Six in a row for Red Bull

Apologies again for the lack of activity – work has been crazy, but a highlight being my namecheck from Crofty on Sky F1…

Anyway, I’m back for another multiple-races-into-one report!

Last time it was three for the price of one. This time it’s six! And they’ve all been Red Bull wins…

The tide begins to turn in Imola

Really testing my memory here but let’s take a crack at a summary of the Emilia Romagna Grand Prix.

Having taken his first pole of the year, Max Verstappen got off the line poorly in the first Sprint Race of the year and was jumped by Charles Leclerc. He would make amends, though, reclaiming the lead on the penultimate lap.

Meanwhile, the title rivals’ respective teammates – Sergio Pérez and Carlos Sainz – fought their way through the field to third and fourth respectively, having started seventh and 10th after a chaotic, wet qualifying session which also saw the Mercedes caught out by a red flag and eliminated in Q2.

Image credit: Getty Images

The rain returned on Sunday and this time it was Leclerc with the poor getaway, dropping behind Pérez and Lando Norris.

All of Sainz’s hard work during the Sprint was undone immediately as he was punted out at the first corner by an understeering Daniel Ricciardo.

Leclerc reclaimed third from Norris but was never quite able to pass either Red Bull and then made his first mistake of the season as he desperately tried to catch Pérez.

A bad day for the onlooking Tifosi got worse as Leclerc spun at the Variante Alta chicane.

He recovered to sixth – and the fastest lap – after a pit stop for a broken front wing but saw his title lead shrink as the Red Bulls picked up their first 1-2 since the 2016 Malaysian Grand Prix, with Norris taking McLaren‘s only podium of the year so far.

Further back, George Russell made a great recovery drive to fourth, but teammate Lewis Hamilton was less fortunate on the opening lap and found himself stuck in a DRS train for the next 90 minutes.

Welcome to Miami

Will Smith references perhaps became a little less palatable thanks to a certain slap a month or so earlier, but the above was somewhat inevitable as F1 headed to Florida for the inaugural Miami Grand Prix.

In a race that appeared to want to be America’s version of Monaco, celebrities came from far and wide for a look at some F1 cars and a dip – or perhaps not – in the infamous fake marina.

Image credit: Reuters

On track, Ferrari locked out the front row for the first time in over two years but Verstappen would have them split by the first corner.

And eight laps later, he would have the lead.

The next hour or so was largely dull until a somewhat bizarre clash between Norris and Pierre Gasly brought out the Safety Car.

Leclerc gave it his all in the closing laps but Verstappen had enough to hold onto the lead, with Sainz also holding off Pérez for the final spot on the podium.

After a poor performance in qualifying, Russell got lucky with the timing of the Safety Car – not for the first time this season – allowing him to continue his run of top-five finishes, whilst Mick Schumacher threw away a chance of his first points with a clumsy lunge on hero and mentor Sebastian Vettel.

The Pain in Spain Falls Mainly on Leclerc

Having waited over five years for their last 1-2, Red Bull wouldn’t even have to wait five weeks for their next one.

Image credit: Motorsport Images

This time, though, it was not on merit.

Leclerc picked up another pole and proceeded to sail away at the front as Sainz and Verstappen behind him each took a trip into the gravel at Turn Four thanks to a couple of rogue gusts of wind.

That dropped the Dutchman behind Russell and Pérez. Whilst his teammate was predictably easy to pass, the Mercedes would prove far trickier – Verstappen spending almost half the race staring at the INEOS-branded rear wing as the DRS flap on his own rear wing developed a fault.

Their battle became one for the lead when Leclerc suffered an engine failure, his despairing calls over the radio reminiscent of those at Sakhir in 2019.

Red Bull decided to mix things up with a three-stop strategy for Verstappen and it paid off.

However, that was in some part due to the team asking Pérez to let him through, the displeased Mexican saying “that’s very unfair, but okay”.

Russell would take a second podium of the season, whilst his teammate provided arguably the performance of the day.

Hit by Kevin Magnussen on the opening lap, Hamilton had fallen to the very back of the pack but produced a stellar drive through the field to fourth, before a late engine issue saw him fall back behind Sainz.

Toto Wolff said he believed a 104th win would have been possible for the seven-time world champion without the early incident. Signs of life from the Silver Arrows?

The Leclerc Monaco Curse Strikes Again

Image credit: Getty Images

F1 returned to the setting of its favourite real marina in late May, with Leclerc surely standing the best chance to end his run of horrible luck on home soil.

And things looked even better once he’d secured the all-important pole position around the streets of Principality.

In terms of admin and organisation, it was a pretty shocking weekend for the under-pressure event.

A downpour and a local power cut saw a delay to the start of the race that was equal parts embarrassing and confusing, whilst the TV direction was once again poor at the only race on the calendar that insists upon having its own local director.

By the time the race finally got going, most of the rain had disappeared and Leclerc appeared comfortable out front.

Then came the Ferrari strategy blunder, though.

An erroneous stop for intermediate tyres put Leclerc in trouble; a belated call to stay out sealed his fate.

The end result was a top-four order of Pérez, Sainz, Verstappen and then Leclerc.

A nasty-looking crash that ripped Schumacher’s car in two brought out a red flag – as well as adding further pressure to the young German – and gave the leading cars a choice to make.

The Red Bulls chose the medium tyre for the final 45 laps of the race whilst the Ferraris went with the hard.

Ultimately it proved to be a moot point as passing was shown to be impossible once again on the tight streets, even when Pérez’s tyres were well past their best.

Image credit: Getty Images.

So, a third career win for the popular Mexican and one that almost brought him to tears on the podium.

A Definitive Swing in the Title Battle?

A fortnight later and the F1 circus headed to its often-far-more-chaotic street race in Azerbaijan.

It was yet another pole for Leclerc – his sixth in eight races – after a stunning final Q3 lap, but once again things would unravel on race day.

He was passed into the first corner by Pérez, but had been holding Verstappen at bay when teammate Sainz trundled into an escape road with a hydraulic issue.

The Spaniard’s painful 2022 season continues, but his misfortune did allow his team to take a strategy risk and bring Leclerc in for a cheap pit stop under the ensuing Virtual Safety Car.

Despite Verstappen having been tucked up behind his title rival, it was Pérez whose tyres were struggling and he was soon caught by his teammate.

The team informed the Mexican that there should be “no fighting” and car number one sailed past on the start-finish straight.

The race appeared to be heating up nicely with Leclerc retaking the lead on his alternate strategy as the Red Bulls pitted, but the weekend was about to get yet more painful for the Scuderia.

The cameras cut to a plume of smoke emerging from the back of the remaining prancing horse of Leclerc, who pulled into the pits to retire.

Image credit: Formula 1

From there it was a comfortable run to the chequered flag for Verstappen, with Pérez and Russell equally at ease in second and third.

If there was one thing that the weekend wasn’t for many of the drivers, however, it was comfortable.

The new regulations’ bouncing and porpoising issues hit new heights – both metaphorically and literally – with Hamilton barely able to get out of his car at the end of the race due to severe back pain.

F1 Finally Returns to Canada

After three years away, the sport finally made its return to the popular setting of Montreal, and the Circuit Gilles Villeneuve showed F1 what it had been missing.

Another eventful wet qualifying session saw Verstappen secure pole, with Fernando Alonso on the front row for the first time in over a decade and Leclerc starting at the back with an engine penalty.

It was Pérez suffering an early mechanical failure this time and bringing out a Virtual Safety Car under which Verstappen and Hamilton pitted.

Once things had shaken out it was a clear front three of last year’s title rivals either side of Sainz.

With 20 laps remaining, Yuki Tsunoda embarrassingly slid straight into the barriers at the pit exit, bringing out a first full Safety Car of the race.

On fresher tyres, Sainz hounded Verstappen to the end but the Red Bull’s superior traction meant he was always able to stay just out of reach in the DRS zones.

Image credit: Getty Images.

So close, yet so far once again for the Spaniard, who now has 11 podiums without a victory and is closing in on Nick Heidfeld’s unwanted record.

No such problems for Verstappen, though, who further extended his championship lead despite Leclerc recovering to fifth.

After two painful weekends – in every sense – on street circuits, Hamilton and Mercedes showed signs that they might be able to challenge on upcoming smoother tracks, whilst Mr-Saturday-turned-Mr-Consistency Russell continued his impressive record of finishing in the top five at every race.

F1 fans feared that Red Bull’s early-season mechanical woes would ruin the title battle as Leclerc dominated.

With a sixth consecutive race win for the Austrian team and now a 49-point margin to Leclerc in the championship, it appears that it may, in fact, be the other way round.

2021 Azerbaijan GP report | Pérez wins as Baku serves up more mayhem

Just your usual chaotic Azerbaijan Grand Prix.
Sergio Pérez celebrates winning the Azerbaijan Grand Prix.
Image credit: Getty Images

Sergio Pérez took a surprise win at the Azerbaijan Grand Prix as both title contenders, Max Verstappen and Lewis Hamilton, failed to score points.

Charles Leclerc had made it back-to-back pole positions against the odds on Saturday. Hamilton was ecstatic to have recovered to second on the grid, after a very challenging start to the weekend for Mercedes, and Verstappen was just behind in third.

The order at the front remained the same as the lights went out, but it was always going to be a matter of time before the Ferrari succumbed to the faster cars behind. Hamilton used his extra straight-line speed to take the lead after two laps and Verstappen followed suit at the start of lap 7. Pérez had made good progress from sixth on the grid and was also able to dispatch the Ferrari a lap later.

Hamilton was just about able to hold the chasing Bulls at bay. His low-downforce setup meant that he had the top speed to keep out of reach on the straights but was unable to break away as he lacked his rivals’ grip in the middle sector. With Verstappen closer than ever and Hamilton’s tyres long past their best, Mercedes brought him into the pits on lap 12. However, the World Champion had to be held in his box as Pierre Gasly trundled past and, with a pair of quick in-laps, the Red Bull drivers were both able to overcut him.

Over the next hour, Hamilton pressured Pérez but never looked close enough to truly challenge him. Even a safety car on lap 31, when Lance Stroll had a scary crash as his tyre exploded at over 300 kph on the main straight, didn’t change much at the front. It looked as though we had our finishing order wrapped up as Verstappen delivered a fastest lap with five laps remaining. But then…

Max Verstappen surrounded by wreckage after his crash at the Azerbaijan Grand Prix.
Image credit: XPB Images

Just as Stroll’s left-rear tyre had failed him, Verstappen’s decided it too was done for the day. The Red Bull speared into the barriers at an equally terrifying speed, leaving shrapnel scattered across the track. Verstappen was unhurt but understandably distraught to have had a win snatched away so late on.

With questions now very much being asked of the stability of the Pirelli tyres, Race Director Michael Masi deployed the red flag.

After a considerable wait, and with all the cars now on soft tyres, the field lined up on the grid for a two-lap sprint to the finish. As the lights went out for a second time, Hamilton got away well and was immediately alongside Pérez. But this race had one more significant twist in its tale.

Lewis Hamilton locks up into the first corner.
Image credit: Getty Images

As Pérez came over to defend the position, Hamilton swerved to the left. In doing so, he accidentally knocked a switch on his steering wheel which is designed to warm up the brakes. It brings the brake bias forward to around 90% and that meant, as Hamilton touched the brake pedal, he instantly locked up and went straight on at Turn 1, rejoining at the back of the field. A tiny mistake with massive consequences.

Pérez successfully held onto his lead to take the chequered flag and earn his second F1 victory. It would transpire that his car was minutes – if not metres – from failing him, as his team asked him to park the car seconds after he crossed the line.

An unusual podium was completed by Sebastian Vettel and Gasly. Vettel drove an incredible race, from 11th on the grid to second at the line. Starting on fresh tyres, he pulled out the longest first stint of anyone to move up to fifth, before passing Gasly after the first safety car. A well-deserved Driver of the Day performance as the four-time champion continues to look more at ease in his new, green machine.

Gasly was also excellent, following up an impressive fourth in qualifying with genuine race pace. He then came out on top in an enthralling last lap battle between himself, Leclerc and Lando Norris to earn his third podium.

Sebastian Vettel celebrates his podium at the Azerbaijan Grand Prix.
Image credit: XPB Images

Fernando Alonso produced his best result since returning to the sport, snatching sixth from Yuki Tsunoda after the restart. Nonetheless, it was a much-improved weekend for the Japanese rookie, who has struggled since his impressive debut in Bahrain. Carlos Sainz – whose race was ruined early on when he took an unscheduled trip down an escape road – finished eighth, ahead of Daniel Ricciardo and Kimi Räikkönen.

So, in the end, it was all a bit much-ado-about-nothing for Verstappen and Hamilton in terms of the title battle. After both drivers significant ups and downs over the weekend, they leave Baku with the same number of points as when they arrived.

As much as that costly slip of a finger will have hurt Hamilton, if you had offered him the opportunity to leave this weekend with as many points as Verstappen on Friday – when Mercedes were struggling to even break into the top 10 – he would likely have taken it…

Who Said the Second Red Bull Seat Was Cursed?

After a hit-and-miss start to his Red Bull career, Pérez thoroughly proved his worth this weekend.

The Red Bull team waves Sergio Pérez home.
Image credit: Getty Images

On Friday, the Mexican said he now finally felt at home in the car, and he backed that up with his level of performance throughout the event. He was legitimately ahead of Verstappen on more than one occasion and then did exactly what he was brought into the team to do on Sunday. That is, provide support to Verstappen in the fight for the win and be there to capitalise should any unforeseen dramas befall the lead driver.

In Baku, the usual roles were reversed with Mercedes outnumbered two to one in the fight for the lead. And the difference that made in the strategic battle was clear to be seen.

Pérez is now only 30 or so points behind the leading pair. One more shock result like this – twinned with the consistency for which he is renowned – and he could even consider himself genuinely in the title battle.

Penalty Points and Late Calls

Along with the questions to be answered by Pirelli, Masi and the FIA will have a few of their own.

Leclerc described the delay in deploying the Safety Car for Verstappen’s incident as “a joke”. It took nearly 20 seconds for double-waved yellow flags to appear and almost a minute and a half for the Safety Car, just as Pérez was approaching the start-finish straight again.

This came after Lance Stroll had been heard on the radio, pleading for a red flag as he sat in his wrecked car, rightly terrified of the cars screaming past him at full speed.

Lance Stroll's crash at the Azerbaijan Grand Prix.
Image credit: Getty Images

There also remains the issue of the penalty points system. I have questioned the current method of distributing points before, and this weekend displayed those issues once again.

Norris was handed three penalty points after finding himself in a tricky situation, with the stewards even acknowledging that he had almost no time to react to a red flag. And Nicholas Latifi was then also handed three points after receiving a clearly misleading radio call from his engineer in which he was told repeatedly to “stay out” when the intended message had, in fact, been to come through the pit lane but not stop.

F1 is, of course, a team sport, but if Latifi were to amass the 12 points required for a race ban, Williams would still race – just with a different driver. If this situation happened four times and Latifi remained blameless in each one, how is that remotely fair on the driver?

And all this whilst a genuinely dangerous action by a driver – as Nikita Mazepin swerved into his teammate’s path at full speed – goes unpunished…

The Azerbaijan Grand Prix in 60(ish) Seconds

Answering the Burning Questions

How will Hamilton and Mercedes respond after their tough weekend in Monaco? Not that well…

Will the ‘flexi-wings’ actually make a difference? People just kind of stopped talking about them amid the drama.

And will Toto Wolff follow through on his threat of a protest? Seemingly not.

Can McLaren’s straight-line speed help them challenge for a podium? They seemed to have untapped potential through the weekend but will be content with P5 and P9.

2021 Azerbaijan GP preview

Expect carnage.

The Burning Questions

How will Hamilton and Mercedes respond after their tough weekend in Monaco?

Will the ‘flexi-wings’ actually make a difference?

And will Toto Wolff follow through on his threat of a protest?

Can McLaren’s straight-line speed help them challenge for a podium?

The Track

The Stats

  • Track Length: 6.003 km
  • Laps: 51
  • Race Distance: 306.049 km
  • Maximum Speed: 331 km/h
  • Lap Time at Full Throttle: 65%
  • First Grand Prix: 2016 (Baku) | 2017 (Azerbaijan GP)
  • Race Lap Record: Charles Leclerc | Ferrari | 2019 | 1:43.009
  • Outright Lap Record: Valtteri Bottas | Mercedes | 2019 | 1:40.495
  • Most Driver Wins: Valtteri Bottas/Lewis Hamilton/Daniel Ricciardo/Nico Rosberg | 2019/2018/2017/2016
  • Most Constructor Wins: Mercedes | 2016, 2018, 2019

The Trivia

  • Features the longest straight in F1 at 2.2 km
  • Features the narrowest section of track in F1
  • The track winds between 12th century fortress walls
  • It is the second longest track on the calendar after Spa
  • It is the fastest street circuit in F1

The Weather

The Quotes

Max Verstappen | “I can understand people complaining [about the flexi-wings] but it’s all within the rules so far. There’s nothing wrong with it. Of course, they try to slow us down.”

Charles Leclerc | “Monaco was incredible and we were fighting for the victory but with the long straights [in Baku] I believe we will be back to the normal competitiveness.”

Lando Norris | “I don’t think we’re going to be extraordinary or unexpected. We have a good car and shown we have a decent car at most tracks but I don’t think we can be confident we’e going to be quicker than Mercedes or Red Bull.”

Lewis Hamilton | “[Naomi Osaka] is an incredible athlete and human being, and her activism has been just so impactful. The fact is when you are young you are thrown into the limelight and spotlight, it weighs heavily on you. The thing is most of us are not prepared. I think she is incredibly brave.”

The Friday Form

Practice 2 Top 5

1 | Sergio Pérez | 1:42.115 | 22 Laps
2 | Max Verstappen | 1:42.216 | 23 Laps
3 | Carlos Sainz | 1:42.243 | 24 Laps
4 | Charles Leclerc | 1:42.436 | 24 Laps
5 | Pierre Gasly | 1:42.534 | 26 Laps

Practice 1 Top 5

1 | Max Verstappen | 1:43.184 | 19 Laps
2 | Charles Leclerc | 1:43.227 | 20 Laps
3 | Carlos Sainz | 1:43.521 | 20 Laps
4 | Sergio Pérez | 1:43.630 | 17 Laps
5 | Daniel Ricciardo | 1:43.732 | 25 Laps

Despite Ferrari’s protestations that their Monaco pace would disappear at a vastly different street circuit in Baku, they finished both Friday’s practice session with two cars in the top four.

It is Red Bull who look the strongest, though, with Max Verstappen topping Practice 1 and teammate Sergio Pérez at the head of the afternoon session. With Mercedes struggling badly – neither Lewis Hamilton nor Valtteri Bottas could break into the top 10 in Practice 2 – this may be a very good weekend for Verstappen and his team’s title charges.

The Photos

The Predictions

Podium

Pole Position

Fastest Lap

Driver of the Day

2019 Azerbaijan GP report | The return of Bottas 2.0

Apparently Azerbaijan used up its quota of carnage on Friday and Saturday.
Valtteri Bottas and Lewis Hamilton after the 2019 Azerbaijan Grand Prix.
Image credit: Steve Etherington

Valtteri Bottas took his second win of the season and the championship lead after an impressive performance at a surprisingly uneventful 2019 Azerbaijan Grand Prix.

After an impressive start to the season with a dominant victory at Melbourne (albeit with Lewis Hamilton having suffered floor damage), the supposed rebirth of Bottas in 2019 as much more than just a ‘wingman’ had seemed to stutter. He was nowhere in Bahrain and, after taking pole in China, was beaten off the line by Hamilton and never really threatened for the remainder of the race. But the Finn was near enough flawless in Baku, grabbing what looked an unlikely pole position, holding his own in the first few corners and then not putting a foot wrong on his way to victory and the lead of the championship.

Hamilton will have regrets though. He had been the stronger Mercedes driver through the practice sessions and the earlier parts of qualifying. He produced an excellent first lap in Q3 but on the second runs, after Mercedes had successfully thrown Ferrari and Sebastian Vettel a dummy, they got their timings a bit wrong. Both drivers were at the back of a queue of drivers trying to get space for their runs. Hamilton was worst affected, losing a lot of tyre temperature which caused him to lose three tenths in the first sector and he couldn’t quite claw that back through the rest of the lap. He got the better start on Sunday but, as he put it, was “a little bit too kind”, giving his teammate a lot of space as they ran wheel-to-wheel. From there, despite following closely throughout, he never really got another chance.

You get the sense that the world champion still feels pretty comfortable that he has Bottas covered. Or maybe it’s just that he genuinely gets on with the Finn and is enjoying an honest fight after all the psychological warfare with Nico Rosberg. Either way, Bottas 2.0 still has a long way to go. He should have been leading the championship at this point last year too but for a dramatic puncture. The European season was where Hamilton started to pull away and he is infamously strong in the latter part of the year, as the tension builds. Maintaining the fight will be far from easy for Bottas but, if Ferrari continue to falter, hopefully he can do so for the sake of a competitive championship. Speaking of which…

Are Ferrari Actually Fast?

Another race and another missed opportunity for the Scuderia. At what point though do we actually start to question the speed of the car? In Bahrain, they were clearly quickest, certainly in the hands of Charles Leclerc. In China, Mercedes regained the upper hand. Through practice in Azerbaijan, they were miles ahead – over a second in Practice 3 – and it looked like we might have another season where certain tracks are more suited to each of the two leading teams and a title battle that would swing to and fro.

Image credit: Getty Images

But it all unravelled after Leclerc’s crash in qualifying and here we are with a record-breaking fourth consecutive 1-2 finish from the start of the season for Mercedes. How much of that is down to the ongoing operational issues that have hindered Ferrari over the past few years and how much of it is just a lack of pace? Qualifying would appear to be down to the former but then Vettel didn’t really look like threatening the Mercedes at any point during the race. Or is it just those Mercedes sandbags out in force again? At least it meant they didn’t have to deal with team orders…

Barcelona will be key. People were referring to the race in Azerbaijan as a must-win for the red cars; Barcelona is far more of one in this writer’s opinion. Testing at Barcelona was what had fans, pundits and the media alike convinced that Ferrari were the team to beat this year. If they get comfortably beaten there too, that could be it. Last year, Mercedes had built a wild animal of a car but learnt how to tame it. This year, it seems they are the ones with the more consistent machine and Ferrari have built the wild animal…but have no ringmaster to do the taming.

What Happened to the Baku Mayhem?

Well, it all happened too early really. A Chuckle Brothers-esque start to the weekend saw a loose manhole cover thankfully not cause any harm to George Russell but cause a lot of damage to his car a few minutes in. Then the rescue truck that came to pick up the Williams promptly crashed into a bridge and proceeded to leak hydraulic fluid on the car. Talk about insult to injury. Practice 1 was cancelled as they checked the bridge and 300 manhole covers around the circuit.

Saturday was all about Turn 8. First Robert Kubica and then, more dramatically, Leclerc’s Ferrari ended up in the barriers there, each causing long delays whilst it was repaired. But sadly, in terms of a spectacle at least, Sunday passed mostly without incident. Except for Daniel Ricciardo bizarrely reversing into his former teammate, Daniil Kvyat, after the Australian had outbraked himself in an overtaking attempt and forced them both down an escape road.

Another Draining Weekend for Williams

Yes, that’s a drain pun. No, I’m not sorry.

If people thought things couldn’t get worse for the Williams team, they were proven thoroughly wrong by the weekend’s events in Baku. First there was the drain cover incident, destroying the floor of Russell’s car and damaging the chassis severely enough that it had to be replaced. Claire Williams put the damage in the hundreds of thousands and stated she would be “taking it up with race control”.

Image credit: AFP via Getty Images

And then Kubica binned the sister car in Q1 on Saturday. Some feared Williams wouldn’t have the spare parts to rebuild another car after having to use the spare chassis for Russell, but fortunately they did and at least both cars were able to compete on Sunday. Not without one more kick in the teeth though. Kubica received a drive-through penalty for ‘pit lane irregularities’, with the team apparently confused as to what they had done wrong. It transpired that, with this being their first pit lane start since the race times shifted to 10 past the hour, Williams hadn’t clocked (no pun intended this time) that you’re supposed to bring the car to the exit 20 minutes before the race start time as opposed to 20 minutes before the hour…

It feels that Williams could, and should, be learning from McLaren. In coming to the realisation that their way of working was outdated and to then basically strip everything apart and rebuild from scratch. Zak Brown has done that for the more recent of the two British former champions and they are now pushing on and regaining dignity and competitiveness, with a solid double-points finish in Baku. But as things stand, it appears that Williams are too proud. And if they’re not careful, that could be their downfall.

The Azerbaijan Grand Prix in 60 Seconds

Answering the Burning Questions

Will there be more team orders at Ferrari? Leclerc’s crash removed that specific elephant from the room.

Can either Ferrari or Red Bull’s upgrades take them to the front? It looked like that could be the case for Ferrari on Friday but by Sunday normal service seems to have resumed.

Will Azerbaijan keep up its so far 100% record of producing highly dramatic races? No.

Will any of the midfield teams stake a claim for being best of the rest? Racing Point and McLaren had strong races but overall it’s still certainly in the balance.

2019 Azerbaijan GP preview

Expect carnage.

The Burning Questions

Will there be more team orders at Ferrari?

Can either Ferrari or Red Bull’s upgrades take them to the front?

Will Azerbaijan keep up its so far 100% record of producing highly dramatic races?

Will any of the midfield teams stake a claim for being best of the rest?

The Track

The Stats

Track Length: 6.003 km

Laps: 51

Race Distance: 306.049 km

First Grand Prix: 2016 (Baku) | 2017 (Azerbaijan GP)

Race Lap Record: Sebastian Vettel | Ferrari | 2017 | 1:43.441

Outright Lap Record: Lewis Hamilton | Mercedes | 2017 | 1:40.593

Most Driver Wins: Daniel Ricciardo/Lewis Hamilton | 2017/2018

Most Constructor Wins: Red Bull/Mercedes | 2017/2018

The Photos

The Predictions

Podium

Pole Position

Fastest Lap

Driver of the Day