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F1 2024 Season

2024 Austrian Grand Prix

Sprint

The 24 lap Sprint Race was cut down to 23 after an aborted start. This was due to photographers at turn one. The McLarens of Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri set their sights on Max Verstappen, who led from lights out.  

A bold move down the inside of Verstappen at turn three on lap five saw Norris take the lead, which would be swiftly taken from him one corner later as the world champion sent it back down the inside. Piastri moved up to second position.  

Behind the leading pack, both Mercedes cars set after Carlos Sainz, who had overtaken George Russell earlier in the race. The Brit would take his place back on lap eight, moving himself up to P4.  

A battle between the McLarens would allow Max Verstappen to take a comfortable victory, with Piastri and Norris finishing second and third respectively, followed by Russell, Sainz, Hamilton, Leclerc and Perez to finish out the points. Nico Hulkenberg received a ten second penalty after the race for forcing Fernando Alonso off the track.  

Qualifying

A busy qualifying session that eventually saw Verstappen once again take a dominant pole position. Hamilton and Perez made it to Q2 on their final laps of Q1, whilst Kevin Magnussen undoubtedly put in the lap of the session to get himself through in P5.  Fernando Alonso found himself just about squeezing into the second part of qualifying, out qualifying Stroll for the first time in two races. Logan Sargeant found himself out in P19 along with Zhou (P20), Bottas (P18), Stroll (P17) and Albon (P16).  

Image Credit: pbs.twimg.com

Q2 started with Hulkenberg being under investigation for jumping Perez in the pitlane, before Verstappen decided to show his true pace setting a blistering lap time of 1.04.577; which he would later beat setting a 1.04.469 to top Q2. Esteban Ocon made Q3 for the second time this season, slotting himself into P10, while teammate Pierre Gasly was out in P13 alongside Alonso (P15), Tsunoda (P14), Magnussen (P12) and Ricciardo (P11).  

Perez and Ocon started Q3 on the back foot as they had no new softs for the session. Verstappen once again set the pace, setting a 1.04.426 on his initial lap. Lando Norris was his closest rival yet again, slotting himself in P2, albeit 0.404 behind the pole sitter.  

Oscar Piastri’s P3 was short lived as his time was deleted for track limits, sending the Aussie down to P7. Charles Leclerc met the gravel on his lap in turn six. The Ferrari driver clattered the kerb at turn nine to end his lap. He ended in P6. His teammate, Carlos Sainz, ended with a second row start in P4. An okay showing from Mercedes gained them P3 (Russell) and P5 (Hamilton). The top ten was rounded out by Perez (P8), Hulkenberg (P9) and Ocon (P10).  

Race

A crazy end to the Austrian Grand Prix saw Russell walk away with his second race victory.  

Leclerc had to box at the start after picking up damage during a typical turn one incident with Piastri. At the front, Verstappen held the lead. First pit stops were seen around lap 11-13, with drivers further down the grid putting on the hard tyres. This turned out to be a poor decision as these tyres degraded quickly.  

Alonso picked up a five second time penalty after an incident on lap 21. The Spaniard was unable to slow down and ran his car into the rear of Zhou. Hamilton and Albon picked up five second penalties as well for crossing the white line at the pit entrance. Perez was also awarded a penalty after speeding in the pitlane.  

Battles throughout the field continued with the Alpines getting a bit too close for comfort on a few occasions. The final round of pit stops saw the action really hot up at the red bull ring.  

As the hards fell off, both Verstappen and Norris pitted on lap 51, with a seven second gap separating the top two in the championship. A slow pitstop for Verstappen saw that gap cut down to just over a second as the pair emerged from the pitlane. The battle for the lead was well and truly on. It was looking like Norris had the pace out of the pits as he put the pressure on Verstappen. Arguments went back and forward on both teams radios as the pair scrapped with Norris lunging on Verstappen on lap 63, looking to stay on track as Verstappen ran wide. He came back on the track in front but it would be on lap 64 where it would all come to blows. Norris sent his car around the outside of Verstappen, the Dutchman seemingly moving to the left to cut Norris off which caused the pair to collide. An instant puncture for Verstappen caused him to run wide, shortly followed by a similar puncture for Norris. The pair was left trundling back to the pitlane as Russell, who was 14 seconds behind, found himself taking the lead of the race.  

Too much time lost and damage sustained left Norris out of the race as Verstappen was handed a ten second penalty for the incident. This penalty did not affect the Dutchman’s race. He finished in P5.

The podium was rounded out by Piastri in P2, and Sainz in P3.  

Written by Meg.

Featured Image Credit: ps-aws.com

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Flashback Friday

Flashback Friday: Austria 2019

As the anticipation builds ahead of the 2024 Austrian Grand Prix, we’re looking back on a previous visit to the Styrian hills that may spark some déjà vu this weekend.

Located in Spielberg, this track was renamed as the ‘Red Bull Ring’ back in 2011 and returned to the Formula One calendar in 2016 after being rebuilt under the Red Bull owners.

Back in 2019, Ferrari driver Charles Leclerc predominantly held the lead in Austria and looked promising to becoming a race winner. Ferrari were the team to beat in Austria after their qualifying laps, coming off the back of a near maiden win for Leclerc in Bahrain. Their hopes had been quashed by engine issues. This was until the third to last lap when Max Verstappen launched an overtake. After banging wheels, Verstappen claimed the position, with Leclerc leaving the track. The Dutchman held onto his sixth career win after the stewards decided to take no further action to investigate the legality of his move.

This was the first non-Mercedes win for the 2019 season. Lewis Hamilton for Mercedes came home in fifth position. This was the first time he finished outside the top two that year, after Sebastian Vettel made a late overtake and make a two-stop strategy work.

This race also marked Antonio Giovinazzi’s first ever Formula One point. He was racing for Alpha Romeo.

Leclerc will be hoping to repeat his 2019 Saturday performance to start on pole. Saying that, with Verstappen’s current success it can be expected to see him at the top of the grid too. In the past three seasons, only Leclerc and Verstappen have claimed race wins in Austria.

Written by Millie.

Featured Image Credit: edition.cnn.com

Categories
F1 2023 Season

Austria 2023 – Five In A Row

The Austrian Grand Prix brought a lot of entertainment to F1 fans. The everchanging weather made the spectacle even more unpredictable (maybe except for the race winner). It was the second sprint race of the year, with the new sprint shootout format brought in Baku, we were hoping for some surprise results.

After the only free practice session early Friday afternoon, the drivers lined up to put in the all important laps that would set their places for Sunday’s race. Some shock eliminations saw George Russell and Sergio Perez eliminated in Q2 with the Red Bull driver missing out on Q3 for the fourth race running.

Source: Planet F1

Verstappen beat Leclerc to pole by only 0.048s, a very tight qualifying session indeed. It looked good for Ferrari as Sainz lined up on the second row alongside Norris who looked super fast with their upgrades. Shoutouts went to Hulkenberg and Albon who qualified 8th and 10th respectively, putting their teams in good positions for Sunday’s race.

Saturday’s sprint shootout had trickier conditions with a damp/dry session. We had some more surprising eliminations again, with neither Mercedes driver making it to Q3. Hamilton was eliminated in Q1, while Russel was hampered with a hydraulic issue which cut his session short. Verstappen and Perez sealed a front row lockout for the team, but the stars of the show were Norris and Hulkenberg who qualified 3rd and 4th.

Source: Sportskeeda

In the sprint, Verstappen showed his dominance by finishing 21 seconds ahead of second placed Perez. Sainz impressed as he clinched 3rd place and some important points for Ferrari. Leclerc was not as fortunate and finished 12th, behind a 10th placed Hamilton and 11th placed Piastri. A clever play of strategy, switching to slicks in good time, saw Hulkenberg take some points in P6.

Sunday’s race was a thrilling one as we were treated to lots of on track battles. Verstappen clinched his 5th victory in a row ahead of Leclerc who claimed Ferrari’s 800th podium. Perez had a stellar race, jumping from P15 all the way to a podium position. Sainz defended him for sometime, helping his Ferrari teammate but in the end the Red Bull was superior.

Source: The Mirror

Track limits were a nightmare for many drivers, several 5 second penalties were given during the race and post race there were even more, changing the order of the results.

Aston Martin protested race results and the stewards post race review saw multiple penalties given: Sainz (10s) , Hamilton (10s), Ocon (30s), Gasly (10s), Tsunoda (5s), de Vries (5s), Albon (10s), Sargeant (5s)

Meaning that Sainz was demoted from 4th to 6th, Hamilton from 7th to 8th and Gasly from 9th to 10th. Top 10: Verstappen, Leclerc, Perez, Norris, Alonso, Sainz, Russell, Hamilton, Stroll, Gasly

The British GP this weekend is the second part of the double header, stay tuned!