Categories
F1 2023 Season

Azerbaijan 2023: Perez, King of the Streets

Race weekend recap

A new format for sprint race weekends was agreed, which would take effect from the Azerbaijan Grand Prix. Friday would see drivers participate in free practice 1 and qualifying for Sunday’s race. Saturday would be all about the sprint: the sprint shoutout was the qualifying session for the sprint race and mandated hard tyres for SQ1, medium tyres for SQ2 and soft tyres for SQ3 meant that some teams may have to prioritise qualifying for the main race.

Limited time in the only free practice session saw our usual trio of Verstappen, Leclerc and Perez. It was the beginning of a bad weekend for Pierre Gasly as his Alpine caught fire while Magnussen suffered a suspected fuel pressure problem.

Source: FormulaNerds.com

Friday’s qualifying session saw Charles Leclerc outpace the Red Bulls and claim pole position for Sunday’s race. In this qualifying session we witnessed Leclerc and Verstappen set identical times, as well as Stroll and Piastri. There were two red flags in the session when Gasly and De Vries were both caught out at separate occasions at Turn 3.

Top 10: Leclerc, Verstappen, Perez, Sainz, Hamilton, Alonso, Norris, Tsunoda, Stroll, Piastri

Sprint shoutout

In the first part of the sprint shootout Sargeant had a run in with the barriers which ended his session early and disrupted it for others. The damage done to his car could not be repaired before the sprint race, so he did not participate.

Eliminated in SQ1: Zhou, Bottas, Tsunoda, Gasly, De Vries

Both Aston Martins were struggling during the sprint shootout with DRS issues but survived and made it to SQ3. Piastri was unlucky and justed missed out in 11th.

Eliminated in SQ2: Piastri, Hulkenberg, Ocon, Magnussen, Sargeant

The inaugural sprint shoutout saw Leclerc take his second pole position of the weekend, really showing his pace against the Red Bulls. The Monegasque driver hit the barriers as he went to improve his time on his final flying lap but managed to keep his pole as neither Red Bull could outdo the Ferrari driver.

Top 10: Leclerc, Perez, Verstappen, Russell, Sainz, Hamilton, Albon, Alonso, Stroll, Norris

Source: Racingnews365.com

Sprint race

Some key points from the sprint race were the coming together of Verstappen and Russell and Perez’s first win of the weekend, showing just why he’s been dubbed “King of the Streets”.

Norris and Bottas were the only two drivers to choose soft tyres for the sprint, this seemed like it could have been a genius move at the start of the sprint but later turned out to be the exact opposite.

Verstappen could be heard over the radio, furious with Russell. Meanwhile, Tsunoda and De Vries also came together, with the Japanese driver losing a wheel when he hit the wall at Turn 13. AlphaTauri sent Tsunoda back out after he trundled back to the pits but a full safety car was then deployed as his damage was severe.

Source: PlanetF1.com

On the restart, Perez didn’t wait too long to get past Leclerc but the Monegasque driver did a good job in keeping Verstappen at bay to hold onto P2. Fernando Alonso finished between Sainz and Hamilton as he was opportunistic after the restart and overtook the seven time world champion. Stroll made a move on Albon towards the end of the sprint, claiming the final point available.

Top 8: Perez, Leclerc, Verstappen, Russell, Sainz, Alonso, Hamilton, Stroll

Race Review

Sergio Perez made it 2/2 wins over the weekend when he saw the chequered flags at the end of Lap 57 of the Azerbaijan Grand Prix. He held his cool when teammate Max Verstappen tried his best to hunt him down and kept a safe distance between them. Though Perez benefitted from the timing of the safety car and Verstappen didn’t, the Mexican made the most of the opportunity to cement his desire for a title charge.

Charles Leclerc claimed Ferrari’s first podium of the season with a P3 finish. Unable to keep up with the pace of the Red Bulls, Leclerc settled for third, finishing over 20 seconds behind them. Sainz was off the pace too, playing catch up to his teammate all weekend as he finished 5th.

Source: CP24.com

Aston Martin will be happy with their weekend. After suffering with DRS issues over the weekend, a 4th and 7th place finish would be a nice chunk of points to reward the team’s hard work. Alonso did try to chase down Leclerc in the latter stages of the race but was unsuccessful in this attempt.

It was a relatively quiet weekend for Mercedes. Hamilton drove a solid race on Sunday, the aim to close in on Sainz but he was unable to perform an overtake. Russell, starting lower than he would’ve liked because of a poor qualifying session on Friday, brought home some points in P8.

McLaren had a positive Azerbaijan GP. Although there is still room for improvement, the team from Woking can be proud of their step forward. The car upgrades saw Norris take P9 and Piastri, who was ill for the majority of the weekend finished P11. Both played the long waiting game behind Ocon and Hulkenberg who pitted late in the race.

Tsunoda completed a very strong race with a points finish in P10. De Vries retired from the race after he crashed into the wall at Turn 5. For Williams, Albon was among the pack that finished close together missing out on points and Sargeant was one of the last of the finishers. In the Haas team, it was similar to Williams; in what was quite an uneventful race, Magnussen was sandwiched between Albon and Gasly while Hulkenberg finished just above Bottas who had a race to forget.

Tune in again next week as we head to Miami for round 5 of the 2023 Formula 1 Season.

Categories
F1 2022 Season

Azerbaijan 2022- Victorious Verstappen in Baku

Race weekend review

In what now seems like it could be a three-way title fight between Verstappen, Leclerc and Perez; F1 returned to Baku, where Sergio Perez claimed his first victory with Red Bull in 2021 in a thrilling race.

Practice

Perez came into the weekend with momentum behind him from his win at Monaco and a new contract extension with Red Bull. The Mexican started off the weekend strong with P1 in FP1, ahead of Leclerc and Verstappen.

The two Spaniards, Sainz and Alonso completed the top 5. Issues for Latifi and Schumacher saw their sessions negatively affected.

FP2 saw Leclerc outdo Perez and Verstappen as he took P1 in the second session by over two tenths of a second. Alonso and Sainz were a bit further back, again completing the top 5.

Source: Autosport.com

Perez took P1 in the final practice session, showing the Ferrari’s and his teammate that he was a serious threat. The gap between himself and Leclerc was only 0.070s while Verstappen was a further two tenths behind.

Sainz placed fourth, with the McLaren drivers Norris and Ricciardo showing some decent pace in fifth and sixth position.

Mercedes had major struggles with purposing on their cars, causing additional discomfort for their drivers who were in P8 and P12.

Source: LAT Images via Planet F1

Qualifying

The battle for pole looked tight between Perez and Leclerc who had been fighting to impress during the weekend, but one can never discount Verstappen from the equation.

Red flags are known to cause chaos around Baku and chaos was caused quite late into Q1, which left teams hurrying to get out for one final lap to save themselves from elimination. Stroll touched the barriers into Turn 7 but suffered minimal damage, continuing his aim to escape Q1. But a lap later, he collided into the barriers at Turn 2, which brought out the red flag.

The queue in the pitlane to go out one last time was long, with the McLaren drivers who were not safe down at the end while Mercedes were at the front. Everyone hurried to the finish line, elbows coming out in order to make sure they could start their final flying lap. Albon complained over the radio that Alonso impeded him by slowing down too much, ruining his lap. In the end, the stewards did not investigate the incident.

Out in Q1: Magnussen, Albon, Latifi, Stroll, Schumacher

Source: FormulaSpy

In Q2, Vettel hit the barriers, causing a yellow flag for a short amount of time. The front runners had already put in their banker laps before the yellow flag, but certain drivers were soon put under pressure, the two McLaren drivers, for example.

Hamilton would be under investigation after qualifying, with Hamilton going slow and marred the lap of Lando Norris, who ended up backing out of his final flying lap, leaving him just short of Tsunoda who was in tenth. In the end Hamilton avoided a penalty.

Out in Q2: Norris, Ricciardo, Ocon, Zhou, Bottas

Sainz put in a great lap that put him on provisional pole after first runs in Q3. His teammate, Leclerc, was close behind, a fragment off his pace, followed by Perez and Verstappen in third and fourth.

Perez had a brief issue which saw him stay in the garage longer than others, meaning he had no tow on his final lap and neither did his other rivals who were battling for that top spot.

Sainz was pushing hard, too hard, which caused a mistake costing him time. Leclerc on the other hand, produced a stellar final lap and put himself in pole position. Perez then put himself into P2, an important front row start in the bag, ahead of Verstappen who would start third in the race.

Top 10: Leclerc, Perez, Verstappen, Sainz, Russell, Gasly, Hamilton, Tsunoda, Vettel, Alonso

Source: LAT Images via F1 chronicle

Race Report

A brilliant start from Perez saw him overtake Leclerc at the start of the race, with Sainz putting pressure on Verstappen who quickly then opened up a gap to the Spaniard.

Sainz then suffered an issue with his car on Lap 9 and retired from the race.

The other Ferrari of Leclerc also retired when he suffered what seemed like an engine issue on Lap 20 before half race distance. He had been closing down the gap to the Red Bulls after his pit stop that left him in third.

Source: autosport.com

Verstappen had closed the gap to Perez when he then overtook him for lead of the race with a nice move on his teammate on Lap 14. The Dutch world champion was in a league of his own, finishing 20 seconds ahead of Perez.

Perez seemed to lack the pace to keep up with Verstappen, dropping back after his teammate’s overtake. He added to his 18 points with an extra point for the fastest lap of the race.

George Russell proved to be Mr. Consistent with another podium, clinching third place, three in total this season. He took advantage of Ferrari’s misfortune and made a second pit stop like many others did to finish the race on fresher tyres, while others like Vettel, Gasly and Tsunoda chose to stay out on their older tyres that they had pitted for on Lap 9.

Source: The Netional News

Lewis Hamilton suffered a considerable amount of porpoising during the race which left his back in a poor state at the end of the race, visibly in pain as he got out of his car. Despite this, the 7 time world champion put in an incredible shift and finished behind his teammate in fourth place, also earning driver of the day.

Pierre Gasly converted a great qualifying result into a great points finish for AlphaTauri, his first points since Melbourne with a fifth place finish. Tsunoda had been in a great position also, running ahead of Vettel in sixth, but an issue with his DRS saw him come into the pits where his team used duct tape to solve the problem meant that the young AlphaTauri driver finished 13th.

Sebastian Vettel earned decent points for Aston Martin finishing in P6, proving his skills had never faded. A mistake while he was in the hunt to overtake Ocon earlier in the race saw him make a smooth turn on the escape road to re-join the track meaning the German lost out to Hamilton and Tsunoda that he had overtaken during the round of pitstops. Without this earlier incident, the end result may have been different. Lance Stroll retired from the race when an issue was found with his car on Lap 48.

Alonso, who had much older tyres than the McLarens behind him was able to fend off his former team’s drivers for P7.

There was tension in the McLaren camp with both drivers audibly unhappy with holding station to their teammates on separate occasions during the race. But Daniel Ricciardo turned his luck around finishing ahead of his teammate in P8, the help of the second VSC allowing him to make good use of his hard to medium tyre strategy. Lando Norris completed the double points finish for the papaya team who had been waiting for this for a while, getting himself a P9, with Ocon also doing the same with his P10.

Source: Planet F1

Valterri Bottas gained some places from his 15th place start, taking his Alfa Romeo to 11th place. But, Guanyu Zhou, who had been performing well and placing above his teammate, retired on Lap 24 with an issue on his car; another DNF to his record.

Alex Albon had a quiet race and finished in 12th place with his Williams. Nicholas Latifi had a 10 second stop-go penalty for a starting grid infringement at the beginning of the race and he finished last.

Mick Schumacher placed 14th as the only Haas to finished the race. Kevin Magnussen retired on Lap 33, showing that some serious discussions about reliability needed to be held.

We head to Canada for Round 9 of the 2022 season. With a firm grip on the championship lead, is there anyone that can stop Verstappen?

Make sure to check out The Fastest Sector social media for more info!

Categories
Memorable Races

My Most Memorable Races- Maria

I’ve been watching F1 for quite some long, but my favourite ones might be the recent ones.

Turkey 2020 -How can a Lewis Hamilton fan forget this one? Lewis getting his 7th world title and making history. I remember like it was yesterday when I sat on my living room floor and cried for hours because HE made it!
Can’t forget Seb back on the podium and Lance’s first pole!

Source: Motorsportmagazine.com

Interlagos 2021 – The best race of the 2021 season! My home race was full of surprises as Lewis got 2 grid penalties, and made 25 overtakes and still won the race. It was simply magical. But besides the result, the memorable part was definitely when he grabbed the Brazilian flag like Senna used to do. I swear to god that even my parents, who were supporting other drivers, cried at that moment.

Source: Reuters.com

Monza 2021 -There are no words that can describe the feeling of seeing a McLaren driver on the highest place of the podium after 9 years. It brought us hope, a feeling that we thought we had lost with the last few years, but it was there, and I can say it is the best feeling in the world.

Source: fia.com

Baku 2018 – There’s nothing too special with this race other than the chaos with RedBull, but for some reason it was quite memorable for me!

Source: skysports.com

Hope you enjoyed this installation of our most memorable races. Stay tuned for more from The Fastest Sector and make sure to follow our social media while you wait for the next post!