Tag: Max Verstappen

  • Verstappen overtakes Leclerc to win Emilia Romagna GP’s sprint race

    Verstappen overtakes Leclerc to win Emilia Romagna GP’s sprint race

    Red Bull’s Max Verstappen came back on Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc to win F1 Emilia Romagna GP Sprint Race with Sergio Perez in third.

    It was dry start to F1 Emilia Romagna GP Sprint race as Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc got the lead at Turn 1 from pole-sitter Red Bull’s Max Verstappen who initially got away well but it wasn’t enough which allowed McLaren’s Lando Norris to be on par with him too.

    But Verstappen kept second from Norris as Haas’ Kevin Magnussen remained fourth despite a small hit from McLaren’s Daniel Ricciardo who lost out to Red Bull’s Sergio Perez for fifth. The Mexican tried an inside move but had to change line and go on the outside.

    Alpine’s Fernando Alonso did not have a good start to drop to seventh from Ferrari’s Carlos Sainz in the points position, as Aston Martin’s Sebastian Vettel and Alfa Romeo’s Valtteri Bottas rounded out the Top 10. His teammate Guanyu Zhou did not last long.

    In his fight against AlphaTauri’s Pierre Gasly, the Frenchman’s front right tangled with the left rear of Zhou which send him into a spin onto the barrier. The safety car was deployed as the stewards noted no further action on either drivers for the incident.

    Magnussen, meanwhile, was shown the black and white flag for weaving. The re-start worked well for Leclerc who continued to lead from Verstappen and Norris, as Perez passed Magnussen to fourth and Sainz passed Alonso for seventh.

    The moves started to come through as Perez passed Norris for third as Sainz cleared both Magnussen and Ricciardo to be fifth. The Dane dropped to seventh from Bottas who had a drag race fight against Alonso to take eighth from the Spaniard.

    Behind, Haas’ Mick Schumacher passed Vettel for 10th as the German came under pressure from Mercedes’ George Russell, AlphaTauri’s Yuki Tsunoda and Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton. Amid all of this, Verstappen closed in on Leclerc out of nowhere.

    He waited for couple of laps to eventually get through Leclerc to lead the F1 Emilia Romagna GP and win the first sprint event of 2022 at Imola. The Monegasque ended up second, nearly three seconds behind as Perez rounded out the Top 3.

    Verstappen will start Sunday’s F1 Emilia Romagna GP from pole with Leclerc beside him and their teammates Perez and Sainz behind in third and fourth. McLaren’s Norris did well in fifth from Ricciardo, as Bottas and Magnussen got the last of the points in Top 8.

    Alonso started fifth but ended up ninth from Schumacher in the Top 10 as Russell could only manage 11th from Tsunoda, Vettel and Hamilton with Aston Martin’s Lance Stroll rounding the Top 15 runners and starting order for Sunday’s race.

    Much like those around him, Alpine’s Esteban Ocon couldn’t do much to be 16th from AlphaTauri’s Gasly who recovered to pass Williams pair of Alexander Albon and Nicholas Latifi.

    DNF: Zhou.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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  • Charles Leclerc beats Verstappen to Aussie GP pole

    Charles Leclerc beats Verstappen to Aussie GP pole

    Melbourne, 9 April 2022: Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc beat Red Bull Racing’s Max Verstappen by almost three tenths of a second to take his second pole position of the season in an Australian Grand Prix qualifying session that was disrupted by two red flag periods. Sergio Pérez qualified third but the Mexican driver was due to visit the stewards after the session to discuss a possible yellow flag infringement during Q2.

    Q1 began with both Ferraris heading out on track soon after the pit lane opened and Leclerc immediately moved to P1 with a lap of 1:19.391. McLaren’s Lando Norris slotted into second just under four tenths off the Ferrari driver.

    Leclerc’s team-mate Carlos Sainz took over at the top with a lap of 1:19.791 as Verstappen and Pérez began their first flying laps. The Mexican’s effort, a 1:19.307, took him to P2, while Max moved to fourth place, a tenth off his team-mate.

    Leclerc was finding time on his second run, however, and he climbed back to the top of the order with the first sub 1m19s time as posted a lap of 1:18.881. Verstappen was also on another push lap and with a purple final sector he took second place 0.044s behind Leclerc. 

    Norris, meanwhile, improved to 1:19.280 to demote Pérez to fifth place and the Red Bull driver dropped another two positions when Alpine’s Fernando Alonso and Alfa Romeo’s Valtteri Bottas took fourth and fifth respectively. 

    With six minutes left Verstappen found more pace to claim P1 with a lap of 1:18.580. Pérez posted a lap of 1:18.834 to claim second place ahead of Leclerc. The top six then retired to the pit lane as the battle to escape the Q1 drop intensified.

    However, with two minutes remaining the session was halted when Nicholas Latifi collided with Lance Stroll. Latifi, on a slow lap, pulled over to let Stroll past, but his fellow Canadian was on a cool down lap. The Williams man went to pass the Aston Martin driver on the right on the run to Turn 5 but Stroll was already moving across the track and the pair tangled, with Latifi’s car wrecked in the heavy collision.

    The session was red-flagged for 15 minutes and the delay gave the Aston Martin mechanics enough time to complete repairs to Sebastian Vettel’s car which had been damaged in a crash in final practice. 

    The German pushed hard to post a solid time on a crowded track but in the end he could only find his way P18 and he was eliminated along with Williams’ Alex Albon and Haas’ Kevin Magnussen in P16 and P17 respectively and the unfortunate Stroll and Latifi.

    In Q2 Verstappen was first out on track, with Pérez not far behind. Verstppen crossed the line in 1:18.611, marginally off his Q1 best, to take top spot, with his team-mate second. Alonso then split the Red Bulls as Leclerc made his way to fourth ahead of Norris. 

    On his second run Verstappen was unable to find more time, but Pérez did better and his 1:18.340 took him 0.271 clear of his team-mate at the top of the timesheet. The Mexican’s lap was under scrutiny, however, with stewards noting that he may not have slowed for yellow flags when Mercedes’ George Russell was forced to use the escape road at Turn 11. The incident was due for investigation after the session. 

    Sainz went for his final run of the segment and his lap of 1:18.739 boosted him to third place behind Verstappen. Leclerc then split the Red Bulls with a lap of 1:18.606. Sainz, though, improved again and when the flag fell he rose to second just over a tenth of a second behind Pérez and ahead of Leclerc and fourth-placed Verstappen.

    AlphaTauri’s Pierre Gasly was the first man eliminated at the end of Q2 ahead of Alfa Romeo’s Valtteri Bottas, Yuki Tsunoda in the second AlphaTauri, Zhou Guanyu in the second Alfa Romeo and Haas’ Mick Schumacher. 

    Verstappen was again on track early in Q3 but the Dutchman’s opening run featured a small lock up in the penultimate corner and he crossed the line in 1:18.399. Pérez then took top spot just 0.001s behind his team-mate. Leclerc was running quickly though and his 1:18.239 was good enough for provisional pole.

    The session was then red-flagged when Alonso crashed at Turn 11. The Alpine driver reported that he had lost hydraulics and could not change gear as he went into the right-hander. The timing of the crash was not good for Sainz. The Ferrari driver caught the red flag just as he crossed the line and his first flyer of the top-10 shootout was lost.

    When the session resumed for the final runs, Pérez put in a good lap but he missed out on beating Leclerc’s first-run benchmark, again by 0.001s. Verstappen made a good gain took top spot with a lap of 1:18.254. Leclerc was one of the last on track, though, and the Ferrari driver was able to find more pace than all his rivals and he claimed his second pole position of the season with a lap of 1:17.868.

    Fourth place went to Norris. Lewis Hamilton took fifth for Mercedes, a tenth of a second ahead of team-mate George Russell and Daniel Ricciardo was seventh in the second McLaren. Esteban Ocon took eight place for Alpine but there was disappointment for Sainz who ran wide in Turn 6 on his final lap. The Spaniard finished the session in ninth place ahead of Alonso.

    2022 FIA Formula 1 Australian Grand Prix – Qualifying
    1 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 1:17.868 8 244.012
    2 Max Verstappen Red Bull 1:18.154 6 243.119
    3 Sergio Pérez Red Bull 1:18.240 9 242.852
    4 Lando Norris McLaren/Mercedes 1:18.703 6 241.424
    5 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 1:18.825 10 241.050
    6 George Russell Mercedes 1:18.933 9 240.720
    7 Daniel Ricciardo McLaren/Mercedes 1:19.032 6 240.419
    8 Esteban Ocon Alpine/Renault 1:19.061 6 240.330
    9 Carlos Sainz Ferrari 1:19.408 1.540 6 239.280
         Fernando Alonso Alpine/Renault – 2
    11 Pierre Gasly AlphaTauri/Red Bull 1:19.226 8 239.830
    12 Valtteri Bottas Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 1:19.410 8 239.274
    13 Yuki Tsunoda AlphaTauri/Red Bull 1:19.424 7 239.232
    14 Zhou Guanyu Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 1:20.155 5 237.050
    15 Mick Schumacher Haas/Ferrari 1:20.465 8 236.137
    16 Alexander Albon Williams/Mercedes 1:20.135 11 237.109
    17 Kevin Magnussen Haas/Ferrari 1:20.254 11 236.758
    18 Sebastian Vettel Aston Martin/Mercedes 1:21.149 3 234.147
    19 Nicholas Latifi Williams/Mercedes 1:21.372 8 233.505
         Lance Stroll Aston Martin/Mercedes – 2

  • Max Verstappen pips Charles Leclerc for Jeddah win

    Max Verstappen pips Charles Leclerc for Jeddah win

    Jeddah, 27 March 2022: Max Verstappen took his first victory of the 2022 FIA Formula One World thanks to a late overtaking move past Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc in a nail-biting finish to the Saudi Arabian Grand Prix here on Sunday. Carlos Sainz took third place for Ferrari, while pole-position man and early race leader Sergio Pérez was forced to settle for fourth after he was disadvantaged by a safety car period just after his first pit stop.

    When the lights went out for the start, Pérez made a good start and powered into the lead. Fellow front-row starter Leclerc was slower off the line and he was quickly put under pressure by Sainz and Verstappen. 

    As they approached Turn 1, Leclerc moved right to defend from team-mate Sainz and that gave Verstappen the opportunity to attack on the inside. Leclerc managed to hold P2, but Verstappen went round Sainz on the outside of the next corner to rise to third place.

    At the front, though, Pérez was beginning to stretch his legs. With a clear track ahead the Mexican began to forge a gap and by lap six he was more than 2.5s clear of Leclerc, with Verstappen 1.3s off the lead Ferrari and three seconds clear of Sainz. Further back, Mercedes’ George Russell took fifth from Alpine’s Esteban Ocon and the Frenchman was also passed by team-mate Fernando Alonso. 

    The order at the top remained static until Pérez made his first pit stop at the end of lap 15. The Mexican switched to hard tyres in a 2.9s second stop and emerged in fifth place. However, timing of the stop proved to unfortunate, as almost as soon as he rejoined the action, the VSC was deployed due to a crash for Nicholas Latifi in the final corner. The virtual caution quickly being replaced by the physical safety car. 

    Verstappen immediately pitted along with Leclerc and Sainz and when the trio emerged from the pit lane Leclerc led behind the safety car with Verstappen second.  Pérez was now down in third place ahead of Sainz and Russell. Behind them Haas’ Kevin Magnussen and Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton, both of whom had started on hard tyres, now occupied sixth and seventh respectively. 

    The safety car left the track at the end of lap 20 and Leclerc held the lead ahead of Max. Pérez, meanwhile, was advised by race engineer that he would have to give up third place to Sainz on the restart as he had passed the Ferrari under the safety car when the Spaniard was leaving the pit lane. As the field exited Turn 1 Pérez slowed and Sainz cruised past to take P3. 

    As the second stint developed the battle at the front between Leclerc and Verstappen ebbed and flowed and by lap 29 the Dutch driver was just 1.4s behind his Monegasque rival. Behind them, Sainz held third place ahead of Pérez, while  Russell was fifth. Hamilton meanwhile, had risen to sixth after passing Magnussen. 

    The complexion of the race changed again on lap 37 when Daniel Ricciardo suffered a mechanical problem and halted his McLaren just short of the pit entry. The VSC was deployed and Haas’ Kevin Magnussen pitted for new tyres. 

    Almost simultaneously Fernando Alonso, also suffering with a mechanical issue, parked his Alpine close to Ricciardo’s car and the pit lane was closed by race control as marshals rushed to push the McLaren and the Alpine into the pit lane.

    The VSC ended on lap 41 and Verstappen immediately went on the attack. The pit lane entry was then opened and Hamilton pitted for medium tyres and he emerged in P12. 

    At the front, Verstappen was now closing on Leclerc and on lap 42 he used DRS to close right up to the Ferrari driver. The world champion attacked at the end of the lap and swept past the Ferrari under DRS. Leclerc immediately struck back and using drag reduction on the main straight at the start of lap 43 he powered past Verstappen to retake the lead.

    At the end of the lap Verstappen attacked again, again closing up to Leclerc under DRS ahead of Turn 27. However, this time he locked up and Leclerc held the lead as they began lap 44.

    With five laps to go Verstappen switched the attack to Turn 1. Leclerc was alive to the threat however and he positioned his car well to fend off the assault. Verstappen was determined to continued the fight and he again closed rapidly. At the end of the lap put his car almost alongside the Ferrari and that gave him the perfect opportunity at the start of lap 47. With the aid of DRS on the main straight he swept past the Ferrari to take the lead. 

    Leclerc wasn’t finished, however, and almost immediately he was on the attack, looking to pressure Verstappen into a mistake. The Dutchman resisted and when the yellow flags were shown for an incident between Lance Stroll and Alex Albon, the Monegasque driver had to back out of any attack. 

    He would have one last chance, at the end on the final lap, but while Leclerc got close in Turn 27 it wasn’t enough and Verstappen held position to take his first victory of 2022.  

    Behind them, Sainz took third while Pérez was forced to settle for fourth place. Fifth place went to Russell, with Ocon sixth ahead of McLaren’s Lando Norris. Pierre Gasly was eighth for AlphaTauri, while Magnussen’s tyre gamble under the VSC saw him finish ninth ahead of Hamilton who took the final point on offer. 

    2022 FIA Formula Saudi Arabian Grand Prix – Race
    1 Max Verstappen Red Bull 50 1:24’19.293
    2 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 50 1:24’19.842 0.549
    3 Carlos Sainz Ferrari 50 1:24’27.390 8.097
    4 Sergio Pérez Red Bull 50 1:24’30.093 10.800
    5 George Russell Mercedes 50 1:24’52.025 32.732
    6 Esteban Ocon Alpine/Renault 50 1:25’15.310 56.017
    7 Lando Norris McLaren/Mercedes 50 1:25’15.417 56.124
    8 Pierre Gasly AlphaTauri/Red Bull 50 1:25’22.239 1’02.946
    9 Kevin Magnussen Haas/Ferrari 50 1:25’23.601 1’04.308
    10 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 50 1:25’33.241 1’13.948
    11 Zhou Guanyu Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 50 1:25’41.508 1’22.215
    12 Nico Hülkenberg Aston Martin/Mercedes 50 1:25’51.035 1’31.742
    13 Lance Stroll Aston Martin/Mercedes 49 – 1 lap
    14 Alexander Albon Williams/Mercedes 47 – Not running
         Valtteri Bottas Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 36 – Retirement
         Fernando Alonso Alpine/Renault 35 – Retirement
         Daniel Ricciardo McLaren/Mercedes 35 – Retirement
         Nicholas Latifi Williams/Mercedes 14 – Retirement
         Yuki Tsunoda AlphaTauri/Red Bull 0 – Not started
         Mick Schumacher Haas/Ferrari 0 – Withdrawn

  • Verstappen fastest in FP2 ahead of Leclerc’s Ferrari

    Verstappen fastest in FP2 ahead of Leclerc’s Ferrari

    Sakhir, 18 March 2022: F1 World Champion took top spot in the second practice session for this weekend’s season-opening FIA Formula 1 Bahrain Grand with the Red Bull Racing driver finishing ahead of the Ferrari cars of Charles Leclerc and Carlos Sainz. Mercedes drivers George Russell and Lewis Hamilton finished in fourth and ninth place respectively.

    Leclerc set the pace in the first half of the one-hour session, with the Monegasque driver posting a time of 1:33.121 that kept in at the top of the order for the bulk of the first half hour.

    Both Red Bulls and Mercedes’ Hamilton were among the last to take to the track and as the opening phase on medium tyres evolved Verstappen and team-mate Sergio Pérez were almost half a second off Leclerc’s pace on the yellow-banded tyres. Hamilton, meanwhile, was struggling with the handling of his W13 as he once again experienced significant ‘porpoising’ on the main straight.

    When the switch to soft tyres for qualifying simulations came Aston Martin pair Lance Stroll were the first out on track, though neither was able to beat Leclerc’s time on mediums. It was left to Alpine’s Fernando Alonso to eventually push past Leclerc’s benchmark with the Spaniard setting a time of 1:32.877.

    Leclerc was soon back in control, though, and his lap of 1:32.263 returned him to top spot.

    Verstappen then emerged on softs and though he lost time in the middle sector his lap of 1:31.936 was still good enough for him to take P1 and hold it until the end of the session.

    With Sainz third, George Russell finished fourth 0.593s slower than Verstappen.

    Hamilton had to abandon his first qualifying run after he locked up again at Turn 1 and suffered with a malfunctioning DRS. His eventual soft tyre time was a 1:33.144 that left him ninth, 1.208s behind Verstappen.

    Alonso’s quali sim saw him finish fifth ahead of Alfa Romeo’s Valtteri Bottas, while Sergio Pérez was seventh ahead Mick Schumacher in the lead Haas. Team-ate Magnussen finished 10th behind Hamilton.

    2022 FIA Formula 1 Bahrain Grand Prix – Free Practice 2
    1 Max Verstappen Red Bull Racing 20 1’31.936
    2 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 20 1’32.023 0.087
    3 Carlos Sainz Ferrari 22 1’32.520 0.584
    4 George Russell Mercedes 25 1’32.529 0.593
    5 Fernando Alonso Alpine 24 1’32.877 0.941
    6 Valtteri Bottas Alfa Romeo 30 1’32.951 1.015
    7 Sergio Perez Red Bull 20 1’32.958 1.022
    8 Mick Schumacher Haas 24 1’33.085 1.149
    9 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 23 1’33.144 1.208
    10 Kevin Magnussen Haas 23 1’33.183 1.247
    11 Lando Norris McLaren 27 1’33.280 1.344
    12 Esteban Ocon Alpine 25 1’33.360 1.424
    13 Pierre Gasly AlphaTauri 24 1’33.621 1.685
    14 Yuki Tsunoda AlphaTauri 26 1’33.789 1.853
    15 Guanyu Zhou Alfa Romeo 27 1’33.953 2.017
    16 Lance Stroll Aston Martin 25 1’33.958 2.022
    17 Nico Hulkenberg Aston Martin 28 1’34.061 2.125
    18 Daniel Ricciardo McLaren 12 1’34.166 2.230
    19 Nicholas Latifi Williams 28 1’34.486 2.550
    20 Alex Albon Williams 22 1’34.735 2.799

  • Verstappen quickest on final day: Pre-season Bahrain test

    Verstappen quickest on final day: Pre-season Bahrain test

    Sakhir, 12 March 2022: Red Bull Racing’s Max Verstappen set the fastest time of the three days of running in Sakhir as Formula 1 pre-season testing came to an end at the Bahrain International Circuit. 

    Verstappen, driving in the afternoon after team-mate Sergio Pérez topped the morning session, completed 53 laps at the wheel of an updated RB18 featuring revised sidepods. 

    The World Champion didn’t appear for most of the first hours of the later session but when he did he gradually began to work his way to the best time of the three days overall as he cycled through various tyre compounds. He set a 1:32.645 on C3 medium tyres and later moved to the softest C5 rubber to set his best lap of 1:31.720.

    That put him almost seven tenths of a second  ahead of second placed Ferrari driver Charles Leclerc. The Monegasque driver’s best lap was delivered on the C4 compound. He did try the C5 tyres but despite setting a purple middle sector he flagged late in the lap and was slower. 

    Third place in the session went to Alpine’s Fernando Alonso. The Spaniard left his best to the end of the session fitting C4 tyres in the final five minutes of the session to set personal bests in each sector to stand as one of just two drivers to get within a second of Verstappen’s time. George Russell was fourth with a time of 1:32.759 that left him 1.039 behind Verstappen and the new Mercedes recruit looked to be battling the mishandling car throughout the lap. 

    Behind Russell, Valtteri Bottas was fifth for Alfa Romeo. The Finn used C3 Pirelli tyres to set a best time of 1:32.985 but his running early when he stopped outside the Turn 8 due to a gearbox issue. 

    AlphaTauri’s Yuki Tsunoda took fifth place as the Italian squad closed out a solid test phase. The Japanese driver, who completed 57 laps, finished two hundredths of a second behind Bottas, while team-mate Pierre Gasly logged 91 laps on the team’s final day.

    After setting the fastest lap of the morning, Sergio Pérez was left with seventh place at the close of running, five hundredths of a second ahead of Haas’s Mick Schumacher, who briefly brought out the red flags in the afternoon after he spun.

    Lando Norris ended the day in ninth place for McLaren and after taking over from Lance Stroll at Aston Martin, Sebastian Vettel finished with the day’s 10th quickest time.


    Formula 1 2022 Pre-Season Test, Bahrain – Day Three
    1 Max Verstappen Red Bull RB18 Red Bull 53 1:31.720 
    2 Charles Leclerc Ferrari F1-75 Ferrari 51 1:32.415 0.695
    3 Fernando Alonso Alpine A522 122 1:32.698 0.978
    4 George Russell Mercedes W13 71 1:32.759 1.039
    5 Valtteri Bottas Alfa Romeo C42 68 1:32.985 1.265
    6 Yuki Tsunoda AlphaTauri AT03 57 1:33.002 1.282
    7 Sergio Pérez Red Bull RB18 43 1:33.105 1.385
    8 Mick Schumacher Haas VF-22 57 1:33.151 1.431
    9  Lando Norris McLaren MCL36 90 1:32.191 1.471
    10 Sebastian Vettel Aston Martin AMR22 46 1:33.821 2.101
    11 Guanyu Zhou Alfa Romeo C42 82 1:33.959 2.239
    12 Pierre Gasly AlphaTauri AT03 91 1:34.865 3.145
    13 Carlos Sainz Ferrari F1-75 Ferrari 68 1:34.905 3.185
    14 Alex Albon Williams FW44 18 1:35.171 3.451
    15 Nicholas Latifi Williams FW44 124 1:35.634 3.914
    16 Lance Stroll Aston Martin AMR22 53 1:36.029 4.309
    17 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes W13 78 1:36.217 4.497
    18 Kevin Magnussen Haas VF-22 38 1:38.616 6.896

  • From karts to F1 world champion: the Max Verstappen story

    From karts to F1 world champion: the Max Verstappen story

    With Max Verstappen claiming the 2021 FIA Formula One World Championship driver’s title following his dramatic win at the Abu Dhabi season finale, we explore how he has developed from a precociously talented young karter to sit at the very pinnacle of the motor-racing world. Here is all you need to know:

    Born to race

    – That Verstappen’s father, Jos, was also an F1 driver is well known; his career spanned much of the 1990s and he was a team-mate of Michael Schumacher. However, Max benefits from a double dose of racing DNA as his mother, Sophie Kumpen, enjoyed a successful karting career of her own, winning the Andrea Margutti Trophy in 1995.

    – Speaking on the Beyond the Ordinary podcast, David Coulthard, an F1 contemporary of Verstappen Sr, explains: “The absolute commitment that was carried in his [Jos’s] DNA has been passed on to Max, and I think that what the Verstappen family has done is work very hard to give him the best grounding – through karting, into cars – make great choices and position him now in a very happy place.”

    An early start

    – At the point most of us are making our first wobbly attempts to ride a bike, young Max was getting a taste of motor racing. As Jos recalls, “He was four-and-a-half when we first put him in. He did it for one day and immediately we bought him a bigger go-kart.”

    – Was that a nerve-wracking experience for the watching parents? Jos adds, “Not really, because I think he was about two-and-a-half when he was [first] driving on a quad bike, so he had quite a lot of experience with speed, how to steer…”

    First race

    – By those standards, it must have seemed like an interminable wait for his first taste of competitive action. Max was the grand old age of seven by the time he was lining up on the grid for the first time.

    – Thankfully, the wait to experience the thrill of victory was not quite as long, as Max went straight out and won that first race. Jos recalls, “We’d prepared very well. He was racing against other mini juniors, who could be nine or 10 years old, so he was competing against a lot older boys.”

    Doing the hard yards

    – What followed over the next decade or so really laid the foundations for the world champion of today. Together, father and son devoted themselves to Max’s nascent career, travelling from race to race in their van and racking up victory after victory.

    – Jos explains, “I think every year we were racing, we were winning championships. You do a lot of races, but what I also really enjoyed was all the things around it. You know, the two of us together in the van, all the preparation you have to do before… I miss it now, but at that moment I really enjoyed it. We did about 80-100,00km a year, every year and we did that for 10 years. It was quite intense.”

    Making the jump to F3

    – It’s no exaggeration to say that Max made an immediate impact when he made the switch over to cars. Former Red Bull Racing teammate Alex Albon reveals, “Max was straight away quick when he joined the championship. He was aggressive back then as well. We didn’t have any altercations – we would never fight, there was always that mutual respect – but, at the same time, we were definitely rivals.”

    F1 comes calling

    – With 10 race victories and third place overall in his maiden F3 championship, it wasn’t long before Formula One teams started taking a look at the talented youngster, and in August 2014 Helmut Marko signed Max up to Red Bull Racing’s driver development programme.

    – We saw him in action during free practice at that season’s Japanese GP, but it was seven months later, at the season-opening Australian GP in Melbourne, that he first lined up in Toro Rosso colours in earnest. Aged just 17 years old, he was F1’s youngest-ever competitor.

    – Max recalls, “Some said, of course, that I was too young. At the time, I didn’t even have my driving licence. They knew of course that I was in Formula One, but the driving instructor, he was very strict, which was good. I had caps, t-shirts ready in case somebody needed to be bribed, but he didn’t take it!”

    From youngest driver to youngest winner

    – An outstanding first season brought not only plenty of championship points, but also awards for rookie of the year, personality of the year and action of the year for his stunning overtake at Belgium’s Spa circuit.

    – That meant it wasn’t long until Marko was on the phone again, and Max was promoted to drive for Red Bull Racing from the 2016 Spanish GP. As Coulthard explains, “It was a great opportunity. Helmut and Red Bull have shown an ability to back young talent and give them an opportunity.”

    – His impact, of course, was immediate and he held off Ferrari’s Kimi Räikkönen in the closing stages to become F1’s youngest race winner at 18 years and 228 days, making headlines around the world.

    – Max recalls the experience, “I started cramping a little bit with five laps to go because of the excitement and the focus. It was pretty crazy, I was literally counting the laps at the end, there was a lot of pressure. My dad was getting so excited at the end that his nose started bleeding.”

    Fine tuning his style

    – His debut win at Barcelona was just a taster for what was to come as Max picked up two victories in the 2017 season at Malaysia and Mexico to place sixth overall in the championship.

    – He needed to show some resolve at the start of the 2018 season following two frustrating retirements in Bahrain and Azerbaijan with his first Austrian victory lifting his spirits en route to another Mexican win and fourth in the championship.

    – He upped the ante in 2019 to score three wins with an Austrian repeat, German triumph and Brazilian victory to finally finish the season in the top three overall.

    – Two victories in the shortened 2020 season saw him place third overall again as he tightened up his driving style and looked to eliminate the occasional hot-headed error that had cost him before.

    Eye on the title

    – After a successful off-season getting his mind and body in shape, Max powered off the grid quickly in 2021 with two wins and three second places in the first five races before a tyre blowout at the Azerbaijan Grand Prix cost him valuable points.

    – It was the British Grand Prix, though, that truly elevated the rivalry with Mercedes as Lewis Hamilton’s controversial move put Max into the tyre wall at a dangerous speed.

    – To Max’s credit, he bounced back with wins in Belgium and his home Dutch Grand Prix before the hotly debated moment in Germany when he clashed with Hamilton again forcing both out.

    – Since then, Max has managed to stay out of trouble with US and Mexican GP wins sandwiched by four second places as the title race headed down to the wire in the Middle East.

    – With his Abu Dhabi GP victory finally seeing him crowned Formula One world champion for the first time, the future is extremely bright for the 24-year-old and a Red Bull team eager to bank more titles next year.

    – As Coulthard, no stranger to title tussles himself, explains, “This is a classic period. When we’ve had these titanic battles in the past, they might come along once a decade or 20 years, but when it happens it’s a wonderful thing to be able to witness two greats go toe-to-toe.”

  • Max Verstappen sparkles at FIA awards gala; Hamilton, personality of the year

    Max Verstappen sparkles at FIA awards gala; Hamilton, personality of the year

    Paris, 17 Dec 2021: The event, hosted by British TV presenter Nicki Shields and French Formula 1 commentator Julien Fébreau provided a glittering backdrop to the FIA Annual General Assembly Week. It was also Jean Todt’s last appearance at the FIA gala as FIA President, before he ends his term of office on 17 December.

    An audience of 800 guests celebrated the outstanding performers and performances of 2021 while the personalities and rising stars were lauded and those lost to the motor sport fraternity in 2021 were remembered. 

    The evening was the crowning glory of a spectacular year for Dutchman Max Verstappen, who at 24, became one of the youngest FIA Formula 1 World Champions. The Red Bull-Honda driver was embroiled in an enthralling season-long battle with seven-time champion Lewis Hamilton of Mercedes-AMG Petronas.

    In receiving his award from President Todt, Verstappen said: “Becoming world champion is my life goal achieved. Everything that comes next is a bonus. Of course I am going to keep pushing and I’m going to be in F1 for a few more years yet,” he said. “While it’s nice to be called world champion, I think more about the long journey and the all the hours I have spent working with my Dad to be here. It’s been a long and tough season and I feel amazing to have finally achieved my goal. I hope I can do this many more times. It’s been an incredible battle with Lewis, one of the greatest drivers ever in Formula 1. We really pushed each other. At the end of the day, we can look each other in the eyes and respect each other which is really important.

    FIA Deputy President for Sport Graham Stoker handed over the third-place trophy to Valtteri Bottas. James Allison, the Chief Technical Officer, accepted the eighth consecutive world championship trophy for the Mercedes-AMG-Petronas team.

    The French duo Sébastien Ogier and Julien Ingrassia clinched their eighth FIA World Rally Championship for Drivers and Co-Drivers respectively. Their efforts helped to secure the champion manufacturer prize for Toyota Gazoo Racing. They were presented with their award by WRC Promoter Managing Director Jona Siebel. 

    The FIA World Endurance Championship drivers’ champions Mike Conway, Kamui Kobayashi and Jose Maria Lopez received their award from FIA Vice-President Mohammed Ben Sulayem. Toyota Gazoo Racing claimed the prize for Champion Hypercar from ACO President Pierre Fillon.

    Dutchman Nyck de Vries took the race victory at the 2020-21 ABB FIA Formula E World Championship finale in Berlin to secure his first title. De Vries, at 26, not only became the youngest title-winner in Formula E history, but also its first World Champion. Formula E CEO Jamie Reigle presented the award.

    The Dutchman’s points haul, along with team-mate Stoffel Vandoorne, enabled Mercedes EQ to take the teams’ title which was accepted by team principal Ian James.

    Johan Kristoffersson collected his fourth FIA World Rallycross Championship crown at the end of an absorbing weekend of action at the Nurburgring, snatching the title from the clutches of countryman Timmy Hansen as the 2021 campaign concluded in a dramatic dead-heat. 

    Timmy Hansen, joined by his brother Kevin, took the team championship honours for Hansen World RX Team. 

    Esports was also recognized during the event in the shape of the FIA Certified Gran Turismo Championships. Toyota’s Coque López accepted the Manufacturer Series award on behalf of team-mates Tomoaki Yamanaka and Igor Fraga whilst Valerio Gallo received the Nations Cup Trophy.

    The stars of tomorrow, the FIA Karting World Champions came in the shape of Tuukka Taponen (OK), Kean Nakamura (OK-Junior) and 

    Winners all: The winners of the year’s FIA championships with Jean Todt at his last Awards Ceremony as he reliquishes the FIA president post today. Photo: FIA

    Noah Milell (KZ). FIA Karting Commission President Felipe Massa handed over the silverware along with Angelo Sticchi Damiani, President of the Italian Automobile Club and Max Verstappen, who had a decorated karting career of his own. 

    The FIA Formula 2 Championship winner Oscar Piastri, recently signed as a test driver for Alpine Formula 1 team in 2022, also took the Rookie of the Year Award. The prize is voted by members of the FIA Drivers Commission, led by the Commission President, nine-time Le Mans winner Tom Kristensen. Rene Rosin represented the champion team Prema Racing. Formula 3 honours went to Dennis Hauger while Giacomo Ricci accepted the team trophy on behalf of Trident Racing. 

    In addition to the Championship titles, a number of other awards were presented. 

    The Outstanding Official of the Year Award went to Anselme Bigirimana, who has been a member of the Burundi Automobile Club (CAB) since 1970 and joined the executive committee of the CAB after a serious accident forced him to retire from competition. Bigirimana is ever-present in all the development activities of motor sport in Burundi. 

    The FIA Personality of The Year Award, decided by permanently accredited FIA media, went to Lewis Hamilton. 

    Action of the Year celebrates the most spectacular moments of the past racing year and is the only prize of the evening voted for by motor sport fans around the world. In 2021, the fans favoured former world champion and current Alpine Formula 1 team’s Fernando Alonso. The Spaniard was acclaimed for his battle with Lewis Hamilton at the Hungarian Grand Prix. 

    The recipient of the FIA Founding Members’ Club Heritage Cup was Robert Dewar on behalf of the Concours d’Elegance Kenya.

    The evening concluded with tributes to President Todt.  He was presented with 20 helmets from each of the current Formula 1 drivers by the CEO of Formula 1, Stefano Domenicali.

    Domenicali said: “Your professional life has always been characterized by true values. We thank you for all that you have done for the motor sport community and also for safety and human rights. You are leaving a lasting legacy.

    Richard Mille, President of the FIA Endurance Commission, in a personal tribute, said: “He’s somebody you can call at 3 o’clock in the morning with a problem and he will wake up the world to solve the problem. We are going to miss him so much.

    The President’s son, Nicolas Todt added: “I want to tell you how proud I am to have a father like you who taught me so many important values. Your successes are due to your passion for motor sport, your willingness to always push the boundaries, your capacity to get the very best from your colleagues and to never take no for an answer.

    And in recognition as President Todt being the inspiration behind the FIA Safe and Affordable Helmet Programme and his dedication across the twin pillars of motor sport and mobility, he was presented with a commemorative Safe and Affordable helmet signed by all the World Champions awarded during his term as President of the FIA. 

    President Todt said: “Life is made in chapters. Being a co-driver was my first. And now this chapter is over. Twelve years is a long time. The job is demanding. I know that the FIA will get fresh blood, a fresh team. Amongst the legacy I leave, I leave an amazing team which is able to continue to deliver the job with the new elected team. I still have the same passion. I am blessed, I still love motor racing. Now it is time to give something back in other areas of life. I am an old man but in good form and we will see what comes next.

    Proceedings ended with the traditional ‘family photo’ and a final applause for all of the 2021 champions and category winners as the curtain fell on what has been a successful motor sport year. 

    Click here to see the event image gallery and here to read the FIA prize giving brochure.
     

    2021 FIA PRIZE GIVING GALA | CHAMPIONS & AWARD WINNERS

    FIA FORMULA 1 WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP FOR DRIVERS
    Max VERSTAPPEN

    FIA FORMULA 1 WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP FOR CONSTRUCTORS
    MERCEDES-AMG PETRONAS FORMULA ONE TEAM

    FIA WORLD RALLY CHAMPIONSHIP FOR DRIVERS AND CO-DRIVERS
    Sébastien OGIER & Julien INGRASSIA

    FIA WORLD RALLY CHAMPIONSHIP FOR MANUFACTURERS
    TOYOTA GAZOO RACING

    FIA HYPERCAR WORLD ENDURANCE DRIVERS’ CHAMPIONSHIP
    Mike CONWAY, Kamui KOBAYASHI, José María LÓPEZ

    2021 FIA HYPERCAR WORLD ENDURANCE CHAMPIONSHIP
    TOYOTA GAZOO RACING

    ABB FIA FORMULA E WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP FOR DRIVERS
    Nyck DE VRIES

    ABB FIA FORMULA E WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP FOR MANUFACTURERS
    MERCEDES-EQ

    FIA WORLD RALLYCROSS CHAMPIONSHIP FOR DRIVERS
    Johan KRISTOFFERSSON

    FIA WORLD RALLYCROSS CHAMPIONSHIP FOR TEAMS
    HANSEN WORLD RX TEAM

    FIA KARTING WORLD CHAMPION – KZ
    Noah MILELL

    FIA KARTING WORLD CHAMPION – OK-JUNIOR
    Kean NAKAMURA

    FIA KARTING WORLD CHAMPION – OK
    Tuukka TAPONEN

    FIA CERTIFIED GRANTURISMO CHAMPIONSHIPS WINNER – NATIONS CUP
    Valerio GALLO

    FIA CERTIFIED GRANTURISMO CHAMPIONSHIPS WINNER – MANUFACTURERS SERIES
    Coque LOPEZ

    FIA CERTIFIED GRANTURISMO CHAMPIONSHIPS WINNER – MANUFACTURERS SERIES
    Igor FRAGA

    FIA CERTIFIED GRANTURISMO CHAMPIONSHIPS WINNER – MANUFACTURERS SERIES
    Tomoaki YAMANAKA

    FIA PERSONALITY OF THE YEAR
    Lewis HAMILTON

    FIA ROOKIE OF THE YEAR
    Oscar PIASTRI

    FIA ACTION OF THE YEAR
    Fernando ALONSO

    FIA JUNIOR WRC CHAMPIONSHIP DRIVERS & CO‑DRIVERS
    Sami PAJARI & Marko SALMINEN

    FIA JUNIOR WRC TROPHY FOR NATIONS
    FINLAND

    FIA WRC2 CHAMPIONSHIP FOR DRIVERS
    Andreas MIKKELSEN

    FIA WRC2 CHAMPIONSHIP FOR CO-DRIVERS
    Torstein ERIKSEN

    FIA WRC2 CHAMPIONSHIP FOR TEAMS
    MOVISPORT

    FIA WRC3 CHAMPIONSHIP FOR DRIVERS
    Yohan ROSSEL

    FIA WRC3 CHAMPIONSHIP FOR CO‑DRIVERS
    Maciej SZCZEPANIAK

    FIA WORLD RALLY CHAMPIONSHIP FOR TEAMS
    HYUNDAI 2C COMPETITION

    FIA AFRICAN RALLY CHAMPIONSHIP DRIVERS & CO‑DRIVERS
    Carl TUNDO & Tim JESSOP

    FIA EUROPEAN RALLY CHAMPIONSHIP DRIVERS & CO‑DRIVERS
    Andreas MIKKELSEN & Sara FERNÁNDEZ

    FIA EUROPEAN RALLY CHAMPIONSHIP FOR TEAMS
    TOKSPORT WRT

    FIA MIDDLE EAST RALLY CHAMPIONSHIP DRIVERS & CO‑DRIVERS
    Nasser AL-ATTIYAH & Mathieu BAUMEL

    FIA NACAM RALLY CHAMPIONSHIP DRIVERS & CO‑DRIVERS
    Ricardo CORDERO & Marco HERNÁNDEZ

    FIA EUROPEAN RALLY TROPHY DRIVERS & CO-DRIVERS
    Mustafa ÇAKAL & Özgür AKDAG

    FIA RGT CUP DRIVERS & CO‑DRIVERS
    Pierre RAGUES & Julien PESENTI

    FIA WORLD CUP FOR CROSS‑COUNTRY RALLIES DRIVERS & CO-DRIVERS
    Nasser AL-ATTIYAH & Mathieu BAUMEL

    FIA WORLD CUP FOR CROSS‑COUNTRY RALLIES FOR TEAMS
    OVERDRIVE SA

    FIA WORLD CUP FOR CROSS‑COUNTRY RALLIES DRIVERS – T3
    Cristina GUTIÉRREZ

    FIA WORLD CUP FOR CROSS‑COUNTRY BAJAS DRIVERS & CO-DRIVERS
    Yazeed AL RAJHI & Alexey KUZMICH

    FIA WORLD CUP FOR CROSS‑COUNTRY BAJAS DRIVERS – T3
    Dania AKEEL

    FIA EUROPEAN RALLYCROSS CHAMPIONSHIP – RX1
    Andreas BAKKERUD

    FIA EUROPEAN RALLYCROSS CHAMPIONSHIP – RX3
    Yury BELEVSKIY

    FIA RX2e CHAMPIONSHIP
    Guillaume DE RIDDER

    FIA FORMULA 2 CHAMPIONSHIP FOR DRIVERS
    Oscar PIASTRI

    FIA FORMULA 2 CHAMPIONSHIP FOR TEAMS
    PREMA Racing

    FIA FORMULA 3 CHAMPIONSHIP FOR DRIVERS
    Dennis HAUGER

    FIA FORMULA 3 CHAMPIONSHIP FOR TEAMS
    TRIDENT

    FORMULA REGIONAL EUROPEAN CHAMPIONSHIP BY ALPINE CERTIFIED BY FIA
    Gregoire SAUCY

    FORMULA REGIONAL AMERICAS CHAMPIONSHIP POWERED BY HONDA
    Kyffin SIMPSON

    FORMULA REGIONAL JAPANESE CHAMPIONSHIP CERTIFIED BY FIA
    Yuga FURUTANI

    FORMULA 3 ASIAN CHAMPIONSHIP CERTIFIED BY FIA
    Guanyu ZHOU

    F4 USA CHAMPIONSHIP CERTIFIED BY FIA
    Noel LEÓN

    F4 SPANISH CHAMPIONSHIP CERTIFIED BY FIA
    Dilano VAN’T HOFF

    F4 UAE CHAMPIONSHIP CERTIFIED BY FIA
    Enzo TRULLI

    F4 ITALIAN CHAMPIONSHIP CERTIFIED BY FIA
    Oliver BEARMAN

    F4 GERMAN CHAMPIONSHIP CERTIFIED BY FIA
    Oliver BEARMAN

    F4 BRITISH CHAMPIONSHIP CERTIFIED BY FIA
    Matthew REES

    F4 JAPANESE CHAMPIONSHIP CERTIFIED BY FIA
    Seita NONAKA

    F4 FRENCH CHAMPIONSHIP CERTIFIED BY FIA
    Esteban MASSON

    F4 CHINESE CHAMPIONSHIP CERTIFIED BY FIA
    Andy CHANG

    FIA WORLD ENDURANCE CHAMPIONSHIP LMGTE FOR DRIVERS
    Alessandro PIER GUIDI & James CALADO

    FIA WORLD ENDURANCE CHAMPIONSHIP LMGTE FOR MANUFACTURERS
    FERRARI

    FIA ENDURANCE TROPHY FOR LMP2 DRIVERS
    Charles MILESI, Ferdinand HABSBURG, Robin FRIJNS

    FIA ENDURANCE TROPHY FOR LMGTE AM DRIVERS
    Alessio ROVERA, François PERRODO, Nicklas NIELSEN

    FIA EUROPEAN TRUCK RACING DRIVERS’ CHAMPIONSHIP
    Norbert KISS

    FIA INTERNATIONAL DRIFTING CUP FOR DRIVERS
    James DEANE

    WTCR – FIA WORLD TOURING CAR CUP FOR DRIVERS
    Yann EHRLACHER

    WTCR – FIA WORLD TOURING CAR CUP FOR TEAMS
    Cyan Racing Lynk & Co

    WTCR – FIA WORLD TOURING CAR CUP FOR JUNIOR DRIVERS
    Luca ENGSTLER

    FIA WORLD LAND SPEED RECORDS
    Gianmaria AGHEM

    FIA OUTSTANDING OFFICIAL OF THE YEAR
    Bigirimana ANSELME

    FIA FOUNDING MEMBERS’ CLUB HERITAGE CUP
    Robert DEWAR

  • Max Verstappen clinches F1 Drivers’ title with a last-lap thriller

    Max Verstappen clinches F1 Drivers’ title with a last-lap thriller

    Abu Dhabi, 12 Dec 2021: Max Verstappen won his first World Driver’s Championship at the end of one of the most intense title-deciders in Formula 1 history, passing rival Lewis Hamilton to take the lead and the race win on the last lap of a dramatic Abu Dhabi Grand Prix. 

    With 54 laps of the race gone and with Hamilton in an apparently comfortable 11-second lead, Verstappen’s chances of taking the title appeared to be over, but when Williams’ Nicholas Latifi crashed out and the safety car was released, the Red Bull driver was handed another chance. He pitted, took on Soft tyres and when the safety car left the track he attacked. He closed on Hamilton, who was on old Hard tyres, and with a late diver down the inside of the Mercedes grabbed the lead. The Briton fought back on the following straight but Verstappen resisted to take his 10th win of the year and his first world championship title.

    When the lights went out at the start, Hamilton got the better start and took the lead into Turn 1 ahead of Verstappen. Behind them, Sergio Pérez made a good start and took third place from McLaren’s Lando Norris who went wide. 

    Having lost the lead, Verstappen slotted into the slipstream of Hamilton’s Mercedes and closed up to the Briton on the run to Turn 7. He attacked with a move down the inside and Hamilton went wide. The Mercedes rejoined the track in the lead and the incident prompted the stewards to take a closer look but ultimately they ruled that there was “no investigation necessary” and Hamilton was free to march on in the lead.

    He then set about building a gap to Verstappen, who began to complain of tyre wear, and by lap 13 the Dutchman was five seconds behind his title rival.

    That was the cue for the Dutch driver to head towards the pit lane and in a 2.1s stop he took on hard tyres. He rejoined in P5 behind Norris, quickly passed the McLaren and then set about chasing down Carlos Sainz. 

    Mercedes reacted to Verstappen’s pit stop by bring Hamilton in at the end of lap 14 and he took on hard tyres in a 2.4s stop, rejoining in P2, 11 seconds behind new race leader Pérez. Behind, Verstappen claimed P3 by comfortably dismissing Sainz but ahead Hamilton began to reel in Pérez. 

    Ove the next six laps the Mercedes driver closed the gap to the Mexican and with DRS support he attacked on the pit straight, passing the Mexican with apparent ease. Pérez was in no mood to relinquish the lead, however, and in the following DS zone he powered back past the Briton to reclaim top spot.

    Pérez’s feisty defence had the effect of allowing Max to erase much his deficit to Hamilton and when the British driver finally made it past the Mexican under DRS on the next lap, Pérez quickly moved aside to let Versatappen power through to second place, just a few seconds behind Hamilton and with both now on hard tyres. 

    It was a brief resurgence, however. As the second stint evolved, Hamilton began to once more slowly draw away from Max and by lap 33 he was five seconds ahead of the Red Bull driver. 

    The complexion of the race changed on lap 36 when Antonio Giovinazzi pulled over at the side of the track with gearbox issues. The Virtual Safety Car was deployed and with Hamilton staying out on track, the Team quickly called Max in for another set of hard tyres. Pérez also pitted under the VSC and he rejoined in third place. Verstappen rejoined almost 17 seconds behind Hamilton and when the track went green the Red Bull driver began to close on the Mercedes at the rate of eight tenths of a second per lap. 

    But as the final stint unfolded it became clear that the pace in the new tyres wouldn’t be strong enough to put Verstappen close to the race-leading Mercedes. 

    With 10 laps left Verstappen was 12 seconds behind Hamilton and running out of time, bu on lap 53 the pendulum once again swung back towards the Dutchman.

    Williams’ Nicholas Latifi crashed and the Safety Car was released. Verstappen immediately pitted and took a set of soft tyres as Hamilton stayed on track. On lap 57 race control decreed that the five cars on track between Hamilton and Verstappen would be allowed to unlap themselves and that the Safety Car would come in to provide for a single lap of racing. 

    And when the track went green Max was immediately on the attack. He closed on Hamilton on the run to Turn 5 and with a brave dive down the inside he claimed the race lead. Hamilton fought back on the next straight and drew alongside the Dutchman and almost got past, but Max held the line, held his nerve and kept the lead until the finish line, and until he had claimed his first FIA Formula One World Drivers’ Championship title.

    However, in the wake of the race, Mercedes lodged two protests against the result. Decisions relating to the protests were still awaited at the time of publication. 

    2021 FIA Formula 1 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix – Race
    1 Max Verstappen Red Bull/Honda 58 1:30’17.345
    2 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 58 1:30’19.601 2.256
    3 Carlos Sainz Ferrari 58 1:30’22.518 5.173
    4 Yuki Tsunoda AlphaTauri/Honda 58 1:30’23.037 5.692
    5 Pierre Gasly AlphaTauri/Honda 58 1:30’23.876 6.531
    6 Valtteri Bottas Mercedes 58 1:30’24.808 7.463
    7 Lando Norris McLaren/Mercedes 58 1:31’16.545 59.200
    8 Fernando Alonso Alpine/Renault 58 1:31’19.053 1’01.708
    11 Esteban Ocon Alpine/Renault 58 1:31’21.371 1’04.026
    10 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 58 1:31’23.402 1’06.057
    11 Sebastian Vettel Aston Martin/Mercedes 58 1:31’24.872 1’07.527
    12 Daniel Ricciardo McLaren/Mercedes 57 1:30’20.926 1 lap /3.581
    13 Lance Stroll Aston Martin/Mercedes 57 1:30’25.327 1 lap /7.982
    14 Mick Schumacher Haas/Ferrari 57 1:30’25.947 1 lap /8.602
    15 Sergio Pérez Red Bull/Honda 55 1:24’12.571 3 laps
         Nicholas Latifi Williams/Mercedes 50 1:16’55.491 Retirement
         Antonio Giovinazzi Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 33 50’20.298 Retirement
         George Russell Williams/Mercedes 26 41’10.855 Retirement
         Kimi Räikkönen Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 25 39’23.611 Retirement
         Nikita Mazepin Haas/Ferrari 0

  • Max Verstappen gets pole ahead of Lewis Hamilton

    Max Verstappen gets pole ahead of Lewis Hamilton

    Abu Dhabi, 11 Dec 2021: Max Verstappen will start the title-deciding Abu Dhabi Grand Prix from the front of the grid after claiming his 10th pole position of the campaign,beating title rival Lewis Hamilton by almost three tenths of a second as Lando Norris finished third for McLaren.

    Verstappen ran early in Q1 and the Dutch driver quickly moveds to the top of the timesheet with a lap of 1:23.680. Red Bull team-mate Sergio Pérez slotted into P4 with a lap of 1:24.253 that put him behind the AlphaTauri cars of Pierre Gasly and Yuki Tsunoda.

    Mercedes driver Hamilton and Bottas then appeared and title-contending Hamilton jumped to top spot with an opening flying lap of 1:23.266. Bottas then shuffled Verstappen down to third with a lap of 1:23.367.

    Soon after there was a brief red flag when one of the Haas cars clipped a bollard in the final corner and the debris ended up on the racing line on the corner exit where McLaren driver Norris then ran over it.

    The session restarted with six minutes left on the clock and in the final runs Hamilton improved to 1:22.845 to head Q1 in front of Bottas who ended the segment in P2 with a time of 1:23.117. Verstappen closed out the segment in third place thanks to an improved time of 1:23.332, just 0.018s ahead of Pérez who finished fourth ahead of Tsunoda.

    Eliminated at the end of the session were Williams drivers Nicholas Latifi and George Russell in P16 and P17 respectively, the Alfa Romeo of Kimi Räikkönen in P18 and the Haas cars of Mick Schumacher and Nikita Mazepin in 19th and 20th places.

    In the second segment both Red Bull and Mercedes sent their drivers out on medium tyres. Hamilotn set the benchmark at 1:20.185 but Verstappen opened with a good lap on the yellow-banded tyres to slot into second place, just 0.004s behind his rival. Sainz then popped up with a lap of 1:23.174 on softs to take top spot, and as he did so Verstappen reported that he had flat spotted one of his medium tyres.

    Not wanting their driver to start the race on a damaged set of mediums, Red Bull switched Verstappen to softs for his final run. It was a move mirrored by Pérez, whose opening time was only good enough for P10.

    And good laps by both saw Verstappen take top spot in Q2 with a lap of 1:22.80, with Pérez three tenths of a second further back in P2. Red Bull will therefore start the race on soft tyres. Behind them Hamilton and Bottas took third and fourth and will start on mediums.

    Eliminated at the end of the segment were Alpine’s Fernando Alonso in 11th place ahead of Gasly, whose brake problems continued, Aston Martin’s Lance Stroll, the Alfa Romeo of Antonio Giovinazzi and the second Aston of Sebastian Vettel.

    In Q3, the Red Bull drivers worked together well in the opening runs of Q3 with Pérez providing Verstappen with a crucial tow before backing off to let the championship leader surge past and set a blistering time of 1:22.109.

    That left the Dutch driver in provisional pole ahead of Hamilton, but the support provided by Peerez left the Mexican left the Mexican in sixth place. Vestappen responded by providing a tow on the Mexican’s second lap and Peerez jumped to an eventual fourth place on the grid behind Norris who sprung a surprise by putting his McLaren into third place.

    The opening run pace from Veratappen was so strong that in the final runs there was no response from Mercedes and Hamilton was forced to settle for second place, 0.371 adrift of the Dutch driver.

    With Norris putting in a good final flying lap to edge Pérez to fourth, fifth place in qualifying went to Carlos Sainz. The Ferrari driver also put in a good final lap to finish four hundredths of a second ahead of Bottas. Charles Leclerc qualified seventh in the second Ferrari ahead of AlphaTauri’s impressive Yuki Tsunoda, Alpine’s Esteban Ocon and the second McLaren of Daniel Ricciardo.

    2021 FIA Formula 1 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix – Qualifying
    1 Max Verstappen Red Bull/Honda 1:22.109  7 231.541
    2 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 1:22.480 0.371 0.452 7 230.499
    3 Lando Norris McLaren/Mercedes 1:22.931 0.822 1.001 7 229.245
    4 Sergio Pérez Red Bull/Honda 1:22.947 0.838 1.021 7 229.201
    5 Carlos Sainz Ferrari 1:22.992 0.883 1.075 6 229.077
    6 Valtteri Bottas Mercedes 1:23.036 0.927 1.129 6 228.956
    7 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 1:23.122 1.013 1.234 6 228.719
    8 Yuki Tsunoda AlphaTauri/Honda 1:23.220 1.111 1.353 6 228.449
    9 Esteban Ocon Alpine/Renault 1:23.389 1.280 1.559 6 227.986
    10 Daniel Ricciardo McLaren/Mercedes 1:23.409 1.300 1.583 6 227.932
    11 Fernando Alonso Alpine/Renault 1:23.460 0.660 0.797 6 227.792
    12 Pierre Gasly AlphaTauri/Honda 1:24.043 1.243 1.501 7 226.212
    13 Lance Stroll Aston Martin/Mercedes 1:24.066 1.266 1.529 7 226.150
    14 Antonio Giovinazzi Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 1:24.251 1.451 1.752 8 225.654
    15 Sebastian Vettel Aston Martin/Mercedes 1:24.305 1.505 1.818 8 225.509
    16 Nicholas Latifi Williams/Mercedes 1:24.338 1.493 1.802 8 225.421
    17 George Russell Williams/Mercedes 1:24.423 1.578 1.905 7 225.194
    18 Kimi Räikkönen Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 1:24.779 1.934 2.334 8 224.248
    19 Mick Schumacher Haas/Ferrari 1:24.906 2.061 2.488 9 223.913
    20 Nikita Mazepin Haas/Ferrari 1:25.685 2.840 3.428 9 221.877