Tag Archives: Charles Leclerc

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 Italy — Results & aftermath

Leclerc rides audacious one-stop strategy to take surprise victory at Monza for jubilant Ferrari; Piastri out-duels McLaren teammate Norris for P2

With McLaren looking the dominant team heading into the Italian Grand Prix on Sunday, it was Ferrari that stunned Formula 1 by pushing their man Charles Leclerc to first place with an audacious, contrarian one-stop strategy and taking a sweet victory at the storied Scuderia’s home race. Lacking the outright pace of the McLaren’s, Ferrari nevertheless capitalized when the pole-sitting Lando Norris scrapped with his teammate Oscar Piastri on the opening lap and was then passed by the young Aussie for the race lead heading into the second chicane. In that tussle, the Prancing Horse of Leclerc was also able to get by the recovering Norris, setting the wheels in motion on Ferrari’s pit wall to come up with a strategy that would enable Leclerc to fight it out with Piastri for the top step of the podium. But few would have guessed that when Leclerc was undercut by Norris on Lap 15 of this 53-lap contest at the ultra-fast Autodromo Nazionale Monza that the fabled team from Maranello would figure out a way to actually win. Leclerc himself was irate at his race engineer & strategist for losing a place to Norris when he stopped a lap later, both drivers making the switch off their opening set of Medium Pirellis onto the more durable Hard compound tires. It seemed more likely that McLaren had set up a duel between their two drivers for the win, with Piastri destined to re-inherit the race lead and Norris P2 after the opening round of pit stops were completed.

But a funny thing happened on the way to that expected McLaren 1-2. With all the front running teams appearing to run the two-stopper as the best way to finish the race, Piastri made his second pit stop from the lead on Lap 39 and Norris in P2 ran a bit longer to Lap 41. But both Leclerc and Sainz stayed out and it suddenly dawned on the paddock that Ferrari were going to run the risky one-stop strategy despite the waning performance from their aging Hard tires. Leclerc’s lead was such that he was more than full pit stop ahead of the P5 Mercedes of Lewis Hamilton, meaning that the worst that could happen to Leclerc and Sainz if they absolutely had to bail in the race’s final few laps would be a likely third and fourth place finish respectively. On the other hand, now McLaren had to try to reclaim the top two spots by making overtakes on the Ferrari duo with time running out. Piastri did close down Sainz and passed the game Spaniard for P2 on Lap 45, with Norris managing the same feat three laps later. But Leclerc was able to maintain enough of a lead that the laps ran out before the desperate Piastri could even get into position to try for a pass. When the checkered flag flew, Leclerc came home some 2.66-seconds to the good of Piastri to the delight of the happily stunned tifosi in the stands, who happily stormed the field for the post-race ceremonies, as is tradition here. It was an emotional win for the Monegasque, who earlier in the season won his home race in Monaco and now has won for Ferrari at Monza, the dream of every Formula 1 driver who drives for the Prancing Horse. And it showed that the much maligned braintrust at the Scuderia could take a gamble that actually paid off for a change, leaving them still in the hunt for the Constructors’ Championship when many had already written them off this year.

With higher expectations after locking out the front row in qualifying, Piastri and Norris finished a somewhat disappointed P2 and P3 respectively, while Leclerc’s teammate Sainz claimed P4 after running a fine race of his own for himself and the team, especially in defense of Leclerc as the laps ran down. Hamilton ended up the highest placed Silver Arrow in P5 after teammate George Russell, who started from P3 on the grid, sustained opening lap damage to his front wing amidst the chaos that is the first chicane here, necessitating a premature and lengthy early pit stop for a wing change in addition to tires that set the young Briton on his back foot for the rest of the race. Russell rallied to finish P7 but it wasn’t the race he envisioned when he woke up on Sunday morning. Likewise, Hamilton was left hoping for more when the Mercedes W15 had looked so strong until the final quali session on Saturday. Team Red Bull were also more than happy to put Monza in the rearview, with points leader Max Verstappen only able to advance one spot from his starting position, finishing a relatively lowly P6, while Sergio Perez  was overtaken late by Russel and had to settle for P8. The team will be hoping that the very tricky and specific compromises needed to succeed at Monza were to blame rather than a lasting problem with the RB20’s development, as they uncharacteristically looked like merely the fourth quickest team here in Italy all weekend long.

Williams’ Alexander Albon and Haas’s Kevin Magnussen also rode the one-stopper to some level of success and points, with Albon finishing P9 and Magnussen taking the final point in P10 despite a 10-second penalty for colliding with the RB of Yuki Tsunoda early in the race, which wound up ending the Japanese driver’s day.

Top 10 finishers of the Italian GP:

POS

NO

DRIVER

CAR

LAPS

TIME/RETIRED

PTS

1

16

Charles Leclerc

Ferrari

53

1:14:40.727

25

2

81

Oscar Piastri

McLaren Mercedes

53

+2.664s

18

3

4

Lando Norris

McLaren Mercedes

53

+6.153s

16

4

55

Carlos Sainz

Ferrari

53

+15.621s

12

5

44

Lewis Hamilton

Mercedes

53

+22.820s

10

6

1

Max Verstappen

Red Bull Racing Honda RBPT

53

+37.932s

8

7

63

George Russell

Mercedes

53

+39.715s

6

8

11

Sergio Perez

Red Bull Racing Honda RBPT

53

+54.148s

4

9

23

Alexander Albon

Williams Mercedes

53

+67.456s

2

10

20

Kevin Magnussen

Haas Ferrari

53

+68.302s

1

Complete race results available via Formula1.com.

The next race is in a fortnight, the always exciting Azerbaijan Grand Prix from the challenging Baku City Circuit, so the teams will get a little breather after the back-to-back rounds coming out of the summer break. For Ferrari and Leclerc and all of Italy, it will mean an extra week to savor an improbable win. For the other contenders, it’ll be trying to figure out how to get back into victory lane in this highly unpredictable season. Hope to see you then to find out how it all shakes out!

2024 F1 Grand Prix of Italy — Qualifying results

McLaren mighty at Monza, lockout front row with Norris pole, Piastri P2; Russell P3 ahead of both Ferraris; Verstappen a shock P7

A week after taking the win at Zandvoort, Lando Norris and McLaren’s surge continued during Saturday qualifying for the Italian Grand Prix at the Temple of Speed, Autodromo Nazionale Monza. On a beautiful day in Northern Italy at this fatstest of F1 circuits, Norris and his teammate Oscar Piastri set an untouchable pace in Q3, with Norris taking pole over Piastri by nine-tenths of a second. McLaren is proving to be the primary challenger for both the Constructors’ and Drivers’ titles, something that was hard to envision earlier in the season when Max Verstappen and his Red Bull were laying waste to the entire Formula 1 field with ease. That all changed in Round 6, when Norris took the win in Miami and since then, the overall momentum has swung decidedly away from Red Bull and towards McLaren. As if to put an exclamation point on that fact, Red Bull were completely flummoxed by their lack of pace here in Italy, which saw them stumble to rather a lowly P7 qualifying effort for Verstappen and a P8 by struggling teammate Sergio Perez. It will be fascinating to see if Red Bull can somehow find a way to recover overnight and be able to work their way to the front come race day. But with the sheer amount of teams that look faster than them here, it certainly doesn’t look like that will happen tomorrow.

Looking like perhaps the fastest team overall heading into Q3, things did not exactly work out for mighty Mercedes when the fastest laps were set in Q3. While George Russell was able to vault himself up to P3 on the grid with a fine final effort, teammate Lewis Hamilton left a lot on the table and only qualified in P6, leaving the English seven-time champ furious with himself after the session. Russell did relegate the Ferrari duo of Charles Leclerc and Carlos Sainz to P4 and P5 respectively despite the ardent support of the always enthusiastic tifosi in the stands for the fabled Scuderia’s home race. The Williams of Alexander Albon in P9 and the Haas of Nico Hulkenberg in P10 rounded out the top ten qualifiers on the day.

Top 10 qualifiers for the Italian GP:

POS

NO

DRIVER

CAR

Q1

Q2

Q3

LAPS

1

4

Lando Norris

McLaren Mercedes

1:19.911

1:19.727

1:19.327

12

2

81

Oscar Piastri

McLaren Mercedes

1:20.076

1:19.808

1:19.436

19

3

63

George Russell

Mercedes

1:20.169

1:19.877

1:19.440

18

4

16

Charles Leclerc

Ferrari

1:20.074

1:20.007

1:19.461

21

5

55

Carlos Sainz

Ferrari

1:20.149

1:19.799

1:19.467

18

6

44

Lewis Hamilton

Mercedes

1:20.477

1:19.641

1:19.513

18

7

1

Max Verstappen

Red Bull Racing Honda RBPT

1:20.226

1:19.662

1:20.022

18

8

11

Sergio Perez

Red Bull Racing Honda RBPT

1:20.598

1:20.216

1:20.062

17

9

23

Alexander Albon

Williams Mercedes

1:20.542

1:20.314

1:20.299

18

10

27

Nico Hulkenberg

Haas Ferrari

1:20.781

1:20.411

1:20.339

18

Complete qualifying results available via Formula1.com.

Tomorrow’s race airs live on ESPN beginning at 9 am Eastern here in the States. Can Red Bull and Max Verstappen get back in the fight with so many other teams looking much faster than them here at Monza? Will McLaren hold off the desperate to win Ferraris at their home track in front of the fanatical tifosi? Is it possible for Mercedes to reclaim the pace advantage they had going into Q3 and pull the upset? 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 Austria — Results & aftermath

Russell gifted win after Verstappen & Norris tangle; Piastri’s lone surviving McLaren claims P2, Sainz P3; Verstappen finishes in P5 but Norris DNFs

A funny thing happened on the way to another Max Verstappen romp at his team’s own Red Bull Ring. A day after dominating the Saturday Sprint and earning pole for the Austrian Grand Prix, the smart money was on Verstappen’s dominating ways here in Spielberg, where he has won four of the last six contests, continuing come race day. And for two thirds of this 71-lap contest, that appeared to be the case. But, with the race evolving into a graduate level true tire strategy test for the engineers on this short, high-deg circuit, things began shifting away from the race leading Red Bull man when both he and the P2 McLaren of Lando Norris were called in on Lap 51 for their second and ostensibly final pit stop for fresh rubber. Both doffed their used Hard Pirelli tires and changed back to the Mediums, the compound they had both started the race on. But Verstappen’s pit crew had an uncharacteristically slow 6.5 -second stop after battling with a sticky left rear wheel, while Norris’s time stationary was the more typically crisp 2.9-seconds. Upon exiting the pits line to stern, Verstappen now saw his previous seven-second lead evaporate to just a touch more than a second over the pursuing McLaren. And pursue Norris did, quickly getting into DRS range and harassing the Dutch race leader over a multi-lap period.  Under that fierce pressure, Verstappen began to be ever more aggressive in defense, leading to multiple complaints from Norris back to his race engineer that the Red Bull was consistently moving in reaction to his lunges. Norris himself had already received the Black & White flag for track limits and eventually received a 5-second penalty after running wide trying an overtake on Verstappen on Lap 59. But that didn’t tame Norris’s aggression and confidence at all. With the two front runners dicing for the race win in ever more intense and physical manner as the laps wound down, something had to give. And on Lap 64, the seemingly inevitable contretemps finally happened.

Norris dove to the inside seeming into the always treacherous off-camber Turn 3 looking to make the race winning overtake. But Verstappen appeared to squeeze the McLaren at the apex and Norris’s from wing made contact with Verstappen’s rear left, damaging the rim and cutting down the Red Bull’s tire almost immediately. Despite his stricken state, Verstappen would not yield and let Norris through into the lead and the two touched again, with Norris picking up a puncture of his own to the rear right. Both the Red Bull and McLaren had to limp back to the pits, but the Red Bull was able to do a standard tire change to Softs, while Norris’s McLaren had been so badly damaged at both the front and by the tire carcass flailing the rear bodywork that the crestfallen Englishman was forced to retire the car. While Verstappen received a 10-second time penalty after the stewards determined he was at fault for that fateful contact between the top two contenders, the Dutch points leader was able to salvage P5 from of the ordeal, as well as set the fastest lap of the Grand Prix for an extra point on those fresh Softs. Norris, meanwhile, scored no points with his DNF, his dreams of victory going from within his grasp to ashes in his mouth in mere moments. Previously on very friendly terms, the way things went down in Austria this Sunday and with Norris’s pointed post-race comments putting all of the blame on the Red Bull ace, there’s likely to be a fairly serious cooling off in Verstappen and Norris’s bromance.

The late race chaos all redounded to the benefit of Mercedes’ George Russell, who went from plodding along in a safe and solitary third place to blowing by the two injured cars ahead and taking the lead on that fateful Lap 64. To quote the Englishman, he was more than happy to “pick up the pieces” and to be fair to him, Russell had run cleanly and quickly enough to be in a position to do so. The Mercedes factory team were jubilant at their good fortune and neither Russell nor the Silver Arrows brass seemed inclined to give the great gift win back. Picking up his teammate, the second and sole surviving McLaren of Oliver Piastri was not able to close enough on Russell for a final lunge but did come home an outstanding P2, though the young Aussie may be ruing having his best lap in qualifying deleted for track limits and being forced to start P7. Ferrari’s Carlos Sainz also enjoyed his gift trip to the podium after inheriting P3. While the second Mercedes of Lewis Hamilton finished a distant P4 to add to the team’s unexpectedly large points haul, the second Ferrari of Charles Leclerc could never quite recover from an opening lap kerfuffle with Piastri and Sergio Perez that necessitated a costly and interminable time in the pits for a front wing change so early in the race. The Monegasque finished an unlucky P11 outside the points despite about a zillion pit stops.

While Perez had yet another underwhelming performance in the second Red Bull en route to a desultory P7 finish, it was something of a banner day for the Haas F1 team. Putting themselves in position to fully benefit from the misfortunes of others by being genuinely quick and having solid pit stops, Nico Hulkenberg rode the chaotic late race waves to an impressive P6 finish, while teammate Kevin Magnussen came home in P8. It was by far the best scoring day for Haas in 2024 and they’ll be hoping they can build on this improved performance at Silverstone next weekend. Rounding out the top ten, Daniel Ricciardo did yeoman’s work for RB Honda to finish P9, while Alpine’s Pierre Gasly ascended to P10 upon Norris’s retirement.

Top 10 finishers of the Austrian GP:

POS NO DRIVER CAR LAPS TIME/RETIRED PTS
1 63 George Russell MERCEDES 71 1:24:22.798 25
2 81 Oscar Piastri MCLAREN MERCEDES 71 +1.906s 18
3 55 Carlos Sainz FERRARI 71 +4.533s 15
4 44 Lewis Hamilton MERCEDES 71 +23.142s 12
5 1 Max Verstappen RED BULL RACING HONDA RBPT 71 +37.253s 10
6 27 Nico Hulkenberg HAAS FERRARI 71 +54.088s 8
7 11 Sergio Perez RED BULL RACING HONDA RBPT 71 +54.672s 6
8 20 Kevin Magnussen HAAS FERRARI 71 +60.355s 4
9 3 Daniel Ricciardo RB HONDA RBPT 71 +61.169s 2
10 10 Pierre Gasly ALPINE RENAULT 71 +61.766s 1

Complete race results available via Formula1.com.

The next race is in but a week’s time, making it a grueling three Grand Prix in a row — the classic British GP from the legendary Silverstone airfield track. McLaren seem to have the pace to take it to Verstappen’s Red Bull but can they duke it out with the increasingly aggressive championship leader? And can once-mighty Mercedes take their improved performance and turn it into yet more good luck at their home circuit? Hope to see you then to find out how it all shakes out!

2024 F1 Grand Prix of Austria — Qualifying results

Verstappen cruises to pole at Red Bull Ring; Norris once again closest pursuer in P2, Russell surges to P3 after Piastri track limits violation

Red Bull’s Max Verstappen continued his dominance at the team’s eponymous Red Bull Ring, where the flying Dutchman has won four of the last six races here in the mountains of Spielberg. Verstappen fended off the best efforts of McLaren’s Lando Norris to secure pole for Sunday’s Austrian Grand Prix not long after a rather procedural romp to victory in the 23-lap Saturday Sprint race earlier in the day. Verstappen kept his mojo working in qualifying en route to yet another pole position, his eighth out of eleven rounds in 2024. It was also Verstappen’s fifth consecutive pole here at the short and speedy little Red Bull Ring and the triple World Champion’s 40th of his brilliant career. With his current run of otherworldly form, you can expect him to at least double that number by the time the Dutch master is through.

Norris was once again Verstappen’s main challenger and, while he couldn’t match Max’s one lap pace and ended up some 0.4-seconds adrift in P2 on the grid, the team and their young English star can take some hope from the fact that Norris seems to fly even faster in race trim. His teammate Oscar Piastri was also looking very quick but had his final lap in Q3 deleted for track limits violations, relegating the speedy Aussie to a P7 start come Sunday. That error benefitted Mercedes’ George Russell, whose time was both legal and good enough for P3 on the second row. Ferrari’s Carlos Sainz will line up across from Russell in P4, with the second Merc of Lewis Hamilton once again struggling a bit more than his teammate and only able to muster a time good enough for P5. With the second Prancing Horse of Charles Leclerc botching his final try and staying P6, it could make for a very spicy start with the mixed Mercedes-Ferrari second and third rows at the start of tomorrow’s race.

Rounding out the top ten qualifiers, Sergio Perez was once again far off his teammates supreme pace and scuffled to an utterly mediocre P8 time, while Haas’s Nico Hulkenberg certainly over performed his car in P9 and Esteban Ocon showed good consistency in his improved Alpine to grab a respectable P10 place for tomorrow’s starting grid.

Top 10 qualifiers for the Austrian GP:

POS NO DRIVER CAR Q1 Q2 Q3 LAPS
1 1 Max Verstappen RED BULL RACING HONDA RBPT 1:05.336 1:04.469 1:04.314 18
2 4 Lando Norris MCLAREN MERCEDES 1:05.450 1:05.103 1:04.718 20
3 63 George Russell MERCEDES 1:05.585 1:05.016 1:04.840 18
4 55 Carlos Sainz FERRARI 1:05.263 1:05.016 1:04.851 18
5 44 Lewis Hamilton MERCEDES 1:05.541 1:05.053 1:04.903 18
6 16 Charles Leclerc FERRARI 1:05.509 1:05.104 1:05.044 22
7 81 Oscar Piastri MCLAREN MERCEDES 1:05.311 1:05.070 1:05.048 17
8 11 Sergio Perez RED BULL RACING HONDA RBPT 1:05.587 1:05.144 1:05.202 21
9 27 Nico Hulkenberg HAAS FERRARI 1:05.596 1:05.262 1:05.385 21
10 31 Esteban Ocon ALPINE RENAULT 1:05.574 1:05.274 1:05.883 24

Complete qualifying results available via Fromula1.com.

Sunday’s race airs live on ESPN beginning at 9 am Eastern here in the States. Have Norris and Russell got anything for Verstappen at Red Bull’s home circuit or will they just be battling each other, Hamilton and the two Ferraris for second place? Hope to see you then to find out how it all shakes out!

2024 F1 Grand Prix of Spain — Results & aftermath

Verstappen takes victory in Spain after P2 Norris bobbles start; Hamilton earns first podium of season ahead of P4 Russell

To beat the best, you’ve got to execute flawlessly. McLaren and their star driver Lando Norris learned that age old lesson of sport again during Sunday’s Spanish Grand Prix, as Norris’s promising pole start quickly unraveled when the young Briton bobbled his getaway as the lights went out to start the race. That slow start saw Norris quickly gobbled up by not only the Red Bull of Max Verstappen, who started P2, but also the Mercedes of George Russell, whose impressive Turn 1 lunge from fourth overtook both Norris and Verstappen, as well as teammate Lewis Hamilton. Verstappen’s Red Bull showed immediately dominant race pace, however, keeping Norris behind easily and then gobbling up Russell for the lead of the Grand Prix on Lap 3. That was really the pivotal early sequence of this 66-lap contest at the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya. But McLaren tried to will their man back into the lead by running a longer first stint for Norris and hoping the overcut would prove powerful enough to make up for his opening lap error. So, when Verstappen came in for his first tire change on Lap 18, doffing his initial set of Soft Pirellis for Mediums, Norris stayed out for another five revolutions before coming in to make the identical switch. But the strategy didn’t really pay dividends, as Verstappen inherited the lead when Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc made his first stop, while Norris was forced to scythe his way through the likes of the second Prancing Horse of Carlos Sainz and the Mercedes of Hamilton simply to get up to P3 by Lap 32.

While Verstappen pumped in good laps at the front in clean air, Norris dispatched the over-achieving Russell in an epic back and forth pass, repass and pass back on Lap 35 while speeding through the twisty Turns 3-4-5 complex. Back in P2, Norris once again watched as the other main contenders made their second tire stops. First, Russell pitted on Lap 37, the Silver Arrows braintrust making the fateful decision to put him on Hards to finish out the race from that distance. But teammate Lewis Hamilton ran quite a bit longer and came in on Lap 45 to take Softs instead, the team liking his chances with only around 30 laps left to run. Verstappen then made his second stop, likewise ditching his Mediums for a new set of the Softs and a race to the finish on those better performing tires. Norris ran two laps longer after debating about staying out with his race engineer, following the same Medium to Soft pattern, albeit with a disappointingly slow 3.6-second stop. Nevertheless, Norris retained P2 on exit just ahead of Russell, even as Verstappen circulated back to the point. While Norris’s McLaren was able to cut into Verstappen’s lead as the laps wound down, it wasn’t nearly enough to prevent the Red Bull ace from notching his seventh win of 2024 out of ten rounds now run. Norris had to settle for setting the fastest lap en route to another second place, his impressive third P2 out of the last five races, not to mention his maiden win in Miami within that stretch. But in a sign of his and the team’s increased ambitions, he was left unsatisfied and rueing the chances lost at the start, the 2.21 second final deficit to Verstappen likely coming down to that poor initial getaway.

Russell’s relatively early pit stop and the need to therefore put him on the Hards cost him at the end, as teammate Hamilton was able to overtake him on lap 52 and claim the last step on the podium in P3 as the checkers flew. Surprisingly, it was Hamilton’s first podium of the 2024 season, though with Mercedes’s improved performance of late, it likely won’t be the last. Russell had to settle for P4 but the Silver Arrows were comfortably ahead of the Ferraris all race long, a worrying development for the Scuderia. Charles Leclerc came home P5, passing Carlos Sainz via team orders on Lap 55 and leaving Sainz extra annoyed after he felt his teammate had treated him roughly earlier in the race. The second McLaren of Oscar Piastri finished P7 after starting in P9 and the second Red Bull of Sergio Perez came home in P8 after his  penalty-effected P11 start. The two Alpines of Pierre Gasly and Esteban Ocon finished in P9 and P10 respectively, the team’s second double points finish in two races after an abysmal start to the year

Top 10 finishers of the Spanish GP:

POS NO DRIVER CAR LAPS TIME/RETIRED PTS
1 1 Max Verstappen RED BULL RACING HONDA RBPT 66 1:28:20.227 25
2 4 Lando Norris MCLAREN MERCEDES 66 +2.219s 19
3 44 Lewis Hamilton MERCEDES 66 +17.790s 15
4 63 George Russell MERCEDES 66 +22.320s 12
5 16 Charles Leclerc FERRARI 66 +22.709s 10
6 55 Carlos Sainz FERRARI 66 +31.028s 8
7 81 Oscar Piastri MCLAREN MERCEDES 66 +33.760s 6
8 11 Sergio Perez RED BULL RACING HONDA RBPT 66 +59.524s 4
9 10 Pierre Gasly ALPINE RENAULT 66 +62.025s 2
10 31 Esteban Ocon ALPINE RENAULT 66 +71.889s 1

Complete race results available via Formula1.com.

The next race is in but a week’s time — the Austrian Grand Prix from the Red Bull Ring in Spielberg. While it may be Verstappen and the team’s home court, McLaren and Norris are still expecting big things as they continue to try and take the fight to the three-time World Champion. Hope to see you then to find out how it all shakes out!