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2022 F1 Grand Prix of Abu Dhabi — Results & aftermath

Verstappen caps historic championship season with win #15 in Abu Dhabi; Perez loses out to Leclerc for P2 in race and total points; Vettel bows out in style with point finish

Red Bull’s Max Verstappen capped off his second successive Formula 1 Championship season  in imperial style, dominating the season-ending Abu Dhabi Grand Prix for his record extending 15th win of the 22-round 2022 campaign. Starting from pole under the lights of the futuristic Yas Marina Circuit in this early evening-into-night race, Verstappen stormed away at the start and never truly relinquished his lead or faced a real challenge throughout this 58-lap contest. The Dutch master and his team made a one-stop strategy look easy while other struggled to execute it, a fitting metaphor for just how superior the RB-18 has been in Verstappen’s hands compared to any of the other contenders. In the end, Verstappen took the checkers nearly 9-seconds to the good of the P2 Ferrari of Charles Leclerc, a fitting end to what has been a truly historic F1 season by any era’s standards.

Pics courtesy GrandPirx247.com

However, that second place by Leclerc may also loom equally as large as Verstappen’s superlative accomplishments when the story of 2022 is recounted in years hence. Red Bull gambled on a split, two-stop strategy for their second driver, Sergio Perez, convinced that it was the best path for the Mexican to finish ahead of Leclerc and thereby claim second in the Drivers’ standings. But it didn’t work out, as Perez, who started alongside Verstappen on the grid in P2, lost vital track position when he made his second stop for a fresh set of Hard Pirellis on Lap 34, reemerging in P6 after conceding P2 to the hard-charging Lecerc. Ferrari may have also contributed to Red Bull’s move by relaying a dummy call to Leclerc about their own intentions of a two-stopper but in the end, Leclerc stayed out and ran his second set of tires all the way to the end, only having stopped back on Lap 21.

Crucially, the Ferrari seemed to really come alive on that set of Hard tires, whereas it struggled for consistant pace on the opening set of Mediums. Red Bull were hoping tire deg would doom the Ferarri and Perez’s many laps fresher rubber would prevail in the end. But Perez had to make so many overtakes in his final stint, including of sometimes recalcitrant back-markers, that the laps just ran out on the Mexican’s second-place dreams. Leclerc took P2 in the race by 1.3-seconds and that resulted in the Monegasque eeking out P2 in the Drivers’ Standings by a slim 3-points. While all seemed cordial in the post-race holding pen between Verstappen and his disappointed teammate, one wonders whether Verstappen’s rather petty decision not to allow Perez to overtake him at the end of the Brazilian GP last week will fester in Perez’s mind over the winter break and what it will mean for team dynamics next year.

For Leclerc, on other hand, that strong result in the final race ensured his runner-up states to Verstappen as truly the second best driver of the year despite hopes of perhaps challenging for the title. But after a strong start, Ferrari just couldn’t keep up with Red Bull’s pace of development or the superiority of the car in Verstappen’s peerless hands. Coupled with unforced errors on the pit wall and driver side, Ferrari had to be content to claim runners up in the Constructors’ title and to see Leclerc prevail over Perez for second in the Drivers’. The second Prancing Horse of Carlos Sainz capped off the strong effort in Abu Dhabi with a P4 finish and the fabled Scuderia from Maranello will now have the off-season to try and creep closer to Red Bull even as they watches Mercedes gain on them in the second half.

But much of Mercedes recent momentum appeared illusory at Yas Marina. While Lewis Hamilton and George Russell looked competitive at the start, it quickly became clear that they were once again back to being the third best team on the track, as they had been for much of the season. While Russell was able to salvage P5, he had nothing for Sainz’s Ferrari late in the race. And to add insult to a rare winless season for Lewis Hamilton, the seven-time champion DNF’d with terminal hydraulic failure on Lap 55, perhaps a residual effect from going airborne over the tall curbs while dicing with Sainz on the opening lap. While they were much improved after their woeful, porpoising-plagued start of the fist half, the Silver Arrows braintrust will be working long and hard over the winter to master this era’s tricky new aero formula, which has left them at a severe deficit to both Red Bull and Ferrari after a previous run of eight Constructors’ Titles under the prior formula.

Rounding out the Top 10, McLaren’s Lando Norris drove solidly to take P6 and teammate Daniel Ricciardo scored points in P9 in his last drive for the team after a very difficult year for the affable Aussie. Esteban Ocon was the lone Alpine to score in P7, his outgoing teammate Fernando Alonso having another retirement in a season plagued by them after a terminal water leak on Lap 28. And Aston Martin were able to bring both cars home in the points, with Lance Stroll finishing in P8 and Sebastian Vettel taking the last point in P10. While it was a far cry from his halcyon days when he was winning four titles on the trot for Red Bull, it was still a fine way for Vettel to drive off into the sunset and cap off what has surely been a Hall of Fame-worthy career. As has been said more than once this race weekend — Danke, Seb!

Top 10 finishers of the Abu Dhabi GP:

POS NO DRIVER CAR LAPS TIME/RETIRED PTS
1 1 Max Verstappen RED BULL RACING RBPT 58 1:27:45.914 25
2 16 Charles Leclerc FERRARI 58 +8.771s 18
3 11 Sergio Perez RED BULL RACING RBPT 58 +10.093s 15
4 55 Carlos Sainz FERRARI 58 +24.892s 12
5 63 George Russell MERCEDES 58 +35.888s 10
6 4 Lando Norris MCLAREN MERCEDES 58 +56.234s 9
7 31 Esteban Ocon ALPINE RENAULT 58 +57.240s 6
8 18 Lance Stroll ASTON MARTIN ARAMCO MERCEDES 58 +76.931s 4
9 3 Daniel Ricciardo MCLAREN MERCEDES 58 +83.268s 2
10 5 Sebastian Vettel ASTON MARTIN ARAMCO MERCEDES 58 +83.898s 1

Complete race results available via Formula1.com.

The final Driver Standings are here.

And the final Constructor’s’ Standings are here.

With 2022 now done & dusted it’s time to ride out the void of the winter break as best we can and get ready for an even more competitive season next year where Ferrari will hopefully continue their progress towards Red Bull’s high water mark and Mercedes will join the party as a bona fide contender after showing massive improvement to their chassis in the second half of this season. Hope to see you in early March when F1 returns in Bahrain to kick off a jam-packed, potentially 24-round 2023 campaign!

2020 F1 Grand Prix of Abu Dhabi — Results & aftermath

Red Bull’s Verstappen runs away from Mercedes to take easy win in season finale; Bottas P2, Hamilton P3 in procedural contest

With Mercedes engines suffering from a mysterious MGU-K issue that left them down on power, Red Bull’s Max Verstappen had no problem sprinting away from this year’s dominant Constructors’ champions to take an easy victory at the season-ending Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, at long last earning the supremely talented Dutchman his first win of the truncated 2020 season. After a run of unpredictable race results, perhaps none more so than last week’s surprise win for Racing Point’s Sergio Perez after Mercedes self-destructed in the pits, Sunday’s finale was a purely procedural affair at the Yas Marina circuit, a track where overtaking is always at a premium even with the DRS gimmick. The pole-sitting Verstappen easily swanned away from the Silver Arrows of Valtteri Bottas and champion Lewis Hamilton, who returned from a COVID infection and did not seem to possess his usual superlative stamina. Regardless, no one could challenge Verstappen’s Red Bull at this day-into-night race and no gambles were taken by the Mercedes brain trust that might have jeopardized Bottas’ second place in the Drivers’ points and allowed Verstappen to claim that honor if the inconsistent Finn finished below P2. After last week’s debacle, the reigning Contructors’ champs were content to play it safe and see their men come home P2 and P3, with Bottas leading home Hamilton, but Verstappen outclassing Bottas by a whopping 15.9 seconds. Don’t count on this being a harbinger of a real challenge to Mercedes’ potential dominance next season, as the Merc engines were clearly ailing and nearing end of life here in round 17, especially as they chose not develop them much further after clinching their record seventh title in a row way back at Imola in early November with eight races still to go. But For verstappen the victory was still sweet, saving the best for last in this challenging year by earning his first victory of a frustrating season when he almost always had to look at a Silver Arrows tailpipe no matter how well he drove.

Pics courtesy GrandPrix247.com

Verstappen’s much maligned teammate Alexander Albon also did his part by showing good form and staying close enough to the top three to make any strategic pit stop gamble the Mercedes pit wall may have wanted to try a nonstarter, as either Bottas or Hamilton would surely have come out behind the mercurial Thai. So he helped Red Bull keep Mercedes honest, holding off even a long shot threat to Verstappen’s supremacy on this day and coming home a solid fourth place. Along with another fourth in Styria in Round 2, a third in the first Bahrain race and another opportunistic podium earlier in Tuscany in Round 9, the result in Abu Dhabi might be enough for Albon to keep his seat at the big Red Bull team, which is what Christian Horner and the other VIPs have always said they wanted, at least in public. But if so, he will need to work hard on qualifying pace, where he was buried by Verstappen all season long, to give himself a better shot at earning high places in the races rather than constantly trying to fight his way through theoretically inferior cars with all the attendant risk that entails. Of course, Albon’s erratic track record over the course of the year still might not be enough to keep Red Bull from replacing him with the free agent Sergio Perez, who has had his best year in F1 by far. Either way, all should be revealed in this particular soap opera very soon.

Pics courtesy GrandPrix247.com

It was also a banner day for McLaren, capping a fine comeback season by not only seeing their drivers Lando Norris and Carlos Sainz finish an impressive P5 and P6 respectively but also earning a very valuable third place in the Constructors’ with that big points haul. The storied team was able to regain at least some of its past glory by leapfrogging the powerful Racing Point team for that coveted position on the final day when Lance Stroll could only muster and point in P10 and a luckless Perez DNF’d on Lap 10 with transmission failure. While Perez didn’t really get a chance to defend his wonderful win at Sakhir a week ago and Stroll somewhat underwhelmed after starting from P8, the Racing Point team still has a lot to be pleased with as they head into the offseason as the fourth best Constructor and ready for the change to Aston Martin branding and Sebastian Vettel partnering Stroll for 2021.

While Renault couldn’t overtake their nearest rivals McLaren and Racing Point and had to settle for fifth in the final Constructors’ standings it was still a good year for the French team, who will rebrand as Alpine for next year. Veteran Daniel Riccardo, who will leave to drive for McLaren next year, finished P7 and Esteban Ocon took P9. Ocon will remain at Renault/Alpine and partner with returning two-time champ Fernando Alonso in 2021. AlphaTauri’s Pierre Gasly, who had a breakout season including a win at Monza in Round 8, came home P8 to secure tenth in the Drivers’ Standings.

A final word on Ferrari: The Scuderia finished a woeful campaign on a woeful note, with Charles Leclerc P13 and the outgoing Vettel P14 in ostensibly his final race in a Prancing Horse, both behind the P12 of the “junior” Alfa Romeo driven by the venerable Kimi Raikkonen. Here’s hoping that Ferrari’s boasts about massive engine upgrades for next year are true — and perhaps Sainz arrival will pick things up, as well — because sixth in the Constructors’ with barely a chance of challenging Racing Point, McLaren or Renault for positions, let alone Mercedes and Red Bull for wins, simply won’t cut it for another season.

Top 10 finishers of the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix:

POS NO DRIVER CAR LAPS TIME/RETIRED PTS
1 33 Max Verstappen RED BULL RACING HONDA 55 1:36:28.645 25
2 77 Valtteri Bottas MERCEDES 55 +15.976s 18
3 44 Lewis Hamilton MERCEDES 55 +18.415s 15
4 23 Alexander Albon RED BULL RACING HONDA 55 +19.987s 12
5 4 Lando Norris MCLAREN RENAULT 55 +60.729s 10
6 55 Carlos Sainz MCLAREN RENAULT 55 +65.662s 8
7 3 Daniel Ricciardo RENAULT 55 +73.748s 7
8 10 Pierre Gasly ALPHATAURI HONDA 55 +89.718s 4
9 31 Esteban Ocon RENAULT 55 +101.069s 2
10 18 Lance Stroll RACING POINT BWT MERCEDES 55 +102.738s 1

Complete race results available via Formula1.com.

Final Drivers’ Standings are here.

Final Constructors’ Standings are here.

The next race, gods willing, will be on March 21st, 2021 back at good old Melbourne, Australia. Enjoy the offseason wherever you are and hope to see you then!

2020 F1 Grand Prix of Abu Dhabi — Qualifying results

Verstappen snatches pole at Yas Marina to break Mercedes’ season-long streak; Bottas betters Hamilton for P2 to spoil the champion’s return

After missing last week’s wild and wooly Sakhir Grand Prix due to COVID, Mercedes ace Lewis Hamilton returned for Round 17 and the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, the final race of the strange, abbreviated 2020 F1 season. But if the current and seven-time World Champion expected to simply come back in and grab an easy pole after his enforced absence his teammate Valtteri Biottas and Red Bull’s Max Verstappen had other ideas. After struggling somewhat throughout Saturday qualifying, Hamilton appeared to have done enough to hook up a pole-worthy lap when the checkers flew at the end of Q3 and he went to the top of the pylon. But his time as provisional fastest man on the day was short-lived when Bottas came steaming home six-tenths ahead of his illustrious stablemate, seeming to simultaneously get the better of Hamilton while also keeping Mercedes’ season-long pole streak comfortably intact. But barely a moment later, Verstappen crashed the Silver Arrows celebration by laying down a time of 1:35.246, .025 better than Bottas and good enough to give Red Bull — and any team not named Mercedes — their first pole of the year. So P2 Bottas will start on the front row alongside pole-sitter Vertspappen, who will have a hungry Hamilton right behind him on the second row in P3. With Verstappen having crashed out on the opening lap last weekend, Hamilton seeing the young substitute George Russell nearly win in his car and Bottas being thoroughly outclassed by the substitute Russell just as he has been by Hamilton for most of the season, the list of competing motivations to win tomorrow’s race and the resultant pressure on the drivers is almost too delicious to contemplate. Simply put, the start at Yas Marina for the Abu Dhabi GP on Sunday could be absolutely bananas.

The McLaren of Lando Norris also acquitted himself exceedingly well, out-qualifying his teammate Carols Sainz P4 to P6 and taking a spot alongside Hamilton on the second row of the grid. For good measure, Norris also bettered Verstappen’s Red Bull teammate Alexander Albon, who once again was found slightly wanting with his qualifying efforts with only the fifth fastest time. Continue reading

2018 F1 Grand Prix of Abu Dhabi — Results & aftermath

Hamilton finishes historic season in style with dominant win in Abu Dhabi; Vettel runner-up, Verstappen P3

Newly minted 5-time World Champion Lewis Hamilton resisted complacency and instead turned in another vintage Hammertime performance to cap off a historically successful 2018 Formula 1 season. Mercedes’ ace lead the race from pole, dominating from the front, and never faced a serious challenge in Sunday’s in Abu Dhabi Grand Prix from futuristic Yas Marina, the final race of the year. Hamilton picked up his 11th victory out of 21 contests and scored his record-setting 408th championship point. For as close as the season seemed at just a little over the halfway mark, Hamilton and Mercedes dominated Ferrari down the stretch en route to the team’s fifth Constructors’ title on the trot since the start of the current hybrid formula. Ferrari have got to be hoping that next year’s rule tweaks can slow the German juggernaut down in 2014. The fabled Scuderia were left pondering the ashes of another failed campaign and wondering where exactly they lost their way not long after the summer break. The Prancing Horses seemed poised to take their challenge to Mercedes’ dominance down to the wire after Vettel’s victory at Spa in August. But then Hamilton reeled off 6 wins in the last eight races with Kimi Raikkonen at COTA in the United States the only Ferrari driver standing on the top step during that amazing run. There will have to be a lot of midnight oil burnt at Maranello during the short winter break if Ferrari and Vettel are to have any hope of catching up to what is now officially a dynastic championship run by Hamilton and mighty Mercedes.

Pics courtesy GrandPrix247.com

The race got off to a scary start on the opening lap when the Renault of Nico Hulkenberg and the Haas of Romain Grosjean touched wheels while fighting for the same piece of real estate, sending Hulkenberg’s car airborne and barrel rolling several time before ending up in the energy-dispersing “Lego” barriers upside down. The helpless Hulkenberg was extracted from the car after some time and emerged unscathed, though the time it took to get him out did bring home the double-edged nature of the Halo system. Things might not have been so positive had his car been on fire during all the time it took to get Hulkenberg out of there safely.

Thankfully, though, the German was unhurt and the race resumed when the Safety Car came in at the end of Lap 4. Hamilton once again vaulted to the lead on the restart, while the Red Bull of Max Verstappen began making up places at a furious pace after software issues at the very start of the race saw the Dutchman drop like a stone from his initial P6 position on the grid. Continue reading

2018 F1 Grand Prix of Abu Dhabi — Qualifying results

Hamilton nails pole for last race of the season, Bottas P2 for Mercedes front row lockout; Vettel third fastest at Yas Marina

With all the prizes claimed on this last race weekend of the 2018 Formula 1 season, team Mercedes and their ace Lewis Hamilton showed they are still driven to win during Saturday qualifying for the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix. At this most stunning of venues, the brilliantly lit day-into-night Yas Marina Circuit, Hamilton decided to set a new track record instead of resting on his laurels as a newly crowned five-time F1 World Champion. The Englishman’s stunning 1:34.794 time in Q3 was over a tenth faster than his teammate, Valtteri Botas, and the two works Mercedes drivers locked out the front row easily for tomorrow’s contest. They also set their fastest times in Q2 on the preferred Ultrasoft Pirellis, which therefore will be the compound they both start on, making for an advantageous race strategy, as well.

The Silver Arrows once again outshone the Prancing Horses of Ferrari, a result all too familiar to the fabled team from Maranello this year. Sebastian Vettel, the championship runner-up, qualified in P3 and Kimi Raikkonen, who departs the team after tomorrow’s race for Sauber, set the fourth fastest time. Ferrari will be hoping their race pace is better, though, if only to salvage a win tomorrow and give Mercedes something to think about in the off season. Daniel Ricciardo out-qualified his more heralded teammate Max Verstappen P4 to P5 in what is also the Aussie’s last race for the Red Bull team as he prepares to move over to Renault. Romain Grosjean pulled his Haas all the way up to P7 on the grid, while Charles Leclerc, who takes Raikkonen’s seat with the big team next year, managed to hustle his Ferrari-powered Sauber up to P8. Esteban Ocon qualified P9 in his last drive for Force India and Nico Hulkenberg’s Renault set the tenth fastest time.

Top 10 qualifiers for the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix:

POS NO DRIVER CAR Q1 Q2 Q3 LAPS
1 44 Lewis Hamilton MERCEDES 1:36.828 1:35.693 1:34.794 19
2 77 Valtteri Bottas MERCEDES 1:36.789 1:36.392 1:34.956 19
3 5 Sebastian Vettel FERRARI 1:36.775 1:36.345 1:35.125 18
4 7 Kimi Räikkönen FERRARI 1:37.010 1:36.735 1:35.365 18
5 3 Daniel Ricciardo RED BULL RACING TAG HEUER 1:37.117 1:36.964 1:35.401 16
6 33 Max Verstappen RED BULL RACING TAG HEUER 1:37.195 1:36.144 1:35.589 14
7 8 Romain Grosjean HAAS FERRARI 1:37.575 1:36.732 1:36.192 15
8 16 Charles Leclerc SAUBER FERRARI 1:37.124 1:36.580 1:36.237 20
9 31 Esteban Ocon FORCE INDIA MERCEDES 1:36.936 1:36.814 1:36.540 18
10 27 Nico Hulkenberg RENAULT 1:37.569 1:36.630 1:36.542 15

Complete qualifying results available via Formula.com.

Tomorrow’s race, the last of the year, airs live beginning at 8AM Eastern on EPSN2 here in the States. Hope to see you then to farewell F1 before the long, cold winter break!

2015 F1 Grand Prix of Abu Dhabi — Results & aftermath

Rosberg wins final race of season in Abu Dhabi, finishing 2015 with 3-win streak, Hamilton P2 again; Raikonnen 3rd for resurgent Ferrari

Pics courtesy GrandPrix247.com

Pics courtesy GrandPrix247.com

Mercedes’ Nico Rosberg finished out his 2015 season on a high note on Sunday by winning his third Grand Prix in a row, bettering his conversion rate after also scoring six consecutive poles. Despite losing out on the Drivers’ Championship to his teammate and archival Lewis Hamilton for a second year in succession, Rosberg was able to earn the psychological salve of big time momentum heading into the off-season. Now, whether Hamilton lifted a bit after claiming his third overall World Championship in Austin four races ago is certainly a valid caveat to Rosberg’s new found supremacy. But there can be no arguing that after his unforced error at COTA sealed the title for Hamilton, Rosberg won the races in Mexico, Brazil and now Abu Dhabi in dominating fashion. He even had his rival complaining about his heretofore superlative Silver Arrows chassis, a sure sign that the Englishman was looking for external excuses for his slight drop off in performance. And during the day-into-night race at the gorgeous and opulent Yas Marina circuit, Hamilton could be heard begging his engineers to gamble on tire strategy by running his second set, the more durable prime soft compound, to the very end of the race. But the team vetoed such a risky strategy on the basis of diminishing returns and despite Hamilton pushing hard and getting to within 6.8 seconds during the closing laps, he was no match for Rosberg this day and wound up finishing over 8 seconds adrift. So for Rosberg it was another sweet victory over his nemesis and something truly positive to hang his hat on over the winter break. Of course, once the championship is up for grabs again in the new year it remains to be seen whether Rosberg really has the mettle to deal with a fiercely competitive Hamilton with his wick fully turned up and gunning for his fourth World Championship. If Rosberg wants to be more than a foil, he has simply got to win a title of his own some day. Otherwise, no matter how well he qualifies, how many Monaco GP victories he notches, or how many wins he picks up when the pressure’s off, he’ll never be considered anything but a “B” driver to Hamilton’s ace. In fact, until Rosberg win’s a title of his own it’s not really certain that he’s Hamilton’s true natural rival at all.

VettelAbuDhabi2015

That distinction, as the esteemed Sam Posey pointed out in his pre-race feature for NBCSN, may well go to Ferrari’s Sebastian Vettel. Starting their careers at the same time, the same age and with Vettel’s four Drivers’ titles won with Red Bull to Hamilton’s three combined with McLaren and Mercedes, the German showed again on Sunday why he is such a special talent. Starting from way back in 16th on the grid after his team uncharacteristically butchered their Saturday Qualifying, Vettel methodically worked his way through the field, masterfully maximizing the performance from each set of his tires. This enabled him to finish on the super soft options and vaulted him up to a hard won fourth place finish. That was right behind his teammate Kimi Raikkonen, who started P3 on the grid and secured that position at the end in a strong, drama-free performance to cap a very up-and-down year for the veteran Finn. Nonetheless, Kimi is slated to be back again next season as Vettel’s wingman and by finishing P3 & P4 the Prancing Horse showed that their early season form was no fluke and that the car continued to improve to the point of being undeniably the second best chassis in the field. If they can just get some more power out of the engine to compete with Mercedes’ straight-line speed it could well and truly be game on in 2016. If Vettel has the proper tools to work with he should be the one to pose the biggest threat to Hamilton’s recent run of dominance. After all, the German this year is the only driver to win a Grand Prix other than a Mercedes driver with his three victories thwarting their efforts to run the table. With a rapidly improving Prancing Horse, a classic F1 showdown between Vettel & Hamilton could be in the offing for next year.

Further down the order, Force India’s Sergio Perez drove an inspired race to finish fifth, holding off Red Bull’s Daniel Ricciardo all afternoon long. Continue reading