2021 Mexico City GP report | Verstappen extends title lead

Chaos at Turn One, not a whole lot after that.
Max Verstappen and Sergio Perez celebrate with the Mexican flag.
Image credit: Getty Images

Max Verstappen and Red Bull dominated at the Mexico City Grand Prix as the Dutchman took another big step towards securing his first championship.

The Red Bulls had, as expected, proven to be easily the quickest package around the Autódromo Hermanos Rodríguez, as the Mercedes engine struggled in the thin air 2,200 metres above sea level. But during qualifying the form book was flipped on its head as Yuki Tsunoda, Sergio Pérez and Verstappen tripped over one another on the crucial final lap of Q3, allowing a surprise Mercedes front-row lockout.

The long run to the first corner would clearly be crucial and Mercedes had hatched a plan for Lewis Hamilton to slot in behind teammate Valtteri Bottas so as to benefit from the slipstream.

However, Hamilton got the better start and was almost immediately alongside the Finn. There was still the opportunity to form a dual-Mercedes roadblock, but Bottas left a Verstappen-sized gap on the outside and car number 33 happily slotted into it, with the trio heading into the first corner three-wide.

Verstappen was able to brake far later than the two Silver Arrows – who had been struggling with the heavy braking for the first corner all weekend – and sweep round on the grippier racing line. From there, the race was his.

The first corner of the Mexico City Grand Prix.
Image credit: Motorsport Images

Mercedes’ poor opening 30 seconds got worse still as Bottas was spun around by Daniel Ricciardo, with chaos ensuing amongst the following pack.

Pérez took to the grass as the rest of the drivers attempted to navigate the stranded Mercedes, but Tsunoda and Mick Schumacher were both launched into the air as they sandwiched a helpless Esteban Ocon and would be forced to retire from the resulting damage.

Once the inevitable Safety Car had returned to the pits and Verstappen had successfully survived a second run to Turn One, he streaked off into the lead and it became clear that, on this occasion, it would not be a Hamilton-Verstappen battle as much as the seven-time world champion defending second place from the second Red Bull.

Home hero Pérez sat within two seconds of Hamilton for much of the first half of the race without ever getting close to attempt a move. Red Bull then attempted to create a tyre deficit for the second stint, leaving him out for a further 11 laps after Hamilton pitted. Despite closing in rapidly, he was again unable to pass in the closing laps, but was nonetheless delighted with third place as he became the first Mexican driver to climb onto the podium at the Mexican Grand Prix.

Out front, it was plain sailing for Verstappen. A few late games as a lapped Bottas attempted to steal the point for fastest lap away from him were his only real point of note as he clinched a ninth win of the season and extended his championship lead to 19 points.

Max Verstappen sitting on his car as it rises to the podium.
Image credit: LAT Images

Behind the front three, Pierre Gasly came home an excellent fourth, followed by the Ferrari pair, as the Scuderia leapfrogged McLaren into third in the constructors’ standings. Then came the old guard, in the shape of Sebastian Vettel, Kimi Räikkönen and Fernando Alonso, with Lando Norris taking the final point as he recovered well from the back of the grid.

Championship Over?

There has been a lot of talk on social media of Verstappen having the title all but wrapped up after yet another win. But, there are still four races to go in which anything could happen.

Brazil next weekend looks likely to favour Red Bull again, but by a smaller margin, and Interlagos has a knack for producing chaos one way or another. After that come two unknowns in Qatar and Saudi Arabia, before the finale in Abu Dhabi which should see the teams fairly evenly matched.

Hamilton certainly has plenty of work to do now, and will probably need a hand from lady luck, but all it takes is one retirement to turn the championship on its head.

After all, never forget the end of the 2007 season… Räikkonen was 17 points behind with 20 remaining from the final two races and somehow managed to come away with the title.

The fat lady may be doing her vocal warm-ups but there’s still a long walk from her dressing room to the stage.

The Mexico City Grand Prix in 60 Seconds

Answering the Burning Questions

Will Red Bull have the advantage that most expect of them this weekend? Yes, they will.

Can Sergio Pérez do anything special in front of his passionate home crowd? The first-ever Mexican to finish on the podium and to lead at his home race is pretty special.

Will there be any major announcements over the weekend? Nothing this week.

2021 Mexico City GP preview

Will Day of the Dead prove to be a Day of the Red (Bull)?

The Burning Questions

Will Red Bull have the advantage that most expect of them this weekend?

Can Sergio Pérez do anything special in front of his passionate home crowd?

Will there be any major announcements over the weekend?

The Track

The Stats

The Trivia

  • At 2,240 metres above sea level, the Autódromo Hermanos Rodríguez is by far the highest track on the current F1 calendar
  • Gerhard Berger took his first win at the 1986 Mexico Grand Prix, driving a Benetton B186 – one of the most powerful F1 cars ever raced – and completed the win on a single set of tyres
  • John Surtees, Denny Hulme, Graham Hill and Lewis Hamilton have all clinched the world title in Mexico, with the latter doing so twice, in 2017 and 2018
  • In 2018, Max Verstappen became the first driver to win the Mexican Grand Prix in consecutive years

The Weather

The Quotes

Lewis Hamilton | “I always want to win it in the right way and if you’re going to lose it, you lose it in the right way also.”

Max Verstappen | “I will race hard like Lewis does and everyone else does and of course always try to keep it clean.”

Sergio Pérez | [On whether he would move aside for Verstappen whilst in the lead] “I think it will be a great problem to have from my side, you know? It always depends on the situation, because most of the decisions are normally taken during the race, during the heat of the event, so I think that depending on the circumstances, we’ll see. But I’m pretty sure the whole team, Red Bull, everyone, wants me to win this weekend.

Andrea Stella | “We don’t anticipate that from an HPP (Mercedes) point of view there should be any larger deficit than the other manufacturers. From a power point of view I don’t think this puts a McLaren or any other HPP cars at a disadvantage. Possibly in the past we saw there as a bit more of a swing associated with the power-unit, but I don’t see the technical reasons why this should still be true.”

The Friday Form

Practice 2 Top 5

1 | Max Verstappen | 1:17.301 | 28 Laps
2 | Valtteri Bottas | 1:17.725 | 31 Laps
3 | Lewis Hamilton | 1:17.810 | 26 Laps
4 | Sergio Pérez | 1:17.871 | 26 Laps
5 | Carlos Sainz | 1:18.318 | 29 Laps

Practice 1 Top 5

1 | Valtteri Bottas | 1:18.341 | 28 Laps
2 | Lewis Hamilton | 1:18.417 | 24 Laps
3 | Max Verstappen | 1:18.464 | 28 Laps
4 | Sergio Pérez | 1:18.610 | 20 Laps
5 | Pierre Gasly | 1:18.985 | 23 Laps

The Photos

The Predictions

Podium

Pole Position

Fastest Lap

Driver of the Day

2019 Mexican GP report | Hamilton win leaves him on brink of title

Ferrari mess up a 1-2, Hamilton wins, Lando’s luckless, water is wet.
Lewis Hamilton wins the Mexican Grand Prix.
Image credit: Daimler AG

Lewis Hamilton came away with a surprise win at the 2019 Mexican Grand Prix after Mercedes had struggled through Friday and Saturday on a track that has not been kind to them in recent years.

Max Verstappen had initially taken pole position but was given a three-place grid penalty for ignoring yellow flags after Valtteri Bottas’s nasty crash in the dying seconds of Q3, which left the Finn winded. It was a needless penalty to risk as Verstappen already had pole secured through his previous flying lap but the Dutchman appeared characteristically unrepentant in the press conference.

So a fired-up Verstappen on race day was something of an inevitability. Last year, that approach won him the race; this year, it did not.

Hamilton made a good start but was squeezed onto the grass by Sebastian Vettel – in previous years that may well have earned him a penalty but not with the current approach by the stewards – and that left him with Verstappen on his inside into Turn One. They nearly touched, Verstappen following Vettel’s lead by also squeezing Hamilton to the edge of the track. Hamilton then got a big slap of oversteer and failed to make the corner, leaving Verstappen nowhere to go except joining him on the grass.

The pair recovered to fifth and eighth but Verstappen’s opportunistic move on Bottas in the stadium section resulted in a puncture and a long trip back to the pits.

At the front, it would become a tale of divergent strategies.

Charles Leclerc had retained the lead at the start and led until pitting on lap 15, committing to a two-stop strategy. Alexander Albon would also be pitting twice, having stopped a lap earlier, but the rest of the leaders would go with what transpired to be the faster option of the one-stop.

Mercedes, for once, decided to go with the undercut for Hamilton and pitted him on lap 23, leaving Vettel and Bottas to go much further. The world champion feared they had pitted too early as his two rivals continued on and on at a decent pace. But it turned out to be the perfect move.

After Bottas and Vettel pitted on laps 36 and 37 respectively, and Leclerc came in for his second stop on lap 43, Hamilton appeared to be in trouble – easy prey for the chasing pack. Vettel had 14-lap-younger tyres and his teammate was closing the gap by a second a lap. It looked set for a showdown in the last few laps, as all four drivers converged, but Hamilton had preserved his tyres perfectly and was able to hold his challengers at arm’s length – two seconds in F1 terms – to the chequered flag.

Ultimately, it was a slow-burner of a race that looked ready to explode but the fuse went out just before reaching the fireworks.

Nonetheless, it was a very satisfying win for the Briton and his Mercedes team at a race from which they did not expect a lot. And one that takes him to the very brink of the title. If either he takes at least four points or Bottas doesn’t win next weekend then he is guaranteed a sixth World Championship. Even with a likely coronation, the Americans will have to go some to beat the Mexican post-race ceremony, which featured the race-winning car and driver appearing from below the stage à la Beyoncé…

Is the Old Verstappen Back?

Many spent the first half of this year waxing lyrical about how Max Verstappen had finally matured and it certainly did appear that way. But was it true?

Since the summer break, Verstappen has been on a run not too far from the one he had in early 2018, with first corner incidents at four of the last six races. Certainly, he was blameless in Japan and unfortunate here, but he is back to just always seeming to be involved in something and that often comes down to where a driver is positioning their car.

The move on Bottas was overambitious and clearly hot-headed as, even without the contact, he was just giving Bottas DRS and a tow down the straight immediately after. And on his way back through the field, there was also a slightly clumsy move on Magnussen, followed by overtaking the Dane whilst off the circuit – there doesn’t seem to have been any explanation as to why this wasn’t penalised.

It is that red mist and seeming lack of foresight that he will need to improve upon if he ends up in a genuine title fight in the next couple of seasons. Not lifting whilst passing the scene of Bottas’s crash on Saturday was potentially excusable, due to the lack of the electronic yellow flags, but his demeanour when asked about it was belligerent and arrogant.

The ‘Orange Army’ are quick to remind that he is still only 22 but should five seasons of F1 experience not trump that?

Image credit: Motorsport Images

Meanwhile, on the other side of the garage, the slightly older but much less experienced Albon had another solid race. And he has now outscored Verstappen in their time together by 46 points to 27.

His pace is getting stronger as he acclimatises to car and team, as shown by matching Verstappen’s qualifying time to the thousandth of a second in Suzuka. He didn’t look overawed whilst battling with the big names this weekend, maintaining third position in front of Hamilton for the first stint in Mexico, and he is making an increasingly compelling case to be kept on for the Red Bull seat in 2020.

Pérez Sends the Home Crowd Wild

I mean, he always does – all he has to do is drive through the stadium section without putting the car in the wall – but rightly so this weekend with a strong drive to seventh and ‘best of the rest’.

Sergio Pérez and Daniel Ricciardo fought hard for that unofficial honour in the final few laps as the Australian closed in on new, softer tyres but he was unable to pull off a trademark divebomb, locking up and running over the grass into Turn One.

Image credit: Renault

There was some further drama behind them as, during their battle over the final two points positions, Daniil Kvyat punted Nico Hülkenberg into the barriers at the very final corner. The German limped over the finish line with no rear wing and the Russian was given a penalty that dropped him to 11th and promoted his teammate, Pierre Gasly, to ninth.

It was a poor day for McLaren who, having been running fourth and sixth early on, found themselves pointless at the chequered flag. Lando Norris’s appalling luck continued as a pit stop error left him stranded at the end of the pit lane with a loose wheel. And Carlos Sainz just had no pace once on the hard tyre, was forced to stop again, and gradually faded into obscurity, finishing 13th. They’ll hope to be back mixing it with the big teams in Texas.

The Mexican Grand Prix in 60 Seconds

Answering the Burning Questions

Can Lewis Hamilton clinch the world title this weekend? Not quite. But it’s as good as done, barring any kind of 2007-esque cataclysm.

Or can Valtteri Bottas use the momentum of his win in Japan to take the challenge to his teammate? Not really. It could have been worse after that Q3 crash, though.

Which car will deal with the low altitude best? Hard to say. A 1-3 for Mercedes but Ferrari were very strong and who knows what Verstappen could have achieved?

Will there be any more drama between Charles Leclerc and Max Verstappen? Leclerc was one of the few drivers that Verstappen didn’t end up in some kind of drama with.

With thunderstorms forecast over the weekend, could we have our first wet Mexican race? Nope. It poured every evening though… Typical.

2019 Mexican GP preview

The Burning Questions

Can Lewis Hamilton clinch the world title this weekend?

Or can Valtteri Bottas use the momentum of his win in Japan to take the challenge to his teammate?

Which car will deal with the low altitude best?

Will there be any more drama between Charles Leclerc and Max Verstappen?

With thunderstorms forecast over the weekend, could we have our first wet Mexican race?

The Track

The Stats

Track Length: 4.304 km

Laps: 71

Race Distance: 305.354 km

First Grand Prix: 1963

Race Lap Record: Valtteri Bottas | Mercedes | 2018 | 1:18.741

Outright Lap Record: Daniel Ricciardo | Red Bull | 2018 | 1:14.759

Most Driver Wins: Jim Clark/Nigel Mansell/Alain Prost/Max Verstappen | 1963, 1967/1987, 1992/1988, 1990/2017, 2018

Most Constructor Wins: Lotus/McLaren/Williams | 1963, 1967, 1968/ 1969, 1988, 1989/1987, 1991, 1992

The Weather

The Quotes

Lewis Hamilton | “Mexico is generally our worst race of the year because of the way our car is set up and it’s going to be a tough one for us.”

Sebastian Vettel | “Over the past couple of years, we have been on an upward trend in Mexico, although Red Bull has been the team to beat. But I think the gaps between us are getting smaller, so let’s see how we get on this year.”

Toto Wolff | “The four remaining races are not going to be easy and we expect Mexico to be the most difficult.”

Mattia Binotto | “After two races in which we could have done better, we arrive in Mexico determined to win. We will be aiming for our sixth consecutive pole, before looking to convert that into victory.”

Sergio Pérez | “Racing in Mexico is the highlight of the season for me. When I see the busy grandstands, I feel very proud and the support from the people is fantastic.”

Daniel Ricciardo | “I love that they have Mariachi bands everywhere.”

The Photos

The Predictions

Podium

Pole Position

Fastest Lap

Driver of the Day