Tag Archives: Fernando Alonso

2023 F1 Grand Prix of Austria — Results & aftermath

CRUISE CONTROL: Verstappen caps off dominant Sprint weekend at Red Bull Ring with untouchable GP win; Perez makes outstanding recovery drive to take P3, Leclerc a solid second, Sainz P6 for improved Ferrari; Mercedes falter

Red Bull’s peerless Max Verstappen continued his relentless march to a third consecutive Formula 1 Drivers’ Title with a dominant victory on Sunday at the team’s namesake track in Spielberg, Austria. Verstappen capped off his imperious race weekend after winning the Sprint race on Saturday by cheekily going for the fastest lap point with a swap to Soft Pirellis with only two laps remaining in the 71-lap contest. While that erased much of his over 20-second advantage to the second place Ferrari of Charles Leclerc, the pit crew executed a perfect tire swap and Verstappen still took the checkers 5-seconds to the good, as well as the fast lap bonus point. At the end of the busy weekend in Austria, the haul was a maximum 34 championship points for marvelous Max and a stunning five wins on the trot. Now carrying an 81-point points bulge over his nearest rival, teammate Sergio Perez, Verstappen’s run to the title is looking more and more like a coronation and potentially one of the most dominant seasons by a driver in F1 history. And such is the quality of Red Bull’s superb RB19 that one of their drivers has won all nine races run this year. It would seem there is not enough time for Ferrari, Mercedes or Aston Martin to catch up with Red Bull’s pace advantage, particularly its supernatural speed when using DRS, and all will have to be satisfied with scrapping for the crumbs from Max’s table.

Perez had a much needed and outstanding recovery drive after qualifying in P15 on Friday due to track limits violations scrubbing his best times (this was to be a recurring theme for many drivers during the race, as well). The veteran Mexican steadily worked his way into contention with patient but decisive overtaking maneuvers and, thanks also to his team’s flawless pit strategy and execution, found himself in P5 by Lap 51. He then steadily closed on the McLaren of Lando Norris, capitalizing on a lockup to make his way by the English driver on Lap 56. That put Carlos Sainz’s Ferrai in his sights and the two engaged in a ding dong battle for multiple laps of a knife’s edge pas de deux. Sainz was able to cleverly survive the onslaught for a time thanks in part to catching the DRS zone just right after Perez appeared to make the overtake. But the duel came to a decisive end on Lap 62 when Perez finally made the pass that stuck to grab P3 and a satisfying podium after a series of lackluster efforts since his last podium result in Miami back in Round 5. Crucially, Perez also avoided the track limits penalties that rained down upon so many other contenders to preserve his P3 finishing time.

Despite Sainz’s thrilling defense, it was the other Ferrari of Charles Leclerc that earned the biggest plaudits for the Scuderia on this day. Leclerc finished second by a deceptively small 5-second margin — it would have been well over 20-seconds had Verstappen not gambled and won on the late stop to take a run at fastest lap — but it was still a solid effort by the Monegasque, as he was able to covert his P2 place on the grid into and equal finishing result and gain ground on his teammate in the standings. Sainz’s once encouraging day came to a bitter end, as the Spaniard was assessed 10-seconds worth of penalties for track limits post race, plummeting him down the order into P6 after crossing the line in P4. Still, it was a good day for Ferrari, which have seen steady performance gains over the last several races. Sainz’s demotion resulted in Norris being promoted to P4 and Aston Martin’s Fernando Alonso being elevated to P5 despite a relatively unexceptional performance by the two-time champion. Likewise, Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton wracked up 10-seconds of post race penalties for track limits, demoting him to P8 and elevating teammate George Russell to P7. In truth, Mercedes lacked pace this weekend and can only be hoping that is a Red Bull Ring-specific issue and not an indicator that their recent progress was actually a mirage.

The second Aston of Lance Stroll also scored in P9 and the Alpine of Pierre Gasly took the final point in P10 when all the penalties were sorted.

Top 10 finishers of the Austrian GP:

POS NO DRIVER CAR LAPS TIME/RETIRED PTS
1 1 Max Verstappen RED BULL RACING HONDA RBPT 71 1:25:33.607 26
2 16 Charles Leclerc FERRARI 71 +5.155s 18
3 11 Sergio Perez RED BULL RACING HONDA RBPT 71 +17.188s 15
4 4 Lando Norris MCLAREN MERCEDES 71 +26.327s 12
5 14 Fernando Alonso ASTON MARTIN ARAMCO MERCEDES 71 +30.317s 10
6 55 Carlos Sainz FERRARI 71 +31.377s 8
7 63 George Russell MERCEDES 71 +48.403s 6
8 44 Lewis Hamilton MERCEDES 71 +49.196s 4
9 18 Lance Stroll ASTON MARTIN ARAMCO MERCEDES 71 +59.043s 2
10 10 Pierre Gasly ALPINE RENAULT 71 +67.667s 1

Complete race results available via Formula1.com.

The next race is already fast approaching — the British Grand Prix at the venerable Silverstone Circuit. Can anyone balk Max’s seemingly unstoppable momentum — perhaps the improved Ferraris will finally break through or maybe Hamilton will find the magic of previous years at his favorite track? Hope to see you then to find out!

2023 F1 Grand Prix of Austria — Qualifying results

Verstappen barely bests Leclerc to notch fourth consecutive pole as track limits penalties wreak havoc; Sainz backs up Ferrari teammate in P3 but Perez’s fast lap deleted in Q2

With another of Formula 1’s fairly gimmicky Sprint Races looming on Saturday, qualifying for Sunday’s Austrian Grand Prix took place on Friday after only one Practice session. Perhaps that lack of track time showed, because nearly every driver in the field had laps deleted at some point throughout the three quali rounds here at the short and fast Red Bull Ring in Spielberg, Austria. That even included the peerless Max Verstappen, who still managed to settle in and set a lap good enough for pole despite having to be slightly more conservative than he would have wished. The Dutch master pipped the very game and hard charging Ferrari of Charles Leclerc by a razor thin 0.048 seconds. Carlos Sainz backed up his Scuderia stablemate in P3, perhaps providing a measure of optimism that the SF-23 might finally be finding the pace to challenge for wins again. But it has been race pace that has been Ferrari’s problem this season, not to mention race strategy, so it remains to be seen on Sunday if the fabled team from Maranello have genuinely conquered the issues holding back their long run performance.

Verstappen’s Red Bull teammate Sergio Perez was the most prominent driver to lose his time due to track limits violations. The Mexican veteran came a cropper in Q2 when he had his only fast time of the session deleted with not enough time remaining to make amends. So, while Verstappen earned his fourth consecutive pole, Perez failed to reach Q3 for the fourth race weekend in a row. Starting from a lowly P15 come race day, Perez’s Round 4 win in Azerbaijan seems a century ago and his once optimistic championship hopes are holding on by a thread. McLaren’s Lando Norris was quick all day here in Spielberg at a track he loves and set the fourth fastest time in Q3, besting the P5 Mercedes of Lewis Hamilton. Similarly to Perez, Hamilton’s teammate George Russell also lost his best lap in Q2 for track limits infringements and will be relegated to starting from P11 on the grid. Lance Stroll out-qualified his Aston Martin teammate Fernando Alonso for the first time this year, while Haas’s Nico Hulkenberg in P8, Alpine’s Pierre Gasly in P9 and Alex Albon’s Williams in P10 all benefitted from keeping their cars between the white lines while other, perhaps faster drivers went a little too far over the edge for the stewards’ liking.

Top 10 qualifiers for the Austrian GP:

POS NO DRIVER CAR Q1 Q2 Q3 LAPS
1 1 Max Verstappen RED BULL RACING HONDA RBPT 24
2 16 Charles Leclerc FERRARI 26
3 55 Carlos Sainz FERRARI 25
4 4 Lando Norris MCLAREN MERCEDES 23
5 44 Lewis Hamilton MERCEDES 25
6 18 Lance Stroll ASTON MARTIN ARAMCO MERCEDES 25
7 14 Fernando Alonso ASTON MARTIN ARAMCO MERCEDES 27
8 27 Nico Hulkenberg HAAS FERRARI 24
9 10 Pierre Gasly ALPINE RENAULT 21
10 23 Alexander Albon WILLIAMS MERCEDES 21

Complete qualifying results available via Formula1.com.

The Sprint Race is tomorrow but Sunday’s GP airs live on ESPN beginning at 9AM Eastern here in the States. Can Leclerc and Ferrari finally step up and challenge Verstappen for victory in Red Bull’s own back yard? I have my doubts but hope to se you then to find out how it all shakes out!

2023 F1 Grand Prix of Canada — Results & aftermath

Supreme Verstappen romps to victory in Canada; Alonso outduels Hamilton for second

With no sign of the rainy weather that shook things up during Saturday qualifying, there was a decided lack of drama concerning who would win Sunday’s Canadian Grand Prix at the Circuit Gilles-Villenuve. As has become a recurring theme this season, Red Bull’s Max Verstappen once again set the ultimate pace and no other car or competitor could come close to catching him. Verstappen led the field from pole and cruised to another dominant victory, earning the Red Bull team’s 100th overall victory, as well as equalling the late, great Ayrton Senna with 41 personal wins. It was also Verstappen’s sixth win from eight races run and his teammate Sergio Perez won the other two, making for a 100% success rate for the RB19 in 2023. Verstappen held his lead despite a Safety Car period that began when Mercedes’ George Russell hit the barriers of this temporary Albert Park circuit. This compressed the field back up after the pursuing Merc of Lewis Hamilton and the Aston Martin of Fernando Alonso followed Verstappen into the pits for the cheap stop and first change off of the Medium Pirelli ties and onto the durable Hards. But the Flying Dutchman simply darted away when the race restarted and quickly gapped Hamilton and Alonso, as he had done at the very start of the GP. It was drama free from there on out and Verstappen took the checkers nearly 10-seconds ahead of his closest pursuer. Yes, we are not even halfway through this year’s World Chamipnhip calendar but it is certainly looking like one of those years in F1 where a dominant driver and a dominant car merge seamlessly into an unstoppable, untouchable force. Short of some major shock event, beating Verstappen now looks like a nigh impossibility, even for his previously more competitive teammate Perez.

While Max was in a league of his own in Canada, the battles behind him were fierce and well fought. Hamilton was able to overtake Alonso for P2 going into Turn 1 after the lights went out to start the race but was only able to keep that position until Lap 22. The Spaniard and his Aston still had the legs on the Silver Arrow and, after several patient laps setting up Lewis, Alonso was able to grab his P2 spot back and then gap him. While Hamilton was later able to again come close to Alonso, he could never quite get within DRS range and find a way by and the seven-time champ had to be content with a solid P3 finish. Hamilton’s teammate Russell, while able to carry on after his fairy heavy contact on Lap 12, was eventually forced to retire the car on Lap 53 of this 70-lap contest with break issues undoubtedly caused by his shunt, costing the team what should have been a good double-points day. On the other hand, Alonso’s teammate Lance Stroll hardly set the home fans on fire with his P9 finish, especially in relation to his far quicker stablemate, but at least he did earn those two points for the team. Aston Martin is now only thirteen points behind mighty Mercedes in the Contractors’ standings, so that error and subsequent DNF by Russell could loom large down the road.

Ferrari had another kissing your sister kind of day, with Charles Leclerc able to come home in P4 and Carlos Sainz in P5. That made for good points for the Scuderia, obviously, but it is becoming clear that the SF-23 has failed to develop as a race car to this point and Ferrari are actually the fourth best team on the grid at present rather than being a credible threat to Red Bull’s dominance. While the team and drivers struck an optimistic tone post-race, particularly regarding tire degradation, their key bugaboo, the cars still look hard to handle at times and not all that fast in race trim, not to mention Mercedes and Aston Martin are not exactly standing still regarding their own upgrades. The second Red Bull of Perez was able to recover somewhat from a yet another poor qualifying effort and a P12 start to secure P6 by race’s end. But that felt more like damage limitation rather than any kind of inspiring comeback. If Perez cannot qualify either first or second in tandem with Verstappen, he has no real shot challenging his teammate for wins, much less the increasingly out of reach title.

Rounding out the Top 10, Alexander Albon converted the Williams team’s excellent Saturday strategy decisions to get him into Q3 and a P10 start into an even more impressive P7 finish, besting the Alpine of Esteban Ocon in equal conditions in the process. And the Alfa Romeo of Valtteri Bottas took the last point in P10 with a very savvy veteran drive to clear other midfield runners after starting down in P14.

Top 10

POS NO DRIVER CAR LAPS TIME/RETIRED PTS
1 1 Max Verstappen RED BULL RACING HONDA RBPT 70 1:33:58.348 25
2 14 Fernando Alonso ASTON MARTIN ARAMCO MERCEDES 70 +9.570s 18
3 44 Lewis Hamilton MERCEDES 70 +14.168s 15
4 16 Charles Leclerc FERRARI 70 +18.648s 12
5 55 Carlos Sainz FERRARI 70 +21.540s 10
6 11 Sergio Perez RED BULL RACING HONDA RBPT 70 +51.028s 9
7 23 Alexander Albon WILLIAMS MERCEDES 70 +60.813s 6
8 31 Esteban Ocon ALPINE RENAULT 70 +61.692s 4
9 18 Lance Stroll ASTON MARTIN ARAMCO MERCEDES 70 +64.402s 2
10 77 Valtteri Bottas ALFA ROMEO FERRARI 70 +64.432s 1

Complete race results available via Formula1.com.

The next race is is a fortnight’s time — the Austrian Grand Prix at the Red Bull Ring in Spielberg. With seemingly unstoppable momentum going in, look for Verstapppen to hunt down his team’s one hundred and first win on their eponymous home track. Hope to see you then to find out how it all skies out!

2023 F1 Grand Prix of Canada — Qualifying results

Verstappen prevails for pole but rain scrambles grid at Circuit Gilles-Villeneuve; lucky Hulkenberg takes P2 when Red Flag disadvantages P3 Alonso

With variably wet and rainy conditions playing havoc during Saturday qualifying for the Canadian Grand Prix, Red Bull ace Max Verstappen nevertheless prevailed over both the elements and his adversaries to earn pole in tricky conditions at a sodden Circuit Gilles-Villeneuve. While it wasn’t surprising to see Verstappen notch his third consecutive pole and fifth out of eight rounds run, he also benefitted from smart strategy by being first to set a banker lap in Q3 and then watching as conditions deteriorated and times got slower and slower as the final quali session wore on. This had the effect of scrambling the grid behind Verstappen resulting in the surprise result of Nico Hulkenberg setting the second fastest time in his Haas ahead of the P3 Aston Martin of Fernando Alonso. Alonso lost out on a higher grid spot when a Red Flag came out for Oscar Piastri’s spun out McLaren directly after Hulkenberg crossed the line but before Alonso could get there with what looked to be a superior time. The Mercedes duo of Lewis Hamilton and George Russell did well in those tricky conditions to take P4 and P5 on the grid respectively and will be the only contending team with two cars within the Top 10 to start the race.

To that point, Carlos Sainz had the lone surviving Ferrari in Q3 after teammate Charles Leclerc waited too long to make a quick switch to slicks in a briefly drying Q2 session. While the Spaniard was only able to qualify a relatively perfunctory P8, it’s likely he will be dropped form even that humble position after a couple of dangerous incidents where his Prancing Horse clearly seemed to be dawdling in the middle of the road to set himself up while other drivers sped his way at full chat. Verstappen’s Red Bull teammate and, for now, closest championship rival Sergio Perez also missed the boat on tire strategy in Q2. He frankly seemed a bit spooked by the conditions in choosing to remain on Intermediate wet tires throughout rather than gamble on slicks, as many others had done successfully. Checo missed Q3 for the third race weekend in a row and will have fight his way to the front from down in P12. And Alonso’s Aston teammate Lance Stroll also failed to emerge from Q2 after a lurid slide in that session and will to start from P13 at his home race.

Top 10 qualifiers for the Canadian GP:

POS NO DRIVER CAR Q1 Q2 Q3 LAPS
1 1 Max Verstappen RED BULL RACING HONDA RBPT 1:20.851 1:19.092 1:25.858 26
2 27 Nico Hulkenberg HAAS FERRARI 1:22.730 1:20.305 1:27.102 25
3 14 Fernando Alonso ASTON MARTIN ARAMCO MERCEDES 1:21.481 1:19.776 1:27.286 25
4 44 Lewis Hamilton MERCEDES 1:21.554 1:20.426 1:27.627 26
5 63 George Russell MERCEDES 1:21.798 1:20.098 1:27.893 25
6 31 Esteban Ocon ALPINE RENAULT 1:22.114 1:20.406 1:27.945 25
7 4 Lando Norris MCLAREN MERCEDES 1:21.998 1:19.347 1:28.046 26
8 55 Carlos Sainz FERRARI 1:22.248 1:19.856 1:29.294 26
9 81 Oscar Piastri MCLAREN MERCEDES 1:22.190 1:19.659 1:31.349 24
10 23 Alexander Albon WILLIAMS MERCEDES 1:21.938 1:18.725 DNF 24

Complete qualifying results available via Formula1.com.

Tomorrow’s race air live on ABC beginning at 2PM Eastern here in the States. With less of a chance of rain in the forecast for Montreal tomorrow, it should intriguing to watch the grid re-sort itself on a dry circuit. Whether anyone has anything for Verstappen is quite a different matter. Hope to see you then to find out how it all shakes out!

2023 F1 Grand Prix of Monaco — Results & aftermath

Verstappen romps to victory in Monaco despite late rain; Alonso a distant P2 after wrong tire call; Ocon takes P3 with stellar effort; Perez scores zero points to cap off lost weekend

Red Bull’s Max Verstappen laid down a major marker in his quest for a third consecutive Formula 1 Drivers’ title, dominating the always significant Monaco Grand Prix on Sunday to claim a relatively easy victory despite the uncertainty brought by rain late in the race. Starting from pole for the first time here and with his teammate and closest championship rival Sergio Perez forced to start from the rear after the Mexican street ace crashed heavily during Saturday Qualifying, Verstappen proved untouchable in race trim even at this slow speed street circuit where the RB 19 ‘s usual DRS superiority was not really a factor. Verstappen potentially put Perez’s championship hopes to the sword with an untouchable performance and a second career win on the streets of Monte Carlo, as Perez was betrayed by a series of errors that saw him unable to advance his position and ended up scoring zero points on the day. Verstappen survived and thrived during the rainy conditions that swooped down from the mountains starting on Lap 52 of this 78-lap contest, patiently riding out several very slippery laps to suss out the track conditions & future weather before diving into the pits for the now necessary treaded Intermediate Pirelli tires on Lap 55.

On the other hand, Verstappen’s closest competition in the race, Aston Martin’s Fernando Alonso, chose to pit a lap earlier for Medium slicks after running his Hards all the way to Lap 54. It proved to be a crucial miscalculation by Alonso’s strategists, as it remained far too wet for slick tires to function and the Spaniard was forced to pit again on Lap 56 for the much needed Inters. Alonso ended up a distant second to the flying Dutchman, nearly 28-seconds adrift, and it’s reasonable to speculate just how much time that second stop cost the Spaniard. With a pit delta of around 19-seconds and traffic circulating relatively slowly due to the poor conditions, if Aston had just made the move to Inters right off the bat, the story of the latter third of the race could have been a bit different. Still, it’s hard to see how anyone really had anything for Verstappen on this day and in his current run of unstoppable form, even the magnificent Alonso. Either way, it meant another strong result in P2 for Fernando, his highest finishing place of the season and his rather remarkable fifth podium out of six races. Alonso is having a renaissance and Aston Martin have made a quantum leap in performance with the AMR23 that makes them arguably the second best car in the paddock.

For Perez, it was an absolutely lost weekend due to the knock on effects of his heavy qualifying shunt, which required a chassis change and a host of other repairs overnight, resulting in a last place start on the grid. On a track where passing is extraordinarily difficult, Perez was stifled in the early going of the race and then got caught up in some extracurriculars that essentially doomed his race further. Trying to somehow move through the field, he tangled with the second Aston Martin of Lance Stroll and the Haas of Kevin Magnussen, contact that damaged his front wing to the extent that he needed a new nose by Lap 36. This totally negated his planned long run tire strategy. After another damaging incident coming together with Mercedes’ George Russell when the rains started to fall, Perez was relegated to tire testing the full Wet Pirellis in potential service of his teammate. He finished two laps behind Verstappen, whose points lead over his teammate grew to 39, while Alonso narrowed his deficit to Perez to only 12. All in a all, a weekend to forget for Perez and he’ll probably be happy there’s another race next weekend to wash the bitter taste of this disaster out of his mouth.

On the other end of the spectrum, it was pure jubilation for Alpine’s Esteban Ocon, who finished an excellent P3 after being gifted that grid position by Charles Leclerc’s penalty for impeding during quali. Ocon became the first Frenchman to reach the podium in Monaco since Jean Alessi way back in 1993. Ocon tenaciously fought off all challengers, including at various times, the two Ferraris of Carlos Sainz and Leclerc and the Mercedes of Lewis Hamilton. Ocon also acquitted himself well in the rain, smartly pitting with the main group of frontrunners for that key switch to Inters on Lap 55 and then keeping it clean in the final stanza for that eye opening P3 result. Throw in Pierre Gasly’s solid P7 effort and it was an outstanding result for the midfield Alpine team. Hamilton was the best of the rest, running a solid if unspectacular race and staying out of trouble in tight quarters to finish in P4. Hamilton and Silver Arrows stablemate George Russell, who finished P5, were also helped by yet more strange strategy decisions by the Ferrari pit wall and some inconsistent driving by their pilots. After Carlos Sainz collided with Ocon speeding out of the tunnel and into the Nouvelle Chicane on Lap 11, damaging the Spaniard’s front wing, the team seemed to equivocate on their next move, resulting in a series of aborted calls for Sainz to box. When they did finally call in their driver from P4 on Lap 34, Sainz was none too pleased when he found himself emerge down in P7. But Sainz made his own misfortune later in the race when he spun out in the rain and lost several more positions, ending up in P8 at the finish and making for a very frustrating day for him.

Leclerc’s day was not that much better, though the Monegasque did rally in front of the home fans to maintain P6 behind Russell when the checkers flew. That’s where he started after that 3-place grid penalty so at least he didn’t lose any positions, but neither could he make any up after that key qualifying mistake. Leclerc is quite talented but prone to mental errors that lead to a lack of consistent performance and cost him better results. One wonders if this is because he feels he has to overdrive the Ferrari to even come close to the Red Bull’s pace or if he is just putting too much pressure on himself and that leads to a loss of concentration. Whatever the reason, it was another disappointing result in his home GP.

Rounding out the top 10, McLaren got good results amidst the chaos for others with a P9 for Lando Norris and P10 for rookie Oscar Piastri. With major upgrades coming to their chassis, McLaren will take those kinds of points paying results with their current underperforming car any day of the week.

Top 10 finishers of the Monaco GP:

POS NO DRIVER CAR LAPS TIME/RETIRED PTS
1 1 Max Verstappen RED BULL RACING HONDA RBPT 78 1:48:51.980 25
2 14 Fernando Alonso ASTON MARTIN ARAMCO MERCEDES 78 +27.921s 18
3 31 Esteban Ocon ALPINE RENAULT 78 +36.990s 15
4 44 Lewis Hamilton MERCEDES 78 +39.062s 13
5 63 George Russell MERCEDES 78 +56.284s 10
6 16 Charles Leclerc FERRARI 78 +61.890s 8
7 10 Pierre Gasly ALPINE RENAULT 78 +62.362s 6
8 55 Carlos Sainz FERRARI 78 +63.391s 4
9 4 Lando Norris MCLAREN MERCEDES 77 +1 lap 2
10 81 Oscar Piastri MCLAREN MERCEDES 77 +1 lap 1

Complete race results available via Formula1.com.

The next race is in but a week’s time — the Spanish Grand Prix from the very familiar Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya where the drivers due their pre-season testing. While Alonso will be on home soil, it’s Verstappen who looks to be unstoppable right now in any country and on any track. But of course in racing, surprises happen all the time and nothing is a given. Hope to see you then to find out how it all shakes out!

2023 F1 Grand Prix of Monaco — Qualifying results

Verstappen grabs first Monaco pole with mighty effort in dying seconds of Q3, bumps game Alonso to P2; Leclerc slots in at P3 at home GP; Perez crashes out heavily in Q1

Formula 1 returned to action after the unfortunate cancellation of last week’s planed Emilia Romagna Grand Prix due to the catastrophic flooding in that beautiful region with a thrilling Saturday qualifying for tomorrow’s Monaco Grand Prix. Under clear and sunny skies and with the famed street circuit ever-evolving to the bitter end of Q3, Red Bull’s Max Verstappen pulled out a miracle final lap at the death to earn his first-ever pole in Monte Carlo, bumping the seemingly supreme time of Aston Martin’s Fernando Alonso and relegating the veteran Spaniard to P2. That sets things up nicely for the points-leading Dutchman as he seeks to build on his seemingly unstoppable championship momentum after a frankly amazing run from ninth to victory in Miami twenty days ago. As for Alonso, even though he’s now still hunting his first pole in F1 since 2012, he’s certainly in the mix for the win tomorrow if he can get away to a good start and get ahead of Verstappen. The Aston Martin in Alonso’s hands is arguably the second best car on the grid and the Red Bull’s usual DRS advantage should be quite muted at this tight, slow speed circuit. Not to mention that Alonso also out-qualified both Ferraris on the day, bettering hometown hero Charles Leclerc*, who came home with the third fastest time, and teammate Carlos Sainz, who was not as quick at P5. (*Leclerc was subsequently penalized three grid positions post-qualifying when he was adjudged to have impeded Lando Norris.)

Alonso was also aided by Verstappen’s teammate and main title rival Sergio Perez’s unforced error in Q1, when the veteran Mexican, who has had his share of drama in Monte Carlo, overcooked it going into Sainte Devote and crashed heavily into the outside barriers at Turn 1 there. While Perez was unhurt, it was a heavy shunt that literally smashed the normally robust carbon fiber side pod to smithereens and likely ruined the gearbox and rear suspension, as well. So, on a day where team Red Bull were thrilled to have one driver on pole after a tight multi-car duel, don’t be surprised if Perez is forced to start from the pits tomorrow, making any sort of points finish a rather remote possibility on this near-impossible to overtake track. If Verstappen saunters away from Perez in the championship fight, his teammate’s rather inexplicable crash so early in quali will be pointed at as the season’s key turning point.

Alpine also showed really good pace on the day, with Esteban Ocon at one point topping the timing sheets late in Q3 but settling for P4 when the big boys had their say, and teammate Pierre Gasly notching a solid P7 effort. Lewis Hamilton out-qualified his Mercedes teammate George Russell, P6 to P8, despite having a shunt in the final practice session earlier in the day that required repairs and then struggling for pace in much of qualifying. And AlphaTauri’s Yuki Tsunoda did very well to take a solid P9, while McLaren’s Lando Norris had to settle for P10 after damaging his car in Q2 by hitting the outside barrier in the Nouvelle Chicane, his team nonetheless having done yeoman’s work in getting it repaired and able to turn some laps in Q3.

Top 10 qualifiers for the Monaco GP:

POS NO DRIVER CAR Q1 Q2 Q3 LAPS
1 1 Max Verstappen RED BULL RACING HONDA RBPT 1:12.386 1:11.908 1:11.365 30
2 14 Fernando Alonso ASTON MARTIN ARAMCO MERCEDES 1:12.886 1:12.107 1:11.449 25
3 16 Charles Leclerc* FERRARI 1:12.912 1:12.103 1:11.471 26
4 31 Esteban Ocon ALPINE RENAULT 1:12.967 1:12.248 1:11.553 26
5 55 Carlos Sainz FERRARI 1:12.717 1:12.210 1:11.630 28
6 44 Lewis Hamilton MERCEDES 1:12.872 1:12.156 1:11.725 30
7 10 Pierre Gasly ALPINE RENAULT 1:13.033 1:12.169 1:11.933 25
8 63 George Russell MERCEDES 1:12.769 1:12.151 1:11.964 29
9 22 Yuki Tsunoda ALPHATAURI HONDA RBPT 1:12.642 1:12.249 1:12.082 29
10 4 Lando Norris MCLAREN MERCEDES 1:12.877 1:12.377 1:12.254 23

Complete qualifying results available via Formula1.com.

Tomorrow’s race airs live at 9AM on ABC here in the States. While qualifying is usually the more exciting event than the actual race in Monaco, look for Alonso to keep Verstappen on his toes in the early going, as there is really nothing between the Aston and the Red Bull on this short street course. It should also be interesting to see if the Red Bull braintrust can figure out a way to get Perez back in the mix with some sort of bold strategy maneuver. Hope to see you then to find out how it all shakes out!

2023 F1 Grand Prix of Miami — Results & aftermath

Peerless Verstappen recovers from P9 start to take dominant victory in Miami, relegates Red Bull teammate Perez to P2; Alonso earns fourth podium out of five races with solid P3

Red Bull’s peerless ace Max Verstappen recovered from an ill-timed Red Flag during Saturday Qualifying that relegated him to a P9 start for the Miami Grand Prix all the way back to a surprisingly easy victory on Sunday. On a track that had been difficult to pass on in its debut last year, 2023’s race was a very different affair, featuring a passel of passes and not only by Verstappen. But, once again, it was the Red Bull in the Dutchman’s hands that proved an irresistible force, as Verstappen carved his way through the midfield during the first third of the GP like a hot knife through better. If this were IMSA, the RB19 would surely be given a balance of performance weight penalty, such was the seeming ease of its multiple overtakes on reasonably proficient cars, including, eventually, his teammate. Verstappen and his strategists also made the wise decision to start on the Hard Pirelli tires from his disadvantaged position on the grid, while the others in the top 10 started on the quicker but shorter-lived Mediums. In any event, after biding his time and staying out of trouble on the opening lap, Verstappen essentially proved the distinction between Hard and Medium tires to be meaningless for him, first making easy work of Alfa Romeo’s Valtteri Bottas on Lap 2 for P8 and then nabbing two places by passing the Haas of Kevin Magnussen and the Ferrari of Charles Leclerc while they were preoccupied dueling each other on Lap 4 to vault up to P6 in the relative blink of an eye. By this point it was clear that not only was Verstappen going to be able to get up and challenge his race leading teammate Perez by the last stanza of the race but it was actually Perez who was likely to be the hunted rather than the hunter, even on one of the Mexican’s favored street courses.

While Perez had successfully gotten out of DRS range of the very fleet P2 Aston Martin of Fernando Alonso, with Alonso likewise being able to keep the P3 Ferrari of Carlos Sainz at bay in the early going, he was unable to build a gap over his hard charging Red Bull teammate further behind. On Lap 9, Verstappen made easy work of Mercedes’ George Russell for P5 and on the next lap he rounded up the out-of-position Alpine of Pierre Gasly for P4 at the same point in Turn 17, the last real corner at the Miami International Autodrome and a section that turned into a prime overtaking area on Sunday. Just a few laps later, Verstappen was on the back of Sainz’s gearbox and he then flew by the Spaniard for P3 midway through Lap 14, utilizing Turn 11 with aplomb this time and then duplicating the feat on Alonso on the subsequent lap. So, by Lap 15 of the 57-lap contest, Verstappen had already erased the memories of his qualifying disappointment and made up an astounding eight positions. With that, he set about closing down his race leading teammate just up the road.

Before any early intra-team dramas could bloom on track, the Red Bull pit wall called in Perez on Lap 20 to make the switch off his aging Medium tires and onto the Hards, which he would be forced to run for the remainder the contest due to the preferred (and likely only feasible) one-stop strategy. That handed the lead to Verstappen and the Dutchman now concentrated on pumping in solid laps on his Hards while running in clean air to bank time for his own inevitable pit stop. That he did in seemingly effortless fashion, running all the way to Lap 46 before diving to the pits for fresh rubber and a new set of Pirelli Mediums with which to close out the race. While the normally top notch Red Bull pit crew was slightly slow by about a second and Verstappen came out behind Perez once again, it was quickly all too clear that Perez on aging, 25-lap old Hards was no match for Verstappen on fresh Mediums. The Flying Dutchman stamped his dominance on yet another race and demoralized yet another teammate, cruising by the game but helpless Perez just a few revolutions of the circuit later on Lap 48, making the decisive move while the two ran side by side down into Turn 1. From there, Verstappen just set off into the distance, setting the race’s fastest lap for the extra championship point en route to the victory five seconds ahead of Perez. It was a remarkable exhibition in Miami and a real statement of dominance by the two-time and reigning World Champion after a disappointing weekend in Baku, setting things up nicely for a rematch between the only two genuine contenders this season two weeks hence at Imola.

Top 10 finishers of the Miami GP:

POS NO DRIVER CAR LAPS TIME/RETIRED PTS
1 1 Max Verstappen RED BULL RACING HONDA RBPT 57 1:27:38.241 26
2 11 Sergio Perez RED BULL RACING HONDA RBPT 57 +5.384s 18
3 14 Fernando Alonso ASTON MARTIN ARAMCO MERCEDES 57 +26.305s 15
4 63 George Russell MERCEDES 57 +33.229s 12
5 55 Carlos Sainz FERRARI 57 +42.511s 10
6 44 Lewis Hamilton MERCEDES 57 +51.249s 8
7 16 Charles Leclerc FERRARI 57 +52.988s 6
8 10 Pierre Gasly ALPINE RENAULT 57 +55.670s 4
9 31 Esteban Ocon ALPINE RENAULT 57 +58.123s 2
10 20 Kevin Magnussen HAAS FERRARI 57 +62.945s 1

Complete race results available via Formula1.com.

The next race is in a fortnight’s time on May 21st, the Emilia Romagna Grand Prix from the Autodromo Enzo e Dino Ferrari, aka Imola, just a little southeast of Bologna. Bring your appetite for more wheel to wheel action between the Red Bull championship rivals and teammates, with Perez aiming to reassert his title hopes and Verstappen looking to hand out another beatdown. Hope to see you then to find out how it all shakes out!

2023 F1 Grand Prix of Miami — Qualifying results

Perez takes pole on Miami as late Leclerc spin brings out Red Flag to scramble grid; Alonso P2, Sainz P3; Verstappen P9 after failing to set Q3 time

Saturday Qualifying for this year’s Miami Grand Prix turned unpredictable in the dying moments, as Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc lost it late in Q3 while trying to improve his position, spinning his Prancing Horse off the circuit entering Turn 17. That brought out a Red Flag for the stricken Ferrari and with under two minutes remaining in the final quali session, ended Q3. It also froze all the drivers in their prior positions with no more chance of improvement. For Red Bull’s Sergio Perez, that meant the fatstest lap of the session and pole for Sunday’s race. But it also doomed  his teammate and championship rival Max Verstappen to an uncharacteristic P9. The Dutchman aborted his first lap of the final session and then was never able to set another time afterwards due to Leclerc’s mishap. The very tight Miami International Autodrome is a hard place to make passes so Verstappen will have his work cut for him, though if any current F1 driver can recover from that disadvantage, it’s him. Conversely, Aston Martin’s Fernando Alonso benefitted from the abbreviated quali session and secured P2 alongside Perez on the front row. With the Spaniard’s run of excellent form to start 2023 and a very completive car, P2 may well be where he finishes the race.

Leclerc’s teammate Carlos Sainz also reaped the benefits of having already banked a solid fast lap earlier in the session and will start P3, while Leclerc obviously did not improve on his standing P7 time. Haas’ Kevin Magnussen was ecstatic to find himself starting P4 after a really solid day for the Danish veteran. And Alpine had a much needed good result with both cars getting through to Q3 and Pierre Gasly qualifying up in P5 and Esteban Ocon in P8.  On the other hand, Mercedes had a torrid time of it in the Miami heat with George Russell only able to manage a time good enough for P6 and teammate Lewis Hamilton unceremoniously knocked out in Q2. The seven-time World Champ will start way back in P13, his first-ever start outside the top 6 while on American soil. Ala Romeo’s Valtteri Bottas was P10 and did not leave the pits at all in that fateful final session.

Top 10 qualifiers for the Miami GP:

POS NO DRIVER CAR Q1 Q2 Q3 LAPS
1 11 Sergio Perez RED BULL RACING HONDA RBPT 1:27.713 1:27.328 1:26.841 20
2 14 Fernando Alonso ASTON MARTIN ARAMCO MERCEDES 1:28.179 1:27.097 1:27.202 19
3 55 Carlos Sainz FERRARI 1:27.686 1:27.148 1:27.349 18
4 20 Kevin Magnussen HAAS FERRARI 1:27.809 1:27.673 1:27.767 19
5 10 Pierre Gasly ALPINE RENAULT 1:28.061 1:27.612 1:27.786 20
6 63 George Russell MERCEDES 1:28.086 1:27.743 1:27.804 20
7 16 Charles Leclerc FERRARI 1:27.713 1:26.964 1:27.861 19
8 31 Esteban Ocon ALPINE RENAULT 1:27.872 1:27.444 1:27.935 20
9 1 Max Verstappen RED BULL RACING HONDA RBPT 1:27.363 1:26.814 DNF 15
10 77 Valtteri Bottas ALFA ROMEO FERRARI 1:27.864 1:27.564 DNS 15

Complete qualifying results available via Formula1.com.

Tomorrow’s race airs live on ABC beginning at 3:30 PM Eastern here in the States. With a rather epically jumbled grid and Vertsappen forced to make up a ton of positions on a notoriously difficult to overtake circuit, it should be a wild ride in the Sunshine State. Hope to see you then to find out how it all shakes out!

2023 F1 Grand Prix of Azerbaijan — Results & aftermath

Perez cruises to victory with help from timely Safety Car, Verstappen P2 as Red Bulls run away in Baku; pole-sitter Leclerc P3 for first Ferrari podium of season

Confirming on Sunday what has been abundantly clear since Round 1 this season, the Drivers’ championship hunt is a two-man, intra-team Red Bull battle, with ostensible number two driver Sergio Perez surging to within 6 points of leader Max Verstappen after an absolutely dominant weekend in Azerbaijan. Making the most of the first Sprint race of the season, Perez won that 17-lap affair in fine fashion on Saturday to take the 8 points on offer. The veteran Mexican then powered his way from a P3 starting grid spot to another impressive victory in Sunday’s full length Grand Prix on the very tricky and treacherous Baku City Street Circuit. Perez took advantage of a slight strategic error by Verstappen’s side of the pit wall when they called the Dutchman in on Lap 10, when AlphaTauri rookie Nyck De Vries came to a stop on track after clipping a barrier. With Verstappen leading the race after an early Lap 4 pass on the pole-sitting Ferrari of Charles Leclerc, his strategists gambled on a momentary local yellow flag  or Virtual Safety Car period to make the switch off the opening-stint Medium Pirellis and onto the Hard compound to execute the preferred one-stopper. But De Vries was unable to restart, necessitating a Safety Car, which then allowed the rest of the main contenders to get ultra-cheap 11-second pit stops and allowed the second place Perez to emerge as the leader and Leclerc now also ahead of Verstappen in P2. When the race resumed on the very end of Lap 13, Perez scampered away deftly, while Verstappen showed the pace advantage inherent in the Red Bull chassis by dusting off Leclerc for that second position without delay and without need of the not yet reenabled DRS. While Verstappen could occasioanally close the gap to his teammate, the longer the 51-lap contest went on, the more Checo inched away from his grasp, in the end coming home over two-seconds ahead of his two-time champion teammate. That made it a massive 33 point haul for Perez over the race weekend to Verstappen’s 24. With no other cars able to challenge Red Bull to this point, it also signaled game on for what could be the best intra-team battle since Hamilton vs. Rosberg in 2016.

While Ferrari’s Leclerc earned pole in both the Sprint and the GP, the Monegasque was unable to convert either of those into victory due to the obvious limitations of the SF-23 in race conditions. In fact, Lecerc has technically won four poles in a row in Azerbaijan if this year’s Sprint is included but has yet to take a victory in Baku. Nevertheless, the Monegasque drove efficiently and held off a hard charging Fernando Alonso for the latter part of the contest to take P3 and earn the Scuderia’s first podium of the season. As things stand now in relation to the peerless Red Bulls, that’s probably about the best result Ferrari can expect barring reliability issues for their rivals. While Alonso didn’t quite have the pace on old Hard tires to hunt down Leclerc he did score another impressive result for the massively improved Aston Martin team, crossing the line in P4 as the checkers flew. Teammate Lance Stroll, who suffered with grip more than Alonso, nearly losing it going into Turn 1 at one point, was able to come home safely in P7, shoring up the team’s improbable P2 in the Constructors’ standings. The second Ferrari of Carlos Sainz drove well enough to keep the Mercedes of Lewis Hamilton at bay and finish P5, while Hamilton recovered from a poorly timed pre-Safety Car pit stop to take P6, overtaking Stroll on Lap 20 for that position after the Canadian made an error going into Turn 16. On a weekend when Mercedes were pretty clearly the fourth best team, the second Silver Arrow of George Russell had a fairly lackluster time of it in Baku and had to settle for P8, though the young Briton did set the fastest lap for an extra point after a late switch to Soft Pirellis on the penultimate lap. McLaren’s Lando Norris and AlfaTauri’s Yuki Tsunoda rounded out the Top 10 finishers in Azerbaijan coming home in P9 and P10 respectively.

Top 10 finishers of the Azerbaijan GP:

POS NO DRIVER CAR LAPS TIME/RETIRED PTS
1 11 Sergio Perez RED BULL RACING HONDA RBPT 51 1:32:42.436 25
2 1 Max Verstappen RED BULL RACING HONDA RBPT 51 +2.137s 18
3 16 Charles Leclerc FERRARI 51 +21.217s 15
4 14 Fernando Alonso ASTON MARTIN ARAMCO MERCEDES 51 +22.024s 12
5 55 Carlos Sainz FERRARI 51 +45.491s 10
6 44 Lewis Hamilton MERCEDES 51 +46.145s 8
7 18 Lance Stroll ASTON MARTIN ARAMCO MERCEDES 51 +51.617s 6
8 63 George Russell MERCEDES 51 +74.240s 5
9 4 Lando Norris MCLAREN MERCEDES 51 +80.376s 2
10 22 Yuki Tsunoda ALPHATAURI HONDA RBPT 51 +83.862s 1

Complete race results available via Formula1.com.

The next race is in but a week’s time — the Miami Grand Prix, the first of three United States-hosted contests this year. With Perez full of confidence and a master of the street race, look for the Mexican to be right on pace with teammate Verstappen and up for the increasingly intriguing championship fight. Hope to see you then to find out how it all shakes out!

2023 F1 Grand Prix of Australia — Results & aftermath

Verstappen prevails is chaotic, incident-filled Aussie GP; Hamilton runs to a clean P2, Alonso survives late-race carnage & rulings for P3

The only predictable thing in Sunday’s absolutely bonkers Australian Grand Prix at the tricky Albert Park Circuit in Melbourne was Red Bull’s Max Verstappen taking victory. The rest of the race was pure chaos that featured a record three Red Flag periods for debris clean up, followed by nail-biting two standing restarts from the grid, and, not coincidentally, a whopping eight retirements. With the race already having been effected by the first Red Flag on Lap 9 after Williams’s Alexander Albon lost control and crashed out at Turn 7, spewing gravel all over the track that necessitated a lengthy cleanup, it seemed that the results would come down simply to long run tire management by the top 3 of Verstappen, Lewis Hamilton and Fernando Alonso. But right after Verstappen seemed to show a hint of vulnerability on Lap 54 of this 58-lap contest by running off track and through the grass after locking up on his aging Hard Pirellis, the real drama began in earnest. On that same lap, Haas’s Kevin Magnussen misjudged his exit coming out of Turn 2 and bashed his rear right into the concrete barrier. That knocked the rubber off the rim as well as shattering Magnussen’s suspension and a second Red Flag was thrown on Lap 55 to clean up the debris field & haul away the stricken Haas, as well as preserve a few precious final racing laps and not end under yellow. The stewards then made the momentous decision to restart the race from the grid once again, rather than a more conventional rolling start behind the Safety Car, thereby turning the Down Under GP into a 2-lap shootout.

This backfired rather spectacularly when the cars sped off in anger again, as first the Ferrari of Carlos Sainz got into Alonso’s Aston Martin, spinning his fellow Spaniard around amidst a pack of snarling F1 cars. Directly or indirectly, that had the knock-on effect of forcing the Alpine of Pierre Gasly across the road and into the front left tire of his teammate Esteban Ocon, wrecking both of their cars in the process and robbing the team of a certain double-points finish. As a result of all that mayhem, another Red Flag was thrown with no chance of any more competitive laps being left to run. Now the debate within the FIA race directors and rules experts was on how to classify the field for the final ceremonial restart. After another long delay, it was decided that the order would be determined by the positions upon the prior restart, as the field had not even completed one sector before the last Red Flag had come out. That was great news for Alonso and Aston teammate Lance Stroll, the latter having also lost a ton of spots outbreaking himself amidst the mayhem. And while it seemed to be good news for the lone surviving Ferrari of Carlos Sainz in P4, that joy was extremely short lived when the stewards handed down a 5-second penalty to Sainz for the earlier contact with Alonso. With the twelve cars surviving to take the checkered flag all bunched together behind the Safety Car and no racing on the final lap, that saw the disconsolate Sainz dropped out of the points to dead last of the runners in P12. It made for a miserable, pointless day for the fabled Scuderia, which also suffered the ignominy of seeing their other pilot, Charles Leclerc, crash out and beach himself on the very first lap while  going into Turn 1 after contact with Stroll. To say Ferrari and their drivers are seriously in trouble in their championship pursuits after just three rounds would be an understatement.

Possibly lost in all that drama and incident was Verstappen’s first win in Australia and second of the season. And while it didn’t look as if Hamilton or Alonso really had anything for the Dutch points leader, particularly in the face of the Red Bull’s seemingly invincible advantage while using DRS, it was still an excellent race for both veterans, who joined Verstappen on the podium to make it three World Champions taking home trophies when the GP finally ended. Hamilton withstood Alonso’s best efforts and kept it clean to maintain a solid P2, even briefly taking the lead from Verstappen early in the race. That gives some hope and momentum to the Silver Arrows in their quest to creep closer to the imperious Red Bulls. It was also doubly important that Hamilton scored big points on the day because teammate George Russell was forced to retire on Lap 18 when something in his engine caught on fire. For Alonso, who looked like he had been punted out of the points by Sainz, it was another sweet day on what is turning out to be a 2023 renaissance. With his P3 restored after the collision with Sainz and teammate Stroll promoted back up to P4 after Sainz’s penalty, it was also a banner day for Aston Martin, which have made themselves a genuine fourth powerhouse team in F1. Spare a kind word for Sergio Perez, as well. The second Red Bull had to start from the pits after a disastrous qualifying and some engine tweaks while in parc fermé. But the talented Mexican, who excels at driving through the field, patiently worked his way up to P7 at the time of the penultimate Red Flag. And, while he went dirt tracking through the mayhem on that fateful final proper restart, losing several spots in the process, between the ruling on the actual race positions reverting to prior to that start, the double DNF of the Alpines and the penalty to Sainz, that pulled Checo all the way up to a very respectable and hard-earned P5.

If Alpine had a disaster with their late race shunt between teammates and subsequent double DNF, team McLaren finally caught a break after a dismal zero-points start to this year’s campaign. Lando Norris was able to finish in P6 and rookie teammate & Melbourne native Oscar Piastri got a fairy tale P8 in his literal hometown Grand Prix.  Alfa Romero’s Zho Guanyu and AlphaTauri’s Yuki Tsunoda also capitalized on the carnage to come home safely in P9 and P10 respectively.

Top 10 finishers of the Australian GP:

POS NO DRIVER CAR LAPS TIME/RETIRED PTS
1 1 Max Verstappen RED BULL RACING HONDA RBPT 58 2:32:38.371 25
2 44 Lewis Hamilton MERCEDES 58 +0.179s 18
3 14 Fernando Alonso ASTON MARTIN ARAMCO MERCEDES 58 +0.769s 15
4 18 Lance Stroll ASTON MARTIN ARAMCO MERCEDES 58 +3.082s 12
5 11 Sergio Perez RED BULL RACING HONDA RBPT 58 +3.320s 11
6 4 Lando Norris MCLAREN MERCEDES 58 +3.701s 8
7 27 Nico Hulkenberg HAAS FERRARI 58 +4.939s 6
8 81 Oscar Piastri MCLAREN MERCEDES 58 +5.382s 4
9 24 Zhou Guanyu ALFA ROMEO FERRARI 58 +5.713s 2
10 22 Yuki Tsunoda ALPHATAURI HONDA RBPT 58 +6.052s 1

Complete race results available via Formula1.com.

Somewhat suitably after this epic, bizarre and frankly exhausting contest in Australia, the next race is in three weeks time — the equally unpredictable Azerbaijan Grand Prix on the perilous streets if Baku. So rest up and I’ll hope to see you then for what should be even more crazy F1 action!