Tag Archives: Sergio Perez

2021 F1 Grand Prix of Bahrain — Results & aftermath

Hamilton holds off surging Verstappen for victory in tense late race duel between top contenders; Bottas a distant P3

With Mercedes and Lewis Hamilton in the unfamiliar position of being the underdogs entering the first race weekend of the 2021 Formula 1 season and supposedly at a disadvantage to the much improved Red Bull and their superlative lead driver, Max Verstappen, the Bahrain Grand Prix proved once again that predictions don’t mean anything once the rubber meets the road and laps get turned in anger. Defending World Champion Hamilton showed that he was not ready to go gently into that good night, demonstrating once again why he has earned a remarkable seven F1 titles by holding off the onslaught of the quicker Verstappen on old tires as the laps ran down at the windblown and gritty Sakhir Circuit. With the flying Dutchman literally breathing down the Englishman’s neck and well within DRS range, Verstappen appeared to make the race winning pass on Lap 53 of this 56 lap contest. In his excitement, however, Verstappen chose a particular tricky section of the track to overtake around the outside of the Mercedes and all four of his wheels breached track limits at Turn 4, providing him with an unfair advantage. He was immediately told by the team to give the position back to Hamilton, which he did. The loss of momentum proved pivotal and Hamilton was able to hold off Verstappen in the few remaining laps to take what seemed almost a stolen victory, crossing the line a mere seven-tenths ahead of his crestfallen rival.

In hindsight, Verstappen will probably regret two thing that cost him an almost certain victory in Bahrain: not being more patient with a still-ample four laps remaining in choosing his moment to overtake Hamilton, who was clearly struggling on his older Hard Pirellis; and giving the lap back to Lewis almost immediately instead of waiting for his strategists, who certainly share some blame here for the hasty call, to figure out the most advantageous place on the track to let Hamilton by with the least amount of time lost in doing it. Verstappen also complained that he should have just taken the five-second penalty after the race, feeling that he could have pulled far enough away to still preserve victory, but this could have risked further sanctions by the stewards, not to mention there being no guarantees that he could actually have gapped Hamilton by that much. One thing is for certain — if Sunday’s race was any indication, this will be the first season since the start of the turbo-hybrid era where a team not named Mercedes has a real chance to win every weekend. Hamilton has always wanted a true inter-team rivalry to prove himself even more than he already has against his fellow Mercedes drivers over the years. And in this year’s much improved RB 16B and the superb 23-year-old Verstappen at the top of his game he looks to finally have it.

Photos from Formula1.com

Hamilton’s Silver Arrows wingman Valtteri Bottas struggled with rear grip on his opening stint, as he had all weekend, but was looking better once he switched off the Mediums onto Hards. Then all his good work closing the gap to the top two was undone by a painfully slow second pit stop when his front right tire would not come unstuck. The unlucky Finn finished some 37 seconds back of P2 Verstappen, though he did set the fastest lap of the race for an extra point after a late stop for fresh rubber. Lando Norris drove an outstanding race for McLaren to finish a strong P4 and the car looks to have genuine pace again this year, with new teammate Daniel Ricciardo also scoring well in P7. Verstappen’s new Red Bull stablemate Sergio Perez had a remarkable recovery drive after losing power on the formation lap and being forced to start from the pits. The canny Mexican veteran somehow managed to salvage an impressive P5 finish, making a three-stop strategy pay off with a passel of late race passes to maximize his and the team’s best available points.

Ferrari showed genuine improvement in race trim over last year’s disastrous lack of pace, with Charles Leclerc able to cross the line in sixth and new teammate Carlos Sainz finishing where he started in P8. Rookie Yuki Tsunoda scored on debut for AlphaTauri with an impressive P9 finish, salvaging a couple of points for the team on a day where their lead driver, Pierre Gasly, who looked like a podium contender going in, lost his front wing early in the race on Lap 4 when he collided with the rear of Ricciardo and was unable recover. The unlucky Frenchman finished way back in P17 and will have to wait to really get his promising season going until Round 2 at Imola in two weeks time. Lance Stroll took the last point in P10 for newly minted Aston Martin but his new partner Sebastian Vettel had a bit of a horror show. The four-time World Champion, who has frankly struggled with unforced errors over the past several seasons, made another big mistake when he was judged responsible for ramming into the back of the Alpine of Esteban Ocon on Lap 45 and handed a 10-second time penalty as a result. Additionally, it made a grand total of five penalty points on Vettel’s super license over the course of the debut race weekend after he was also dinged for failing to respect Yellow Flags in qualifying on Saturday. All in all, not the start the German vet was looking for in trying and reestablish himself as a top performer in the series and impress his new team with his supposed skill and savvy.

Top 10 finishers of the Bahrain GP:

POS NO DRIVER CAR LAPS TIME/RETIRED PTS
1 44 Lewis Hamilton MERCEDES 56 1:32:03.897 25
2 33 Max Verstappen RED BULL RACING HONDA 56 +0.745s 18
3 77 Valtteri Bottas MERCEDES 56 +37.383s 16
4 4 Lando Norris MCLAREN MERCEDES 56 +46.466s 12
5 11 Sergio Perez RED BULL RACING HONDA 56 +52.047s 10
6 16 Charles Leclerc FERRARI 56 +59.090s 8
7 3 Daniel Ricciardo MCLAREN MERCEDES 56 +66.004s 6
8 55 Carlos Sainz FERRARI 56 +67.100s 4
9 22 Yuki Tsunoda ALPHATAURI HONDA 56 +85.692s 2
10 18 Lance Stroll ASTON MARTIN MERCEDES 56 +86.713s 1

Complete race results available via Formula1.com.

The next race is in three weeks when Formula 1 returns to Imola in Italy for the second year in a row for the Emilia Romagna Grand Prix. Let’s hope the action between Hamilton and Vertstappen stays just as close in Tuscany as it was today in Bahrain. Look forward to seeing you then!

2021 F1 Grand Prix of Bahrain — Qualifying results

GAME ON: Red Bull’s pace for real as Verstappen beats Hamilton for premier pole of 2021 at Sakhir;  Bottas P3 ahead of Leclerc’s improved Ferrari

The 2021 Formula 1 season is upon us after a long, cold winter and events on track wasted no time heating up during Saturday qualifying for tomorrow’s opening round Bahrain Grand Prix. It was time to find out if Mercedes had been hiding their pace in relation to the seemingly ascendent Honda-powered RB16 B Red Bull chassis. It took three rounds of quali to answer that compelling question but in the end Red Bull superstar Max Verstappen laid down the gauntlet by putting together a seamlessly fast final lap, wresting pole away from seven-time champ and Mercedes ace Lewis Hamilton by a fairly cushy six-tenths of a second. Coming off his season-ending victory last year in Abu Dhabi and with a winter’s worth of upgrades to the Red Bull, Verstappen looks like he finally has the finely honed weapon to compete with Hamilton and the Silver Arrows for at least the Drivers’ Championship if not the Constructors’. The Dutchman will be keen to continue his momentum and hunt down a victory in tomorrow’s debut contest of 2021 to show that the German behemoth will not have things their own way this year after absolutely dominating the modern hybrid era.

It was not all good vibes for team Red Bull, however, as they saw Mercedes number two Valtteri Bottas recover from some discomfort with his new W12 mount to set a solid final time good enough for P3, while their new hire Sergio Perez succumbed to the curse of being Verstappen’s stablemate and got bounced in Q2. The veteran Mexican, who was brought in to the team after a superlative season last year to add consistency and stability to the troublesome number two Red Bull pilot role, will have to start a disappointing P11 tomorrow, with a lot of ground to be made up if he is going to help his teammate hold off the dual Silver Arrows onslaught. To be fair to Perez, the team may have botched his strategy by sending him out on the Medium Pirellis rather than the faster Softs when it was crunch time in P2.

Ferrari showed that they too made significant improvements in the offseason, especially in the power department, if not quite lifting them to the level of the top two teams. Charles Leclerc drove the wheels of his SF21 to set the fourth fastest time, only about a tenth behind Bottas. New Scuderia teammate Carlos Sainz, who made the jump to Maranello from McLaren, was quite a bit off that pace after looking very close to Leclerc up until that point and could only manage a P8 starting position. Pierre Gasly was the lone AlphaTauri to make it into the top ten but again looked very sharp after his breakout year in 2020. The young Frenchman appears to be maturing and improving every season and he tucked in right behind Leclerc with a solid P5 time. Daniel Ricciardo outpaced his teammate Lando Norris in his debut for McLaren, P6 to P7, while two-time champion Fernando Alonso impressed on his return to F1 after a hiatus dating to 2018 by setting a very respectable P9 time for newly badged Alpine (formerly Renault). And Lance Stroll got through to Q3 and will start P10 for the renamed Aston Martin team (formerly Racing Point and still powered by Mercedes engines), while his new teammate, former Ferrari man Sebastian Vettel, saw his bad luck from 2020 carry over when he had to slow for yellow flags at critical moment in Q1 and could not make it out of that session. The German four-time champion will start from a lowly P18 and will have to control his emotions and make steady progress if he is to avoid a repeat of the last few years’ many mental errors. At the very least, the British Racing Green-clad livery is beautiful to look at even if team Aston Martin will have a hard time replicating last season’s success as a “mini Mercedes” under the new restrictive downforce rules.

Top 10 qualifiers for the Bahrain GP:

POS NO DRIVER CAR Q1 Q2 Q3 LAPS
1 33 Max Verstappen RED BULL RACING HONDA 1:30.499 1:30.318 1:28.997 15
2 44 Lewis Hamilton MERCEDES 1:30.617 1:30.085 1:29.385 18
3 77 Valtteri Bottas MERCEDES 1:31.200 1:30.186 1:29.586 17
4 16 Charles Leclerc FERRARI 1:30.691 1:30.010 1:29.678 15
5 10 Pierre Gasly ALPHATAURI HONDA 1:30.848 1:30.513 1:29.809 15
6 3 Daniel Ricciardo MCLAREN MERCEDES 1:30.795 1:30.222 1:29.927 18
7 4 Lando Norris MCLAREN MERCEDES 1:30.902 1:30.099 1:29.974 18
8 55 Carlos Sainz FERRARI 1:31.653 1:30.009 1:30.215 17
9 14 Fernando Alonso ALPINE RENAULT 1:30.863 1:30.595 1:30.249 15
10 18 Lance Stroll ASTON MARTIN MERCEDES 1:31.261 1:30.624 1:30.601 15

Complete qualifying results available via Formula1.com.

Tomorrow’s race airs live beginning at 10:55 AM Eastern on ESPN2 here in the States. Time to find out if Verstappen has what it takes in race trim to bring the fight to mighty Mercedes. Hope to see you then!

2020 F1 Grand Prix of Abu Dhabi — Results & aftermath

Red Bull’s Verstappen runs away from Mercedes to take easy win in season finale; Bottas P2, Hamilton P3 in procedural contest

With Mercedes engines suffering from a mysterious MGU-K issue that left them down on power, Red Bull’s Max Verstappen had no problem sprinting away from this year’s dominant Constructors’ champions to take an easy victory at the season-ending Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, at long last earning the supremely talented Dutchman his first win of the truncated 2020 season. After a run of unpredictable race results, perhaps none more so than last week’s surprise win for Racing Point’s Sergio Perez after Mercedes self-destructed in the pits, Sunday’s finale was a purely procedural affair at the Yas Marina circuit, a track where overtaking is always at a premium even with the DRS gimmick. The pole-sitting Verstappen easily swanned away from the Silver Arrows of Valtteri Bottas and champion Lewis Hamilton, who returned from a COVID infection and did not seem to possess his usual superlative stamina. Regardless, no one could challenge Verstappen’s Red Bull at this day-into-night race and no gambles were taken by the Mercedes brain trust that might have jeopardized Bottas’ second place in the Drivers’ points and allowed Verstappen to claim that honor if the inconsistent Finn finished below P2. After last week’s debacle, the reigning Contructors’ champs were content to play it safe and see their men come home P2 and P3, with Bottas leading home Hamilton, but Verstappen outclassing Bottas by a whopping 15.9 seconds. Don’t count on this being a harbinger of a real challenge to Mercedes’ potential dominance next season, as the Merc engines were clearly ailing and nearing end of life here in round 17, especially as they chose not develop them much further after clinching their record seventh title in a row way back at Imola in early November with eight races still to go. But For verstappen the victory was still sweet, saving the best for last in this challenging year by earning his first victory of a frustrating season when he almost always had to look at a Silver Arrows tailpipe no matter how well he drove.

Pics courtesy GrandPrix247.com

Verstappen’s much maligned teammate Alexander Albon also did his part by showing good form and staying close enough to the top three to make any strategic pit stop gamble the Mercedes pit wall may have wanted to try a nonstarter, as either Bottas or Hamilton would surely have come out behind the mercurial Thai. So he helped Red Bull keep Mercedes honest, holding off even a long shot threat to Verstappen’s supremacy on this day and coming home a solid fourth place. Along with another fourth in Styria in Round 2, a third in the first Bahrain race and another opportunistic podium earlier in Tuscany in Round 9, the result in Abu Dhabi might be enough for Albon to keep his seat at the big Red Bull team, which is what Christian Horner and the other VIPs have always said they wanted, at least in public. But if so, he will need to work hard on qualifying pace, where he was buried by Verstappen all season long, to give himself a better shot at earning high places in the races rather than constantly trying to fight his way through theoretically inferior cars with all the attendant risk that entails. Of course, Albon’s erratic track record over the course of the year still might not be enough to keep Red Bull from replacing him with the free agent Sergio Perez, who has had his best year in F1 by far. Either way, all should be revealed in this particular soap opera very soon.

Pics courtesy GrandPrix247.com

It was also a banner day for McLaren, capping a fine comeback season by not only seeing their drivers Lando Norris and Carlos Sainz finish an impressive P5 and P6 respectively but also earning a very valuable third place in the Constructors’ with that big points haul. The storied team was able to regain at least some of its past glory by leapfrogging the powerful Racing Point team for that coveted position on the final day when Lance Stroll could only muster and point in P10 and a luckless Perez DNF’d on Lap 10 with transmission failure. While Perez didn’t really get a chance to defend his wonderful win at Sakhir a week ago and Stroll somewhat underwhelmed after starting from P8, the Racing Point team still has a lot to be pleased with as they head into the offseason as the fourth best Constructor and ready for the change to Aston Martin branding and Sebastian Vettel partnering Stroll for 2021.

While Renault couldn’t overtake their nearest rivals McLaren and Racing Point and had to settle for fifth in the final Constructors’ standings it was still a good year for the French team, who will rebrand as Alpine for next year. Veteran Daniel Riccardo, who will leave to drive for McLaren next year, finished P7 and Esteban Ocon took P9. Ocon will remain at Renault/Alpine and partner with returning two-time champ Fernando Alonso in 2021. AlphaTauri’s Pierre Gasly, who had a breakout season including a win at Monza in Round 8, came home P8 to secure tenth in the Drivers’ Standings.

A final word on Ferrari: The Scuderia finished a woeful campaign on a woeful note, with Charles Leclerc P13 and the outgoing Vettel P14 in ostensibly his final race in a Prancing Horse, both behind the P12 of the “junior” Alfa Romeo driven by the venerable Kimi Raikkonen. Here’s hoping that Ferrari’s boasts about massive engine upgrades for next year are true — and perhaps Sainz arrival will pick things up, as well — because sixth in the Constructors’ with barely a chance of challenging Racing Point, McLaren or Renault for positions, let alone Mercedes and Red Bull for wins, simply won’t cut it for another season.

Top 10 finishers of the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix:

POS NO DRIVER CAR LAPS TIME/RETIRED PTS
1 33 Max Verstappen RED BULL RACING HONDA 55 1:36:28.645 25
2 77 Valtteri Bottas MERCEDES 55 +15.976s 18
3 44 Lewis Hamilton MERCEDES 55 +18.415s 15
4 23 Alexander Albon RED BULL RACING HONDA 55 +19.987s 12
5 4 Lando Norris MCLAREN RENAULT 55 +60.729s 10
6 55 Carlos Sainz MCLAREN RENAULT 55 +65.662s 8
7 3 Daniel Ricciardo RENAULT 55 +73.748s 7
8 10 Pierre Gasly ALPHATAURI HONDA 55 +89.718s 4
9 31 Esteban Ocon RENAULT 55 +101.069s 2
10 18 Lance Stroll RACING POINT BWT MERCEDES 55 +102.738s 1

Complete race results available via Formula1.com.

Final Drivers’ Standings are here.

Final Constructors’ Standings are here.

The next race, gods willing, will be on March 21st, 2021 back at good old Melbourne, Australia. Enjoy the offseason wherever you are and hope to see you then!

2020 F1 Grand Prix of Abu Dhabi — Qualifying results

Verstappen snatches pole at Yas Marina to break Mercedes’ season-long streak; Bottas betters Hamilton for P2 to spoil the champion’s return

After missing last week’s wild and wooly Sakhir Grand Prix due to COVID, Mercedes ace Lewis Hamilton returned for Round 17 and the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, the final race of the strange, abbreviated 2020 F1 season. But if the current and seven-time World Champion expected to simply come back in and grab an easy pole after his enforced absence his teammate Valtteri Biottas and Red Bull’s Max Verstappen had other ideas. After struggling somewhat throughout Saturday qualifying, Hamilton appeared to have done enough to hook up a pole-worthy lap when the checkers flew at the end of Q3 and he went to the top of the pylon. But his time as provisional fastest man on the day was short-lived when Bottas came steaming home six-tenths ahead of his illustrious stablemate, seeming to simultaneously get the better of Hamilton while also keeping Mercedes’ season-long pole streak comfortably intact. But barely a moment later, Verstappen crashed the Silver Arrows celebration by laying down a time of 1:35.246, .025 better than Bottas and good enough to give Red Bull — and any team not named Mercedes — their first pole of the year. So P2 Bottas will start on the front row alongside pole-sitter Vertspappen, who will have a hungry Hamilton right behind him on the second row in P3. With Verstappen having crashed out on the opening lap last weekend, Hamilton seeing the young substitute George Russell nearly win in his car and Bottas being thoroughly outclassed by the substitute Russell just as he has been by Hamilton for most of the season, the list of competing motivations to win tomorrow’s race and the resultant pressure on the drivers is almost too delicious to contemplate. Simply put, the start at Yas Marina for the Abu Dhabi GP on Sunday could be absolutely bananas.

The McLaren of Lando Norris also acquitted himself exceedingly well, out-qualifying his teammate Carols Sainz P4 to P6 and taking a spot alongside Hamilton on the second row of the grid. For good measure, Norris also bettered Verstappen’s Red Bull teammate Alexander Albon, who once again was found slightly wanting with his qualifying efforts with only the fifth fastest time. Continue reading

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!

2020 F1 Grand Prix of Sakhir — Qualifying results

Hamilton out with COVID but Bottas takes pole at Sakhir, Russell P2 in Mercedes debut for another Silver Arrows front row lockout; Verstappen P3 for Red Bull

A week after Romain Grosjean survived a horrifying and fiery crash, Formula 1 remained in Bahrain for the Sakhir Grand Prix and the disturbing news kept right on coming. While Grosjean was a welcome sight in the paddock walking only with a light limp and bandages on his burned hands, Lewis Hamilton was absent and in self-quarantine after testing positive for COVID-19 during the week. That unfortunate event saw Williams’ regular driver George Russell drafted into the factory Mercedes factory team to pinch hit for Hamilton alongside Silver Arrows regular, Valtteri Bottas. With a rejiggered Bahrain International Circuit utilizing the outer track for the first time to differentiate the Sakhir GP nearly devoid of the usual serpentine turns and featuring one of the fastest laps in F1 history at well under a minute to cover its rectangular and short 2.2 miles, Saturday qualifying was fast, furious and highly unpredictable. But in the end it wound up the usual Mercedes front row lockout anyway, with Bottas making hay in Hamilton’s absence to take pole and Russell showing some serious chops on debut in the top car to take P2 despite it being essentially a brand new experience for him.

While Red Bull’s Max Verstappen looked very fast throughout and seemed primed to steal pole from the Mercs midway through Q3, Bottas bettered the Dutchman’s best lap to snatch it back, barely having time to look back when Russell crossed the line a minuscule .026 seconds behind him. Russell clearly has the pace to win tomorrow’s Grand Prix but it remains to be seen if the youngster can master the clutch-dependent start in unfamiliar equipment that is so essential for a lightning getaway when the lights go out. Still, the 22-year-old has got to be thrilled to have given Bottas such a run for his pole money on debut and his performance will no doubt raise his profile in the F1 rankings going forward.

Verstappen had to settle for P3 on the grid, as he did last weekend here, but this will ostensibly put him on the cleaner side of the track again, so look for Max to pounce in case one or both of the Mercs come to grief on the opening lap. However, Verstappen’s Red Bull teammate Alexander Albon was back to his underwhelming qualifying ways after a solid P4 effort last week. On this day, Albon was inexplicably bounced in Q2 with only the twelfth fastest lap. Similarly, Charles Leclerc over-performed in his Ferrari to qualify a very solid P4, while Sebastian Vettel continued to limp to the finish of his awful 2020 campaign with a subpar P13 effort in the penultimate quali of his Ferrari career. Racing Point’s Sergio Perez showed his quality once again to qualify P5 a week after being denied a sure podium by late race engine failure. Teammate Lance Stroll, who also DNF’d last week after being flipped upside down, could do no better than P10. Daniil Kvyat out-qualified his AlphaTauri teammate Charles Gasly P6 to P9, while Renault’s Daniel Ricciardo and McLaren’s Carlos Sainz were the lone representatives of their teams to make it into Q3, with Ricciardo taking P7 and Sainz setting the eighth fastest time.

With Russell substituting for Hamilton at Mercedes this weekend, 25-year-old Formula 2 driver Jack Aitken was brought in to take Russell’s seat at Williams for at least this race. And with Grosjean understandably needing more to time to recover from his injuries young Pietro Fittipaldi, grandson of two-time champ Emerson, will fill that seat at Haas.

Top 10 qualifiers for the Sakhir GP:

POS NO DRIVER CAR Q1 Q2 Q3 LAPS
1 77 Valtteri Bottas MERCEDES 53.904 53.803 53.377 24
2 63 George Russell MERCEDES 54.160 53.819 53.403 25
3 33 Max Verstappen RED BULL RACING HONDA 54.037 53.647 53.433 17
4 16 Charles Leclerc FERRARI 54.249 53.825 53.613 21
5 11 Sergio Perez RACING POINT BWT MERCEDES 54.236 53.787 53.790 17
6 26 Daniil Kvyat ALPHATAURI HONDA 54.346 53.856 53.906 26
7 3 Daniel Ricciardo RENAULT 54.388 53.871 53.957 15
8 55 Carlos Sainz MCLAREN RENAULT 54.450 53.818 54.010 20
9 10 Pierre Gasly ALPHATAURI HONDA 54.207 53.941 54.154 28
10 18 Lance Stroll RACING POINT BWT MERCEDES 54.595 53.840 54.200 19

Complete qualifying results available via Formula1.com.

Tomorrow’s race, the second-to-last pf the year, airs live on ESPN beginning at 12PM Eastern here in the States. With Hamilton away and a whopping 87 laps to play, look for an unpredictable race where literally anyone of the top 10 starters could potentially win. Hope to see you then to find to how it all shakes out!

2020 F1 Grand Prix of Bahrain — Results & aftermath

Hamilton wins Bahrain GP marred by horrific Grosjean opening lap crash; Verstappen P2, Albon elevated to P3 as late-race failure dooms Perez’s podium hopes

Sunday’s Bahrain Grand Prix, one of Formula 1’s most seemingly anodyne races, provided a frightening reminder of the inherent risks of the sport when Romain Grosjean’s Haas speared off the track on the opening lap and hit an oblique-angle armco barrier head-on at nearly 140 mph, sending the cockpit area with the Frenchman through the barrier like a missile and tearing the rear completely off the car. That catastrophic structural failure also breached the fuel system, igniting the car on impact and engulfing Grosjean in a huge fireball. It was one of the most spectacular and horrifying crashes during an F1 race in probably decades but the constant advances in safety throughout that time ensured that the Frenchman survived the shunt with only relatively minor injuries. The halo device in particular appeared to have done the life-saving work it was designed for, protecting the driver not only from a serious head injury, as befell the late Jules Bianchi when he slid under a crane on track under yellow at a rainy Suzuka in 2014, but also miraculously keeping Grosjean conscious after impact and able to release his own belts to escape the inferno engulfing him within a little under 20 seconds. The first-lap medical car, which follows directly behind the pack on the opening lap for just such an incident and was the brainchild of the legendary Professor Sid Watkins back in the early ’90s, also did exemplary work, with Dr. Ian Roberts and driver Alan van der Merwe getting to the scene promptly and able to assist Grosjean’s escape and treat the shaken driver immediately. It might have been a different story had the halo device, as well as the now standard HANS device, not kept Grosjean conscious, as the safety personnel would have had to somehow extract him from within the fire. As it was, the fortunate Frenchman suffered only burns to his hands and is recovering in a nearby military hospital and in good spirits.

After that, the race itself mainly seemed an afterthought, with a very long Red Flag period delay to repair the barrier at Turn 6, which was designed at an angle for cars to skid off of not strike directly, offering drivers and the entire paddock far too long to watch replays of the horrific incident and consider the danger of their profession that all too often is minimized in this generally hyper-safe era of F1. But after over an hour stationary in the pits, the drivers did what they are paid to do, remounting their vehicles and getting back out to restart the race. It was only Lap 3 of this 57-lap contest and while Mercedes ace Lewis Hamilton led Red Bull’s Max Verstappen from a second stationary grid start, the race one again came to an unceremonious halt when the Racing Point of Lance Stroll flipped over after contacting Daniil Kvyat’s AlphaTauri while contesting the same apex real estate at Turn 8. Kvyat’s car had also been the one that touched wheels when Grosjean cut across the track abruptly to send him into that lurid crash but the Russian was not at fault there. In the case of the Stroll incident, however, he was deemed to be the culprit and was levied a 10-second time penalty by the stewards. After a much quicker Safety Car period, the race restarted yet again on Lap 9 and Hamilton put his foot down and got on with the business of winning the Grand Prix.

Obviously it’s never easy driving a Formula 1 car, especially after witnessing such a traumatizing crash, but Hamilton blocked out all distractions and made it look that way, holding off Max Verstappen’s Red Bull handily throughout the remainder of the race and keeping it clean to take yet another win, his eleventh out of fifteen races this year, as well as extending his F1 record victory total to 95. With Hamilton’s teammate Valtteri Bottas having an off day after suffering an early puncture that essentially ruined his race, Verstappen gave yet another effort good enough for P2 but his car never really matched the pace of the lead Silver Arrow. Verstappen’s teammate, Alexander Albon, got a much needed bit of luck late in the race when the Racing Point of Sergio Perez, running comfortably in third and looking for his second successive podium, suffered what looked to be a turbo failure on Lap 54 and tumbled out of the points. That promoted Albon to P3 and the last spot on the podium, marking the first time this year both Red Bull’s had made it to the post-race champagne celebration, and perhaps taking Albon off the hot seat. With Bottas also finishing in eighth after his poor race, that elevated Verstappen to only 12 points behind the Finn for second in the Drivers’ Championship with only two races remaining. Bottas will now have to put his head down, regroup quickly for next week’s GP at this same Sakhir circuit and then do the business to hold off the hard charging Dutchman and stave off the ignominy of finishing third in this year’s most dominant chassis.

Further down the order, the rest pf the top 10 also benefitted from Perez’s heartbreaking late-race retirement, with the McLaren’s of Lando Norris and Carlos Sainz making out particularly well by coming home P4 and P5 respectively. With both Stroll and Perez failing to finish for Racing Point, McLaren’s solid points haul on the day saw them elevated to P3 in the valuable Constructors’ Championship with a 12 point gap to now-P4 Racing Point. AlphaTauri’s Pierre Gasly did well to make the most of a two-stop strategy, running an exceptionally long second stint and avoiding the drama that befell his teammate Kvyat to take a solid P6. The Renaults of Daniel Ricciardo and Esteban Ocon battled each other all race long and eventually would up sandwiching Bottas at the finish in P7 and P9 respectively. And perhaps the biggest beneficiary of Perez’s engine failure was Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc, who snuck into the last points paying position at P10 with a car that was frankly terrible on anything less than the freshest rubber.

A final word about Grosjean’s accident: This exact type of impact with a stationary barrier is what killed Francois Cevert at Watkins Glenn in 1973 and Grosjean’s angle of entry would also probably have led to the same of cockpit intrusion that resulted in Jules Bianchi’s eventually fatal brain injury when he submarined that ill-placed crane in the rain in Japan. There can be no doubt that the halo saved Romain Grosjean’s life on this day in Bahrain. It may be “ugly” fro  an aesthetic perspective but it absolutely did its job in the Haas’s crash even if the cause of the fuel cells breach and ignition require further investigation. The debate over whether cockpit protection is really needed in open wheel/single seater racing is well and truly over and it needs to be mandated right down to the lowest professional levels of the sport. The safety of the drivers, famous and anonymous, demand nothing less.

Top 10 finishers of the Bahrain GP:

POS NO DRIVER CAR LAPS TIME/RETIRED PTS
1 44 Lewis Hamilton MERCEDES 57 2:59:47.515 25
2 33 Max Verstappen RED BULL RACING HONDA 57 +1.254s 19
3 23 Alexander Albon RED BULL RACING HONDA 57 +8.005s 15
4 4 Lando Norris MCLAREN RENAULT 57 +11.337s 12
5 55 Carlos Sainz MCLAREN RENAULT 57 +11.787s 10
6 10 Pierre Gasly ALPHATAURI HONDA 57 +11.942s 8
7 3 Daniel Ricciardo RENAULT 57 +19.368s 6
8 77 Valtteri Bottas MERCEDES 57 +19.680s 4
9 31 Esteban Ocon RENAULT 57 +22.803s 2
10 16 Charles Leclerc FERRARI 56 +1 lap 1

Complete race results available via Formula1.com.

The next race is in but a week’s time — at this exact circuit for the Sakhir Grand Prix, the penultimate race of the delayed, abbreviated and very weird 2020 season. Look for some track safety improvements following Sunday’s incidents and hopefully a cleaner race by the drivers overall.

2020 F1 Grand Prix of Bahrain — Qualifying results

Supreme Hamilton smashes Bahrain track record for pole; Bottas qualifies P2, Verstappen P3

Fresh on the heels of earning his record-tying seventh Drivers’ Championship with a fine come-from-behind wet weather win in Turkey two weeks ago, Mercedes ace Lewis Hamilton showed no sign of slowing down. The English living legend blistered the bone dry Bahrain International Circuit under the lights during Saturday night qualifying, setting a new track record en route to taking pole position for tomorrow’s Grand Prix. Team Mercedes also returned to their front row lockout ways after having that season-log streak snapped last time out in Turkey when Valtteri Bottas set the second fastest lap time in Q3, albeit nearly three-tenths adrift of Ham the Man. Red Bull’s Max Verstappen sounded less than distraught at qualifying behind the Silver Arrows in P3, as that will put the Dutchman on the clean side of this often sandy track. He should also get a good tow from Hamilton when the lights go out to perhaps aid an overtaking move down into the first corner. Verstappen’s teammate Alexander Albon will start alongside him on the second row and behind Bottas in P4, only the second time this year the young Thai has managed to pull himself within one spot of his superlative teammate during qualifying, the other being at Mugello in Tuscany in early September.

Behind the front four, Sergio Perez was the lone Racing Point to start in the top 10 with a fine P5 qualifying effort. Hard to believe the savvy Mexican veteran still does not have a F1 drive for next year. Renault’s Daniel Ricciardo and Esteban Ocon qualified P6 and P7 respectively, while AlphaTauri’s Pierre Gasly and Daniil Kvyat were P8 and P10, sandwiching the McLaren of Lando Norris, who will start P9.

Top 10 qualifiers for the Bahrain GP:

POS NO DRIVER CAR Q1 Q2 Q3 LAPS
1 44 Lewis Hamilton MERCEDES 1:28.343 1:27.586 1:27.264 16
2 77 Valtteri Bottas MERCEDES 1:28.767 1:28.063 1:27.553 16
3 33 Max Verstappen RED BULL RACING HONDA 1:28.885 1:28.025 1:27.678 15
4 23 Alexander Albon RED BULL RACING HONDA 1:28.732 1:28.749 1:28.274 18
5 11 Sergio Perez RACING POINT BWT MERCEDES 1:29.178 1:28.894 1:28.322 20
6 3 Daniel Ricciardo RENAULT 1:29.005 1:28.648 1:28.417 17
7 31 Esteban Ocon RENAULT 1:29.203 1:28.937 1:28.419 14
8 10 Pierre Gasly ALPHATAURI HONDA 1:28.971 1:29.008 1:28.448 14
9 4 Lando Norris MCLAREN RENAULT 1:29.464 1:28.877 1:28.542 17
10 26 Daniil Kvyat ALPHATAURI HONDA 1:29.158 1:28.944 1:28.618 17

Complete qualifying results available via Formula1.com.

Tomorrow’s night race in the desert airs live on ESPN2 beginning at 9AM Eastern here in the States. Hope to see you then to find out how it all shakes out!

2020 F1 Grand Prix of Turkey — Results & aftermath

Hamilton earns record-tying seventh Drivers’ Championship with come from behind win in Turkey; Perez P2 & Vettel P3 after masterful wet weather drives

In typical Lewis Hamilton fashion the Mercedes ace battled back from a mediocre qualifying effort and extraordinarily difficult track conditions to take a storming victory in the return of the  Turkish Grand Prix at Intercity Istanbul Park on Sunday. Starting from P6 on the grid and with his Silver Arrow struggling to heat up the wet weather tires necessitated by both a wet and unaturally smooth track, Hamilton survived the treacherous early portion of the race, biding his time and steadily improving his track position until by Lap 37 of this 58-lap contest he passed Racing Point’s Sergio Perez to take the lead. It was a lead he would somewhat astoundingly never relinquish, as Ham the Man hung on to his aging Intermiediate Pirelli tires for so long they eventually turned into slicks and actually benefitted his performance by dint of their baldness on what was a rapidly drying circuit during the closing laps. Keeping his head down and waving off a potential late safety stop for fresh Inters floated by his team braintrust, Hamilton not only went on to win the race by a massive 31.6 seconds, thereby locking up this year’s Drivers’ Championship, but with that accomplishment tied the great Michael Schumacher’s record of seven overall Formula 1 titles. With his nearest rival, teammate Valtteri Bottas, having a disastrous day that featured multiple spins and saw the Finn finish well out of the points in P14, the only thing that might have kept Lewis from clinching this year’s crown was a last lap squall that could have proven difficult to navigate on his well worn, 50-lap old Inters. But more rain never came and so Lewis Hamilton drove his way to victory and into the Formula 1 firmament with a terrific drive that showed yet again why he is not only the greatest driver of this era but also now firmly in the argument for greatest F1 pilot of all time.

Pics courtesy GrandPrix247.com

Perez also drove a superb race, outlasting his pole-sitting Racing Point teammate Lance Stroll by matching Hamilton’s one-stop strategy and holding off a brace of hard-charging Ferraris on the treacherous final corner to secure a highly impressive P2 finish. The veteran Mexican driver, who used all his guile and experience to collect the third P2 finish of his career, also did himself a world of good in his quest to remain in F1 next year after being unceremoniously sacked by Racing Point earlier in the year. Conversely, Stroll had a hard luck day after making his first-ever start from pole. The young Canadian led much of the first half of the race but a second stop for fresh Inters on Lap 36 proved to be his undoing, as the circuit had evolved into a very strange condition where it’s freshly laid asphalt was still too wet for slick Pirellis but also too dry for the Intermediates to work effectively. That swung the advantage to drivers like Hamilton and Perez, who stayed out on their old Inters and worked off most of the tread to a better performance effects. As a result, Stroll lost a ton of positions over the final twenty laps and had to settle for P9. Combined with Perez’s superb P2 it was still a great day for the Racing Point team and their quest for third in the Constructors’ standings. But Stroll had to be crestfallen to not even make the podium after such an auspicious start to the day, much less having his dreams of an F1 win unceremoniously dashed.

With Sebastian Vettel starting from P11 and teammate Charles Leclerc a lowly P12, both Ferraris actually came good in the race for once. While both drivers made the dreaded double pit stop, on this day the Prancing Horses actually seemed to like these slick conditions and maximize the performance of their tires. Vettel in particular drove like the four-time champion he is rather than the completely lost-at-sea aging veteran he has looked like for much of this misbegotten year. After impressive early work to deftly advance through the field while others slid and skidded all around him, Vettel was able to snatch P3 and a podium from his junior teammate when Leclerc out-breaked himself while dicing with Perez on the final lap. Leclerc had to settle for P4 but it was still one of the best days — if not the best —  that have Ferrari have had in a generally miserable 2020. A bit further back of the Ferrari duo, McLaren also had an excellent result, with Carlos Sainz taking an impressive P5 and Lando Norris moving up to P8 with a strong late-race push. Team Red Bull had a trying day with both Mex Verstappen and Alexander Albon spinning multiple times en route to disappointing P6 and P7 finishes respectively. Renault’s Daniel Riccardo, who also struggled in these challenging conditions, held on well enough to take the last point in P10.

In the end, though, it was Hamilton’s day through and through. With rare emotion stifling his normally talkative and ebullient nature, the Englishman reflected the weight of his mighty accomplishment in tying Schumacher’s iconic record of seven World Championships, a mark of excellence previously thought to be untouchable. That he deserves all the accolades that are sure to come his way for joining that elite company and making it a two man club was more than validated by his wonder drive to somehow take victory against all the odds and run of play here in Turkey on this fateful Grand Prix Sunday. That he can potentially earn his eighth title and stand alone at the top of the Formula 1 summit next year seems right now less of a possibility and more of a fait accompli. Of course, as the wise old hand once said, that’s why you go racing. But at this point it’d be very difficult to bet against Hamilton because in his heart of hearts you know he wants to be the all-time leader in F1 Championships. And what Lewis Hamilton puts his mind to he always seems to achieve.

Top 10 finishers for the Turkish GP:

POS NO DRIVER CAR LAPS TIME/RETIRED PTS
1 44 Lewis Hamilton MERCEDES 58 1:42:19.313 25
2 11 Sergio Perez RACING POINT BWT MERCEDES 58 +31.633s 18
3 5 Sebastian Vettel FERRARI 58 +31.960s 15
4 16 Charles Leclerc FERRARI 58 +33.858s 12
5 55 Carlos Sainz MCLAREN RENAULT 58 +34.363s 10
6 33 Max Verstappen RED BULL RACING HONDA 58 +44.873s 8
7 23 Alexander Albon RED BULL RACING HONDA 58 +46.484s 6
8 4 Lando Norris MCLAREN RENAULT 58 +61.259s 5
9 18 Lance Stroll RACING POINT BWT MERCEDES 58 +72.353s 2
10 3 Daniel Ricciardo RENAULT 58 +95.460s 1

Complete race results available via Formula1.com.

The next race is in a fortnight’s time — the Bahrain Grand Prix from the arid Bahrain International Circuit. While it’s highly doubtful there will be any rain to spice things up who knows what spanners the Formula 1 gods will yet throw into the works? Hope to see you then to find out how it all shakes out!

2020 F1 Grand Prix of Turkey — Qualifying results

Stroll grabs wonder pole in wet & wild Turkish GP qualifying, Perez P3 in banner day for Racing Point; unhappy Verstappen settles for P2 after key Red Bull strategy call; Mercedes’ season-long pole streak ends

With an already slick new surface giving drivers fits during dry practice sessions for Formula 1’s return to Turkey and Intercity Istanbul Park, traction was even further compromised by a deluge at the start of Saturday qualifying for tomorrow’s Grand Prix. The rain on top of the new asphalt resulted in a long Red Flag period in Q1 to try and wait the weather out after the best drivers in the world went skating around the circuit as if on ice. Clearly, no slick Pirellis would be used and the treacherous track conditions meant the day was ripe for unexpected qualifying results. And that’s just what happened. The Racing Point of Lance Stroll put in a perfect, highly technical lap and coaxed his car around, keeping it out the gravel traps to seize pole away from the usual suspects. Stroll made the most of the team’s pivotal Q3 decision to run him and his teammate, Sergio Perez, on Intermediate rather than full Wet tires on a tricky but marginally improving track. Crucially, when Perez temporarily set the fastest lap on his Inters and bested the Red Bull of Max Verstappne’s time early in the final session the Red Bull brain trust reacted and pulled Verstappen in from a very tasty hot lap to have the Dutch rainmeister match Racing Point’s move off the full Wets and onto the Inters. However, Versteppen simply couldn’t get the Inters to perform as well as the Racing Point duo and had to watch Stroll take his first career pole ahead of his P2 time nearly 4-tenths in arrears. Perez slotted in at third fastest and a disgruntled Verstappen was left rueing the team’s strategy call, although one can certainly understand their logic in looking to find the magic crossover point in tire performance. For the young Canadian Stroll, who has struggled mightily since missing the Eiffel GP with what was eventually diagnosed as COVID, there were no regrets only jubilation. His joy might not be long lived because holding on to that top spot tomorrow in the face of Verstappen’s onslaught could be more than a little tricky. But grabbing an F1 pole is nonetheless something he can carry with him as a badge of honor for the rest off his life. And who knows? If the weather is the same in Istanbul tomorrow, which it could well be, Stroll and the two Racing Points may just be able to excel again in these funky conditions.

Stroll’s wonder pole in the wet was also the first time this season a non-factory Mercedes hadn’t claimed that honor. If Verstappen was miffed by his team’s decisions the Mercedes duo of points-leader Lewis Hamilton and second place Valtteri Bottas were utterly flummoxed, as the normally superlative Silver Arrows stubbornly refused to get any of their wet weather tires to turn on and perform. Continue reading