The powers that be in Formula 1 have decided to tinker with their highly successful qualifying format, debuting a new 17-lap “sprint race” on Saturday at Silverstone to determine the starting grid for tomorrow’s British Grand Prix. Moving the normal three rounds of knock-out “qualifying” to Friday evening, those results only determine the starting spots for the sprint race not the pole or race day grid order. Instead, today’s sprint race will determine the actual starting spots for tomorrow’s Grand Prix.
Without having yet seen the sprint race quali, I have some serious misgivings about this new format. Why debut it in the middle of the season? Has the impact on the teams’ resources and personnel been considered thoroughly vis a vis having to prep for an entirely separate min-race in addition to the full GP the next day? Racers being racers, will we see some drivers taking each other out in the heat of competition for those precious grid spots during the sprint qualifying? And how are penalties going to be assessed for things like changing gear boxes and other elements, since F1 have essentially forced the teams to risk more frequent damage to the cars?
While it’s clear that F1 brass want more unpredictability and passing by making pure one-lap speed not solely determinative of grid position and increasing the odds of multiple cars being out of position when the GP begins, why introduce this smack dab in the middle of a championship already 9 rounds old? Is that really fair to the competitors who have been playing by one set of rules for the first part of the season? Lastly, as the adage goes: if it ain’t broke don’t fix it. F1 qualifying is already compelling as is and rewards the fastest cars with the best grid positions. Yes, everyone is always moaning about the perceived lack of passing in the races but except at a circuit like Monaco this is a bit if a canard, especially this season we have seen fine competition at the front of the field thanks to the highly competitive Red Bull challenging Mercedes’ usual supremacy, as well as a very tight midfield battle for points where teams like McLaren, Ferrari, AlphaTauri, Aston Martin and Alpine duke it out for positions on a weekly basis.
So, in my opinion, the Sprint Race Qualifying seems like a bit of a gimmick that one would find trotted out in a lower form of the sport to drum up interest and not at its highest level, as well as a solution in search of a problem, especially since it is being introduced mid-season. I think it would have been better deployed next season when the chassis will be theoretically spec and quasi-identical and the need to create performance uncertainty will be greater. But we’ll see how it works out in actuality today and perhaps I will be eating my words. More to come…