Tag: Formula One

  • Verstappen wins 100th race for Red Bull; Alonso pushes Hamilton to third

    Verstappen wins 100th race for Red Bull; Alonso pushes Hamilton to third

    Montreal (Canada), 18 June 2023: Max Verstappen scored a lights-to-flag win at the Canadian Grand Prix to seal Red Bull Racing’s 100thvictory in Formula 1, as Aston Martin’s Fernando Alonso shrugged off late-race brake issues to take P2 and restrict Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton to the final step of the podium

    “The 100th Grand Prix win for the team, that’s incredible,” said Verstappen afterwards. “I never expected to be on these kind of numbers myself as well, you know, so, yeah, we keep enjoying, we keep working hard. But today has been a great day again.”

    When the lights went out at the start, championship leader Verstappen got away well from pole position to take the lead ahead of front-row starter Alonso. The Spanish driver, whose getaway was not the best, was passed into Turn 1 by Hamilton, with the second Mercedes of George Russell in fourth place.

    Verstappen soon began to edge away from Hamilton and at the start of lap eight he was 2.4 seconds ahead of the Mercedes. The Virtual Safety Car was deployed when Logan Sargeant parked his Williams at the side of the track, but when the American’s car was removed and the caution ended Verstappen’s progress away from the pack continued and by lap 10 he was almost 3.5s ahead of Hamilton, with Alonso a second off the Mercedes in third place. Russell held fourth ahead of Alpine’s Esteban Ocon, with McLaren’s Oscar Piastri sixth ahead of the Haas of Nico Hulkenberg. 

    On lap 12 the Safety Car was released when Russell overcooked his entry into Turn 9 and hit the wall. He limped back to the pits and the SC period prompted Verstappen to pit and switch his starting medium tyres for a set of hard compound Pirellis. Hamilton and Alonso also changed tyres during the SC phase, leaving Verstappen to emerge from his stop in the lead. 

    Behind the top three, both Ferrari drivers opted to stay out on starting medium tyres and they rose to P4 and P5 with Charles Leclerc ahead of Carlos Sainz. Behind them, Sergio Pérez in the second Red Bull also stayed out, on hard tyres, and he climbed to sixth place. The Safety Car left the track at the end of lap 16. Max held his lead ahead of Hamilton and Alonso, and the twin Ferraris kept Checo at bay as the race went green again. 

    At the front, Verstappen again began to draw away and by lap 20 he was again almost three seconds clear of Hamilton. The Mercedes driver was coming under increasing pressure from Alonso, however, and at the end of lap 22 the Spaniard pounced, using DRS to slip down the inside of the Briton’s car as they approached the final chicane to take P2.

    The order at the front settled as the leaders worked their way through the stint on hard tyres, with Verstappen widening the gap to Alonso to 5.2 seconds by lap 33.

    Further back, lead Ferrari driver Leclerc was now three seconds behind third-placed Hamilton. Sainz was two seconds off his team-mate and Checo held sixth, five seconds behind Sainz and seven clear of Ocon. 

    Pérez made his sole stop of the race on lap 38, moving to medium tyres and emerging in P7 behind Albon. Ferrari reacted by pitting Sainz on the following lap and after a 2.8 switch to hard tyres he rejoined ahead of Williams’ Alex Albon who was targeting a one-stop race. Leclerc then pitted from P4 on lap 40 and after taking on hard tyres he rejoined ahead of Sainz. Checo was on the hunt, though, and as Leclerc emerged from the pit lane, the Mexican passed Albon to take P6 just 4.5 seconds behind Sainz and on quicker tyres. 

    Hamilton also stopped on lap 40, heading back to medium compound Pirellis, while Alonso stopped on the next lap, fitting another set of hard tyres. 

    Verstappen made is final stop on lap 42, moving to medium tyres and once again he took the lead for his final stint. 

    Behind the top six, Albon was doing a superb job of keeping Russell at bay. The Mercedes driver had recovered from his early crash and was attempting to wrestle seventh place from his fellow Briton. That battle ended on lap 54, however, when the damage Russell had shipped early on finally took its full toll and he was forced to retire. That left the way open for Ocon to reel in Albon and with 10 laps left the Alpine driver was just 0.4s off the Williams but could finds no way past. 

    The battle between Alonso and Hamilton was also hotting up and with the Spaniard nursing a rear brake problem, the Briton closed in and 10 laps from the flag the gap between P2 and P3 was down to 1.8s. Despite his mechanical woes, Alonso managed to find enough pace to rebuild the gap and he was soon more than two seconds ahead of the Mercedes. 

    At the front, Verstappen was in total control after 70 laps, he took his sixth win of the season ahead of Alonso and Hamilton. With two laps left, and with a significant gap behind him, sixth-placed Pérez pitted for a set of soft tyres and an attempt at the fastest lap. The Mexican delivered a 1:14.481 to add a point to the eight he scored for sixth place behind the two Ferraris. 

    Seventh place in the race went to Albon with the Briton defending well in the closing stages to keep Alpine’s Esteban Ocon in eighth. Ninth place went to Lance Stroll in the second Aston Martin and the final point went to 10th-placed Alfa Romeo driver Valtteri Bottas. 

    2023 FIA Formula 1 Canadian Grand Prix – Race 
    1 Max Verstappen Red Bull Racing 70 1:33’58.348 
    2 Fernando Alonso Aston Martin Mercedes 70 1:34’07.918 9.570
    3 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 70 1:34’12.516 14.168
    4 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 70 1:34’16.996 18.648
    5 Carlos Sainz Ferrari 70 1:34’19.888 21.540
    6 Sergio Pérez Red Bull Racing 70 1:34’49.376 51.028
    7 Alexander Albon Williams 70 1:34’59.161 1’00.813
    8 Esteban Ocon Alpine 70 1:35’00.040 1’01.692
    9 Lance Stroll Aston Martin 70 1:35’02.750 1’04.402
    10 Valtteri Bottas Alfa Romeo 70 1:35’02.780 1’04.432
    11 Oscar Piastri McLaren 70 1:35’03.449 1’05.101
    12 Pierre Gasly Alpine 70 1:35’03.597 1’05.249
    13 Lando Norris McLaren 70 1:35’06.711 1’08.363
    14 Yuki Tsunoda AlphaTauri 70 1:35’11.771 1’13.423
    15 Nico Hülkenberg Haas 69 1:34’15.291 1 lap /16.943
    16 Zhou Guanyu Alfa Romeo 69 1:34’15.725 1 lap /17.377
    17 Kevin Magnussen Haas 69 1:35’08.607 1 lap /1’10.259
    18 Nyck de Vries AlphaTauri 69 1:35’13.315 1 lap /1’14.967
         George Russell Mercedes 53 1:13’07.798 Retirement
         Logan Sargeant Williams 6 8’10.072 Retirement

  • Charles Leclerc in love with LeMans: Fia Thursday Press meet: Canadaian GP

    Charles Leclerc in love with LeMans: Fia Thursday Press meet: Canadaian GP

    DRIVER GROUP 1 – Valtteri BOTTAS (Alfa Romeo), Fernando ALONSO (Aston Martin), Charles LECLERC (Ferrari), Oscar PIASTRI (McLaren), Alex ALBON (Williams)

    Q: Oscar, why don’t we start with you? Let’s throw it back to Spain. You said on Sunday night that it had been a dose of reality for the team. After a competitive Saturday, do you now understand why you struggled so much in the race?

    Oscar PIASTRI: Yeah, I think so. I think even before the race happened, or at the race, we knew what our limitations were going to be. And yeah, Sunday proved to be correct in what we thought would happen. So yeah, I think we understand where we need to work and where we need to improve, and now it’s just about delivering on that.

    Q: Now, talking of work, you have been busy since that race, testing in Hungary last week. How was that?

    OP: It was nice. Another day in an F1 car is always a good day.

    Q: And how different did it feel in an F1 car compared to an F2 car?

    OP: Well, I haven’t been to Budapest in an F2 car either. It had been a while since I’d been there. But no, cool track in an F1 car, especially with a lot of high-speed corners to really feel the limits of an F1 car. So yeah, it was a fun day out.

    Q: Bring it onto this weekend then, your first Canadian Grand Prix. It’s a tricky track, this one. Tell us about the preparations on the sim? 

    OP: Yeah, I think pretty normal, to be honest, nothing too much more. I’ve played the track when I was growing up on the F1 video games. So yeah, I’m looking forward to it. It looks cool. It looks quite bumpy and a bit dusty. And obviously a lot of weather hanging around. So we’ll see how it goes. But I’m looking forward to getting out there.

    Q: Final one for me. For cricket fans out there, The Ashes start tomorrow in the UK. England against Australia. Very quickly: are you looking forward to having a good beating by the Poms?

    OP: I was going to say the exact same thing back. No, looking forward to it, should be good. I’ll try and watch it where I can obviously. It’s a bit of a shame all the F1 races clash with all the games, but I’m looking forward to seeing Australia smash you guys.

    Q: It’s going to be good. And good luck this weekend. Charles, coming to you now. Before we talk Formula 1, can we just throw it back to last weekend? You were at Le Mans for a historic victory for Ferrari at the 24 hours. Just tell us about the weekend, and whether you ever see yourself driving in that race? 

    Charles LECLERC: I’ve said it many times now, I think it’s an incredible race and of course I would love to participate one day. I don’t know when, but I would love to. It was incredible. It was the first time for me attending the race. Obviously, it couldn’t have ended up better, with Ferrari winning. But just the whole event is crazy. By night, the first six hours were crazy with the weather too, and rain, no rain. So it was very, very exciting. And I think the last time I went to see a race as a spectator was a very, very long time ago, too. So it was good. 

    Q: Did you stay up all night? 

    CL: Until 4.30 in the morning, I slept like four hours. So it was okay.

    Q: Wow, that’s commitment. Fernando, do you think he should do it?

    Fernando ALONSO: Yes, why not?

    Q: It’d be good. Let’s bring it back to Formula 1. What can we expect from you and Ferrari this weekend, because you’re coming off the back of a difficult weekend in Spain? 

    CL: Yeah, it was a very difficult weekend for me especially. On this track we don’t have anything new, so I don’t think we’ll have any miracles, but we need to just try and maximise our package, understand more this package, the way we should set up the car in order to maximise it, as in Spain we were quite easily off the window and then we were losing quite a lot of performance. So we’ve learnt a lot. And I’m pretty sure we’ll be in a better place for this weekend. But I don’t think it will be a huge step forward.

    Q: When you got the car back to Maranello, did you discover a problem from Saturday?

    CL: No, no, we didn’t.

    Q: No issue, OK. What about this weekend then? Great race last year from the back to fifth. I know you’ve got nothing new but what are you hoping for?

    CL: Well, last year we were in a very different situation and again, I think we expect Aston Martin to be very strong this weekend. We expect Red Bull to be very strong this weekend. We struggle to understand exactly where Mercedes will be compared to us. But again, we have to focus on ourselves and try to maximise our package. It’s a very challenging track, with the weather, also, we don’t really know which side it is going to go. So yeah, we’ll just focus on ourselves and see what we can do.

    Q: All right. Best of luck. Fernando, coming to you now. So Ferrari think Aston Martin are going to be strong this weekend. What do you think?

    FA: Let’s see, I think it should be a good weekend. But you never know until you hit the track. We also had expectations in Barcelona and we didn’t perform in that race. So yeah, let’s see. We have a couple of new parts in the car as well for this race, so depending on the weather, we will try to test them and validate them. And yeah, hopefully we can be a little bit more competitive than Barcelona.

    Q: What are you expecting from the upgrades?

    FA: Always trying to improve a little bit. Our car has been a completely new project for Aston Martin, a completely new philosophy, a new concept of how the car worked. And, yeah, we’ve been discovering things at every race this year. And I think it’s an optimisation of the package, what we try to do, and we’ve been constantly bringing new parts to the races and this is another step forward and more to come in the future.

    Q: Lawrence Stroll said this week that he’d like to see both of his cars on the podium here. How likely is that?

    FA: You never know. But it is an aggressive target for the weekend. But we know Lawrence, you know, the ambition of him is super high, always. And we will try to make him happy and proud in the home Grand Prix.

    Q: Fernando, you’ve won this race before. You started on the front row last year. What is the secret of success here at the Circuit Gilles Villeneuve? 

    FA: I think you need to have, obviously, confidence in the car. It’s a semi-street circuit, so you get very close to the walls and you need to ride the kerbs as well. Very aggressive, very bumpy circuit. Weather normally plays a big factor here, as it will do again this weekend. And get some experience, it’s always good. It’s the 17th or 18th Canadian Grand Prix, so it always helps.

    Q: All right, best of luck. Thank you, Fernando. Alex, coming to you now. Now, you said in Spain that the Barcelona track layout left Williams exposed. What do you think about this weekend?

    Alex ALBON: I kind of like these kinds of circuits. I do feel there’s a little bit more in terms of the ride. Maybe not so much just pure downforce on the car. There’s a bit more to it. The weather… So, we’ve got some upgrades coming this weekend, hopefully, in some ways we want it to be dry just to see what they do. But as I said, it does seem like a bit more of a characterful track than Barcelona.

    Q: What are you expecting from the upgrades? Have you driven them on the simulator?

    AA: Yeah, we’ve been pretty hard at work the last couple of weeks. You know, nothing too big actually, balance-wise. It feels quite similar. It’s more just a general downforce difference. We’ve done a good job. I do think it’s going to put us more into the fight with the midfield. Something which we’ve been falling away a little bit from the last few races, so hopefully you can just get us back into the fighting area for points.

    Q: All right. Best of luck with that. Thank you, Alex. Valtteri, thank you for waiting. Before we talk on track a question regarding off track, because James Key is going to be joining Alfa Romeo as technical director in September. Can we get your reaction to that news, please?

    Valtteri BOTTAS: I think James is obviously very welcome to the team. He’s got lots of experience from different teams before, been in different situations. So yeah, I think he’s going to be a good addition for us and looking forward to starting to work with him.

    Q: And in terms of facilities, does Alfa Romeo/Sauber have everything it needs in Hinwil? Is it just a question of brainpower now? 

    VB: The basic things are there. There’s always room for improvements and you could always get the latest machinery for every single department. So I think there’s still work going on to see where to invest, when to invest, because there’s a clear long-term plan. But then in the end, it’s also about human power, like you said, so we’re getting there step by step, but it is a project.

    Q: Alright, and what can we expect from you and Alfa Romeo this weekend? You have four podiums at this track. Great drive to P7 as well last year. What about 2023?

    VB: Hopefully points. I think that’s a realistic target. We had a car in Barcelona to be in the top 10. So let’s see how we go here. Very different track, but we try the best and we’re here to fight for points.

    QUESTIONS FROM THE FLOOR

    Q: (David Croft – Sky Sports F1) It’s a question for you Charles. I could see the disappointment on your face when you told Tom that you couldn’t find a cause of the issues on Saturday in Barcelona. If only you could run in Baku every single week, your season will be a lot better than it has been. How worried are you about Ferrari’s form, about the way the season is progressing, and the fact that you couldn’t find an issue to something that was clearly a problem for you on Saturday in Spain?

    CL: I mean, overall, I think all the team is not satisfied with the performance we are showing at the moment on track. And it’s very far off our expectations at the beginning of the season. And yes, we are very clear with ourselves and it’s very clear for us. Then, qualifying in Barcelona was a very particular one. I think I wasn’t the only one to struggle, and we need to understand these things. And for now, we don’t have the reason. So this is a little bit more worrying, and that’s where we need to push and try to understand the reason for it. Because obviously, the feeling was really bad. And then, looking ahead, we just need to keep pushing, trying to bring upgrades as quickly as possible and regularly, which is our aim now, to try to close the gap with the guys in front and also to close the gap, especially in terms of race pace. Because even though I struggled a lot in Qualifying on the Saturday, the Sunday wasn’t great either. And if we look, Carlos, who had a great weekend, he had a great Saturday, but then on Sunday, we struggled again with a race pace. So that’s where we are trying to, to push at the moment. What gives me confidence, though, is that there’s a clear direction in where we want to work and improve and this is what makes me believe in the project.

    Q: (Filip Cleeren – Motorsport.com) Fernando, when you started in Formula 1, the cars were over 200 kilograms lighter than they are today. And now there are discussions to try and bring that weight down again. Just in your experience, how much would that improve the show? How much more enjoyable would it be to drive as well?

    FA: I don’t think it would change much the show. I think it’s more the size of the cars than the weight of the cars, which makes things a little bit more difficult, overtakings, fights into the first couple of corners in the race, it is difficult now to position the car, just because the size of it, not because the weight of the car. So I think it’s going to be difficult to really reduce, significantly, the weight of course, as the hybrid engines, they will always be heavier than the normal engines and the safety on these cars is a lot higher as well. So I know there is some interest in going into that direction. Let’s see what they can do. It will be always welcome and it’s always more fun to drive light cars, but at the end of the day, I think it’s more the size of them that makes racing a little bit more difficult.

    Q: (Luke Smith – The Athletic) Another one for Fernando, you seem quite bullish about Aston Martin’s chances going into this weekend. Canada does have a history for surprise winners, be it due to weather or groundhogs even, getting in the way of cars. Do you see this as being your best chance to get that 33rd win that everyone’s hyping up?

    FA: No, I don’t think so. I don’t think so. I think it was more the reaction after Barcelona, knowing that probably was more a one-off, that we were uncompetitive, than being in Canada, you know, our best chance. I think we will be, hopefully, on a very competitive position all throughout the year, and maybe only Barcelona being a little bit out of pace. So that’s the hope. But I don’t think that we point at one weekend, here in Canada or any other has the biggest chance of winning, Probably Monaco was, to be honest, in our calendar, our best chance and we were very close: only 40 or 50 milliseconds off pole position, and then in the race, obviously the chance with the weather coming at the end. So, let’s see when we have another opportunity.

    Q: (Adam Cooper – motorsport.com) Question for Charles. You drove the 2024 no-blanket tyres in Barcelona last week. How did that test go? Are they raceable? The FIA has to make a decision in about six weeks on whether the ban goes ahead next year. Would you be happy if we had no blankets?

    CL: Oh, it’s… I think it’s too early and I don’t have all the answers for now. I have to say that in the conditions that I had during the test, it was good, and it went well. But yeah, in lower temperatures, I don’t know. I haven’t tested these tyres in lower temperatures and that’s where the big question mark is. So, very difficult to answer whether I will be happy to go. I would like to maybe test those tyres in different conditions and then see whether they are raceable in all conditions. But again, it was a positive test with the conditions that we’ve had in Barcelona.

    Q: Charles, can I just ask you to elaborate on that? What does the car feel like on the first lap out of the pits?

    CL: Well, you’ve got four or five corners where it’s very tricky. Where the tyres need to get into temperature. When you are alone on track it is not that much of a problem. But of course, if you are racing other cars, then it becomes very, very difficult to manage. If it remains four or five corners, even in low conditions, then it’s something that we could consider. But obviously with very low conditions, I expect this to be much longer, this warm-up period, and this then could become difficult.

    Q: Fernando, can I bring you in on this? Because your experience in IndyCar, of course no tyre warmers there? What are your thoughts?

    FA: Well, I think it depends on the tyre energy that you put on that specific circuit. Barcelona will help the tyres, some others, it will make things very difficult. Indy, I think you put a lot of energy in the tyres immediately and it was fine. At places like Monaco, or some others… I’m not a big fan of removing the blankets, to be honest, and I don’t see the reason why.

    Q: (Chris Medland – Racer) Question for Alex. Sorry, to throw it forward a little bit – but your home race at Silverstone in a few weeks’ time. What are your hopes for Williams at that one? Especially with the upgraded car? Do you hope to be a bit more competitive there, and is it a special weekend for you when you race in front of such a big crowd like that?

    AA: Silverstone I think is one of everyone’s favourite circuits. Like you said, I think it’s a bit more representative to see where our package comes out. We’ve still got Austria before then if I’ve got my calendar, right. But no, it will be good. I think it’s also Williams’… well, it was supposed to be their 800th – but it will be 799 with Imola, unfortunately, but it will still be a good race and hopefully we can put on a good show. It’s always good to go to Silverstone.

    Q: (Simon-Olivier Lorange – La Presse) The question is going to be for Fernando. I guess it’s not going to be a surprise to get a question about your team-mate in his hometown here. From your point of view, from what you saw from him, from your relationship with him this season. What do you think must improve, or what is missing in him to not only be a good driver but maybe become a star in the sport?

    FA: Yeah, I know Lance from 2012. Actually, I met him here in one of the Ferrari events, when he was in the Academy. I think Lance is showing the speed in the car, the commitment, we saw at the beginning of the year as well, racing with a broken hand and things like that. You only see when you really have passion for something that you’re doing. And I think, for him, the most important thing now is to get the consistency, weekend after weekend. I think we saw many times in the past, sparks of Lance, in wet qualifying, in races, at the starts, lap one performance, these kinds of things that are outstanding. And then, some other weekends that the result was not coming or you get in a bad loop in Qualifying, so something like that, and then the weekend is a little bit compromised. So, I think that consistency is going to be the next step in his career, to be constantly fighting for the top five and then at the end of the year, you see the amount of points that you gain when you get all the weekends right. But as I said, with the motivation, the commitment that he has, and the team that Aston Martin is building now, I think it’s a matter of time that this will come.

    Q: (Matt Coch – Speedcafe.com) One for Oscar. Looking a little bit forward, the B-spec car isn’t too far away. How much do you know about that? Have you driven it in the simulator? And, I guess, what are you expecting if you have driven the simulator? What is it? What does it feel like? Is it much different? 

    OP: I haven’t driven in the simulator yet. So I’m not sure. Hopefully, it’s faster. That’s obviously the plan. I think we’re positive and optimistic about the new package we’ve got coming for Austria and Silverstone. We’ll have to wait and see but I’m looking forward to firstly driving it in the sim when I have the chance and then obviously on the real track too.

    Q: (Luke Smith – The Athletic) Charles, about Le Mans and your visit. You’ve said, obviously before, that you’d like to do the race one day, but did going they’re really sort of solidify that for you? Was there anything that really surprised you about the race, that made you be like: I need to do this in the future. And is it something you see post-F1, or could you maybe do it during your F1 career? 

    CL: I mean, with more and more races in Formula 1, it starts to become more and more difficult, I think, to fit another race, in another category where you need to do testing, etc. So, if the calendar lets me do it, why not? But at the moment, it looks difficult. Then, I don’t know, not much surprise me. I think I kind of expected all of what I’ve seen, at least in the way the team is working. But the excitement around the race in itself was incredible to see. I’ve never seen so many people on a racetrack before. And it’s a very long track and wherever you go, you see lots and lots of people, and very passionate about racing and you know that it’s not the first race they are watching: they’ve been watching for years. It’s good to see so many passionate people at the same event, and on that I was surprised, yes.

    Q: Can I bring you in on this Oscar? Do you fancy Le Mans?

    OP: You asked me about Indy last time! Yes, I think a similar answer to what Charles said. Obviously, with more and more races in the calendar, becomes difficult. Obviously, I’m only seven races into my F1 career, so maybe give it some more time. But it looks like an exciting race. But yeah, not for a while.

    Q: Fernando, are you going to go back again?

    FA:  I may go, yeah.

    Q: Could you do it as part of a Formula 1 season? Or do you think it needs to be a separate programme?

    FA: No, you can. I did the endurance world championship and Formula One World Championship. I think both Championships, so why not one race only?

    Q: As the calendar gets longer in Formula One, still possible?

    FA: I did in 2018, and it was very long already.

    Q: Alex, how about you?

    AA: I would love to, yeah.  I’m not sure. Maybe post-F1, or even during but it’s exciting. I think the racing was really good. I don’t know if the other drivers watched it but it was quite cool to follow along. And I like this whole new LMP style, lot of manufacturers coming into it.

    Q: How many hours did you watch last weekend?

    AA: I didn’t have the official channel, so I was just going on some dodgy livestream! It was intermittent, coming on and off all the time, so total, maybe three hours.

    Q: Valtteri. How about you, Le Mans?

    VB: Why not one day? I? I feel like Charles: it is tricky with the commitments we have in Formula 1. It’s only the races, it’s the other as well. So, time-wise, challenging. So, I’ll probably say post-F1, could be something. 

    Q: I think we might see you at Bathurst before we see you in Le Mans, right?

    VB: That’s very likely.

    Q: (Scott Mitchell-Malm – The Race) It’s a question for Charles, sorry, for your earlier answer covered this already but just on the issue that you felt in Barcelona in Qualifying, and what you say about there not being anything obvious wrong with the car, or mechanically wrong with the car afterwards? What, based on the analysis then, why did it manifest itself in the feeling that it did? Why could you feel it? Or did it feel like it was worse through some types of corners than others? Because you’re not the kind of driver to sort of suffer in those conditions without a good reason.

    CL: Yeah, well, to be honest, it is the first time that it happened in my career. I mean, if I look on the left-hand corners, that’s where I was struggling. I said it straightaway after Qualifying, and we can see that on data clearly. I’m losing some six-and-a-half or seven-tenths in all the left-hand corner – but there are no real reasons for it yet. So yeah, for now, I cannot say much more, to be honest.

    Q: (Chris Medland – Racer) One for everyone, just following up on the Le Mans chat. Valtteri mentioned about how there are other commitments around Formula 1 that make it hard to do stuff, in season. Do you think, as drivers, you’d benefit from having a bit more freedom to race other things, gain other experiences – or do you think that being fully tied into F1, even if it isn’t driving, is the only way to go? 

    VB: I feel like it’s quite individual as a driver. But for me, doing other things sometimes, I feel a benefit. You know, you get another point of view of driving. For example, I’ve done a few rallies over the last few years, some test days for it as well. Just the timing needs to be correct. So yeah, I feel like when you drive something else, you can always unlock and discover something. Especially in the winter-time, it kind of keeps you sharp if you do something else.

    AA: Yeah, I think the same as Valtteri. Everyone’s individual, but the way I see it is a little bit like… I did DTM, for example. Very different cars, and maybe not the most fun cars to drive but you learn such a different way to drive quickly. Every car has a different style and if you just drive Formula 1 all the time, I think you get fixed on one kind of style. Call it like reading a book: kind of extend your vocabulary, but it’s more like you’re racing vocabulary: you get a better appreciation for how to be on the limit and how to be quick in all different kinds of things.

    FA: Yeah, I agree. You know my opinion: the more you race, the more you drive, the better you are.  Instead of being in a restaurant or on a beach, or on an event or premier or whatever. If you are behind a wheel, that will be to your advantage at one point in your career: at one point in a corner or race start, or something. It will always be something that you put in your hard disk.

    CL: Yeah, I think I will take it more as a challenge. I don’t know how much we can take from endurance driving to Formula 1 as it’s very, very different. As Fernando says, it always helps to be behind the wheel but yeah, before I was saying that it was going to be difficult, mostly because outside of the races, we also have quite a lot of events and things going on with Ferrari. So not much free time, and the free time that we have, when we have two or three days, obviously Le Mans is a very tiring race: when I saw the drivers at the end of the race, they were really, really tired: not much sleep and a lot of driving. So it’s nice, I would love to do it one day, but you also need to think about the whole season and Formula 1 is obviously the main priority for now.

    OP: Yeah, I think driving anything can be useful. I say that: I’ve never actually driven a race car with a roof on it before! So, I don’t know, maybe it’ll be a summer activity for me! I think you can look at it from both ways. Obviously F1 is a very different car from anything else. And there’s quite a lot of specifics. But at the same time, you can, as Alex and Fernando were saying, you can learn different things that can help you in situations where you might not expect so yeah, I think it can be useful, but like we’ve all said, there’s not much time to do it these days.

    DRIVER GROUP 2 – Yuki TSUNODA (AlphaTauri), Pierre GASLY (Alpine), Kevin MAGNUSSEN (Haas), Lewis HAMILTON (Mercedes), Sergio PÉREZ (Red Bull)

    Q: Lewis, why don’t we start with you, if we could. Seven wins here in Canada, you have a phenomenal record. And of course, one of those wins was your first one in Formula 1 back in 2007. What is it about this place?

    Lewis HAMILTON: Good afternoon, everyone. I don’t know. I think it’s one of the drivers’ favourite circuits, I think, for sure. It’s the city, it’s the energy. I was asking one of the Canadians recently if the city is the same when we’re not here. But the energy is always great. Got a great and amazing crowd since the beginning. And the track, you’ve got these long, long straights, but it’s a bit like a go-kart track in how you have to throw the car over the kerbs. It’s just always gelled well with me. It’s a big, big braking circuit and that’s always been my strength since I was younger.

    Q: I was just going to say: does it suit your style? 

    LH: Clearly!

    Q: The record speaks for itself! And how much confidence do you have coming into this weekend after what was a really encouraging race in Spain? 

    LH: Yeah, definitely a lot, that we’ve been making progress and the car, last race, we’ve all been buzzing, I think, back at the factory and the whole team has this new energy and kind-of feels like we’ve got a North Star: we know where we’re going; we know how to get there. So, everyone’s just churning away and working as hard as possible. So, excited to come here. I’m hoping that… we generally don’t know whether this track suits our car, and the car’s characteristics, but the weather may change that and we’ll see.

    Q: Are you doing a rain dance?

    LH: I don’t think I need to! Those clouds are looking pretty big outside!

    Q: You’ve seen the forecast! Final one from me. You did say in Barcelona that you were hoping to hook up with Toto Wolff after the race, to talk about your future with the team.

    LH: We’ve never hooked-up!

    Q: Did you have a meeting? You normally do it over pizza, right?

    LH:  No, we never have pizza! I’ve seen Toto, we’ve talked several times, we have a great relationship but there’s nothing else to say at the moment.

    Q: Any progress made? 

    LH: Yeah… but nothing else new to really add to it.

    Q: Kevin, let’s come to you next, your 150th race in Formula 1. What a ride it’s been for you. Just how do you reflect on the last ten years?

    Kevin MAGNUSSEN: Yeah, I mean, it always… when you think back, 150 races, it sounds like a lot but it actually doesn’t feel like that much. I always get surprised when new guys come into F1, and I see their age and I think about my own age and suddenly feel quite old! Actually, I feel young still, but time flies and I’m not a youngster anymore. 

    LH: How old are you?

    KM: I’m 30.

    LH: 30!

    KM: Were you surprised I wasn’t older, or…?

    LH: I think it’s the beard.

    KM: So, I look old! People say I look older than my Dad! I’ve seen that on the Internet. But no, it’s been a really fun ride, and it doesn’t feel like it’s anywhere near over yet. And yeah, I’m excited to be around still, and excited for the future.

    Q: Well, tell us about Spain next. It wasn’t an easy race for either you or your teammate. What have you learned since that race that’s going to help you this weekend?

    KM: Yeah, it was a tricky one because it was so up and down, you know? One session, we were close to top five and the next one, we were out-in-Q1 range, and it was going up and down so much that it was…  we made small changes to the car that we didn’t think was going to be big and it had a very big effect. So, it was a little bit of a confusing weekend. And you know, it obviously ended up not being a great one in the race too, with a lot of tyre wear and degradation. So, I’m hoping that we can find some actual answers that we can carry forward and avoid falling into the same trap.

    Q: Nico also said this week that he thinks the team needs to focus on Sundays, not Saturdays. Do you agree with him? 

    KM: Yeah, I do agree. I mean, at the end of the day, Sundays are the most important. If you have a fast car on Saturday, it doesn’t really matter if you’re really wearing out the tyres or just not fast on Sunday. So, that is clearly the priority: to find the pace on Sunday. It has been good in races this year, but it’s been a little bit up and down. Too much up and down. That’s clearly what we need to work on.

    Q: And do you think this race track will suit your driving style, a bit like it does Lewis’?

    KM: I don’t know about that. We have been struggling a little bit when it’s been bumpy and you know, this track is a bumpy one. And you’re also using the kerbs in all the chicanes and I don’t know if that’s going to suit us that well – but you often get surprised anyway and we’ll see.

    Q: Yuki coming to you now. You were upset after the race in Spain following the incident with Zhou Guanyu. What did you learn as a result of what happened on track there? And will you do anything differently, going forward, in terms of your wheel-to-wheel racing? 

    Yuki TSUNODA: I’m still upset with it but you cannot change anything. In the end, that’s what the FIA decided and actually, we spoke this afternoon with the FIA and understand their perspective. Other than that, nothing to say. I won’t change any approach, I would say, to be honest. In the end I will try as much as possible to defend it, within the limit. I thought it was in the limit and it was not – but in the end, it was using too much and you cannot defend, so, obviously I’ll try to change a little bit better. There’s room that I can improve in any situation. I feel, at the same time, a similar mindset to after the race, I felt quite harsh, but in the end it is what it is, and yeah, I just have to accept it.  

    Q: What about this weekend? Give us your thoughts on the Circuit Gilles Villeneuve. I’ve read that you compared it to Suzuka, and I think that’s an interesting comparison. Tell us more.

    YT: I’ve compared this track to Suzuka?

    Q: That’s what I’ve read – in your race preview.

    YT: It’s not similar at all!

    Q: Maybe… Were you thinking in terms of how it punishes mistakes like Suzuka does? Is that maybe what you were thinking?

    YT: Ah, OK, yeah. Well, Suzuka, we don’t drive kerbs, and here we drive kerbs. And it’s a street circuit here and not a street circuit in Suzuka, so… I don’t know. I was not in a good mood when I said that, or whatever! But yeah, I mean, in terms of there being grass next to the track surface is quite similar to Suzuka, which is challenging and still thrilling, and once you step-out, it’s quite costly. But if you compare to Suzuka, it’s not similar at all. So, it’s hard to say more than this but I try to maximise the lap-time within the grass.

    Q: And Yuki, are you confident that you can get back into the points? There’s been three races now that you’ve been outside.

    YT: Yeah, I think so. I mean, especially race pace, we’ve been positive consistently this year. So I try to maximise that, and one of our limitations now is a qualifying, try to extract as much as possible, end up as high position as much as possible, to be slightly easier than starting P15 or whatever. That’s our probable main challenge for this week. And I’m feeling positive. I think, so far, bumpy track is not too bad. Monaco, we performed quite well. So, feeling optimistic. I’ll try my best. I think weather will be a slight game changer and affect our strategy and pace, so see how it goes. 

    Q: Pierre, you’ve been busy away from the racetrack since we last saw you in Spain. You took in the tennis in Paris, you’ve been bowling here in Montreal, just tell us a bit more?

    Pierre GASLY: Yeah, it was quite nice to just have like a weekend to recharge back home and I’m quite a sports enthusiast, so I must say I quite enjoyed between MotoGP, 24 hours of Le Mans, Roland Garros, there was the Champions League final. So, I definitely enjoyed watching and following all that. And then we had a nice bowling event last night with the team, so it was pretty fun to just catch up and bond with the team members outside the race track. 

    Q: It was Djokovic, did you watch? 

    PG: Yeah, Djokovic, it was just incredible to witness. He won his 23rd Grand Slam and it was just impressive, just mentally and how strong his game was. Definitely I enjoyed it. 

    Q: Well, talking Formula 1, can we throw it back to qualifying in Spain next because you were given a six-place grid penalty for impeding. Are you and your engineer going to approach qualifying any differently this weekend to avoid something like that happening again? 

    PG: Yeah, obviously. I think it had a very bad impact, obviously, on our weekend, from Qualifying, for us to start P10 and drop to P14 on lap one, so it was definitely a pretty terrible start. But yeah, there are always things we can do better. There were small mistakes, which were done in Quali, which we reviewed and will improve in terms of procedure and communication. And yeah, it was a harsh penalty. Unfortunately, there is a regulation, which is applied most of the time and then we paid a pretty big price.

    Q: And do you think this circuit here in Montréal will suit your car?

    PG: I think the last three events have been pretty strong in terms of evolution and progress. We’ve scored points with both cars in these last three events. Miami was a step forward. Monaco, there was obviously a podium. Barcelona, we showed strong pace in Quali, with a fourth in Qualifying and again double points. So there are definitely positives. There are small details we need to work on to really make a step on Sundays, but overall, I think we’ve got decent potential in our package and I’m confident we can get a strong result again this weekend.

    Q: Checo, after a difficult couple of races, what is your mindset coming into this Canadian Grand Prix?

    Sergio PEREZ: Yeah, I basically want to reset and go again. Basically, Monaco was all down to me, I had a really bad mistake. But then in Barcelona, in the Qualifying again, it was tricky with the damp conditions. We didn’t manage to have a good Quali and then we paid the price on Sunday. So I’m looking forward to getting back to the form we had in the early season.

    Q: Is it difficult to get the car into the right window for you in Qualifying? Is that the cause of the problem?

    SP: It was difficult in Barcelona. It is the only time that I have difficulties with the car. I did struggle through the weekend, so it was tricky in Barcelona. But other than that, I think in Monaco we had the pace to really have a very good weekend but I did a mistake. I was caught out with a tailwind, with a car ahead and so on. No, I think the first time we had difficulties was in Barcelona.

    Q: And Christian Horner said that he thinks there’s less pressure on you now. Do you agree with him?

    SP: I don’t think so. I think we always have to deliver to our maximum and we just have to make sure we deliver. We have a great car and we should be having a lot of podiums, wins and so on, from now until the end of the year. We can see that the competition is getting closer and closer all the time, but we will try our best.

    Q: And do you think you’ll have the fastest car this weekend?

    SP: It’s a tricky race track. We’ve seen in Barcelona things are getting closer and certainly there’s always one or two teams that can get really close. And especially with how the weekend is looking, it’s looking really damp, so it will only get things a little bit closer.

    QUESTION FROM THE FLOOR

    Q: (David Croft – Sky Sports F1) Checo, you’re no rookie. You’ve been around for a while now, but I’m told, week after week, you never stop learning in life. I think it’s 50 races now, this weekend, for Red Bull, 50 races as a team-mate to Max. So, what have you learned from him as a driver that you can use to help you in what you say is now a reset for the rest of the season? What has he done that you think, ‘right, I need to do that to get more out of this?’

    SP: Well, I think he has been able to deliver when it matters – in Qualifying and he hasn’t had a bad weekend at all this year. And I think it’s what I need. I cannot afford to have any bad weekends anymore. I think I’ve had two or three bad weekends in the season, so I really have to get rid of those and keep the consistency high because I think it’s something that Max has been really good and consistent throughout this period.

    Q: (Simon-Olivier Lorange – La Presse) Lewis, it’s been a year and a half since you got a first place. After winning so much in your career, is it getting heavier and heavier to get this next win? Or are you able to really reset between every race and get to the next one with the idea of finally this is going to be the one? 

    LH: Yeah, I don’t feel any weight. We’ve gone through a tough patch and we’re kind of, like, on that up. And I feel that there’s been a feeling of like… For example, the last race and some of the races, it feels like we’ve had wins. It’s just about perspective. Of course, we’ve not been in first place but there have been many wins in the steps that we’ve taken. Last race, for us, as a team, to be on the podium with both drivers, that was a win for us. And so we’re just focused. We know, as I was just saying earlier, that we have that north star. We know where we need to go. We don’t know everything of how to get there but we know that together we can get there if we just keep our heads down and focus on the science. The engineering team is fantastic within the organisation. We’ve got great development team and I honestly think we’ve got the best development rate, as good if not better than any team in the sport and so you’ve just got to keep chipping away. 

    Q: (Luke Smith – The Athletic) Lewis, you spoke in New York, I think yesterday, about Mission 44, Ignite and the work you’re doing, obviously to improve diversity through motorsport. And with the contract talks with Toto, how much are these programmes a part of your future with Mercedes, something you’re talking more about, advancing them? And does it also point to this being way more than just a driver in a team wanting to work together to win races and championships? It’s about helping deep-rooted change in the sport.

    LH: Yeah, I think we already covered a lot of that already in the previous contract and so it’s really… we’ve got an amazing group of people back at the factory who are really refocused on D&I and really, there’s been huge progress within our team since the first time we’ve had the conversations, like the serious conversations, and the work that we’re doing with Accelerate 25, Ignite, which is now within Mission 44. And that’s really my role within Mission 44. And I think the team is always super supportive. I don’t know when you’re referring to, to be honest, maybe the Forbes thing you mean? Yeah. That’s still always going to be a focal point and the important thing, obviously, Mission 44 I think, I’m really proud of where we got it to. We’re now funding, I think it’s 25 or 26 different organisations out there, so starting to really start to have impact and see… Hopefully, we’ll start to see a better, fresher chain coming through from with more diverse students.

    Q: (Joost Smedema – NOS) Lewis, in 2017 you equalled the record of pole positions of Ayrton Senna here in Canada. This weekend, Max can equal the numbers of victories of Ayrton. If you think back on 2017, what is your feeling if you think back to that weekend? And could you describe the impact for you as a Formula 1 driver to be compared to Senna, which Max may experience this weekend as well?

    LH: 2017. Jeez, I don’t remember it. Yeah, I really can’t remember off the top of my head. I need to see a video or something like that. I’ve got a bad memory. But for me, it was very, very surreal just that being five years old, watching with my dad and the dream was to be like Ayrton. The dream was to get to Formula 1 and do something like him and then to then find that you’re matching equally in terms of results. You know, ultimately it’s unfair because there’s a lot more races in our time than there were back then. But still it was a real honour. I think I got it, they gave me a helmet or something like that, replica helmet, something like that, and so that was very cool. Yeah, Max has been doing an amazing job. He’s had such an incredible career so far and he’s for sure going to surpass that. (We’re) working on getting the car to where it needs to be so we can slow him down.

    Q: (David Schneider – Hershey Shiga Sports) Yuki, Mario Miyakawa, veteran business manager of Kamui Kobayashi and Jean Alesi, has been at your side this year. How have you decided on him and has it already positively influenced your workflow this year?

    YT: Yeah, definitely. First of all, we knew each other already. I got introduced by Mr Yamamoto from Honda in 2021, in Monaco. Since then, we keep in touch, just casually and we get along quite well. But same time we didn’t actually work together, and I approached to him last year around Abu Dhabi. And yeah, so far he’s doing the job that I wanted him to do and I’m really, really happy with him. Not just… I mean, managing just as a kind of friendship side, he’s really good and I feel like I can rely on him quite a lot. So yeah, I can trust him a lot, which is a good thing which is an important thing. And yeah, I feel quite happy with him.

    Q: (Adam Cooper – Motorsport.com) Question for Lewis and Checo as the more experienced guys. There’s a lot of talk about trying to bring the weight down for the next regulations in ‘26. But just now, Fernando said the bigger issue is the size of the cars, the dimensions in terms of manoeuvrability. Would you agree with that, that that’s more of an issue than the actual weight? 

    SP: Well, I think the dimensions of this car, probably they have an impact in places like Monaco, where it just gets harder to do racing. But other than that, I do think that the tyres, the size of the car are probably a little bit too big. Although we can follow a bit better, it seems a bit better to protect, defend your position. So I would welcome a lighter car as well but I don’t think it’s a main issue to me. It’s also the size of the car that is hurting a bit the racing side.

    LH: Similar. I think the dimensions are pretty good. I quite like the size of the car but obviously there are some places where it is tight as Checo said. But I think it is the weight that has definitely gone too far. Our wheels this year are a ridiculous weight. And there’s just no need. We’ve had light wheels in the past, and then the cars, just the braking zones are longer but I definitely think there’s some good changes they can make for the future. It’s not my decision, obviously. 

    Q: (Phil Duncan – PA) Lewis, Toto said earlier this week that it would be days rather than weeks in terms of the contracts. Given your latest discussions with him, is that how you see the timeline developing? And just going back to Max potentially matching Senna’s number of wins this weekend, that will take them to 41, I know he’s obviously quite a long way off your record of 103 but do you think there’s a chance that he could catch that or eclipse that given that he’s only 25?

    LH: He’s got a very long career ahead of him so absolutely. Ultimately, records are there to be broken. And he’s got an amazing team. But as I said, we’ve got to work harder to try and continue to extend it. I hope we get to have some… at least within the last period of time in my career, I hope we get to have some more close racing. And then I don’t really have a huge amount to say on the contractual side of things. It’ll get done when it’s done. If that’s next week, if that’s in a month’s time, as long as it gets done I’m not really bothered.

    Q: (Chris Medland – Racer) Lewis, actually having to look forward to Silverstone in a few weeks’ time, your home race, does the performance of the Mercedes in Barcelona bode well for your chances at that circuit? What are your hopes from the car there? And just how special is it to race at Silverstone?

    LH: Yeah, super excited to get to have the British Grand Prix. Hope… the weather has been amazing in the past week or so. When I left I think it was 29 degrees which was amazing. So let’s hope that that extends out to when we get there. And yeah, I’m really, really hopeful that the performance we had in the last race… I mean, we’re only like three tenths off… each lap, I was around three or four tenths off Max, which was the closest I think we’ve ever been this year. And I’m hoping by then, we will hopefully have taken another step. So I’m really, really hopeful that we can… maybe that will be a race where we get to actually race them but we’ll see.

    Q: (Nicolas Blasquez – AFP) Pierre, did you expect you and the team to get so positive an effect with the upgrades so quickly because you made a very big step forward in only a very short period of time?

    PG: Well, I think that the team last year showed really good progress and evolution with the upgrades throughout the entire season. And I think it was probably the strongest strength throughout the whole year. So I trusted in the team to improve the performance. We had a pretty slow start of the year, probably starting on the back foot and a bit further away from the competition than we would have liked. But clearly, I think it’s fair to say it came as a bit of a positive surprise that in Monaco we were able to fight for the podium. In Barcelona, again, top four in Qualifying, so there seems to be definitely some very good potential to unlock from the package we’ve got and that’s why I’m pretty confident in the coming races. The coming weekends, I think there are definitely some big points to get as a team. 

  • Max Verstappen quickest in FP2 after Russel top FP1:

    Max Verstappen quickest in FP2 after Russel top FP1:

    Max Verstappen set the fastest time of the second free practice session for the 2023 FIA Formula 1 Miami Grand Prix but Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc brought running to a halt when he crash late in the session. 

    Ferrari driver Leclerc and team-mate set the early pace, but the first really representative time came from Red Bull’s Sergio Perez who set a time of 1:30.757 and then by his team-mate Max Verstappen who stopped the clock at 1:30.146.

    Sainz then posted a lap of 1m30.128s, and Leclerc became the first driver to get under 1m30s with a lap of 1:29.497. 

    Verstappen put in another quick lap that edged him close to the Monegasque driver and then with his next attempt he finally pushed through to the top of the order with a 1:29.380.

    All of the early P1 times had been set on medium compound Pirelli tyres but McLaren’s Lando Norris then emerged on soft tyres and the Briton jumped to top spot with a lap of 

    1:28.741. Aston Martin’s Fernando Alonso moved to P2 before being supplanted by Sainz, but Norris’ time proved good enough to stand for some time. 

    It was Verstappen who eventually toppled the McLaren driver, the Dutchman posting a 1:28.255. The champion then lowered the benchmark to 1:27.930 as drivers began to switch to longer runs. 

    Ten minutes from the end of the session the red flags came out when Leclerc crashed at Turn 7. The incident resulted in a five-minute stoppage as the damaged Ferrari was rescued. When running resumed it was solely to get more running on the harder compounds and there were no significant improvements in lap time. 

    Behind Verstappen. Sainz finished second with Leclerc third. Pérez ended the session in fourth, almost half a second behind his team-mate. 

    Alonso was left with fifth place with the Spaniard having moved past Norris just before Leclerc’s crash. Lewis Hamilton finished seventh ahead of Aston Martin’s Lance Stroll, as Esteban Ocon and Alex Albon completed the top 10.


    2023 FIA Formula 1 Miami Grand Prix – Free Practice 2
    1 Max Verstappen Red Bull Racing 23 1:27.930 
    2 Carlos Sainz Ferrari 26 1:28.315 0.385
    3 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 20 1:28.398 0.468
    4 Sergio Perez Red Bull Racing 24 1:28.419 0.489
    5 Fernando Alonso Aston Martin 25 1:28.660 0.730
    6 Lando Norris McLaren 24 1:28.741 0.811
    7 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 23 1:28.858 0.928
    8 Lance Stroll Aston Martin 23 1:28.930 1.000
    9 Esteban Ocon Alpine 25 1:28.937 1.007
    10 Alex Albon Williams 26 1:29.046 1.116
    11 Pierre Gasly Alpine 22 1:29.098 1.168
    12 Kevin Magnussen Haas 22 1:29.171 1.241
    13 Zhou Guanyu Alfa Romeo 27 1:29.181 1.251
    14 Valtteri Bottas Alfa Romeo 26 1:29.189 1.259
    15 George Russell Mercedes 21 1:29.216 1.286
    16 Oscar Piastri McLaren MCL60 McLaren 24 1:29.339 1.409
    17 Nico Hulkenberg Haas VF-23 Haas 22 1:29.393 1.463
    18 Yuki Tsunoda AlphaTauri AT04 AlphaTauri 25 1:29.613 1.683
    19 Nyck de Vries AlphaTauri AT04 AlphaTauri 25 1:29.928 1.998
    20 Logan Sargeant Williams FW45 Williams 27 1:30.038 2.108

  • Sergio Perez wins Azerbaijan Sprint ahead of Verstappen

    Sergio Perez wins Azerbaijan Sprint ahead of Verstappen

    Baku, 29 April 2023: Sergio Pérez took the first Sprint win of his career with a controlled drive to victory in Baku that saw him pass Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc midway through the race in the Sprint race ahead of the FIA Formula 1 Championship here on Sunday .

    Third place in the 17-lap race went to Max Verstappen. The championship leader dropped to fourth at the start after being hit by George Russell but later passed the Mercedes drive to take the P3 medal.

    When the lights went out at the start, Leclerc got away well from the front of the grid to take the lead. Pérez matched the Ferrari drive off the line and tucked in behind, but Verstappen was slow to start and he was quickly put under pressure by Russell. Verstappen had the upper hand in Turn 1 but Russell was more aggressive at the next corner. He locked up on cold tyres, however, and collided with the Red Bull, gouging a hole in the sidepod of Versatppen’s RB19. The Dutchman had to give way to the Briton as they headed onto the straight towards Turn 3. 

    Moments later the Virtual Safety Car was deployed when AlphaTauri’s Yuki Tsunoda hit the wall in Turn 14 and with debris on the track the physical Safety Car was released at the end of lap three. 

    The SC left the track at the end of lap five. Leclerc managed the restart well ahead of Pérez but it was Verstappen who reacted best to Leclerc’s acceleration and he ambushed Russell just after they crossed the start-finish line. The Dutchman dived down the inside of the Mercedes and powered past the Mercedes into Turn 1. 

    Behind them, Carlos Sainz also reacted well and he muscled past Lewis Hamilton under braking into Turn 1 to take P5. Hamilton, forced wide, also surrendered position to the opportunistic Fernando Alonso who tucked in behind Sainz and stole P6. 

    On lap 8, with DRS back in play after the resumption, Pérez closed up to Leclerc and as they roared along the long straight toward Turn 1 he swept past the Ferrari to take the lead. 

    Two laps later, Leclerc lost the DRS boost of being within a second of Pérez and Verstappen tried to close in. The Ferrari driver responded, though, and he briefly pushed his way back into DRS of the race leader as Verstappen drifted out of range of Leclerc.

    Pérez was now in firm control and on lap 14 he stretched his lead to 1.3 seconds and from there sailed serenely on to take a superbly managed first Sprint win. 

    Verstappen managed to close up to within a second of Leclerc on the penultimate lap but the Ferrari driver was wily enough to harvest energy in the right places and was able to keep restrict the Dutchman to third at the flag. 

    Behind the top three, Russell took fourth place ahead of Sainz and Alonso and Hamilton and the final point on offer went to Lance Stroll in the second Aston Martin. 

    2023 FIA Formula 1 Azerbaijan Grand Prix – Sprint 
    1 Sergio Pérez Red Bull/Honda RBPT 17 – 
    2 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 17 4.463
    3 Max Verstappen Red Bull/Honda RBPT 17 5.065
    4 George Russell Mercedes 17 8.532
    5 Carlos Sainz Ferrari 17 10.388
    6 Fernando Alonso Aston Martin/Mercedes 17 11.613
    7 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 17 16.503
    8 Lance Stroll Aston Martin/Mercedes 17 18.417
    9 Alexander Albon Williams/Mercedes 17 21.757
    10 Oscar Piastri McLaren/Mercedes 17 22.851
    11 Kevin Magnussen Haas/Ferrari 17 27.990
    12 Zhou Guanyu Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 17 34.602
    13 Pierre Gasly Alpine/Renault 17 36.918
    14 Nyck de Vries AlphaTauri/Honda RBPT 17 41.626
    27 Nico Hülkenberg Haas/Ferrari 17 48.587
    16 Valtteri Bottas Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 17 49.917
    17 Lando Norris McLaren/Mercedes 17 51.104
    18 Esteban Ocon Alpine/Renault 17 1’00.621
         Yuki Tsunoda AlphaTauri/Honda RBPT 2 – Retirement
         Logan Sargeant Williams/Mercedes 0 – Withdrawn

  • Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc takes Baku pole ahead of Max Verstappen: F1

    Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc takes Baku pole ahead of Max Verstappen: F1

    Baku (Azerbaijan), 28 April 2023: Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc took a superb first pole position of 2023 in Qualifying for Sunday’s FIA Formula 1 Azerbaijan Grand Prix, beating Red Bull’s Max Verstappen by almost two-tenths of a second after nothing could separate the pair in the opening runs of Q3. 

    Verstappen’s opening time in the final segment of Qualifying was swift 1:40.455, and that was matched, to the thousandth by Leclerc. However, the Red Bull driver claimed the provisional pole by virtue of having set the time first. 

    But there was no denying the Ferrari driver in the final runs as a brave final lap gave him a 0.188s advantage over Verstappen, who said he had suffered from a warm-up issue on his last lap. Sergio Pérez, meanwhile, went quicker than Leclerc in the first sector on his final flyer, but the Mexican lost time later in the lap and was forced to settle for third. 

    Earlier, at the start of the one-hour session, Verstappen took an early Q1 lead with a lap of 1:41.887. That put him two-tenths of a second ahead of Leclerc. Pérez, meanwhile, was down in fifth place after a tricky opening run that left with an opening time of 1:43.373. 

    There was no time for the Mexican to immediately improve, however, as the red flags were displayed soon after when Nyck de Vries hit the wall in Turn 3. The Dutch driver attempted to carry too much speed into the 90˚ left-hander and went straight into the barriers at the corner exit. 

    When the session eventually resumed, running was brief, as the red flags came out again almost immediately. Pierre Gasly also crashed in Turn 3 with the Alpine driver hitting the wall with the rear right side of his car. He was able to keep going to the next escape road, but with the barriers requiring repair, the session had to be stopped. 

    When the action restarted, Pérez jumped to the top of the order with a 1:41.756. Verstappen bypassed that to take P1 with a lap of 1:41.398 before heading back to the garage. Leclerc slotted into third place ahead of Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton and McLaren’s Lando Norris moved to fifth. 

    Pérez went for another run, but with little pressure coming from behind, the Mexican abandoned the attempt in the final sector and headed back to the pit lane.

    Leclerc continued his attempt, however, and he took P1 with a time of 1:41.269, 0.129 ahead of Verstappen. Aston Martin’s Fernando Alonso moved to third place and Peerez progressed to fourth ahead of Mercedes’ George Russell.

    At the wrong end of the Q1 timesheet, Alfa Romeo’s Zhou Guanyu was ruled out in P16 along with the Haas cars of Nico Hülkenberg and Kevin Magnussen and the unfortunate Gasly and de Vries. 

    Aston Martin’s Fernando Alonso set the first solid time of Q2 with a 1:41.400, but Pérezbeat that time to take P1 with a lap of 1:41.131 before Verstappen slotted into P2, 0.062s behind his team-mate. Leclerc then took P1 with a lap of 1:41.037 and with just under four minutes remaining the Red Bulls headed back out on track for their final runs. 

    In the end, with no improvement coming in his final sector, Pérez chose to back out of his final run. Verstappen, though, went purple in all three sectors and took P1 with a lap of 1:40.822. 

    The shock elimination at the end of the session was Russell. The Mercedes driver was edged out of the final segment by team-mate Hamilton, by just 0.004s. Also out at the end of the middle segment were Alpine’s Esteban Ocon, Williams’ Alex Albon, Alfa Romeo’s Valtteri Bottas, and the second Williams of Logan Sargeant. 

    Pérez was the first on track at the start of Q3 and the Mexican opened his account with a lap of 1:40.563. Behind him, Verstappen was quicker, and the champion claimed the provisional pole with a lap of 1:40.445. There was nothing in terms of time to separate the Dutchman from Leclerc, however. The Ferrari driver crossed the line in an identical time, though Verstappen took P1 thanks to crossing the line first. 

    For the final runs, Leclerc went out ahead of the two Red Bull drivers, with Pérez ahead of Verstappen on track. 

    Leclerc crossed the line in 1:40.203 and though Pérez went quicker than the Ferrari driver through the opening sector, he lost time in the middle of the track. It was a similar story for Verstappen. The champion lost time in the second sector and when he crossed the line he was just under two-tenths off the Ferrari and on the front row. Pérez had to settle for a row two berth ahead of Sainz.

    Fifth place in Qualifying went to Hamilton, with Alonso sixth. Seventh place went to Norris, while Yuki Tsunoda took an excellent eighth place for AlphaTauri. Lance Stroll was ninth for Aston Martin and the final top-10 place went to Oscar Piastri in the second McLaren. 

    2023 FIA Formula 1 Azerbaijan Grand Prix – Qualifying 
    1 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 1:40.203 
    2 Max Verstappen Red Bull Racing 1:40.391 0.188
    3 Sergio Pérez Red Bull Racing 1:40.495 0.292
    4 Carlos Sainz Ferrari 1:41.016 0.813
    5 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 1:41.177 0.974
    6 Fernando Alonso Aston Martin 1:41.253 1.050
    7 Lando Norris 1:41.281 1.078
    8 Yuki Tsunoda AlphaTauri 1:41.581 1.378
    9 Lance Stroll Aston Martin 1:41.611 1.408
    10 Oscar Piastri McLaren 1:41.611 1.408
    11 George Russell Mercedes 1:41.654 1.451
    12 Esteban Ocon Alpine 1:41.798 1.595
    13 Alex Albon Williams 1:41.818 1.615
    14 Valtteri Bottas Alfa Romeo 1:42.259 2.056
    15 Logan Sargeant Williams 1:42.395 2.192
    16 Zhou Guanyu Alfa Romeo 1:42.642 2.439
    17 Nico Hulkenberg Haas 1:42.755 2.552
    18 Kevin Magnussen Haas 1:43.417 3.214
    19 Pierre Gasly Alpine 1:44.853 4.650
    20 Nyck de Vries AlphaTauri 1:55.282 15.079

  • Max Verstappen on pole as Red Bull lockout front row: F1 season opener

    Max Verstappen on pole as Red Bull lockout front row: F1 season opener

    Defending FIA Formula One world champion Max Verstappen took his first pole of 2023 with the quickest time in Qualifying for the season-opening Bahrain Grand Prix. Verstappen’s team-mate Sergio Pérez took second place to as Red Bull locked out the front row. Charles Leclerc took third place, though the Ferrari driver missed the final run of Q3 as he opted to save a set of tyres for the race.

    At the start of Q1, Leclerc was one of the first to kick off a flying lap but as the Ferrari driver began his lap a piece of his right wheel brow broke off and then, as he locked up into Turn 1, a second element flew off the underside of his car. 

    With debris on the racing line, the session was red-flagged with four minutes on the clock. 

    Following an eight-minute delay, the session resumed and the Red Bulls were quickly on track, along with the rest of the field. Verstappen climbed to the top of the timesheet with a lap of 1:31.295, but the Dutchman was almost immediately eclipsed by Aston Martin’s Fernando Alonso and then by Leclerc. It was the Ferrari star’s team-mate Carlos Sainz who staked the biggest claim to top spot in the opening runs with the Ferrari driver taking P1 with a lap of 1:30.993. 

    In the final runs of the opening segment Aston Martin’s Lance Stroll, Haas’ Nico Hulkenberg and William’s Alex Albon all jumped into the top 10 but despite their advances, Sainz took top spot from Russell and Leclerc. 

    There was no place in Q2, though, for Williams’ Logan Sargeant. The Williams rookie was eliminated in P16 ahead of Haas’ Kevin Magnussen, McLaren rookie Oscar Piastri, AlphaTauri’s Nyck de Vries and Alpine’s Pierre Gasly who had his final time deleted for track limits in Turn 15. 

     In the opening runs of Q2, Verstappen took control, with the Dutchman taking P1 with a lap of 1:30.503, 0243s ahead of Pérez who slotted into P2. Verstappen’s lap left him 0.398s clear of third-placed Hamilton, with his Mercedes team-mate George Russell in fourth place ahead of Alonso and the Ferrari duo of Sainz and Leclerc. 

    Red Bull opted to keep its drivers in the garage for the final runs of Q2 and when the final times arrived, it was Leclerc who took top spot with a time of 1:30.282. Verstappen’s opening time was good enough to hold on to second place, while Russell took third ahead of Hamilton, Sainz and Alonso. That left Pérez with seventh place and the Q3 order was rounded out by Hulkenberg, Alpine’s Esteban Ocon and Stroll. Out went McLaren’s Lando Norris in P11, Alfa Romeo’s Valtteri Bottas and Zhou Guanyu, AlphaTauri’s Yuki Tsunodo and 15th-placed Albion. 

    Verstappen again set the pace in the opening runs of the final segment. The Dutchman went purple in the first and final sectors to set a P1 time of 1:29.897, with Leclerc second on 1:30.000. Pérez slotted into third place, 0.234 off his team-mate, while Alonso took fourth place ahead of Russell. 

    Leclerc oddly opted to sit out the final runs, choosing instead to save a set of tyres for the race start, and that left the door open for Verstappen to stretch away from the field. The Dutchman obliged and thanks to a strong middle sector he found almost two tenths of a second to claim pole with a lap of 1:29.708. Pérez also found time to leapfrog Leclerc and take P2 to lock out the front row for tomorrow’s race. 

    2023 FIA Formula 1 Bahrain Grand Prix – Qualifying 
    1 Max Verstappen Red Bull Racing 1:29.708 
    2 Sergio Perez Red Bull Racing 1:29.846 0.138
    3 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 1:30.000 0.292
    4 Carlos Sainz Ferrari 1:30.154 0.446
    5 Fernando Alonso Aston Martin 1:30.336 0.628
    6 George Russell Mercedes 1:30.340 0.632
    7 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 1:30.384 0.676
    8 Lance Stroll Aston Martin 1:30.836 1.128
    9 Esteban Ocon Alpine 1:30.984 1.276
    10 Nico Hulkenberg Haas 1:31.055 1.347
    11 Lando Norris McLaren 1:31.381 1.673
    12 Valtteri Bottas Alfa Romeo 1:31.443 1.73
    13 Zhou Guanyu Alfa Romeo 1:31.473 1.765
    14 Yuki Tsunoda AlphaTauri 1:32.51a0 2.802
    15 Alexander Albon Williams – –
    16 Logan Sargeant Williams 1:31.652 1.944
    17 Kevin Magnussen Haas 1:31.892 2.184
    18 Oscar Piastri McLaren 1:32.101 2.393
    19 Nyck de Vries AlphaTauri 1:32.121 2.413
    20 Pierre Gasly Alpine 1:32.181 2.473

  • Sergio Perez quickest in FP1: F1 Season Opener

    Sergio Perez quickest in FP1: F1 Season Opener

    Bahrain, 3 March 2023: Red Bull Racing’s Sergio Pérez went quickest in first practice for the opening race of the 2023 FIA Formula One World Championship, the Bahrain Grand Prix, beating Aston Martin’s Fernando Alonso by almost half a second. Defending champion Max Verstappen finished in third place in the other Red Bull car. 

    Pérez staked his claim to P1 early in the session, posting a time of 1:35.069 before Alonso bypassed that as Verstappen joined the fray with a third-place time almost four tenths shy of his team-mate’s. 

    Alonso held sway for the first 10 minutes of running before Pérez once again moved ahead with a lap of 1:34.343. 

    But as the session headed for its half way point, the Mexican driver bolted on a set of soft tyres and posted a lap of 1:32.758 to put some distance between himself and his rivals. Verstappen followed soon after, but the defending champion was only to get to a time just over six tenths off the pace set by Pérez. 

    McLaren’s Lando Norris then moved to third place on soft tyres, though the Briton was 1.4s down on Pérez’s benchmark, and Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc made his way to fourth place. 

    Both were demoted, though, when Alonso moved to soft tyres and he set a time of 1:33.196 to take P3 0.438s off Pérez.

    With Leclerc fifth, sixth place went to Lance Stroll who was at the wheel of the Aston Martin AMR23 for the first time after suffering hand injuries in a pre-season bicycle accident. The Canadian worked his way into the session slowly but eventually made his way to 1:34.298 a tenth of a second ahead of Haas’ Kevin Magnussen.

    Zhou Guanyu was eighth quickest for Alfa Romeo with team-mate Valtteri Bottas just behind. 

    Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton rounded out the top 10 order with team-mate George Russell in P11 though either attempted a soft tyre run in the session 

    New-season rookie Oscar Piastri was 12th for McLaren ahead of AlphaTauri’s Yuki Tsunoda, while F1 returnee Nico Hülkenberg was 14th for Haas. Esteban Ocon took 15th place of Alpine ahead of full-season rookie Nyck de Vries of AlphaTauri and Pierre Gasly finished in P17 ahead of new Williams recruit Logan Sargeant, who beat team-mate Alex Albon. The timesheet was propped up by Ferrari’s Carlos Sainz. 

    2023 Bahrain Grand Prix – Free Practice 1 
    1 Sergio Pérez Red Bull/Honda RBPT 1:32.758 21 210.043
    2 Fernando Alonso Aston Martin/Mercedes 1:33.196 0.438 22 209.056
    3 Max Verstappen Red Bull/Honda RBPT 1:33.375 0.617 21 208.655
    4 Lando Norris McLaren/Mercedes 1:34.165 1.407 21 206.904
    5 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 1:34.257 1.499 17 206.702
    6 Lance Stroll Aston Martin/Mercedes 1:34.298 1.540 17 206.613
    7 Kevin Magnussen Haas/Ferrari 1:34.402 1.644 20 206.385
    8 Zhou Guanyu Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 1:34.575 1.817 18 206.007
    9 Valtteri Bottas Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 1:34.689 1.931 20 205.759
    10 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 1:34.917 2.159 13 205.265
    11 George Russell Mercedes 1:34.966 2.208 20 205.159
    12 Oscar Piastri McLaren/Mercedes 1:34.997 2.239 24 205.092
    13 Yuki Tsunoda AlphaTauri/Honda RBPT 1:35.015 2.257 20 205.053
    14 Nico Hülkenberg Haas/Ferrari 1:35.043 2.285 22 204.993
    15 Esteban Ocon Alpine/Renault 1:35.105 2.347 20 204.859
    16 Nyck de Vries AlphaTauri/Honda RBPT 1:35.402 2.644 25 204.222
    17 Pierre Gasly Alpine/Renault 1:35.455 2.697 22 204.108
    18 Logan Sargeant Williams/Mercedes 1:35.749 2.991 24 203.482
    19 Alexander Albon Williams/Mercedes 1:36.018 3.260 15 202.911
    20 Carlos Sainz Ferrari 1:36.072 3.314 21 202.797

  • Lewis Hamilton clinches sixth World F1 Championship; Bottas wins race

    Lewis Hamilton clinches sixth World F1 Championship; Bottas wins race

    By Abhishek Aggarwal

    Valtteri Bottas wins the US GP on Sunday. Photos by Abhishek Aggarwal

    Austin, 3 Nov 2019: Defending World Champion Lewis Hamilton came second behind teammate Valtteri Bottas on Sunday. But it was enough as the Briton was crowned FIA Formula 1 World Champion for 2019, his sixth World Championship, just one short of the all-time record of Michael Schumacher, at the United States Grand Prix, the 19th round of the 21-event FIA World Championship here at the Circuit of the Americas on Sunday.

    It was Bottas who won the race with a two-stopper, getting the ninth one-two for Mercedes AMG Petronas Motorsport team, who already clinched the Constructors’ World Championship. After a tense tactical battle, the top-three drivers fought till the last few laps and with his worn out tyres, Hamilton could not stop Bottas going past him, in a second attempt, and had to be content with the second place. As he just needed four points to clinch the sixth World title, the reigning world champ kept his cool and clinched the issue.

    The Circuit of the Americas, always offers a wide variety of strategies and the same was seen all the way down the field but Hamilton who dominated at the circuit, the last four years today, gave way to Bottas’ fifth win. But nevertheless, it was a creditable show having started from P5. Red Bull’s talented youngster Max Verstappen was locked in a tactical battle with Bottas for most of the race, and he was on a similar medium-hard-medium two-stop strategy but could not get past Hamilton at the finish and forced to finish third with yellow flags out towards the end. Bottas also sealed his second place in the championship.

    Hamilton would have loved to take the world title by winning the race as he expressed during a short chat after the win and also expressed `his love to return to India’, when this reporter spoke to him, but we well reserve that for another article.

    But it was team Scuderia Ferrari Mission Winnow, who were the big loser during the week-end as they ended up without a podium since Spain. However, the silver lining was provided by Charles Leclerc, who came fourth and also took the all-important point that clinched the team’s second place in the Constructors’ Championship. But all did not go according to Ferrari plan and the lead driver and multiple former world champion Sebastian Vettel retired on Lap 8 with a broken right rear suspension. Despite starting from P2, Vettel struggled during the race losing many places in the first two laps itself.

    The next stop, the penultimate in the 21-round calendar will be Brazil for the Formula 1 Heineken Grande Premio Do Brasil from November 15 to 17.

    FIA release adds: Hamilton started the race from fifth place, his lowest grid spot of the season, but after the start he quickly climbed into the top three as both Ferrari drivers had difficult starts. Sebastian Vettel was passed by Verstappen into Turn 1 and Leclerc was passed by Hamilton.

    Further back, Red Bull’s Alec Albon collided with Carlos Sainz and the Thai driver was forced to pit at the end of the lap. He took on medium tyres, rejoined in P20 and then began a fight back through the order.

    Vettel, meanwhile, was losing more ground. The Ferrari driver reported “crazy understeer” after the start and by the end of lap one he was down to P7 as both McLaren’s Lando Norris and Renault’s Daniel Ricciardo surged past.

    And by lap 8 the German’s race was run. As he ran over the kerbs in Turn 8, his rear right suspension collapsed. He managed to maintain control and pulled over at the side of the track and retired.

    By lap 12 Bottas had carved out a three-second gap to Verstappen, with Hamilton a further eight tenths of a second behind. Hamilton now began to close on the Red Bull driver and at the end of the following lap Verstappen elected to put for fresh tyres. He bolted on a set of hard tyres and rejoined in P4 ahead of Renault’s Daniel Ricciardo.

    Mercedes responded to Verstappen’s stop by pitting leader Bottas at the end of the following lap and he rejoined in P3, just ahead of the Dutchman. Both quickly powered past the much slower Leclerc and resumed their battle in P2 and P3 respectively.

    Further back, Albon made a second stop, for medium tyres, on lap 20 and dropped back to P15. He once again started a march up the order and by half distance he was back into the points, in ninth place.

    Hamilton, though, stayed on track and nursed his starting his medium tyres until he was at last passed by Bottas on lap 24. The Briton dived for the pits and after switching to a set of hard tyres he rejoined in third place behind Max.

    Ahead, Bottas now led Verstappen by six seconds, with Hamilton a further 11 seconds back in P3. Leclerc was now a lonely fourth, some 25 seconds off Hamilton and 14 seconds clear of Ricciardo. The McLarens of Norris and Sainz were now sixth and seventh and respectively and after dismissing Pierre Gasly and Sainz, Albon found himself in P7. His next target was Norris and within two laps he’d caught his fellow rookie. He then made quick work of reclaiming his starting position of sixth with a good move past Norris into Turn 1.

    With his tyres fading, Verstappen was now beginning to drop back from leader Bottas. He dived into pit lane on lap 35 to take on a new set of medium tyres. Mercedes again covered the move by pitting Bottas at the end of the next tour and as Hamilton once again assumed the race lead as Bottas emerged in P2.

    Bottas then began to close on Hamilton and by lap 50 the Finn found himself within DRS range of his team-mate and began to attack. His first effort was rebuffed, but with five laps remaining there was nothing Hamilton could do as Bottas made the most of DRS on the back straight to power past on the inside and reclaim the lead.

    As Hamilton’s pace dropped on fading tyres, Verstappen smelled blood. With two laps left the Dutchman got to within DRS range of the championship leader, but though he pushed to find a weakness, no opportunity presented itself and as Bottas crossed the line to take his fourth win of the year, and Hamilton took second to wrap up his sixth Formula 1 World Drivers’ title, the Red Bull driver was forced to settle for third place.

    Behind the top three, Charles Leclerc finished a distant fourth, some 52 seconds behind the race winner. Albon finished fifth after once again dropping back following a third pit stop for soft tyres late in the race. Sixth place went to Ricciardo with Norris seventh ahead of team-mate Sainz. Nico Hulkenberg took an extra two points for Renault with ninth place and the final point on offer went to Racing Point’s Sergio Pérez.

    2019 FIA Formula One United States Grand Prix – Race
    1 Valtteri Bottas Mercedes 56 1:33’55.653
    2 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 56 1:33’59.801 4.148
    3 Max Verstappen Red Bull/Honda 56 1:34’00.655 5.002
    4 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 56 1:34’47.892 52.239
    5 Alexander Albon Red Bull/Honda 56 1:35’13.691 1’18.038
    6 Daniel Ricciardo Renault 56 1:35’26.019 1’30.366
    7 Lando Norris McLaren/Renault 56 1:35’26.417 1’30.764
    8 Carlos Sainz Jr. McLaren/Renault 55 1:34’04.201 1 Lap
    9 Nico Hülkenberg Renault 55 1:34’08.115 1 Lap
    10 Sergio Pérez Racing Point/Mercedes 55 1:34’14.355 1 Lap
    11 Kimi Räikkönen Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 55 1:34’15.280 1 Lap
    12 Daniil Kvyat Toro Rosso/Honda 55 1:34’17.420 1 Lap
    13 Lance Stroll Racing Point/Mercedes 55 1:34’37.575 1 Lap
    14 A.Giovinazzi Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 55 1:34’49.443 1 Lap
    15 Romain Grosjean Haas/Ferrari 55 1:35’06.885 1 Lap
    16 Pierre Gasly Toro Rosso/Honda 54 1:33’11.079
    17 George Russell Williams/Mercedes 54 1:34’18.137 2 Laps
    18 Kevin Magnussen Haas/Ferrari 52 1:29’53.921 Brakes
    Robert Kubica Williams/Mercedes 31 54’56.089
    Sebastian Vettel Ferrari 7 12’03.130

     

     

  • Photo gallery from Abhishek Aggarwal in Austin

    Photo gallery from Abhishek Aggarwal in Austin

    By Abhishek Aggarwal

    Austin, 1 Nov 2019: The first two practice sessions on Friday at the US Grand Prix at the Ciruit of the Americas proved that the track is a bit tricky due to the bumpy nature.

    The first day of the weekend and the two practice sessions are done and the track (10 to 25 C) and air temperatures (5 to 15) were a bit colder than usual and as a result favoured some due to more downforce and thick air from the circuit. The first practice session saw Red Bull’s Max Verstrappen at the top whereas Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton topped the second practice session.

    Many felt that the track was a bit bumpy and the likes of Romain Grosjean (Turn 5 followed by a crash), Daniel Kvyat (Turn 17) and Sebastian Vettel (Turn 15) spun around while many of the drivers had lock-ups and showed break sparks followed by understeer.

    The first practice session also witnessed 2020 Test tires being used for the first time by both the drivers of Haas team and Lewis Hamilton, however the result wasn’t that favorable (+2 secs than the best lap) due to the drivers taking those runs a bit slow.

    At the team principals’ press conference, Mattia Binotto on being asked about this week’s race pace, said: “First, we are still lacking downforce compared to our competitors and that’s an area of weakness, something that we improved all through the season. I think that today we’ve got a good package but not good enough and we are very aware that having downforce is important, certainly on some circuits, like Budapest and Mexico. But if you look from Budapest to Mexico we did a great step forward in the right direction. So we will need to add further downforce, we will need to add further downforce for next season and that is important for the race pace, tyre degradation and so on. Adding downforce will mean adding drag and we will be slower then on the straight. But still today we believe we’ve got a good engine and that’s in our favour and we hope to keep the same advantage in the future.”
    Tomorrow’s qualifying will look interesting with both Max Verstappen and  Lewis Hamilton pushing hard and getting competition from the two Prancing Horses’ drivers.

    Here are some photos for INDIAinF1 from Austin on Friday:

  • Max Verstappen outpaces Charles Leclerc in FP2: Russian GP

    Sochi, 27 Sept 2019: Max Verstappen went quickest in the second practice session for the Russian Grand Prix, beating Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc by more than three tenths of a second with the quickest Mercedes driver, Valtteri Bottas, third and six tenths of a second off the pace.

    Having only achieved a best result of fifth place at the Sochi Autodrom since the race’s calendar debut in 2014, the Black Sea circuit was not expected to be a venue suited to Red Bull, but Verstappen gave lie to that assessment by posting a time of 1:33.162 during his FP2 qualifying run.

    The lap put him 0.335s ahead of Leclerc who had claimed top spot earlier as the first of the expected front runners to bolt on a set of new soft tyres and go for a performance run.

    Verstappen’s soft-tyre best followed an opening phase run on medium tyres during which the Dutchman lagged two tenths of a second off the pace set by Leclerc.

    However, Verstappen’s good low fuel pace give Red Bull hope of scoring a good result on Sunday despite an impending five-place grid drop as both it’s drivers, along with Honda-powered Toro Rosso stablemates Pierre Gasly and Daniil Kvyat are facing PU-related grid penalties on Sunday.

    Behind Leclerc, Bottas took third place for Mercedes, though the Finn, who won here in 2017, was only able to get to 0.646s off Verstappen’s pace. Bottas set his best lap of the session shortly after Hamilton and he managed to eclipse his championship-leading team-mate by 0.152s.

    Singapore Grand Prix-winner Sebastian Vettel failed to make a significant improvement during his qualifying simulation and having gained just a tenth of a second over his medium-tyre best he ended the session in fifth place, a full second off Verstappen.

    Penalty-hit Toro Rosso driver Pierre Gasly was an impressive sixth in the session finishing marginally ahead of Racing Point’s Sergio Pérez, with Renault’s Nico Hulkenberg eighth.

    The German finished the session almost four tenths of a second ahead of 14th-placed team-mate Daniel Ricciardo, and perhaps more importantly two tenths clear of 11thLando Norris, the quickest driver from Renault’s Constructors’ standings rivals McLaren.

    Ninth place in the session went to Lance Stroll in the second Racing Point, and the final top-10 spot was taken by Alex Albon in the second Red Bull. The Thai driver spent much of the session in his team’s garage after taking too much kerb early on and damaging the floor of his car.

    2019 FIA Formula One Russian Grand Prix – Free Practice 2
    1 Max Verstappen Red Bull Racing 29 1:33.162
    2 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 33 1:33.497 0.335
    3 Valtteri Bottas Mercedes 22 1:33.808 0.646
    4 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 32 1:33.960 0.798
    5 Sebastian Vettel Ferrari 32 1:34.201 1.039
    6 Pierre Gasly Toro Rosso 26 1:34.971 1.809
    7 Sergio Perez Racing Point 31 1:34.998 1.836
    8 Nico Hulkenberg Renault 33 1:35.026 1.864
    9 Lance Stroll Racing Point 31 1:35.176 2.014
    10 Alex Albon Red Bull Racing 18 1:35.216 2.054
    11 Lando Norris McLaren 33 1:35.223 2.061
    12 Daniil Kvyat Toro Rosso 38 1:35.337 2.175
    13 Kevin Magnussen Haas 26 1:35.351 2.189
    14 Daniel Ricciardo Renault 28 1:35.370 2.208
    15 Kimi Raikkonen Alfa Romeo 34 1:35.374 2.212
    16 Romain Grosjean Haas 31 1:35.593 2.431
    17 Carlos Sainz McLaren 29 1:35.635 2.473
    18 Antonio Giovinazzi Alfa Romeo 29 1:36.004 2.842
    19 George Russell Williams 38 1:36.785 3.623
    20 Robert Kubica Williams 36 1:37.838 4.676.