2021 Portuguese GP report | Hamilton takes round 3

A frustrating weekend for Verstappen, but the fight remains very much on.
Lewis Hamilton celebrates winning the Portuguese Grand Prix.
Image credit: Getty Images

Lewis Hamilton fought back past title rival Max Verstappen and teammate Valtteri Bottas to take victory at the Portuguese Grand Prix.

The World Champion had missed out on pole number 100 by just 0.007 seconds on Saturday and fell back to third early in the race on Sunday. An uncharacteristic mistake from Kimi Räikkönen, as he bizarrely drove into the back of his Alfa Romeo teammate on the start-finish straight, brought about an early safety car. Hamilton was caught out when he “literally just for a split second” checked his mirror to see where Verstappen was and “in that split second, that’s when Valtteri went”. With the jump on Hamilton, Verstappen passed him into the first corner and set about pressuring the leading Mercedes.

The Red Bull was clearly faster in the tighter, middle section of the track but lacked the straight-line speed to make a pass on the straight, even with DRS. And when Verstappen suffered a moment of oversteer coming through the penultimate corner, Hamilton was able to retake the place, bravely diving to the inside as the Dutchman defended. Verstappen tried to come back at the second corner but Hamilton was able to repay the favour he received in Imola, taking the racing line and running his rival out of road.

Lewis Hamilton and Max Verstappen go wheel-to-wheel again at the Portuguese Grand Prix.
Image credit: LAT Images

Hamilton closed in on his teammate and, as they started lap 20, pulled off another daring overtake, sweeping around the outside of Bottas into Turn One. From there, the Briton never looked under threat. Behind him, Bottas continued to hold off Verstappen as he had earlier in the race, until Red Bull pulled the trigger and attempted an undercut with a pit stop on lap 35.

A slightly tardy stop for Bottas one lap later put him under pressure from the onrushing Verstappen. As the Finn slithered about on his cold tyres, and then got a bit sideways coming out of Turn Three, Verstappen was able to get alongside him on the straight and take the position.

Bottas was homing back in on second place later in the race, but a sensor issue caused him to lose power briefly and he failed to close the gap again. Sergio Pérez, in the second Red Bull, had done his trademark tyre-whispering job and eventually pitted for soft tyres with 15 laps remaining. The Mexican is yet to claim his first podium for Red Bull but a solid fourth at the chequered flag is his best result yet and what the Red Bull management brought him in to achieve.

Behind the leading teams, in ‘Formula 1.5’, Lando Norris continued his excellent form with a fine drive to fifth, including an opportunistic move around the outside of Esteban Ocon on the opening lap. Charles Leclerc came home in sixth, ahead of the Alpine pair of Ocon and Fernando Alonso. Daniel Ricciardo recovered well to ninth, after a disappointing qualifying had left him 16th on the grid, and Pierre Gasly completed the points finishers.

Verstappen and Bottas both went for the fastest lap late on. The Red Bull man completed the faster tour but lost the ensuing bonus point when his lap time was deleted for a track limits infringement. Further frustration for Verstappen after track limits had also denied him pole on Saturday. Christian Horner was content overall, though, saying that they were happy with second as they “knew this would be a track that favours Mercedes”.

This grand prix may not have had the thrills and spills of the first two races, but there were some great overtakes and the battle remains tight between the two protagonists at the top. They will continue their fight a bit further along the Mediterranean coast in Barcelona in just a few days time – the first of many double-headers this season.

Lewis Hamilton riding the Algarve rollercoaster.
Image credit: Daimler AG

Progress at Alpine

It was a good weekend over in the blue corner of Alpine. The French team had so far struggled to get on top of their 2021 car and – after fighting for third in the championship last year – had slid back towards the back of the midfield.

There were updates in Imola which showed promise but perhaps required some more mileage to fully understand. Additional updates were brought to Portugal and, from the outset, they were visibly faster. The two drivers finished Friday afternoon’s practice session in fifth and sixth and Ocon maintained that form on Saturday.

Whilst Alonso never looked comfortable after a spin early on in qualifying, his younger teammate was flying. He finished Q1 and Q2 in fourth place and ultimately claimed sixth on the grid, just three thousandths of a second behind Leclerc.

And Sunday showed that their race pace was a match for their short runs. Alonso made amends for his scrappy qualifying with a thrilling comeback from 13th on the grid to eighth, finishing just a second behind his teammate who, after losing an exciting early battle with Norris, had produced a mature drive worthy of his six points. “The car feels much better and much more alive and really competitive”, said Alonso. “It has been a big step forward for us.”

The Portuguese Grand Prix in 60 Seconds

Answering the Burning Questions

Who will take the next round in the Hamilton-Verstappen battle? It was round 3 to Hamilton, but certainly not a knock-out blow.

Or will we get a third different winner in three races? Nope. Bottas started well, but faded away as the race went on.

Can Lando Norris continue his excellent form at the start of this season? He can and remains third in the drivers’ standings.

Will we get some cold-track chaos like we did at last year’s race? The sunny weather made things more manageable but the wind kept the drivers on their toes.

2021 Portuguese GP preview

The Burning Questions

Who will take the next round in the Hamilton-Verstappen battle?

Or will we get a third different winner in three races?

Can Lando Norris continue his excellent form at the start of this season?

Will we get some cold-track chaos like we did at last year’s race?

The Track

The Stats

  • Track Length: 4.653 km
  • Laps: 66
  • Race Distance: 306.826 km
  • Maximum Speed: 323 km/h
  • Lap Time at Full Throttle: 66%
  • First Grand Prix: 2020 (Portimão) | 1958 (Portuguese GP)
  • Race Lap Record: Lewis Hamilton | Mercedes | 2020 | 1:18.750
  • Outright Lap Record: Valtteri Bottas | Mercedes | 2020 | 1:16.466
  • Most Driver Wins: Lewis Hamilton | 2020
  • Most Constructor Wins: Mercedes | 2020

The Weather

The Quotes

George Russell | “The incident is one thing, my actions afterwards were another, and in my opinion they weren’t good enough. I do want to be a role model, I do want to lead by example, and my actions post-crash were not that.”

Max Verstappen | “It was of course great to win, after missing out in Bahrain it felt very satisfying to win the race in Imola. There were definitely a few things that we wanted to learn from the Bahrain race, which we did, and we could bring home the win.”

Fernando Alonso | “It’s going to be difficult here, for sure. It’s another new circuit. Most of the grid, they raced here five months ago, so that’s something that I will need to get up to speed with quickly in the free practice.”

Nicholas Latifi | ” Obviously it’s really disappointing for me, two years my home race has been cancelled. But I do believe it was the right decision for the health and safety of the Canadian people and the travelling Formula 1 personnel.”

The Photos

The Predictions

Podium

Pole Position

Fastest Lap

Driver of the Day

2020 Portuguese GP report | Hamilton wins to break all-time record

92 not out.
Image credit: Mercedes-AMG

Lewis Hamilton won an entertaining race as Formula 1 made its first-ever trip to Portimão for the 2020 Portuguese Grand Prix.

All weekend, the drivers and teams struggled to get to grips (no pun intended) with the intricacies and idiosyncrasies of the tyres at the newly resurfaced, cold track. It led to an interesting qualifying session – where Hamilton took pole on the theoretically slower, medium compound – and a manic opening few laps.

On their medium tyres, the Mercedes – and Charles Leclerc, starting fourth after another excellent qualifying performance – struggled to produce enough heat on the cold, damp surface as a light drizzle continued to fall. Hamilton, who would later describe himself as “overly cautious”, took it very easy, more than aware that he would be the effective guinea pig for those behind him.

Speaking of those behind him, a good start from Sergio Pérez saw him alongside Max Verstappen at Turn 2 but would also see him facing the wrong way moments later as the Dutchman understeered into the Racing Point and pitched him off the track. The McLarens, meanwhile, were flying. Bottas passed Hamilton for the lead towards the end of the first lap but was then himself passed by Carlos Sainz, up from seventh on the grid and fully utilising the extra heat in his soft tyres. The sister McLaren of Lando Norris was also up to fourth, from eighth on the grid, and – most impressive of all – Kimi Räikkönen had passed no fewer than 11 cars on the opening lap, clearly drawing on his two years of rallying experience.

Carlos Sainz and Valtteri Bottas at the Portuguese Grand Prix.
Image credit: XPB Images

Normality was soon restored once the medium tyres had reached temperature, however, with a top three of Bottas, Hamilton and Verstappen. For a while, the World Champion bided his time, staying around two seconds behind his teammate, but on lap 15 he made his move. Fastest lap followed fastest lap and he was soon within DRS range. It was a simple pass down the start/finish straight and, from there, Hamilton never looked back.

He built a gap of 10 seconds as Mercedes extended the first stint on both cars, before finally pitting the pair on laps 40 and 41. By the chequered flag, car number 44 had extended its lead to over 25 seconds. That is a rarity in this era of taking as little as possible out of the tyres, car and engine, but the chilly Algarve circuit meant it was a necessity to keep temperature in the tyres and, for once, Hamilton’s full potential was revealed. It was a fitting way in which to break Michael Schumacher’s all-time win record. 92 victories – a simply mind-boggling achievement and another step towards matching another Schumacher record with a seventh world title; Hamilton now has a 77-point lead in the standings with five races to go.

Verstappen spent the race in his now trademark, lonely position, unable to keep pace with the superior Mercedes but miles clear of the rest of the field. Behind him, Leclerc was similarly isolated and at least as impressive. The only non-Mercedes driver to start on the medium, the Monegasque had predictably fallen back at the start, but recovered well to fourth and was the last man to remain unlapped by the all-conquering leader.

Sergio Pérez produced an even better recovery after his clash with Verstappen on the opening lap and was running fifth in the closing laps. He would fall back, though, as he struggled on the soft tyres, first being passed by Pierre Gasly, on yet another strong weekend for the Frenchman, and then Sainz.

Esteban Ocon finished in eighth, just ahead of teammate Daniel Ricciardo, beating the Honey Badger for the first time since the 70th Anniversary Grand Prix back at the start of August. And Sebastian Vettel at least claimed his first point since Mugello on another weekend where he was thoroughly outclassed by Leclerc.

All in all, Portimão delivered a great race. The conditions helped in mixing things up somewhat, but there was some great wheel-to-wheel racing throughout the field – first Räikkonen and Sainz and then former teammates Pérez and Ocon running side-by-side for multiple corners. And it will now forever be etched into Formula 1 folklore as the venue for Hamilton’s record-breaking victory.

Clouds Gather Over Albon

Alexander Albon at the Portuguese Grand Prix.

Red Bull management’s relentless defence of Alexander Albon this season noticeably started to slip this weekend, with Team Principal Christian Horner saying that the Thai driver “needed to bounce back with strong weekends from start to finish at Portimão and Imola” to claim a Red Bull seat for next year.

He failed in the first of those two objectives this weekend, unfortunately. Whilst ‘only’ half a second down on Verstappen in qualifying, Albon suffered another poor start and the two-stop strategy he ended up on only made matters worse as he was unable to make progress through the midfield. Being lapped by his teammate topped off another race to forget.

He would appear to be safe in his seat through to the end of 2020, but – whilst there are seemingly tensions between Red Bull and Gasly which reduce one threat to Albon – Horner and Helmut Marko now appear to be open to the idea of hiring from outside the Red Bull driver pool and, with Pérez and Nico Hülkenberg currently unemployed next year, there are some very tempting alternatives.

Grosjean Pulls No Punches

Image credit: XPB Images

With the announcement ahead of the Portuguese Grand Prix that Romain Grosjean and Kevin Magnussen would be let go by the Haas team at the end of 2020, the drivers now have no reason to hold back.

Grosjean has been especially outspoken, stating that he believed the VF-20 was essentially the same car as in pre-season testing and now “the slowest in the paddock”.

“When it gets hot at the end of third practice you get the ride height and then it cools down – and then you start qualifying with a different one and every lap the rear suspension heats up and the rear ride height changes. Normally we’re struggling a little bit but this weekend the magnitude is quite bigger and we’ve got no idea why.”

There are deep-set issues at Haas. They have been going backwards rapidly since 2018 and, whilst becoming a cult hero for his entertaining appearances in Drive to Survive, surely Team Principal Guenther Steiner must be held accountable. We all hope that Gene Haas’s patience with the sport continues and we don’t lose another team, but he will know that changes need to be made to the current system.

The Portuguese Grand Prix in 60 Seconds

Answering the Burning Questions

Who will adjust best to a brand-new circuit to F1? Nobody adjusted especially well to the tricky conditions but, predictably, Mercedes came out as the class of the field.

Can Lewis Hamilton make the all-time win record his own this weekend? He can.

Which of the teams battling for third in the Constructors’ Championship will have the best weekend? It was very even between all three, with McLaren taking marginally more points than Renault and Racing Point.

Will there be any big driver line-up announcements? Not yet, but the rumours are getting more confident.

Surely we’ll get rain at one of these European October/November races? Right?! A bit of drizzle kept things interesting throughout but still no downpour.

2020 Portuguese GP preview

The Burning Questions

Who will adjust best to a brand new circuit to F1?

Can Lewis Hamilton make the all-time win record his own this weekend?

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

Will there be any big driver line-up announcements?

Surely we’ll get rain at one of these European October/November races? Right?!

The Track

The Stats

Track Length: 4.653 km

Laps: 66

Race Distance: 306.826 km

First Grand Prix: 2020 (Portimão) | 1958 (Portuguese GP)

Race Lap Record: n/a

Outright Lap Record: n/a

Most Driver Wins: Alain Prost | 1984, 1987, 1988 (Portugal)

Most Constructor Wins: Williams | 1986, 1991, 1992, 1994, 1995, 1996 (Portugal)

The Weather

The Quotes

Romain Grosjean | “The last chapter is closed and the book is finished. I’ve been with Haas F1 team since day 1. Five years during which we went through highs and lows but the journey was worth it.”

Kevin Magnussen | “I have had a great time with the team for four years and I look back at a great journey. I am still working on my plans for the future, which I will announce in due course.”

Otmar Szafnauer | “If I thought our process was wrong [regarding Lance Stroll’s positive test], I would change it. I’m not going to do anything else.”

The Photos

The Predictions

Podium

Pole Position

Fastest Lap

Driver of the Day