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2022 F1 Grand Prix of Australia — Results & aftermath

Leclerc romps to dominant win in Melbourne; Perez P2, Russell P3; Verstappen, Sainz DNF

Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc absolutely dominated Sunday’s Australian Grand Prix, winning the race handily after starting from pole and leaving even his closest pursuers far, far behind. The Monegasque’s pace in his Prancing Horse here at Albert Park was somewhat of a a surprise, because even after qualifying in the top spot on Saturday the savvy take around the paddock was that Red Bull would have the true race pace. But the famed Scuderia’s return to championship contending form after several years mired in mediocrity was confirmed in this first Aussie GP in two years, as neither the Red Bull of Max Verstappen or Sergio Perez could touch Leclerc on this day. In fact, Verstappen was forced to retire the car on Lap 39 of this 58-lap contest when his engine or hydraulic lines developed a leak leading to a small conflagration in the engine bay. The Dutch reigning world champion, who had been sitting comfortably in second during the race despite not being able to truly challenge Leclerc for victory, instead was forced to resign himself to his second DNF in three races to start the 2022 campaign. The Red Bull is certainly fast but reliability could well be its Achilles heal in what is shaping up to be a season long battle against Ferrari. That left it to Verstappen’s teammate Sergio Perez to fly the Red Bull team’s flag, which the Mexican did with aplomb by taking an easy P2 on the day, albeit over 20.5-seconds in arrears of Leclerc. To put the exclamation point on his performance, the Ferrari man also took the bonus point by setting race’s fastest lap, reaping the full 26 on a day when his key rival Verstappen scored a big fat zero.

Pics courtesy GrandPrix247.com

All was not totally sunshine and roses at the fabled Scuderia from Maranello, however. Their number two Carlos Sainz had a disastrous weekend, following his somewhat unlucky P9 qualifying when he and the team were caught out but a late Red Flag in Q3 with an early DNF on Sunday when the veteran Spaniard misjudged his braking going into Turn 10 on Lap 2, overshot and then beached himself in the gravel. So like Verstappen, Sainz failed to score for his team in Melbourne, as well, only in his case he barely notched any laps at all and it appeared to be entirely his fault. Sainz will probably not be happy that the next race is two week’s away, since he’ll have all that time to stew on what he freely admitted was a “disaster” of a GP weekend. Continue reading

2022 F1 Grand Prix of Australia — Qualifying results

Ferrari’s Leclerc stamps authority in quali, takes pole for return of Aussie GP in Melbourne; Red Bull’s Verstappen settles for P2, Perez P3 but Sainz fumbles way to P9; P5 Hamilton edged by Norris at reconfigured Albert Park

 

Top 10 qualifiers for the Australian GP:

POS NO DRIVER CAR Q1 Q2 Q3 LAPS
1 16 Charles Leclerc FERRARI 1:18.881 1:18.606 1:17.868 21
2 1 Max Verstappen RED BULL RACING RBPT 1:18.580 1:18.611 1:18.154 21
3 11 Sergio Perez RED BULL RACING RBPT 1:18.834 1:18.340 1:18.240 21
4 4 Lando Norris MCLAREN MERCEDES 1:19.280 1:19.066 1:18.703 20
5 44 Lewis Hamilton MERCEDES 1:19.401 1:19.106 1:18.825 28
6 63 George Russell MERCEDES 1:19.405 1:19.076 1:18.933 26
7 3 Daniel Ricciardo MCLAREN MERCEDES 1:19.665 1:19.130 1:19.032 22
8 31 Esteban Ocon ALPINE RENAULT 1:19.605 1:19.136 1:19.061 23
9 55 Carlos Sainz FERRARI 1:18.983 1:18.469 1:19.408 22
10 14 Fernando Alonso ALPINE RENAULT 1:19.192 1:18.815 DNF 15

Complete qualifying results available via Fomrula1.com.

Put on that extra pot of coffee — tomorrow’s race from Down Under airs live beginning at 1AM Eastern on ESPN here in the States. Hope to see you then to find out how things shake out between the resurgent Ferrari star Leclerc and the always formidable Red Bull ace Verstappen!

2022 F1 Grand Prix of Saudi Arabia — Results & aftermath

GAME ON: Verstappen strikes back for Round 2 victory in Saudi Arabia with late pass on P2 Leclerc; Sainz P3 & unlucky Perez P4, as 2022 appears to be two-team battle between Ferrari & Red Bull

After failing to finish in Round 1 of the 2022 Formula 1 season last week in Bahrain and starting from a disappointing P4 for this Sunday’s Saudi Arabian Grand Prix, Red Bull’s Max Verstappen received not only improved reliability but also the key breaks during the race to out-duel Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc and take his first win of the season. Leclerc and Ferrari had been brilliant all day, using a devious head fake that lured the pole-sitting Red Bull of Sergio Perez into an early stop on Lap 16 while Leclerc stayed out despite team radio suggesting otherwise. It proved to be the first pivotal moment of an eventful race because Williams’ Nicholas Latifi crashed out on the very next lap and forced the deployment of a Safety Car. That allowed the rest of the field to come to the pits for cheap stops for fresh rubber while Perez had just completed his for the full fare. When everyone had cycled through behind the Safety Car, Leclerc now led the race, with Verstappen leapfrogging both Sainz and his teammate Perez for second, while Sainz and Perez squabbled over P3 and P4 respectively. At that point, it looked for all the world that Leclerc had the best car and he seemed to lead out Verstappen fairly easily once the race went back to green on Lap 21.

But the tricky and tight Jeddah Corniche Street Circuit was not done doling out surprises on the day and after twenty-six fairly straightforward laps with the main contenders staying in lockstep the proceedings were again interrupted. First, the Alpine of a hard charging Fernando Alonso lost power and slowed to a stop just in front of pit entry on Lap 37 and then the McLaren of Daniel Ricciardo followed suit in practically the exact same area a lap later. This forced the race director not only to engage the Virtual Safety Car in order to retrieve the stranded pair of cars but also to keep the pits closed this time due to their proximate location. Interestingly, by the time the VSC ended on Lap 41 Verstappen had crept a little closer to Leclerc than he was able to at race pace and now only trailed the lead Prancing Horse by just under a second, the delta necessary to activate the Drag Reduction System in the rear wing. It also set things up for a grandstand finish between the two drivers, who so far have to be seen as the favorites for this year’s championship. Continue reading

2022 F1 Grand Prix of Saudi Arabia — Qualifying results

Red Bull’s Perez snatches pole from Ferrari’s Leclerc at tricky Jeddah Corniche Street Circuit; Sainz P3, Verstappen P4; Hamilton shockingly knocked out in Q1; Schumacher airlifted to hospital after vicious Q2 shunt

On an incident-filled and frankly scary Saturday qualifying for tomorrow’s Saudi Arabian Grand Prix, it was Red Bull’s ostensible Number Two who managed to come out on top of the timing sheets. Veteran Sergio Perez bested not only his much more heralded teammate, Max Verstappen, but also both Ferraris, the team that looks most likely to challenge Red Bull for the big prizes this season. With a rebel drone strike on a nearby oil facility yesterday sending a a wave of unease through the paddock, the simmering tension was further compounded when Haas’s Mick Schumacher lost it during Q2 and suffered a vicious shunt  Turn 10 of this very tight and tricky Jeddah Conriche Street Circuit that shot him into one concrete barrier and then across to the other side of the track and down the road for quite some ways. While the Haas was completely destroyed, the car also did its part by breaking apart at the rear, as designed, thereby dissipating energy away from the driver. So, despite the massive impact, the initial medical reports on Schumacher were all positive and he was airlifted to hospital for precautionary reasons rather than emergency ones. However, the young German, who is trying to follow in his seven-time champion father Michael’s footsteps, was preemptively ruled out for the Grand Prix and it looks like Haas will only be fielding Kevin Magnussen’s car when the lights go out for tomorrow’s race. Magnussen kept his cool after his teammate’s disturbing crash and qualified P10.

Pics courtesy GrandPrix247.com

Schumacher’s accident led to a lengthy Red Flag period with just under five minutes in Q2, both for Schumacher’s painfully slow extraction from his wrecked car and then for some serious track cleanup and barrier repair at the scene of the crash site. But the marshals and race directors did yeoman’s work and were able to get Quali back underway, leading to the all important top ten shootout in Q3. Ferrari had looked the strongest on overall one-lap pace through the race weekend so far, so it was no surprise to see Charles Leclerc, last week’s race winner and pole-sitter in Bahrain, lay down the quickest lap as the seconds ticked down in the final qualifying session. His teammate Carlos Sainz slotted in right behind him by a little over a tenth on his final lap, making it a provisional Ferrari front row lockout, But Perez had other ideas. The veteran pilot drove a flawless final lap, coming nerve wrakingly close to the barriers at times, but wringing the maximum speed out of the Red Bull to earn his first-ever Formula 1 pole and beat back the Ferrari challenge for today. Interestingly, his normally superlative teammate Verstappen struggled to get his Soft Pirelli tires into their optimal operational window durning a cool and breezy night in the Red Sea port city of Jeddah and the Dutch reigning world champion could only muster the fourth fastest time. So it will be Perez and Leclerc on the front row and Sainz and Verstappen on row two, which should make for a really intriguing and likely contentious opening lap in tomorrow’s GP. Continue reading

2022 F1 Grand Prix of Bahrain — Results & aftermath

Leclerc victorious in season opener, Sainz P2 in promising start to 2022 campaign for Ferrari; disastrous late double DNF for Red Bull leads to podium for Mercedes’ Hamilton, P4 for Russell

In the first race of the 2022 Formula 1 season, team Ferrari proved that its early mastery of the new ground effect-dependent chassis and new engine specs was not a fluke. The famed Scuderia from Maranello, which suffered a prolonged period of mediocrity for much of the prior turbo-hybrid era, saw a spring resurgence as their blood red Prancing Horses finished one-two in the Bahrain Grand Prix on Sunday. Charles Leclerc, who clearly was the fastest man of the weekend, earned victory after starting from the pole, while his stablemate Carlos Sainz fought hard and took advantage of the terminal failures of both contending Red Bulls late in the race to come home a happy  P2. That marked the first one-two Ferrari finish in a GP since 2019 in Singapore when Sebastian Vettel led home Leclerc. While Leclerc was relatively dominant all day, he was effectively harassed by Verstappen’s Red Bull for the lead throughout, including a ding dong, see saw battle between the two after the first round of pit stops between Laps 16 and 20. Verstappen and his team made effective use of the undercut coming in a lap earlier than then Monegasque to gain track position on Leclerc, which led to several laps of Verstappen passing Leclerc going into Turn 1 and Leclerc snatching the lead back coming out of Turn 4, where the Ferrari’s excellence in the slow speed corners neutralized the Red Bull’s straight line pace advantage. After a period of holding stations and status quo for many laps after that while Verstappen bided his time, it looked like it would be game on again between the two contenders when a full Safety Car was deployed on Lap 46 of this 57-lap contest after Pierre Gasly’s AlphaTauri stopped on track and unceremoniously burst into flames. It proved to be a very bad omen for other Red Bull-engined cars.

With the field now bunched up again behind Leclerc after pretty much everyone dove to the pits for the cheap stop and a switch to the high performing Soft Pirelli tires to finish out the race, Leclerc’s advantage over Verstappen was reduced to less than a second. But by the time the Safety Car tucked in at the end of Lap 50, Verstappen had been on the radio complaining about a heavy feel to the steering, perhaps having something to do with the power steering hydraulics. Leclerc initiated the restart superbly and gapped Verstappen, although the Dutch reigning world champion still seemed able to stay on the lead Ferrari’s gearbox. But Verstappen’s radio messages to and from the pit wall kept getting more fraught and there was clearly trouble brewing in the car. Sure enough, on Lap 54 something in Verstappen’s engine let go and he was quickly overtaken by most of those behind him. Verstappen wound up limping his mount to the pits but the issue was terminal and he was forced to retire. Climbing out of the car in stunned disbelief as the race stormed to its conclusion without him was a sad way to begin the defense of his first championship.

Continue reading

2022 F1 Grand Prix of Bahrain — Qualifying results

Leclerc snatches pole for season opener, Sainz P3 in promising start for Ferrari; Red Bull’s reigning champ Verstappen qualifies P2, Hamilton only P5 as Mercedes struggle

The real beginning of Formula 1’s latest new era yielded a multitude of surprises, as the teams put the completely redesigned cars on display for the first time in earnest during Saturday Qualifying for tomorrow’s season-opening Bahrain Grand Prix. With a radical new set of rules changing the look and design of the cars, most notably in cutting down on the complexity of the wings and exterior aero elements for less downforce but with a renewed emphasis on ground effects to stick the chassis to the road surface in exchange, it was the first opportunity to see which teams came out of the box strong and which still had work yet to do. And the answer appears to be that Ferrari has made the biggest improvements under the new regulations and the famed team from Maranello could well be geared up for a mano a mano brawl with Red Bull and their reigning champion, Max Verstappen, for the big prizes at the end of the year. Obviously, one swallow does not make a spring, but Charles Leclerc was able to put his blood red Prancing Horse on pole under the lights at the Bahrain International Circuit, besting Verstappen’s vaunted Adrian Newey-designed Red Bull RB18 at the line by a relatively hefty .123-seconds. Confirming the potential power of the new Ferrari design, Leclerc’s teammate Carlos Sainz was also in contain for the pole, though in the end he slotted in at P3 just barely of Verstappen’s pace. Meanwhile, the Dutch champ’s Ref Bull teammate, Sergio Perez, looked set to reprise his pivotal wingman role once again in 2022, as the Mexican veteran could manage no better than the fourth fastest lap in the face of the Prancing Horses’ rediscovered competitiveness.

The inverse of Ferrari’s resurgent good fortune was the poor debut performance of the normally mighty Mercedes new W13 chassis. With the new ground effects also come new aero headaches and Mercedes have suffered from severe oscillations, aka “porpoising”, throughput testing and in these first days of practice. While the team’s braintrust were able to dial out some of that, especially on their seven-time champion Lewis Hamilton’s mount, Hamilton could still do no better than a P5 start for tomorrow’s race. To say the least, that is an unfamiliar position for the Briton, who frankly dominated the just completed hybrid era until the ascendence of Verstappen and his controversial championship-clinching win to end the 2021 campaign in Abu Dhabi last December. Worse still for the eight-time consecutive Constructors’ Champions, their new number two, England’s young George Russell, suffered the ignominy of qualifying down in P9, about where he would normally end up in the pokey Williams last year. If that wasn’t disheartening enough, the previous Merc second banana, Valtteri Bottas, out-qualified Russell in P6 with his new team, the Ferrari-powered Alfa Romeo. In fact, Ferrari power looked like this first weekend’s winner already, with not only Bottas keeping his Q3 streak alive at Alfa but also Kevin Magnussen marking his return to F1 with a brilliant effort to capture P7 on the grid for perpetual back marker Haas despite battling hydraulic issues. and it was a very promising day for the Scuderia on the power plant front. On the other side off the engine equation, all four Mercedes-powered McLarens and Aston Martins failed to make it into the final qualifying round. Savvy veteran Fernando Alonso willed his Alpine Renault into P8 with a fine final effort while the Red Bull (Honda)-powered AlphaTauri of Pierre Gasly struggled with overall handling rand could do no better than P10.

Top 10 qualifiers for the Bahrain GP:

POS NO DRIVER CAR Q1 Q2 Q3 LAPS
1 16 Charles Leclerc FERRARI 1:31.471 1:30.932 1:30.558 15
2 1 Max Verstappen RED BULL RACING RBPT 1:31.785 1:30.757 1:30.681 14
3 55 Carlos Sainz FERRARI 1:31.567 1:30.787 1:30.687 15
4 11 Sergio Perez RED BULL RACING RBPT 1:32.311 1:31.008 1:30.921 18
5 44 Lewis Hamilton MERCEDES 1:32.285 1:31.048 1:31.238 17
6 77 Valtteri Bottas ALFA ROMEO FERRARI 1:31.919 1:31.717 1:31.560 15
7 20 Kevin Magnussen HAAS FERRARI 1:31.955 1:31.461 1:31.808 12
8 14 Fernando Alonso ALPINE RENAULT 1:32.346 1:31.621 1:32.195 14
9 63 George Russell MERCEDES 1:32.269 1:31.252 1:32.216 17
10 10 Pierre Gasly ALPHATAURI RBPT 1:32.096 1:31.635 1:32.338 21

Complete qualifying results available via Formula1.com.

Tomorrow’s race airs live on ESPN here in the States beginning at 11AM Eastern here in the States. Can Ferrari set the pace over the course of a full Grand Prix or will Verstappen’s superlative skills where down the Prancing Horses and deny them victory? And just how much pain will Mercedes take tomorrow as the team focuses on early season damage limitation? Look forward to seeing you then to find out how it all shakes out in the 2022 opener!

2021 F1 Grand Prix of Abu Dhabi — Results & aftermath

MIRACLE MAX: Verstappen seizes first Championship after late Safety Car ruins Hamilton’s bid for an unprecedented eighth title; Shell-shocked Mercedes still win record eighth Constructors’ Title in controversial season finale

In one of the most controversial Grand Prix in Formula 1 history, let alone for a Championship-deciding season finale, Red Bull’s superb Max Verstappen prevailed over Mercedes ace and seven-time World Champ Lewis Hamilton in Sunday’s Abu Dhabi Grand Prix to take his first-ever F1 crown. Under the bright lights of Yas Marina Circuit and the glare of lifelong expectations, the Dutch wunderkind, running P2 and around 13-seconds behind Hamilton,  took advantage of a late Safety Car caused by Williams’ Nicolas Latifi crashing out on Lap 53 to nip into the pits for a fresh set of Soft Pirelli tires. Meanwhile, Mercedes did not feel able to pit Hamilton even though he was on relatively ancient Hard tires already some 30-laps-old with five to go in this 58-lap contest because they didn’t want to cede the ever-valuable track position. That left Hamilton highly vulnerable should the wrecked Williams be able to be cleared before the laps of the race ran out. To the marshals’ and the race director’s credit, they decided to everything possible to clear the stranded Williams and associated debris and restart the race, thereby letting the two title contenders finish fighting it out under green.

To get to that point, however, Race Director Michael Masi had to insert himself into the outcome by first not allowing the five lapped cars between Hamilton and P2 Verstappen to pass the Safety Car and get back to the tail end of the field. This enabled the marshals to safely clear Latifi’s car. With a little over a lap now remaining, Masi then changed his edict and had the lapped cars overtake to clear the top two, allowing Verstappen to pull right alongside Hamilton for the restart towards the end of Lap 57, As the Safety Car ducked back into the pits, Hamilton tried to get the drop on Verstappen by controlling and scooting away at the restart. But the Dutchman didn’t let him gain much of advantage and his faster, fresher rubber soon proved too much for the Mercedes man to overcome. By Turn 5 of the final lap, Hamilton was easy meat and, despite fighting like the champion he is and always will be, Hamilton could no longer hold off the inevitable. Verstappen slipped by to take a lead that seemed impossible just five laps prior in front a enthralled fans of all rooting interests. Hamilton tried one more desperation lunge but Verstappen quickly distanced him, pulling away and coming to the checkers some 2.256-seconds ahead of his season-long nemesis. They say to be the best you’ve got to beat the best and that’s exactly what young Max did today to become the fourth youngest F1 Champion at the age of 24-years and 73 days (active drivers Hamilton is the second-youngest champ, Sebastian Vettel first). Continue reading

2021 F1 Grand Prix of Abu Dhabi — Qualifying results

FINAL DUEL IN THE DESERT: Verstappen and Red Bull ace Hamilton and Mercedes for all important pole at Yas Marina; Norris pips P3 from Perez

With the 2021 Formula 1 season and Drivers’ and Constructors’ Championships down to the last race at the futuristic Yas Marina Circuit in Abu Dhabi, Saturday’s qualifying took on added import and Red Bull and Max Verstappen got the better of their arch rival, Mercedes ace Lewis Hamilton. With the two title aspirants entering the weekend in a dead heat on Drivers’ points and Verstappen only ahead by virtue of the race wins tiebreaker, the Red Bull braintrust pulled a clever maneuver to give their star contender the edge by deploying wingman Sergio Perez to give the Dutchman the draft at a crucial time in Q3. That enabled Verstappen to set a fast lap that Hamilton, running without a draft from his teammate, Valtteri Bottas, was unable to match. So Verstappen will line up from the pole and Hamilton in P2 for tomorrow’s race. Adding another complication to the mix, Verstappen will be starting on a set of Soft Pirellis after flat-spotting his Mediums in Q2 while Hamilton will be on the theoretically preferred Medium rubber to start. It should make it a very interesting strategic race and will likely find Hamilton hunting down Verstappen on the faster Soft tires as the season reaches its fascinating climax.

Behind that elite top two, Lando Norris managed to wrest away P3 on the grid from Perez with a brilliant final hot lap, relegating the Mexican veteran to P4. But that was still better than what Bottas could accomplish, as the Finn could do no better than the sixth fastest lap in his final qualifying attempt with Mercedes. They sandwiched Ferrari’s Carlos Sainz, who bettered his teammate Charles Leclerc, P5 to P7. Yuki Tsunoda was the only AlphaTauri to get into Q3 and qualified P8, while Alpine’s Esteban Ocon set the ninth fastest time and the second McLaren of Daniel Ricciardo slotted in at P10.

Top 10 qualifiers for the Abu Dhabi GP:

POS NO DRIVER CAR Q1 Q2 Q3 LAPS
1 33 Max Verstappen RED BULL RACING HONDA 1:23.322 1:22.800 1:22.109 20
2 44 Lewis Hamilton MERCEDES 1:22.845 1:23.145 1:22.480 19
3 4 Lando Norris MCLAREN MERCEDES 1:23.553 1:23.256 1:22.931 20
4 11 Sergio Perez RED BULL RACING HONDA 1:23.350 1:23.135 1:22.947 24
5 55 Carlos Sainz FERRARI 1:23.624 1:23.174 1:22.992 22
6 77 Valtteri Bottas MERCEDES 1:23.117 1:23.246 1:23.036 20
7 16 Charles Leclerc FERRARI 1:23.467 1:23.202 1:23.122 23
8 22 Yuki Tsunoda ALPHATAURI HONDA 1:23.428 1:23.404 1:23.220 22
9 31 Esteban Ocon ALPINE RENAULT 1:23.764 1:23.420 1:23.389 20
10 3 Daniel Ricciardo MCLAREN MERCEDES 1:23.829 1:23.448 1:23.409 19

Complete qualifying results available via Formula.com.

Tomorrow’s race airs live on ESPN2 beginning at 8AM Eastern here in the States. With the Drivers’ Championship coming down to this final race it should be absolutely nail-biting stuff. Hope to see you then to find out how it all shakes out!

2021 F1 Grand Prix of Saudi Arabia — Results & aftermath

DOWN TO THE FINAL ROUND: Hamilton wins bizarre, incident-packed Saudi GP & takes fastest lap to tie P2 Verstappen in points after multiple on-track contretemps; Bottas nips Ocon for P3 at checkers to edge Mercedes closer to Constructors’ title

In a crazy and sometimes over the line first-ever Saudi Arabian Grand Prix on Sunday, Mercedes ace Lewis Hamilton emerged victorious over his archrival, Red Bull’s superlative Max Verstappen, after both drivers once again came together on track. With tempers running as high as the temperatures at this sultry, Red Sea adjacent Jeddah Corniche Street Circuit, Hamilton kept a cooler head than the Dutch wunderkind and survived multiple Red Flag, Safety Car, and Virtual Safety Car periods, as well as a baffling collision into the rear of the Red Bull, to not only pull out a win but, by dint of also setting the race’s fastest lap, score enough points to tie Verstappen in the Drivers’ points with just one race remaining. So, with the two best drivers of this generation level on points going into the final Round 21, it will literally be all to play for in next week’s season-ending Abu Dhabi Grand Prix. But how they got to that point was due to the chaotic nature of this inaugural Saudi race and it will certainly go down as one of the most controversial Grand Prix in Formula 1 history.

After the pole-sitting Hamilton got away cleanly to start the race, with his Mercedes teammate Valtteri Bottas doing a good job from P2 of balking any progress the P3 Verstappen might have wanted to make in the early going, the drama really started on Lap 10 when Mick Schumacher crashed out violently into the Tecpro barriers at Turn 1. While the German rookie thankfully emerged unhurt, the Safety Car was deployed and Mercedes decided to pit both their cars under the full course yellow in an ostensible bid to get a cheap tire change for their leading duo with the rest of the field running slowly. Verstappen did the opposite and stayed out, with the Red Bull team opting for track position and  the lead and perhaps hoping that they could pull some strategy later in the race. But their gamble paid off more handsomely than they could have imagined when the race director decided that the barriers needed more serious intervention and threw the Red Flag on Lap 13. Under the peculiarities of the Formula 1 rules, this now meant that Verstappen’s crew could also change his tires, only this time not just cheaply but in fact absolutely free, since all the cars were being held stationary in the pits. Hamilton complained bitterly about this decision but he has also benefitted from the same scenario in the past and that’s just the way the rules work for all competitors. When the race restarted after a loch delay and from a standing start on Lap 16, Verstappen was in the lead with equally fresh Hard Pirellis as those of Hamilton’s in P2.

But if cautions breed cautions, Red Flags also breed Red Flags. Hamilton got away well at that restart to take a precarious lead but Verstappen made a lunging move down into Turn 1 into and through the runoff area there that forced the Englishman to back out. The end result of Hamilton’s avoidance actually saw the third place car of Esteban Ocon’s Alpine also pass Hamilton, relegating the Englishman to P3. Almost immediately after that there was a huge shunt down the following straight that saw the second Red Bull of Sergio Perez taken out after contact with Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc and the second Haas of Nikita Mazepin crash violently into the rear of a decelerating car in front. That brought out another Red Flag to clean up the huge debris field, during which Red Bull changed Verstappen’s tires once again, interestingly to a set of the lest durable Mediums this time. After some confusion, Verstappen was also ordered to give Hamilton back P2 after being adjudged to have gained an unfair advantage during his overtaking maneuver. But Max used his anger well when the race finally started again after another long delay, passing both Hamilton and Ocon in the same sequence for the lead when things got underway again on Lap 17. With Hamilton disposing of Ocon on the subsequent lap and setting off in pursuit of Vertsappen in the lead, the real race was now well and truly on.

After a jagged stop-start period that saw five Virtual Safety Cars deployed between Lap 23 and Lap 33, things began hotting up again when Hamilton tried to make a pass on Verstappen on lap 37 of this 50-lap contest. The Dutchman once again ran off track while defending and gained an advantage. And once again, Max was ordered to give back the position to Hamilton. But apparently no one told Hamilton this small fact because, while Verstappen slowed on the final part of the course, Hamilton failed to discern the intent and smashed into the back of the Red Bull. To be fair, Verstappen also seemed to be moving around an awful lot for such a let-by — something the stewards were clearly looking at after the race — and Lewis protested vehemently that he had been brake-checked.

But fortunately Hamilton suffered only minor damage to his front wing with no noticeable loss of pace. Hamilton harassed the Red Bull and the two almost collided again as the Dutchman, desperate to keep his points lead, finally let Hamilton by only to immediately retake the point position. This time the stewards had had enough and assessed Vertsappen a five-second penalty for too many off course episodes. Combined with Verstappen’s Medium tires going off much more quickly than Hamilton’s Hards, this effectively ceded the win to the Silver Arrow. Hamilton made a pass that stuck at Turn 27 on Lap 43 and sailed into the distance, setting the fastest lap along the way. Meanwhile, Verstappen and Red Bull were unable to duck into the pits for fresh rubber and an attempt to steal back that point because Ocon and Bottas were dar too close with that time penalty factored in. So it was Hamilton coming home with his third consecutive win and the maximum twenty-six points in tis race, Verstappen in P2 and a dead heat between the two going into the last race of the season. Making matters even sweeter for Mercedes, Bottas was able to pip Ocon for P3 and the final spot on the podium at the checkers. Combined with Perez scoring zero points on the day after his DNF, that gave might Mercedes and potentially insurmountable 28-point lead over team Red Bull in the Constructors’ race.

Top 10 finishers of the inaugural Saudi Arabian GP:

POS NO DRIVER CAR LAPS TIME/RETIRED PTS
1 44 Lewis Hamilton MERCEDES 50 2:06:15.118 26
2 33 Max Verstappen RED BULL RACING HONDA 50 +11.825s 18
3 77 Valtteri Bottas MERCEDES 50 +27.531s 15
4 31 Esteban Ocon ALPINE RENAULT 50 +27.633s 12
5 3 Daniel Ricciardo MCLAREN MERCEDES 50 +40.121s 10
6 10 Pierre Gasly ALPHATAURI HONDA 50 +41.613s 8
7 16 Charles Leclerc FERRARI 50 +44.475s 6
8 55 Carlos Sainz FERRARI 50 +46.606s 4
9 99 Antonio Giovinazzi ALFA ROMEO RACING FERRARI 50 +58.505s 2
10 4 Lando Norris MCLAREN MERCEDES 50 +61.358s 1

Complete race results available via Formula1.com.

It all comes down to this — the twenty-first and final round of the 2021 F1 Championship is next weekend in Abu Dhabi. With emotions running high between the top two contenders and Hamilton and Verstappen desperate to outscore one another, keeping it clean has never been more important. But that’s easier said than done when these two are side by side on the track. Hope to see you then to find out how it all shakes out and just who will wear this year’s Formula 1 crown!

2021 F1 Grand Prix of Saudi Arabia — Qualifying results

Hamilton earns pole in Jeddah after Verstappen hits wall on final attempt, relegating points leader to P3 on grid; Bottas will start P2 as Mercedes lock out front row

With time expired in Q3 during Saturday qualifying for the inaugural Saudi Arabian Grand Prix at the daunting, high speed Jeddah Corniche Street Circuit, Red Bull’s Max Verstappen looked to be setting a blistering lap good enough to snatch the pole position from Mercedes ace Lewis Hamilton. But the Dutch points leader stepped just that far over the line and smacked the wall at the last corner with his right rear tire, bringing his car and his qualifying attempt to an abrupt end. That meant Hamiton’s fastest lap held up as the pole time and Verstappen was also unable to jump the second Silver Arrow of Valtteri Bottas. So Bottas will line up alongside his team leader in P2 for a Mercedes front row lockout and Verstappen will start P3… assuming that he didn’t damage his gearbox badly enough to force a pre-race change, which would demote him a further five positions on a very tight and demanding circuit where overtaking will be at an absolute premium. With Verstappen leading Hamilton by a slim 8 points in the Drivers’ Championship, it is mathematically possible for the Dutchman to take the F1 crown in this penultimate race with a net gain of 18 points. But it is also quite a bit more likely that Hamilton, who has been on a superb run of form that has seen the English seven-time champ win the last two GP on the trot, will continue to apply the pressure, eat into Verstappen’s lead if not overtake him and, either way, push this titanic 2021 title tilt to the final round in Abu Dhabi next weekend.

Behind those front three, Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc landed safely in P4 after his teammate Carlos Sainz had several hairy moments of snap oversteer in Q2 and failed to advance out of that round. Sainz will have to figure out a way to move forward from P15 and help the team maximize points in their fierce fight with McLaren, which saw Lando Norris qualify in P7 and Daniel Ricciardo in P11. The second Red Bull of Sergio Perez struggled his way to a disappointing P5 qualifying time, while the two AlphaTauris performed well at this brand new track, with the talented Pierre Gasly setting the sixth fastest time in Q3 and rookie Yuki Tsunonda continuing his recent improvement by slotting in at a decent P8. Alpine’s Esteban Ocon and Alfa Romeo’s Antonio Giovinazzi qualified in P9 and P10 respectively.

Top 10 qualifiers for the Saudi Arabian GP:

POS NO DRIVER CAR Q1 Q2 Q3 LAPS
1 44 Lewis Hamilton MERCEDES 1:28.466 1:27.712 1:27.511 23
2 77 Valtteri Bottas MERCEDES 1:28.057 1:28.054 1:27.622 25
3 33 Max Verstappen RED BULL RACING HONDA 1:28.285 1:27.953 1:27.653 19
4 16 Charles Leclerc FERRARI 1:28.310 1:28.459 1:28.054 24
5 11 Sergio Perez RED BULL RACING HONDA 1:28.021 1:27.946 1:28.123 23
6 10 Pierre Gasly ALPHATAURI HONDA 1:28.401 1:28.314 1:28.125 26
7 4 Lando Norris MCLAREN MERCEDES 1:28.338 1:28.344 1:28.180 21
8 22 Yuki Tsunoda ALPHATAURI HONDA 1:28.503 1:28.222 1:28.442 26
9 31 Esteban Ocon ALPINE RENAULT 1:28.752 1:28.574 1:28.647 22
10 99 Antonio Giovinazzi ALFA ROMEO RACING FERRARI 1:28.899 1:28.616 1:28.754 21

Complete qualifying results available via Formula1.com.

Tomorrow’s race airs live on ESPN2 beginning at 12:30pm Eastern here in the States. It will be tense times all around with fingers crossed in the Red Bull garage that Verstappen didn’t seriously damage his car in that fateful late-quali tank slapper. Conversely, Hamilton will be looking to convert pole into the win and, perhaps with a bit of misfortune to his title rival, overhaul the Dutchman to take the lead going into the final contest. Also, if I were a betting man I would count on at least one Safety Car or Red Flag period to potentially shake things up — especially concerning is the pit out blend line where it seems to me cars exiting could come to grief with those steaming down the start-finish straight at full chat if everyone is not super careful.  Hope to see you then to find out how it all shakes out!