Tag Archives: bearman

How a charging Haas F1 team has made the right calls on and off the track

Haas has moved up from P9 to P8 and has bigger ambitions over the last four races

For the Haas Formula 1 team the Mexican GP saw a dream result, with Ollie Bearman’s fourth place and ninth for Esteban Ocon allowing it to jump Sauber for eighth in the World Championship.

The focus is now firmly ahead, with Aston Martin and Racing Bulls both within a 10 point range.

Mexico was just reward for a well-executed weekend, with Bearman obviously doing a brilliant job in the cockpit and the team making a smart strategy call that ultimately paid off.

It also came in the wake of the decision to introduce an upgrade package at the US GP that only has a life of six race weekends in order to provide a late season boost in the constructors’ battle. That already paid off on its debut in Austin with a ninth place for Bearman, and Mexico brought more vindication.

“We’re definitely happy,” team boss Ayao Komatsu told this writer. “Without the upgrade, I don’t think we could have had the Austin result, I don’t think we could have had this result.

“So it’s already proven that regardless of championship position, because like I keep saying, a result is a result, you cannot 100% control that. Let’s face it, we moved up one position, but they [Sauber] are only two points behind. It’s nothing, absolutely nothing.

“All I’m trying to say is we’ve just got to try the get the best out of the car and drive and execute every single race weekend. If we do that, I’m sure we can move up. But there’s just no point counting the points.”

The team now has its sights set on getting ahead of both Aston Martin and Racing Bulls over the course of these last four race weekends.

“Even before I said P6 is possible,” said Komatsu. “But again, it’s just no point thinking like that. A 22 points gap with six races remaining – of course, it was possible, but there’s no point thinking, how are we going to get 23 points? It may not happen. But that’s out of our control, right?

“That we suddenly got 14 points, great, it’s now 10 points to P6. But again, it’s not about how are we going to get 10 points? It’s more about how are we going to start Brazil FP1? Make sure we get the sprint quali right.

“If we do everything right, we can score points in the sprint. And then that puts us another step ahead for main quali and race. So I think it’s very important for us to focus what’s in front of us, and that mindset, honestly, is the one let us make the right decision for the second pit stop [in Mexico].

“Imagine if we were too hung up on the podium?. I’m sure we would have lost the podium with Max coming through. I’m not sure if we could have hung on to P4 with Piastri coming through with the new tyre. So yeah, I think the mindset is very important.”

That strategy call was a difficult one to make, but it was the right one, and it showed signs of clear thought and a good process.

Bearman was running in an unexpected P3, and he had the option to stay out, run to the flag, and try to hold on.

However when cars behind pitted they not only gave themselves fresh tyres with which to fight, but also helped Max Verstappen to have a clearer run at the Haas. The team decided that a solid shot at P4 was better than risking all trying to hold on to third and potentially tumbling down the order in the closing laps. The collective head ruled the heart.

“At that point we were going for the one stop,” Komatsu explained. “So if nobody pitted, we’d have just stayed out and done the one-stop, because I think Max would have got stuck in the DRS train. He wouldn’t have been able to overtake.

“But the minute those two cars behind made a pit stop, that means Max had George [Russell] to go through, then us to go through, pick us off one by one. He would have done that. Then we already made 70% decision to box after those two cars pitted, but as soon as we heard that George is boxing as well, there was no doubt.”

Giving up P3 was the logical move: “We’d only lose position to Max, and he was going to overtake us anyway. So that wasn’t about covering for undercut, it was just about those guys are already converted, and Max was going to come through, so we had nothing to lose.

“Max has got tyre delta. That’s probably why those two guys decided we’re not going to be able to defend. So as soon as we lost that buffer of cars, it’s not going to happen. And you saw how close Max finished with Leclerc, then you saw how much behind we were compared to Leclerc.

“So imagine Max had completely taken us easily, and then how far we’re going to drop back against those cars who made a second stop? So for me, at that point, it’s what’s in front of us? What’s our objective? We’ve got to make sure we get P4.”

Bearman had put his car in a podium position with an early charge that saw him fighting with drivers in the top teams.

“That was good racing, right?,” said Komatsu. “That was amazing, out of Turn 6. That was great racing. And then first stint we had Max behind. Second stint, we had a Mercedes behind. Third stint we had a Mercedes and McLaren behind. I mean, what a privilege to be racing against those top guys.”

Bearman has had something of a messy first full season, getting into scrapes and earning a few penalties, and a good result was just what he needed.

“We’ve been working with Ollie, of course, continuously,” Komatsu noted. “And like I said so many times, his potential is no question. It’s about harnessing that, managing to build up the weekend, nurturing that talent.

“Singapore was very good. Austin was again, very good, but a couple of things, in the sprint, and then the race, incidents. In Mexico missing FP1, jumping in for FP2, bang. And then such a tight qualifying.”

“And then essentially the entire race he was fighting against three top teams, Red Bull, Mercedes, McLaren – teams we shouldn’t be fighting. So that is amazing. Track position, free air so much more important. It’s important everywhere. But here with all the temperature restrictions, it’s so important.”

There are fine margins in the midfield these days, and just missing out on Q3 consigned Ocon to a much more difficult race, hampered by traffic. The Frenchman also didn’t feel well during the weekend.

“Austin, the high speed stability, he still struggled, whereas Ollie got the most out of it,” said Komatsu. “This circuit he got everything out of it. He’s not being well this weekend, all the way through, he had a massive headache.

“You look at Esteban’s quali performance. He lost Q3 by three hundredths. He was five-hundredths behind Ollie. They’re basically the same pace all the way through this weekend.

“And then during the race, what obviously made Esteban’s race more difficult was he was stuck behind Tsunoda. During the first stint, he was very happy with the car. He was clearly quicker than Tsunoda. He had a very similar pace to Piastri, so he had the same pace as Ollie. What kills you is the traffic.”

So what then of the last four races – can Bearman and Ocon find enough points to move the team to P7 or P6?

“Honestly, I’ll be least looking forward to Vegas, because it’s a long straight again,” said Komatsu. “In low downforce we are not as competitive, but most of the circuits, like Brazil, Qatar, Abu Dhabi, should be OK. Honestly, because margins are so small, there’s no point looking too far ahead.”

Leave a comment

Filed under Uncategorized

Why frustrated Bearman is ready to unleash Haas pace

Bearman can’t catch a break at the moment [Pic: @tinnekephotography]

Oliver Bearman could be forgiven for thinking that the world is against him right now after two frustrating qualifying sessions saw him stranded at the back of the grid.

And yet there is clearly some potential in the Haas package that he can take advantage of given a clean weekend in Spain.

At Imola he missed getting his final lap in after a red flag in Q1, a decision that was challenged by his team. That left him as the last car on the grid in P19, with Yuki Tsunoda switching to a pitlane start. From there he had a frustrating race to P17.

In Monaco he was again caught out by a red flag, this time in practice, after he opted to pass a slow Carlos Sainz rather than stand on the brakes and stay behind the Williams.

He thought he was doing the right thing, but the stewards took a dim view, and gave him a 10-place grid penalty.

Inevitably from P20 it was going to be a long slog, and yet despite a slow pit stop he managed to convert it to P12 at the finish – a decent performance given that only two cars retired.

However, Esteban Ocon’s solid run to seventh place showed what might have been.

“Of course, feeling a little bit hard done by,” he said when I asked him about the penalty after the session. “But I don’t want to get too much into the details. Different things, but same outcome, unfortunately.

“I feel like it was a harsh penalty, honestly, for everything that happened. I felt like there were some mitigating circumstances, namely the huge delta speed and the lack of time I had to react. But c’est la vie.”

Expanding on the transgression he added: “I don’t know what the standard penalty is. It’s quite a rare thing, but I feel like we’re in a street track, against the walls, and in a split second, I have to decide whether to slow down 120kph in 60 metres, or overtake the guy at a safe speed.

“Of course, I didn’t want to lock up and hit him. That would have been an absolute disaster, and I think I would have been in a lot more trouble than what I was now. But I think given the circumstances, I think I could have been dealt with a bit more kindly.”

Adding to the frustration was the fact that he couldn’t get any solace from showing what he could do in qualifying, because of the risk of knocking Ocon out.

In the end he had to settle for P17 in Q1 after abandoning his final lap.

“The only thing was I didn’t want to be in Q2 at the expense of the wrong person,” he noted. “If it happened that it played out and I knocked my teammate out of Q2 that would have been a disaster. So I’m glad we didn’t do that.

“I had to slow down at the end of the lap, but I understand. I’m starting 20th anyway, regardless of what happens, and I wouldn’t want to get in the way of anyone. The goal was maybe to be in Q2, and knock out a competitor. But of course, I don’t want to knock out an ally.”

Bearman was one of several drivers to go for the first lap tyre change strategy, but despite losing time with a wheel issue he ultimately made more progress up the order than others who took that route.

“We had a decent race,” he said. “The best we could have done today was this, really. We were lucky not to be affected by a slow stop.

“I think unless we had five or six other cars stopping on lap one, we were going to take the lap one stop. The problem is that regardless of what you do, the pack when it’s driving kind of six seconds slower, there’s nothing you can really do about it.”

The result may have gone largely unnoticed, but Monaco was a good boost for Bearman.

“In terms of personal performance, it was a really good weekend,” he noted. “I performed at a very high level, in my opinion, like I did in Imola. So I’m proud of myself, and I think the team have also done an excellent job this weekend.

“It’s been a tough one with this 10-place penalty, which unfortunately hindered our weekend, and meant that today the maximum we could have done was P12.

“But I’m really excited to get to Barcelona, and hopefully we can have a representative weekend of what we’ve been showing, or maybe hiding in a way, these past two weekends.”

It’s clear that upgrades introduced in Imola have been a boost, and Barcelona will be a chance for Bearman to reap the benefit.

“I’m almost certain points were there this weekend,” he said. “If I look at my performance, there was clearly pace in the car, no doubt about that.

“And of course, very happy to see Esteban scoring points on a weekend was more difficult on my side of the garage. But Esteban showed that there’s pace in the car, and there’s a lot of pace in the car.

“I think even if you look at the pace in free air in Imola, it looks quite good. The car has been feeling great.

“I think we just need to get the clear air, which is a bit more difficult. I just want to have a normal weekend now, without interruptions, without qualifying out of position, because that has been the case in the past two weekends.

“And I’ve been going off the back row for the past few race weekends. And nothing’s easy from back there…”

Leave a comment

Filed under Uncategorized

Bearman makes his point as revised floor boosts Haas

Bearman was in the top 10 for the second time in two races

Oliver Bearman continues to impress at the Haas Formula 1 team, and the young Brit caught the eye in Suzuka by comprehensively outperforming team mate Esteban Ocon.

To be fair it was a slightly tougher weekend for the Frenchman. From the start of the weekend Bearman had the team’s new floor, fast tracked to the car after it proved difficult in Australia.

Ocon in contrast got it for Saturday, and thus only had FP3 in which to optimise the car and get fully comfortable prior to qualifying.

While Bearman qualified 10th and finished in the same position as he logged a useful point, Ocon had to settle for starting 18th, and he wasn’t able to make progress from there.

Like other drivers who have switched teams Ocon is still finding his feet, and it’s also worth recalling that he had the better weekend in China, outpacing Bearman and taking eighth on the road and sixth in the final results.

Nevertheless Suzuka was a statement of intent from Bearman, who has quickly overcome the disappointment of a huge practice crash in Australia.

Japan was a straightforward race for him.

“Pretty boring, I was pretty lonely out there, a bit sleepy,” he said when I asked him about his afternoon. “It was a fun race. With the temperatures dropping like they did today, and the track kind of resetting overnight with the rain, the grip was incredibly high, and the level of pushing was also incredibly high.

“The tyres were super robust today, and it was basically just a flat-out race, and I didn’t quite have enough pace to attack, and I wasn’t slow enough to be attacked either. So it was a bit lonely.”

Bearman confirmed that the revised floor worked well, and he also made an intriguing observation that suggests he might less affected than Ocon by the car’s quirks.

“For me, it seems positive,” he said. “So I’m happy with that. The team has done a great job bringing it so quickly after the upset of Australia. So I think we did a great reaction, and for it to work as expected is a good feeling. Let’s see how it how it performs on the rest of the tracks that we have in this triple header.

“We just had a little bit less bouncing in those high-speed corners, which, anyway, I feel like I’m not super sensitive to, so with or without the floor, I don’t complain that much about bouncing. I’m used to F2 which doesn’t have suspension, essentially. So anything’s an upgrade!

“And the floor has definitely improved the bouncing, and it doesn’t really change the feeling for us. But it allows us to run the car a bit more aggressively, and get a bit more performance out of it, which is good. And it seems like it’s worked this weekend.”

Ocon meanwhile downplayed the suggestion that only having Saturday to get used to the new floor was the reason why he struggled.

“I think it’s a bit more complicated than that,” said the Frenchman. “I think it’s good overall, that the teams managed to bring this update this quickly and react this this quickly. It worked on one car, which is very good.

“We need to pick that up, understand the data from Ollie’s side, and it’s good that he’s managed to pick up a point. And yeah, we are very happy on that side. Now it’s just a matter of turning it into our car as well. And no doubt that this will come too.”

Team boss Ayao Komatsu insisted that as of Saturday the two cars were identical.

“The data is pretty clear,” he said. “It’s working. So we haven’t understood why Esteban couldn’t perform. Both cars as far as we can see, are performing very, very close to each other within the resolution of what we can measure? Not to say there might be something that we cannot measure, but so far, we haven’t found anything.”

Bearman hadn’t sampled any of the first three tracks in an F1 car, although he knew Melbourne from F2, and Suzuka from a Super Formula test.

He now goes to two venues that he has sampled in faster machinery, including Jeddah, where he actually raced last year.

“Every weekend I’ve done so far has had a mistake somewhere,” said the teenager. “Maybe not China, but this one completing the full weekend without any bad points, good qualifying, good race, I’m happy with this one, and it’s a good baseline to improve from.

“I’m definitely excited to go to tracks that I know. At the end, it doesn’t change much by the time you get to qualifying, because even here, having three free practices is enough to learn the track for most.

“So it really all comes down to how comfortable I am in the car. This weekend, I felt really confident to push and lean on it. And if I have that feeling, I hope we can be that competitive in the future races too.”

Leave a comment

Filed under Uncategorized