2021 Hungarian GP report | Ocon wins extraordinary race

A race that almost made Monza 2020 look dull.
Esteban Ocon celebrates his shock win at the Hungarian Grand Prix.
Image credit: Reuters

Esteban Ocon took his maiden Formula 1 victory in a chaotic Hungarian Grand Prix after a first corner pile-up.

Rain started to fall half an hour before the lights went out and caused chaos at Turn One. Valtteri Bottas, after a poor getaway, braked too late and ploughed into the back of Lando Norris, in turn punting the young Briton into Max Verstappen. Bottas himself then slid into the other Red Bull of Sergio Pérez.

That had left Charles Leclerc looking at second place, only for Lance Stroll to crash into him after also missing his braking point. This time, rather than being the projectile, a McLaren was on the receiving end, Daniel Ricciardo being spun round by the helpless Ferrari.

Bottas and Pérez retired immediately with Norris joining them during the ensuing red flag. Verstappen and Ricciardo were able to continue but with significant damage, despite the best efforts of the Red Bull mechanics during the stoppage.

The drama was far from over, however.

As the drivers followed the safety car round for a standing restart, still on intermediate tyres, it became apparent that the sun had dried the track out incredibly quickly. Lewis Hamilton lined up once again in his pole spot…but nobody followed him…

Every other driver had come in to fit dry tyres. Mayhem in the pits ended with all the drivers lining up at the end of the pit lane, and George Russell unsuccessfully trying to pull off a sneaky mass overtake.

Lewis Hamilton all alone at the second start.
Image credit: Getty Images

So, it was lights out and away just Hamilton went, but knowing that he would have to stop at the end of the lap. Having done so, he rejoined in last place.

The Hungaroring is a notoriously difficult track on which to overtake and the World Champion was struggling. He had successfully passed Antonio Giovinazzi and Mick Schumacher but was unable to get close enough to Pierre Gasly‘s AlphaTauri to fashion a move.

Mercedes decided a two-stop strategy was the way forward and pitted Hamilton on lap 20. Once in fresh air, he was immediately the fastest car on track by a fair margin and crucially undercut Verstappen and Ricciardo when they stopped a lap later.

Hamilton gradually picked drivers off, either when they pitted or on track – an audacious move around the outside of Yuki Tsunoda at Turn 4 the highlight – and soon enough found himself up to fifth.

Meanwhile, at the front, a leading pair of Ocon and Sebastian Vettel had emerged after Hamilton’s overdue tyre change. The Williams of Nicholas Latifi held on to third for an impressive spell, allowing them to open up a gap. The unlikely leader eventually pitted on lap 38 – a lap after Vettel – and emerged narrowly ahead of the four-time champion.

Hamilton spent a few laps stuck behind Carlos Sainz in fourth but built enough of a gap to pit for medium tyres and rejoin in fifth. At this point he was three seconds faster than any other car on track, but in his path lay a formidable obstacle – Fernando Alonso.

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

The Spaniard is never one to back down from a wheel-to-wheel battle, and here he was further incentivised to help protect his teammate’s lead.

The old rivals produced a thrilling battle as Alonso used every trick in the book to keep the faster Mercedes behind. He somehow succeeded in doing so for 10 laps before a lock-up into Turn One finally released Hamilton.

But, by that point, there were only six laps remaining. Hamilton quickly dispatched Sainz in third and closed in rapidly on Ocon and Vettel, but it was too late. Ocon completed an incredibly mature drive, keeping his head whilst leading a race for the very first time, to take the chequered flag.

Behind the top five, the AlphaTauris finished line astern in sixth and seventh, with Gasly stealing the point for fastest lap on the final tour, and Williams finally got their first points since Germany 2019 with Latifi eighth and Russell ninth.

Nicholas Latifi running in the midfield.
Image credit: Getty Images

Verstappen fought valiantly with – as his engineer put it – half a car to earn the final point in tenth, but saw Hamilton retake the lead of the championship.

There was more drama to come after the chequered flag, however, as Vettel was disqualified. His Aston Martin had developed a fuel pump issue late on and the FIA were unable to take the one-litre sample required by the regulations. The disqualification is under appeal, but it looks likely that Vettel will sadly lose a well-deserved podium.

Sainz is promoted to third, which means – bizarrely – half of his four podiums have now come belatedly.

Why Didn’t Hamilton Pit?

Mercedes basically found themselves between a rock and a hard place.

With Hamilton at the front, it would have been brave for Mercedes to pull into the pits and potentially hand over pole position not knowing what everyone behind you is planning. And, more importantly, if they had done so and everybody had followed them in, they would have struggled to release their driver into a stream of cars coming down the pit lane.

Lewis Hamilton overtakes Mick Schumacher.
Image credit: Getty Images

Hamilton said after the race that the team had believed more rain was coming and their was no radio traffic between driver and team during the lap behind the safety car. Perhaps they thought it was banned – as some on social media also initially thought – with that being the case for the regular parade lap.

But as this was the effective third lap of the race, no such regulation was active. That is a silly mistake if so that may have contributed to what, in hindsight, was clearly the wrong call.

Either way, it set up a vintage Hamilton comeback. One which appeared to have taken a lot out of him as he visibly struggled to remain standing on the podium. Hamilton later revealed he fears he may be suffering from ‘long COVID’. Let’s hope the summer break gives him some time to continue his recovery.

More Sparks in the Title Fight

Tensions between Red Bull and Mercedes were already beyond simmering heading into the Hungarian Grand Prix, and this will not have done anything to calm them.

For the second race in a row, a Mercedes made contact with a Red Bull. Aside from the obvious implications in terms of points, the cost of the ensuing damage is piling up for the Austrian team, in the first year of a budget cap.

Carnage at the first corner of the Hungarian Grand Prix.
Image credit: AFP

Mercedes Team Principal Toto Wolff apologised to his opposite number, Christian Horner, but the Red Bull boss didn’t appear to be particularly appeased and asked if Wolff would be paying the bill.

“I’m sure he wasn’t that sorry to see the result. I’m sure he didn’t tell Valtteri to do that but the consequences of that for us are brutal. In a cost cap environment, that needs looking at by the FIA.”

In addition to Hamilton reclaiming the title lead, Mercedes have also passed their rivals in the constructors’ standings. And the update brought to Silverstone by the reigning champions appears to have moved them back level on performance. The Silver Arrows had the edge all weekend on a track which has not been their strongest in recent years.

For all the drama we have had to the halfway point of the season, it is effectively back to square one with both championships practically level.

Four weeks to rest and recuperate now, and then we go again.

The Hungarian Grand Prix in 60 Seconds

Answering the Burning Questions

How will Hamilton and Verstappen act in the wake of their controversial clash? As it was, they were not the source of the drama into Turn One. Whilst there were still a few barbed remarks, the relationship seemed respectful enough in the public eye.

Who will come out on top at a track with similar characteristics to Monaco but where Hamilton has won eight times? Well, Ocon actually, as we all predicted…

Can Ferrari keep up their impressive recent form? They showed strong pace again. Leclerc was bumped out of what would have been second place, but an eventual podium for Sainz will make up for that.

2021 Hungarian GP preview

What will happen into Turn One?..

The Burning Questions

How will Hamilton and Verstappen act in the wake of their controversial clash?

Who will come out on top at a track with similar characteristics to Monaco but where Hamilton has won eight times?

Can Ferrari keep up their impressive recent form?

The Track

The Stats

  • Track Length: 4.381 km
  • Laps: 70
  • Race Distance: 306.630 km
  • Maximum Speed: 321 km/h
  • Lap Time at Full Throttle: 57%
  • First Grand Prix: 1986
  • Race Lap Record: Lewis Hamilton | Mercedes | 2020 | 1:16.627
  • Outright Lap Record: Lewis Hamilton | Mercedes | 2020 | 1:13.447
  • Most Driver Wins: Lewis Hamilton | 2007, 2009, 2012, 2013. 2016, 2018, 2019, 2020
  • Most Constructor Wins: McLaren | 1988, 1991, 1992, 1999, 2000, 2005, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2011, 2012

The Trivia

  • Only Monza has a longer consecutive streak on the F1 calendar than the Hungaroring
  • For the thirteen seasons between 2005 and 2017, the winner of the Hungarian Grand Prix failed to go on and win the title
  • F1 had its 100th winner (Heikki Kovalainen in 2008) and 100th polesitter (Max Verstappen in 2019) at the Hungaroring
  • From higher vantage points, it’s possible to see around 80% of the circuit
  • Since the race was first held in 1986, rain has only fallen during the race three times

The Weather

The Quotes

Max Verstappen | “[It is] disrespectful if one guy is in the hospital and the other one is waving the flag around like nothing has happened while you push the guy into the wall with 51G.”

Lewis Hamilton | “I don’t believe our behaviour was disrespectful,” said the seven-time world champion. As I said, it’s one thing knowing and then celebrating what happened, and it’s one thing not knowing and celebrating. As I told you, I wasn’t aware – but it’s my home Grand Prix and we worked incredibly hard for god knows how long to get a result like that.

Toto Wolff | “I think the comments that were made, surely out of emotion, were going directly against a seven-time world champion. Words like ‘amateurish’ should have no place and what it triggered was an avalanche of comments in the social media, a lot of controversy and added to further polarisation.”

Sebastian Vettel | “I always enjoy [racing] Fernando [Alonso]. His talent is without doubt, the skills on track one of the biggest that the sport has seen, and he’s done something which I thought was impossible to do, which is beating Michael”

The Friday Form

Practice 2 Top 5

1 | Valtteri Bottas | 1:17.012 | 29 Laps
2 | Lewis Hamilton | 1:17.039 | 27 Laps
3 | Max Verstappen | 1:17.310 | 24 Laps
4 | Esteban Ocon | 1:17.759 | 29 Laps
5 | Sergio Perez | 1:17.824 | 23 Laps

Practice 1 Top 5

1 | Max Verstappen | 1:17.555 | 21 Laps
2 | Valtteri Bottas | 1:17.616 | 26 Laps
3 | Lewis Hamilton | 1:17.722 | 25 Laps
4 | Carlos Sainz | 1:18.115 | 24 Laps
5 | Pierre Gasly | 1:18.181 | 27 Laps

The Photos

The Predictions

Podium

Pole Position

Fastest Lap

Driver of the Day

2020 Hungarian GP report | A record-equalling eighth victory in Hungary for Hamilton

Hamilton is the hero again, but no more so than the Red Bull mechanics.
Lewis Hamilton leads the Hungarian Grand Prix.
Image credit: LAT Images

Lewis Hamilton took a commanding victory at the 2020 Hungarian Grand Prix, winning in Budapest for the eighth time and, in doing so, matched Michael Schumacher‘s long-standing record for the most wins at one grand prix.

It is looking like the first of potentially a few Schumacher records to fall this year, considering the dominance of Mercedes and Hamilton now being just two podiums and five race wins behind the legendary German’s tallies.

The 86th victory of Hamilton’s career began in tricky conditions, with the track soaking wet from rain earlier in the day but drying out as the sun poked through the clouds and leaving the decision of which tyres to start on as a tight judgement call.

Max Verstappen – generally considered one of the very best in the rain – showed just how precarious the conditions were as he crashed on the way to the grid. Thus ensued a mad rush by the Red Bull mechanics to fix his broken front left push-rod in the remaining 15 or so minutes; they completed the work with 25 seconds to spare.

Image credit: Formula 1

The Dutchman demonstrated his gratitude, firstly over the radio and then on the track, with a stellar performance to take second place, having started seventh, and narrowly holding off the charging Mercedes of Valtteri Bottas in the final laps.

Bottas had got away poorly – he was fortunate not to receive a penalty for jumping the start after initially reacting to lights going out on his dashboard – and dropped back down the order on the run to the first corner. This is not the Bottas 3.0 that fans thought they had seen at the opening grand prix. He has now lost the championship lead to his illustrious teammate and will have to conjure up some renewed fire in his belly if he is to wrestle that lead back as we head for back-to-back races at Silverstone, where Hamilton has won five of the last six events.

And the world champion is showing some great form currently. He used all his wet-weather expertise to open up an eight second lead in the first couple of laps and, by the end, had a significant enough gap to Verstappen that he was able to comfortably pit for soft tyres and secure the extra point for the fastest lap. All in all, another masterclass to add to the collection.

Further back, Alexander Albon made a strong recovery after a disappointing qualifying to finish fifth, just ahead of Sebastian Vettel. Both drivers needed a good result and will surely have got some critics off their respective backs, for a while at least.

Neither came close to challenging Lance Stroll in the Racing Point, however, who coasted to a comfortable fourth position – the second-best result of his career. The ‘Pink Mercedes’ was undoubtedly the second-best car during qualifying and, whilst they faded a little in the race, were impressive enough to raise hackles a little more in the paddock. Renault have now lodged a second protest against the Racing Point car, before even having heard the result of their first one.

Lance Stroll at the Hungarian Grand Prix.
Image credit: XPB Images

An inspired call at Haas to pit at the end of the formation lap for dry tyres led to the struggling team running third and fourth in the early stages. They predictably fell down the order, but Kevin Magnussen hung on commendably to finish ninth on the road. They would later receive a penalty for breaching regulations regarding driver aids by instructing the pair to pit on the formation lap, but Magnussen still earned a single point -their first of the season – for 10th, at least.

Meanwhile, Red Bull survived without a penalty despite having clearly been caught drying the track on Albon’s grid spot…

Yet More Stewarding Inconsistency

It is so very hard to predict which way a stewarding decision is going to fall currently; it’s as if they are making it up as they go along. But then I suppose that is not a huge surprise when you have a panel that changes from race to race.

Last week saw the bewildering decision not to penalise Stroll for his attempt to pass Daniel Ricciardo late on in the Styrian Grand Prix. He clearly forced Ricciardo off the track – left the track himself for good measure – and then kept the position. It seemed a ‘slam dunk’ penalty to most of the paddock, thanks to the trifecta of forcing another car off the track, violating track limits and completing an overtake off the track all in one move. As well as, arguably, rejoining in an unsafe manner as he blocked Lando Norris upon his return.

The stewards, however, saw things differently. As is often the case, there was not much of an explanation as to their decision, which deemed it a “racing incident where neither driver was wholly to blame”. Ricciardo said he thought it was “crystal clear” that it should have resulted in a penalty and, considering all he did was avoid a collision, it is difficult to see how the stewards apportioned any blame upon him.

Image credit: LAT Images

This is the crux of the problem; the fans – and even the drivers – are often left bemused by the decisions and no one is there to justify them. I have called for it before, but what we really need is a consistent panel of respected figures who are fully accountable for their decisions and explain exactly how and why they have come to them.

A Crash Back Down to Earth for Lando

After two extraordinary races to open the season for Lando Norris, Sunday saw things go far less smoothly for the 20-year-old. After what he described as “the worst start I’ve ever got in my life”, he fell to the back of the field and, from there, never really recovered.

The Hungaroring is notoriously hard to pass on and the McLaren driver could only recover to finish 13th in the end. Still, with two stellar performances out of three so far, things could be going far worse and I’m sure, if you had offered him fourth in the championship standings at this point before the season started, he would have bitten your hand off.

And if you thought he couldn’t get any more likeable as a personality, he was captured helping his mechanics disassemble the car on Sunday evening.

The Hungarian Grand Prix in 60(ish) Seconds

Answering the Burning Questions

Can Ferrari make some progress this weekend (and maybe not immediately crash into one another)? It wasn’t all plain sailing but certainly an improvement on the previous two races.

Will Lewis Hamilton match Michael Schumacher’s record for the number of wins at one GP with an 8th triumph in Hungary? Yep.

How will Racing Point respond to the protest about their car? By being ever more in-your-face with their speed, if anything.

Will the interview requested by Sebastian Vettel (with Martin Brundle) prove to be a major announcement? No, but it’s a thoroughly entertaining watch.

With more thunderstorms forecast, could it be another wet and wild weekend? It threatened to pour throughout the weekend, but we only ever got hints of rain when it really counted.

2020 Hungarian GP preview

The Burning Questions

Can Ferrari make some progress this weekend (and maybe not immediately crash into one another)?

Will Lewis Hamilton match Michael Schumacher’s record for the number of wins at one GP with an 8th triumph in Hungary?

How will Racing Point respond to the protest about their car?

Will the interview requested by Sebastian Vettel (with Martin Brundle) prove to be a major announcement?

With more thunderstorms forecast, could it be another wet and wild weekend?

The Track

The Stats

Track Length: 4.381 km

Laps: 70

Race Distance: 306.630 km

First Grand Prix: 1986

Race Lap Record: Max Verstappen | Red Bull | 2019 | 1:17.103

Outright Lap Record: Max Verstappen | Red Bull | 2019 | 1:14.572

Most Driver Wins: Lewis Hamilton | 2007, 2009, 2012, 2013, 2016, 2018, 2019

Most Constructor Wins: McLaren | 1988, 1991, 1992, 1999, 2000, 2005, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2011, 2012

The Weather

The Quotes

Sebastian Vettel | “The truth is that I don’t have a contract to sign, I haven’t signed anything for next year. It’s not that close, as you think.”

Sergio Pérez | “I’m with the team, and as far as I know I have a contract. We will see what happens in the next weeks, but from my point of view I’ve got a contract with the team and I fully believe in the future of the team.”

Lewis Hamilton | “I am not saying that everyone is going to take a knee, but over time as we get to talk about it more often I would like to think we will all be together in the understanding of it.”

Jenson Button | “[Fernando Alonso] is at the top of his game still and I think it’s great that the two-time world champion is going to be racing back in Formula 1. He is a very fiery character and we don’t really know how it’s going to end up with Renault, but I need to congratulate them for bringing him back to Formula 1.

The Photos

The Predictions

PODIUM

POLE POSITION

FASTEST LAP

DRIVER OF THE DAY

2019 Hungarian GP report | Hamilton stages comeback to snatch victory

The Hamilton-Verstappen duel we’ve all been waiting for.
Lewis Hamilton celebrates winning the Hungarian Grand Prix.
Image credit: AP

Lewis Hamilton and his Mercedes team produced a tale of redemption, after their messy weekend in Germany, to take a dramatic late victory at the 2019 Hungarian Grand Prix.

Max Verstappen had continued his excellent recent form to pip both Mercedes drivers – Hamilton and Valtteri Bottas – for his first ever pole position on Saturday. He then just about survived with the lead intact to the first corner, despite running three-wide with Hamilton and Bottas, and from there it looked his race to lose on a track where it is notoriously difficult to overtake.

Behind him, the two Mercedes battled through the first few corners. Bottas did so clumsily though, locking up twice and then clipping his front wing first against the rear tyre of his teammate and then that of Charles Leclerc’s Ferrari. Both escaped without punctures but Bottas’s wing was damaged to the extent that he was forced to pit for a replacement and would emerge in last place, with a long race ahead of him.

The top two of Verstappen and Hamilton steadily pulled away from the Ferrari pair; it becoming apparent fairly quickly that this was to be a two-horse race. At first there was something of stalemate but as Verstappen’s tyres began to fade, Hamilton closed up to the back of the Dutchman and forced Red Bull to pit him early on lap 25, as they feared a pit stop by Mercedes would produce an ‘under-cut’ and give Hamilton the lead. Mercedes stretched the championship-leader’s first stint as far as they could – for another six laps – with the hope of fresher tyres at the end of the race. Hamilton rejoined and immediately closed the gap; a six-second lead gone in just over three laps.

Thus ensued the duel that Formula 1 fans have been craving for a long time. Of course, the two drivers have battled for position on track before, but it has rarely been in closely-matched cars and, generally, Hamilton has been very cautious – looking at the bigger picture of his own title fights and knowing Verstappen’s tendency to take no prisoners. But here, it was different. Hamilton has a far more comfortable lead in the championship and, at this point, his closest competitor is arguably Verstappen. So he went for it. Specifically around the outside of the deceptively tight Turn Four, at 150 mph over a blind crest. He nearly pulled it off too but for a snap of oversteer which sent him wide into the run-off area.

The first four corners of that lap were captivating, with excellent attacking and defensive driving from the two. But now, it was the turn of the Mercedes strategy team to excel.

With no threat to their second place coming from behind, they decided to roll the dice and pit Hamilton for a set of medium tyres, hoping he could claw back the 20-second gap in the remaining 22 laps as Verstappen’s tyres aged. For a while, it looked overly ambitious, with the gap still at over 15 seconds seven laps later, but then Hamilton turned it on and Verstappen’s tyres faded badly; the gap suddenly decreasing by more than 1.5 seconds per lap. By the time Hamilton had reached the back of the Red Bull, there was little Verstappen could do to defend. There was to be no repeat of the dramatics from earlier and Hamilton neatly swept around the outside of Turn One with a little under four laps remaining and claimed his eighth victory of 2019.

A totally different race to the chaos in Germany but certainly still an enthralling one – plenty of action, interesting strategies and nail-biting tension at the front. Formula 1 enters its summer break on a high.

Ferrari Finish Third But Now Have the Third Quickest Car

Ferrari were always likely to struggle in Budapest but will be disappointed to have finished a full minute behind the leader. This was a track that in recent years has very much suited their car, with its downforce and speed through slow corners, but this year’s machine has almost the exact opposite traits. They now have a significant straight-line advantage but are somewhat hopeless in slow to mid-speed corners. And whilst Red Bull have made impressive progress in reducing the gap to Mercedes, Ferrari have faltered.

Image credit: Callo Albanese

They were left to their own private race for the final step on the podium and it was Sebastian Vettel who used a similar strategy to Hamilton’s to catch and pass his younger teammate a couple of laps from the end. An impressive 39-lap stint on the medium tyres left the German able to switch to the softs for the remainder of the race and reel in Leclerc on similarly fading tyres to Verstappen’s at the front.

It was continuation of Vettel’s recent upturn in form and/or luck but he will be fully aware that there is a long way to go for the team. They found themselves with clearly the third quickest car this weekend. That is something that will provide some embarrassment at Maranello – this was supposed to be their year, remember? And Red Bull were supposed to be in a rebuilding phase as they acclimatised to a Honda engine.

At least the races after the summer break will present an opportunity for the Scuderia, with Spa and Monza both heavily reliant on straight-line speed. And oh how the Tifosi could do with a victory at home right now…

Pressure Mounts on Bottas and Gasly

With ‘silly season’ in full swing and lots of rumours swirling regarding their seats, both Bottas and Pierre Gasly could have done with a solid race heading into the summer break. But neither managed one.

Toto Wolff has now openly admitted that it is a straight choice between Bottas and Esteban Ocon – the Mercedes reserve driver, waiting in the wings after missing out on a seat this year – and that the Mercedes management will be using the summer to weigh up their options. But the Finn made a less-than-compelling case in Hungary. Fortunate not to wreck both Mercedes cars’ races with that early contact, he certainly damaged his own and then did a somewhat average job of working his way through the field, eventually being held behind Kimi Räikkönen’s Alfa Romeo for an underwhelming eighth place finish.

The Mercedes at the Hungarian Grand Prix.
Image credit: Motorsport Images

His mental state after that mistake in Germany was dicussed; did that play a part in his sloppy performance on Sunday? Either way, that would appear to be his championship hopes all but over. Potentially his Mercedes career too.

Meanwhile, at Red Bull, Gasly is a driver under even more pressure. He has been given more time than probably any other driver in Red Bull’s history when performing so badly but now, after once again being lapped by his teammate and failing to pass a McLaren, is that time up?

Helmut Marko had announced very recently that Gasly would stay on for the remainder of the season but there was a pointed shift in the comments made by both himself and team principal Christian Horner after this race. Horner stating that “we shouldn’t be racing Saubers [sic] and McLarens”. The issue being that Gasly’s lack of performance noticeably cost them this weekend – a driver closer to Verstappen’s level should have been within 20 seconds of Hamilton and would then have prevented the strategy that won Mercedes the race.

With Red Bull now legitimately challenging Ferrari for second in the Constructors’ Championship, every point counts. And Gasly is not providing many unfortunately.

Sainz and McLaren Continue to Impress

Image credit: McLaren F1

Speaking of the McLarens, the fact is that they are racing with Gasly…and winning. Once again, they punched above their weight, running comfortably in fifth and sixth until Lando Norris was again unlucky with a slow pit stop, on a track that they thought might cause them problems. Norris recovered well through the field to earn a couple of points at least in ninth, whilst Carlos Sainz finished fifth for the second successive race and is now only five points behind Gasly in the standings.

McLaren have thoroughly embarrassed Renault – comfortably outperforming them with their own engine and doing so in a season where the French team were aiming to close the gap to the top three. And, after struggling with the Renault car somewhat last year, Sainz is really showing his quality and consistency in 2019. It’s worth remembering that he generally matched Verstappen in their year together at Toro Rosso.

A word also for Williams, who seem to have had something of a breakthrough with their understanding of their car, and particularly George Russell. The young Briton narrowly missed out on claiming a spot in Q2 – a feat which would have seemed unthinkable prior to the weekend – and then finished ahead of Lance Stroll and Antonio Giovinazzi on legitimate pace on Sunday. In doing so, he is ensuring that his name is at least mentioned in regards to that Mercedes seat, even if Toto Wolff – probably correctly – thinks it is a little early for him.

The Hungarian Grand Prix in 60 Seconds

Answering the Burning Questions

Surely the upward curve of increasingly dramatic races can’t continue?! Well, the curve maybe didn’t continue upwards but I wouldn’t say it went particularly downwards either.

Can Bottas mentally recover from his costly crash in Germany? A good performance on Saturday but come Sunday, it would appear maybe not.

Will his performance last race prove to be a turning point for Vettel? Quite possibly. Time will tell but it was another better weekend for him.

Can Verstappen continue his good form and head into the summer break as an outsider for the title? He certainly continued his good form. The title looks maybe a taller order than it did prior to Sunday but he’s an outside bet nonetheless.

Will we get the Pierre Gasly from Silverstone or Hockenheim? Turns out it was specifically the Gasly from Austria – getting stuck behind a McLaren and lapped by Verstappen.

2019 Hungarian GP preview

The Burning Questions

Surely the upward curve of increasingly dramatic races can’t continue?!

Can Bottas mentally recover from his costly crash in Germany?

Will his performance last race prove to be a turning point for Vettel?

Can Verstappen continue his good form and head into the summer break as an outsider for the title?

Will we get the Pierre Gasly from Silverstone or Hockenheim?

The Track

The Stats

Track Length: 4.381 km

Laps: 70

Race Distance: 306.630 km

First Grand Prix: 1986

Race Lap Record: Michael Schumacher | Ferrari | 2004 | 1:19.071

Outright Lap Record: Sebastian Vettel | Ferrari | 2017 | 1:16.276

Most Driver Wins: Lewis Hamilton | 2007, 2009, 2012, 2013, 2016, 2018

Most Constructor Wins: McLaren | 1988, 1991, 1992, 1999, 2000, 2005, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2011, 2012

The Weather

The Photos

The Predictions

Podium

Pole Position

Fastest Lap

Driver of the Day