauri’s Yuki Tsunoda (1m20.381s) and Pierre Gasly (1m20.439s) slotted in eighth and ninth, with Alfa Romeo’s Guanyu Zhou (1m20.498s) rounding the Top 10 where the Frenchman set his best time on the medium compound.
Williams had a better session with Alexander Albon in 11th from Haas pair of Kevin Magnussen and Mick Schumacher, with Aston Martin’s Lance Stroll in 14th from his teammate Sebastian Vettel – the two Germans used medium tyres.
Alpine’s Esteban Ocon was 16th from Williams’ Nicholas Latifi, with McLaren’s Norris in 18th after the team managed to fix up his issue for couple more laps. His teammate Ricciardo and Bottas didn’t get any laps under their belt ahead of the sprint race.








