2022 F1 Grand Prix of Singapore — Results & aftermath

Perez delivers masterclass on slippery streets of Singapore, survives Safety Car infraction to take victory; Leclerc a game P2, Sainz a distant P3, as Verstappen rallies to P7 in incident-filled race

Red Bull’s Sergio Perez bookended his magnificent Monaco win in late May with an even more impressive drive to victory on the slick and slippery streets of Singapore on Sunday. With the entire field starting on Intermediate wet weather Pirelli tires after a late afternoon downpour dampened the streets of the ultra-tight Marina Bay Street Circuit, Perez started from P2 but made quick work of the pole-sitting Ferrari of Charles Leclerc to take the lead on the opening lap. Meanwhile, Leclerc’s Scuderia teammate Carlos Sainz pushed his way past Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton to take P3, while the second Red Bull of Max Verstappen, starting from P8 after the team botched his fuel calculations during qualifying, bogged down at the start and dropped even further to P12. By Lap 3, the Dutch points leader had recovered somewhat to P10 but he had his work cut out for him on a track that is more than a little difficult to overtake on.

Pics courtesy GrandPrix247.com

The first of many incidents that would complicate this intriguing contest throughout the day occurred on Lap 7 when the Williams of Nicholas Latifi banged into the Alfa Romeo of Zhou  Guanyu, damaging both cars and necessitating the deployment of a Safety Car in order to safely retrieve the stricken Alfa. With the track not drying quickly in the sultry tropical conditions, nobody chose to risk changing to the slick tires at that juncture. The field had another opportunity to gamble when Fernando Alonso’s Alpine came to an abrupt stop with engine failure on Lap 21 of this ostensible 61-lap GP. This time, Mercedes’ George Russell, mired in the rear of the pack after a poor quali and subsequently taking engine change penalties, rolled the dice and dove into the pits under Virtual Safety Car conditions for a swap off of Inters and onto Medium slick tires. When Russell emerged and began tiptoeing around the circuit as if driving on ice it became apparent that for those with a real shot at winning on the day it was still far too soon to risk taking off the wet weather rubber.

After two more brief VSC periods due to a crash by Williams Alex Albon on Lap 26 and the second Alpine of Esteban Ocon also suffering an engine failure on Lap 28 during which no one else opted to make the switch to slicks, Hamilton had a crash of his own Lap 33 that, though it did not end his race, damaged his front wing and severely compromised the remainder of it when he was forced to pit for the requisite lengthy nose change. Simultaneous to that, Russell finally began setting the fastest sector times, signaling that the crossover point had been achieved and the time was now for dry weather tires. One by one, drivers dove to the pits for slicks, with the P2 Leclerc coming in on Lap 35 and suffering a slow-ish 5.3 seconds stationary stop, while the race -leading Perez came in a lap later and benefitted from a typically spiffy 2.8-second effort by the Red Bull crew. Between the difference between their respective time in the pits and the difficult nature of getting the tires up to temp on the out lap, Perez came out comfortably ahead of Leclerc, the undercut not paying off for Ferrari on this day. No sooner had that all cycled out than Yuki Tsunoda promptly crashed his AlphaTauri, leading to yet another Safety Car and also meaning that the race would now be timed to two hours total upon the restart due to all the delays,

When the race finally got underway again with 34:40 remaining, Leclerc took advantage of the compressed gap to Perez under the Safety Car to mount a fierce challenge. The Ferrari man harried the veteran Mexican for several laps, their cars both squirming around at the edge of adhesion when they put the power downcoding out of the still-wet corners. When DRS was finally enabled by race control with just 27-minutes remaining it seemed the Prancing Horse might have a shot. But with passing so difficult in the slow speed corners and Leclerc forced to run so closely behind to even have a chance of an overtake, the Monegasque seemed to take the life out of his tires and his car lost its fine edge in handling. As Leclerc sawed away at his wheel and Perez began disappearing up the road, Ferrari were now left hoping that a race control investigation into Perez for getting too far behind that final Safety Car would lead to a results-altering penalty at the end. The Red Bull pit wall urged Checo to push and build a penalty-proof gap and he obliged, with Leclerc fading to an over seven-second deficit to the P1 Perez when the checkers finally flew in this enthralling tilt. Such was Perez’s excellence on the day and particularly in that final push that he was able to cling to the victory even after being assessed a 5-second penalty for that Safety Car infringement. That drive in the return of the Singapore Grand Prix after a two-year Covid-induced hiatus will go down as one the best in F1 history and proves that Red Bull not only have the best car this year but also, in Verstappen and Perez, the two best drivers in 2022.

Top 10 finishers of the Singapore GP:

POS NO DRIVER CAR LAPS TIME/RETIRED PTS
1 11 Sergio Perez RED BULL RACING RBPT 59 2:02:20.238 25
2 16 Charles Leclerc FERRARI 59 +2.595s 18
3 55 Carlos Sainz FERRARI 59 +10.305s 15
4 4 Lando Norris MCLAREN MERCEDES 59 +21.133s 12
5 3 Daniel Ricciardo MCLAREN MERCEDES 59 +53.282s 10
6 18 Lance Stroll ASTON MARTIN ARAMCO MERCEDES 59 +56.330s 8
7 1 Max Verstappen RED BULL RACING RBPT 59 +58.825s 6
8 5 Sebastian Vettel ASTON MARTIN ARAMCO MERCEDES 59 +60.032s 4
9 44 Lewis Hamilton MERCEDES 59 +61.515s 2
10 10 Pierre Gasly ALPHATAURI RBPT 59 +69.576s 1

Complete race results available via Formula1.com.

After the first race in three weeks, the F1 hustle is back on and the next race is in but a week’s time — the Japanese Grand Prix from venerable Suzuka. Hope to see you then to find out if the second Far East GP in-a-row can rival the thrills from Singapore!