Perez holds off Verstappen’s amazing recovery drive to take victory in Saudi Arabia, notching Red Bull’s second consecutive 1-2; Alonso loses podium then given P3 back after FIA penalty reconsideration
Red Bull’s Sergio Perez maximized his pole start in Sunday night’s Saudi Arabian Grand Prix and mastered the tricky Jeddah Corniche Street Circuit, all while holding off his teammate Max Verstappen’s furious comeback, to take a solid victory in F1’s second round of 2023. After a driveshaft issue prematurely ended Verstappen’s qualifying efforts on Saturday relegating the Dutchman to P15 on the starting grid, the veteran Mexican street specialist capitalized on his good fortune to run in clean air from the front on the the tight and twisty streets of Jeddah and proved to be the class of the field this evening. Even though Perez momentarily lost his lead to the Aston Martin of the resurgent Fernando Alonso on the opening lap, the Red Bull’s pace soon proved to be too much for the Spaniard’s Aston. Perez reclaimed P1 from Alonso on Lap 4 and then simply sailed away, building a seemingly insurmountable gap to the rest of the field. Even after a short Safety Car period due to the sister Aston of Lance Stroll coming to an abrupt on-track stop on Lap 18, with the resultant cheap pit stops and tightening of the field, Perez’s Red Bull still proved the dominant car on the day. He jumped away after the end of Lap 20/beginning of Lap 21 restart, leaving the other top runners to fight over the other two podium positions en route to a solid victory and a tie with Verstappen in the Championship points.
On Verstappen’s side of the garage, it was all about recovery after the mechanical failure in qualifying and the resultant P15 start, and the two-time Champ took to his task with his usual gusto in overtaking. After a somewhat easygoing start, Verstappen really began putting the moves on after DRS became enabled on Lap 3, this year’s RB19 looking like having a nearly unfair advantage when it gets to open its rear wing on the straights. By Lap 8, Verstappen had improved to tenth in the race, and by Lap 12 he had passed the Mercedes of Lewis Hamilton for P8. When that first and only Safety Car was deployed, Verstappen wisely dived to the pits for fresh rubber, doffing his opening set of Medium Pirellis for the Hards to see him through to the end of the race. The deft strategy call saw Verstappen well placed in P4 upon the restart and he made short work of Mercedes’ George Russell for P3 on Lap 23, then took P2 from Alonso two laps later. But on this night, Perez had the measure of his more decorated teammate and kept him at bay with aplomb. While Verstappen was able to nick an extra championship point for setting the race’s fastest lap to keep him level in on points, it was Perez who took home top honors some 5.35 seconds to the good. Aside from the intriguing intra-team implications, the result made it two consecutive Red Bull 1-2 finishes to open the 2023 campaign. For the moment, at least, no other team looks anywhere near their raw pace and tis year’s Drivers’ Championship could quickly be reduced to a two man, one team battle.
Alonso had a frustrating but ultimately fulfilling day after his opening-lap pass on Perez for the lead. Very quickly, word came down from the stewards that he had lined up his car incorrectly in his grid box to start the race, which incurred a 5-second penalty. While he got a break by being able to serve that time penalty under full-course yellow conditions during the Safety Car period, the stewards initially also adjudged that an Aston Martin mechanic had improperly put his rear jack onto the car while the 5-seconds were being served. That ran afoul of the interpretation of the rules of “no work may be done on the car while serving a penalty” and the team were then assessed a post-race penalty of 10-seconds for the infraction. That momentarily turned what had been a certain second consecutive podium P3 finish for the Spaniard into a P4 when the time had been added, knocking the streaking Spaniard off the podium. But then, a day of mixed emotions for Aston Martin with Stroll’s early retirement factored in, got a final positive uplift after the race officials reviewed their decision and rescinded Alonso’s penalty. That negated Russell’s short-lived promotion to P3, the young Englishman keeping his original earned race result of P4. Russell had earlier resisted not-so-veiled team orders to allow teammate Lewis Hamilton by him during the post-Safety Car second tire stint, which saw Hamilton on the quicker Mediums and Russel running the opposite strategy after a change off Mediums to Hards. But Russell fended off Hamilton’s best on-track efforts, as well any internal politics from the pit wall, and Hamilton had to settle for a still better than expected P5 when the checkers flew.
On the other hand, Ferrari may well have categorized their day at Jeddah as a bit of a minor disaster. While it was always going to be tough with Charles Leclerc starting from P12 after already running afoul of engine component limitations for multiple energy control unit replacements in only the second race weekend, the team thought they had a decent shot at a podium with Carlos Sainz starting in P4. But the Prancing Horses never really showed good race pace compared with the Aston Martins and the Mercedes (leaving the untouchable Red Bulls out of the discussion entirely) and the Scuderia saw themselves unable to move forward against those adversaries. Leclerc stalled out after recovering to P7 and Sainz was no match for Hamilton after the Safety Car restart and eventually had to settle for P6 at the finish. Fourth Best Cars in 2023 is certainly not what Ferrari expected coming in to the new race year and it’s definitely not going to be satisfactory for the brass back at Maranello. The Ferrari F1 team is going to be under increasingly heavy pressure to improve their results and reliability and quickly.
Rounding out the Top 10, Alpine had another good double points day, with Esteban Ocon coming home in P8 and new hire Pierre Gasly taking P9. And Haas’s Kevin Magnussen scored the last point after a late race hammer-and-tongs battle with AlphaTauri’s Yuki Tsunoda saw the veteran Dane prevail for P10.
Top 10 finishers of the Saudi Arabian GP:
POS |
NO |
DRIVER |
CAR |
LAPS |
TIME/RETIRED |
PTS |
1 |
11 |
Sergio Perez |
RED BULL RACING HONDA RBPT |
50 |
1:21:14.894 |
25 |
2 |
1 |
Max Verstappen |
RED BULL RACING HONDA RBPT |
50 |
+5.355s |
0 |
3 |
63 |
George Russell |
MERCEDES |
50 |
+25.866s |
15 |
4 |
14 |
Fernando Alonso |
ASTON MARTIN ARAMCO MERCEDES |
50 |
+30.728s |
12 |
5 |
44 |
Lewis Hamilton |
MERCEDES |
50 |
+31.065s |
10 |
6 |
55 |
Carlos Sainz |
FERRARI |
50 |
+35.876s |
8 |
7 |
16 |
Charles Leclerc |
FERRARI |
50 |
+43.162s |
6 |
8 |
31 |
Esteban Ocon |
ALPINE RENAULT |
50 |
+52.832s |
4 |
9 |
10 |
Pierre Gasly |
ALPINE RENAULT |
50 |
+54.747s |
2 |
10 |
20 |
Kevin Magnussen |
HAAS FERRARI |
50 |
+64.826s |
1 |
Complete race results available via Formula1.com.
The next race is in a fortnight’s time — the always enjoyable Australian Grand Prix from Melbourne’s Albert Park Circuit. All signs seem to point for a two-man internecine fight for wins between the Red Bull’s of Max Verstappen and Sergio Perez with the resultant raising of tensions between the two aces. Can any other team make a dent in Red Bull’s easy season superiority? Hope to see you then to find out!