2021 Russian GP report | Hamilton claims 100th win after Norris heartbreak

Hamilton 1st, Verstappen 2nd…sounds like a pretty regular race then, no?
The podium at the Russian Grand Prix.
Image credit: Daimler AG

Lewis Hamilton finally completed his extraordinary century of Formula 1 victories, after taking the lead with three laps remaining of a thrilling Russian Grand Prix.

Most of the race was led by Lando Norris. The 21-year-old McLaren driver took an impressive maiden pole position on Saturday in changeable conditions but lost the lead to his good friend Carlos Sainz on the long run to the first real corner of Turn 2.

Norris stalked the Ferrari for 12 laps before reclaiming the lead and then showed maturity far beyond his years, showing no signs of stress as he led a grand prix for the first time.

Meanwhile, in the title battle, Hamilton – who had qualified fourth – had been boxed in at the start and found himself in sixth, behind the leading pair, future teammate George Russell, Lance Stroll and Daniel Ricciardo.

The pack head six-wide into the first corner.
Image credit: Getty Images

The group formed a DRS train and would remain in the same order for the first stint of the race.

Hamilton’s title rival Max Verstappen had started from the back after taking an engine penalty – a decision that was already on the cards but was cemented by the Dutchman’s three-place grid penalty for his clash with Hamilton at the previous race.

The Red Bull scythed through the field in the opening laps – disappointingly for Mercedes, even making short work of Valtteri Bottas – and found himself just three positions and two seconds behind his rival approaching the halfway point.

Of the drivers at the front, Sainz, Russell and Stroll pitted early on, with the rest extending and the title rivals pitting together on lap 26.

Having been released, Hamilton had finally been able to demonstrate his pace and succeeded in jumping all the former passengers of the DRS train except Stroll, who he swiftly dispatched two laps later.

It was not long until he had also caught and passed Sainz, leaving an eight-second gap to Norris with a little over 20 laps remaining.

Lando Norris at the Russian Grand Prix.
Image credit: Motorsport Images

Things were not going so well for Verstappen, who – having started on the hard tyre and then pitted unusually early – was struggling on the mediums and had fallen behind Fernando Alonso into seventh place.

The gap at the front reduced rapidly, but once the Mercedes had moved within two seconds of the McLaren, it once again demonstrated its distaste for dirty air. That, twinned with the papaya car’s prodigious top speed, meant that Hamilton was unable to get close enough to make a move with the laps counting down.

But then the rain began to fall.

By lap 47 of 53, the parts of the track closest to the Black Sea were significantly wet. Norris had a moment of oversteer and ran wide, but a cautious Hamilton – with one eye on the championship battle – remained narrowly behind.

It was now all about whether to risk the change to intermediate tyres, with parts of the track becoming increasingly treacherous but other areas still dry.

Lewis Hamilton closes on Lando Norris as the rain begins to fall at the Russian Grand Prix.

Norris was not interested in giving up the lead and stayed out. Hamilton ignored his team’s first call to come in, but a second call saying that the rain was going to increase convinced him to come in with four laps remaining.

The rain did increase. Norris committed to his decision but the downpour became torrential and as the McLaren slithered off the road two laps later, Hamilton sailed past and he accepted that he had to pit.

The running order turned on its head as those who had stayed out lost not seconds but minutes to the drivers on intermediate tyres.

Verstappen – who had pitted early – jumped from seventh to second, Bottas from 14th to fifth and Kimi Räikkönen from 13th to eighth, whilst Sergio Pérez fell from fourth to ninth and Charles Leclerc from eighth to 15th.

Sainz hung onto third, to claim his fifth podium, with Ricciardo three seconds down the road in fourth. Norris was, at least, able to recover to seventh and a bonus point for the fastest lap, but was understandably heartbroken, having come so close to what would have been a thoroughly deserved maiden victory.

The young Briton demonstrated his immense talent, however – as he has for much of this season – and can be sure that his time will come.

Hamilton may be at the other end of his career now, but showed he is far from past it as he became the first ever Formula 1 centurion. A mind-boggling achievement.

The next big milestone would be the record-breaking eighth world title, but he will have to work even harder for that after Verstappen’s surprise second place.

The Impact on the Championship

Max Verstappen in the wet at the Russian Grand Prix.
Image credit: Red Bull Racing Honda

Whilst the day belonged to Hamilton and his momentous achievement, Red Bull perhaps leave Russia the happier of the two title-contending teams.

Team Principal Christian Horner had said they would be content if Verstappen could work his way up to fifth from the back of the grid and keep the points swing to Hamilton to around 15.

So, leaving Sochi with just seven fewer points than the new championship leader is a huge win for the Austrian team.

Their main man should now be fine for power units through to the end of the season, whilst the expectation is that Hamilton will have to take a penalty for a fourth engine at some point between now and Abu Dhabi.

After two races where Red Bull expected to see a Mercedes 1-2 and Hamilton build a considerable lead in the standings, Verstappen sits just two points behind.

As for the remainder of the season, it very much depends on how many of the scheduled races take place as planned. Mexico and Brazil have historically been Red Bull circuits, but the jury remains out on whether the F1 circus will be able to travel to either considering the current Covid restrictions.

There are some unknowns – such as the new track in Saudi Arabia and a race likely to take place in Qatar – and the remaining tracks are too close to call.

Basically, the situation remains as it has been for most of the year: this title could go either way.

The Russian Grand Prix in 60 Seconds

Answering the Burning Questions

Will Verstappen take an engine penalty and start from the back? Yep.

With rain due on Saturday, when will qualifying actually take place and will it spring any surprises? Despite torrential rain on Saturday morning, it went ahead at the scheduled time and sprung plenty of surprises.

Is Ricciardo now going to be back to his best with the added confidence from Monza win? Fourth place was a good result, but Norris was back to being comfortably on top throughout the weekend.

2021 Russian GP preview

From Russia with no love lost at the front.

The Burning Questions

Will Max Verstappen take an engine penalty and start from the back?

With rain due on Saturday, when will qualifying actually take place and will it spring any surprises?

Is Daniel Ricciardo now going to be back to his best with the added confidence from Monza win?

The Track

The Stats

  • Track Length: 5.848 km
  • Laps: 53
  • Race Distance: 309.745 km
  • Maximum Speed: 341 km/h
  • Lap Time at Full Throttle: 78%
  • First Grand Prix: 2014
  • Race Lap Record: Lewis Hamilton | Mercedes | 2019 | 1:35.761
  • Outright Lap Record: Lewis Hamilton | Mercedes | 2020 | 1:31.304
  • Most Driver Wins: Lewis Hamilton | 2014, 2015, 2018, 2019
  • Most Constructor Wins: Mercedes | 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020

The Trivia

  • Mercedes has won every Russian Grand Prix to date – the seven since it joined the F1 calendar in 2014, and even the pre-Formula 1 grands prix in 1913 and 1914
  • There has been a Russian driver present at every running of the Russian Grand Prix so far
  • Sochi is the only Winter Olympics host city to have also staged a Formula 1 race, though four other current F1 cities – Melbourne, Montreal, Barcelona and Mexico City – have hosted the Summer Olympics
  • In 2014, Nico Rosberg locked up at the first corner, causing him to pit, and then did the remainder of the race on one set of tyres and recovered to finish second

The Weather

The Quotes

Christian Horner | “You’re always learning but he’s a hard racer, it’s part of his characteristic, it’s part of why he has the following that he does. you know when he’s in the car he’s going to give 110%. And I think that also has an impact on the driver he’s racing, because you know he’s going to go for it.”

Toto Wolff | “I think the change of approach is that Lewis pretty much decided not to bail out anymore when he thinks that the corner is his. Now it needs two to tango, it needs two to understand each other on track, when a collision can be avoided.”

Daniel Ricciardo | “Once I was in the lead and it had been a while since I’d had that feeling, fortunately it felt very familiar and it felt like home.”

Valtteri Bottas | “At this situation, how the situation is, yes I would [move aside for Lewis] because we are here as a team and we need to make sure we win both titles, not only the constructors’ but also the drivers’. At the moment, Lewis has a greater chance of that, so that’s the situation at the moment.”

The Friday Form

Practice 2 Top 5

1 | Valtteri Bottas | 1:33.593 | 19 Laps
2 | Lewis Hamilton | 1:33.637 | 22 Laps
3 | Pierre Gasly | 1:33.845 | 22 Laps
4 | Lando Norris | 1:34.154 | 17 Laps
5 | Esteban Ocon | 1:34.402 | 23 Laps

Practice 1 Top 5

1 | Valtteri Bottas | 1:34.427 | 25 Laps
2 | Lewis Hamilton | 1:34.638 | 23 Laps
3 | Max Verstappen | 1:34.654 | 13 Laps
4 | Charles Leclerc | 1:35.117 | 22 Laps
5 | Sebastian Vettel | 1:35.781 | 23 Laps

Mercedes continued their Sochi dominance with Valtteri Bottas heading a Silver Arrows 1-2 in both practice sessions.

It was confirmed that Max Verstappen would start from the back for the race – after taking on a new power unit – but the Dutchman complained that he could not overtake anyone with his current top speed, so Red Bull will need to ensure that he is able to do so by Sunday.

The Photos

The Predictions

Podium

Pole Position

Fastest Lap

Driver of the Day

2021 Italian GP report | Ricciardo’s redemption as Hamilton and Verstappen clash again

It’s shoeys all round…except for the title rivals.
Daniel Ricciardo celebrates winning the Italian Grand Prix with a trademark 'shoey'.
Image credit: Getty Images

Daniel Ricciardo won his first race since leaving Red Bull in 2018 on an extraordinary Italian Grand Prix weekend.

McLaren were legitimate challengers in Monza and took advantage of the leading teams’ messy weekends to claim a first victory since 2012, with Lando Norris making it a 1-2 for the papaya team.

After a poor start in the sprint race, Lewis Hamilton found himself fourth on the grid and, with teammate Valtteri Bottas starting at the back after taking a new engine, it was Max Verstappen and Ricciardo who lined up on the front row.

The Honey Badger nailed his getaway and comfortably beat the Red Bull to the first corner. From there, he never looked back.

Hamilton also got a good start, passing Norris for third and then challenging Verstappen into the second chicane of Variante della Roggia. The reigning champion got himself alongside the Red Bull but – not for the first time this season – was run out of road on the outside and rejoined the track behind Norris.

The two McLarens and the two title rivals battle.
Image credit: Getty Images

It would not be the rivals’ final meeting on track.

The first stint of the race was a tale of the two title contenders failing to pass the McLaren in front of them, largely thanks to their excellent straight-line speed and strong traction out of the final corner.

Ricciardo triggered the sole round of pit stops when he came in on lap 23, but the series of events leading to the biggest moment of the weekend began when Verstappen responded one lap later.

The usually flawless Red Bull pit crew suffered a sensor issue which led to a painful, 11-second stop for the championship leader and saw him fall behind Norris.

Mercedes – despite Hamilton having started on the harder tyre compound – knew this was their chance to jump Verstappen and brought car number 44 in two laps later. It was another poor stop, however – at a little over four seconds – and saw Hamilton rejoin right between Norris and Verstappen.

The Dutchman tried to stick it out around the outside of Turn One but ran out of road and bounced over the sausage kerbs. That sent him straight on into Hamilton and, as his right rear rode over the left rear of the Mercedes, he suddenly found himself sitting on top of his rival’s car.

The aftermath of the clash between Lewis Hamilton and Max Verstappen.
Image credit: GPblog NL

Despite Hamilton’s efforts to reverse out from underneath the Bull which had so rudely mounted him, both were out of the race and the Safety Car was called.

The race restarted on lap 30 with Charles Leclerc delighting the Tifosi by having moved up into second with a cheap pit stop during the Safety Car period.

Not for long, though, as Norris bravely kept his foot in at almost 200 mph with two tyres on the grass through Curva Grande to retake the position from the Ferrari.

After a brief challenge on his teammate for the lead, McLaren decided to call the race off and focus on securing a scarcely believable 1-2.

Behind them, Bottas continued his inspired charge through the field. The Finn had topped qualifying on Friday and won the Sprint on Saturday but started at the back for the main event after taking on a new engine.

He fought his way up to fourth on the road, which became a podium once Sergio Pérez was hit with a five-second time penalty for overtaking off the track. The Mexican also recovered well from a disappointing qualifying but would ultimately claim fifth – splitting the two Ferraris – once the penalty was applied.

Out front, though, it was all about the McLarens, who completed another wave of of orange celebrations – after Verstappen’s win at home seven days before – as they crossed the line in first and second.

What a tale of redemption for the team and their Aussie driver, who had struggled so badly to adapt to his new car in the first part of the season.

McLaren celebrate on the Italian Grand Prix podium.
Image credit: AFP

He appears to have succeeded in mentally resetting over the summer break and his eighth F1 victory will perhaps be the most satisfying of his career to date.

Now we wait to see what the Woking team can do with the regulations reset for next season. If they continue on their current trajectory, they could well be fighting for victories on a far more regular basis.

Breaking Down the Latest Hamilton-Verstappen Incident

Just as the battle at the front was becoming more amicable once again – with Hamilton appearing genuinely please for his rival’s home success – we get another flashpoint.

There was much debate over the culpability in their dramatic clash at Silverstone, and that will likely be the case again over the next fortnight.

Predictably, the drivers blamed each other. But the stance of Christian Horner – and even the ever-outspoken Helmut Marko – that it was a racing incident shows an effective admission of guilt on this one.

It usually takes just the slightest hint of accountability from Hamilton for them to go on the media warpath, encouraging their followers to raise their pitchforks to the sky.

There was an element or irony in elements of the Red Bull camp’s reaction in Italy. Firstly, Verstappen’s protestations that Hamilton should have left him more space are somewhat hypocritical, considering his approach to a very similar situation with the roles reversed on lap 1.

And, in hindsight, after having made such ridiculous accusations to the extremes of Hamilton having practically committed attempted murder in Silverstone, playing off an incident where their driver’s car struck Hamilton’s helmet as no big deal also seems a little incongruous.

Max Verstappen's wheel strikes Lewis Hamilton's helmet.
Image credit: AFP

The stewards decided Verstappen was predominantly to blame and have handed him a three-place grid penalty for the next event. Not that it will matter considering the likelihood of Red Bull taking an engine penalty in Sochi.

From this writer’s point of view, the penalty feels about right. The Dutchman entered the chicane behind Hamilton but his overspeed meant that he was probably justified in sticking his car on the outside initially.

However, despite Hamilton leaving just about enough space to do so, it was clear that the trajectory and speed at which Verstappen entered was only going to result in one outcome, unless Hamilton basically parked his Mercedes on the outside of the second corner and waved him through.

That is the point at which most drivers on the grid – including Hamilton himself earlier in the race – would bail out of the move and take to the escape road. But Verstappen is not most drivers.

His sheer bloody-mindedness means that he will almost never back out of a confrontation. Since joining the sport – even as a 17-year-old – he has epitomised the Ayrton Senna ‘back out or we crash’ mantra.

Personally, I would much rather see a hard battle over the course of a series of corners or laps, with two racers battling it out right on the edge.

Fernando Alonso and Lewis Hamilton battle at the Hungarian Grand Prix.
Image credit: XPB Images

Hamilton and Fernando Alonso demonstrated that in Hungary this year – and many times before – as have plenty of other drivers.

That is surely what we want to see. Whilst these monumental crashes are great for the drama, and will be spoken about for years, it is a shame that the most referenced points of this incredible season will be the leaders ending up in the gravel, rather than battles for the ages like Alonso and Michael Schumacher at Imola in 2005.

It almost brings a question to Verstappen’s wheel-to-wheel ability. The 23-year-old is clearly spectacularly fast, but at what point do we consider him to be poor in wheel-to-wheel combat? The instances of him forcing drivers off the road outnumbers his on-the-edge battles at an increasing rate.

He surely has the ability and spatial awareness required, but whether he chooses to do so is the bigger issue.

There is a very fine line between hard driving and poor driving.

The Italian Grand Prix in 60 Seconds

Answering the Burning Questions

How will the Sprint Qualifying format play out this time around? Once again, we had a crazy weekend – but whether the format was instrumental in that is up for debate.

Will Mercedes dominate on a power-sensitive track? In terms of outright pace, probably. In terms of the race, it was actually a McLaren domination.

Will we get the usual Monza shenanigans in the regular qualifying session on Friday? Yep, as predicted it was all a bit cringeworthy at points.

2021 Italian GP preview

A second attempt at Sprint Qualifying – will it bring more drama?

The Burning Questions

How will the Sprint Qualifying format play out this time around?

Will Mercedes dominate on a power-sensitive track?

Will we get the usual Monza shenanigans in the regular qualifying session on Friday?

The Track

This image has an empty alt attribute; its file name is Italy-Monza.png

THE STATS

  • Track Length: 5.793 km
  • Laps: 53
  • Race Distance: 306.720 km
  • Maximum Speed: 341 km/h
  • Lap Time at Full Throttle: 78%
  • First Grand Prix: 1950
  • Race Lap Record: Rubens Barrichello | Ferrari | 2004 | 1:21.046
  • Outright Lap Record: n/a
  • Most Driver Wins: Lewis Hamilton/Michael Schumacher | 2012, 2014, 2015, 2017, 2018/1996, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006
  • Most Constructor Wins: Ferrari | 1951, 1952, 1960, 1961, 1964, 1966, 1970, 1975, 1979, 1988, 1996, 1998, 2000, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2006, 2008, 2010

The Trivia

  • In the past 18 races here, the 2009 and 2020 Italian Grands Prix are the only times that the polesitter has failed to finish in the top two – both times, it was Lewis Hamilton
  • Giuseppe ‘Nino’ Farina won the first ever Drivers’ Championship at the track in 1950 and remains the only driver to have won the title on home soil
  • At the 2020 Italian Grand Prix, Lewis Hamilton set the fastest ever lap in an F1 car, with an average speed on his pole lap of 264.363 km/h
  • The closest finish to a Formula 1 race came at Monza in 1971, with Peter Gethin crossing the line just 0.01 seconds ahead of Ronnie Peterson and the top covered by just six tenths
  • The 1988 Italian Grand Prix was the only race of the season which McLaren failed to win

The Weather

The Quotes

George Russell | “Naturally I believe myself and I have high aspirations, but equally I know how tough it’s going to be. Lewis is a seven-time champion for a reason, and I’m probably in one of the most fortunate positions on the grid to learn from him.”

Lewis Hamilton | “New fresh blood in our team is going to be great because obviously I’m the oldie there. That definitely will energise the whole team knowing that they have a new youngster coming through who is super hungry, driven and he pushing the team forwards. I just know he’s going to continue to get stronger, even in these next nine races, and next year he’ll be bringing the heat for sure.”

Charles Leclerc | “George is very talented and he’ll be next to one of the best in the history of this sport so he doesn’t have much to lose, which is a good position to be in. He can just give it everything and show his talent.”

Valtteri Bottas | “It’s something new, something exciting for me, and it’s a bit of a project. There’s going to be work to do but I will give all my expertise to try and improve them. Realistically, to fight for wins next year, is going to be unlikely, but you never know.”

The Friday Form

Practice 1 Top 5

1 | Lewis Hamilton | 1:20.926 | 28 Laps
2 | Max Verstappen | 1:21.378 | 22 Laps
3 | Valtteri Bottas | 1:21.451 | 29 Laps
4 | Lance Stroll | 1:21.676 | 23 Laps
5 | Pierre Gasly | 1:21.719 | 28 Laps

Lewis Hamilton topped the only practice session before qualifying on Friday morning, as the Mercedes gave the impression that they are the class of the field on this track.

Hamilton and teammate Valtteri Bottas’s times were set on the medium tyre, whilst title rival Max Verstappen set his on the theoretically faster soft.

The McLarens also looked fast, with two medium-tyre laps that would have left them second and third if they had not been deleted for track-limits violations.

Of course, as ever, the engines will be turned up to 100% when it counts and everything could change, but we look set for a fascinating weekend.

The Photos

The Predictions

Podium

Pole Position

Fastest Lap

Driver of the Day

2021 Dutch GP report | Verstappen sends the Orange Army wild

The Dutch sure know how to throw a party.
The Orange Army goes wild at the Dutch Grand Prix.
Image credit: Getty Images

Max Verstappen withstood everything Mercedes threw at him to win the Dutch Grand Prix – his home race – at the first attempt, much to the delight of a sea of orange.

The Red Bull looked the slightly better car over the course of the weekend – at least in the hands of Verstappen – and it was the 23-year-old who narrowly secured pole position on Saturday.

Lewis Hamilton impressively closed to within 0.038 seconds of his title rival, after a tricky weekend where he missed almost all of Practice 2 with an engine issue, but the margin should have been larger with Verstappen’s DRS failing to open after he had also missed fifth gear earlier in the lap.

On Sunday, as soon as the flying Dutchman had successfully navigated the run to the first corner, it was to be a tale of strategy.

Sergio Pérez in the other Red Bull had been caught out in Q1 and would be starting from the back, which left Mercedes able to utilise two-versus-one tactics.

Lewis Hamilton chases Max Verstappen.
Image credit: Sutton Images

They attempted to take advantage, bringing Hamilton in for an attempted undercut, whilst teammate Valtteri Bottas ran long on a one-stop. The Finn made his Mercedes as wide as possible when Verstappen caught him, but was unable to stop him sailing past after one lap, despite the Zandvoort circuit proving predictably difficult to pass on.

Once again, Mercedes attempted the undercut with Hamilton, pulling the trigger unexpectedly early on lap 39. It was poorly executed, though, with the reigning champion emerging into traffic and Verstappen was easily able to cover him.

From there, it was plain sailing for the home favourite and car number 44 eventually gave up the chase to pit and secure the fastest lap.

A six-point swing in the title battle leaves Verstappen three points ahead in the standings heading to the season’s second sprint-qualifying weekend at Monza. On paper, it is a track that should favour the Silver Arrows. But how often have things followed the script this season?

An orange haze from the Dutch fans' flares.
Image credit: Getty Images

A Tough Weekend for McLaren

Behind the most common podium trio of all time, Pierre Gasly once again excelled in the AlphaTauri, backing up his excellent fourth in qualifying with a lonely but flawless race.

Behind him, the Ferraris finished fifth and seventh – split by Fernando Alonso, who judged his tyre life to perfection to pass Carlos Sainz on the last lap – which sees them open out an 11.5-point gap to McLaren in the Constructors’ Championship.

The crowd may have been wall-to-wall orange, but things did not go the way of the papaya team in the Netherlands.

Unusually, Lando Norris struggled for pace throughout the weekend, and was then caught out by the pair of Williams crashes in Q2, leaving him 13th on the grid. Teammate Daniel Ricciardo did make it through to Q3 but could only manage 10th and, after nearly not starting the race at all, struggled for pace during it.

Norris extended his first stint well and caught the Honey Badger towards the end of the race. Team orders allowed him past but, after a tough battle with the recovering Pérez, Norris would only finish one place in front of a mildly disgruntled Ricciardo to claim the final point.

Daniel Ricciardo at the Dutch Grand Prix.
Image credit: Motorsport Images

Monza will give them an excellent chance to bounce back immediately, however. They are renowned for their straight-line prowess this season and could even find themselves mixing it with the big boys next weekend at the Temple of Speed.

The Dutch Grand Prix in 60 Seconds

Answering the Burning Questions

Will Red Bull or Mercedes come out on top at a track that is somewhere between the Red Bull Ring and the Hungaroring? It was pretty tight, but Red Bull appeared to have a slight edge.

How will the drivers cope with a very unique circuit? They all seemed to love it. Along the lines of Mugello last year – a thrilling rollercoaster but not designed for modern F1 cars to overtake.

Will there be any overtaking? See above. Although Pérez produced some inventive moves to make his way back through the field.

2021 Dutch GP preview

Let’s see if we can actually manage a race this weekend…

The Burning Questions

Will Red Bull or Mercedes come out on top at a track that is somewhere between the Red Bull Ring and the Hungaroring?

How will the drivers cope with a very unique circuit?

Will there be any overtaking?

The Track

The Stats

  • Track Length: 4.259 km
  • Laps: 72
  • Race Distance: 306.648 km
  • Maximum Speed: 309 km/h
  • Lap Time at Full Throttle: 61%
  • First Grand Prix: 1952
  • Race Lap Record: n/a
  • Outright Lap Record: n/a
  • Most Driver Wins: Jim Clark | 1963, 1964, 1965, 1967
  • Most Constructor Wins: Ferrari | 1952, 1953, 1961, 1971, 1974, 1977, 1982, 1983

The Trivia

  • The 1973 Dutch Grand Prix is remembered for the dreadful accident of Roger Williamson. David Purley was awarded the George Medal for bravery after attempting to save Williamson from his burning wreck
  • The final corner banking is twice as steep as the Indianapolis Speedway
  • The 1975 Dutch Grand Prix saw James Hunt score his maiden grand prix win for Hesketh after a giant-killing performance in changeable conditions
  • And the 1985 race saw Niki Lauda win his last ever grand prix from tenth on the grid
  • Local legend has it that the infamous Tarzan corner is an homage to a man who would only relinquish his vegetable garden on the plot of land where the circuit was to be built if the track had a corner named after him

The Weather

The Quotes

Kimi Räikkönen | “This is it. This will be my last season in Formula 1. It was not an easy decision but after this season it is time for new things. Formula 1 might come to an end for me but there is a lot more in life that I want to experience and enjoy.”

Stefano Domenicali | “Kimi is an incredible part of our sport, a personal friend and a true champion.”

George Russell | “The truth is there’s nothing to announce but I’m aware of the situation of where I’ll be racing next year.”

Max Verstappen | “I think what we have to try and aim for is a great weekend for everyone and I’m sure the fans will enjoy. If there would be a little bit of booing, I guess just close your ears and don’t listen to it.”

The Friday Form

Practice 2 Top 5

1 | Charles Leclerc | 1:10.902 | 29 Laps
2 | Carlos Sainz | 1:11.056 | 28 Laps
3 | Esteban Ocon | 1:11.074 | 33 Laps
4 | Valtteri Bottas | 1:11.132 | 33 Laps
5 | Max Verstappen | 1:11.264 | 28 Laps

Practice 1 Top 5

1 | Lewis Hamilton | 1:11.500 | 17 Laps
2 | Max Verstappen | 1:11.597 | 18 Laps
3 | Carlos Sainz | 1:11.601 | 19 Laps
4 | Charles Leclerc | 1:11.623 | 18 Laps
5 | Valtteri Bottas | 1:11.738 | 18 Laps

Lewis Hamilton narrowly topped a hugely truncated morning session, after Sebastian Vettel’s Aston Martin broke down and was then unsafe to touch. But the reigning champion then had car troubles of his own, grinding to a halt just three laps into his afternoon session with an engine issue.

That will seriously hamper his preparations on a brand new circuit.

The Ferraris appear strong – as they did on other tight, twisty tracks – and could even launch an unlikely charge for the front row.

The Photos

The Predictions

Podium

Pole Position

Fastest Lap

Driver of the Day