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F1 2024 Season

Interview with Nicole Bearne

We asked some questions to Nicole Bearne, former Head of Internal Communications at Mercedes-AMG Petronas Formula One Team, who spoke about her career and gave some advice to those who have an interest in working in Formula 1.

Q: What brought about your interest in Formula 1?

I didn’t set out to work in F1 initially. I used to watch the races on TV with my Dad when I was growing up, but I never saw it as a possible career opportunity. I wasn’t a mechanic or an engineer! I studied Russian and International Relations at University and, after spending a few years working in Russia, I got a job with a Russian oil company in London. One day in 1994 my boss asked me to arrange a trip for him and some of his business associates to the British GP.  I went along with them, watched Damon Hill win the race, and I was hooked.

Q: Can you give a brief summary about how your career in Formula 1 began? 

I went back to Silverstone for the British Grand Prix in 1995 and 1996, each time becoming more of a fan. Then at the end of 1997, the Russian company I was working for closed down and I was made redundant. Early in January 1998, I turned to the job section of a London newspaper to take a look at possible job opportunities. There I found an advert that changed my life. A newly formed Formula One racing team called British American Racing was looking for a Personal Assistant to support the Team Principal. I applied knowing that there would be huge competition, so needless to say I was over the moon when I got the call to say they wanted me to do the job.

 Q: What is one piece of advice you would give to someone with the goal of working in motorsport?

Stand out from the crowd…

The first question to ask yourself as you think about applying for any role (in motorsport or any other industry) is “What makes me different?” Why is a recruiter going to be interested in you, above all the other candidates? If you have done the same things as every other applicant, your CV won’t shine through. It won’t get their interest. So the question is: what can you do to make yourself stand out. Often this is not even work-related activity. It could be a sport that you excel at, or a musical instrument that you play. It could be a specific achievement. Within our F1 team over the years, we have had a concert pianist in Aero, a world champion Irish Dancer in Legal, a European record holding swimmer in IT and a British 400m sprint relay champion in HR. All these are significant achievements that would be of interest to a recruiting manager. So think about what you have done and how you can stand out.

Also, take time to consider your personal qualities. Have you demonstrated leadership in a previous role? Can you talk about times when you have had to be resilient? What personal challenges have you overcome? These are all things that potential recruiters are interested in. 

Q: In your opinion, what is the best way to get experience in motorsport?

Work experience is invaluable and can be a great way to build your CV and your network. However, F1 teams receive literally thousands of requests each year for work experience and are only able to offer a very small number of placements. Priority for these is often given to local schools near to the team’s headquarters, or partner schools, colleges and organisations that the team may already work with. Internships are usually advertised on the team’s website or come about through existing contacts with universities.

It’s important therefore not to limit your work experience applications to just Formula One teams. Think creatively about the area that you are interested in and then apply to other companies that might be relevant: other motorsport teams, race circuits, tv or radio stations, merchandise sellers, graphic design agencies or events and hospitality companies. 

Q: What do you like most about F1/ motorsports as a whole?

Having worked in motorsport for 25 years, the most enjoyable aspect for me was always the team spirit. Everyone supports everyone else, and people genuinely care about each other.  You work with a team of highly talented, dedicated individuals but everyone pulls in the same direction and is focussed on the same goals. There’s a ‘no blame’ culture, where people can be open, honest and treat each other with kindness and respect. I also really appreciate the technical side of the sport, the constant innovation and creativity that pushes the boundaries.

Q: Are there any challenges that you faced that you feel may have helped you grow in your career? What are they and how did they help?

I think the main thing I have learned is that you need to keep learning and growing in order to build your career.  I’ve reinvented my career within motorsport a number of times, moving from being an Executive Assistant to working in Communications, and then IT, Finance and Internal Communications.  Each time, I’ve learned new skills and taken on new responsibilities. I’m now doing the same with my consultancy firm, The Comms Exchange. If you’re not learning, you’re standing still. That’s as important for the people who work in the teams to know, as much as it is for the teams themselves.

Q: Before you worked in F1, what were your expectations of working in the sport and was it different to what it was really like; if so, how?

I think, like most people, I thought an F1 team was just made up of the people that you see at the race on TV – the drivers, mechanics, engineers and a small number of team management and support crew.  I didn’t appreciate that’s only the tip of the iceberg, and that behind them stands the team behind the race team – nowadays that’s nearly 2,000 people: designers, engineers, manufacturing and assembly technicians, inspectors, aerodynamicists, wind tunnel technicians, model makers, dyno engineers, test & development technicians, electronics engineers, project planners, buyers, painters and graphic designers, simulation specialists, mathematical modellers, strategists, race, facilities, stores, IT, HR, legal, finance, marketing, social media, internal communications, team clothing, travel, logistics, heritage, the fitness centre, reception, catering, security and cleaning. It’s a huge operation with an incredible mix of nationalities, cultures and personalities – all supporting each other and working together to put two cars and drivers on the track.

Q: If you could change one thing in Formula 1, what would it be and why? 

I would like to see more females in senior leadership/board level positions in Formula 1, and behind the wheel of the car. There are many talented female leaders and female drivers, but they have not been given a proper opportunity in this sport as yet.

If you are interested in hearing more from Nicole, we would recommend following Nicole on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/nicole-bearne?utm_source=share&utm_campaign=share_via&utm_content=profile&utm_medium=ios_app

Categories
F1 2023 Season

Miami 2023 – Miami’s Number One

Race weekend review

Some Hollywood stars made appearances in the paddock to cheer the teams on and see some on-track action. There was a some questions asked about the decision to shorten two DRS zone by some drivers, while other drivers like Alonso, was in favour of this decision.

Source: TennisMajors.com

In FP1 Mercedes started off the weekend strong, showing that they came to Miami with pace. Russell and Hamilton were P1 and P2, while Leclerc and Verstappen were P3 and P4. The Aston Martins were 7th and 8th, about a second slower than the Mercedes.

FP2 brought us back to a more usual trio. Verstappen topped the charts ahead of both Ferraris, followed by Perez. Norris had a better session than his first as he managed P6, but Russell found himself lower down the table in P15. Leclerc brought out the a red flag when he crashed late on in the session.

Source: Mark Sutton – LAT Images

Verstappen stayed on top in FP3 ahead of Leclerc and his teammate, Perez. Alpine showed some pace with both drivers in the top 6 and within nine tenths of the leading cars. It was another difficult practice session for Mercedes as they finished 10th and 13th.

Qualifying

McLaren had another bad qualifying session with both cars knocked out in Q1. The Mercedes drivers left it late to secure their places in Q2. De Vries outqualified his teammate Tsunoda for the first time this season when the dutchman escaped elimination but Tsunoda did not. Another surprise was the elimination of Stroll. Out of Q1: Norris, Tsunoda, Stroll, Piastri, Sargeant

One of the biggest shocks of qualifying was the Mercedes of Lewis Hamilton not making it out of Q2. Both he and Russell were in danger with five minutes left on the clock; while Russell narrowly escaped, Hamilton did not. Albon missed out on Q3 by five hundredths of a second. Out of Q2: Albon, Hulkenberg, Hamilton, Zhou, De Vries

Sergio Perez claimed pole position in Miami ahead of Fernando Alonso and Carlos Sainz, giving us a Spanish speaking top 3. Verstappen and Leclerc both made mistake on their first flying lap with Verstappen backing out of his and Leclerc putting himself to P7. In his final attempt for pole Leclerc went off through the run-off area and into the barriers bringing out the red flag and ending the session early. Verstappen, who didn’t set a time, was P9. Top 10: Perez, Alonso, Sainz, Magnussen, Gasly, Russell, Leclerc, Ocon, Verstappen, Bottas.

Source: sportskeeda.com

Race recap:

Max Verstappen did what he does best at the Miami GP. From P9 he charged his way through the field, catching Alonso for P2 by lap 15 (Alonso guessed 25) and eventually overtook Perez for the lead, in a class of his own during the race. Perez settled for second, having a strong race but his teammate made the hard stint work brilliantly and coasted to the end on medium tyres.

Fernando Alonso was back on the podium for Aston Martin, he too, had a solid race, kept his distance from Russell. He had such a lonely race that he watched Stroll make overtakes on the big screen. Stroll, who started down in P18 was not too shy of scoring points, he finished P12.

Source: Source: GPBlog.com

Mercedes, after a strong start to the weekend will be glad to end it on a high. Russell captured 4th place, overtaking Sainz for those 12 points while Hamilton had a nice recovery making his way from P13 all the way to P6 ahead of Leclerc.

It was a disappointing weekend for Ferrari in Miami. Sainz who started in the podium places dropped down to P5 as he was hit with a 5 second penalty for speeding in the pit lane and he could not keep up with Russell once past the Spaniard. Leclerc, who struggled behind Magnussen for a large portion of the race finished where he started as Hamilton’s late charge relegated the Ferrari driver.

Alpine had a good day in the office in Miami with a double point scoring finish. Gasly and Ocon finished P8 and P9 respectively. McLaren on the other hand had a race to forget in Miami. No points were scored as they finished where they started in P17 and P19. Their gamble for a soft tyre start in the hope of a safety car didn’t pay off, especially when De Vries made contact with Norris at the start. Both cars soon came in to pit for hard tyres which they finished the race on. Tsunoda displayed his talent with a P11 finish, although he just missed out on points, the Japanese driver showed just how well he’s driving in a slower car. De Vries on the other hand was P18 after making contact with Norris on Lap 1.

Source: Andy Hone – LAT Images

Kevin Magnussen hung on to P10, surviving Tsunoda and Stroll’s late charge for that final championship point. The Dane who battled it out with Leclerc will see Haas delighted with the point. Hulkenberg did not have as good a race as his teammate and was stuck with 15th. Logan Sargeant was happy to be back in Miami for his home GP but he finished plum last and a lap down while Albon took P14. Bottas’ tyre strategy didn’t pay out in the end for him as he fell back into 13th and Zhou finished behind Hulkenberg in 16th.

We now take a one week break before we head to Imola for the first of a trio of European races. Stay tuned for more content on the blog and follow our social media for updates.

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 2023 Season

Saudi Arabia 2023- Perez All The Way

Race week review

A strong start to the season for Redbull and Aston Martin had their rivals scrambling to catch up and there was a lot of pressure on Ferrari and Mercedes. Emerging news during the week was that Leclerc would be using new control electronics for his PU meaning he would be serving a 10 place grid penalty for the race.

From the very beginning it was clear that Redbull and Aston Martin were leaders. We were starting to see a pattern with our top 3. What used to be a familiar top 3 of Verstappen, Perez and Leclerc, was now a top 3 of Verstappen, Perez and Alonso ( with Stroll close behind). In all 3 sessions, those were the front runners, with some variation.

Source: Luca Bruno via Reuters

When it got to qualifying, the question was: would anyone be able to stop Max Verstappen? The answer; no one was quite so sure about.

Qualifying did not go to plan for Sargeant, who spun at Turn 22/23 and saw his lap time deleted for track limits; and neither was it any better for Norris, who made a mistake on his first run and hit the wall, ending his qualifying early. Tsunoda, Albon and DeVries also failed to escape elimination in Q1.

Probably the most surprising news of the weekend was the shock exit of Verstappen in Q2. The Dutchman told his team about an engine problem and he dragged his car back to the pits but did not continue the session as there was not enough time to solve the problem. Both Alfa Romeos and both Haas cars all failed to set times quick enough to see them into the top 10 shootout. Piastri impressed in his McLaren as he slotted his car into the top 10.

Perez took pole position for the second year running in Jeddah, ahead of Leclerc (who would drop down to 12th because of his penalty), meaning Alonso would start alongside the Mexican. Russell would be joined by Sainz on the second row. Stroll, Ocon, Hamilton (having a disappointing qualifying in 8th), Piastri and Gasly rounded out the top 10.

Source: motorsport.com

Race Report

Sergio Perez lost his lead at lights out to Alonso but overtook the Spaniard soon enough, he then charged ahead away from the others and survived the pressure from Verstappen towards the end, taking the victory in Jeddah. Verstappen had an impressive race himself, climbing through the midfield (one of the few cars that benefitted from the safety car) and grabbing himself P2 and fastest lap – keeping him on top of the championship standings.

Fernando Alonso, once again showing how strong he is in this new Aston Martin car, drove a strong race to finish P3. He was given a post-race 10 second penalty for not serving his penalty correctly (the original penalty for a starting procedure infringement) but this decision was then reversed when Aston Martin appealed it and he kept his P3 and claimed his 100th podium in F1. Lance Stroll unfortunately had his race cut short when he was told to stop out on track in the earlier part of the race which brought out the safety car.

Source: CNN.com

Mercedes, who were not as close to the front runners as the wished, briefly inherited P3 from Alonso’s penalty but the celebration was cut short when the decision was reversed. Aside from that, both Mercedes who were 4th and 5th in the final classification had decent races but were left with a fair amount of catching up to do.

Ferrari were no match for their rivals, their pace apparently seven tenths per lap slower than last year at this circuit. Sainz finished P6 ahead of Leclerc who made his way through the field after his 10 place grid penalty. The Italian team will need to rethink their approach for the upcoming races.

Source: news.italy24.press

It was a solid race for Alpine who had both cars scoring points in 8th and 9th. For a second race running, Gasly was in the top 10; and Ocon, who had a DNF in the season opener, scored his first points of the season.

Haas grabbed a last minute point when Magnussen overtook Tsunoda for 10th place. The pair produced a great battle that left the Dane the happier of the two. Hulkenberg wasn’t too far behind in 12th.

Zhou finished further up the field than his teammate in P13, Bottas struggled with technical issues during the race and was the last of the finishers.

Tsunoda was very frustrated at the end of the race as he missed out on points due to Magnussen’s overtake. De Vries, who started 18th, crossed the line in P14.

Source: Lars Baron/Getty Images

Another disappointing weekend for McLaren saw Piastri finish ahead of Norris in P15, as the more experienced driver brought the car home in P17. The team from Woking will have a lot of reflecting to do to understand what is going wrong.

Sargeant, after being passed by Piastri on the last lap, crossed the line in P16; while Albon retired from the race due to brake problems.

We race in Australia next, a track known for brilliant season openers. It will be Oscar Piastri’s first home GP in Formula 1, will McLaren turn their luck around in time for the rookie? Will Red Bull’s rivals close the gap?

Make sure to follow The Fastest Sector on all of our social media to stay updated with the latest news of the F1 world.

Categories
F1 2023 Season

F1 Crews: James Vowles


“Valtteri it’s James”

F1 fans know when James comes on the radio, there’s gonna be strategy and there’s gonna be people listening to it, understanding the next tactical move from Mercedes. 

James Vowles has been widely known in the F1 world as the brains behind the winning strategy of the Mercedes AMG F1 Team. However the 8 Constructors and 7 Drivers Championships didn’t come straight into his career. 

Born on the 20th of June, 1979. James took his master’s degree in Motorsport Engineering and Management. The Brit who also fancied himself behind the wheel, with him competing in the Asian Le-Mans series 2022 in the GT class with the Garage59 team.

He started his motorsport journey with British American Racing. Putting in the work through the years, as the team changed its name and progressed up and down the field. In 2009, when Honda exited F1 and this sudden move put Brawn GP on the grid, James was sitting in the Race Strategist chair on the pitwall. His leadership and abilities put out race-winning and eventually championship winning strategies over the season. 

So when Mercedes bought out the private team, he found himself on the opportunity that F1 staff hoped for. He along with the pitwall of Ron Meadows, Simon Cole, and Andrew Shovlin made the best of this time and led the Mercedes domination in the Turbo-Hybrid era. His tenure at Mercedes as its Motosport Strategy Director ended early 2023, when he was called up to become the team principal of the Williams F1 team.


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Flashback Friday

Flashback Friday – China 2012

A decade ago, round three of the 2012 F1 season saw the teams and drivers arrive at the Shanghai International Circuit. Tensions were high because of the long discussions about Mercedes front wing F duct’s legality, said legality being argued by Mercedes competitor’s.

Source: Maxf1.net

Notably, Hamilton, who at the time was looking to add another championship to his name, was to serve a five place grid penalty for changing the gearbox of his McLaren.

Over the three practice sessions, Mercedes and McLaren showed their speed on track by hosting their cars in the top 3 of all of the sessions. Hamilton topped FP1 and FP3, while seven time world champion Schumacher split the young Brit’s dominance and topped FP2.

Qualifying

When it came to qualifying, it was a different ball game. Red Bull and Mercedes were confident in their car; both leaving it late to do runs in Q1, but both teams were safe with that bold move. The usual suspects were out in Q1 such as Vergne, Kovalainen, Petrov, Glock, De la Rosa and Karthikeyan.

In Q2, probably the most unexpected event at the point during the weekend, was the exit of two time world champion Sebastian Vettel for Red Bull. Both Mercedes, Hamilton and Raikkonen stayed in the pits while others did their final runs in attempt to escape elimination. This eventually dumped Vettel out of Q2, he was joined by Massa, Maldonado, Senna, di Resta and Ricciardo.

The top 10 shootout was full of excitement as it could have been anyone’s pole position for the taking. First to set a lapped time was Rosberg, punching a 1:35.1 on the clock, half a second faster than his team mate Schumacher, Hamilton and Webber. With confidence in his time, he stepped out of the car with two minutes left on the clock; but there was no one who could stop Rosberg from claiming his first pole position in Formula 1. Hamilton ended up P2 but would later drop back to P7 for his gearbox penalty.

Starting grid: Rosberg, Schumacher, Kobayashi, Raikkonen, Button, Webber, Hamilton, Perez, Alonso, Grosjean

Source: autoexpress.co.uk

Race

Finally, the much anticipated race day came along and Vergne was to start in the pitlane after changes to his car before the race.

Most of the grid started on soft tyres, but starting medium tyres were Massa, Senna and both Toro Rossos. Good starts from the Mercedes pair saw them avoid trouble but Kobayashi and Webber fell backwards in order and found themselves in a tight pickle, with Webber behind Alonso. An early stop by Webber led the others to follow his actions shortly after.

The only retirement of the race came from a mistake in the pitlane by Mercedes when Schumacher went to make his first pitstop. A possible podium finish turned into a nightmare for the German team. With the round of pitstops completed the lead was Rosberg, Button, Hamilton, Webber and Raikkonen.

Webber was the first to pit again for new tyres on Lap 22; Button and Hamilton followed his lead. Raikkonen stopped later and ended up losing many places after the pitstop. By Lap 30, the different strategies were more clear cut: Rosberg, Vettel and Raikkonen were all on two stop strategies while Button, Hamilton and Webber were doing three stops.

After Rosberg’s final stop Button took the lead but would still have to make another stop himself. But when Hamilton, Alonso and Button pitted, it was not smooth sailing for Button as there was an issue with his rear left tyre which delayed his stop giving the lead back to Rosberg. When Massa pitted, it left Raikkonen behind the leading Rosberg but there was a train of cars behind him.

With five laps to go Button, Hamilton and Webber overtook Vettel with their much fresher tyres for 2nd, 3rd and 4th. Nico Rosberg held his own and took good care of his tyres to see himself victorious in F1 for the first time in his career. He was joined by a double McLaren podium in Button and Hamilton.

Top 10 points scorers: Rosberg, Button, Hamilton, Webber, Vettel, Grosjean, Senna, Maldonado, Alonso, Kobayashi

Rosberg’s win moved him to P6 in the championship standings but it was McLaren’s Hamilton and Button who were first and second.

Source: makformula1.blogspot.com

Hope you enjoyed that Flashback Friday, we will be back in the new year with lots more to share!

Categories
F1 2022 Season

Mexico 2022- Another Record Broken

Race weekend review

The main news of the week was the FIA’s announcement on Red Bull’s cost cap breach; they were fined seven million dollars and got a 10% reduction in wind tunnel time. Their breach was 2.2 million dollars but if a tax credit had been applied correctly it would have been 0.5 million dollars. Aston Martin received a four hundred and fifty thousand dollar fine for their breach of the cost cap.

Several drivers sported new helmets for the Mexican Grand Prix. Sebastian Vettel wore one of his iconic Red Bull helmets with the words “Danke Didi” as a tribute to the late Dietrich Mateschitz.

Source: racingnews365.com

Practice

Many young drivers replaced the usual F1 drivers in FP1 in Mexico. Liam Lawson, Logan Sargeant, Nyck De Vries, Jack Doohan and Pietro Fittipaldi all had the opportunities to impress. Carlos Sainz and Charles Leclerc topped the charts for Ferrari but the top six were covered by just under two tenths, so there was no obvious advantage yet.

Testing on the Pirelli rubber in FP2 saw an unusual top 3 of Russell, Tsunoda and Ocon. Red flags were waved when Charles Leclerc went off the track and hit the barriers, damaging his rear wing. Magnussen and Stroll were to take grid penalties for the race; the Dane needed an engine replacement earning him 5 places, and Stroll 3 for his incident with Alonso at the U.S. GP.

Source: Express.co.uk

Russell topped the charts again on Saturday morning, but this time he was joined by his team mate Lewis Hamilton and gave Mercedes the 1-2, the 8x world champions looking threatening at the top. Verstappen completed the top 3 but was almost half a second behind Russell’s leading time.

Qualifying

The usual suspects, our regular top six were safe; the Ferraris and Red Bulls chose not to do a final run unlike the others who needed extra laps to see them through. Schumacher and Vettel set the exact same lap time, the Haas driver putting his time in first. But it would not be enough for the Germans to escape elimination. Out in Q1: Schumacher, Vettel, Stroll, Albon, Latifi.

The top four of Hamilton, Sainz, Russell and Verstappen were all close in time. Perez took to a clear track with just three minutes to spare, setting himself a time that would see him fifth. Unfortunately for Ricciardo, the McLaren driver missed out on Q3 to Alonso by 0.053s. Out in Q2: Ricciardo, Zhou, Tsunoda, Gasly, Magnussen.

An intense fight for pole position was looming. Three teams seemed to be in with a chance. The top 5 after first runs were: Verstappen, Russell, Perez, Sainz and Bottas. Hamilton’s time (his first run) that was good enough for P3 was deleted for track limits. Verstappen improved on his final lap, solidifying the pole position, while Russell did not improve (due to track limits) but kept his P2 ahead of Hamilton who was P3 by just 0.005s. It was not very common for the pole sitter to take the victory at the Mexico GP in recent years, while good fortune had been on the side of the third place starter on the grid; would things be different this year?

Top 10: Verstappen, Russell, Hamilton, Perez, Sainz, Bottas, Leclerc, Norris, Alonso, Ocon.

Source: Thescore.com

Race Report

Max Verstappen broke yet another record at the Mexico GP. Taking his Red Bull to victory, the Dutchman finished 15 seconds ahead of next second place finisher Lewis Hamilton. A one stop strategy, from soft to medium tyres which were well taken care of, saw Verstappen take his 14th win of the season. He now holds the record of most wins in an F1 season, overtaking a record he equalled with Schumacher and Vettel just last week. Perez had the same strategy as Verstappen, he was closing in on Hamilton after his pitstop but was unable to catch the Brit in the end so he settled for third.

Mercedes strategy ultimately let them down in Mexico. In what could have been a more successful weekend with the pace they had seen during free practice and qualifying, the Silver Arrows were not as close as they would have liked. Hamilton overtook Russell at the start and held onto track position, but the medium-hard strategy did not work in their favour as they could not find the pace needed to catch those in front of them. Hamilton grabbed a podium for the team, taking a valuable P2, and Russell took P4 quite a bit further back.

It was an uneventful weekend for Ferrari who finished P5 and P6. They lacked the pace of their competitors and were miles behind, so far behind that Russell was able to pit for new tyres to set the fastest lap of the race and still come out comfortably ahead of Sainz in fifth.

McLaren had a good race; both drivers scoring points for the papaya team. Ricciardo received a 10 second time penalty for causing a collision with Tsunoda, but this riled up the Aussie who stormed his way to P7, overtaking both Ocon and Alonso and forming a large enough gap to the Frenchman who was P8. He was also voted driver of the day. Norris had a solid drive to get P9.

Alpine lost out to McLaren points-wise at the Mexico GP but still maintain a seven point lead to their rivals. Ocon found himself in a McLaren sandwich in P8, while Alonso had a late retirement due to an engine issue- the Spaniard called out Alpine and its reliability issues.

Source: Alamy Stock Photo via Planetf1.com

Quite a dismal day for Aston Martin who could only manage 14th and 15th, they too, lacked the pace to compete. Vettel completed an impressive stint on his soft tyres which he started the race on, but on medium tyres after a pitstop, the car just was not quite right. Stroll was on a different strategy but no such luck was found for either driver.

AlphaTauri would be glad to see the back of that race as they left Mexico with no points. Gasly just missed out in P11, he picked up a five second time penalty for forcing Stroll off the track. Tsunoda was the other non-finisher after his contact with Ricciardo saw him limp to the pits and retire from the race.

Alfa Romeo managed to come away with one point, Valtteri Bottas hung on for P10 to get that all important championship point that will be crucial in their battle with Aston Martin who they are now four points ahead of.

No points for Williams, with Albon their highest finisher in P12 who was in the hunt for P10 in the closing stages but was overtaken by an eager Gasly. Latfi was the last of the finishers, a lap behind the second-last place finisher Magnussen.

We have a week’s break before we get back to racing. Next we will see the drivers take on the Brazil GP where there will be a sprint race, meaning extra points are up for grabs.

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F1 2022 Season

Belgium 2022- Gossip & Grid Penalties Galore

During the week, McLaren and Daniel Ricciardo announced that the Australian driver would not drive for the team in 2023, that he would finish up with the papaya team at the end of this season. Much speculation arose over the summer break when F2 champion Oscar Piastri and Alpine had somewhat of a public disagreement over the status of the vacant seat that came from Fernando Alonso’s switch to Aston Martin next year. It is rumoured that Piastri will take Ricciardo’s place at McLaren next year, McLaren going for a different line up as things haven’t been going their way this season. But there is still a dispute about Piastri’s contract with Alpine which has been brought to F1’s Contract recognition Board.

Ricciardo still tried to keep his spirits high in Belgium, his warm smile stood out even though he faced some difficult questions on his future. He received support from his former teammates and champions Vettel and Verstappen, as well as seven time world champion Hamilton, who only had words of praise.

Source: planetf1.com

Plenty of drivers took grid penalties during the weekend, 8 drivers in total. It began with much talk about grid penalty rules and how they would be applied in relation to qualifying and taking up new components at different times. Verstappen, Leclerc, Ocon, Norris, Zhou, Schumacher and Tsunoda were all to take “back of the grid” penalties. Meanwhile Valtteri Bottas took a 20 place grid penalty.

Practice

On track, over the practice sessions, Mercedes were a bit behind their competitors Red Bull and Ferrari. They went from pole in Hungary to 1.8 seconds off the pace in Spa. In FP1 our usual trio topped the charts, with Sainz leading Leclerc and Verstappen. F2 driver Liam Lawson took Gasly’s place in the AlphaTauri in FP1 as part of the young drivers test. Kevin Magnussen had an issue so the session was red flagged for a period of time. There was also some rain towards the end of the session; some drivers pitted for inters to test out the track and others stayed in the garage and ended their session early.

In FP2, the McLaren showed some good place, finishing the session behind Verstappen and Leclerc in P3. Verstappen was comfortably ahead of Leclerc with eight tenths between them. Lance Stroll gave Aston Martin a pleasant surprise with fourth place. Mercedes again were struggling in comparison to their rivals, only seeing P6 and P8.

After some not so good sessions on Friday, Perez came out on Saturday morning charging with a late flying lap, finishing ahead of Verstappen and Sainz in FP3 before qualifying. Once again, there was a considerable gap between the Red Bulls and the Ferrari. Good runs from Norris and Alonso saw them in fourth and fifth. Leclerc had a spin and went into the gravel during the session which caused a brief red flag but he reported that he believed the car had no damage.

Qualifying

Sainz and Perez would be the pair that battled it out over the true pole position as the others would take their grid penalties. Verstappen set the pace in Q1 and didn’t go for a second run, nor did Perez and the Ferraris. Albon impressed, taking him to P6. Sebastian Vettel just missed out on Q2 by two thousandths of a second to Mick Schumacher. Following him out was Latifi, Magnussen, Tsunoda and Bottas.

In Q2, Ricciardo received a tow from Norris, having not done a first run like the others. Ocon did the same for Alonso. Leclerc ended that session P1 after an improved time but the Red Bulls and Sainz chose not to go out again after their first attempts. The tow for Alpine worked better than it did for McLaren as Ricciardo failed to qualify for Q3 while Alonso secured a place in the top 10 shootout. Alex Albon impressed again, taking that tenth place and making his first Q3 appearance of the season. Completing the elimination in that round alongside Ricciardo was Gasly, Zhou, Stroll and Schumacher.

As seen for most of the weekend, Verstappen showed superiority to the others; completing first flying lap and making it his only, sitting back and watching from the garage as he set the fastest time overall. A little mix up in the Ferrari garage saw Leclerc unnecessarily take a new set of soft tyres to give Sainz the tow to fight for pole. His confusion at this mistake could be heard over the radio.

Sainz did not improve on his second run, meaning he was P2 but would start on pole in Sunday’s race. Perez followed behind in P3 but would start on the front row alongside Sainz while his teammate would fall down to 15th and Leclerc 16th. Ocon was fifth but would be demoted to 17th due to his penalty, Alonso was sixth and Hamilton seventh but both would be promoted to starting on the second row together. Russell and Albon would start fifth and sixth on row three in the race after qualifying eight and ninth but benefitting from others penalties and Norris would start 18th behind Ocon as he was 10th in Q3.

The top 10 starting grid: Sainz, Perez, Alonso, Hamilton, Russell, Albon, Ricciardo, Gasly, Stroll, Vettel

Race

Tsunoda would start from the pitlane after some more power unit changes, and his teammate Gasly would do the same as he had issues with his car just before the lights out.

Verstappen proved to be untouchable in his Red Bull, making his way through the grid all the way up from 14th to 1st; crossing the finish line 17 seconds ahead of his teammate Perez in second, which gave the team a fantastic 1-2. The pace and strategy of the Red Bulls saw them obliterate their competition on Sunday. Verstappen now leads Perez who is now second, by 96 points in the World Driver’s Championship.

Ferrari had more of a tricky situation than desired when Charles Leclerc who started behind Verstappen in 15th had made his way up to ninth by Lap 2 but found an issue with his front right tyre and had to pit, dropping him down to P17. He eventually made his way back up to P5, keeping his head down and working through the field, he was behind Russell by a large margin and decided to pit late for new softs to set the fastest lap. But with not a great enough gap to Alonso in sixth place, Leclerc was under pressure from the Spaniard and lost a place to him. Although he quickly gained the place back Leclerc, received a five second time penalty for speeding in the pitlane in the bid to come out ahead of Alonso, ultimately demoting him to sixth place. Sainz, who was no match for the Red Bulls, secured a podium for his team ahead of Russell who had closed the gap between them, but Sainz was able to hang on to P3.

It was a mixed day of emotions for Mercedes, Russell managed to continue his streak of finishing in the top five in every race he’s completed. He pushed for P3 towards the end, in the aim of snatching it from Sainz but was unsuccessful so the Brit earned P4 in Spa. On the other hand, his teammate was not met with such fortune. Lewis Hamilton retired from the race on Lap 1 after a first lap incident with Fernando Alonso which left his car beyond repair.

McLaren fell further behind their rivals Alpine as the French team managed a double points finish with Alonso benefitting from Leclerc’s 5 second penalty, moving up to P5 and Ocon securing P7. Alonso was not badly affected by his brush in with Hamilton at the start and continued his race as normal, showcasing some real speed in the Alpine; Ocon was the same and impressed with two double overtakes during the race. Both Ricciardo and Norris failed to score points, although, Ricciardo had been running in the points for the majority of the race.

Williams took a point home with Alex Albon’s 10th place finish. The Thai driver had been consistently good all weekend and got the reward for all of his efforts on Sunday afternoon. He was slightly under pressure as a DRS train formed behind him in the latter part of the race. Latifi’s incident on the second lap which sent him to the pits and caused the safety car saw him at the back of the field for the rest of the race.

Alfa Romeo did not have a good weekend. On Lap 2, the birthday boy Valtteri Bottas was an unlucky victim when trying to avoid a swerving Latifi and ended his race early. It was definitely not how the Finn would have liked to celebrate his 33rd birthday. Guanyu Zhou was among those who took grid penalties but he was unable to make up enough places to get into point scoring positions.

A decent day at the office for Aston Martin with P8 for Sebastian Vettel and P11 for Lance Stroll who just missed out to Albon for that last championship point. Vettel’s incredible start had him up in P5 on the opening lap but he later fell down to P8 and finished there. Lance Stroll unfortunately found himself in the DRS train and was unable to overtake Albon.

AlphaTauri’s Pierre Gasly had a great 100th F1 grand prix, earning his team P9 from his pitlane start. His strategy saw him make his way through the pack and finish behind Vettel. Tsunoda had the same strategy as Zhou and came out ahead of the rookie in that battle for P13.

Finally, it was a weekend to forget for Haas. The team knew they would struggle for pace in Spa and were not expecting great results but P16 and P17, a whole lap down from Verstappen is not where they would like to be.

We now head to The Netherlands for round 15 of the 2022 F1 season, the home grand prix of the reigning world champion who looks unstoppable at the minute; is there anyone who can stop him?

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Flashback Friday

Flashback Friday- Russia 2017

We’re back with another installation of flashback Friday to keep you occupied during the summer break. This time we look at Valtteri Bottas’ first F1 win which he claimed at Sochi in 2017.

The three practice sessions before qualifying were topped by the usual Ferrari and Mercedes, who were far ahead of the rest of their competitors.

Source: thenewswheel.com

Qualifying

When it came to qualifying there were a couple of crashes from Palmer and Wehrlein which disupted the sessions. But in Q1, that duo failed to reach Q2, along with Vandoorne, Ericsson and Grosjean.

In Q2, Lance Stroll was looking for the opportunity to make Q3 for the second time but failed to do so. The Force India pair of Perez and Ocon were solid enough to find themselves in the top 10. But the struggles continued for McLaren as Alonso could only take P15. Following him out of Q2 were Sainz, Stroll, Kvyat and Magnussen.

Source: motorauthority.com

There were only really four cars in contention for pole. The two Ferrari and the two Mercedes. On provisional pole was Kimi Raikkonen who was ahead of Valtteri Bottas, his Finnish counterpart. Meanwhile, Vettel and Hamilton were third and fourth after first runs.

It was to be Vettel’s day as he claimed his first pole position since Singapore 2015. Next to him was Raikkonen, getting Ferrari their first front row lock out since 2008 in France. The Mercedes of Bottas and Hamilton had to settle for P3 & P4.

The top 10 was: Vettel, Raikkonen, Bottas, Hamilton, Ricciardo, Massa, Verstappen, Hulkenberg, Perez, Ocon.

Race

Source: Express.co.uk

An extra formation lap was needed at the start of the race as Fernando Alonso’s McLaren stopped on track before lights out. A great start from Bottas saw him jump Raikkonen but some more amazing race craft from the Finnish driver then saw him take the lead of the race going into the first corner ahead of Vettel.

The deployment of the safety car came about when Grojean and Palmer tangled up together. Lap 4 saw them get back to racing but immediately Ricciardo reported that his brakes were on fire for and had to retire for the second time in the season.

A pitstop for Bottas on Lap 28 saw him drop to second place, with Ferrari doing the opposite with Vettel and staying out for longer. Vettel stopped on Lap 34 while Bottas went wide in Turn 13, majorly flat spotting his tyres. This gave Vettel the solid belief that he could really hunt Bottas down for the win, with just three laps to go.

Source: syndication.bleacherreport.com

Running into traffic on his final lap, giving him DRS, allowed Bottas to keep his distance from the Ferrari. Vettel was unable to clear Massa in the Williams fast enough, giving Bottas the breathing space he needed.

Bottas secured his first F1 win in Russia that day, proving he could cope under an intense amount of pressure. His brilliant start and composed attitude throughout the race got him the victory.

Although Vettel had to settle for second place, Raikkonen’s third place gained Ferrari a nice chunk of points with a double podium.

Source: thetelegraph.co.uk

Elsewhere, Hamilton took fourth, over half a minute behind his teammate. Verstappen, after his good start took fifth, finishing ahead of the Force Indias in sixth and seventh who claimed a double top 7 finish for the first time since Belgium the year before. Hulkenberg, Massa and Sainz completed the top 10.

“I knew I could do these results, I always trusted my ability, but this result confirms it.”

Valtteri Bottas

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F1 2022 Season

Great Britain 2022 – Sainz is Supreme in Silverstone

Race weekend review

The iconic British GP in Silverstone has always been one of entertainment; from winning the race with only three wheels to a heavy crash at Copse. This weekend was no different.

Many stars filled the paddock once again, from YouTube, Hollywood and football— everyone wanted to know, who would it be this year? Sir Lewis? Looking for a record breaking victory? Or Max Verstappen? Aiming to keep his mighty championship hunt going.

Practice

The weather conditions made it tricky to assume anything all weekend. FP1 saw rain, and lots of it, so there was minimal running on the track. At a later stage, it began to dry out and certain drivers changed for slick tyres.

Valterri Bottas, Lewis Hamilton and Carlos Sainz ended the session as the top three, while Lance Stroll ended up on the gravel with only a few seconds to spare, ending the session early.

Source: TFS

No more rain for FP2 meant that drivers could finally go out on track to get the data they needed. Some teams were collecting data from new upgrades —Williams and Aston Martin being two of them.

Carlos Sainz finished the session on top, followed by Hamilton and Norris. Championship rivals Verstappen and Leclerc were P4 and P5 respectively.

Source: TFS

Red Bull came back on a charge in FP3, displaying their recent domination in full effect. Verstappen took P1 and Perez P2, ahead of the Ferrari of Leclerc and both Mercedes, who had been showing great pace throughout the weekend.

Qualifying

Some rain fell just before the session began so everyone was on intermediate tyres, ready to go as soon as the lights turned green.

Verstappen, who was ahead for the majority of the session, set a time that would keep him ahead of Leclerc. Surprisingly, the heavily upgraded Williams was the one eliminated in Q1, Albon not happy about the strategy the team used in the session. Both Haas and Aston Martin lost both of their drivers in the first round of qualifying.

Eliminated in Q1: Albon, Magnussen, Vettel, Schumacher, Stroll

Even more rain came down as we edged further into the session, causing all sorts of problems for drivers who didn’t get an early lap in.

A still struggling Ricciardo didn’t set a time fast enough to help him escape elimination, along with Ocon too who was in P15. AlphaTauri lost both drivers but considering it had been a difficult weekend for them, it seemed like it would be just fine.

For the first time ever, Latifi had made it to the top 10 shootout in Q3.

Eliminated in Q2: Gasly, Bottas, Tsunoda, Ricciardo, Ocon

While out in Q3, in the midst of setting a flying lap time like he had been doing, Verstappen spun coming out of Stowe but his composure allowed him to keep control and managed that 360 degree turn beautifully.

It looked like Verstappen had it in the bag, with Hamilton and Leclerc behind him but just as the clock hit zero, Sainz set a stunning lap time to put him first for Ferrari— A Leclerc spin would solidify a first pole position for the Spaniard as the Monegasque and Dutch ended the laps they were on.

Source: FIA.com

It was a first for Sainz, finally a pole sitter in Formula 1. He would start alongside Verstappen and in front of his teammate Leclerc.

Top 10: Sainz, Verstappen, Leclerc, Perez, Hamilton, Norris, Alonso, Russell, Zhou and Latifi

Source: news.postuszero.com

Race Report

Silverstone 2022 was without a doubt one of the most memorable races so far this season. We saw a returning star on the podium as well as a new race winner, and plenty of action inbetween.

After taking pole position on Saturday, Carlos Sainz was able to take his first win in Formula One, a monumental moment which will not be forgotten. However, another incident in the series of Ferrari’s issues meant that teammate Charles Leclerc was only able to finish in fourth, on a day when he should have been able to achieve much more.

Source: Clive Mason via Getty images

It was a good day for Red Bull in comparison, with Mexican Sergio Perez finishing in second place, despite an early tussle with Charles Leclerc. However, teammate and championship leader Max Verstappen was only able to finish in seventh place after sustaining damage from debris on track. Despite this, the team lost minimal points in the championship battle.

Returning to the podium was home hero Lewis Hamilton in third place, much to the delight of the Mercedes team. However, George Russell’s home race was ended just as it began following a heavy and serious crash with Zhou Guanyu which resulted in a lengthy red flag.

Source: Lewis Hamilton via Instagram

This was only the start of Alfa Romeo’s issues on Sunday – Zhou’s crash left the Chinese driver in the medical centre and unable to capitalise on what could have been an excellent race for him, whereas Valtteri Bottas retired from the race due to a gearbox issue.

It was an equally disappointing day for the Alpha Tauri team, with Pierre Gasly having to retire from the race following contact between the two teammates, and Yuki Tsunoda only able to finish in fourteenth, despite avoiding severe damage at the first race start.

It was a much better afternoon for the McLaren team, with Lando Norris finishing in sixth place at his home race in front of an adoring crowd. However, it was another struggle of a race for Daniel Ricciardo, with the Australian driver only able to finish the race in thirteenth place.

An excellent start to the race for Nicholas Latifi saw him battling the faster cars on the grid in the Williams, eventually finishing in twelfth place. The team was, although, unable to test the new upgrades they had brought along as Alex Albon was another victim of the first lap contacts, resulting in a DNF and hospital trip for the Thai/British driver. We hope for a speedy recovery, Alex!

An excellent weekend for Haas saw both drivers finish in the points for the first time in a long time – after an excellent on track battle with Max Verstappen, Mick Schumacher was able to finish in eighth place, the highest of his career, with Kevin Magnussen in tenth place.

Source: Mick Schumacher via Instagram

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