Tag: Max Verstappen

  • Max Verstappen quickest in First Practice: Azerbaijan GP

    Max Verstappen quickest in First Practice: Azerbaijan GP

    Baku, 4 June 2021: Formula 1 Driver’s championship leader Max Verstappen set the fastest lap of the first practice session for this weekend’s Azerbaijan Grand Prix beating Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc and Carlos Sainz at the Baku Street Circuit.

    The session on the streets beside the shores of the Caspian Sea was held in windy conditions and on a temporary track severely lacking in grip early on.

    There was a spin for AlphaTauri’s Yuki Tsunoda with the Japanese driver running out of road at Turn 4 before getting stuck in the run-off area as the half way mark in the session arrived.

    Aston Martin’s Sebastian Vettel also went long, this time in Turn 1, and the German was forced to used the escape road there. Defending F1 champion Lewis Hamilton, team-mate Valtteri Bottas and AlphaTauri’s Pierre Gasly also had off-track moments during the session.

    As the grip began to improve times fell and as the session moved into the final half hour, McLaren’s Daniel Ricciardo took top spot with a lap of 1:43.732 set on this weekend’s C5 soft compound tyre.

    The Australian’s team-mate Lando Norris might have gone quicker but the Briton spun at the final corner, though he managed to stay out of the barriers.

    The Ferrari drivers then claimed 1-2 spots on the timesheet with Leclerc leading the way with a lap of 1:43.227 ahead of Sainz’s 1:43.521s.

    But in the final 10 minutes Verstappen used soft tyres to jump to the top of the order with a lap of 1:43.184, 0.043s ahead of Leclerc and three tenths quicker than Sainz.

    Verstappen’s team-mate Sergio Pérez took fourth place with a lap of 1:43.630, a tenth quicker than Ricciardo, while Pierre Gasly was sixth, a couple of hundredths of a second further back. Hamilton finished the session in seventh place ahead of Norris, Alpine’s Fernando Alonso and Bottas.

    2021 FIA Formula 1 Azerbaijan Grand Prix – Free Practice 1
    1 Max Verstappen Red Bull/Honda 1:43.184 19 209.439
    2 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 1:43.227 0.043 20 209.352
    3 Carlos Sainz Ferrari 1:43.521 0.337 20 208.757
    4 Sergio Pérez Red Bull/Honda 1:43.630 0.446 17 208.538
    5 Daniel Ricciardo McLaren/Mercedes 1:43.732 0.548 25 208.333
    6 Pierre Gasly AlphaTauri/Honda 1:43.757 0.573 23 208.282
    7 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 1:43.893 0.709 20 208.010
    8 Lando Norris McLaren/Mercedes 1:43.996 0.812 20 207.804
    9 Fernando Alonso Alpine/Renault 1:44.777 1.593 25 206.255
    10 Valtteri Bottas Mercedes 1:44.891 1.707 20 206.031
    11 Kimi Räikkönen Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 1:44.943 1.759 18 205.928
    12 Antonio Giovinazzi Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 1:45.092 1.908 20 205.636
    13 Lance Stroll Aston Martin/Mercedes 1:45.234 2.050 23 205.359
    14 Yuki Tsunoda AlphaTauri/Honda 1:45.384 2.200 25 205.067
    15 Sebastian Vettel Aston Martin/Mercedes 1:45.415 2.231 24 205.006
    16 Esteban Ocon Alpine/Renault 1:45.446 2.262 23 204.946
    17 George Russell Williams/Mercedes 1:45.452 2.268 24 204.934
    18 Nicholas Latifi Williams/Mercedes 1:45.774 2.590 22 204.311
    19 Mick Schumacher Haas/Ferrari 1:46.899 3.715 20 202.160
    20 Nikita Mazepin Haas/Ferrari 1:46.945 3.761 18 202.073

  • Verstappen wins, takes title lead for the first time; Hami 7th

    Verstappen wins, takes title lead for the first time; Hami 7th

    Monaco, 23 May 2021: Max Verstappen took the lead of the 2021 F1 Driver’s Championship for the first time in his career with a perfectly judged first Monaco Grand Prix victory ahead of Ferrari’s Carlos Sainz and McLaren’s Lando Norris after pole sitter Charles Leclerc failed to make the start due to a driveshaft issue resulting from damage sustained a crash in qualifying. Lewis Hamilton finished seventh in the Monaco Grand Prix, the fifth round of the F1 World Championship here Sunday, thus losing his Championship lead.

    On the Monegasque driver’s lap to grid he reported an issue and quickly returned to the pit lane. However, it swiftly became apparent that the home driver would not be taking part in the race and that Verstappen would start from P2, with an unobstructed view down to the first corner. 

    And when the lights went out to signal the start, the Dutchman got away well, and despite a small amount of wheelspin he was able to take the lead ahead of third-place starter Valtteri Bottas and as they powered out of Ste Devote, Max led from Bottas with Ferrari’s Carlos Sainz third ahead of McLaren’s Lando Norris and AlphaTauri’s Pierre Gasly. 

    Over the course of the open 10 laps, Verstappen was able to gradually build a slight gap to Bottas and then, as the Finn began to take too much life out of his tyres as he tried to stay with the race leader, the Dutchman was able to pull further away even further and by lap 27 he was almost five seconds clear of the Mercedes driver who was visibly struggling on his starting softs. 

    And as the pit stop window opened for those starting on the red walled tyres, Bottas’ race unravelled. The Finn pitted at the end of lap 30 but when he stopped on his marks his pit crew could not remove the front right wheel and with the wheel nut resolutely stuck he was forced to retire from the race. 

    Verstappen then made his first and only stop. And after taking on hard tyres in two seconds dead, the Dutchman rejoined in second place just behind team-mate Sergio Pérez who had jumped up the order as the field pitted around him. 

    One of those to pit ahead of the Mexican was Sebastian Vettel and a good stop for the Aston Martin driver saw him jump both Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton and AlphaTauri’s Gasly, who had been holding up the world champion.

    Aston Martin’s exploitation of Gasly’s pace relative to Hamilton was the cue for Red Bull to then pit Pérez and the Red Bull driver was able to make a 2.8s stop and still rejoin ahead of Vettel, in fourth place. 

    At the front and on fresh hard tyres, for Verstappen the race now became one of efficient management. And over the second half of the race the Dutch driver was flawless as he carefully managed tyre life while at the same time edging further and further away from Sainz. And after 78s laps the Red Bull driver took his first Monaco win, almost nine seconds ahead of the Ferrari driver. Norris took third place 11 seconds further back after spending the final third of the race fending off a charge from Pérez who thrived on the hard tyres.. 

    Pierre Gasly took a deserved sixth place for AlphaTauri ahead of Lewis Hamilton. Lance Stroll was eighth for Aston Martin ahead of Alpine’s Esteban Ocon and the final point on offer went to Alfa Romeo’s Antonio Giovinazzi. 

    The victory in Monaco, allied to Hamilton’s P7, means Verstappen now has a four-point lead over the defending champion in the Drivers’ standings with 105 points to 101. The Team also takes the lead in the Constructors’ Championship with 149 points to Mercedes’ 150 points. 

    2021 FIA Formula 1 Monaco Grand Prix – Race
    1 Max Verstappen Red Bull/Honda 78 1:38’56.820
    2 Carlos Sainz Ferrari 78 1:39’05.788 8.968
    3 Lando Norris McLaren/Mercedes 78 1:39’16.247 19.427
    4 Sergio Pérez Red Bull/Honda 78 1:39’17.310 20.490
    5 Sebastian Vettel Aston Martin/Mercedes 78 1:39’49.411 52.591
    6 Pierre Gasly AlphaTauri/Honda 78 1:39’50.716 53.896
    7 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 78 1:40’05.051 1’08.231
    8 Lance Stroll Aston Martin/Mercedes 77 1 Lap
    9 Esteban Ocon Alpine/Renault 77 1 Lap
    10 Antonio Giovinazzi Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 77 1 Lap
    11 Kimi Räikkönen Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 77 1 Lap
    12 Daniel Ricciardo McLaren/Mercedes 77 1 Lap
    13 Fernando Alonso Alpine/Renault 77 1 Lap
    14 George Russell Williams/Mercedes 77 1 Lap
    15 Nicholas Latifi Williams/Mercedes 77 1 Lap
    16 Yuki Tsunoda AlphaTauri/Honda 77 1 Lap
    17 Nikita Mazepin Haas/Ferrari 75 3 Laps
    18 Mick Schumacher Haas/Ferrari 75 3 Laps
    Valtteri Bottas Mercedes 29 Wheel
    Charles Leclerc Ferrari 0 Not started

  • The race was very tough, but yes, it was a great race: Hamilton

    The race was very tough, but yes, it was a great race: Hamilton

    Portimao, 2 May 2021: The following drivers attended the FIA post-race Press Conference on Sunday: 1 – Lewis HAMILTON (Mercedes); 2 – Max VERSTAPPEN (Red Bull Racing); 3 – Valtteri BOTTAS (Mercedes)

    TRACK INTERVIEWS (Conducted by Paul Di Resta) 

    Q: Max, started third, finished second, you had a great jump on Lewis at the restart, you got in front but then you made a small mistake in Turn 14. How was your race.

    Max VERSTAPPEN: Yeah, it was pretty decent. I had a good re-start and then I tried to put the pressure on Valtteri. At the end it think we just lacked a little bit of pace overall, so Lewis got by again and after the pit stop, the warm-up is super hard on these tyres, but I think once we settled in second you could clearly see that around here we were lacking a bit of pace compared to them. But still, second, fastest lap in the last lap…

    Q: Ah well, I think you have been deleted for track limits at Turn 14, right at the end. The good thing is it didn’t go to Lewis, it went to Valtteri who took it the lap before you?

    MV: That’s a bit odd because they were not checking track limits in 14, but whatever?

    Q: Well, onto the next race, what’s your feeling? Did you think this was a weekend that would favour Mercedes and then on to Spain where you can make a fight back?

    MV: Yeah, I think in general this was a bit of an odd weekend in terms of grip. We were not on top of it here but we’ll see again what we can do in Barcelona.

    Q: Lewis, I think you’ve got to be pretty pumped for that result – absolutely textbook. But you managed to get the position back and onto the next one?

    Lewis HAMILTON: Yeah, I’m telling you that was such a tough race, physically and mentally. Just keeping everything together… it was very windy out there, obviously, so it was very easy to put a foot wrong. I just didn’t get quite as good a start as Valtteri and then I lost out on the re-start, which was not good. I was not happy about that, naturally. I really had to try and position myself as best I could. I can’t remember, but I think Max made a mistake at some point in the lap, which was like perfect, and I knew that that was going to be the lap I would be as close as I could to him in the last sector. With Valtteri, I had to make the move early on, before the tyres were destroyed and I managed to just get him in Turn 1, just right on the limit. But a great race. 

    Q: I know you relish the challenge of people and opposition pushing you all the way. What does the next four days look like for you heading to Spain because it’s a very different year with Red Bull this close?

    LH: Yeah, I think the next few days… We head back home for just a couple of days and it’s about recovery and a lot of physio. Angela will be with me. Recovery and get yourself back, turned around as quickly as possible for the next one. A lot of kind of debriefs, a lot to download today, there are improvements we can make. Today wasn’t all perfect so we look at those areas and we try to turn over the stones.

    Q: Valtteri, P3. I know you would have wanted more. You got the fastest lap as Max’s lap got deleted. How did your race go?

    Valtteri BOTTAS: It was a tricky day today. I don’t really know what happened in the first stint. I just didn’t have the pace, for unknown reasons. So we will need to have a look at that. But afterwards I think the second stint was pretty good but we had a bit of an issue with some sensor or something, so I couldn’t get Max.

    Q: Like you say, why did the car become better when it was on half tanks, you were able to push on and even had Toto Wolff on the radio giving you that extra push. It seemed like when the fuel burned off you had the fastest race car?

    VB: I don’t know really. Overall, we have had a strong package today and I don’t know why in the first stint it didn’t work. We need to look at that but otherwise good points.

    PRESS CONFERENCE

    Q: Lewis, many congratulations, what a race. First of all, how good does this feel?

    LH: I’ve been racing a long, long time, and we’ve had a lot of success over the years and I’m really grateful that each one feels new and different and it was a completely different journey today and this weekend to get the result we just got. It’s a much different feeling of course when you are battling so closely with two great drivers. So yeah, it feels fantastic today. I’m very grateful for and really proud of the team. We had a great pit stop and a strong strategy and everyone had just kept their head down to try and extract more and more from this car that we have. So a big thank you to everyone.

    Q: You’re not one for statistics, you’ve told us that many times, but this was your 150th points finish for Mercedes.

    LH: Nice. It really is incredible, right. It’s down to a lot of great, great people working so hard over all these years, so I hope they feel this success.

    Q: Couple of key moments to ask you about. The re-start: you said a moment ago you weren’t happy with yours, what happened?

    LH: (laughs) I lost position, that’s what happened! Well, it was interesting because I was focusing on Valtteri naturally and literally just for a split second I looked in my mirrors to see where Max was and in that split second that’s when Valtteri went.

    VB: (laughs) I could see looking in the mirrors!

    LH: Ha! So that wasn’t great and then I was Valtteri’s tow and you (Max) were about to pull out and I pulled out and gave you Valtteri’s tow and I was like, ‘you idiot’, to myself you know. So then after that being behind the two… what a great track. It really enabled us to fight closely in that first stint and I think that’s what the fans want and that’s what I want from a racing point of view. This track is really great because you can have certain different lines in certain corners, a bit like Austin, so it was really awesome.

    Q: And eight points the gap between yourself and Max at the top of the table. It’s tight.

    LH: It’s very tight. I saw that he had gone in for the fastest lap and got it but obviously Valtteri ended up with it at the end. But as you can see I think it is a great fight between Mercedes and Red Bull and I’m sure also down the field and we will be pushing each other right to the last race. We’re going to be sick of each other at the end I would imagine or sick of racing, because there are so many races.

    Q: Max, well done. Are you happy with second today, given the relative pace of the cars – or do you feel this was a missed opportunity?

    MV: I’m pleased. I tried everything I could really. I had a good restart because the actual start, I just missed-out a bit. We didn’t really have particularly a great launch so yeah, I couldn’t really do anything there but then yeah, it was a good fight into Turn One with Lewis. Managed to keep it on the kerb as well, so didn’t have to give the position back like in Bahrain. From there it was just super-close between the three of us. I tried to attack Valtteri but all the time I could not get close enough in those last two corners and then the run onto the straight. By pushing I had a little wobble but I didn’t really lose-out a lot from that. And then Lewis was already super-close behind and he got me into Turn One and then, of course, Lewis was putting the pressure on Valtteri and I just could not stay close to Lewis for that, to also pick up the DRS. But yeah, it was close. I just tried to put the pressure on and, of course, Lewis cleared Valtteri and then I was, I don’t know for how many laps, in Valtteri’s DRS. It was incredible – but it was good. It felt a bit more like… not flat-out racing but at least a bit more than continuously tyre saving. So, yeah, it was nice.

    Q: As you say, you spent a lot of time on a Mercedes gearbox today. Tell us about the relative pace of your car and there car. Where was the Mercedes better, where were you better?

    MV: To be honest, it depends a bit and it’s difficult to tell when you are so close because you anyway lose a lot of downforce. For me, I think the whole weekend we haven’t been really satisfied with the grip in general, the car. Last year this was a very difficult weekend for us and it seemed like it’s still not great for us. Let’s say it like that. It’s a bit difficult to judge, to be honest. I prefer to wait again to Barcelona and see how the progression from the beginning of the season to that track will be. This is a bit of an odd weekend in terms of grip – but clearly we still have to improve and do better because we should be fastest on every single track and in every single condition – because the track is the same for everyone. Still, second place, pretty happy with that. Good fights on the track, also with Valtteri afterwards, after the pit stop. It was quite close in Turn 4, because I washed out a bit but yeah, it was quite a decent race.

    Q: Can we just get your thoughts on that gap to Lewis in the Championship? Just eight points.

    MV: Yeah it’s close. I wish it was closer! It’s a long season and we can’t afford to have any retirement or silly mistakes so we just have to keep on doing what we’re doing.

    Q: Valtteri, well done, podium number 58 today. How would you sum-up today’s race?

    VB: Disappointing. When you start from the pole position, you have only one target for the race and that is to win the race. It didn’t happen today so I’m disappointed – but I don’t really know why in the first stint I didn’t really have the pace. I mean, I felt everything in terms of the race start, the restart, everything was good from my side but I could see quite early on in the race that, with the Mediums, I just didn’t have pace like Lewis and Max had. I have no idea way. I don’t have the explanation. It was better on the Hard tyre and at some point I was catching Max and then I had an issue with one sensor that, I started to lose power and then I lost like five seconds to Max and that was it.

    Q: Did the car feel immediately better on the Hard tyre?

    VB: Not on the first lap. It was really bad but we know the warm-up today with the Hard tyre was going to be tricky. Afterwards, once I got heat in the tyres, it was actually not bad and better than with the Medium. Yeah, lots of things to look at, to analyse and learn from in the next two days before starting to focus for the next race.

    Q: There was some encouragement over the radio mid-race from Toto Wolff. Is it slightly unusual for him to do that?

    VB: No, it’s not. There’s been many times that he’s, you know, opened the radio to say something. It’s all supportive and it shows there’s the support and the passion behind – and it never hurts. Obviously I’m always giving it every single bit I have on track. But yeah, it’s good.

    VIDEO CONFERENCE

    Q: (Alex Kalinauckas – Autosport) Lewis, first of all, congratulations on the win. I wonder if you can please talk us through the phase of the race just after the restart when you were behind Max and Valtteri. Were you just hanging back to see what was going to happen with the tyres and how they were going to progress ahead of you as well, or were you pushing flat-out throughout, as Max suggested earlier. Thank you.

    LH: Thank you. No, I think Max was super-fast on that restart and there was a moment I think we were all very, very close. I fell back, maybe a second or something like that and I needed to get closer but for a moment there was far too big a gap. I wasn’t in the DRS, and I just had to gather my thoughts and made a couple of tweaks in terms of how I was driving and then start on the attack again. Once I did, obviously I got closer and Max, I think, had a small mistake which then put me in a nice position out of Turn 5 and then I just needed to keep that gap through the rest of the lap and that was where I was able to get past him. Then, after that, was just focussing on bridging the gap between myself and Valtteri, who was very quick out of the last corner.  

    Q: (Andrew Benson – BBC Sport) Lewis, two part question for you: one is we’ve seen this a number of times with you now where you are able to follow really closely behind other drivers for a period of laps and still keep the tyres in decent condition and then pull off an overtake. I’d like to ask you how you do that? And secondly, just how energised are you by this close fight you’re having with Max for the championship, and that one’s for Max as well?

    LH: Well firstly, yes, massively excited and driven – I think we all are, as a team – to be in the fight with Red Bull. This weekend, I think, I feel like maybe Red Bull lost a little bit of performance this weekend, because I don’t think we improved but from the last race to here I think they took a sidestep closer to us this weekend, for whatever reasons. But this is great, this is what we all live for, we live and breathe for, to get up and fight and try and pull out the smallest bits of performance to be able to fight a great competitor. With the tyres, it’s really… I guess it’s just knowledge of the tyres, really and knowing which ones you can lean on and where you can… I can’t really say too much, to be honest. I think everyone was pushing and they put on their tyres. I think I just managed to get the balance pretty sweet, better for the race than it was for qualifying.

    Q: Is it different with the new constructions this year?

    LH: It’s a little bit different. The tyre is slightly different and so there’s a slightly different approach in terms of how you treat the tyres but it’s not a massive different, people wouldn’t notice otherwise normally, but here, this track, there’s not a huge amount of grip and you’ve got the hardest compounds but being that they are the hardest compounds means that they can do the race distance and there’s not a huge amount of wear, so you can push every single lap and I think that’s great, because there are races we’ve been in in the past where we have to do a lot of lift and coasts, slow down to make the tyre go the distance because the pit lane is so long. So I think it was the right tyre for this weekend.

    MV: Yeah, I think it’s what everyone wants to see but of course what I want as well, because the last few years we have not been close enough so it’s a good start to the season, that’s for sure and I hope it can be like this for the rest of the season because it keeps everyone excited.

    Q: (Phil Duncan – PA) Lewis and Max, Nico Rosberg called Lewis’s drive phenomenal today and said that now Max is starting to get a better understanding of how good Lewis is, so I just guess following on from that, Lewis, how good was your performance today? Was it a big statement of intent for the championship in terms of you passed Max and Valtteri on track and I guess to Max, are you now beginning to understand how good Lewis is given that you’re racing him so closely every weekend?

    LH: I think none of us here are under any illusion of just how hard it is out there for us, how close the battle is and how… we’re all giving absolutely everything in our day-to-day lives in order to be best prepared and deliver at the weekends. The pressure is immense between us all and I think there’s a huge amount of respect between the three of us and obviously with the other drivers here. Of course, it’s always great when you have a race like today where you’re able to follow and overtake and capitalise on the small margins and gaps that have but at the same time, look at the restart. Max had been pulling absolutely everything out of the Red Bull and given us a great run for our money so I think it’s going to be like this for the rest of the season, which I think can be incredibly exciting.

    MV: Yeah, I don’t need Nico to make me realise how good Lewis is. I know he’s very good, otherwise you don’t win so many championships.

    Q: (Edd Straw – The Race) Max and Lewis: you’ve had a wheel-to-wheel fight in all three of the races this year, which is great because it’s quite rare in Formula 1 so 100% of those battles. How have you seen those battles in particular, how much are you enjoying them? They seem forceful but fair from both of you so far. Do you think that’s sustainable, especially as we could have, at this rate, another twenty of those battles this year?

    MV: Yeah, it’s been really cool, especially when you race a driver, when you know that you can go to the absolute limit, I guess you can trust each other to just race super-hard. I think that’s always really nice because you can see the in the three races we’ve had we haven’t really… well, we gave each… how you say? It’s been really close to each other but predictable. Lewis has never had something like ‘oh, we’re going to crash’ or something. I always have full trust in Lewis that we all give each other enough space.

    LH: Yeah, I just second that. I think it is naturally down to respect and I think both very, very hard but fair and I think that’s what makes great racing and great racing drivers and I think we will continue to keep it clean and keep it on the edge but I don’t think either of us has a plan to get any closer than we have been.

    Q: (Alex Kalinauckas – Autosport) Another question to Lewis: how do you feel about Max and Valtteri being able to stop at the end of the race to chase the fastest lap point? Before they did that, you were ahead of them. I think Perez may have ended up with the fastest lap anyway but you had much more to lose if you’d come in and the pit stop had gone wrong so how did that go?

    LH: Yeah, I think… you came in first, right?

    VB: Max came first, I think. Did you? I don’t know.

    MV: No, I think you pitted before me, one lap…

    LH: Otherwise you wouldn’t have pitted. Yeah, I think, for me, I’ve come from third place so for me it was a solid job and there are days when it’s necessary to take the extra risk to take the extra lap but today wasn’t one of those. I think it was just about making sure we finished strong and bag the points, you know, because every point does count but I’d heard that Valtteri had stopped and then I heard that Max had stopped so it was going to be close between the two. At the time, Max had obviously got the point, which takes a little bit off the great result that we had but obviously it didn’t turn out in the end.

    Ends

  • Max Verstappen wins inciedent-packed race; Hamilton recovers

    Max Verstappen wins inciedent-packed race; Hamilton recovers

    Imola, 18 April 2021: Red Bull Racing’s Max Verstappen navigated a treacherous wet start, safety cars and red flags to take his first victory of 2021 as Lewis Hamilton recovered from a mid-race spin to fight back to second place at the end of an incident-packed Emilia Romagna Grand Prix. 

    The Imola circuit was hit by heavy downpours in the hour leading up to the race start and on the laps to grid the track proved difficult as Alpine’s Fernando Alonso when he spun off and damaged his front wing. The Spaniard made it back to the pit lane for repairs and took the start but his troubles were a sign of just how difficult the conditions would prove to be in the early stages of he race.

    However, despite the treacherous conditions Verstappen made an excellent start from P3 on the grid and passed team-mate Sergio Pérezx and and pole-sitter Lewis Hamilton in the first chicane to taske the lead. In a bruising overtaking move, Hamilton was forced wide and the champion recovered recovered Pérez also tried to get past. The Mexican was forced to back off, however, and losing pace he lost a place to Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc. 

    Moments later as the field swept up the hill from Tosa, Williams’ Nicholas Latifi slid off track at Piratella. He kept his car going but as he rejoined the track he collided with Haas’ Nikita Mazepin and was bounced into the wall. The safety car was swiftly deployed.

    When racing resumed at the end of lap six Verstappen controlled the re-start well to keep Hamilton at bay, while Leclerc held fourth ahead of Pérez. However, under the safety car the Mexican had a spin and afterwards was deemed to have illegally overtaken cars to return to fourth place behind Leclerc. He would later be handed a 10-second time penalty by the stewards for the transgression.

    At the front, Verstappen was regularly putting in fastest laps and by lap 16 he had built a five-second gap to Hamilton. Leclerc was now 15 seconds behind the lead Mercedes, with Pérez a further eight seconds back. 

    As the one-third distance point arrived, Aston Martin’s Sebastian Vettel judged the conditions to be good enough for slick tyres and he pitted for medium compound Pirellis. Soon the German was setting personal best times and Red Bull responded by pitting Verstappen for mediums at the end of lap 27.

    Mercedes then pitted the world champion at the end of the following lap. The stop was slow at 4.0 seconds, however, and as he made his way to the pit exit Max powered past in the lead once again. 

    Checo made his pit stop at the end of the next tour. The Mexican not only served his 10s time penalty but also changed his steering wheel and he rejoined in fifth place, behind Leclerc and Norris. 

    After a brief period of incident-free racing, drama erupted when Hamilton lost control and went off track at Tosa as he tried to navigate his way past back markers. He slid across the gravel and came to a halt just before the barriers. However, as he tried to get going again he hit the wall and damaged the front wing. The Mercedes driver rejoined eventually but it looked like his race was run. However, within moments he was granted a reprieve soon when Williams’ George Russell and Mercedes’ Valtteri Bottas were involved in a heavy accident. 

    Russell went to overtake the Finn but as Bottas defended, the Williams driver put a wheel on the grass on the right side. He slammed into the side of the Mercedes and both cars hit the barriers hard. The safety car was deployed but with debris strewn across the track at Tamburello the red flags were soon shown. 

    The race was suspended for some time as the track was cleared but at 1625 local time the cars flowed out of pit lane to prepare for a rolling start. The track was still tricky, however, and Verstappen was almost caught out by the conditions. 

    Trying to warm his tyres, the race leader lost control in the final Rivazza corner. He managed to regain control, however, and narrowly avoided a costly spin just as the safety car was about to leave the track. Within seconds racing resumed and Verstappen showed great composure to fend off a challenge from Leclerc to hold the lead.

    Behind them, Lando Norris, who had moved to soft tyres during the suspension, managed to get past Leclerc to steal P2, with Pérez now in fourth place ahead of Sainz. Pérez then spun at the exit of Turn 4 and dropped back to P14. The Red Bull driver managed to claw back two places by the end of the race but it was a frustrating afternoon for the Mexican.

    At the front, however, his team-mate was in total control. On Medium tyres Verstappen stretched away from Norris and then set about managing his run to the flag. 

    Hamilton, who took the rolling start in P9, put in a determined fight back in the final third of the race, but despite dragging himself back to P2 in the closing stages, he could make no impact on the yawning gap to Max and after 63 incident-packed laps, the Red Bull driver crossed the line 22 seconds ahead of the Briton to claim his first win of the year. 

    Norris’ gamble on soft tyres for the re-start paid off too. Although he was unable to jeep Hamilton at bay in the final laps, the McLaren driver nursed his fading tyres to the flag in third place to take his second career podium finish. 

    Behind him Leclerc finished fourth with Ferrari team-mate Carlos Sainz in fifth. Sixth place went to Daniel Ricciardo in the second McLaren, while Lance Stroll finished in seventh place for Aston Martin ahead of AlphaTauri’s Pierre Gasly, Alfa Romeo’s Kimi Räikkönen and Alpine’s Esteban Ocon. 

    Hamilton’s determined comeback netted the Briton fastest lap in the closing stages and the extra point for that means that he leaves Imola with a single-point lead over Verstappen in the Drivers’ Championship standings.

    2021 FIA Formula 1 Emilia Romagna Grand Prix – Race
    1 Max Verstappen Red Bull/Honda 63 2:02’34.598
    2 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 63 2:02’56.598 22.000
    3 Lando Norris McLaren/Mercedes 63 2:02’58.300 23.702
    4 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 63 2:03’00.177 25.579
    5 Carlos Sainz Ferrari 63 2:03’01.634 27.036
    6 Daniel Ricciardo McLaren/Mercedes 63 2:03’25.818 51.220
    7 Lance Stroll Aston Martin/Mercedes 63 2:03’26.507 51.909
    8 Pierre Gasly AlphaTauri/Honda 63 2:03’27.416 52.818
    9 Kimi Räikkönen Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 63 2:03’39.371 1’04.773
    10 Esteban Ocon Alpine/Renault 63 2:03’40.302 1’05.704
    11 Fernando Alonso Alpine/Renault 63 2:03’41.159 1’06.561
    12 Sergio Pérez Red Bull/Honda 63 2:03’41.749 1’07.151
    13 Yuki Tsunoda AlphaTauri/Honda 63 2:03’47.782 1’13.184
    14 Antonio Giovinazzi Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 62  1 Lap
    15 Sebastian Vettel Aston Martin/Mercedes 61  Not running
    16 Mick Schumacher Haas/Ferrari 61  2 Laps
    17 Nikita Mazepin Haas/Ferrari 61  2 Laps
         Valtteri Bottas Mercedes 30  Collision
         George Russell Williams/Mercedes 30  Collision
         Nicholas Latifi Williams/Mercedes 0  Spun off

  • Hamilton resists intense pressure from Verstappen to win season opener

    Hamilton resists intense pressure from Verstappen to win season opener

    Sakhir, 28 March 2021: Defending F1 World Champion Lewis Hamilton resisted intense pressure from a charging Mac Verstappen to take a thrilling Bahrain Grand Prix win at the end of an epic battle between the two drivers at the Bahrain International Circuit. Valtteri Bottas took third place for Mercedes with Lando Norris fourth for McLaren, in the first round of the Formula 1 World Championship here on Sunday.

    After a tight strategic battle across the first two third of the race, during which Hamilton undercut pole position man Verstappen to steal the race lead, the Red Bull driver emerged from his final pit stop eight seconds behind the Mercedes driver but on fresher tyres.

    Verstappen closed in and a titanic battle ensued. Verstappen got past at one point but having done so by going off track was forced to cede the position back to Hamilton. Then, in the final laps, Hamilton defended masterfully to keep Verstappen at bay as the Dutch driver repeatedly tried to pressure the seven-time champion into a mistake. Hamilton eventually crossed the line with just seven tenths of a second in hand over his rival.

    In a hugely entertaining season-opening race, there was drama even before the start. At the end of the formation lap Sergio Pérez slowed and pulled over at the side of the track on the approach to the final corner with what looked like complete electrical failure. However, after a reset he was able to get power back and as a second formation lap got underway he steered his RB16B into the pit lane from where he’d start the race. 

    When the lights went out, Verstappen got away well from pole to take the lead ahead of Hamilton into Turn 1. Further back Haas’ Nikita Mazepin went off track at Turn 3 and hit the barriers, causing the safety car to be deployed.

    When the action resumed, Verstappen controlled the restart and after a short Virtual Safety Car period caused by Pierre Gasly clipping Daniel Ricciardo’s McLaren and losing his front wing, the Dutchman began to build a slim lead that by lap 13 had reached 1.7 seconds. 

    With 14 laps gone Mercedes went for the undercut, pitting Hamilton for a set of hard tyres. Verstappen and Red Bull didn’t blink, however, and the Dutchman stayed on track as Hamilton began to set quick times on fresh tyres. 

    Bottas made his first stop soon after, with the Finn also taking hard tyres, and then Verstappen finally accepted that his tyres were fading and made his first stop on lap 18. The Dutchman bolted on a second set of medium tyres, but as he left the pit lane, Hamilton swept past to take the lead.

    At the front, the gap ebbed and flowed across the second stint, but at the end of lap 28, Hamilton again pitted early taking another set of hard tyres as Mercedes sought to prevent any potential undercut by Red Bull.

    Hamilton’s pit stop handed the lead back to Verstappen. A lap later Bottas pitted but he was hampered by a long stop caused by a stuck right front wheel. After 10.9 seconds stationary the Mercedes driver rejoined in fifth place behind Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc.

    Further ahead, Verstappen’s times were flagging and as Hamilton closed in Red Bull called the Dutchman in at end of lap 39 for hard tyres. That put Hamilton back into the lead but Verstappen, armed with fresher tyres, was just eight seconds behind.

    He immediately began to close the gap to the leader and by lap 47 he was just over three seconds behind the world champion. And when the Briton locked up on lap 51, the red Bull driver got to within DRS range. He attacked into Turn 1 on the next lap and made his way past in Turn 4. However, he did so by going off track and had to give back the position. 

    Defending masterfully Hamilton then managed to keep the Dutchman at bay, forced Verstappen to settle for second place, with Bottas a distant third after his botched pit stop. Force place went to McLaren’s Lando Norris, while Pérez put in a superb drive to recover from his pit lane start by claiming fifth place after late charge following his final stop for hard tyres. He finished just five seconds behind Norris.

    Sixth place wen to Leclerc, seventh place went to the second McLaren of Daniel Ricciardo, while Carlos Sainz completed a good weekend for Ferrari with eighth place. AlphaTauri rookie Yuki Tsunoda scored two points on his debut with ninth place and the last point on offer went to Aston Martin’s Lance Stroll.  

    2021 FIA Formula 1 Bahrain Grand Prix – Race
    1 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 56 1:32’03.897
    2 Max Verstappen Red Bull/Honda 56 1:32’04.642 0.745
    3 Valtteri Bottas Mercedes 56 1:32’41.280 37.383
    4 Lando Norris McLaren/Mercedes 56 1:32’50.363 46.466
    5 Sergio Pérez Red Bull/Honda 56 1:32’55.944 52.047
    6 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 56 1:33’02.987 59.090
    7 Daniel Ricciardo McLaren/Mercedes 56 1:33’09.901 1’06.004
    8 Carlos Sainz Ferrari 56 1:33’10.997 1’07.100
    9 Yuki Tsunoda AlphaTauri/Honda 56 1:33’29.589 1’25.692
    10 Lance Stroll Aston Martin/Mercedes 56 1:33’30.610 1’26.713
    11 Kimi Räikkönen Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 56 1:33’32.761 1’28.864
    12 Antonio Giovinazzi Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 55 1 Lap
    13 Esteban Ocon Alpine/Renault 55 1 Lap
    14 George Russell Williams/Mercedes 55 1 Lap
    15 Sebastian Vettel Aston Martin/Mercedes 55 1 Lap
    16 Mick Schumacher Haas/Ferrari 55 1 Lap
    17 Pierre Gasly AlphaTauri/Honda 52 4 Laps
    18 Nicholas Latifi Williams/Mercedes 51 5 Laps
         Fernando Alonso Alpine/Renault 32 Brakes
         Nikita Mazepin Haas/Ferrari 0 Spun off

  • Max Verstappen fastest in both practice sessions

    Max Verstappen fastest in both practice sessions

    Sakhir, 26 March 2021: Red Bull Racing’s Max Verstappen continued to set the pace at the Bahrain International Circuit as he set the quickest lap of the second practice session for the Bahrain Grand Prix ahead of McLaren’s Lando Norris and Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton. The F1 World Championship begins on Sunday with the first race at BIC. 

    The opening part of the 60-minute session saw much of the running conducted on medium compound tyres with Verstappen leading the way early thanks to a lap of 1:31.842 after an early P1 time from Hamilton was deleted for exceeding track limits. 

    The champion was soon back on top, however. Mercedes team-mate Valtteri 

    Bottas briefly held sway but a second run on mediums that yielded a lap of 1:31.261 took Hamilton back to the top of the order. 

    It was during this phase of the session that the season’s first brush with barriers occurred. Kimi Räikkönen lost control on the exit of Turn 2 and the Alfa Romeo driver slid off into the barriers damaging both ends of his car. The Finn was able to keep his car going, however, and he was able to limp back to the pits for repairs. 

    When the field made the switch to soft tyres for performance runs soon after the incident, Ferrari’s Carlos Sainz was the first to make a step up, topping the timesheet with a lap of 1:31.127. Hamilton then found five hundredths of a second to take P1 again before Norris usurped him with a lap of 1:30.942.

    Verstappen, though, had just emerged on track and at the end of his soft-tyre run the Dutch driver had edged ahead of the McLaren man by 0.095s to set the fastest lap of the session. Verstappen also posted the best times in the final two sectors. 

    With the performance runs completed the field then switched the traditional FP2 long-run data gathering. 

    Behind Hamilton Carlos Sainz was fourth for Ferrari with a lap of 1:31.127. That was good enough to put him almost a tenth ahead of Bottas, with the Finnish Mercedes shading the second McLaren of Daniel Ricciardo by just over a hundredth of a second. 

    Yuki Tsunoda continued to impress for AlphaTauri with the Japanese rookie setting the seventh fastest time. His lap of 1:31.294 saw him finish a tenth ahead of Aston Martin’s Lance Stroll and two tenths ahead of more experienced AlphaTauri team-mate Pierre Gasly. 

    The final top 10 position was taken by Sergio Perez in the second Red Bull. The Mexican ended the session with a best time of 1:31.503 to sit 0.656s behind Verstappen.

    2021 FIA Formula 1 Bahrain Grand Prix – Free Practice 2
    1 Max Verstappen Red Bull 23 1:30.847  
    2 Lando Norris McLaren 25 1:30.942 0.095
    3 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 24 1:31.082 0.235
    4 Carlos Sainz  Ferrari  26 1:31.127 0.280
    5 Valtteri Bottas Mercedes 23 1:31.218 0.371
    6 Daniel Ricciardo McLaren 22 1:31.230 0.383
    7 Yuki Tsunoda AlphaTauri 23 1:31.294 0.447
    8 Lance Stroll Aston Martin 24 1:31.393 0.546
    9 Pierre Gasly AlphaTauri 27 1:31.483 0.636
    10 Sergio Perez Red Bull 23 1:31.503 0.656
    11 Esteban Ocon Alpine 24 1:31.601 0.754
    12 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 26 1:31.612 0.765
    13 Antonio Giovinazzi Alfa Romeo 27 1:31.740 0.893
    14 Sebastian Vettel Aston Martin 26 1:31.769 0.922
    15 Fernando Alonso Alpine 24 1:31.770 0.923
    16 Kimi Raikkonen Alfa Romeo 15 1:31.862 1.015
    17 George Russell Williams 28 1:32.331 1.484
    18 Mick Schumacher Haas 24 1:33.297 2.450
    19 Nicholas Latifi Williams 28 1:33.400 2.553
    20 Nikita Mazepin Haas 19 1:33.449 2.602

    Free Practice 1

    Earlier, the Dutch driver used soft compound Pirelli tyre to claim top spot in the session, just under three tenths of a second ahead of Mercedes’ Valtteri Bottas, with McLaren’s Lando Norris third. Defending World Champion Lewis Hamilton finished fourth. 

    With Friday’s practice session cut to an hour each this season the session was a busy one with returning two-time champion Fernando Alonso leading the field out of the pit lane in his Alpine when the lights went green to signal the start of the first grand prix track session of the new season. 

    It was Red Bull who quickly forced their way to the top of the timesheet, however, with new recruit Sergio Pérez claiming top spot as he bolted on a set of soft tyres inside the first quarter of an hour. 

    Mercedes pursued a similar strategy and Hamilton then went quickest on soft tyres with a time of 1:32.884. Bottas then moved ahead but Verstappen eclipsed everyone with his first flying lap of 1:32.214.

    With early soft tyre runs complete teams switched focus to longer running before once again looking at performance in the closing stages. 

    Norris was the first to move up the timesheet, with the McLaren driver posting a lap of 1:31.897 on soft tyres. With improvements occurring across the order the Red Bull and Mercedes drivers eventually emerged with a little more Hamilton went fastest of anyone in the first sector with just over 10 minutes remaining. 

    The defending champion seemed to be enjoying a more stable Mercedes than seen in pre-season testing but after setting the fastest first sector the improvement ebbed and he finished the session with a best time of 1:31.921, a tenth behind Norris. 

    Bottas, though, was able to extract more from the new Mercedes W12 and he posted a time of 1:31.692 to claim P1. Verstappen was still circling, however, and with purple times in the first two sectors he claimed top spot with 0.298 in hand. 

    Charles Leclerc was fifth for Ferrari, six tenths off Verstappen but less than a tenth behind Hamilton, while Pérez was sixth with a lap of 1:32.071, 0.677 behind his new team-mate, though the Mexican did claim the quickest third sector. 

    AlphaTauri’s Pierre Gasly finished seventh in front of Ferrari’s Carlos Sainz, while Daniel Ricciardo was ninth in the second McLaren ahead of Sauber’s Antonio Giovinazzi. 

    2021 FIA Formula 1 Bahrain Grand Prix – Free Practice 1 
    1 Max Verstappen Red Bull 12 1:31.394  
    2 Valtteri Bottas Mercedes 17 1:31.692 0.298
    3 Lando Norris McLaren 20 1:31.897 0.503
    4 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 15 1:31.921 0.527
    5 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 14 1:31.993 0.599
    6 Sergio Perez Red Bull 15 1:32.071 0.677
    7 Pierre Gasly AlphaTauri 23 1:32.195 0.801
    8 Carlos Sainz Ferrari 15 1:32.366 0.972
    9 Daniel Ricciardo McLaren 20 1:32.434 1.040
    10 Antonio Giovinazzi Alfa Romeo 16 1:32.786 1.392
    11 Kimi Raikkonen Alfa Romeo 18 1:33.134 1.740
    12 Sebastian Vettel Aston Martin 21 1:33.157 1.763
    13 Lance Stroll Aston Martin 20 1:33.233 1.839
    14 Yuki Tsunoda AlphaTauri 21 1:33.329 1.935
    15 Esteban Ocon Alpine 20 1:33.528 2.134
    16 Fernando Alonso Alpine 18 1:33.872 2.478
    17 George Russell Williams 22 1:34.127 2.733
    18 Nicholas Latifi Williams 22 1:34.340 2.946
    19 Mick Schumacher Haas 16 1:34.501 3.107
    20 Nikita Mazepin Haas 16 1:34.975 3.581

  • Max Verstappen top times on Day 1: Bahrain Test

    Max Verstappen top times on Day 1: Bahrain Test

    Bahrain, 12 March 2021: Max Verstappen set the quickest time on the opening day of Formula 1 pre-season testing at the Bahrain International Circuit as Mercedes encountered early troubles.

    In hot and hazy conditions due to heavy winds whipping up sand, Verstappen set his quickest time, a lap of 1:30.674 set on Pirelli’s yellow-banded C3 tyre in the afternoon session as he also worked his way to the day’s largest lap count of 139 tours of the 5.412km circuit. 

    The Dutchman’s table-topping lap left him 0.215 seconds clear of McLaren’s Lando Norris with the British driver also using the C3 tyre for his best time. Third place on the day went to Alpine’s Esteban Ocon, though the French driver set his best lap on the softer C4 compound. 

    Mercedes’ test phase got off to a difficult start, however. Valtteri Bottas managed to complete a single installation in the morning before being sidelined by a gearbox issue. 

    Bottas was able to rejoin the session but managed just six laps in total before handing over driving duties to Lewis Hamilton. 

    Seven-time world champion Hamilton added 42 laps in the afternoon but suffered several off-track moments in the tricky conditions and ended the day in 10th place on the timesheet with a best time of 1:32.912 set on the C2 hard tyre. 

    Bottas, meanwhile, was left to prop up the timesheet in 17th place, six seconds off the pace. 

    “The first lap, the install lap, we realised there was an issue with the gearbox. We obviously had to localise the issue and change the gearbox, which takes quite a bit of time,” said the Finn of his troubled morning. “Only at the very end we got a few laps, and then it was red-flagged, and that was it. Six total laps, all with aero rakes on the car, so not much running today. Not an ideal start.”

    Fourth place in the session went to Aston Martin’s Lance Stroll. The Canadian driver finished 1.1s off Verstappen’s pace, as he ran on unmarked prototype Pirelli tyre. The tyre supplier is offering two prototypes this weekend that are identical to the standard C3 but produced in Turkey rather than Romania. 

    Stroll’s new team-mate, four-time champion Sebastian Vettel ended the day in P13 on the timesheet with a best time of 1:33.742. In all the Aston Martin pair got through 97 laps on a solid first day. 

    Vettel’s replacement at Ferrari, Carlos Sainz, took fifth spot on his first full test day for the Scuderia. The Spaniard finished with a best time of 1:31.919 set on C3 tyres. 

    Like Mercedes, Ferrari also encountered mechanical woes, as Charles Leclerc was halted by an issue in the morning. 

    Kimi Räikkönen posted 63 laps for Alfa Romeo in the morning session and team-mate Antonio Giovinazzi added a further 68 in the afternoon to complete a decent first day for the Swiss team as they placed 12thand sixth respectively. 

    Seventh place went to new McLaren recruit Daniel Ricciardo with the Australian followed by AlphaTauri’s Pierre Gasly and rookie driver Yuki Tsunoda. 

    Further back Williams tester Roy Nissany was 14th for Williams as he worked through 83 laps, while Haas rookie Nikita Mazepin completed 70 laps on his way to P15. It was a less auspicious first outing with the American team for 2020 Formula 2 champion Mick Schumacher. The German only completed 15 laps. 

    Formula 1 Pre-Season Testing, Bahrain – Day One 
    1 Max Verstappen Red Bull/Honda 1:30.674 139
    2 Lando Norris McLaren/Mercedes 1:30.889 0.215 46
    3 Esteban Ocon Alpine/Renault 1:31.146 0.472 129
    4 Lance Stroll Aston Martin/Mercedes 1:31.782 1.108 46
    5 Carlos Sainz Ferrari 1:31.919 1.245 57
    6 Antonio Giovinazzi Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 1:31.945 1.271 68
    7 Daniel Ricciardo McLaren/Mercedes 1:32.203 1.529 45
    8 Pierre Gasly AlphaTauri/Honda 1:32.231 1.557 74
    9 Yuki Tsunoda AlphaTauri/Honda 1:32.727 2.053 37
    10 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 1:32.912 2.238 42
    11 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 1:33.242 2.568 59
    12 Kimi Räikkönen Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 1:33.320 2.646 63
    13 Sebastian Vettel Aston Martin/Mercedes 1:33.742 3.068 51
    14 Roy Nissany Williams/Mercedes 1:34.789 4.115 83
    15 Nikita Mazepin Haas/Ferrari 1:34.798 4.124 70
    16 Mick Schumacher Haas/Ferrari 1:36.127 5.453 15
    17 Valtteri Bottas Mercedes 1:36.850 6.176 6

  • Facile win for Verstappen as F1 season ends; BWT Racing Point loses 3rd by 7 points

    Facile win for Verstappen as F1 season ends; BWT Racing Point loses 3rd by 7 points

    Max Verstappen closed out his 2020 FIA Formula One World Championship campaign in style with a commanding light as to flag victory at the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, with the Red Bull driver finishing more than 10 seconds clear of Mercedes Valtteri Bottas. The Finn’s team-mate Lewis Hamilton was third. When the lights went out at the start, Verstappen made a good getaway and comfortably took the lead ahead of Mercedes’ Valtteri Bottas with Lewis Hamilton third. 

    The order changed though on lap six when, with the aid of DRS, Red Bull’s Alex Albon passed McLaren’s Lando Norris to claim fourth place. Meanwhile, at the front of the field, Verstappen was comfortable in the lead, 2.6s clear of Bottas with Hamilton a further 3.5s further back. Albon held fourth ahead of McLaren’s Norris and Carlos Sainz.

    The race was reset on lap 10, however. Sergio Pérez pulled over at the side of the track between Turns 18 and 19 with a power unit issue. An initial VSC became a full Safety Car as marshals struggled to recover Pérez’s car and during the caution the leading drivers all pitted to take on hard tyres.

    Verstappen rejoined in the lead ahead of Bottas, Hamilton and Albon but the pit stops vaulted hard-tyre starter Daniel Ricciardo to fifth ahead of Norris, though the Australian would need to pit later in the race. 

    As the race went edged past one-third distance the order began to settle as Verstappen again eked out a gap. By lap 20 he was 3.4s ahead of Bottas, with Hamilton two seconds further back. Albon was now 4.2s behind the seven-time champion but though he was losing ground to the Mercedes he was steadily pulling away from Ricciardo who was six seconds behind the Thai driver. 

    Verstappen though continued to build his comfort zone and by lap 32 he was 7.5 seconds clear of the lead Mercedes, with Hamilton also comfortable in third, six seconds ahead of Albon.

    At the end of lap 39 Ricciardo was the last to shed his starting hard tyres and after taking on medium tyres he rejoined in P7, behind the McLarens of Norris and Sainz. 

    Verstappen was now totally dominant at the head of the field. On lap 48 he was 12 seconds clear of Bottas and telling his team on the radio that they could turn his engine down if required. 

    And seven laps later Verstappen eased across the line to take his and red Bull’s second win of the year after early-season victory at the 70th Anniversary Grand Prix.

    Bottas settled for second place a little under 10 seconds behind Verstappen as the race winner throttled back in the closing stages. Hamilton claimed the final podium place ahead of Albon. 

    Fifth place for McLaren’s Lando Norris and sixth for team-mate Carlos Sainz handed the Renault-powered team third place in the Constructors’ Championship ahead of Racing Point, for whom Lance Stroll was tenth on the night. Ricciardo took seventh ahead of Gasly and the second Renault of Estaban Ocon.
    2020 FIA Formula 1 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix – Race
    1 Max Verstappen Red Bull/Honda 55 1:36’28.645
    2 Valtteri Bottas Mercedes 55 1:36’44.621 15.976
    3 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 55 1:36’47.060 18.415
    4 Alexander Albon Red Bull/Honda 55 1:36’48.632 19.987
    5 Lando Norris McLaren/Renault 55 1:37’29.374 1’00.729
    6 Carlos Sainz McLaren/Renault 55 1:37’34.307 1’05.662
    7 Daniel Ricciardo Renault 55 1:37’42.393 1’13.748
    8 Pierre Gasly AlphaTauri/Honda 55 1:37’58.363 1’29.718
    9 Esteban Ocon Renault 55 1:38’09.714 1’41.069
    10 Lance Stroll Racing Point/Mercedes 55 1:38’11.383 1’42.738
    11 Daniil Kvyat AlphaTauri/Honda 54 1:36’31.445 1 Lap
    12 Kimi Räikkönen Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 54 1:36’34.174 1 Lap
    13 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 54 1:36’42.721 1 Lap
    14 Sebastian Vettel Ferrari 54 1:36’51.876 1 Lap
    15 George Russell Williams/Mercedes 54 1:37’01.030 1 Lap
    16 Antonio Giovinazzi Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 54 1:37’02.381 1 Lap
    17 Nicholas Latifi Williams/Mercedes 54 1:37’11.562 1 Lap
    18 Kevin Magnussen Haas/Ferrari 54 1:38’00.387 1 Lap
    19 Pietro Fittipaldi Haas/Ferrari 53 1:36’38.988 2 Laps
         Sergio Pérez Racing Point/Mercedes 8 14’13.035 Transmission

  • Max Verstappen takes his first pole in the last race of the season

    Max Verstappen takes his first pole in the last race of the season

    Abu Dhabi, 12 Dec 2020: Max Verstappen scored his first pole position of 2020 and the third of his career with in qualifying for the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, with the Dutchman putting in a phenomenal final lap in Q3 to beat Mercedes Valtteri Bottas by 0.025s. Lewis Hamilton finished third ahead of McLaren’s Lando Norris.

    Bottas set the pace in the opening segment of qualifying, with the Finn setting an early benchmark of 1:35.699. Hamilton slotted into second place but his lap was swiftly deleted for violating track limits at Turn 20. 

    Verstappen, meanwhile, had a tricky start to the session when Williams released Nicholas Latifi into his path in the pit lane. The Dutchman was forced to lock-up and flat-spotted his tyres. 

    He went out and set a time but in the final minutes of the session he dropped to P10 and was forced to run again. He immediately vaulted to P2 behind Bottas with a lap of 1:35.993. Verstappen was eventually shuffled to P4 as Hamilton grabbed top spot in the final runs and Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc took third ahead of McLaren’s Lando Norris. Racing Point’s Sergio Pérez was sixth and Alex Albon in the second Red Bull progressed in seventh place with a lap of 1:36.106. 

    At the other end of the timesheet, Alfa Romeo’s Kimi Räikkönen was eliminated in 16th place after being beaten to P15 by team-mate Antonio Giovinazzi. The Italian eclipsed his Finnish team-mate by almost half a second to edge their private qualifying battle 9-8. Räikkönen was followed out of the session by Haas’ Kevin Magnussen, Williams’ George Russell, Haas’ Pietro Fittipaldi and Latifi. 

    In Q2 the Bulls and the Mercedes went out on medium tyres but Albonhad his opening lap deleted for a track limits infringement at Turn 21. He dropped to P13 on the timesheet in the closing stages and it meant that he needed a run on soft tyres to guarantee progress. 

    Verstappen, meanwhile, opened with a time of 1:36.236. That landed him P5 and he admitted dissatisfaction with the lap, saying the tyres had gone off in the final sector. 

    He went for another run, on mediums, and in the final moments he jumped to P3 behind Hamilton and Bottas with a lap of 1:35.641. Albonfollowed him across the line with a good lap of 1:35.654 to take P4. 

    Somewhat surprisingly Esteban Ocon and Daniel Ricciardo were eliminated in P10 and P11 respectively, with the Renault being edged out Q3 by the AlphaTauris of Daniil Kvyat and Pierre Gasly. Also eliminated at this stage of the session were 13th-placed Sebastian Vettel of Ferrari followed by Alfa Romeo’s Antonio Giovinazzi and Pérez. Facing a back-of-the-grid start due an engine change, Pérez failed to set a time in Q2. 

    In the final top-10 shootout, Verstappen signalled his intent with his opening run as he posted a lap of 1:35.519 to split with the Mercedes as Bottas took provisional pole. 

    When the final runs began Hamilton was the first out and after setting purple times he took P1 with a lap of 1:35.332. That looked impressive but then Bottas snuck past the benchmark by six hundredths of a seconds and it looked like Mercedes might be heading towards another front row lock-out.

    Verstappen, though, had other ideas and with a perfectly constructed lap the Dutch ace found the time required to edge past Bottas to claim his and the team’s first pole position of the year. 

    Behind the top three, McLaren’s Norris took an impressive fourth place to edge Albonby seven hundredths of a second. Sixth place went to Carlos Sainz in the second McLaren with Kvyat an excellent seventh for AlphaTauri’s ahead of Racing Point’s Lance Stroll, Leclerc and Gasly. 

    2020 FIA Formula 1 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix – Qualifying
    1 Verstappen Verstappen Red Bull/Honda 1:35.246 6 209.923
    2 Valtteri Bottas Mercedes 1:35.271 0.025 0.026 6 209.868
    3 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 1:35.332 0.086 0.090 6 209.734
    4 Lando Norris McLaren/Renault 1:35.497 0.251 0.264 6 209.372
    5 Alexander Albon Red Bull/Honda 1:35.571 0.325 0.341 6 209.209
    6 Carlos Sainz McLaren/Renault 1:35.815 0.569 0.597 6 208.677
    7 Daniil Kvyat AlphaTauri/Honda 1:35.963 0.717 0.753 6 208.355
    8 Lance Stroll Racing Point/Mercedes 1:36.046 0.800 0.840 6 208.175
    9 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 1:36.065 0.819 0.860 6 208.134
    10 Pierre Gasly AlphaTauri/Honda 1:36.242 0.996 1.046 6 207.751
    11 Esteban Ocon Renault 1:36.359 0.893 0.935 6 207.499
    12 Daniel Ricciardo Renault 1:36.406 0.940 0.985 6 207.397
    13 Sebastian Vettel Ferrari 1:36.631 1.165 1.220 6 206.914
    14 Antonio Giovinazzi Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 1:38.248 2.782 2.914 6 203.509
         Sergio Pérez Racing Point/Mercedes 1
    16 Kimi Räikkönen Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 1:37.555 2.027 2.122 6 204.955
    17 Kevin Magnussen Haas/Ferrari 1:37.863 2.335 2.444 9 204.310
    18 George Russell Williams/Mercedes 1:38.045 2.517 2.635 8 203.930
    19 Pietro Fittipaldi Haas/Ferrari 1:38.173 2.645 2.769 9 203.664
    20 Nicholas Latifi Williams/Mercedes 1:38.443 2.915 3.051 7 203.106

  • Hamilton returns but Verstappen fastest on Friday: F1 final round

    Hamilton returns but Verstappen fastest on Friday: F1 final round

    Abu Dhabi, 11 Dec 2020: Red Bull Racing’s Max Verstappen set the fastest lap of the opening practice for the final round of the 2020 FIA Formula One World Championship, the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, as Lewis Hamilton finished fifth on the time-sheet as he returned to the cockpit for Mercedes following his recovery from COVID-19. 

    Hamilton completed his 10-day quarantine in Bahrain and after returning a number of negative tests was free to travel to Abu Dhabi following confirmation from the authorities that he could do so. Mercedes confirmed he returned a further negative test on arrival and thus he is eligible to compete this weekend.

    However, despite the champion’s return, it was Verstappen who led the way in the daytime session at Yas Marina Circuit, with Mercedes’ Valtteri Bottas second and last weekend’s first-time podium finisher Esteban Ocon of Renault third. 

    Bottas set early pace on soft compound Pirellis but when Verstappen eventually bolted on the red-banded compound after avoiding them early on he took top spot with around half an hour left in the session. 

    The Red Bull driver logged a best time of 1:37.378s to edge Bottas by just 0.034 seconds. Ocon who finished second at the Bahrain International Circuit last weekend continued his recent run of good form with a time 1.1 seconds off Verstappen’s time.

    It was a less successful outing for the Frenchman’s team-mate Daniel Ricciardo, however. The Australian, who is making his final appearance for Renault before a switch to McLaren in 2021, suffered a fuel pressure problem early on and completed just four laps. 

    Second Red Bull driver Alex Albon took fourth place on the timesheet but he ended the session 1.169s behind team-mate Verstappen. The Thai driver also suffered a spin Turns 12/13 in an otherwise error-free session. 

    Hamilton took fifth spot with his best time coming on hard compound tyres. In all, he completed 20 laps on his return to duty for Mercedes. 

    Racing Point drivers Lance Stroll and Sergio Perez finished sixth and seventh respectively ahead of the AlphaTauri pair of Daniil Kvyat and Pierre Gasly, while Kimi Raikkonen completed the top 10 for Alfa Romeo.

    Elsewhere, Mick Schumacher made his grand prix weekend debut with his 2021 team Haas. The FIA Formula 2 champion finished 18th with a best of 1:41.235, which put him almost 3 second clear of team-mate Pietro Fittipaldi who is again standing in for the injured Romain Grosjean this weekend. 

    2020 FIA Formula 1 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix – Free Practice 1
    1 Max Verstappen Red Bull/Honda 1:37.378 26 205.327
    2 Valtteri Bottas Mercedes 1:37.412 0.034 32 205.256
    3 Esteban Ocon Renault 1:38.515 1.137 34 202.957
    4 Alexander Albon Red Bull/Honda 1:38.547 1.169 25 202.892
    5 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 1:38.744 1.366 24 202.487
    6 Lance Stroll Racing Point/Mercedes 1:38.831 1.453 25 202.308
    7 Sergio Pérez Racing Point/Mercedes 1:38.956 1.578 25 202.053
    8 Daniil Kvyat AlphaTauri/Honda 1:39.150 1.772 27 201.658
    9 Pierre Gasly AlphaTauri/Honda 1:39.160 1.782 30 201.637
    10 Kimi Räikkönen Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 1:39.199 1.821 22 201.558
    11 Carlos Sainz McLaren/Renault 1:39.330 1.952 27 201.292
    12 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 1:39.344 1.966 25 201.264
    13 Lando Norris McLaren/Renault 1:39.352 1.974 28 201.248
    14 Sebastian Vettel Ferrari 1:39.670 2.292 19 200.605
    15 Robert Kubica Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 1:39.905 2.527 19 200.134
    16 George Russell Williams/Mercedes 1:40.446 3.068 24 199.056
    17 Nicholas Latifi Williams/Mercedes 1:41.063 3.685 27 197.840
    18 Mick Schumacher Haas/Ferrari 1:41.235 3.857 23 197.504
    19 Pietro Fittipaldi Haas/Ferrari 1:44.069 6.691 24 192.126
    20 Daniel Ricciardo Renault 3