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

Miami 2022- Marvellous Max in Miami

There was a lot of buzz surrounding the inaugural Miami GP; music, acting and sports stars found their way to the paddock to support drivers who were to brave the brand new street circuit which had hints of the vibes at Monaco with the yachts by the track. Ted Kravitz even passed on some information beside mermaids during the weekend.

Race weekend review

Coming off the back of a win at Imola, Max Verstappen had momentum on his side. But Charles Leclerc was looking to extend his championship lead in front of the American crowd, while Carlos Sainz looked to change his fortune after two DNFs in a row.

Mercedes luck seemed to have turned with what seemed like good starts in practise, new upgrades featured on the car. Verstappen’s car slightly had contact with the wall which left him with little involvement during the session as he spent most of it in the garage. Leclerc finished the session on top, closely followed by Russell.

Swapping it around in FP2, Russell topped the charts, ahead of Leclerc and Perez. The session was filled with plenty of incidents including a spin from Sergio Perez, a crash from Carlos Sainz, and a hydraulic issue for Max Verstappen.

It was Sergio Perez who was P1 in the final practice session, followed by Leclerc and his teammate Verstappen who finally had a decent session. Impressive laps set by Alonso, Vettel and Schumacher saw them in 4th, 5th and 6th. With a good FP2 result, Albon once again impressed in FP3 with ninth place in the Williams. It was not a great session for Mercedes, who struggled in 15th and 17th. A red flag for a big crash at Turn 14 for Ocon saw his session end prematurely.

Source: Insider.com

Another pole position saw Leclerc tie with Vettel on pole positions for Ferrari and also meant that he had been on the front row for every race so far this season. Carlos Sainz made it a Ferrari 1-2 and Max Verstappen could only get third place in his hunt for the championship after an error on his final flying lap.

Sergio Perez was 4th, followed by Bottas in 5th with a strong performance after a new power unit and Lewis Hamilton in 6th. 7th, 8th and 9th were occupied by Gasly, Norris and Tsunoda, a good session for the AlphaTauri after a rough weekend in Imola. Lance Stroll filled up the last position in the top 10, a good result for the Canadian.

Out in Q2 was: Alonso, Russell, Vettel, Ricciardo and Schumacher.

Out in Q1: Magnussen, Zhou, Albon and Latifi (Ocon did not take part in qualifying after his crash in FP3, he was to start at the back of the grid)

Race Report

Small spells of rain before the race looked like it might disrupt the good weather conditions seen throughout the weekend but the track was all dry with the sun in the sky just before lights out.

Issues with fuel temperatures for Aston Martin saw both drivers start in the pit lane, an unfortunate position to find themselves in as both drivers had somewhat decent qualifying results. (10th & 13th)

A good start for Leclerc saw him keep his lead at the start, but an even better start for Verstappen saw him snatch P2 from Carlos Sainz into the first corner.

Verstappen, after keeping quite close to Leclerc since the start, overtook the Monegasque for the lead of the race on the DRS straight on lap 9.

A lot of entertainment came from the lower half of the grid throughout the race, with DRS trains keeping many drivers close together. The battle between the two Aston Martins, the two Haas’ and Lando Norris brought anticipating moments on the screen. Magnussen and Norris who had gone to pit were stuck behind the Aston Martins who were doing long stints on hard tyres, effectively losing out many places.

On lap 42, Pierre Gasly began struggling with his car, unable to keep it on track. When he rejoined, he made contact with Lando Norris’ left rear tyre, taking the McLaren driver out of the race ( Gasly later retired with an issue) and bringing out a virtual safety car before eventually the full safety car was deployed.

Source: Motorsport.com

Some drivers made use of this opportunity, George Russell who hadn’t pitted because he started on hard tyres dived into the pits, the strategy to wait on a safety car going according to plan.

Lance Stroll, Esteban Ocon, Sergio Perez and Kevin Magnussen also pitted, before Sebastian Vettel followed soon after.

The race concluded with a lot of chaos, the stewards investigating incident after incident:

An incident involving Sebastian Vettel and Mick Schumacher saw Vettel retire and Schumacher place last after both were on course for some points for their teams.

Kevin Magnussen was caught in a tangle with Lance Stroll for which he later received a time penalty for (causing a collision).

Daniel Riccardo was also penalised for leaving the track and gaining an advantage, dropping him to P13.

Fernando Alonso was given two five second penalties: one incident involving Gasly and another for weaving on the straights twice. Dropping him out of a points scoring finish.

It almost seemed that there was an opportunity for Perez to put pressure on the top three with a fresh set of new medium tyres but it wasn’t to be as Carlos Sainz put in a great defence to keep his P3.

Charles Leclerc took advantage of the gap that had now closed down between him and the race leader Verstappen, piling pressure on the reigning world champion in the aims to snatch away the victory. But Verstappen kept his cool all the way to the finish line to become the Miami GP’s first winner, meaning that he maintained his current streak of winning ever race he completed in the 2022 campaign. The gap to Leclerc in the championship is 19 points as he also claimed a point for fastest lap.

Source: upi.com

P2 and P3 for Ferrari meant that they continue to lead the constructors’ championship as well, a good day for Carlos Sainz as he looks to put his misfortune in the past.

Sergio Perez finished P4 as he was unable to overtake Sainz.

Russell had a nice battle with his teammate Lewis Hamilton for fifth place before staying ahead of him with his fresher tyres, keeping his streak of finishing in the top five every race.

Source: GPblog.com

Not the best weekend for McLaren as Norris DNF’d and Ricciardo was hit with a five second penalty towards the end of the race for an incident

AlphaTauri also had a weekend to forget with Gasly retiring and Tsunoda finishing outside the points in P13 ending the race on soft tyres, a risk which did not pay off.

Alfa Romeo had some positives from the weekend as Bottas continued his great start to the season with a P8, but unfortunately the positivity did not extend to the other side of the garage when Zhou Guanyu retired in the early stages of the race.

Source: Theguardian.com

Aston Martin saw Stroll claim a single point when he was bumped up into the top ten after Alonso’s penalty. Vettel, who had a pit-lane start like Stroll was effectively on course for 8th place, retired after his incident with Mick Schumacher.

A great redemption story for Ocon after being unable to participate in qualifying saw him go from P20 to P8 among all over the concluding madness. Alonso finished outside the top ten after both penalties were applied, he placed 12th.

Alex Albon’s brilliant run with Williams continues as he clinched two points for his team, a superb drive from him. Latifi ended up in 14th place, a pretty uneventful race for him.

Source: Planetf1.com

Haas would definitely like to put this weekend in the past with Magneussen retiring and Schumacher in last place.


It’s the Spanish GP next up on the calendar, where Leclerc will look to bounce back and take the reign of his championship lead. Make sure to stay up to date on all of the latest news inside the paddock by following The Fastest Sector on social media!

Categories
F1 2022 Season

Melbourne 2022 – Return to Australia

Race week review

F1 finally returned to Australia after three long years, and what is normally the opening race of the season was the third on this year’s calendar. The wait was well worth it; as Daniel Ricciardo, who has previously mentioned missing the opportunity to have his home race and see his family affected his mental health finally returned home. He was the star of the show, as home fans welcomed their hero.

Source: Formula1.com

Sebastian Vettel, who missed the first two races of the season due to Covid, returned to the grid to get his 2022 season started. The Aston Martin team had work to do to catch up with the other teams ahead of them.

The biggest change to the track was the old Turn 9, which became a straight. The weekend also started off with four DRS zones but for safety reasons one of them was scrapped.

Ferrari kicked off the weekend with their continuous impressive form as Carlos Sainz topped the chart in FP1 and Charles Leclerc did the same in FP2. The prancing horse just seemed to have an edge over its competitors. Red Bull, Ferrari’s closest challengers were not too far off the pace in both of Friday’s sessions.

Source: Boringbuzz.com

McLaren, who have had a difficult start to the season compared to their great start in the 2021 season, surprised many people with their pace over the weekend. This positive information was definitely helpful to Ricciardo who has not had the best of luck in his home GP over the years. They were fifth and eighth in FP1 and, eighth and tenth in FP2.

Sebastian Vettel’s first race of the season did not get off to a great start as his car lost power near the end of the first session, bringing out a red flag. “Fireman Seb” made his appearance once again with the fire extinguisher as smoke was billowing out of his car, before he scootered around the track, which he was fined €5000 for after the stewards investigated the incident. The team were unable to fix his car in time for the second session, His teammate, Lance Stroll, brought out a red flag in FP2 when a piece of his Aston Martin wheel cover flew off.

On Saturday morning in FP3, Lando Norris’s McLaren was the fastest car on track, ahead of Charles Leclerc. It was a difficult session for many as several drivers went off track. The two Aston Martin drivers brought out red flags, the first, when Sebastian Vettel hit the wall at Turn 10 and the second was when Lance Stroll had a late crash at Turn 11, ending the session early.

In qualifying, traffic caused a lot of problems. Stroll’s car was fixed on time for the session, but a big talking point was his incident with Nicholas Latifi. The pair came together as Latifi let Stroll past him, but Stroll then slowed down and Latifi tried to get past again. Stroll was later handed a three place grid penalty.

Source: Express.co.uk

Vettel who did not seem like he would get a run in qualifying, was given a chance by the amazing efforts of the mechanics who used the time during the red flag to get him out.

As heroic as the effort was, with very little running time on track for the German, he did not make it out of Q1. Following him out were Albon, Magnussen, Latifi, Stroll and Magnussen. After his brilliant start on his return to F1, there was much surprise that the Dane was eliminated and outqualified by his young teammate.

Source: Planetf1.com

Bottas missed out on Q3 for the first time in 103 races, an impressive streak that came to an end. The Red Bull’s and Ferrari’s were on top of their game, ahead of the rest of their competitors in Q2. Both McLaren’s made it into Q3, the first time this season, cementing their impressive improvement so far. Going out along with Bottas was Ocon, Zhou, Schumacher and Tsunoda.

Leclerc had set the fastest time in Q3, followed by Perez and Verstappen before Alonso’s Alpine stopped with a hydraulic issue and broufht out a red flag. The Spaniard had matched Leclerc first sector and was two tenths up in the second sector before the issue. Carlos Sainz was caught out by the red flag as he was on a good lap, just short of the line before the red flag came out.

When the green lights showed, Verstappen improved and set his car P1, but only for a few moments as the man of the moment, Charles Leclerc took pole position.

Source: Formula1.com

Perez, who was under investigation for not slowing under yellow flags in Q1, was in third place and Lando Norris, building on his team’s impressive pace qualified in fourth, just two tenths of his teammate Ricciardo, in seventh.

Source: Autosport.com

It was a relatively good session for Mercedes who qualified in fifth and sixth, Hamilton, a tenth ahead of Russell. Ocon qualified eighth, while the other Ferrari driver, Carlos Sainz, only qualified in ninth, going wide at Turn 10 and finished a second and a half behind his teammate on pole, leaving Alonso in tenth.

It was later announced that Alex Albon of Williams, who was to serve a three place grid penalty from the previous race, was disqualified from the qualifying session for being unable to produce the required one litre of fuel sample.

Source: Planetf1.com

There were to be some changes to the grid before the start of the race, Albon would start last after his disqualification behind Lance Stroll who was handed his three place grid penalty. Perez and Leclerc, who were both under investigation for separate incidents in qualifying the day before, kept their positions as the stewards took no further action.

Race Report

It was another weekend on top for Charles Leclerc and the Ferrari team, with a dominant win in Melbourne to mark the return of Formula One to Australia. Unfortunately, teammate Carlos Sainz did not finish the race following his retirement on the second lap, but this didn’t affect Ferrari’s top step on the Constructor’s Championship, which they continue to lead.

Source: Autosport.com

While Ferrari lost one car in the race, so to did main competitors Red Bull. Reigning champion Max Verstappen once again had to retire from the race due to an issue with the car – is the Red Bull Power Train not all it’s cracked up to be? However, teammate Sergio Perez came home in second place, allowing the team to leave Australia with a good haul of points.

The podium was rounded off by Mercedes newcomer George Russell, his first podium with the team. Teammate and former champion Lewis Hamilton came in fourth, suggesting that Mercedes may be back on the right track with car development and slowly making their way back to the front of the grid.

Source: Reuters.com

This weekend was similarly better for Mercedes customers McLaren, with Lando Norris finishing in 5th and home hero Daniel Ricciardo in 6th, the best result for the team so far.

Esteban Ocon took seventh place for Alpine, bringing home a few points for the French team. However, Fernando Alonso finished in seventeenth after a late pit stop in order to try for the fastest lap – which he almost achieved, until a stellar lap from Charles Leclerc stopped him in his tracks.

An excellent weekend for Valtteri Bottas saw him capitalise on the mistakes of his rivals, allowing him to take eighth place in the race for Alfa Romeo, with rookie teammate Zhou Guanyu in 11th place once more, another strong finish for the Chinese driver.

Source: Pitpass.com

Pierre Gasly finished in ninth place for Alpha Tauri, his second points finish of the season, after a late final lap lock-up saw him lose eighth place to Valtteri Bottas. Teammate Yuki Tsunoda finished in fifteenth place for the team.

One of the most incredible drives this weekend had to be from returning racer Alex Albon, in his third race for Williams. Albon raced on the same set of hard tires on which he started for fifty-seven out of the fifty-eight laps, eventually pitting on the final lap but remaining in the points at tenth place.

Source: RacingNews365.com

It was a relatively good weekend for Haas with Mick Schumacher finishing in thirteenth after missing the race in Saudi Arabia, and Kevin Magnussen in fourteenth. Schumacher was quick to avoid contact during the race and showed excellent racing skills throughout.

The less said the better about Aston Martin this weekend. After crashes for both drivers throughout the practice and qualifying sessions, Sebastian Vettel left the race in a similar fashion on Sunday after his car hit the barriers. While Lance Stroll did finish the race, he did so in twelfth place, following a five second penalty for weaving in front of Bottas.

By Leslie & Tara