Tag Archives: George Russell

2021 F1 Grand Prix of Emilia Romagna — Results & aftermath

Verstappen dominates at rainy & wet Imola for win; Hamilton salvages P2 with remarkable recovery drive after uncharacteristic error; Norris an impressive P3 for McLaren; Bottas crashes out, error-ridden Perez fails to score

Red Bull’s Max Verstappen dominated in tricky wet weather conditions on Sunday at Imola to take victory in the Emilia Romagna Grand Prix, his first win of what looks to be a very promising season for both the Dutchman and his team. While cars all around him slipped and slid off on a track that started wet after pre-race rain and never fully dried, Verstappen passed pole-sitter Lewis Hamilton for the lead on Lap 1, kept his ride on the black stuff and avoided the serious trouble that bedeviled so many of contenders throughout the day and flew away to what was eventually a fairly easy victory. Meanwhile Hamilton, his certain archrival for the 2021 championship, made an uncharacteristic unforced error when he was closing up on Verstappen nearly midway thorough the race. Carving his way through back-markers on Lap 31 of this 64-lap contest, Hamilton took it in too deep entering Tosa just three laps after pitting for a set of Medium Pirellis, his first slick tires of the day. Hamilton slid off a damp asphalt and through the gravel, nosing into a barrier. For a while it seemed he might be stuck, as it took the English seven-time champ forever to find reverse. But he finally managed to extricate himself ever so gingerly and headed towards the pits, albeit while losing a lap after such a lengthy delay. Fortunately for Hamilton, though not at all for the team, his Mercedes teammate Valtteri Bottas, who was already having a dismal day mired back in P8, was speared into by Williams’ (and Mercedes development driver) George Russell in a vicious shunt at high speed that sent both cars crashing out with massive damage. While both Bottas and Russell were thankfully OK physically, if none too happy with each other, the massive debris field forced a prolonged Red Flag period on Lap 34.

Pics courtesy GrandPrix247.com

But the disaster for Bottas perversely redounded to Hamilton’s benefit. Not only were the Mercedes mechanics able to change his front wing without losing any time in the pits where all cars still running were now stationary but he also got back on the lead lap at the end of the Red Flag delay, when he and the other lapped cars were allowed to drive around the circuit to get to the tail end of what was now a rolling restart. So while Hamilton had still been shuffled back to P9, he could now begin making passes for position with the resumption of the race, something he did with aplomb in an effort to make amends for his rare gaffe. While Verstappen ran away from the field easily and was now untouchable, Hamilton gradually worked his way up to P5 by Lap 42 and then dispatched the two Ferraris of Carlos Sainz and Charles Leclerc for P4 and P3 on Laps 50 and 55 respectively. On a day where he looked to have possibly thrown a strong result away after starting from pole, the Englishman’s damage limitation drive came about as good as possible when he executed a masterful pass on the McLaren of Lando Norris to claim P2 on with only four laps remaining. And in so doing, Hamilton also managed to set the race’s fastest lap, thereby claiming the bonus point so that even when Vertsappen won the race by over 20 seconds, Hamilton still retained his Drivers’ Championship lead by a single slim point with his gutsy P2 finish and that opportunistic fastest lap bonus. That said, both Hamilton and Mercedes know they have a real battle on their hands with the Red Bulls this year and that both driver and team have got to improve their performance and consistency if they are going to hold off young Max’s determined pursuit of his first title in equal or perhaps even superior equipment.

All was not sweet music for Red Bull despite Verstappen’s glorious win, however. With Bottas crashing out, the team missed a golden opportunity to land a hard blow against Mercedes in the Constructors’ battle when second driver Sergio Perez made a mess of his opportunity to do score big points. After being handed a penalty on Lap 12 for inexplicably passing under the first Safety Car, Perez still looked to be fighting for a podium when the race resumed post-Red Flag. But on Lap 38 Perez made another unforced error, albeit under tricky wet-dry conditions. Seemingly sitting pretty in P4 with 26 laps remaining to get closer to his teammate and thwart Hamilton’s progress, Perez spun off the circuit and dropped all the way back to P14. The veteran Mexican, of whom much greater things are expected, could only manage to work his way back up to P11 when the laps ran out, scoring zero points on a day where it seemed certain Red Bull would net a far larger haul. The uncharacteristically ragged and fruitless outing by Checo opened the door to McLaren’s Lando Norris for his second career podium and while he could not hold off Hamilton’s hard charging Merc the talented Englishman did keep both Ferraris behind him to claim P3. It was an impressive drive from the ascendent Norris and along with Daniel Ricciardo’s P6 made for a very satisfying day for the much improved McLaren team.

Ferrari also must have been well pleased with a very solid run from team leader Charles Leclerc for P4 and a good comeback drive from Carlos Sainz after some early race mistakes to take P5. AlphaTauri’s Pierre Gasly also recovered from a nearly disastrous strategy call by the team to keep him out on full wet tires for far too long sent the Frenchman plummeting down the order. But Gasly hung tough and managed to take P7 when Aston Martin’s Lance Stroll was penalized 5-seconds for track limits abuse after the race. Still, Stroll drove well for his adjusted P8 and the points were important for the team in light of Sebastian Vettel being forced to retire due to an accumulation of mechanical gremlins late in the race. And somehow the rather pokey Alpines of Esteban Ocon and Fernando Alonso also managed to score points in P9 and P10 respectively by dint of simply surviving the fray and staying out of the gravel traps that led to grief for so many drivers on this wet and unpredictable day in Italy. A day that could well be remembered as the beginning of the end of Mercedes-Hamilton hegemony and the real start of the championship run of Max Verstappen.

Top 10 finishers of the Emilia Romagna GP:

POS NO DRIVER CAR LAPS TIME/RETIRED PTS
1 33 Max Verstappen RED BULL RACING HONDA 63 2:02:34.598 25
2 44 Lewis Hamilton MERCEDES 63 +22.000s 19
3 4 Lando Norris MCLAREN MERCEDES 63 +23.702s 15
4 16 Charles Leclerc FERRARI 63 +25.579s 12
5 55 Carlos Sainz FERRARI 63 +27.036s 10
6 3 Daniel Ricciardo MCLAREN MERCEDES 63 +51.220s 8
7 10 Pierre Gasly ALPHATAURI HONDA 63 +52.818s 6
8 18 Lance Stroll ASTON MARTIN MERCEDES 63 +56.909s 4
9 31 Esteban Ocon ALPINE RENAULT 63 +65.704s 2
10 14 Fernando Alonso ALPINE RENAULT 63 +66.561s 1

Complete race results available via Formula1.com.

With the season now really rolling, the next race is but two weeks away — the Portuguese Grand Prix at the Autódromo Internacional do Algarve aka Portimao. The Round 3 rematch between  Verstappen and Hamilton in what is looking like a season-long heavyweight fight can’t come soon enough for me. Hope to see you then to find out what’s next in the real inter-team rivalry we’ve been waiting for!

2020 F1 Grand Prix of Sakhir — Results & aftermath

Perez earns first career win in wild Sakhir GP; Ocon P2, Stroll P3 after Mercedes throw away near-certain Russell debut victory with sloppy pit stop

With Mercedes ace and reigning World Champion Lewis Hamilton sidelined with COVID the Sakhir Grand Prix always had the potential to be a wide open affair. But few could have imagined how crazy Sunday’s race would actually turn out to be. The normally supreme Mercedes factory team blew what should have been another easy one-two Silver Arrows finish when a risky double-stack pit stop to try to take advantage of a Safety Car on Lap 63 backfired spectacularly, opening the door to the surviving “best of the rest” to take advantage. The Silver Arrows team confused the drivers’ tires, sending out Hamilton’s stand-in and race leader, George Russell on a set of Medium Pirellis allotted to regular driver Valtteri Bottas and forcing the team to also remount the same set of old Hard tires back onto then-P2 Bottas’s car in desperation. The blunder not only left the luckless Bottas stationary in the pits for an excruciating 24 seconds while the team scrambled to make sense of the situation but also necessitated ordering Russell, who normally drives for the backmarker Williams team but was surely dreaming of his maiden F1 victory in the world’s fastest race car, back in for the correct set of his matching tires, as per the regulations. When the insanity was finally sorted it found Racing Point’s Sergio Perez leading the race, with Renault’s Esteban Ocon now in P2, the second Racing point of Lance Stroll in third and the nonplussed Mercedes duo of Bottas and Russell demoted to P4 and P5 respectively. But with the Safety Car withdrawing at the end of Lap 68 and 19 laps remaining the ultra-fast Mercedes duo still had a chance to claw their way back to the front.

Pics courtesy GrandPrix247.com

As he had been all race prior, It quickly became apparent that Russell was again the faster man, especially with fresh Mediums giving him a major advantage over Bottas’ older Hard tires. The young Englishman quickly dispatched his teammate to ascend to P4 and then on Lap 72 passed Stroll for P3 and at least a consolation podium position if not the win of his dreams. Any points would be Russell’s first in F1 but he was clearly still hunting for victory, making quick work of Ocon for P2 on lap 73 and taking chunks of time out of Perez’s lead. But on Lap 78 Russell’s promising charge was again thwarted by a slow rear left puncture that forced yet another trip to the pits for new rubber. It was heartbreak for Russell and the team, who rejoined down in fifteenth and could only make it back up to P9 before the laps ran out, earning him his first-ever championship points but also wondering forlornly what might have been.

For the veteran Perez, however, it was sweet vindication when he took the checkered flag as the winner, the Mexican’s fist victory in 190 F1 career races. With Checo inexplicably slated to lose his Racing Point seat for next season he made the best possible advertisement for his services for any potential suitors out there. He not only ended up winning thanks to Mercedes’ own goals but that he did was all the more remarkable because he had to recover from an opening lap collision with Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc that pushed him to the rear after he had to immediately pit for a front wing change. Perez never gave up, though, but kept on pushing and put himself in position to capitalize when Mercedes needlessly overcomplicated their strategy and then failed to execute. If not for last week’s bitter disappointment when he suffered engine failure while in position to finish P3, Perez would be looking at three consecutive podiums. If he doesn’t get a drive for next year it won’t be because of performance that’s for sure, as he’s had a tremendous second half and may well have cemented fourth place in the Drivers’ standings with today’s remarkable win. In the even bigger picture, Perez became only the second Mexican national to win a Formula 1 GP and the first since the late, legendary Pedro Rodriguez took victory at Belgium way back in 1970.

For Renault’s Ocon it was nearly as special a result when he came home P2, his first ever podium and by far his best result in an on again, off again career. And for Perez’s Racing point teammate Lance Stroll it was a second P3 podium in a somewhat inconsistent and COVID-interrupted season. The duo’s win and third place made for a banner points haul for Racing Point after they were shutout last week, solidifying their third place in the massively valuable Constructors’ standings where positions equal literally millions of dollars. With Daniel Ricciardo finishing P5 it was also a nice day for team Renault, who sit solidly at fifth in the Constructors’ with an outside chance of overtaking McLaren in the points in the final race next week at Abu Dhabi. Also contributing to the wide open nature of this contest, the opening lap kerfuffle between Perez and an over-ambitious Leclerc knocked out Leclerc’s Ferrari and also saw Red Bull’s Max Verstappen crash out while he was taking evasive action and skidded through the gravel, spearing nose-first into a crash barrier. Just like that two of the potential high points contenders were instantly erased and many midfield runners had opportunities to capitalize. The McLaren of Carlos Sainz couldn’t touch the eventual top three but still scored an opportunistic P4 result. Verstappen’s teammate Alexander Albon did well enough to haul himself up to a P6 finish and will be hoping to quiet the rumors of Perez replacing him at Red Bull. The AlphaTauri of Daniil Kvyat came home ahead of the luckless Bottas in P7 while the two Mercedes were doomed to a P8/P9, Bottas leading the crestfallen Russell. The second McLaren of Lando Norris took the last point in P10.

Final note: While a relatively healthy Romain Grosjean was a welcome sight in the Bahrain paddock after last week’s horror crash his injuries will prevent the Frenchman from competing in the final race next week. Pietro Fittipaldi, who finished last of the active runners after facing a very steep learning curve, will likely drive for Haas again in Grosjean’s place at Yas Marina for the season finale.

Top 10 finishers of the Sakhir GP:

POS NO DRIVER CAR LAPS TIME/RETIRED PTS
1 11 Sergio Perez RACING POINT BWT MERCEDES 87 1:31:15.114 25
2 31 Esteban Ocon RENAULT 87 +10.518s 18
3 18 Lance Stroll RACING POINT BWT MERCEDES 87 +11.869s 15
4 55 Carlos Sainz MCLAREN RENAULT 87 +12.580s 12
5 3 Daniel Ricciardo RENAULT 87 +13.330s 10
6 23 Alexander Albon RED BULL RACING HONDA 87 +13.842s 8
7 26 Daniil Kvyat ALPHATAURI HONDA 87 +14.534s 6
8 77 Valtteri Bottas MERCEDES 87 +15.389s 4
9 63 George Russell MERCEDES 87 +18.556s 3
10 4 Lando Norris MCLAREN RENAULT 87 +19.541s 1

Complete race results available via Formula1.com.

The next and last race of the 2020 season is in but a week’s time — a short trip for the teams to neighboring Abu Dhabi and the beautifully futuristic Yas Marina circuit. With Hamilton’s return uncertain, young George Russell may well have a chance for a second bite of the cherry to salve today’s disappointment. Hope to see you then to find out how it all shakes out!

2019 F1 Grand Prix of Australia — Qualifying results

Hamilton lays down marker for 2019 with pole run in Melbourne, pipping Bottas to lock out front row for Mercedes; Ferrari’s Vettel only good enough for P3 start in first race of new season

After the long, dark winter the new 2019 Formula 1 season began in earnest at the sunny Albert Park circuit in Melbourne, Australia on Saturday with the first qualifying session of the year at the now traditional opening weekend from down under. Proving that the more things change the more they stay the same, Mercedes’ ace Lewis Hamilton, the current reigning World Champion, snatched pole out of the hungry hands of his Finnish teammate, Valtteri Bottas. With Bottas entering his third year with the factory Mercedes team desperate to give Hamilton more of a challenge and shed his wingman reputation it looked midway through Q3 that he’d done enough to get the better of Lewis. But Hamilton marshaled a mighty final lap of just 1:22.043, good enough for the lap record, as well as the pole over his crestfallen teammate by a mere .012 seconds.

If Bottas was dismayed yet again by Hamilton’s unearthly quali pace Ferrari’s Sebastian Vettel must also have had a sinking feeling of deja vu. After finishing second to Hamilton in the championship for the last two seasons and working under a new team boss after Maurizio Arrivabene was canned in favor of former technical director Mattia Binotto, Vettel could only have been disheartened to find the pace of this year’s model of Prancing Horse still wanting that certain bit of magic in comparison the peerless Silver Arrows. Vettel could do no better than P3 with a time some seven-tenths slower than his pole-sitting nemesis. Vettel’s new teammate Charles Leclerc, who made the leap from last year’s sister Sauber team to Ferrari’s second seat, displacing veteran Kimi Raikkonen in the process, acquitted himself very well with a solid P5 run his first time out of the chute. Leclerc was bested, though, by Red Bull’s Max Verstappen, who pushed his now-Honda powered chassis to the very edge and up to a P4 qualifying time. It was difficult to get a true read on Red Bull and their engine partners, however, as Verstappen’s new teammate Pierre Gasly, who was promoted from Toro Rosso, got caught out by rapidly improving track conditions in Q1 and was bounced with only the 17th fastest time in that first session. Look for a lot of passing from Gasly early in tomororw’s race as he looks to atone for that lackluster effort and show that team Red Bull made the right choice is letting Daniel Ricciardo to give him the first team drive.

Further down the order, the Haas F1 team made a strong opening bid to earn the “best of the rest” moniker, as the returning duo of Romain Grosjean and Kevin Magnussen qualified P6 and P7 respectively. Continue reading