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2024 F1 Grand Prix of Qatar — Results & aftermath

Verstappen cruises to victory while chaos envelopes rest of field; Leclerc earns P2 ahead of Piastri as Ferrari close the gap to McLaren

A week after clinching his fourth consecutive Drivers’ title in Las Vegas, Red Bull’s peerless Max Verstappen showed no signs of resting on his laurels at Sunday’s Qatar Grand Prix. Peeved about being penalized one grid spot for an incident with Mercedes’ George Russell during Saturday qualifying, Verstappen launched off the line like a man possessed when the lights went out to start the race. He quickly made short work of the pole-sitting Russell, exacting his desert vengeance swiftly while steaming into Turn 1. Russell also lost a position to McLaren’s Lando Norris, dropping the lead Silver Arrow down to P3 with less than a third of lap yet run. Meanwhile, there was carnage at the back of the pack, with Haas’s Nico Hulkenberg losing traction and ping-ponging off Esteban Ocon’s Alpine and rookie Franco Colapinto’s Williams. While Hulkenberg was able to drive away from the accident from the large runoff area at the apex of Turn 1 with only a puncture, Ocon and Colapinto were not as fortunate and a Safety Car was deployed to retrieve both stricken cars.

It was a quick clean up and the race restarted towards the end of Lap 4, Verstappen quickly pulling a decent gap over the pursuing P2 McLaren of Norris. Once again, there was contact towards the rear, with the RBs of Yuki Tsunoda and Liam Lawson and the Sauber of Valtteri Bottas all making contact with one another but all three also able to continue. Lawson was eventually penalized 10-seconds for causing that collision and then the stewards also busted Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton for jumping the start, earning the seven-time champ a 5-second penalty. With all of the top contenders running slightly longer on their starting sets of Medium Pirelli tires due to that early Safety Car period, Russell became the first of the top ten to pit for fresh rubber on Lap 24, perhaps feeling the heat from the second McLaren of Oscar Piastri behind him and angling for an undercut advantage. But that gambit came to less than nothing when the Silver Arrows mechanics uncharacteristically botched the stop with a sticky rear right tire, leaving Russell helplessly stationary for an excruciating 7-seconds. When Russell rejoined on his new set of Hard compound tires, he found himself down in P11, behind several ostensibly slower cars and with a lot of work to do to pull himself back into the serious points.

The race began to get downright bizarre on Lap 30 of the 57-Lap contest from Losail International Circuit when a wing mirror from Alexander Albon’s Williams fell off and lay stationary just before the end of the start-finish straight. While double yellow flags were deployed in that sector, the race director inexplicably did not deploy a Safety Car to retrieve the errant mirror and lap after lap the cars had to try and tiptoe around that dangerous bit of debris. On Lap 33, however, Bottas ran over it, sending shards of glass and carbon fiber across the track surface. On Lap 34, Hamilton and the Ferrari of Carlos Sainz both sustained punctured tires as a result of running over that debris. On Lap 35, the Safety Car was finally deployed to clean up the jagged mess but it was far too late for those already disadvantaged by it. To make matters worse, Norris had failed to lift for the double yellows in that area while in hot pursuit of Verstappen a little earlier. The Dutchman immediately took notice and so too did the stewards, who soon announced they were investigating the McLaren man’s potential infraction.

When things had been cleaned up and the race restarted on Lap 39, it was once again Verstappen and Norris battling it out at the front, the Englishman getting much closer this time and running side by side with the Red Bull before backing out of the effort and living to fight another day, But once again there was trouble at the back, as the second Red Bull of Sergio Perez spun violently and ended up unable to continue, as did Hulkenberg, who got beached in one of the gravel traps. It was another terrible day for Perez, who seems more than likely to lose his Red Bull seat due to his horrid drop in form in the second half of the season, which has cost the team dearly in their hopes of repeating as Constructors’ champs. When the race restarted once more on Lap 42, Verstappen swanned away this time, while Norris found himself under attack by Charles Leclerc’s Ferrari. While Norris was able to hold the Prancing Horse off to maintain second place, on Lap 45 the hammer dropped and Norris was assessed a race altering 10-second stop/go penalty, which relegated him to last of the runners in P15 when he emerged from the pits. Hamilton also received a second penalty, this time a drive through for speeding in the pits earlier, adding insult to injury for the proud Englishman on a day where nothing went right for him and he would score no points.

As for Norris, he desperately tried to get back into the points, his indiscretion costing the McLaren team in their fight against Ferrari for the all-important Constructors’ Championship. Leclerc was now firmly ensconced in P2 and ended up 6-seconds behind  the victorious Verstappen when the checkered flag flew, making it a very good day for the Scuderia and the Monegasque. Russell had seemingly recovered from his disastrous pit stop when he crossed the line in P3 but was assessed a 5-second time penalty for dropping back too far from the Safety Car during its final deployment. That promoted Piastri to the podium in P3, Russell being relegated to P4 on a frustrating day for the Briton. Alpine’s Pierre Gasly had a superb drive to finish a very valuable P5, making the most of the rash of retirements and woes to other points contenders. Carlos Sainz further helped close Ferrari’s gap to McLaren to an eminently manageable 21-point deficit, while Norris clawed his back in the points with a late race pass on Bottas for P10 and also set the fastest lap en route to make it a pair on a day where much more seemed to be on the cards for him. Aston Martin’s Fernando Alonso gave a vintage effort to finish an impressive P7 in a car that was nowhere on the straights; Sauber’s Zhou Guanyu scored his and the team’s first points of the year with an excellent drive to finish P8; and the  lone surviving Haas of Kevin Magnussen also took valuable points in P9

Top 10 finishers of the Qatar GP:

POS

NO

DRIVER

CAR

LAPS

TIME/RETIRED

PTS

1

1

Max Verstappen

Red Bull Racing Honda RBPT

57

1:31:05.323

25

2

16

Charles Leclerc

Ferrari

57

+6.031s

18

3

81

Oscar Piastri

McLaren Mercedes

57

+6.819s

15

4

63

George Russell

Mercedes

57

+14.104s

12

5

10

Pierre Gasly

Alpine Renault

57

+16.782s

10

6

55

Carlos Sainz

Ferrari

57

+17.476s

8

7

14

Fernando Alonso

Aston Martin Aramco Mercedes

57

+19.867s

6

8

24

Zhou Guanyu

Kick Sauber Ferrari

57

+25.360s

4

9

20

Kevin Magnussen

Haas Ferrari

57

+32.177s

2

10

4

Lando Norris

McLaren Mercedes

57

+35.762s

2

Complete race results available via Formula1.com.

The 2024 season F1 finale is but a week away, the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix from the visually stunning Yas Marina Circuit. Hope to see you then for yet more fireworks before we draw the curtains on what has been an enthralling season of motor racing at the sport’s highest level!

2024 F1 Grand Prix of Singapore — Results & aftermath

Norris runs away from Verstappen from the start to take dominant win in Singapore; Verstappen still secures P2 but Piastri adds to McLaren points haul in P3

After taking pole by just two-tenths on Saturday, it wasn’t quite clear how much race pace McLaren’s Land Norris would have versus his closest rival, Red Bull’s Max Verstappen. But in Sunday’s Singapore Grand Prix, it quickly became apparent that the answer was more than enough to keep Verstappen, the season-long Drivers’ points leader, well and truly in the rearview mirrors. With the Flying Dutchman’s best chance a potential early overtake at the very start of the race at the ultra-tight Marina Bay Street Circuit, where passing is always at a premium, it was instead Norris who made the superior getaway when the lights went out. The young English contender quickly demonstrated just how much the McLaren MCL38 has overhauled the RB20 as the season has progressed, scampering away with relative ease and quickly gapping the pursuing Red Bull. With his main opponent on this day not Verstappen but the heat, humidity and his own fight for concentration in the face of fatigue, Norris had a few small moments and brushes with the wall. But he kept it clean enough to take a dominant win at the end of 62 grueling laps without a Safety Car or respite of any kind, to the tune of a nearly twenty-one-second advantage over Max. The only thing that stopped Norris from having an absolutely perfect weekend was the Red Bull sister team’s Daniel Ricciardo of RB Honda, who made a late stop for fresh Soft Pirellis and subsequently stole the fastest lap point away from Norris. It was nice bit of long game strategy from Red Bull in a tight championship and a suitably selfless gesture from Ricciardo, who ran his last race for RB on Sunday and possibly in Formula 1, the affable Aussie set to be replaced in the car when the teams unpack in Austin by promising rookie New Zealander, Liam Lawson.

Despite his recent surge in momentum, Norris has not been able to make much of a dent in Verstappen’s championship lead, as the Dutch master has proven superb at damage limitation in the face of the McLaren onslaught. As a team, however, McLaren have begun to pull away in the all important Constructors’ points, helped in no small part by having the superior dynamic duo of Norris and Oscar Piastri, who are both able to compete for victory on any given Sunday. Continue reading

2024 F1 Grand Prix of Singapore — Qualifying results

Norris earns pole at Marina Bay in Red Flag-affected quali; Verstappen pips Hamilton for P2; Ferrari Q3 nightmare as Sainz crashes out, Leclerc time deleted

With Formula 1 entering the final third of its longest ever season and the Championship hunt as tight as it has been in several years, Saturday Qualifying for the Singapore Grand Prix was as dramatic as it was potentially consequential. McLaren’s Lando Norris, desperate to close his gap to Red Bull’s points-leading Max Verstappen after a difficult weekend in Azerbaijan, was able to take the pole for Sunday’s race with a post-Red Flag one-lap flier late in Q3. Ferrari’s Carlos Sainz had crashed out midway through Q3 in bizarre fashion during a pre-hot lap warm up, bringing out the Red Flag to retrieve the Spaniard’s stricken Prancing Horse form the final corner’s Tecpro barriers.  With a little over 8 minutes remaining when the session restarted, McLaren opted to send both their cars out first amongst the remaining nine to set times and not wait around for any potential track improvement by the time the clock ran out. It worked well for Norris, who hooked up a lap good enough for P1 but less well for teammate Oscar Piastri. Piastri, last week’s winner at Baku, had been in the top spot before the Sainz stoppage but the young Aussie could not improve and was eventually relegated to P5 by the session’s end.

After a multi-race qualifying drought, Verstappen returned to his excellent form under the pressure of the one-lap shootout, besting Mercedes Lewis Hamilton for P2 in a car that had looked nowhere for most of the session. Lining up alongside Norris on the front row, this race could come down to which driver gets away better at the very start, as passing at Marina Bay Street Circuit can be extremely difficult. Hamilton was nonetheless pleased with his P3 effort, the team unlocking pace in the car overnight after some mediocre performances in Friday’s two practice sessions. Silver Arrows stablemate George Russell was slightly less pleased with the unpredictable performance of his Pirelli tires but still  managed to set the fourth fastest time to earn a spot alongside Hamilton on Row 2. Nico Hulkenberg far out-performed his mediocre Haas and set a stunning time good enough for P6. Aston Martin’s savvy Fernando Alonso pulled the same trick to take a solid P7. RB Honda’s Yuki Tsunoda earned P8, while Ferrari suffered the indignity of not only Sainz having to start the race from P10 due to his crash but also seeing Charles Leclerc’s decent final lap deleted for a track limits violation, dropping the Monegasque to P9 and making for a very unhappy fifth-row duo for the Scuderia.

Top 10 qualifiers for the Singapore GP:

POS

NO

DRIVER

CAR

Q1

Q2

Q3

LAPS

1

4

Lando Norris

McLaren Mercedes

1:30.002

1:30.007

1:29.525

16

2

1

Max Verstappen

Red Bull Racing Honda RBPT

1:30.157

1:29.680

1:29.728

18

3

44

Lewis Hamilton

Mercedes

1:30.393

1:29.929

1:29.841

16

4

63

George Russell

Mercedes

1:30.811

1:30.153

1:29.867

17

5

81

Oscar Piastri

McLaren Mercedes

1:30.258

1:29.640

1:29.953

18

6

27

Nico Hulkenberg

Haas Ferrari

1:30.724

1:30.150

1:30.115

18

7

14

Fernando Alonso

Aston Martin Aramco Mercedes

1:30.684

1:30.450

1:30.214

17

8

22

Yuki Tsunoda

RB Honda RBPT

1:30.716

1:30.289

1:30.354

17

9

16

Charles Leclerc

Ferrari

1:30.786

1:29.747

DNF

19

10

55

Carlos Sainz

Ferrari

1:30.670

1:30.108

DNS

16

Complete qualifying results available via Formula1.com.

Tomorrow’s race airs live on ESPN beginning at 8 am here in the States. With tensions mounting  and time running short in the hunt for glory in 2024, as well as a very tight circuit where overtaking is very difficult and Safety Cars are de rigueur, look for loads of close quarters action between the top contenders, several of whom are out of position, in a desperate scramble for maximum points. Hope to see you then to find out how it all shakes out!

2024 F1 Grand Prix of Azerbaijan — Qualifying results

Leclerc claims pole in chaotic Baku qualifying; Piastri edges Sainz for P2 but Norris knocked out in Q1 shocker; Perez out-qualifies Verstappen for once, P4 to P6

On a fascinating and chaotic day of Saturday qualifying for the Azerbaijan Gran Prix at the always challenging Baku City Circuit it was Ferrari’s Chalres Leclerc who carried the momentum from his dream win at Monza two weeks ago and converted it into pole position for Sunday’s Grand Prix. The Monegasque’s excellent run of qualifying form at Baku also continued, as he earned his fourth consecutive pole here. Leclerc, however, has never concerted those into wins in Azerbaijan, something he will be more than eager to do come race day tomorrow. McLaren’s Oscar Piastri slotted in alongside the lead Ferrari with a time good enough for P2, while Leclerc’s Scuderia stablemate Carlos Sainz laid down the third fastest lap in Q3. Unfortunately for McLaren and their highest placed driver, Lando Norris was unceremoniously bounced out of Q1 after some confusion over lifting for a yellow flag that appeared in actuality to be the “slow down” white flag. Starting from a lowly P16, Norris and his brain trust will have it all to do tomorrow to try and keep his points pursuit of Red Bull’s Max Verstappen on track. The young English contender will likely need help from a Safety Car and /or Red Flag, plus some canny strategy calls from the pit wall to get a decent result.

Speaking of Red Bull and Verstappen, it was another bewildering day for the Dutch master, as teammate Sergio Perez firmly bested him in quali, P4 to P6. It was the first time this season that the Mexican veteran, who is fighting to stay in his Red Bull seat after a massive midseason slump, has out-qualified his championship-leading teammate. Mercedes’ George Russell split the Red Bull’s with the fifth fatstest time, clinching the season’s qualifying battle with his highly decorated teammate Lewis Hamilton, 13 to 4. Hamilton could only muster P7 on the day, though the seven-time World Champion has a habit of coming good in the races. Aston Martin’s Fernando Alonso over-performed his rather tepid mount to the tune of a P8 starting spot, while raw rookie Franco Colapinto go the better of his senior Williams teammate Alex Albon in only his second F1 effort, P9 to P10. Colapinto, who was drafted into the team to replace the struggling American Logan Seargeant at Monza, has looked impressive throughout the weekend at this rather daunting circuit. He was also helped by Albon not being able to get a final lap due to inexplicably leaving the pits with the airbox fan still attached. It remains to be seen if Albon will face any penalties for tomorrow’s race due to that obvious unsafe release.

Top 10 qualifiers for the Azerbaijan GP:

POS

NO

DRIVER

CAR

Q1

Q2

Q3

LAPS

1

16

Charles Leclerc

Ferrari

1:42.775

1:42.056

1:41.365

20

2

81

Oscar Piastri

McLaren Mercedes

1:43.033

1:42.598

1:41.686

19

3

55

Carlos Sainz

Ferrari

1:43.357

1:42.503

1:41.805

23

4

11

Sergio Perez

Red Bull Racing Honda RBPT

1:43.213

1:42.263

1:41.813

15

5

63

George Russell

Mercedes

1:43.139

1:42.329

1:41.874

20

6

1

Max Verstappen

Red Bull Racing Honda RBPT

1:43.097

1:42.042

1:42.023

20

7

44

Lewis Hamilton

Mercedes

1:43.089

1:42.765

1:42.289

22

8

14

Fernando Alonso

Aston Martin Aramco Mercedes

1:43.472

1:42.426

1:42.369

19

9

43

Franco Colapinto

Williams Mercedes

1:43.138

1:42.473

1:42.530

20

10

23

Alexander Albon

Williams Mercedes

1:42.899

1:42.840

1:42.859

19

Complete qualifying results available via Formula1.com.

Tomorrow’s race aires live on ESPN beginning at 7 am Eastern here in the States. With the grid jumbled and a lot of drivers out of position, it should be an action packed start that Leclerc and Piastri will look to stay ahead of in pursuit of victory. Hope to see you then to find out how it all shakes out!

2024 F1 Grand Prix of the Netherlands — Results & aftermath

Norris recovers from poor start to hammer Verstappen on home turf; Leclerc holds off Piastri for P3

In the halcyon days of Red Bull’s dominance, a bobble like the one McLaren’s pole-sitting Lando Norris made to start Sunday’s Dutch Grand Prix would have relegated the young Briton to a second place start once Max Verstappen pounced to take the lead amidst the rolling dunes of Zandvoort. But such are the strides that McLaren and their young duo of drivers have made that Norris not only kept his cool after ceding the lead but then set himself to relentlessly closing down the race leading Red Bull in rather astonishingly rapid fashion. Proving that the pace advantage in Formula 1 no longer rests with Red Bull, McLaren’s main man hunted down Verstappen and re-passed the Dutchman in front of his home crowd with relative ease on Lap 18 of this 72-lap contest. Norris almost immediately scampered away out of DRS range and built enough of an advantage to withstand Verstappen’s attempt at an undercut on Lap 27, emerging from his only out stop of the race a lap later just under five-seconds ahead of the Flying Dutchman. After that, it was clear that the McLaren in Norris’s hands had the legs on Verstappen’s Red Bull, and Norris never faced a real challenge for the rest of the race. He subsequently earned his second F1 victory and second this season after breaking his duck in Miami, taking the checkered flag nearly 23-seconds ahead of the Red Bull runner-up.

Ferrari’s Chalres Leclerc exceeded expectations by making a very good getaway of his own to start the race and then undercutting the field on Lap 25 to get track position on the second McLaren of Oscar Piastri and the second Red Bull of Sergio Perez. Lecerc was then able to hold off Piastri in the final stanza of the race to claim P3 and earn the last step on the podium. But with Piastri still coming home a solid P4 while Perez drifted to a rather desultory P6 finish, and combined with Norris’s maximum 26-points haul for not only winning but setting the fastest lap of the day, McLaren closed ground on Red Bull in the all-important Constructors’ Standings to the tune of a mere thirty-point deficit. Norris also sliced into Verstappen’s lead in the Drivers’ points, closing to within seventy with nine races remaining on the calendar. In a twist few would have predicted after the opening rounds of the 2024 season, Red Bull are now the ones chasing McLaren and hoping they can do just enough to hold off the papaya orange menace filling up their rearview mirrors in both title hunts.

Leclerc’s Scuderia teammate Carlos Sainz did well to come home ahead of Perez in P5 after being hampered by limited running in practice and starting down in P10. Mercedes had a step back here after their strong run of results heading into the summer break, leaving the team scratching their heads over their relative lack of pace that saw George Russell only finish P7 after starting from fourth on the grid. Teammate Lewis Hamilton at least recovered somewhat from his lowly P14 starting position and came home in P8, cold if any comfort for driver and team. Alpine’s Pierre Gasly had another solid drive to take valuable points in P9 and Fernando Alonso was the lone Aston Martin to score in P10.

Top 10 finishers of the Dutch GP:

POS

NO

DRIVER

CAR

LAPS

TIME/RETIRED

PTS

1

4

Lando Norris

McLaren Mercedes

72

1:30:45.519

26

2

1

Max Verstappen

Red Bull Racing Honda RBPT

72

+22.896s

18

3

16

Charles Leclerc

Ferrari

72

+25.439s

15

4

81

Oscar Piastri

McLaren Mercedes

72

+27.337s

12

5

55

Carlos Sainz

Ferrari

72

+32.137s

10

6

11

Sergio Perez

Red Bull Racing Honda RBPT

72

+39.542s

8

7

63

George Russell

Mercedes

72

+44.617s

6

8

44

Lewis Hamilton

Mercedes

72

+49.599s

4

9

10

Pierre Gasly

Alpine Renault

71

+1 lap

2

10

14

Fernando Alonso

Aston Martin Aramco Mercedes

71

+1 lap

1

Complete race results available via Formula.com.

The next tilt is in but a week’s time — the Italian Grand Prix from the Temple of Speed, Monza. While Ferrari would dearly like to take the honors for that race weekend, it’s now looking like a two team race between Red Bull and surging McLaren. Hope to see you then to find out how it all shakes out on the fastest circuit in Formula 1!

2024 F1 Grand Prix of the Netherlands — Qualifying results

Norris claims authoritative pole over Verstappen at Zandvoort as F1 kicks back into gear; Piastri P3, Russell P4

Formula 1’s long summer break has come and gone, as the circus reopened for Round 15 of the 2024 World Championship at the small but technical Zadvoort Circuit amidst the dunes along the coast of the Netherlands. After nothing but wet practices on Friday and Saturday morning, Qualifying itself was dry and the cars finally got to show their speed. Looking tan, ready and rested, McLaren’s Lando Norris continued his run of good form by laying down a dominant lap to earn pole position during Qualifying for tomorrow’s Dutch Grand Prix, some four-tenths to the good of Red Bull’s Max Verstappen, the current points leader in the Drivers standings. Despite the throngs of orange-clad countrymen willing on the Dutch master from the stands, it was the papaya orange of Norris’s McLaren setting the pace when push came to shove. Adding to McLaren’s satisfaction, Oscar Piastri set the third fastest time, while Verstappen’s teammate Sergio Perez could only muster P5. Mercedes’ George Russell split those two and will line up alongside Piastri on the second row after claiming P4. But Silver Arrows teammate Lewis Hamilton, winner of two of the last three races prior to the break, had a bit of a disastrous day. First, the seven-time champion was bounced in Q2 after only being twelfth fastest in that session; then he was assessed a three-place grid penalty after being found guilty of impeding Perez in Q1. On a circuit where track position is king, Hamilton will really have to pull something out of the bag come race day now starting from a lowly fourteenth.

Charles Leclerc was the only Ferrari to make it into Q3 and will start P6 on Sunday, as teammate Carlos Sainz struggled with handling en route to an initial P11 grid spot. But Williams’ Alexander Albon, who had been looking good with the eighth fastest time at the end of quali, was DQ’d after the session due to a technical infraction on the floor of his car. That elevated not only Sainz into the top ten, but also promoted Aston Martin’s Lance Stroll to P8 on the grid, alongside his P7 teammate Fernando Alonso, and lifted Alpine’s Pierre Gasly up to P9.

Top 10 qualifiers for the Dutch GP:

POS

NO

DRIVER

CAR

Q1

Q2

Q3

LAPS

1

4

Lando Norris

McLaren Mercedes

1:11.377

1:10.496

1:09.673

14

2

1

Max Verstappen

Red Bull Racing Honda RBPT

1:11.393

1:10.811

1:10.029

14

3

81

Oscar Piastri

McLaren Mercedes

1:11.541

1:10.505

1:10.172

16

4

63

George Russell

Mercedes

1:11.049

1:10.552

1:10.244

18

5

11

Sergio Perez

Red Bull Racing Honda RBPT

1:11.006

1:10.678

1:10.416

17

6

16

Charles Leclerc

Ferrari

1:11.370

1:10.689

1:10.582

24

7

14

Fernando Alonso

Aston Martin Aramco Mercedes

1:11.493

1:10.845

1:10.633

16

DQ

23

Alexander Albon

Williams Mercedes

0

8

18

Lance Stroll

Aston Martin Aramco Mercedes

1:11.518

1:10.661

1:10.857

19

9

10

Pierre Gasly

Alpine Renault

1:11.718

1:10.815

1:10.977

20

10

55

Carlos Sainz

Ferrari

1:11.327

1:10.914

18

Complete qualifying results available via Formula1.com.

Revised grid taking into account multiple penalties is here.

Tomorrow’s race amidst the dunes airs live on ESPN tomorrow starting at 9 am Eastern here in the States. Hope to see you then to find out of Norris can hold off Verstappen for another win and tighten up the championships even further and we fly into the second half of the season!

2024 F1 Grand Prix of Belgium — Qualifying results

Verstappen fastest by far at wet Spa but will drop 10 places due to engine penalties; P2 Leclerc inherits pole for race, P3 Perez elevated to front row

Red Bull’s Max Verstappen returned to his dominating ways amidst tricky wet weather conditions during Saturday qualifying for the Belgian Grad Prix. With persistent mist and occasional rains swirling around the legendary Spa-Francorchamps circuit in the Ardennes forest, Verstappen mastered the wet parts of the track and excellent on those areas that were merely damp, riding his Intermediate Pirelli tires to a six-tenths advantage over the P2 Ferrari of Charles Leclerc. Unfortunately for the flying Dutchman, who is looking to recover from an uncharacteristically ragged and testy race last week in Hungary en route to a P5 finish, Verstappen will be dropped to P11 due to a 10-place grid penalty for a new engine component outside the limit. Therefore Leclerc, whose very fast final flying lap seemed to come from nowhere, inherits the actual pole for tomorrow’s race. Also benefiting was Verstappen’s struggling teammate Sergio Perez, who finally made it into Q3 after a long drought, set the third fastest time on merit and will now be elevated to P2 and the front row for tomorrow’s start due to his teammate’s demotion. With Verstappen forced to fight his way to the front from outside the top ten and the always unpredictable weather at Spa likely to rear it’s head at any moment during the race, tomorrow’s Belgian GP could be another humdinger in a season that has already been full of them.

Lewis Hamilton was the quickest Mercedes in these tricky conditions with a final time good enough for P4, while Silver Arrows teammate George Russell struggled moreso en route to only the seventh fastest time. The two McLaren’s ended up the meat in the Mercedes sandwich, last week’s brilliant pace washed away in the slick conditoins. With Lando Norris heading Hungarian GP winner and victory debutante Oscar Piastri P5 to P6, they and the team will be hoping for better weather and the ability to push for the podium in the race. While Leclerc excelled, the second Ferrari of Carlos Sainz underwhelmed and could do no better than P8. Aston Martin’s Fernando Alonso in P9 and the Alpine of Esteban Ocon in P10 rounded out the remaining qualifiers in Q3, and the P11 Williams of Alexander Albon was elevated to tenth on the grid for the GP due to Verstappen’s demotion.

Top 10 qualifiers for the Belgian GP:

POS

NO

DRIVER

CAR

Q1

Q2

Q3

LAPS

1

1

Max Verstappen

Red Bull Racing Honda RBPT

1:54.938

1:53.837

1:53.159

21

2

16

Charles Leclerc

Ferrari

1:55.349

1:54.193

1:53.754

22

3

11

Sergio Perez

Red Bull Racing Honda RBPT

1:55.139

1:54.470

1:53.765

21

4

44

Lewis Hamilton

Mercedes

1:55.692

1:54.037

1:53.835

22

5

4

Lando Norris

McLaren Mercedes

1:55.582

1:54.358

1:53.981

24

6

81

Oscar Piastri

McLaren Mercedes

1:54.835

1:54.136

1:54.027

23

7

63

George Russell

Mercedes

1:55.353

1:54.095

1:54.184

22

8

55

Carlos Sainz

Ferrari

1:55.169

1:54.112

1:54.477

23

9

14

Fernando Alonso

Aston Martin Aramco Mercedes

1:55.489

1:54.258

1:54.765

23

10

31

Esteban Ocon

Alpine Renault

1:55.417

1:54.460

1:54.810

23

Complete qualifying results available via Fomrula1.com.

The amended grid with Verstappen’s penalty factored in is here.

Tomorrow’s race, the last before the month-long August break, airs live on ESPN beginning at 9 am Eastern here in the States. Will the rains return to upend the teams’ best laid plans and can Verstappen fight his way up from P11 to a podium or even a win whatever the weather? Hope to see you then to find out how it all shakes out!

2024 F1 Grand Prix of Hungary — Results & aftermath

Piastri prevails for maiden win over Norris as McLaren dominate in Hungary; Hamilton earns P3 and 200th podium with savvy drive; Verstappen finishes a disgruntled P5

McLaren’s young Australian driver Oscar Piastri earned his maiden Formula 1 win at Sunday’s Hungarian Grand Prix, prevailing over his teammate Lando Norris after a first lap pass for the race lead and then a little help from team orders when some late race strategy calls reversed their positions. The McLaren 1-2 was their first since 2021 and confirmed the surging team’s status as the biggest threat to Red Bull and Max Verstappen’s hegemony. In a thoroughly intriguing and tense race at the high downforce Hungaroring, pit strategy came to the fore as the determining factor for the top contenders, and none more so than at team McLaren. With Norris perhaps hampered by a pre-race gremlin in his drive-by-wire throttle system, the pole-sitter saw himself out dragged by his teammate heading into Turn 1 to start the race, and Piastri made it stick for the early race lead. Piastri maintained de facto P1 after the first round of stops for McLaren despite the undercut of Norris boxing a lap earlier than him on Lap 18. But when they decided to repeat the earlier call to Norris in for his second tire stop on Lap 47 of this 70 lap contest, attempting to cover off the Mercedes of Lewis Hamilton, things within the team became quite tense. Hamilton had already made his second and final stop back on Lap 41, the Mercedes braintrust deciding to stay on the durable Hard Pirellis, hoping for an advantage in the final laps. On the other hand, Norris switched off the Hards and back onto the quicker Mediums, again undercutting his teammate Piastri, who came in one circuit later on Lap 48 to make the same tire switch. This time, Piastri was unable to maintain his advantage and emerged in P2 behind the now race-leading Norris. But the team quickly informed both drivers of their intentions to switch their positions in the closing laps to rectify Piastri’s startegy-induced disadvantage, since they had contravened the gentleman’s agreement within F1 teams giving pit priority to their leading driver. While Piastri struggled to catch up to his front-running teammate and Norris required repeated cajoling from the pit wall over the final 20 or so laps, he finally and somewhat grudgingly let Piastri by with two laps to go. In the end, it all worked out for team McLaren and reflected well on Norris as a team player able to accept the bigger picture amidst his own fierce ambition to win. And for Piastri, it was his Formula 1 dream come true and, he hopes, merely the first of many Grand Prix victories to come.

 

Hamilton drove exceptionally well en route to third place and his 200th career podium. The seven-time World Champion was able to push through his doubts about the Silver Arrows tire strategy of running the Mediums to Hards to Hards, contrary to the other contenders, who ran Medium-Hard-Medium, and make his final stint work well enough to hold off a furious podium charge by Verstappen. On Lap 63, in shades of 2021, the two came together when Verstappen made a lunge steaming into Turn 1, with Verstappen catching one of Hamilton’s wheels and being sent airborne. Luckily and despite coming down quite hard, there was no significant damage to the RB20 and no penalties were assessed to either driver by the stewards. But the contretemps fatally balked the furious Dutchman’s progress and he lost out not only to Hamilton but also Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc, who was waiting to pounce after running a solid if unspectacular race of his own and consequently nicked P4 from the Dutchman. Relegated to an uncharacteristic P5 at the finish, it capped off a difficult and tumultuous day for Verstappen and the Red Bull team, their ace pilot repeatedly berating the car’s performance, the strategy and generally carrying on in a mighty cranky mood throughout. Perhaps the pressure of what is now a genuine and formidable title challenge from McLaren is getting to the current reigning three-time champ. And while teammate Sergio Perez did well enough to recover to a solid P7 finish after another crash out early in qualifying and lousy start from the back of the grid, the fact that Perez very rarely races at the front to be utilized as Verstappen’s wingman these days is probably also hurting the team. It is certainly hurting Perez’s standing as the second Red Bull driver and, despite being re-signed earlier this season, the Mexican’s perplexingly poor performance since then has the rumor mill on possible in-season replacements in overdrive.

Leclerc’s somewhat fortunate P4 finish covered up the rather more mediocre pace of the Ferrari here, with Carlos Sainz finishing more like where the car deserved, in P6. Hamilton’s teammate George Russell also had to execute a Perez-like recovery drive after getting caught out in wet-dry conditions on Saturday and only qualifying a lowly P17. The Briton was able to salvage P8 and also grabbed the extra point for the fastest lap of the race. But it was still a pretty bitter day at the office for Russell as he watched his more decorated teammate once again ascend to the podium. Yuki Tsunoda kept it clean enough in his RB Honda to come home P9 and Aston Martin’s Lance Stroll took the last point in P10.

Top 10 finishers of the Hungarian GP:

POS NO DRIVER CAR LAPS TIME/RETIRED PTS
1 81 Oscar Piastri MCLAREN MERCEDES 70 1:38:01.989 25
2 4 Lando Norris MCLAREN MERCEDES 70 +2.141s 18
3 44 Lewis Hamilton MERCEDES 70 +14.880s 15
4 16 Charles Leclerc FERRARI 70 +19.686s 12
5 1 Max Verstappen RED BULL RACING HONDA RBPT 70 +21.349s 10
6 55 Carlos Sainz FERRARI 70 +23.073s 8
7 11 Sergio Perez RED BULL RACING HONDA RBPT 70 +39.792s 6
8 63 George Russell MERCEDES 70 +42.368s 5
9 22 Yuki Tsunoda RB HONDA RBPT 70 +77.259s 2
10 18 Lance Stroll ASTON MARTIN ARAMCO MERCEDES 70 +77.976s 1

Complete race results available via Formula1.com.

The next race, the last before the long summer break, is in but a week’s time — the Belgian Grand Prix at the fabled Spa-Francorchamps circuit in the Ardennes. The very long and sweeping Spa is an entirely different beast from the tight and twisty Hungaroring so, it remains to be seen if McLaren’s stunning improvements will also translate there or if Red Bull will finally have the room to again stretch what had been its supreme legs earlier in the season. Hope to see you then to find out how it all shakes out!

2024 F1 Grand Prix of Spain — Qualifying results

GAME ON: Norris bests Verstappen for pole in Barcelona; Mercedes out-qualify Ferrari

The beginning to the 2024 Formula 1 campaign seemed to promise only an inevitably dominant Max Verstappen march to a fourth consecutive Driver’s title. But things have gotten well and truly more complicated and interesting with emergence of McLaren’s Lando Norris as a genuine threat to the Red Bull ace’s imperial ambitions. Beginning in Round 5 in China, Norris has shown that he can essentially match Verstappen and the RB20’s pace, either in qualifying trim or at race pace. Norris beat out Verstappen fair and square for his maiden F1 win in Miami and finished P2 to Verstappen the race before in China and two of the three races after Miami, Emilia-Romagna and Canada. And two weeks after his excellent runner-up performance in Montreal, where victory was also within his reach if not for an ill-timed Safety Car, Norris showed his form and threat are no fluke by besting Verstappen in Saturday qualifying to earn pole for Sunday’s Spanish Grand Prix. Norris put in a blistering last lap around the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya to surpass what appeared to be Verstappen’s supreme final time by 0.020-seconds. It was Norris’s second career pole in F1 and first since way back in 2021 at Sochi in Russia. The Lando-Max front row should make the opening lap of tomorrow’s Grand Prix must see TV, as two young pilots at the peak of their powers fight on even terms for what each hopes will be a statement win in Spain.

Which is not to say that the drivers behind that elite duo won’t also have something to say about the outcome of the race. Looking like their performance gains in Canada might just prove illusory after two desultory rounds of quali, the factory Mercedes team came alive in Q3. The Silver Arrows ambushed Ferrari with their pace improvement on the rubbered-in track, with Lewis Hamilton out-qualifying his younger teammate George Russell for a change, P3 to P4. With Mercedes thereby locking out the second row, Ferrari were surprised to find themselves relegated to row three, with Charles Lecerc earning P5 ahead of teammate Carlos Sainz in P6. Alpine continued their momentum after their double points finish in Canada, with Pierre Gasly slotting in an impressive P7 ahead of teammate and archrival Esteban Ocon in P9. They sandwiched the second Red Bull of Sergio Perez, who sacrificed his chance of a higher placing when he helped out teammate Verstappen by giving him a tow in Q3. The team may be having second thoughts about that decision, because Verstappen would probably still have been P2 either way and Perez was then demoted to P11 on the grid due to having to serve his 3-spot penalty from Canada for choosing to drive his heavily damaged car back to the pits. While that promotes the second McLaren of Oscar Piastri to a P9 start, that will be cold comfort for the young Australian, who ran wide into the gravel on his final qualifying lap and therefore could not come close to matching teammate Norris’s pole time. Aston Martin’s Fernando Alonso qualified P11 but was elevated to P10 on the grid for his home race as a result of Perez’s penalty.

Top 10 qualifiers for the Spanish GP:

POS NO DRIVER CAR Q1 Q2 Q3 LAPS
1 4 Lando Norris MCLAREN MERCEDES 1:12.386 1:11.872 1:11.383 12
2 1 Max Verstappen RED BULL RACING HONDA RBPT 1:12.306 1:11.653 1:11.403 12
3 44 Lewis Hamilton MERCEDES 1:12.143 1:11.792 1:11.701 18
4 63 George Russell MERCEDES 1:12.456 1:11.812 1:11.703 16
5 16 Charles Leclerc FERRARI 1:12.257 1:12.038 1:11.731 12
6 55 Carlos Sainz FERRARI 1:12.403 1:11.874 1:11.736 12
7 10 Pierre Gasly ALPINE RENAULT 1:12.651 1:12.079 1:11.857 18
8 11 Sergio Perez RED BULL RACING HONDA RBPT 1:12.477 1:12.054 1:12.061 18
9 31 Esteban Ocon ALPINE RENAULT 1:12.691 1:12.109 1:12.125 18
10 81 Oscar Piastri MCLAREN MERCEDES 1:12.460 1:12.011 DNF 16

Complete qualifying results available via Formula1.com.

Tomorrow’s race airs live on ESPN beginning at 9 am Eastern here in the States. Can Norris hold off Verstappen over the course of 66-laps and take a second victory at the Dutchman’s expense? Or will the Silver Arrows and Prancing Horses have a say in the outcome? Hope to see you then to find out!

2024 F1 Grand Prix of Miami — Results & aftermath

McLaren’s Norris earns maiden win in Miami with brilliant drive & a little luck; Verstappen relegated to rare P2 in fair fight, Leclerc P3 for Ferrari

McLaren’s Lando Norris drove the race of his life at the Miami Grand Prix on Sunday, using his ever improving skills as a driver, the new upgrades on his MCL38 chassis and little bit of Safety Car luck to earn his maiden win in Formula 1 in spectacular fashion. Having knocked on the door with seven podiums over the course of a F1 career that began in the middle of the 2018 season, the 24-year-old Briton finally kicked down that barrier to take the top step of the podium ahead of the usually imperious Red Bull of Max Verstappen by an impressive 7.612 seconds. After coming a cropper on the first lap of Saturday’s Sprint race, Norris excelled in Sunday’s GP, even though he started from back in P5 on the grid. With Verstappen looking fully in control and en route to another easy win midway through this 57-lap contest, and teammate Oscar Piastri actually seeming the quicker car in the early going, Norris made his own luck by running an extra-long first stint on his initial Medium Pirelli tires. While some contenders pitted under a brief Virtual Safety Car deployed on Lap 23 to retrieve a loose bollard from the chicane that Verstappen had knocked onto the track a few laps earlier, including Max himself, the two McLarens were not in position to take the risk of the VSC ending while in the pits and stayed out. It proved to be a prescient decision.

When the action resumed at the end of that lap, Verstappen had been shuffled back to P4, with Piastri now in the lead, Ferrari’s Carlos Sainz in P2 and Norris in third. Piastri and Sainz then pitted under green flag conditions on Lap 28, both going from Mediums to Hards under the favored one-stop strategy, with Norris then inheriting the lead and presumably attempting a one-lap overcut strategy. But that plan paid even bigger dividends when the Haas of Kevin Magnussen came together with the Williams of local boy Logan Sargeant on the very same lap, spinning Sargent backwards into the barriers and disabling his car. A Safety Car to retrieve the stricken Williams was quickly deployed on Lap 29, enabling Norris to duck into the pits for the cheap stop under the full course yellow a lap later. Norris then reemerged still in the lead, setting up a showdown for the victory with Verstappen when the SC ended in the latter part of Lap 32. The pace in the McLaren being up to the challenge, Norris held off Verstappen with aplomb at the rolling the restart and then, to the capacity crowd’s astonishment, began pulling away from the flying Dutchman. With the tension and anticipation of something truly special unfolding as the laps wound down, Norris kept pulling away from Verstappen, who for once could do nothing to get back up to Norris and make a real challenge. Perhaps the Red Bull’s front wing was damaged from hitting that bollard or perhaps the McLaren in Norris’s hands truly had the legs on the RB20 on this day — or maybe little of both. But when the checkers flew it was an ecstatic Norris with that all important first Formula 1 victory to put McLaren back in the winners circle for the first time since 2021 and relegate the runaway championship favorite Verstappen to a wholly unaccustomed P2.

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