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Formula 1 - 2023 Season

Italian Grand Prix: Carlos Sainz beats Max Verstappen to pole position

Ferrari's Carlos Sainz pipped Red Bull's Max Verstappen to pole position in a gripping qualifying session at the Italian Grand Prix.

Pole changed hands three times in the dying seconds of qualifying.

Ferrari's Charles Leclerc took pole from Sainz, who was fastest on the first runs, before Red Bull's Max Verstappen went to the top and then Spaniard Sainz replaced him.

Sainz beat Verstappen by 0.013 seconds to send the home fans into ecstasy.

Leclerc was only 0.054secs further adrift as the top three were separated by just 0.067secs over 3.6 miles of the historic Monza circuit.


BBC
 
Max Verstappen suggests Lewis Hamilton is 'jealous' of his success following comments from rival

Max Verstappen has responded to Lewis Hamilton questioning the pedigree of his team-mates by suggesting his rival is "a little jealous" of his success.

Ahead of Verstappen attempting to seal a record 10th successive victory in Sunday's Italian Grand Prix, Hamilton told Sky Italy on Thursday that he was "no more impressed" by the Dutchman than the sport's former world champions and that the Red Bull driver's success was "blown up much more" than his own.

Verstappen has dominated the 2023 season to the point that with nine races remaining it is a matter of when, not if, the 25-year-old will claim his third successive title.

"Maybe he's a little jealous of my current success," Verstappen said to the Dutch media, including Racing News 365, after qualifying second in Monza on Saturday.

"This kind of statement... he possibly thinks he's winning something with that, but it makes no difference to me.

"I think Mercedes have a very hard time dealing with losing, after all these years of winning so much."

Hamilton was controversially denied a record eight world title when Verstappen secured his maiden triumph in 2021, but Mercedes still claimed the constructors' crown at the end of one of the fiercest battles the sport has seen.

However, following the introduction of new design regulations in 2022, Red Bull have been dominant and are on course for a second successive constructors' title after ending Mercedes' eight-year streak.

Verstappen added: "At some point, you have to be realistic and then you have to be able to appreciate what other teams are doing.

"We did the same when they were dominant and we also said, 'We have to work harder because we are not good enough'.

"You can keep shouting and screaming that what we do is not that special... you just have to deal with yourself."

 
Italian Grand Prix: Max Verstappen in record-breaking 10th consecutive F1 win.

Red Bull's Max Verstappen broke Ferrari's valiant challenge to set an all-time record for consecutive wins with victory in the Italian Grand Prix.

The Dutchman was held back by pole-winner Carlos Sainz's Ferrari for 14 laps but his pressure paid off when an error from the Spaniard gave him his chance.

Sainz locked his brakes into the first chicane and that allowed Verstappen to pass the Ferrari into the second chicane at Monza.

Sainz, after forcefully holding on to second place from team-mate Charles Leclerc, was left to fend off Verstappen's team-mate Sergio Perez for second place.

After many laps of defence, Sainz finally lost the position with nine laps to go and then set about fighting hard again to keep Leclerc behind for the final podium place.

It was frantic at times as Sainz hung on with worn tyres, and eventually the Spaniard pleaded to his team to let him "bring it home". Leclerc was told: "Race until the end, no risk."

Sainz clung on with some desperate late braking moves into the first chicane, and eventually the fight was settled at the start of the final lap.

Leclerc sold the dummy to Sainz at the first chicane but the Spaniard moved to defend and Leclerc had to lock all his brakes and cut the chicane to avoid his partner. Leclerc crossed the line just 0.1secs behind.

Mercedes' George Russell drove a steady race to take fifth, while Lewis Hamilton impressed on an inverted strategy, starting on the hard tyre and switching to the medium, to pass the McLarens and Alex Albon's Williams to take sixth.

Hamilton earned a five-second penalty for colliding with McLaren's Oscar Piastri when passing him at the second chicane but had enough of a margin to keep the place.

Albon clung on ahead of McLaren's Lando Norris, while Fernando Alonso had his most anonymous race of the season to take ninth in the Aston Martin ahead of Alfa Romeo's Valtteri Bottas.

Piastri had to pit to repair damage after the Hamilton incident and finished 12th behind Liam Lawson's Alpha Tauri.

Ferrari put up a strong fight against the all-conquering Red Bull team at their home race with by far their most competitive showing of the season.

Their hope was for Leclerc, starting third, to pass Verstappen into the first corner and set up a one-two at the front of the field, from which they might be able to play strategy against Verstappen.

But Verstappen made a strong start, and Sainz had to chop across quickly to prevent the Dutchman claiming the inside line for an attack at the first corner.

The lead secured, Sainz was faced with a challenging opening stint trying to hold Verstappen off for as long as possible.

Verstappen tracked the Ferrari, rarely more than 0.5secs behind. He tried the outside on lap six, only to be rebuffed, and complained to his team about the Ferrari's straight-line speed.

But eventually his pressure paid off. Sainz locked his right front wheel on the way into the first chicane at the start of lap 15, and that allowed Verstappen to get a better exit out of the corner.

Verstappen drew alongside on the flat-out run through the Curva Grande and claimed the lead down the inside of the Roggia chicane.

Once Verstappen was into the lead, the destiny of the race win was no longer in doubt - if it ever really had been - and the uncertainty was now over the remaining podium positions.

Verstappen now leads Perez in the championship by 145 points as his third drivers' title draws ever closer.


 
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Italian Grand Prix: Max Verstappen in record-breaking 10th consecutive F1 win

Red Bull's Max Verstappen set an all-time record with his 10th consecutive win as he broke Ferrari's valiant challenge at the Italian Grand Prix.

The Dutchman was held back by pole-winner Carlos Sainz's Ferrari for 14 laps but his pressure paid off when an error from the Spaniard gave him his chance.


BBC
 
Max Verstappen: Toto Wolff says Red Bull driver's new record for consecutive wins is 'completely irrelevant'.

Mercedes team principal Toto Wolff says Red Bull driver Max Verstappen's all-time record of 10 consecutive wins is "completely irrelevant".

Verstappen's victory at Monza on Sunday means he surpassed his Red Bull predecessor Sebastian Vettel's run of nine straight victories in 2013, and accomplished something Mercedes did not during their period of domination between 2014 and 2020.

Wolff said: "For me, these kinds of records are completely irrelevant. They were irrelevant in our good days at Mercedes.

"I don't know how many races we won in a row. I didn't even know there was a count."

However, Wolff did admit that Verstappen's success "shows a great driver in a great car competing at an extremely high level".

In a second answer on Verstappen he added: "By the way, that record, I would think it's a good one, because it's perfection."

And he said that he expected Red Bull to go on to win every race this season, barring an error.

"I think they need to screw it up themselves in order not to win [every race] this season," Wolff said.

Ferrari team principal Frederic Vasseur said: "They always had mega pace - from Monza to Monaco, they were performing and this is impressive. But the most impressive for me is that Max - it's not just about the last 10 races, it's about the last two years - I would say he didn't make a single mistake in the races.

"It's easier to not make mistakes when you have a margin on the others, but even in these kind of circumstances he is able to manage a situation very well.

"To not do a single mistake over two seasons is just mega."

Red Bull team principal Christian Horner said: "You have to recognise and applaud what Max is doing at the moment. It's very special. We shouldn't detract from that in any way.

"In sport, very rarely things like this happen and it's a golden moment for him and certainly a golden moment for the team."

There have been questions within F1 as to whether governing body the FIA should legislate to try to halt Red Bull's domination, as they did at the end of 2020 when a rule change for the 2021 season affected Mercedes more than other teams and led to a ferocious title battle between Verstappen and Mercedes' Lewis Hamilton, with the Dutchman eventually coming out on top after winning the controversial season finale at Abu Dhabi.

But Wolf said: "If a team dominates in the way Max has done with Red Bull, then fair dues. This is a meritocracy.

"As long as you comply with the regulations - technical, sporting and financial - we just need to say, well done. And if it takes a long time [to catch up], then it takes a long time.

"I remember people crying foul when it was us. Entertainment follows sport, not the other way around. You can't be WWE [wrestling] - we don't want to be scripted content."

 
Ferrari driver Carlos Sainz has thanked police following reports he was the target of an attempted theft after Sunday's Italian Grand Prix.

According to Corriere dello Sport, the 29-year-old was approached by two men, under the pretense of wanting a selfie, who removed a watch worth hundreds of thousands of pounds from his wrist.

Sainz and his bodyguard reportedly chased the thieves and managed to retrieve the timepiece and were then helped by members of the public before police arrived.

"As many of you already know, yesterday we experienced an unfortunate incident in Milano," the Spaniard posted on X, formerly known as Twitter.

"The most important thing is that we are all OK and this will only remain as an unpleasant anecdote.

"Many thanks to all the people who helped us yesterday, to the Milan police for their quick intervention and thanks for all your messages."

Sainz finished third in the race at Monza, behind Red Bull duo Max Verstappen and Sergio Perez.



Sky Sports
 
All Formula 1 teams complied with the sport's cost cap in 2022, governing body the FIA has said.

The FIA added the 10 teams had all been issued certificates of compliance with the $140m (£112m) cap after "an intensive and thorough process".

It said there had been an "extensive check of any non-F1 related activities".

These included "multiple visits to team facilities and careful auditing procedures".

All teams "acted at all times in a spirit of good faith and co-operation," it said.

The findings may surprise a number of teams, because rumours have been swirling around F1 in recent weeks that at least one team had broken the cost cap again in 2022.

Last year, the FIA found that world champions Red Bull exceeded the limit by £1.86m in 2021, while Aston Martin and Williams were found of procedural breaches.


BBC
 
I've been a casual watcher of F1 for a couple years, especially in that Verstappen-Hamilton title fight year. But Verstappen's dominance has been just as boring as Hamilton's was before him, haven't bothered watching a race in ages because everyone knows how it ends.
 
Former Formula One champion Nigel Mansell is auctioning more than 300 items previously housed in his Jersey museum.

The online auction is made up of a whole range of "hugely personal" items relating to his racing career.

It includes 32 racing helmets, 78 baseball caps, 50 race suits and more than 200 trophies and awards.

His "final F1 win helmet" could fetch up to £50,000, and bids for his number plate "5 NM" could reach £60,000.


BBC
 
Alfa Romeo retain Valtteri Bottas and Zhou Guanyu for 2024

Valtteri Bottas and Zhou Guanyu will stay with the Alfa Romeo Sauber team for the third consecutive year in 2024.

Bottas, who joined from Mercedes in 2022, was under contract for next season but there had been some doubt about the future of his team-mate.

Representative Alessandro Alunni Bravi said the team had chosen "stability" as they continue their transition into the factory Audi effort by 2026.

The team are ending their relationship with Alfa Romeo after this season.

They will race under a new name next year but this has not yet been revealed. Although Audi is already a part-owner, the German car giant's name is not expected to be used until it officially enters F1.

Bravi said: "Valtteri and Zhou are drivers of known talent and skill and they work really well together: they are well-matched and can push each other.

"Valtteri has taken a real leader's role within the team, pushing us all to give our best; Zhou has made impressive steps forward in the last two years and we expect him to continue on this trajectory in 2024."

Reserve driver Theo Pourchaire will also continue with the team.

Bottas, whose contract ends next season, said: "I have a feeling we have an exciting journey ahead of us. There is an impressive amount of work going on behind the scenes, in [the team's base in] Hinwil and beyond, and now that the line-up is set for next year, we can focus fully on improving, starting this weekend in Singapore already.

"Every step forward we make is a step forward for this year and next, so we are motivated to give everything we have every time we're trackside or at the factory."

Zhou said he was "grateful for the trust" Sauber had shown in him and that he was "excited" at the prospect of racing at his home grand for the first time as China returns to the F1 calendar next year for the first time since the pandemic.

Alfa Romeo/Sauber have had a difficult year and are in ninth place out of 10 teams in the constructors' championship, one point behind Haas with eight races remaining this season.

BBC
 
ROKiT set to refile Williams F1 legal case in California after Florida dismissal

ROKiT boss Jonathan Kendrick has said he is “not letting go” of his $149m legal action against Williams, despite its dismissal by a Florida court on technical grounds.

The case was dismissed after the judge ruled that ROKiT's lawyer was not allowed to practice in the US District Court of the Southern District of Florida, where it was filed.

Kendrick will now shift the case to California, where the Englishman and his company are based.

"I'm not letting this go," Kendrick told Motorsport.com. "We're going to refile in California."

The case relates to ROKiT's period as title sponsor of the Grove outfit. The company paid Williams $19m in 2019 and fulfilled its commitments, but when the start of the 2020 season was delayed by COVID-19, Kendrick asked to renegotiate payments.

But in May and several weeks before the first race, Williams ended the agreement and the cars raced without its ROKiT livery that season.

A dispute over the unpaid fees for 2020 subsequently went to the London Court of International Arbitration, where Williams ultimately proved successful.

In April this year, ROKiT launched legal action against Williams, also naming former deputy team principal Claire Williams and past team executives Mike O'Driscoll (who served as CEO) and Doug Lafferty (who was chief financial officer). All three left the team in the autumn of 2020 as a result of the takeover by Dorilton.

Kendrick said a Florida court was chosen essentially because of Miami's F1 current connections.

The filing claimed that the team made "fraudulent statements" about its potential competitiveness, with ROKiT in essence suggesting that the ICA didn't have the full story when it made its arbitration decision.

The claim noted that "as a direct and proximate result of the fraudulent statements made by the defendants, plaintiffs have suffered significant financial loss and damage to their goodwill and business reputation," and asked for compensation for "an amount in excess of $149,528,550 dollars".

Kendrick's case was launched on his behalf by Larry Klayman, a well-known lawyer who has been involved in a number of high-profile actions, including some against former US presidents Bill Clinton and Barack Obama, and current president Joe Biden.

Last week Judge Beth Bloom dismissed the case on the grounds that Klayman is currently unable to operate in the Southern Florida District Court due to the fallout from an unrelated matter.

Following a motion for clarification from the Williams side, Judge Bloom noted that Klayman had been "suspended from practice in the District Court" and that ROKiT had "failed to obtain counsel authorised to practice in this District."

With the Florida case now not proceeding Kendrick will switch his focus to California, with a new legal team, as Klayman isn't licensed to work in the state.

Klayman downplayed the reasons behind the dismissal of the ROKiT case.

"I have challenged the suspension," he told Motorsport.com. "There's a motion pending to set it aside. Because it's incorrect.

"This is a matter which is 15 years old, coming out of the District of Columbia, which is a very toxic place. I took on Obama and it just so happens the judge who dismissed the case is an Obama appointee."

Regarding the ROKiT case, he said: "It was dismissed without prejudice, and it will be refiled in another court very shortly in the next few days.

"It will be refiled in California. That was a strategic decision that was made before the judge dismissed the case. So we were going to that anyway. It will be handled by California lawyers. Not by me.

"No harm has been done, no rights have been lost. That's key. The case was not dismissed on its merits."

With the Florida case over and no formal filing anywhere else as yet, the Williams team's current position is that the matter is completed.

"Williams Racing can confirm that the United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida has dismissed all claims filed by ROKiT against Williams and its former directors," a spokesperson told Motorsport.com.

"Having successfully obtained an arbitration award against ROKiT in the UK and successfully securing confirmation of the arbitral award by a federal court in the United States, Williams continues to place its trust in the legal system with regard to its dispute with ROKiT, and looks forward to receipt of the amount awarded to it under the original arbitral award."

 
Singapore Grand Prix: Mercedes following Felipe Massa 2008 title case 'with interest'

Mercedes say they are following "with interest" former Ferrari driver Felipe Massa's attempt to overturn the 2008 world championship result.

Massa is taking legal action over an alleged "conspiracy" that he says denied him the 2008 title, which was won by Lewis Hamilton for McLaren.

Wolff said the Massa case was "not something anyone saw coming".

He added it will "certainly set a precedent" and they were "looking from the sidelines with curiosity".

Wolff suggested that the Massa case could have ramifications for the controversial end to the 2021 title fight.

Hamilton was on course to win the championship two years ago for Mercedes while leading rival Max Verstappen going into the final laps of the season finale in Abu Dhabi.

But race director Michael Masi failed to apply the rules correctly during a late safety-car period, allowing only some lapped cars to un-lap themselves rather than all, as the rules dictated.

The race was re-started for one final lap, on which Verstappen passed Hamilton to win the race and the title.


BBC
 
Singapore Grand Prix: Red Bull pace 'worse than expected' says Max Verstappen

Max Verstappen said Red Bull were "worse than we expected" after he ended Friday practice at the Singapore Grand Prix with eighth fastest time.

Both Verstappen and team-mate Sergio Perez, who was seventh, were fighting a lack of rear grip as Carlos Sainz led Charles Leclerc to a Ferrari one-two.

Verstappen said balance was an issue and he "never got the car together".

He added: "[There's] just a few things that we don't understand. I will try to improve but it is quite a big gap."

Sainz was 0.018 seconds quicker than his team-mate, with Mercedes driver George Russell third, 0.235secs off the pace, ahead of Aston Martin's Fernando Alonso, the second Mercedes of Lewis Hamilton and Lando Norris' McLaren, which has a major aerodynamic upgrade this weekend.

Verstappen was more than 0.7secs off the pace on his one-lap qualifying simulation run.

Russell said Ferrari were in the strongest position for qualifying, not least because of his belief that they ran their engines in a lower power mode than their rivals.

"Ferrari are looking favourites at the moment," Russell said, "and I don't think they were maximum power unit either and the fight is on for the second row probably but we never know what's going to happen."

But Sainz said he expected Red Bull to be in the fight for pole on Saturday.

"When you look at their long-run pace, they looked the strongest car," Sainz said.

"Once they sort out the one-lap pace, they will be there and in the fight for pole but Mercedes and McLaren and Aston should also be in that fight so I think we are in for quite an exciting day."

 
Ferrari's Carlos Sainz edged out George Russell's Mercedes for pole position as Max Verstappen qualified 11th at the Singapore Grand Prix.

Verstappen swore over the team radio as he struggled with his unexpectedly uncompetitive Red Bull, which threatens to end his record-breaking run of wins.

Sainz beat Russell by 0.072 seconds, while the Englishman was just 0.007secs ahead of Charles Leclerc's Ferrari.

McLaren's Lando Norris was fourth, ahead of Mercedes' Lewis Hamilton.

Sainz, whose pole was his second in a row after starting from the front in Italy, said: "We have a very good car in certain tracks and certain conditions and like one lap, and [on] this sort of [track with] short exits and quick changes in direction, our car seems to be very good this weekend.

"Like in Monza, we know our weakness is always the race pace and we always pay a price. But everyone has been doing a great job over the last couple of weekends to understand the package and understand the car and I think we are definitely making a bit of progress."

Haas driver Kevin Magnussen beat Fernando Alonso's Aston Martin to sixth place, with Esteban Ocon's Alpine, Magnussen's team-mate Nico Hulkenberg and Alpha Tauri's Liam Lawson completing the top 10.
 
Maybe Verstappen's run of wins will finally come to an end, on a track with little overtaking.
 
BREAKING: Lance Stroll will not participate in Sunday's race in Singapore

Aston Martin say Lance is "still sore" following a high-impact crash in qualifying
 

Ferrari's Carlos Sainz triumphs in thriller as Red Bull's winning run ends​


Carlos Sainz won the Singapore Grand Prix with a controlled drive for Ferrari that ended Max Verstappen and Red Bull's winning run.

Sainz managed the race expertly from the front while Verstappen fought back to fifth place after starting in 11th on a difficult weekend for Red Bull.

Sainz led McLaren's Lando Norris and Mercedes' Lewis Hamilton nose to tail across the line after George Russell crashed out of third place on the last lap.

Russell and Hamilton gambled on a late pit stop for fresh tyres and charged back up to Sainz and Norris but could not pass before Russell's late error.

It was a dramatic climax to an intriguing race that ebbed and flowed throughout its close to two-hour running time, with a safety car, a virtual safety car and some close racing through the field, a fitting event to mark the ending of Verstappen's all-time record of 10 consecutive victories.

Sainz's second win for Ferrari after last year's British Grand Prix was the first time a Red Bull had failed to win since Russell won the penultimate race of last season in Brazil.

"We nailed the weekend, we nailed the race and we did everything we had to do, and we did it perfect," said Sainz. "We brought home P1 and I'm sure the whole of Italy and the whole of Ferrari are going to be proud and happy today.

"I felt under control, I always felt like I had the head-space and the pace in hand to do whatever I wanted to do. I'm over the moon right now."

Ferrari had clearly entered the race determined to deliver the win, and pull every strategic game they could to do so, sacrificing Sainz's team-mate Charles Leclerc on the way.

Leclerc, who qualified third, was the only driver in the top 10 on the grid to start on soft tyres and the move paid off as he passed Russell off the line to make it a Ferrari one-two in the opening laps.

Sainz controlled the pace, as is typical for a leader in Singapore, while Leclerc was asked by Ferrari to back up the rest of the field and give his team-mate a five-second lead.

Leclerc did not quite do that, staying within a second of Sainz for 10 laps or so, and then dropping back to about three seconds away. But he certainly helped Sainz significantly when a safety car was deployed on lap 20 after Logan Sargeant broke his front wing by running wide into a wall and dragged debris around the track as he returned to the pits.

Leclerc backed off on that lap, holding up the cars behind him, and Sainz was nine seconds in front by the time he led the field into the pits at the end of the lap.

It worked a treat for Sainz, who returned to the track in the lead, but left Leclerc vulnerable, and he dropped behind Russell, Norris and Lewis Hamilton before returning to the track because Ferrari had to hold him before releasing him from the pits as traffic passed by.

At the restart, Sainz was leading Verstappen, who had vaulted up the field by not stopping under the safety car, but the world champion's old hard tyres left him vulnerable and he soon tumbled back down the field.

Russell, now sitting behind Sainz, made it clear he knew the Ferrari driver was managing his pace, and that this was to stop Mercedes making another pit stop and deploying the fresh set of medium tyres they alone among the teams had saved for the race.

But when Esteban Ocon's Alpine stopped in the pit-lane exit on lap 43, the virtual safety car was deployed and Mercedes pulled the trigger, stopping both Russell and Hamilton for those fresh medium tyres.

Russell rejoined in fourth place, just over 15 seconds behind Leclerc, with Hamilton in fifth close behind him.

Russell caught and passed Leclerc on lap 54, and then set off after Norris and Sainz up front, with Hamilton now right behind him and apparently even faster.

With five laps to go, the top four were nose to tail, and Sainz deliberately slowed to give Norris the benefit of the DRS and make it harder for the Mercedes to pass him.

On lap 59, with three to go, Russell had a run on Norris towards Turn 16, the final chicane, but the McLaren driver managed to cut off his attack.

Russell never got quite as close again and there was late drama as he crashed at Turn 10 on the final lap, catching the wall with his outside front wheel on the entry, and Sainz led Norris and Hamilton across the line, the three separated by only 1.2 seconds.

"It's heartbreaking after such a great weekend," an emotional Russell said after the race. "Qualifying was great, the race was great, we were bold with the strategy but I feel like I've let myself and the team down, it's tough but we will come back."

Verstappen salvages decent result from frustrating weekend​


Verstappen went into the race on hard tyres, aiming to run a long first stint and hope to leapfrog cars in front as they made their pit stops.

He had worked his way up from 11th to eighth within a few laps before getting stuck behind a battle between Aston Martin's Fernando Alonso and Ocon.

Staying out vaulted him up to second behind Sainz at the first safety car - and perhaps could even have given him the lead had Leclerc not backed up the field.

But he soon dropped back again and when he finally stopped on lap 40 for fresh tyres he fell to 15th.

But he stayed patient and picked off slower cars in front of him on his fresher tyres, and by the closing laps was putting pressure on Leclerc, but just ran out of time to try to pass.

Verstappen now leads team-mate Sergio Perez by 151 points, which means he cannot win the title in Japan next weekend, as he would need to leave that race 180 points in front to do so, and only a maximum of 26 are available.

Hamilton's third place vaults him up to third in the championship, 10 points ahead of Alonso, who had a difficult race in Singapore.

The Spaniard earned a five-second penalty for crossing the pit-entry line at a first pit stop, then was passed by Ocon while trying to overtake Perez mid-race.

Aston Martin gambled on a late stop for soft tyres under the virtual safety car but Alonso ran wide at Turn 14 when he rejoined and ended up finishing 15th and last.

Behind Verstappen, Alpine's Pierre Gasly benefited from the problems of Ocon and Alonso to take sixth, ahead of the McLaren of Oscar Piastri and Perez.

New Zealander Liam Lawson continued his impressive series of performances since he was drafted in at Alpha Tauri to replace Daniel Ricciardo after the Australian broke his hand during the Dutch Grand Prix weekend.

Lawson took a strong ninth place, despite losing a couple of places at the start after making it into the top 10 on the grid for the first time.

Haas driver Kevin Magnussen pitted for fresh tyres under the VSC and fought back to take the final point in 10th place, despite losing a series of places by running off track at Turn Five in a hectic battle mid-race.

 
Singapore Grand Prix: 'Turning point? No, but Singapore was fun while it lasted'

Red Bull finally faltered at the Singapore Grand Prix, and it was Carlos Sainz and Ferrari who stepped forward and grabbed the win that the opposition has felt for most of this year might never come.

Sainz led from start to finish and did not put a foot wrong, but this was far from an easy win, in a race that demonstrated what has long been clear - what a spectacle Formula 1 would be this year if Red Bull were taken out of the picture.

Sainz crossed the line with McLaren's Lando Norris and Lewis Hamilton's Mercedes right on his tail. On the final lap, George Russell, who not long before had looked like winning after a bold strategy call, crashed out of third place.


BBC
 
Charles Leclerc says Ferrari's 2024 F1 car project is 'very different' from their 2023 challenger

Charles Leclerc says Ferrari's 2024 F1 car will be "very different" from their 2023 challenger and hopes recent learnings about the SF23's weaknesses will ensure next year's car is more successful.

After a season blighted by inconsistency and Leclerc and team-mate Carlos Sainz struggling to get a handle on their 2023 car, Ferrari have had an upturn in form in the last two races.

On Sunday, Sainz won in Singapore to deliver Ferrari their first win since the 2022 Austrian GP and that came on the back of a third and fourth-placed finish for him and Leclerc at the Italian GP.

Leclerc hopes the recent learning and further tests the team can do in the remaining seven races of this season will ensure Ferrari hit the ground running in 2024.

"We learnt plenty during Monza especially about our weaknesses," Leclerc said in the build-up to the Singapore GP weekend.

"After Monza we understood more things which are good for this year even though it will be a small step in the right direction but mostly for designing next year's car which is positive.

"First of all the 2024 project is very different to the car we have this year. And with everything we've learnt so far it reaffirms that it's a good choice what we've gone for next year.

"The more we learn, the better it is for doing the last few details for next year's car. It's super important and it was really good to understand that before the end of the season as we still have quite a few races so we can maybe push a bit more in that direction.

"There were things we tested in Monza to make sure that it was really the case, and it was. So Zandvoort and Monza we learnt a lot and that is good for this year even though I don't think it will turn our season around, for sure not. It's a good step forwards and for next year this is a really good step forwards.

"It will be easy to say that we've understood everything now. We understood good things in the last few races, whether this is all or not it's difficult to say until we've actually achieved our development programme and confirmed it was that. So I'm not confident this is everything we had to find to close the gap to Red Bull but it's a step in the right direction for sure."

 
Japanese Grand Prix: Lewis Hamilton expects Red Bull to bounce back

Lewis Hamilton will be convinced "something's up" if Red Bull are not back at their normal level at this weekend's Japanese Grand Prix.

Red Bull failed to win for the first time all year last weekend in Singapore, where Carlos Sainz triumphed for Ferrari.

Hamilton said: "I would think if they are not 30 seconds ahead like they have been in the past then something's up.

"It was a difficult weekend, the last one, but their car should be phenomenal here. They have been phenomenal all year."

Red Bull's Max Verstappen, who finished fifth in Singapore, believes his team will face a challenge from McLaren at the demanding, high-speed Suzuka circuit, a favourite with all the drivers.

"It should be a good track for us," Verstappen said, "but McLaren have been making great gains and they are normally quite good in the high-speed as well. So they can be quite strong here, I think."

Asked whether he thought McLaren could challenge Red Bull in Japan, championship leader Verstappen said: "Yeah, I think so."

He added: "I definitely see them very competitive."

Verstappen praised the progress McLaren have made since starting the season with one of the slowest cars on the grid.

"It is quite impressive to see where they started and where they are now," he said.

 

FIA admits to Verstappen F1 Singapore GP penalty mistake​


The FIA has admitted to Formula 1 teams that the controversial decision to give a reprimand to Max Verstappen for an impeding incident in Singapore Grand Prix qualifying was a mistake.

It has confirmed that the Dutchman should have received the standard three-place grid penalty for one of his two impeding offences, which would have dropped him from 11th to 14th on the final grid.

The FIA has also promised that the Singapore decisions will not be used as precedent and will in effect be erased from the database of past incidents that stewards refer to when making calls.

Verstappen was the subject of three impeding investigations in Singapore, including one for getting in the way of Yuki Tsunoda on the track, another for blocking Logan Sargeant, and a third for waiting at the end of the pitlane with a queue of cars behind him when trying to create a gap.

In the event he escaped sanction for the Sargeant incident and received reprimands for holding up Tsunoda and for waiting in the pitlane.

The fact that he hadn’t received a radio message regarding Tsunoda was regarded as mitigating circumstances, and the team was fined €5000.

The decisions came as a surprise to rival teams and drivers as qualifying impeding incidents have traditionally led to grid penalties, with several team representatives visiting the stewards to discuss the matter.

In the immediate aftermath of qualifying even Verstappen himself expected to receive at least one grid penalty, and he took full responsibility for the Tsunoda incident.

Asked about it by Autosport, the Dutchman said: "Yeah, that was not good. I didn't see him because I was on the radio talking about what was the problem.

“And then I didn't get a call up until he was basically behind me. It basically sums up my qualifying, it was just super hectic and messy."

Pierre Gasly, who received two three-place impeding penalties in Spain, was one of many who were left confused by the outcome.

“I’ve had tough decisions against me, with a six-place penalty in Barcelona this year for impeding, and it was definitely way less than what I’ve seen yesterday,” he said after the Singapore race. “Maybe now this is allowed. I don’t know, I’ll ask.”

Lando Norris was another driver who didn't understand the reprimand decisions.

“I think there should just be harsher penalties for blocking people, because so many people do it," he said in Japan on Thursday. "It ruins your lap it ruins your qualifying, it put Yuki out in qualifying, and he was P1 in Q1.

“Just no one seems to care enough. And it's happened a lot this season, it's happened to me quite a few times, especially with certain teams.”

The subject came up in Friday’s team managers’ meeting in Suzuka, and steward Matteo Perini – who served in Singapore and is providing continuity in Japan – admitted that on review the on-track reprimand decision handed to Verstappen should have been a grid penalty.

In addition, Sargeant should have probably had a penalty for a separate incident involving Lance Stroll, although there were other circumstances in his case.

Perini confirmed the Verstappen calls would not be used as precedent in the future, and also that a lack of radio warning on approaching cars should not be given as mitigating circumstances that protect the driver from a harder punishment.

Regarding the Verstappen pitlane incident, the Singapore stewards still back their original decision to give a reprimand as waiting in the pitlane is not expressly banned in the rules - but they have told the FIA there should be a regulation that covers such circumstances.

Although the teams and drivers now have clarity, they may also question the fact that Verstappen started three places higher in Singapore than he should have, and thus potentially denied rivals valuable points, with an easier climb to his eventual fifth place finish.

 
Japanese GP Starting Grid:

1) Max Verstappen

2) Oscar Piastri

3) Lando Norris

4) Charles Leclerc

5) Sergio Perez

6) Carlos Sainz

7) Lewis Hamilton

8) George Russell

9) Yuki Tsunoda

10) Fernando Alonso

11) Liam Lawson

12) Pierre Gasly

13) Alex Albon

14) Esteban Ocon

15) Kevin Magnussen

16) Valtteri Bottas

17) Lance Stroll

18) Nico Hulkenberg

19) Zhou Guanyu

20) Logan Sargeant
 
Japanese Grand Prix: Max Verstappen wins as Red Bull take constructors' title

Red Bull's Max Verstappen dominated the Japanese Grand Prix to take his 13th victory of the year and help his team clinch the constructors' title.

The Dutchman fended off the McLarens of Oscar Piastri and Lando Norris at the first two corners and then motored away into a race of his own.

Norris passed Piastri after he had to back off for Verstappen's defence and went on to secure second place.

Piastri followed him home in third for his first podium in his debut season.

The McLaren drivers had to pass Mercedes' George Russell after the final pit stops as the Briton tried a rare one-stop strategy after an early hectic and feisty battle with team-mate Lewis Hamilton.

Russell's gamble failed to pay off - after the McLarens passed him, both into Turn One, he was then passed by Ferrari's Charles Leclerc for fourth with a lovely move around the outside of Turns One and Two.

In the closing laps, Russell also lost out to Hamilton and Ferrari's Carlos Sainz and dropped down to seventh, with Hamilton fifth and Sainz sixth.

It was all window-dressing compared to the imperious Verstappen, though, who was once again in a league of his own, his driving justifying the quality of one of the greatest racing cars ever built as Red Bull clinched a second constructors' championship in a row and a sixth in all.

Verstappen is now likely to win the drivers' title at the next race in Qatar, quite possibly in Saturday's sprint race.

As long as Perez does not score six more points than Verstappen in the sprint at Losail, the Dutchman will be champion for a third time.​
BBC
 

Aston Martin: Jessica Hawkins becomes first woman to test F1 car since 2018​


Britain's Jessica Hawkins has become the first woman in almost five years to test a Formula 1 car.

Aston Martin announced on Tuesday that Hawkins completed 26 laps in their 2021 car at the Hungaroring near Budapest last Thursday.

The former W Series racer, 28, alternated in the car with test and reserve driver Felipe Drugovich.

"It's taken me every bit of blood, sweat and tears to get here," said Hawkins.

"I've had to keep it secret for months now, which was pretty hard. It's been absolutely worth it and it's given me really valuable insight."

The most recent woman to test an F1 car was Colombia's Tatiana Calderon with Sauber - now Alfa Romeo - at the Hermanos Rodriguez track in Mexico City in October 2018.

Susie Wolff is the last woman to compete in a practice session, in 2015, while a female driver has not started a grand prix since Italian Lella Lombardi in 1976.

Hawkins, a former British karting champion and a stunt driver in James Bond movie 'No Time To Die', joined Aston Martin as a driver ambassador in 2021.

She said: "Nothing will compare to the acceleration and braking of a Formula 1 car and, having looked at the data, I'm really proud of my performance.

"I'll keep pushing for more and, in the process, I want to inspire other women and let them know they should follow their dream no matter what it is."

Aston Martin team principal Mike Krack said: "We were really impressed by Jessica's preparation for the test - she worked incredibly hard with our simulator team and that made it an easy decision to put her in the AMR21.

"Jessica approached the opportunity with great maturity; she was up to speed quickly and found a nice rhythm."

 

Mark Gallagher has suggested that Max Verstappen is likely to beat Lewis Hamilton at F1's first "billion-dollar" driver​


Here is what he had to say recently while talking at GP Racing podcast.

“Regarding Max being potentially the first billion-dollar Formula 1 driver in terms of his career earnings, the reason I say that is because you really don’t need to sit in front of a calculator for very long to work out that, if he’s already been in Formula 1 since the age of 17, even if you put in a sort of relatively modest trajectory in terms of his salary, he’s already well into nine figures – hundreds of millions of dollars of income during his career to date,” he said.

“He’s got a very long way to go, potentially. This is one of the interesting things about Max saying he may not stick around that long, because he certainly doesn’t need to stick around in order to make serious money. He’s already made serious money, and he will make serious money over the balance of his Red Bull contract until 2028.

“But the fact is that, if he decides, ‘okay, I’ll do a [Lewis] Hamilton or I’ll do an [Fernando] Alonso, and I’ll stay until I’m 38 or 40’, I mean, all bets are off. His career earnings will just continue to rocket.

“What you say regarding the deals that he has, the deals that he has are not stratospheric, they’re not Nike NBA-style personal endorsement deals, but they are still significant. When you start to add them up, if you’ve got 1.5 million here or 2 million there, and this is on top of your salary, you can see that he’s reached a point where, I mean, it’s no wonder he looks so relaxed about everything in his life. He’s literally in the class of his own.”

“People who are not diehard Max fans will say to me, they find him not easy to engage with as a casual viewer – people see him as a little bit of an an automaton, you know, he turns up, he does the job. He says the right things. There’s not much more to it,”

“That’s often given to me as kind of a criticism of Max that maybe he doesn’t have the Lewis Hamilton stardom. But, of course, the Lewis Hamilton stardom is also interesting in that some people really love it and some people really don’t like it. Some people will say, ‘oh, what’s with the Lewis Hamilton fashion show each weekend?’

“I have to say more people than the critics say to me ‘isn’t it fantastic the way Lewis has picked just being his own man?’ and how he clearly enjoys all the other things that he does beyond Formula 1, including his love of fashion and music.

“Max is much simpler. I spoke to a few people inside Red Bull, both the F1 team and the broader company. One of the people I spoke to is David Coulthard. David travels to the races with Max. They travel from Monaco together and David gave me a little bit of background on their relationship, which is really interesting.

“David tells me that what you see with Max is exactly what you get. He is totally driven by just being a racing driver. He doesn’t want to do anything else. He doesn’t want to have huge outside interests, his interests outside of Formula 1 racing is more racing, be it in driving another car somewhere else or be it with his sim racing. So he’s just interested in racing. That’s it. That’s where his interest lies.

“In some ways, he is diametrically the opposite of Lewis, his way of switching off from F1 is to immerse himself in music and fashion. Max can’t operate, and doesn’t want to operate, on that basis. He doesn’t want to switch off from racing, because he loves racing too much. That’s literally what he most enjoys doing. So it’s a much more straightforward personality in that respect. Not that multi-dimensional.

“Maybe that’s one of the reasons why some people find Max too much of an automaton, there’s not much more to him than what you see.”

“I don’t think Max is worried about his marketability, globally,” he said.

“I don’t think his manager is worried about his marketability globally, because his career and things are outstanding. He’s got his endorsement contracts, there will be more, he is obviously a total superstar at home in the Netherlands.

“It’s impossible to go into almost any store of any kind and not find someone using a Max Verstappen point-of-sale display, be it Red Bull, be it Jumbo Supermarkets, or any number of other brands in the Netherlands who have somehow tapped into him through partnerships, etc.

“At home in the Netherlands, he is every bit the superstar there as Lewis Hamilton is in the UK, possibly even more so if I may say so and that’s only because Lewis has a lot of competition from a lot of other top sports stars here in the UK, plus you’ve got Premiership football here.

“Whereas in the Netherlands, Max is it. So you go into a filling station and you’ve got a giant cut-out of Max Verstappen greeting you. He is, in Max Verstappen world, achieving everything he wants to achieve, ticking every box in terms of financial reward.
 
Qatar Grand Prix: Lewis Hamilton says Max Verstappen has done 'exceptional job'

Lewis Hamilton has praised Max Verstappen for doing "an exceptional job" as the Red Bull driver stands on the brink of a third consecutive title.

Verstappen will win the Formula 1 drivers' championship in Saturday's sprint race in Qatar as long as team-mate Sergio Perez does not score at least six more points than him.

Hamilton said: "Max has been faultless and no-one can take that away from him.

"He has done an amazing job with the package he has."

Ahead of Verstappen's expected coronation this weekend, Hamilton added: "He and the team have been phenomenal. They've raised the bar."

The winner of the sprint - a shorter race than a grand prix of about half an hour - earns eight points, with a sliding scale down to one point for eighth.

Verstappen will be champion once again if he finishes at least sixth in the sprint, no matter what Perez does.

There is no avoiding that fact for Verstappen, but he is focused simply on winning this weekend.

The Dutchman, who has won 13 of the 16 races held so far this season, said: "We are having an amazing year and we just come into this weekend and want to win again.

"And of course I know if I win or whatever on Saturday I win the championship, but we are just very focused on the main job."

Verstappen said he had no feelings either way as to whether winning it in a sprint race would be an anti-climax.

"If it's Saturday or Sunday, I don't think it matters a lot," Verstappen said. "It's always nice to win it at the first possible opportunity.

"To win three championships in a row is never easy. You need a very good car, but I always try to be consistent and not to have too many mistakes.

"The car is in a really great window, except Singapore [last month], but all the other races it was really nice to drive. But it is still easy when driving on the limit to make mistakes and that is what I try to eliminate."

Verstappen was also lauded by a series of his rivals.

Perez, who has won just two races, said: "Max has done a tremendous job. He has driven on another level compared to anyone else."

Aston Martin's Fernando Alonso added: "An incredible season, breaking so many records, and when you win so many races - and they were not easy races, sometimes they were tricky with weather conditions we went through, June, July all the races were hit by rain - and when you make no mistakes and deliver the job every weekend, it is big respect."

McLaren's Lando Norris said: "He delivers on every area and that is not something every driver is able to do.

"For him to performance at 100%, 100% of the time is the difficult thing. He has said he is not the biggest fan of street circuits; that's generally where Sergio has been closer to him. But you would say he doesn't have any weaknesses. He has done an amazing job. He deserves it and so do Red Bull."

 

Verstappen quickest as tricky conditions hit Qatar practice​


Max Verstappen unsurprisingly set the leading time in the opening practice session ahead of this weekend’s Qatar Grand Prix, albeit with the hour-long run causing a cacophony of problems.

For the latest sprint weekend, with FP1 the only test bed ahead of qualifying later today, Verstappen was comfortably fastest with a lap of one minute 27.428s around the Lusail International Circuit, finishing 0.334s ahead of Ferrari’s Carlos Sainz.

Those times came at the end of what proved to be a very tricky session for all concerned.

One of the problems for the drivers initially were the clouds of dust and sand being kicked up by the 20 cars as they took to the pit lane

Aside from being on the outskirts of the capital Doha, and therefore in a considerably deserted area, in the weeks building up to this event the paddock area was a construction site as a new pit and paddock complex has been built to bring the venue up to date.

At one stage early on, it prompted Sainz, referencing his father’s rallying exploits, to quip: “Yeah, my dad would do quick in these conditions.”

In addition, the drivers also had to acclimatise to a newly resurfaced circuit, with Verstappen commenting after a couple of laps “Oh my God! This is so slippery.”

Throughout the session, there were numerous off-track moments, not least caused by severe gusts of wind, two of which were from the two-time champion who can clinch a third consecutive title this weekend.

A setting sun, creating visibility issues, and searing temperatures of 35 degrees Celsius further added to the difficulties faced by those on track who only had an hour to get up to speed before facing qualifying under the lights and, therefore, significantly different conditions.

For instance, track temperature at the start of the session was 45.5 degrees Celsius, and by the close, with the sun almost set, was down to 38.

Appreciably, though, the opening laps from all concerned were gingerly bearing in mind the leading time in first practice from F1’s maiden visit two years ago was 1:23.273s from Verstappen.

It resulted in the lead changing hands on numerous occasions, with Verstappen, George Russell, Lewis Hamilton and Fernando Alonso all leading the way in the opening 20 minutes, but considerably off the pace on the hard compound tyres.

Russell was the first to dip below 90 seconds around a 16-turn track where a driver is on full throttle for 75 percent of the lap.

As the circuit conditions improved, so the lap times tumbled, with Charles Leclerc initially shaving seven-tenths of a second off Russell’s lap, although the Monégasque’s lead lasted just seconds, however, as Alonso soon set a 1:28.624s.

On his return to the pits there appeared to be a misfire on Leclerc’s Ferrari as he commented: “Oh, that didn’t sound good. What happened there?”, to which the team responded that they would get back to him. It is understood there was a software issue.

Of the leading drivers from one of the top-five teams, Sainz was the first to venture out on the medium compound, but still finished 0.442s behind Alonso’s time that held firm until, with just over 20 minutes remaining, Piastri set a 1:28.380s on the hard tyres, shaving 0.244s off the Spaniard’s pace.

McLaren team-mate Lando Norris, who had ploughed through a polystyrene speed board early on after going off track, came within 0.061s of Piastri to split the Australian and Alonso.

Five minutes later, Leclerc went quickest with a 1:28.104s, albeit on the medium Pirellis before Williams’ Alex Albon became the first to venture out on the soft rubber with 13 minutes remaining, only to venture off track at Turn 4, forcing him to abort the lap.

On his second push lap, Albon again lost his FW45 at the same corner, complaining that the “rear was not connected to the car at all “, that there was “zero accommodation”.

Showing Albon the way to go on the soft tyres, Haas’ Nico Hulkenberg then leaped up the leaderboard to sit 0.067s behind Leclerc.

On his first push lap on medium tyres, Alonso reclaimed top spot with a 1:27.919s, albeit momentarily as the soft-shod Verstappen went quicker by almost half a second with a time that proved to be the best of all.

Behind Sainz, Leclerc finished third overall, followed by Alonso with a fine time on the medium tyres. The two-time champion was the only one of the top seven on the yellow-banded rubber.

Sergio Perez was fifth ahead of AlphaTauri’s Yuki Tsunoda and Hulkenberg, with Russell eighth, then Piastri and Norris, neither of whom tested either the medium or soft tyres.

The Williams duo of Logan Sargeant and Albon were next up, both just over a second off the pace, followed by Hamilton.

On his maiden outing around the circuit, and ahead of what is expected to be his final race weekend before being replaced by Daniel Ricciardo for the next event in Austin, Liam Lawson could only manage 19th quickest in his AlphaTauri, with only Kevin Magnussen in his Haas slower, the Dane two seconds down on Verstappen, despite being on the soft tyres.

 
Qatar Grand Prix: Max Verstappen on pole position as F1 title looms

Max Verstappen stormed to pole position at the Qatar Grand Prix and needed only one run in the final qualifying session to achieve it.

Mercedes drivers George Russell and Lewis Hamilton were promoted to second and third after penalties for McLaren's Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri.

Norris and Piastri had been second and fourth, sandwiching Russell, but lost their times for exceeding track limits.

Aston Martin's Fernando Alonso starts fourth.

Ferrari's Charles Leclerc will line up fifth, while team-mate Carlos Sainz failed to make it through to the top 10 shootout.

The qualifying session set the grid for the grand prix on Sunday, by which time the most consequential result of the weekend may already have occurred.

Saturday is devoted to the sprint event, with a qualifying session followed by a short race, and this could result in champion-elect Verstappen being crowned.

Verstappen will clinch the title as long as he does not lose six points or more to Red Bull team-mate Sergio Perez in an event that awards eight points to the winner and then a sliding scale down to one point for eighth.

That matter was on the backburner on Friday, and as well as the strife for Sainz there was another big scalp in the second qualifying session, when Perez was eliminated.



 
Red Bull's Max Verstappen clinched a third world title by finishing second in a chaotic and incident-packed sprint race at the Qatar Grand Prix.

Three safety cars triggered by a series of accidents and collisions created a dramatic spectacle under the lights at the Lusail circuit won by McLaren's Oscar Piastri.

Verstappen fought back after dropping from third on the grid to fifth on the first lap but could not quite catch Piastri.

McLaren's Lando Norris passed Mercedes' George Russell late on to take third.

Verstappen's championship success was effectively confirmed when his team-mate Sergio Perez was taken out in a three-way collision also involving Alpine's Esteban Ocon and Haas driver Nico Hulkenberg.

Verstappen had only to ensure he did not lose more than five points to the Mexican to secure the title so Perez's retirement made the Dutchman champion regardless of his eventual result.

Verstappen said to his team over the radio: "I don't know what to say. Incredible year. Thank you for providing me with such a car. It has been a pleasure so far this year."

The incident that took out Perez - triggered when Ocon moved across on Hulkenberg, who had Perez on his outside - brought out the third safety car and set up a five-lap race to the finish.

BBC
 
Lando Norris admits 'hurt' over mistakes as McLaren team-mate Oscar Piastri claims Qatar GP Sprint victory

Lando Norris admitted he had been left "hurt" after mistakes saw him miss out on a maiden Formula 1 Sprint victory as his McLaren team-mate Oscar Piastri triumphed in Qatar.

Norris, considered perhaps the biggest talent on the grid without a race or Sprint victory, has spearheaded McLaren's stunning resurgence, finishing second in four of the last seven Grand Prix.

However, presented with a car capable of challenging for victory at the Losail International Circuit, an error in Saturday's Sprint shootout and a poor start to the shortened race cost Norris the chance to break his duck, as he ultimately finished third behind Piastri and Red Bull's Max Verstappen, who sealed the world championship.

The 23-year-old insisted that it was his own errors, rather than his rookie team-mate's maiden victory, that had left him feeling low ahead of Sunday's race, which he will start from 10th after twice exceeding track limits in the final part of qualifying on Friday.

"It's never the nicest feeling, but it's not what hurts me," Norris said. "It just hurts me that I've messed up this morning, I should be on pole, and should at least be P1 and P2 yesterday for the race tomorrow.

"So I guess it's just when it counts, this is a weekend when it counts, and I've just made too many mistakes. And it just annoys me to such a high level.

"I guess some of it's about trying to reset and refocus and not think of it, but it's impossible for me to not think of it, you know, so just frustrating.

"But Oscar's done a better job than me this weekend, and he deserves to be in the position he has done today. I'm starting where I deserve to be because I've just done a bad job, you know?

"So it is frustrating, especially when the car is so good and the team have done such a good job to improve so many things and give us these chances to fight for pole and to fight for wins.

"And then just when I don't deliver on my role, it's frustrating and I let myself down.

"So it's tough, but to come away with the double podium today kind of makes it a little bit better and therefore I'm just very happy for the team.

"https://www.skysports.com/f1/news/1...-oscar-piastri-claims-qatar-gp-sprint-victory
 
BREAKING NEWS: Carlos Sainz will not take part in the Qatar Grand Prix due to a fuel system issue on his car
 
Qatar Grand Prix: Max Verstappen wins as Lewis Hamilton and George Russell collide

Mercedes drivers Lewis Hamilton and George Russell collided at the start before Max Verstappen went on to dominate the Qatar Grand Prix.

The crash caused Hamilton's retirement and dropped Russell to the back of the field, from where he fought back in impressive fashion to finish fourth.

McLaren's Oscar Piastri and Lando Norris took second and third after holding position in the final stages.

Verstappen was in total control after clinching his third title on Saturday.

The Dutchman led throughout from pole position, although he did lose the lead after his first stop, mandated by rules restricting tyre mileage as a result of safety concerns.

All the teams were restricted to a maximum of 18 laps on each set of tyres after Pirelli discovered its product was vulnerable to failure at high speed over the kerbs at the Lusail circuit.

That led to a staccato race in which it took time for the order to settle down, all drivers forced to make at least three pit stops by the tyre-mileage limits.

Williams' Alex Albon led the race after Verstappen had made his first pit stop, a situation partly influenced by an early safety car deployed to recover Hamilton's damaged Mercedes.

But as the strategies evened out over a race distance, Ferrari's Charles Leclerc took fifth place behind Verstappen, Piastri, Norris and Russell.

Leclerc capitalised on an error by Aston Martin's Fernando Alonso, who ran wide off the circuit at about half distance and lost out to the Ferrari.

Alonso, struggling with a seat that was burning him, held on for sixth ahead of Alpine's Esteban Ocon and Alfa Romeo's Valtteri Bottas.

Red Bull's Sergio Perez finished ninth on the road after starting from the pit lane following a crash in Saturday's spring, his race hampered by two five-second penalties for exceeding track limits.

But the Mexican's race was hampered by two five-second penalties for exceeding track limits, the first served at a pit stop and the second imposed at the end, demoting him to 10th behind Alfa Romeo's Zhou Guanyu.


BBC
 
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Qatar Grand Prix: Drivers feel the heat during 'brutal' race

Formula 1 drivers said conditions in Sunday's Qatar Grand Prix were "beyond the limit" and "too extreme".

A number of drivers needed medical attention for either dehydration or heat exhaustion after a race run in high temperatures and humidity.

And Alpine driver Esteban Ocon said he had vomited in his helmet.

Mercedes driver George Russell said: "It was an absolutely brutal race, by far the most physical I have ever experienced. I felt close to fainting."

Russell added he had "never experienced anything like that before".

Williams driver Logan Sergeant retired because he could not cope with conditions any longer.

The team said he had later been "cleared by the medical team on-site after suffering from intense dehydration during the race (having been) weakened by having flu-like symptoms earlier in the week".

The American's team-mate Alex Albon was taken to the medical centre and treated for acute heat exposure. He, too, was assessed and cleared by the medical team.

Aston Martin's Lance Stroll sought out an ambulance to receive treatment for dehydration and many drivers lay down in the garage of governing body the FIA after the race as they sought to recover.

The race was held in temperatures of more than 30C with high levels of humidity on a track with many high-speed corners.

The decision to limit stint lengths to just 18 laps because of safety concerns about the tyres exacerbated the situation as it meant drivers were pushing harder than usual. F1 grands prix have been generally defined by tyre management since Pirelli became the supplier in 2011.

Red Bull's Max Verstappen, who won his third world title on Saturday and followed it up with victory in the grand prix, said: "These kind of temperatures are just too extreme.

"When I saw the weather before I came here, I wasn't looking forward to it. It has nothing to do with more training; some of the guys struggling are extremely fit and probably fitter than me.

"The whole day you walk around (like you are) in the sauna and then in the night the humidity goes up.

"But there are a few places like that. Singapore is like a two-hour race and it's very warm and it's on the limit of what should be allowed. It was way too hot."

 
FIA to look at F1 calendar changes after Qatar GP

The FIA says it will look into calendar changes and other measures in Formula 1 to deal with extreme weather following the Qatar Grand Prix.

Some drivers needed medical attention after a race run in temperatures of more than 30C and high humidity.

Alpine driver Esteban Ocon said he had vomited in his helmet.

"They should not be expected to compete under conditions that could jeopardise their health or safety," said motorsport's governing body.

Mercedes driver George Russell called the Qatar GP "brutal" and said he "felt close to fainting", while Williams driver Logan Sargeant retired because he could not cope with conditions any longer.


BBC
 
Formula 1 has selected Pirelli as the exclusive tyre supplier to the World Championship and Global Tyre Partner until 2027, with an option to extend for an additional year.
 
Formula 1 drivers' union boss says every team should be looking at cooling seats

The head of Formula 1's drivers' organisation says the Qatar Grand Prix proved that there is a heat-related limit for the human body in the sport.

Several drivers needed medical attention after the race for either dehydration or heat exhaustion.

Meanwhile, Alpine's Esteban Ocon vomited in his helmet.

Grand Prix Drivers' Association chairman Alex Wurz said F1 must look into what needs to be done to address the issue.

"It's too easy to say: 'Here is a gym membership - get on with it,'" he said.

Wurz, speaking exclusively to BBC Sport, added: "There are multiple contributing factors which need to be understood by everyone."

He said a first step should be a study of heat effect across motorsport, and that other categories had already introduced technologies to regulate temperature, such as the cooling of drivers' seats.


 
Formula 1: McLaren to trial recycled carbon fibre at US Grand Prix

McLaren are to trial the use of recycled carbon fibre on their cars at next week's US Grand Prix.

It will be used on cockpit panels on Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri's cars.

If the experiment is a success, McLaren will continue using the material for the remainder of the 2023 season and plan to expand its use in future years.

Recycled carbon fibre (rCF) offers a number of environmental benefits, including a 90% reduction in lifecycle carbon emissions, McLaren said.

"The potential future applications of rCF are hugely exciting," McLaren chief operating officer Piers Thynne said.

"It offers up to 85% of carbon fibre's original strength, making it strong enough for a variety of applications in F1 and beyond.

"We will continue to work closely with the FIA, F1 and fellow teams to help accelerate change."



 

Belgian Grand Prix secures Formula 1 calendar place until 2025​

The Belgian Grand Prix at Spa-Francorchamps will remain on the Formula 1 calendar at least until 2025 after a new contract was signed.

The deal amounts to a one-year extension on the circuit's previous deal, which ran until next season.

Spa is popular with drivers and fans because of its reputation as one of the world's most demanding tracks.

But its place on the calendar has been under threat because F1 considered the circuit facilities had become outdated.

A statement from F1 announcing the new deal emphasised the "significant development of its infrastructure in recent years".

It pointed to two new grandstands allowing for a 10,000 capacity increase, plus "a wider variety of entertainment for fans across the weekend including the addition of live music concerts".

The statement added that attendance had increased from 2022 to 2023 by 20,000 to a total of 380,000 spectators over the weekend.

However, transport in and out of the circuit remains a problem and this is an area where F1 would like to see improvements.

Traffic is a major issue over the Belgian Grand Prix weekend on the restricted access roads in the Ardennes forests around the circuit.

F1 president and chief executive officer Stefano Domenicali said: "Spa is synonymous with Formula 1 having been one of the circuits in our first ever season and is much-loved by fans and drivers alike, so I am delighted to extend our relationship with them until 2025.

"The promoter has taken big strides in the last few years to improve the fan experience and infrastructure, and work is ongoing between all the stakeholders with a clear focus on delivering safe and exciting racing."

Despite its storied history, which dates back to 1925, the Belgian Grand Prix at Spa remains one of the European events most threatened by potential calendar expansion.

Consideration has been given in recent years to alternating its place on the schedule with the Dutch Grand Prix at Zandvoort.

However, F1's inability to secure a satisfactory deal for the return of the South African Grand Prix has taken some of the pressure off its place on the calendar.

 
I actually like the Spa track and happy to see that it is going to be a part of F1 circuit until 2025.
 
F1: Lance Stroll apologises to FIA over behaviour at Qatar GP

Aston Martin driver Lance Stroll has apologised to motorsport's governing body for his behaviour after qualifying at last weekend's F1 Qatar Grand Prix.

Stroll threw his steering wheel out of his car and shoved his trainer out of the way after qualifying 16th.

The 24-year-old was under investigation by the FIA's compliance officer for potentially breaking F1 rules.

An FIA spokesperson said the compliance officer had received an apology and issued an official warning to Stroll.

An FIA statement said: "The compliance officer has noted this apology and issued a written warning, reminding Lance of his responsibilities as a competitor bound by the FIA Code of Ethics and other FIA ethical and conduct guidelines set forth by the sporting regulations.

"The FIA maintains a zero-tolerance stance against misconduct and condemns any actions that may lead to physical harassment."

Stroll's actions in Qatar came after he had been knocked out during the first session of qualifying, in which he lapped 1.122 seconds slower than team-mate Fernando Alonso.

The Spanish two-time world champion went on to qualify fourth for the grand prix, continuing his streak of consistent dominance over his Canadian colleague.

It was the fifth consecutive weekend in which Stroll had been knocked out of qualifying after the first session.

Stroll then used an expletive in a monosyllabic TV interview afterwards, in which he said just seven words in response to three questions. The interview was not part of the FIA's investigation, BBC Sport understands.

Later in the weekend, Stroll admitted to being "in a rut and it's not getting better", and said he "hated having a bad day".

Stroll has out-qualified Alonso only twice all year and his average lap-time deficit to the former Alpine driver is the largest between any pair of team-mates on the grid.

Alonso, who is fourth in the championship behind only Red Bull drivers Max Verstappen and Sergio Perez and Mercedes' Lewis Hamilton, has scored nearly four times as many points as Stroll, who is only 10th.

All seven of the podium finishes Aston Martin have recorded this season have been earned by Alonso.

Aston Martin are owned by Stroll's father, the Canadian businessman Lawrence Stroll.

 
George Russell can't be 'nice guy' in Lewis Hamilton battle, says Nico Rosberg

George Russell "can't just be the nice guy" in his battle with Mercedes team-mate Lewis Hamilton, Nico Rosberg has told the Sky Sports F1 Podcast.

Seven-time world champion Hamilton took responsibility and apologised for causing a first-corner collision with Russell at the Qatar Grand Prix earlier in October, as their inter-team rivalry boiled over following several near misses.

With both drivers contracted to the team until the end of the 2026 season, the pair maintaining a positive relationship is likely to be a crucial factor in Mercedes' hopes of ending Red Bull's dominant streak.

Rosberg, who drove alongside Hamilton for four seasons at Mercedes and beat the Brit in his final F1 campaign in 2016 to seal a maiden drivers' title, has warned that Russell must continue to apply pressure at all levels.

"Things have been heating up there because also in Suzuka it was well over the limit on one occasions when they both took each other off the track," Rosberg said.

"It's a very difficult situation for George as well. Unfortunately, you can't just be the nice guy in that situation - you have to also internally keep the pressure on.

"You have to make it difficult for the team, unfortunately. It sucks, but otherwise the team will always just take the easiest route.

"So it's very uncomfortable because George needs to be pushing - which he does on the radio, you hear him saying things like 'again' and things like that. So he's really trying to hold against it."

Hamilton said after the race that the incident was "100 per cent" his fault, and was also shown in a video posted on Mercedes' social media channels offering an apology and hug to Russell, who recovered from the back of the field to finish fourth.

"It was a good one in Qatar for George because Lewis actually admitted [he was wrong]," Rosberg added.

"So that was a big win for George in that sense, also internally, which is very rare because in my time Lewis never had 100 per cent fault, so he never actually had to admit in that way.

"So it's very, very rare for Lewis to be at 100 per cent fault at that, it usually never happens.

"It's to be watched. It's an interesting battle and dynamic opening out there."

 
George Russell can't be 'nice guy' in Lewis Hamilton battle, says Nico Rosberg

George Russell "can't just be the nice guy" in his battle with Mercedes team-mate Lewis Hamilton, Nico Rosberg has told the Sky Sports F1 Podcast.

Seven-time world champion Hamilton took responsibility and apologised for causing a first-corner collision with Russell at the Qatar Grand Prix earlier in October, as their inter-team rivalry boiled over following several near misses.

With both drivers contracted to the team until the end of the 2026 season, the pair maintaining a positive relationship is likely to be a crucial factor in Mercedes' hopes of ending Red Bull's dominant streak.

Rosberg, who drove alongside Hamilton for four seasons at Mercedes and beat the Brit in his final F1 campaign in 2016 to seal a maiden drivers' title, has warned that Russell must continue to apply pressure at all levels.

"Things have been heating up there because also in Suzuka it was well over the limit on one occasions when they both took each other off the track," Rosberg said.

"It's a very difficult situation for George as well. Unfortunately, you can't just be the nice guy in that situation - you have to also internally keep the pressure on.

"You have to make it difficult for the team, unfortunately. It sucks, but otherwise the team will always just take the easiest route.

"So it's very uncomfortable because George needs to be pushing - which he does on the radio, you hear him saying things like 'again' and things like that. So he's really trying to hold against it."

Hamilton said after the race that the incident was "100 per cent" his fault, and was also shown in a video posted on Mercedes' social media channels offering an apology and hug to Russell, who recovered from the back of the field to finish fourth.

"It was a good one in Qatar for George because Lewis actually admitted [he was wrong]," Rosberg added.

"So that was a big win for George in that sense, also internally, which is very rare because in my time Lewis never had 100 per cent fault, so he never actually had to admit in that way.

"So it's very, very rare for Lewis to be at 100 per cent fault at that, it usually never happens.

"It's to be watched. It's an interesting battle and dynamic opening out there."

Rosberg loving this .. haha 😄 🤣. He really disappointed me when he retired under mental stress of fighting Hamilton prime.
 
Daniel Ricciardo will make his return from injury at this weekend's United States Grand Prix in Austin, Texas.

The 34-year-old Australian has missed five grands prix since breaking a bone in his left hand in practice for the Dutch Grand Prix on 25 August.

A spokesperson for his Alpha Tauri team confirmed to BBC Sport that Ricciardo would be back in the car in Austin.

Neither Alpha Tauri nor owners Red Bull had previously officially said he would definitely be racing in the US.

Red Bull decided against having Ricciardo return for the previous event in Qatar to give his injury more time to recover, saying there was no need to take any risks.

Ricciardo said in a video posted on Instagram on Sunday after completing a show run for Red Bull in Nashville, Tennessee: "Little update: simulator's been going well, hand is feeling good to drive. Austin - everyone knows I love Austin. I wouldn't miss that one for the world. See y'all in Austin."

It will be only Ricciardo's third race since his return to the grid at the Hungarian Grand Prix in July. The eight-time winner had started the season as Red Bull's reserve driver.

Ricciardo - who was dropped by McLaren at the end of 2022, a year before the end of his contract - is already confirmed as an Alpha Tauri driver for 2024.

He was drafted in after 10 races of this season after Red Bull lost faith in Dutchman Nyck de Vries, who was signed to complete his maiden F1 season with Alpha Tauri this year but whose performances Red Bull felt did not come up to expectations.



 
United States Grand Prix: FIA quadruple maximum F1 driver fine to 1m euros

Leading Formula 1 drivers expressed shock at a decision to raise the possible fine that can be imposed on competitors to 1m euros (£871,000).

Governing body the FIA said on Thursday it was quadrupling the maximum fine stewards can impose from 250,000 euros.

"I have no idea what deserves a 1m euros penalty," said Ferrari's Charles Leclerc.

He said the rise was a "huge amount of money" and commented: "Some drivers are making less than that."



 
United States Grand Prix: Charles Leclerc takes pole position for Sunday's race

Ferrari's Charles Leclerc took pole position in a tight qualifying session in the United States Grand Prix with Max Verstappen down in sixth.

Leclerc beat McLaren's Lando Norris by 0.130 seconds with Lewis Hamilton just 0.009secs further back in third.

Verstappen went fastest with his final run, despite a mistake at the first corner, but had his lap deleted for exceeding track limits at Turn 19.

Ferrari's Carlos Sainz and Mercedes' George Russell were fourth and fifth.


 

Russell handed three-place grid penalty for Austin Sprint after impeding Leclerc in Shootout​


George Russell has been handed a three-place grid drop for the United States Grand Prix Sprint after he was adjudged by the stewards to have impeded Charles Leclerc during the Shootout in Austin.

Leclerc had been on a flying lap in SQ1 when he appeared to find Russell on the racing line on the exit of the penultimate corner, with the stewards noting the incident before later confirming they would investigate it after the session.

Having spoken to both drivers and their team representatives, and also looked at the data and video evidence available to them, the stewards found that Russell could have done more to avoid the situation, and handed him a three-place grid penalty.

This means that when Russell lines up for the Austin Sprint, he will be demoted from eighth on the grid to 11th, with Alex Albon, Pierre Gasly, and Daniel Riccardo set to be promoted up the order.

“Car 63 entered the last two corners preparing for his flying lap at the end of SQ1 with Car 16 closing in quickly,” read the steward’s statement. “Whilst the team did inform the driver about the closing car a few seconds in advance, there was no further information directly before Car 63 entered Turn 19 with Car 16 right behind.

“Car 63 did not move from the racing line in or after Turn 19 and therefore unnecessarily impeded Car 16.

“The Stewards note that irrespective of any information coming from the team, it is the driver’s responsibility to ensure that no other cars are unnecessarily impeded.”

Source: formula1.com
 
United States Grand Prix: Max Verstappen wins ahead of charging Lewis Hamilton

Max Verstappen climbed up from sixth on the grid to win the US Grand Prix after a close battle with Lewis Hamilton and Lando Norris.

Verstappen was measured, slowly picking off the cars in front of him and then holding on for his 50th career win.

Hamilton passed Norris for second in the final laps but ran out of time to catch Verstappen for the lead.

And after the race Hamilton's car was one of two referred to the stewards for potentially breaking the regulations.

His Mercedes and the Ferrari of Charles Leclerc, who finished sixth, were found to have skids in their underbody plank that did not conform to the regulations. The matter was referred to the stewards.

Before the late technical drama, Hindsight left Hamilton and Mercedes ruing a potential win had they played the strategy slightly differently.

Hamilton passed Norris for second in the final laps but ran out of time to catch Verstappen for the lead.

The Red Bull did not have the advantage it has had so often this year and Norris and Hamilton made him work for the win.

Mercedes tried to make a one-stop strategy work while Verstappen and Norris went for a two, but the decision backfired on them and cost Hamilton more time than the margin by which he eventually lost the race.

The decision forced Hamilton on to an off-set strategy, where he had to catch and pass both the McLaren and the Red Bull to win after initially losing ground.

Hamilton managed to close in and passed Norris with six laps to go to take second place.



BBC
 
Hamilton and leclerc disqualified 🤣🤣🤣...
It really seemed sus how close Hamilton boy was getting and now it gets revealed he was cheating 🤣
 
United States Grand Prix: Lewis Hamilton disqualified as Max Verstappen wins
Lewis Hamilton was disqualified from second place in the US Grand Prix after running Max Verstappen's Red Bull close for victory.

Hamilton was just two seconds behind Verstappen at the flag but his car was later declared illegal for excessive wear on the underfloor skid blocks.

Ferrari's Charles Leclerc suffered the same fate after finishing sixth.

Hamilton's disqualification promoted McLaren's Lando Norris to second and Ferrari's Carlos Sainz to third.

Verstappen was measured, slowly picking off the cars in front of him and then holding on for his 50th career win.

Hamilton passed Norris for second in the final laps but ran out of time to catch Verstappen for the lead.

 
Hamilton and leclerc disqualified 🤣🤣🤣...
It really seemed sus how close Hamilton boy was getting and now it gets revealed he was cheating 🤣
Dumbest, ignorant post ever about F1.

You sound just like Justin Trudeau.
 
Hamilton and leclerc disqualified 🤣🤣🤣...
It really seemed sus how close Hamilton boy was getting and now it gets revealed he was cheating 🤣
JT clone,

here is some information so you won't sound as ignorant next time

>>>>The stewards' verdict in Austin said that Mercedes - and Ferrari - had "stated that the high wear on the skid pads was probably a result of the unique combination of the bumpy track and the sprint-race schedule that minimised the time to set up and check the car before the race".

A glance at the on-board cameras of the cars of Hamilton and team-mate George Russell showed how much the drivers were suffering from the bumps at the Circuit of the Americas.

Russell's car was not checked by the scrutineers, incidentally, and nor was that of Leclerc's team-mate Carlos Sainz. The way FIA scrutineering works is that cars are checked at random. If a transgression is found, that does not mean that the other car in the team is then checked as well.<<<<
 
JT clone,

here is some information so you won't sound as ignorant next time

>>>>The stewards' verdict in Austin said that Mercedes - and Ferrari - had "stated that the high wear on the skid pads was probably a result of the unique combination of the bumpy track and the sprint-race schedule that minimised the time to set up and check the car before the race".

A glance at the on-board cameras of the cars of Hamilton and team-mate George Russell showed how much the drivers were suffering from the bumps at the Circuit of the Americas.

Russell's car was not checked by the scrutineers, incidentally, and nor was that of Leclerc's team-mate Carlos Sainz. The way FIA scrutineering works is that cars are checked at random. If a transgression is found, that does not mean that the other car in the team is then checked as well.<<<<
Dude, I know about F1 a bit more than a being fan of 15 years. So chill relax and listen.

Hamilton's performance was surprisingly good at Austin. And the random check proved that, while Redbull had to adjust ride height higher to account for bumps and hence stay within rules. Mercedes tried to by pass and cheat on the rules by keeping the ride height lower. The random check proved it. Mercedes brought a new upgrade to Austin and guess what .. it violates the rules. 🤣.

Even Ferrari performance was surprising, leclerc got screwed by standard Ferrari being Ferrari in strategy else he would have been among podium too.

Disqualification doesn't happen at simple silly mistakes. Ok team LH??

I hope you follow rocketpoweredmohwak's channel. 🤣🤪
 
Dude, I know about F1 a bit more than a being fan of 15 years. So chill relax and listen.

Hamilton's performance was surprisingly good at Austin. And the random check proved that, while Redbull had to adjust ride height higher to account for bumps and hence stay within rules. Mercedes tried to by pass and cheat on the rules by keeping the ride height lower. The random check proved it. Mercedes brought a new upgrade to Austin and guess what .. it violates the rules. 🤣.

Even Ferrari performance was surprising, leclerc got screwed by standard Ferrari being Ferrari in strategy else he would have been among podium too.
did you even read my post?

Not every car was checked
Disqualification doesn't happen at simple silly mistakes.
According ro the stewards who made the call that exactly what happened

>>Russell's car was not checked by the scrutineers, incidentally, and nor was that of Leclerc's team-mate Carlos Sainz.<<
I hope you follow rocketpoweredmohwak's channel.🤪
nope
 
did you even read my post?

Not every car was checked

According ro the stewards who made the call that exactly what happened

>>Russell's car was not checked by the scrutineers, incidentally, and nor was that of Leclerc's team-mate Carlos Sainz.<<

nope
Bhai, who is denying what you said. Basic fact is team LH was caught in violation and hence disqualified.
This violation had material impact on their performance, so no sympathy for Mercedes here.
 
Bhai, who is denying what you said. Basic fact is team LH was caught in violation and hence disqualified.
This violation had material impact on their performance, so no sympathy for Mercedes here.
you really sound canadian now.

how do you know all the other car's didn't have the same violation?
 
Last edited by a moderator:
you really sound canadian now.

how do you know all the other car's didn't have the same violation?
1. Did you start following f1 after drive to survive?
2. I don't get what's ur obsession with checking all cars. Hamilton got caught in the random check and was found to be violating and hence dq. He is a cry baby and I support max for years even before he actually started this dominating run. I am cheering that nothing else.

You are typical team LH as per rocketpoweredmohawk. Watch the channel it will cheer you a little 🤣
 
1. Did you start following f1 after drive to survive?
2. I don't get what's ur obsession with checking all cars. Hamilton got caught in the random check and was found to be violating and hence dq. He is a cry baby and I support max for years even before he actually started this dominating run. I am cheering that nothing else.

You are typical team LH as per rocketpoweredmohawk. Watch the channel it will cheer you a little 🤣
Oh please.

you referred to it as cheating. Stewards statement says otherwise

just like Justin Trudeau, you are deflecting

Cheating is working the refs to restart the race which was under caution...

Quit while you are still behind.
 
Oh please.

you referred to it as cheating. Stewards statement says otherwise

just like Justin Trudeau, you are deflecting

Cheating is working the refs to restart the race which was under caution...

Quit while you are still behind.
Dude, your team gets caught with an illegal car and still you are standing ranting like a noob.
I can understand you just got into f1 from the dumb drive to survive series and have little appreciation of what makes f1 special.

This illegal configuration of the car is what allowed your lord LH drive so close to Lando and max with full fuel loads in first half of the race with Mercedes driving legal limits.
Even toto or Hamilton is not questioning that they f#@ked up here, but somehow you are 🤪🤣🤣
 
Oh please.

you referred to it as cheating. Stewards statement says otherwise

just like Justin Trudeau, you are deflecting

Cheating is working the refs to restart the race which was under caution...

Quit while you are still behind.
In f1 for actual f1 purists , running illegal configuration that helps in race is called cheating . They violated a 30 year old well established rule.
Wait for Mexico where Hamilton will be back to 5th or 6th position.
 
Lewis Hamilton: Mercedes 'embarrassed' by United States GP disqualification, says James Allison

Mercedes technical director James Allison says the team were left "embarrassed" by Lewis Hamilton's disqualification from the United States Grand Prix for a breach of technical regulations.

Hamilton and Ferrari's Charles Leclerc were excluded from second and sixth places respectively four hours after the end of Sunday's dramatic race after wear levels on the planks underneath their cars were found to have exceeded limits set out in F1's regulations.

The seven-time world champion's disqualification means that instead of closing to within 19 points of Red Bull's Sergio Perez for second in the drivers' standings, his deficit grew to 39 points with just four rounds of the season remaining.

Speaking in Mercedes' post-race debrief, Allison said: "Of course the disqualification is a significant blow. It's a miserable feeling. It hurts and, everybody here feels it.

"Everybody is upset, embarrassed to a degree as well because we absolutely don't like being on the wrong side of the rules, and just lamenting the lost points."

After Mercedes brought a final significant upgrade of the season to the W14, Hamilton produced a hugely impressive weekend which saw him narrowly lose out to the other Red Bull of world champion Max Verstappen for victory.

Allison said that the progress made in terms of performance will help the team get over the disappointment of the disqualification.

He added: "Give it a day or two and that will start to wane and be replaced by the much happier feeling, which is we moved our car forward this weekend and that it's hard to do that.

"But we did it and we did it by a decent amount. And with four races left in the championship, four races where I am pretty sure we will stay on the right side of the skid block rules.

"The initial feeling of hurt, and disappointment and frustration of ourselves will pass to be replaced by the sunny optimism of knowing that the car looked bright on this upgrade package and we've got four more races to show what we can do with it."

 

Marta Garcia: F1 Academy champion given fully funded Freca seat for 2024​

Formula 1 Academy winner Marta Garcia has been handed a fully paid-for drive in the 2024 Formula Renault Eurocup by Alpine (Freca) series.

The 23-year-old will compete for the leading Prema team in the category, which is a stepping stone between the Formula 4 and Formula 3 series.

Funding will come from F1 Academy, car maker Tatuus, Prema and F1 tyre supplier Pirelli.

Garcia said she was "thrilled" and added Freca would be "a big step".

F1 Academy managing director Susie Wolff said: "F1 Academy is all about progression and creating more opportunities for young women across motorsport, so to offer a fully funded seat in Freca for our inaugural champion is a significant moment.

"The fact that she will also continue to race with Prema, whom she has built a relationship with and are current team champions in this category, will also aid in her future development."

Garcia became the inaugural F1 Academy champion with victory in the first of three races at the US Grand Prix last weekend, putting her beyond the reach of rivals Lena Buhler and Hamda Al Qubaisi in the female-only feeder series.

Now the rewards follow for Garcia, who said: "We know we will have to work a lot with the team to succeed but I'm really determined to do well.

"I can't thank F1 Academy enough. It is such a fantastic initiative, and it is the right way to do it, trying to take drivers with the best results to the top level.

"What an amazing opportunity, I'm looking forward to it and to the work that we have ahead, inside and outside the track."

In addition, Freca will from next season allow teams to run a fourth car if they sign a driver who finishes first, second or third in the F1 Academy standings.

For its second season in 2024, the F1 Academy series will reduce the amount of money a driver has to contribute to take part in the series to 100,000 euros (£87,000) from 150,000 euros.

 
Mexico City Grand Prix: Max Verstappen tops first practice

Red Bull's Max Verstappen headed the times in the first practice session at the Mexico City Grand Prix.

Verstappen was 0.095 seconds quicker than Williams' Alex Albon in second, despite running the medium tyres rather than the softs of those behind him.

The world champion's team-mate Sergio Perez, cheered on by his home fans, was third, ahead of McLaren's Lando Norris.

Ferrari's Charles Leclerc was fifth ahead of the second McLaren of Oscar Piastri.


BBC
 
Red Bull Racing will field two rookie drivers during the F1 season-ending Abu Dhabi Grand Prix. Formula E champion Jake Dennis is set to make his public Formula 1 track debut with Red Bull in FP1 in Abu Dhabi. Adam Cooper.
 
Mexico City GP Qualifying: Charles Leclerc takes pole as Ferrari seal shock one-two in chaotic session

Charles Leclerc led team-mate Carlos Sainz in a surprise Ferrari front-row lockout after a chaotic Mexico City Grand Prix qualifying session.

World champion Max Verstappen appeared primed to take pole for Red Bull after impressing in Q1 and Q2, but the Dutchman could only manage third after the Ferraris came from nowhere to surge to the top of the timesheet.

Leclerc delivered a 1:17.166 on his first run in Q3 to go 0.067 clear on Sainz, and, despite neither Ferrari being able to go quicker on their second run, Verstappen's improvement on his final flying lap was not enough to gatecrash the front row.

Verstappen faces a nervous wait before his third place on the grid is confirmed, with the stewards investigating him for blocking the pit-lane exit during a chaotic finale to Q1.

AlphaTauri's Daniel Ricciardo produced the best moment so far of his return to Formula 1, making a statement by beating Red Bull's Sergio Perez to fourth at the Mexican's home race.

Lewis Hamilton took sixth but is also under investigation, for not slowing down under yellow flags at the end of Q1, and will also meet the stewards after the session.

Oscar Piastri took seventh for McLaren, but the team will be left hugely disappointed after poor execution led to a shock Q1 exit for Lando Norris.

George Russell, who along with Verstappen is under investigation for blocking the pit-lane exit in Q1, took eighth ahead of Alfa Romeo duo Valtteri Bottas and Zhou Guanyu.

Mexico City GP Qualifying result:

1) Charles Leclerc, Ferrari
2) Carlos Sainz, Ferrari
3) Max Verstappen, Red Bull
4) Daniel Ricciardo, AlphaTauri
5) Sergio Perez, Red Bull
6) Lewis Hamilton, Mercedes
7) Oscar Piastri, McLaren
8) George Russell, Mercedes
9) Valtteri Bottas, Alfa Romeo
10) Zhou Guanyu, Alfa Romeo

 
Mexico City Grand Prix: Max Verstappen wins restarted race after Kevin Magnussen crash

Red Bull's triple world champion Max Verstappen made Formula One history as the first driver to take 16 victories in a season when he won a crash-halted and action-packed Mexico City Grand Prix on Sunday.

The Dutch 26-year-old also equalled French great Alain Prost's haul of 51 career wins with his fifth win in six editions of the Mexican race at the Autodromo Hermanos Rodriguez.

Mercedes' Lewis Hamilton finished second, with fastest lap, and Ferrari's Charles Leclerc was third in a race red-flagged and restarted just before the halfway point when Haas's Kevin Magnussen crashed heavily.
 
Mercedes' Chief Technical Officer, Mike Elliott, has resigned from the team after 11 years following the team's failure to win a race this season. Elliott, who joined in 2012 as head of aerodynamics, played a significant role in the team's eight consecutive Constructors' Championships from 2014 to 2022.
 
Fernando Alonso annoyed with rumours of Red Bull move

Fernando Alonso has made it clear he is annoyed with claims that he could switch to Red Bull from Aston Martin.

Stories that he could replace Sergio Perez emerged in the wake of last weekend's Mexico City Grand Prix.

Alonso said he was "not enjoying" it, and dismissed the idea as "the normal paddock rumours from people who try to make fun of it and gain some followers".

The two-time world champion added: "I will make sure there are consequences."

Alonso did not elaborate on what those might be, or whom they might be directed towards.



 
Formula 1 says the season-ending Abu Dhabi Grand Prix is "not at risk" of cancellation despite unrest in the region caused by the Israel-Hamas war.
 

Sao Paulo Grand Prix: Carlos Sainz fastest in first practice ahead of Charles Leclerc​

Carlos Sainz led a Ferrari one-two ahead of Mercedes' George Russell in practice at the Sao Paulo Grand Prix.

The session offered little information about form for qualifying at 18:00 GMT as the other leading teams did not join them in running the soft tyres.

World champion Max Verstappen was only 16th fastest after using only the hard tyres, Lewis Hamilton 12th after doing the same in his Mercedes.

Lando Norris faces an investigation for colliding with Nico Hulkenberg's Haas.

The McLaren driver, on a fast lap, came across the German dawdling on the racing line entering the final corner, Juncao.

Norris dived down the inside and ran deep into the corner, and his right rear wheel hit the left front of the Haas in what some interpreted as a car equivalent of a shoulder barge.

Hulkenberg and Norris have both been summoned to see the stewards to explain the incident.

Norris, 19th fastest, was another leading runner to stick with one set of hard tyres in the only session in which teams have to assess their car set-ups before qualifying on this weekend run to the 'sprint' format.

That means qualifying later on Friday will set the grid for Sunday's grand prix, while Saturday is a stand-alone 'sprint' day with a qualifying session followed by a short race.

Before practice started, Formula 1 announced that the race at Interlagos will be on the calendar until at least 2030 after signing a new five-year contract.

F1 chairman and chief executive officer Stefano Domenicali said: "Brazil has such a rich racing heritage, and this iconic circuit is a favourite of drivers and fans around the world.

"It embodies everything that is great about racing, and we look forward to seeing how it develops over the years to come to create an even better experience."

 
Sao Paulo Grand Prix: Carlos Sainz fastest in first practice ahead of Charles Leclerc

Carlos Sainz led a Ferrari one-two ahead of Mercedes' George Russell in practice at the Sao Paulo Grand Prix.

The session offered little information about form for qualifying at 18:00 GMT as the other leading teams did not join them in running the soft tyres.

World champion Max Verstappen was only 16th fastest after using only the hard tyres, Lewis Hamilton 12th after doing the same in his Mercedes.

Lando Norris faced an investigation for colliding with Nico Hulkenberg's Haas.

The McLaren driver, on a fast lap, came across the German dawdling on the racing line entering the final corner, Juncao.

Norris dived down the inside and ran deep into the corner, and his right rear wheel hit the left front of the Haas in what some interpreted as a car equivalent of a shoulder barge.

Hulkenberg and Norris were summoned to see the stewards to explain the incident but the officials decided to take no further action, saying "both drivers contributed to the contact".



 
Sao Paulo Grand Prix: Max Verstappen beats Charles Leclerc to pole position for Sunday's race

Red Bull's Max Verstappen beat Ferrari's Charles Leclerc to pole position in a rain-affected qualifying session at the Sao Paulo Grand Prix.

Aston Martin benefited from approaching rain, with Lance Stroll and Fernando Alonso taking third and fourth places.

Mercedes drivers Lewis Hamilton and George Russell locked out the third row with fifth and sixth places, ahead of McLaren's Lando Norris.

Ferrari's Carlos Sainz was eighth ahead of Red Bull's Sergio Perez.

The Mexican suffered because he was one of the last drivers out of the pits and Norris' team-mate Oscar Piastri spun at the final corner on to the pit straight in front of him, forcing the Red Bull driver to back off.

Leclerc described the session as "super-weird" as the only laps the drivers completed were on a dry track but were considerably slower than those they had managed in the previous session.

Leclerc added: "I've never experienced that in my career before. It felt like it was raining but there was no rain around.

"From Turn Four onwards, the car was extremely difficult to drive, there was no grip. I was thinking of coming into the pits but then I was on the front row."

Verstappen said: "Our laps felt terrible. I think the wind changed and started to be very strong."

Heavy rain did then start to fall, accompanied shortly afterwards by an electric storm, and the session was red-flagged with four minutes remaining, officials deciding not to restart it.

"It's night time," Alonso said, as the drivers returned to the pits.

For Stroll, it was by far his best qualifying result of the season as he beat Alonso by just 0.043secs, out-qualifying his illustrious team-mate for only the third time all season.

Stroll said: "The car was feeling good throughout the session. Q3 was really tricky, I had a few lock-ups and missed some apexes, but good enough for a top three."

It was a strong result and something of a relief for Aston Martin, whose form has slumped in recent races after a strong start to the season.

The changing conditions were typical of Brazil, where rain has often affected events at Sao Paulo's Interlagos circuit, a historic and charismatic venue which it was announced on Friday will be on the calendar until at least 2030 thanks to a new contract.

Ironically, a 15-minute delay to the start of the session, caused by the need to clear the track of dirt and debris, ensured the rain hit the session.

Without that, the whole hour would have been managed before the rain began to fall.



 
Sao Paulo Grand Prix: Max Verstappen wins sprint race from Lando Norris

Red Bull's Max Verstappen drove to a comfortable victory in the Sao Paulo Grand Prix sprint race after passing Lando Norris' McLaren at the start.

Verstappen's better launch secured him the inside line for the first corner and he controlled the race from there.

Norris slipped back to third on the first lap behind George Russell's Mercedes but re-passed him on lap five.

Red Bull's Sergio Perez recovered from dropping behind Russell and team-mate Lewis Hamilton to finish third.

The Mexican, under pressure after a series of difficult races, dropped to fifth on the first lap from third on the grid, losing out to Russell at the first corner and then being passed by Hamilton around the outside at Turn Four.

Perez re-passed Hamilton at Turn Four for fourth and then set off after Russell.

They exchanged places twice on lap eight, Perez passing Russell into Turn One and then Russell retaking the position, like Hamilton on the first lap around the outside of Turn Four.

But two laps later, Perez made a move stick into Turn One and was able to secure third place.

Russell hung on to fourth place, his pace fading as the race ran its distance, but Hamilton, also struggling, slipped behind Ferrari's Charles Leclerc, who took fifth with three laps to go.

Hamilton then had to take on Alpha Tauri's Yuki Tsunoda, who passed the seven-time champion for sixth place with two laps to go and set off after Leclerc, crossing the line right on the Ferrari's tail.

Behind Hamilton, five seconds adrift of Tsunoda, Ricciardo in the second Alpha Tauri chased Ferrari's Carlos Sainz across the line, the Spaniard securing the final point.

Verstappen said: "Initial getaway wasn't that fantastic but the second bit was very strong and I could get alongside. Twenty-four laps around here is all about tyre management. Just incredibly difficult around here. Last year we were struggling with that already in the sprint and that's why I was a bit careful."

Norris said he had been "caught napping" by Russell, adding: "He was pushing quite hard in the first few laps but then was suffering a lot later on.

"It's a tough circuit. You don't feel like you can push anywhere. You do two laps and then you have no grip. You're managing, you have one little wheelspin and it costs you 0.2-0.3secs.

"But it's a positive race. We weren't expecting to be anywhere close to the Red Bulls here. Today we were good compared to everyone except Max."

There were gripping battles throughout the field, with Hamilton holding up a train of cars for the first few laps as up to 10 drivers at times battled behind him.

One of the drivers creating entertainment in the second half of the field was Fernando Alonso, who fought up from 15th on the grid, after being hit by Alpine's Esteban Ocon in qualifying, to finish 11th, battling for 10th on the last lap with McLaren's Oscar Piastri.

Alonso passed both Haas drivers and Alpine's Pierre Gasly but just failed to overtake Piastri after some clever defence from the rookie Australian at the first corner.

Sunday's main grand prix is at 17:00 GMT with world champion Verstappen starting on pole position as he seeks a record-extending 17th victory of the season.


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Max Verstappen wins the Sao Paulo Grand Prix to take a record-extending 17th win of the 2023 season!
 
Red Bull's Max Verstappen took a controlled victory in the Sao Paulo Grand Prix to extend his all-time record for wins in a season to 17.

Verstappen fended off a brief challenge from McLaren's Lando Norris early on before easing away to control the race.

Fernando Alonso took the final podium position after a stunning drive in the Aston Martin, re-passing Sergio Perez's Red Bull on the last lap after losing the place a lap before.

Mercedes had their worst race of 2023, Lewis Hamilton finishing eighth and George Russell retiring when running 11th.

It was an unwelcome surprise for the former champions after the team felt they had been making progress in recent races with an upgraded floor.

Verstappen's win was copybook after a brief challenge from Norris in the opening laps.

But the star of the race was arguably Alonso, with a masterful defensive drive against Perez and then some remarkable race-craft to reclaim the position after losing it on the penultimate lap.

Perez was within a second of Alonso, and therefore with use of the DRS overtaking aid, with 16 laps to go.

But Alonso kept a faster car behind him by clever driving, choosing innovative lines through corners and gauging his pace just right at the key points of the track to ensure Perez was never quite able to get by.

As the race went into its final three laps, it appeared as if Alonso was going to hold on, only for Perez to make a valiant final effort and pass him into Turn One on the penultimate lap.

Alonso challenged back into Turn Four, but was unable to make the move stick, and it appeared as if third place was gone.

But he closed back in on Perez, sold him a dummy into Turn One at the start of the final lap, forcing Perez to defend to the inside, which allowed Alonso to compromise the Red Bull's run through the Senna S.

That gave Alonso a better exit on to the back straight and he reclaimed third place around the outside into Turn Four, and fended Perez off through the final corner and on the run to the line, taking third by just 0.053secs.


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