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.

2022 Emilia Romagna GP preview

The Burning Questions

Will Ferrari delight the Tifosi on home soil?

Have Red Bull fixed the issues which saw Max Verstappen retire from two of the opening three races?

Will any of the teams have brought significant enough upgrades for the first European grand prix to change the pecking order?

Could we get another wet and wild Imola race?

The Track

The Stats

  • Track Length: 4.909 km
  • Laps: 63
  • Race Distance: 309.049 km
  • Maximum Speed: 311 km/h
  • Lap Time at Full Throttle: 71%
  • First Grand Prix: 1980 (Imola) | 2020 (Emilia Romagna GP)
  • Race Lap Record: Lewis Hamilton | Mercedes | 2020 | 1:15.484
  • Outright Lap Record: Valtteri Bottas | Mercedes | 2020 | 1:13.609
  • Most Driver Wins: Michael Schumacher | 1994, 1999, 2000, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2006
  • Most Constructor Wins: Ferrari/Williams | 1982, 1983, 1999, 2000, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2006/1987, 1990, 1992, 1993, 1995, 1996, 1997, 2001

The Weather

The Quotes

Charles Leclerc | “I know in the past we have had so much support here, so to be here in that position I am pretty sure it is going to be special.”

Max Verstappen | “I race exactly like I always race because that is how I am. Charles is aggressive, too, and you can clearly see that. We have nice battles, but we don’t touch.”

Carlos Sainz | “I have been in the fight for pole in the three races and maybe I was missing the last 0.1 seconds. Of course Charles has done an exceptional job with this car and is making the difference as a driver and he is doing really well but I don’t feel that far [away].”

George Russell | “I think because we’re at just different stages of our career, there’s no hard feelings either way. From my side, I’m 24 years old going up against the greatest of all time – if he were to finish ahead of me, obviously I don’t like it but I’m not going to cry and sulk about it.”

The Photos

The Predictions

Winner

Podium

Sprint Winner

Pole Position

Fastest Lap

Driver of the Day

2021 Emilia Romagna GP report | Verstappen wins frantic wet-dry race

Two races down, two absolute classics.
Max Verstappen and Lewis Hamilton go wheel-to-wheel at the first corner of the Emilia Romagna Grand Prix.
Image credit: Getty Images

Max Verstappen took the chequered flag after a very eventful couple of hours in changeable weather at Imola for the Emilia Romagna Grand Prix.

There was a downpour around an hour before the race got underway which left a tricky, drying track with some sections dry and others still wet. And there was plenty of drama before the lights even went out. On the way to the grid, Fernando Alonso crashed, Valtteri Bottas suffered a rear left puncture and both Aston Martins’ brakes caught on fire. That led to a pit lane start – and eventually a stop-go penalty – for Sebastian Vettel. The pre-race theatrics weren’t quite over as Charles Leclerc spun on the formation lap, but was able to reclaim his fourth place before arriving at the grid.

When the lights did go out, it was Verstappen who made a flying start from third on the grid. He had the racing line into the first corner and was able to run his main rival, Lewis Hamilton, out of road and claim the lead. Hamilton bounced over the raised kerbs and damaged his front wing but held onto second. Further round the first lap, Nicholas Latifi spun his Williams and then, upon rejoining, put himself into the wall after leaving Nikita Mazepin nowhere to go on the run down towards the Variante Alta.

That produced a safety car and (you’d expect) a moment of calm… But no, Mick Schumacher overcooked it whilst warming his tyres and pitched himself into the wall at the pit exit. The German rookie was able to recover but would have to drive round minus a front wing for a couple of laps as the pit lane was closed, ironically, to clear the debris from his crash. Sergio Pérez then ran wide into the gravel and earned himself a penalty by passing two cars to reclaim his position under safety car conditions.

Mick Schumacher spins under the Safety Car.
Image credit: Formula 1

Verstappen controlled the restart well and the leading pair dropped the rest of the pack. Leclerc – running in an impressive third – was already 15 seconds behind when Verstappen pitted on lap 28. Hamilton responded a lap later but a slow stop ruined any chances of him jumping the Dutchman and he rejoined a few seconds behind.

The World Champion appeared to be more comfortable on the dry tyres, though, and was closing the gap as the two drivers worked their way through the backmarkers. However, on lap 31, Mercedes‘ race imploded.

George Russell slowed to allow his fellow countryman past as they approached the Tosa hairpin, but stayed on the racing line. Force to overtake on the wet part of the track, Hamilton slithered off into the gravel and ultimately the wall, as the appalling turning circle of a modern Formula 1 car was laid bare. After some trouble, he engaged reverse gear and excruciatingly back-pedalled over the gravel and onto the track, but with a damaged front wing. And things were about to go from bad to worse in the Mercedes camp.

As Hamilton limped back to the pits, the other Mercedes driver and the Mercedes protégé came together in a massive way. After a poor qualifying had seen Bottas start from eighth, his struggles had continued come the race and he unbelievably found himself defending against a Williams. At full speed on the start-finish straight, Russell pulled alongside the Mercedes but put a wheel on the grass and immediately speared across into the Finn, both drivers going straight on and smashing into the barriers. With debris all over the track, the race was red-flagged.

After a brief stoppage, the drivers rejoined the track for a rolling restart. Ironically, the Mercedes disaster had actually aided Hamilton, who found himself in ninth, no longer a lap down, and with a repaired car. Verstappen then got lucky himself as he lost the car whilst backing the pack up for the restart, but was just about able to save the situation and Leclerc politely remained behind.

When he did successfully get the race back underway, the McLaren gamble to fit soft tyres saw Lando Norris pass Leclerc for second and briefly put pressure on the leader. Yuki Tsunoda passed Hamilton into the first corner but immediately spun and a lap later Pérez also found himself pointing the wrong direction in the gravel. A tale of hero to zero for the Mexican who had been the first teammate to outqualify Verstappen since Daniel Ricciardo left the team.

Two drivers may have removed themselves as obstacles, but Hamilton still had a lot of work to do if he was to recover to the podium. But recover he did. Slowly but surely, he got to within a second of each of the cars in front and executed a move into Tamburello. Norris put up an excellent fight on what were now very worn soft tyres, but eventually ceded his position with three laps remaining. He would hold off the chasing Ferraris for third, though, and claimed a very well-earned podium – the second of his career.

Ricciardo took sixth but – after earlier having to move aside for his teammate – admitted he still has a lot of work to do as he tries to acclimatise to his new, papaya machine. Late penalties for Lance Stroll and Kimi Räikkönen saw Pierre Gasly promoted to seventh and Alonso claim his first point since returning to the sport, despite never looking especially comfortable in the car.

Max Verstappen celebrates winning the Emilia Romagna Grand Prix.
Image credit: Getty Images

Out front, it had all been plain sailing for Verstappen since his minor blunder at the restart and he had built up a comfortable 20-second lead. Hamilton snatched the fastest lap late on, which keeps him one point ahead in the drivers’ standings, but the title fight is very much on.

A Damaging Day for Bottas and Russell

Now that the field has closed up so dramatically on the Silver Arrows, when Bottas has one of his off-days in qualifying, it is far more brutally exposed. He was a little under half a second shy of his teammate’s pole time and whilst, in the past, that would often still have seen him on the front row, in Imola it left him in an embarrassing eighth place.

And yet, Sunday was arguably worse. Surprisingly, considering his heritage and love of rallying, driving in the wet does not appear to be a strong suit for the Finn – just look at his performance in Turkey last year… He fell back a further two places at the start and then spent 28 laps stuck behind the Aston Martin of Stroll. That is what put him into a situation where he could be crashed into by an arguably overexcited Russell.

If you are expecting that to reflect well on Russell’s chances of replacing him next year, however, you’d be wrong. Whilst qualifying saw another performance worthy of his ‘Mr. Saturday’ moniker and the incident with Bottas itself could have been excusable, it was his reaction during the aftermath that left a bitter taste in the mouth.

George Russell and Valtteri Bottas have a disagreement after their high-speed crash.
Image credit: Getty Images

First, Russell stormed up to the smoking wreckage that contained Bottas, lambasted him for “trying to kill them both” and gave him a smack on the helmet for good measure. As Bottas emerged visibly winded from his car and was then being examined at the medical centre, Russell was already Tweeting his criticisms and claiming that Bottas would have defended differently if it were another driver.

Whilst his initial, heat-of-the-moment reaction was understandable, he really should have thoroughly examined the footage before going to see the media as it seems pretty clear to most that it was somewhere between a racing incident and Russell’s fault. Mercedes Team Principal Toto Wolff described it as 60:40 in terms of blame and was left fairly unimpressed.

This comes not long after the young Briton crashed behind the safety car whilst also chasing points at Imola last year. There is no denying that he has talent – and he obviously cannot have any blame attributed to him for what happened in Bahrain last year – but, if he is not careful, he could gain himself a reputation for choking when opportunities come his way. And throwing his toys out of the pram in the process.

The Emilia Romagna Grand Prix in 60 Seconds

Answering the Burning Questions

With a very different location to the last race, will Red Bull still have the fastest car? It was hard to say. It looks like Mercedes have certainly at least closed the gap.

Can Max Verstappen make amends for his near miss last time out? Very much so!

Will any of the teams have brought significant upgrades for the first European race after a three-week gap? Ferrari’s new floor appears to have given them a performance boost.

How will the midfield shape up? Can Alpine or Aston Martin improve on their disappointing performances in the desert? A little but the midfield order appeared pretty similar.

Will we see some challenging conditions with cold temperatures and a fair chance of rain? We will!

2021 Emilia Romagna GP preview

The Burning Questions

With a very different location to the last race, will Red Bull still have the fastest car?

Can Max Verstappen make amends for his near miss last time out?

Will any of the teams have brought significant upgrades for the first European race after a three-week gap?

How will the midfield shape up? Can Alpine or Aston Martin improve on their disappointing performances in the desert?

Will we see some challenging conditions with cold temperatures and a fair chance of rain?

The Track

The Stats

  • Track Length: 4.909 km
  • Laps: 63
  • Race Distance: 309.049 km
  • Maximum Speed: 329 km/h
  • Lap Time at Full Throttle: 73%
  • First Grand Prix: 1980 (Imola) | 2020 (Emilia Romagna GP)
  • Race Lap Record: Lewis Hamilton | Mercedes | 2020 | 1:15.484
  • Outright Lap Record: Valtteri Bottas | Mercedes | 2020 | 1:13.609
  • Most Driver Wins: Michael Schumacher | 1994, 1999, 2000, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2006
  • Most Constructor Wins: Ferrari/Williams | 1982, 1983, 1999, 2000, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2006/1987, 1990, 1992, 1993, 1995, 1996, 1997, 2001

The Weather

The Quotes

Lewis Hamilton | “You can see that Red Bull currently are ahead and we are the hunters. I think we like that position. I like it. That’s what I started out with back when I was racing karts at Rye House. It’s nothing new for me and it’s definitely exciting.”

Max Verstappen | “They are very close even if they don’t say it. [Bahrain] is definitely an opportunity missed, but if we have the fastest car it won’t matter because we have 22 races to finish in front of them.”

Daniel Ricciardo | “Such a fun circuit. It’s so fast. I think last year was my favourite qualifying lap of the year. It’s awesome.”

George Russell | “I made what is probably the biggest mistake of my career at Imola in 2020 when crashing under the safety car. It’s a track where, if you make a mistake, you’re out. But that’s what racing should be about! I’ll look to try and rectify my mistake from last year with a good result this weekend.”

The Photos

The Predictions

Podium

Pole Position

Fastest Lap

Driver of the Day

2020 Emilia Romagna GP report | Hamilton wins at Imola as Mercedes claims record title

Mercedes: Rewriting HIS7ORY Since 2014.
Mercedes seal the constructors' title at the Emilia Romagna Grand Prix.
Image credit: Motorsport Images

Lewis Hamilton took what had at one point seemed an unlikely victory at the 2020 Emilia Romagna Grand Prix, as his Mercedes team wrapped up a record-breaking seventh consecutive World Constructors’ Championship.

The World Champion was beaten to pole by teammate Valtteri Bottas on Saturday, later describing his lap as “piss poor”, and was then passed by Max Verstappen on the run to the first corner. The narrow Imola circuit proved very difficult to pass on, with the two-metre-wide behemoths of modern Formula 1, and the front three appeared to have formed an orderly queue that may well last the entire race.

However, it would transpire that Bottas had collected some Ferrari shrapnel on the second lap which was significantly affecting his aero performance. Red Bull pitted Verstappen on lap 19 and Mercedes immediately responded with a pit stop for Bottas to cover off the Dutchman. This released Hamilton who suddenly started producing a succession of fastest laps. His medium tyres seemed to be holding up well and Mercedes decided to extend his first stint with the potential to fit the soft tyre at the end.

As it became apparent just how much time Bottas was losing, Hamilton defied his aging tyres and increased his lead to almost the exact length of a pit stop. It would all become academic, however, as a Virtual Safety Car on lap 29, brought about by yet another mechanical retirement for Esteban Ocon, handed the lead to Hamilton on a plate. He re-emerged five seconds ahead of his teammate and Bottas was now forced to switch his attention to keeping Verstappen behind him.

After a couple of close calls, a lock-up into Rivazza allowed Verstappen to pull right up to the gearbox of the Mercedes and he snatched second on the run down to Tamburello. Once again, it appeared as if the order had settled in for the remainder of the race, but there was one more twist in the tail. On lap 51, Verstappen’s right-rear tyre suddenly let go and left him stranded in the gravel trap.

Max Verstappen shows his frustration after retiring from the Emilia Romagna Grand Prix.
Image credit: Formula 1

That brought out a full safety car. Both Mercedes drivers pitted without incident – the team able to remove the piece of Ferrari from Bottas’s bargeboards – and, surpisingly, so did Sergio Pérez, who was due to inherit that provisional podium position after having made excellent progress from 11th on the grid. Those behind him did not, though, and the Racing Point driver found himself behind Daniel Ricciardo, Charles Leclerc and Alexander Albon.

It was an unusually chaotic safety car period, featuring an embarrassing crash from George Russell – ruining his best chance yet at a points finish – and Lance Stroll wiping out his front jack man during his pit stop; the mechanic thankfully walked away unscathed.

The safety car period ended, leaving a six-lap sprint to the finish and the chaos was predictably far from over. Daniil Kvyat made an opportunistic double-overtake at the restart to jump up to fifth, before passing Leclerc later in the lap. Behind him, Pérez did successfully recover one place, passing Alexander Albon around the outside; the under-pressure Anglo-Thai then span immediately and surely put another nail in his Red Bull coffin.

This was the second of two crucial weekends for Albon and he once again failed to produce. It is looking more and more likely that he will not be retained for 2021 and, with F2 driver Yuki Tsunoda being strongly linked to the second seat at AlphaTauri, Albon is now fighting desperately for his F1 career – let alone the Red Bull seat.

Out front, Hamilton comfortably extended his gap to Bottas and sealed the extra point for fastest lap on the final tour. Ricciardo just about held off Kvyat for his second podium in three races and, behind them, Pérez was unable to pass Leclerc for fifth. The final points positions went to the McLarens and the Alfa Romeos, with Kimi Räikkönen frustrated that he had finally taken his only pit stop one lap before the safety car was called.

After having forgotten at the Nürburgring, Ricciardo this time remembered to do his trademark ‘shoey’ and was even joined by Hamilton, a man who had previously said he would never be convinced to partake in that particular celebratory swig. Whilst he looked like he instantly regretted his decision to take a sip from the sweaty, yellow boot, it is unlikely to have dampened his mood a great deal. Hamilton now has one hand (and at least a few fingers of the other) on that Drivers’ Championship trophy – Bottas must outscore him by at least eight points in Turkey to keep the title alive.

HIS7ORY MAKERS

Mercedes wrapping up the constructors’ title with a few races to go has become the norm for many years now and, with many fans thoroughly bored of the dominance, it is possible to forget what an incredible achievement it is that we are witnessing.

With a seventh consecutive Constructors’ Championship, Mercedes have surpassed the record set by the dominant Ferrari team of the Schumacher-Brawn-Todt era. This is now arguably the greatest team in the history of the sport. As we all know, they nailed the hybrid engine regulations in 2014 and gave themselves a massive head start for those first three years. Dominating one set of regulations is not rare – Red Bull, Williams, McLaren and Ferrari have all done it in the past – but 2017 brought about another major change in the cars and Mercedes simply aced that too.

Smaller changes since then – even the ones introduced specifically to target them, such as this year’s ban on ‘qualifying modes’ – have done little harm to the Silver Arrows’ supremacy either. Would anybody honestly be surprised if they do the best job on the 2022 regulations too?

Their biggest threat appears to come from the two most respected members of the team – Hamilton and Team Principal Toto Wolff – seemingly considering their positions, as both have been openly pondering how much longer they will continue. Time will tell on that front, but Hamilton himself is usually the first to point out that he is just the last link in a very long, particularly well-oiled chain.

Admittedly, as ‘last links’ go, Hamilton is maybe the greatest of all time – the same could be said for Wolff – but there will be more drivers and more team principals in the years to come and, assuming Mercedes stick to their relentlessly efficient principles, they will be at the forefront of the sport for a long, long time.

The Emilia Romagna Grand Prix in 60 Seconds

Answering the Burning Questions

How will a condensed two-day weekend affect the teams? There certainly seemed less prepared, particularly in terms of the behaviour of the tyres.

Can Mercedes wrap up a record seventh consecutive title? Of course they can.

How will Alexander Albon fare on a crucial weekend for his F1 future? Not well, sadly.

Which of the teams battling for third in the Constructors’ Championship will have the best weekend? Renault had marginally the best weekend and are now a single point ahead of their two rivals.

Will Kimi Räikkönen gain an advantage as the only driver to have previously raced at Imola? The veteran Finn had an excellent race and, with a safety car appearing one lap earlier, could have grabbed a large haul of points.

2020 Emilia Romagna GP preview

The Burning Questions

How will a condensed two-day weekend affect the teams?

Can Mercedes wrap up a record seventh consecutive title?

How will Alexander Albon fare on a crucial weekend for his F1 future?

Which of the teams battling for third in the Constructors’ Championship will have the best weekend?

Will Kimi Räikkönen gain an advantage as the only driver to have previously raced at Imola?

The Track

The Stats

Track Length: 4.909 km

Laps: 63

Race Distance: 309.049 km

First Grand Prix: 1980 (Imola) | 2020 (Emilia Romagna GP)

Race Lap Record: n/a

Outright Lap Record: n/a

Most Driver Wins: Michael Schumacher | 1994, 1999, 2000, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2006

Most Constructor Wins: Ferrari/Williams | 1982, 1983, 1999, 2000, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2006/1987, 1990, 1992, 1993, 1995, 1996, 1997, 2001

The Weather

The Quotes

Kimi Räikkönen | “So many of the faces that were around me when I made my F1 debut in 2001 are still here and the unique atmosphere of this team is what gives me that extra motivation to keep going. I wouldn’t be here if I didn’t believe in the team’s project and in what we feel we can achieve together.”

Lewis Hamilton | “You want to look back and say I was a part of something much bigger than myself, than my team, than the sport, and I did it with a whole group of people and a lot of force against us, but also a lot of force because there was many of us pushing in the same direction”

Sergio Pérez | [On the prospect of joining Red Bull] “It’s a bit of a hot seat, no? But it’s an opportunity to be with a top team, that are fighting Mercedes pretty much every single race. The season is coming to an end so I think it’s important for teams to know what’s going on, what’s happening going forwards, and for drivers too. I’m looking at all my possible options, and I cannot take too long anymore.”

The Photos

The Predictions

Podium

Pole Position

Fastest Lap

Driver of the Day