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How Albon, Ocon and Hadjar taught the US GP field to avoid Pirelli’s hard tyre

Usually the hard tyre is a good race option, but it didn’t work in Austin

The US GP brought an intriguing twist on the tyre front as the C1 hard proved to be ineffective in the race, and was quickly abandoned by the three drivers who started on it.

Austin saw Pirelli introduce a double step between compounds, with the C1, C3 and C4 in play, in an attempt to mix up strategies.

Typically the hard is the starting choice of drivers down the field, especially those who are a little out of position after bad qualifying sessions. The general idea is to use its durability to run as far as possible into the race, and hope that a safety car or even a red flag creates a strategic advantage.

That didn’t happen on Sunday, as the tyre simply didn’t switch on properly. Alex Albon abandoned his hards after just seven laps, with Esteban Ocon following on lap 24, and Isack Hadjar on lap 28.

When you consider that Lance Stroll was also able to run as far as lap 28 with his softs – three steps away on the compound scale – it’s a good indication that the hard wasn’t working.

In effect Albon, Ocon and Hadjar served as a litmus test for the rest of the field. Their form plus the unexpectedly strong opening stint from Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc on the C4 convinced rivals to go to the softs from the mediums on which they had started.

Prior to the race that decision had not been clear cut, with medium/hard cited by Pirelli as the most likely option for the race.

“We were not even sure that a medium/soft could have been a feasible one-stop,” said McLaren boss Andrea Stella. “So we just discovered through the race what the strategy should have been.

“We saw very early that the hard tyre wasn’t a good tyre, because people were coming off the hard tyre, and before it looked like the medium/soft was a possibility. So in this sense, I think Ferrari had done a good job of anticipating that starting on the soft was a good idea.”

For Albon it was particularly galling as he abandoned the hards so early that he was obliged to switch to a two-stop strategy.

“A hot track, hard tyre, normally that’s a recipe for a good race,” he said when I asked him about it. “The hards worked well last year, and long runs in FP1 looked good as well. So we were kind of licking our lips a little bit when I was told there were not many cars on the hard tyre in front of us. And then at the start of the formation lap, I thought that’s a lot less grip than I expected it to be!”

A first lap clash with Gabreil Bortoleto didn’t help: “We had an incident on lap one anyway, that being said, it didn’t really change much to the race. I don’t think it was my fault or that it was Gabriel’s fault either. Then effectively we just decided to get rid of the tyre, and by doing so, almost started a pit stop back basically in our race.”

This season Esteban Ocon has made often used long opening stints to project himself into the points, and the Haas driver was hoping for more of the same in Austin. Alas this time he was left frustrated.

“I think we just gave the info – myself, Alex and Isaac – for the whole field, really, in not using that hard,” he said. “I think it was the tyre that was not working for this track. I had a good start, gained three or four positions. It was pretty good after Turn 1. But unfortunately, I lost it all after three laps. I had no pace, was sliding a lot. It was extremely difficult out there, and when we boxed into the medium, the pace was decent. It was the same as most people that were fighting ahead, but I couldn’t recover after what we lost. So we didn’t get it right this race.”

Given that Hadjar was starting in P20 after his costly Q1 crash Racing Bulls had to try something, but it didn’t pay off as he followed Ocon home in P16.

“The race I anticipated, to be honest,” said the Frenchman. “The race was obviously not amazing today, it was average. And strategy, we wanted to go long and something to happen. But it wasn’t the case. I didn’t want to start on the hard today. I knew soft/medium were just enough to make the whole race, but obviously starting P20, you want to try things that don’t really make sense. So we tried.”

Hadjar stressed that it wasn’t his choice: “If it was down to me, I would have started on another tyre. But I understand that point of view. We had to try something. We had to understand. So I wasn’t against their decision, so that was fine. At least we learned something.”

In Mexico City weekend Pirelli is once again running a two-step compound gap, this time with the C2, C4 and C5 in play. In theory it should be business as usual with the harder tyre a viable race option – it will be interesting to see how it plays out.

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How Zandvoort F1 qualifying exposed a Williams tyre weakness

Albon couldn’t get tyre temperature when it mattered in Q2 at Zandvoort

Qualifying for the Dutch GP was a tricky affair for everyone, with gusts of wind catching many people out on top of the challenge of getting the tyres into just the right window.

It wasn’t easy to put all the pieces together, and just as Isack Hadjar got it spectacularly right in P4, so some others were a little bit out of position.

Among them was Alex Albon, who was as high as P6 in Q1 but then tumbled to a lowly P15 after a difficult final run in Q2.

The Williams driver was quick to flag a tyre temperature issues on team radio. Afterwards he gave a fascinating insight into the challenge of getting the out lap just right, revealing an unusual amount of detail about how the FW47 has to be pushed harder than rivals before commencing a flying lap.

“We were quite comfortably in the top 10 in Q1, and we were quite comfortably in the top 10 in Q2 run one,” he noted.

“And then basically when we came out the garage, we must have been waiting for about two and a half minutes to get out the pit lane.

“And then by the time we got out the pit lane, all the people that came out the pit lane before were on their push laps. So then you do a slow out lap, because you have to let all the cars past who are on the push lap.

“By the time that happens, you go into Turn 1, and the tyres are absolutely nowhere. And you cannot do anything, honestly. We know we’re on the on the back foot in terms of our window to get the tyres to work is narrower than other teams. I think you see that Carlos was struggling in Q1, I was okay in Q1.

“We’ve seen it in in so many tracks we’ve gone to this year so far, if we don’t get our clean out lap, we are nowhere.

“And I think our out lap is normally around this track so far this weekend has been about 10-15 seconds a lap quicker than the people around us. And my Q2 run two out lap was maybe 20-25 seconds slower than my normal out lap. So you can imagine that normally doesn’t go well when you go into Turn 1…”

That requirement for a quick out lap is part of the DNA that is baked into the Williams, and the team has had to work around it all season.

“It doesn’t make it easy for us in many ways,” said Albon. “Obviously I’m angry at the moment. But as a strategist when your window is a bit smaller than everyone else’s to get the clean air and to get the right space on track is very difficult.

“And I feel for us. We basically need to figure out the tyres first. That’s the main issue, and then everything else will come easier. That’s where the frustration is.”

In stark contrast other cars need or can deal with a much slower lap out of the pitlane.

“I think in that moment, it’s basically how versatile are you on your out lap? A team like RB or Aston, for example, their out laps are about 15 seconds a lap slower than hours. So for them, it doesn’t matter.

“They can have the slow exit out of he pit lane and they can have a slow out lap, because it that’s what they do, even on a clear run. That’s not the same for us.

“That’s why you see us a lot of the time go early, for that very reason. I think Mercedes did it in Q2, they went early. And maybe we should have done that.”

All of this makes for some interesting scenarios as drivers jockey for position coming out of the pits.

“Communication is very important,” Albon noted. “You have to be flexible in your run plans. Like I said, the easiest thing is to get the tyres to have a big window, that’s realistically where you can afford to do it.”

“Obviously, this regulation with the minimum delta time and the pit lane thing, this is what it’s come down to.

“And what’s interesting is you’ll actually see some teams purposely letting cars get in front of them, because for them, it’s better to cool the tyres down before they start their out laps.

“But then it just creates chaos! It’s the same for everyone. So I’m not going to complain. I think it’s a valid solution. I think it’s been better doing this than it was from previous years. But it’s the name of the game, and you’ve just got to adapt and get better.”

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Can Williams reboot its 2025 F1 season after enduring a nightmare month?

Sainz is adamant that the team has to regroup after recent struggles

For the Williams Racing Formula 1 team the month of June turned into something of a recurring nightmare.

Having logged an impressive 54 points in the first eight races of the 2025 season Alex Albon and Carlos Sainz earned just a single further point between them in the three events held last month since their double score in Monaco in May.

Sometimes luck just seems to go against you, and much as Sauber enjoyed a near perfect run over those same three races while logging 20 points, so Williams has been facing an ongoing scenario of what can go wrong going wrong.

Indeed Albon posted a remarkable three retirements in a row, with accident damage in Spain followed by PU overheating issues in both Canada and Austria.

Meanwhile Sainz failed even to start last weekend after an issue with the brakes, something of a recurrent problem for him in recent weekends.

The frustration is that despite the team struggling to fully optimise the FW47 on qualifying on soft tyres good points have still been on offer.

In Austria Albon appeared to have fortune on his side as he jumped from 12th to seventh at the start, and had he not hit trouble he would have had a good chance of finishing sixth.

It didn’t happen however, and this week the team has faced some soul-searching as it tries to put things right for Silverstone.

For Sainz not even starting at the Red Bull Ring was a painful if familiar experience, given that he’s had similar experiences previously at both McLaren and Ferrari.

This time the rear brakes stuck on, which triggered an aborted start as he was not able to get away on the formation lap. When he did get round to the pits the brakes were cooked, and that was that.

“I don’t know why this happens to me as a driver so often,” he said when I asked him about not getting a chance to race. “It happened a few times that I don’t even get to start the race and yeah, today just a different issue.

“We couldn’t change the brakes [before the race]. We had a pretty big issue yesterday in quali, but we managed to correct it. So laps to the grid, the car was fine. I was ready to race, but then suddenly, on the lap to grid, I found we had another issue.

“The first gear didn’t go in because the rear brakes were stuck. And then I understood, and I power cycled the car and tried to get going, but in the end the issue came back, I got fire, and that was it.”

Sainz was adamant that there was performance in the car, despite his lowly P19 on the grid.

“Again today we I think we would have been quickest midfield car on the race run, but we struggled with soft tyres, for sure. Since I was P1 in Q2 in Imola, I don’t know what has happened, what’s changed in the car, but something in qualifying on soft tyres doesn’t seem to click, so we need to keep working on that.

“Then we are still very quick on Sundays, like we saw in Canada, we saw today, we saw in Monaco even, we can have good race pace. So we have a strong car, strong package. We just need to execute weekends, and stop having issues.”

Any retirement is costly when the midfield battle is so close, especially in an era when a lot of teams are showing bulletproof reliability.

Williams sits in fifth place and still has a decent advantage over the rest of the midfield, but that gap could disappear.

“Clearly, too many issues yesterday, too many issues today,” said Sainz as he reflected on recent form. “We’re having a tough run as a team, very scrappy first half of the season.

“And I must say, even if we are very quick as a team, and I think I’ve adapted quickly to the car, we seem to have too many problems when it counts and when it matters.

“Doesn’t matter if it’s reliability, strategy or weekend execution. So time to regroup. It’s true, we don’t have much time, but Silverstone, it’s our home Grand Prix, and we need to regroup to see what we can do better.”

Expanding on the theme he added: “It just shows we are going through a tough period in a tough time for the team, and we need to understand why, because clearly it’s costing us a lot of points.

“We have a decent car. We haven’t upgraded it much, but we have an upgrade coming soon.

“We just need to get better at executing weekends. People were asking me before if it’s related to focusing on next year, and it’s not, it should be completely unrelated.

“The way you execute a race weekend, and reliability-wise, has nothing to do with putting the focus on next year.

“So we should use these issues we’re having this year, and all of these problems, to learn as a team to execute better weekends.”

Sainz admitted that he and Albon both have to play their part in trying to improve things.

“All of the big leaders of the team, we need to take responsibility and leadership,” he said. “We all need to take also accountability in what we are doing wrong as a team.

“This is one aspect of the team that I fully back, and I fully trust that we are capable of doing that.

“Now we need to test ourselves to see how quick as a team we can respond to these issues, and come back stronger, because I’m sure there’s going to be responsibility and leadership. I’m sure there’s going to be. So it’s just a matter of in testing times, how quick you can recover from all these issues, and it will put us to test.”

For Albon the Austrian retirement was particularly frustrating as he’d taken advantage of the Antonelli/Verstappen clash to jump up the order, and it all seemed to be going his way.

“Obviously a little bit fortunate,” said the Thai/British driver. “The waves parted a little bit, but we were in the right place at the right time, and we had a good car, had a nice overtake on Pierre, and were pulling away from the cars behind.

“I was actually catching George towards the end of my stint. And then we covered off Gasly, I think, and then we ran into the issues.

“Maybe something after the pit stop just picked up. It looks similar to Canada, if anything. Yeah, we need to review it. Obviously, we’ve had three DNFs a row now, so we’re lacking the mileage at the moment.

“I don’t know. It’s the same car as it was at the beginning of the year, and it was a lot more reliable at the beginning of the year. So I’m not sure if it’s temperatures that we’re running at that’s making us struggle.”

Albon noted before the weekend started that after getting too hot the Montreal PU would be tested on Friday, and it seemed to be healthy: “We did long running in traffic as well, just a double check, triple check, and then we come to the race, and it’s still an issue.”

He agrees that the team has to get its act together this weekend, not least because it’s a circuit that should suit the car.

“I’m a little bit worried. I don’t know what we can do. We can’t afford it to happen in Silverstone, because I think that’s a good track for us.

“We’ve missed out on good points today, with all the DNFs happening to the top teams. So yeah, very frustrating. I’m not sure the next track being a home track, if that helps us a bit, just with efficiency in getting things to the car. But we’ll deep dive, and try to find a solution.”

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Albon: How Barcelona exposed Williams flaws – and the need to “take the medicine”

Williams missed the points for the first time in five races – but Albon says lessons were learned

Williams enjoyed a remarkable run of four races from Jeddah to Monaco with both cars finishing in the points, helping to put the Grove team into a comfortable fifth place in the F1 World Championship.

That streak ended with a frustrating weekend in Spain, at a track that the team expected to be a little tricky.

Neither driver made Q3, with Alex Albon qualifying a still respectable 11th and Carlos Sainz a frustrated 18th at his home event.

Both men then suffered early front wing damage, necessitating a premature first stop for Albon that put him out of synch with rivals. Later he received more damage in further contact with Liam Lawson, and that led to his retirement. Sainz meanwhile could manage only 14th.

The positive was that all the woe occurred on a weekend when the car was not at its best, and points would have been a struggle.

“I don’t care, put it all be one race,” said Albon when I put that to him. “We’ll get it all done with, and then we’ll move on to Canada!

“In all seriousness, I think as bad as it looks today, there’s some learnings from this weekend. I think we’ve shown that our car is going in the right direction. Q2 and P11 proves that. It shows we still have work to do. We’re not this ultra-midfield car that that’s quick everywhere. We still have our flaws and our weaknesses.

“There’s a clear trend now that pretty much everyone around us is already upgraded, so we will inevitably fall down the pecking order eventually. We need to look at this track and understand why is it always this circuit that hurts us?

“We know it’s long corners, but we need to understand why the long corners. And in the race honestly, I think we could have been fighting for points. Could have, would have, should have.”

Albon insists that there’s always much to be learned from difficult weekends as Williams continues to make progress.

“It might sound weird, but I enjoy coming to these tracks, because I feel like I want us to be a top team,” he said. “And I know that these are the tracks where we need to be better at if we are going to be one.

“So it’s good to take our medicine and to understand it, and to really put the car to the test and understand and look at it, see it visually, quite a lot of work to do here. Let’s really get on top of it.

“We’ve improved the car everywhere, and we’ve definitely improved the car in long corners, but it’s still a step behind some of the others.”

Albon’s Sunday afternoon in Barcelona was made worse by a poor getaway that saw hm swallowed up by those behind, which contributed to the contact with Nico Hulkenberg.

“We had a clutch issue at the start,” he explained. “My clutch drop felt good, and I believe I was on target, but we just had an issue with the clutch. So we lost out quite heavily at the beginning, that cascaded, or put us back on the back foot into Turn 1.

“There was a concertina of cars avoiding each other, and I was the last one to get hit. So I lost my front wing. It forced us on a three-stop because of that, but an early three stop, and then when we had to a front wing change, you do the three-stop without an undercut. So it’s like the worst of everything, everyone’s coming out in front of you.”

Later in the race Albon had a couple of fraught moments with Liam Lawson, one of which earned him a 10-second penalty for leaving the track and gaining an advantage. He was at least able to take it before parking the car, so that it doesn’t carry over to the next event.

“The first penalty incident, I don’t know how I was ever going to make the corner,” he noted.

“For me, it was avoiding action because he was running me out. So I thought, well, he couldn’t complete the move cleanly without pushing me. So I’m entitled to the position. Maybe it might be I might be wrong in that, but that was my feeling towards it. So I thought.

“And anyway, I boxed the next lap, so I got out of his way. Maybe that wasn’t early enough for them. And then we came with Liam later in the race, a bit of a tricky one. I think I tried my best to stay out the way. I think by that point, my tyres were gone. And another front wing.

“A lot of the contacts I was getting were on the side, not just clipping the front, but clipping the end pieces of the floor. And so at that point, the car was pretty badly wounded, and we just decided to stop.”

Montreal is next, and it looks like the type of circuit that should suit the FW47.

“I agree. We’re good on ride, we’re good on a low downforce wing, so that bodes well for us, and we’re generally quite good in low-speed corners.

“Honestly, I think we’re in a good place. I feel like we’re generally understanding the setup of the car well. we’re in a good rhythm with the car. I feel like I’m driving well with the car. You just have to hope that Canada falls towards us as a track layout, and optimise it.

“I think this weekend, if we optimised everything perfectly, we would have maybe got P10. So it was a tricky one. I think in Canada I’m looking more towards Q3 and that kind of race.”

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