Tag Archives: Ferrari

Piastri: Opening laps of Abu Dhabi GP were “pretty miserable”

The start of the Abu Dhabi finale was a nightmare for Piastri

Oscar Piastri admits that the opening laps of the Abu Dhabi GP were “pretty miserable” as he was sent tumbling down the order.

At the start he was knocked into a spin by Max Verstappen, and then as he tried to recover he hit the Williams of Franco Colapinto, and picked up a 10-second penalty.

By the flag he had recovered to 10th place, while victory for Lando Norris guaranteed that McLaren won the World Championship.

“Pretty miserable!”, said Piastri when asked by this writer about the opening laps. “Obviously Turn 1 was what it was. And I think on the restart with Franco, I need to look at it back, I think I just misjudged where everyone was going to brake.

“A lot of moves going on towards the braking zone. And yeah, I just think I got it wrong. So yep, that set me up for a pretty tough race and tough evening.

“But I think in the grand scheme of things, that doesn’t really matter at the moment, and just very, very proud of the whole team and what we’ve been able to achieve this year.”

Piastri accepted Verstappen’s apology for the incident.

“I think for me there was no overlap into the corner,” he said. “Max came and apologised, and the penalty speaks for itself. So it is what it is.

“Obviously, at that point, I knew I needed to try and get my way back through. I knew it was going to be going to be tough, but once I had come together with Colapinto that was pretty much the nail on the coffin for my race.

“So not the best way to end off the season for myself, but for the team couldn’t have obviously been any better.

“I’ll definitely ride the high of that and have a good off-season, like I’m sure the rest of the team will, and make sure we come in strong next year.”

Piastri admitted that being part of a title-winning team will take time to process.

“I’m sure it’ll take a little bit to sink in, as my own personal victories often take time to sink in,” he said.

“I think the junior championships I won, it didn’t sink in until sometimes days or weeks later. And I’m sure this is going to be a similar thing.

“I’m sure once we see everybody in the factory, and see the smile on everyone’s face, it’ll really start to sink in. As drivers obviously we have our eyes very firmly set on becoming drivers’ World Champions.

“But it’s also very clear how much the constructors’ championship means. And I think when we get to celebrate that with the hundreds and thousands of people back at back at McLaren, together with Mercedes HPP, that’s when it will really sink in, and the sense of pride will be there.”

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Sainz has “mixed feelings” after final Ferrari outing

Sainz is on his way to Williams

Carlos Sainz admitted that he had “mixed feelings” after landing second place in the Abu Dhabi GP while Ferrari just missed out on the constructors’ title.

Sainz and team mate Charles Leclerc made the podium, but victory for Lando Norris ensured that McLaren held on to its advantage in the points.

The Spaniard will now have his first taste of the Williams FW46 in a 200kms filming day in Abu Dhabi on Monday afternoon, before he completes a full test day with the team on Tuesday.

“Obviously a bit of mixed feelings, I’m not going to lie,” said Sainz. “I think we all came into this race trying to win the constructors’ championship, and ultimately we didn’t manage to do it.

“McLaren have put together a very strong weekend. Lando hasn’t put a foot wrong all race and all weekend. And in the end, congratulations to them, because they deserve it.

“On my side, I tried to do everything I could to keep within reach of McLaren. Before the race we knew that McLaren might have one or two tenths of pace on us and that was enough to pull a bit of a gap before the pit stops or during the race to have a bit of a buffer and not to feel too much pressure.”

Sainz admitted that he thought Oscar Piastri’s first lap incident might have opened the door for Ferrari.

“I think I had a very strong first stint,” he said. “I managed to keep [Norris] within reach and within pressure margins, especially when I was told Charles was coming in a good comeback.

“Oscar had obviously that incident in lap one, I thought we might have a bit of a chance, but then little-by-little it started to fade.

“When we put on the hard tyres, like we’ve seen in many cases this year, the McLaren upped the pace a bit, and they started pulling away two/three tenths per lap, and that was enough for them to have that safety margin, and bring it home.

“And from our side, I think we did everything we could. Both Charles and I have given absolutely everything this weekend. It hasn’t been an easy weekend for me, obviously, knowing it was the last one.

“But I did the best I could to stay focused and to do the maximum that the car could do today, I think.”

He agreed that the realisation that it was his final race for Ferrari had an impact.
 
Strange,” he said. “A bit emotional, I’m not going to lie. Probably, I would say it was more emotional the last time that I jumped in the car, in the grid. I knew that was obviously going to be my last race with a group of people that I’ve enjoyed these last four years.

“The last time that I would jump in a Ferrari car, probably, and I was just feeling emotional. I tried to remind myself to try and enjoy the race as much as possible and to give the absolute maximum for this team.”
 
Sainz admitted that he was already thinking about his first laps for Williams.

“I’m not going to lie, my last laps, as much as I was pushing like hell for this team I was already starting to feel things in the car and trying to say, remember how this feels. because tomorrow and Tuesday I need to remember why is this car quick in this corner and why does it feel good?

“Because I know probably what I’m going to find tomorrow and Tuesday needs some margin of improvement in the corners that I was feeling the car. So this just sums up that I’m already looking also ahead. I’m extremely motivated for the challenge that I have ahead of me.

“Today is a day to try and enjoy as much as possible with the team as my last day in red. We still have some days in Maranello coming up, but obviously my competitive mind is already looking forward to Monday and Tuesday and to see how I can make that Williams car faster.”

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Norris admits F1 title was “not looking as likely” after Piastri spin

Norris admitted that the pressure was on after Piastri was pushed into a spin

Lando Norris admitted that the thought the World Championship was “not looking as likely) after team mate Oscar Piastri was nudged into a spin by Max Verstappen on the first lap in Abu Dhabi.

The incident left Norris on his own out front with no margin for error while Ferrari drivers Carlos Sainz and Charles Leclerc were set to bag big points.

In the end victory for Norris was enough to secure the championship despite the Ferrari drivers securing the other podium places.

“Today was a very special day for all of us,” said Norris. “It was ours to lose today and I’m sure at certain moments people thought that it was not far away from being lost. Two Ferraris up there, and Charles doing a great job to get back to the podium.

“Oscar was super unlucky. He got taken out in Turn 1. So for a minute, my heart was like, ‘Oh God, it’s not looking as likely’. But if I just kept my head down and kept focused, I knew I could deliver and do what I’d got to do.”

Norris made it clear he was proud of his contribution to the title success.

“The bigger picture of us winning a championship for the first time in 26 years,” he said. You wouldn’t have thought that when you say the name McLaren. It feels wrong to say that they’ve not won a championship in 26 years.

“But for me to be part of that, for Oscar to be part of it, is something we’re incredibly proud of. And delivering that for the team has put the biggest smile as possible on everyone’s face.

“This is the biggest reward you can give back to everyone who designs the car, builds the car, gets the partners. Everyone has played such a big part, so just proud. Pride is my biggest thing. Of course, I’m happy I finished the season this way, but I’m way more happy for the team than I am for myself.”

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How “painful” experience of 2010 Abu Dhabi defeat shaped Andrea Stella

Can Stella and McLaren seal the title today?

McLaren team principal Andrea Stella admits that losing the 2010 World Championship at the final round in Abu Dhabi was the “most painful day” of his career – but the defeat helped him became the leader he is today.

Stella was Fernando Alonso’s engineer at Ferrari at the time, and the Spaniard arrived at the finale leading from Mark Webber, Sebastian Vettel and Lewis Hamilton.

However a bad strategy call by the team saw Alonso trapped behind Renault driver Vitaly Petrov and unable to better seventh place – allowing race winner Vettel to snatch the title.

Now Stella heads into today’s Abu Dhabi race with McLaren holding a comfortable lead in the constructors’ championship, but Ferrari still in with a shout of stealing the title if something goes wrong.

Asked by this writer about his mindset ahead of the race in the context of the 2010 frustration Stella made clear that he had learned from it.

“For me, going back to this track 14 years ago at the time, I think you’re right, it was potentially the most painful day in my F1 career,” he said.

“But if I look back now, and I’ve talked about this with Fernando a couple of times, we actually feel proud of what we have achieved in 2010 because we are proud that we were here at the last race in a season in which most of the time we didn’t enjoy any technical advantage, and it was thanks to great execution and great driving by Fernando that we could be fighting for the championship at the last race.

“And ultimately, you know, over time, while you are proud of your victories, sometimes when you don’t win, it’s what counts the most to be what we are today.

“I hope that in some of the learnings that season, and even the emotional toughness that you gain by going through those moments, I’ve been able to bring something with me my career and hopefully also leave this as part of my contribution to McLaren”

Stella said that he and the team are heading into today’s race in a positive mood.

“The reference to 2010 is a reference to 14 years ago,” he said. “Before then I had done already 10 years which means this is my 25th season. And there’s one benefit, not many others, of having done 25 seasons in F1, it’s that you kind of have the experience, and you have the experience even in terms of mindset.

“And you know that in this kind of circumstances, you just have to stay in the present. Enjoy the present, don’t think too far, don’t think too tomorrow, unless it’s because we want to know what are we going to do for the strategy it needs to be functional to executing the race.

“But really, you keep your emotions and your mind in the present. I’ve been actually quite impressed by the team, because when I was approaching people to talk about how we were going to face this last race of the of the season, it was actually the team that normally told me, ‘Don’t worry, Andrea, we will do what we’ve always done,’

“And this gave me a great sense of reassurance, and I really appreciated the maturity that I saw in the team.”

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Leclerc on fading Ferrari title hopes: “I believe in miracles”

Ferrari faces a tough job to dislodge McLaren…

Charles Leclerc says he “believes in miracles” and is motivated to “do something  versy special” after a disastrous qualifying session in Abu Dhabi.

Leclerc had a 10-place penalty for taking a new battery and then lost his best lap to a track limits offence in Q2, leaving him 14th.

He starts 19th as Franco Colapinto was 19th and had a five-place penalty, and thus starts behind the Ferrari.

With the McLarens on the front of the grid Ferrari’s chances of winning the 2024 constructors’ championship have faded, but Leclerc hasn’t given up.

“Obviously I don’t feel good after a qualifying like that,” he said. “I don’t think I would have managed to beat the McLarens, they were too strong, but we could have been fourth.

“Obviously I got my lap time deleted. We are not making our life any easier. However, it motivates me to do something very special tomorrow, and my goal remains the same, it’s to win the constructors’ championship, and I still believe in it as much as I did yesterday, even though on paper obviously is going to be hard.”

He added: “I believe in miracles. Again it makes our life very difficult, that’s for sure. But with the 10 grid places penalty, it was always going to be difficult.

“But I see an opportunity to do something very special, and I’ll do my best to do it. And I think, yeah, I’ll believe in it until the very last lap. Anything can happen.”

Leclerc is confident that Ferrari has a good car for the race.

“The race pace was okay, but McLaren seemed to be a lot stronger,” he said. “But again, we’ve changed quite a bit the car since FP3, so I think we went in the right direction.

“And if anything, our tyre degradation is better than others, so I would expect to go in a good position.”

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Hamilton “pretty chilled” after stray bollard ruins lap

Hamilton starts his final Mercedes race from 16th

Lewis Hamilton was left frustrated in qualifying in Abu Dhabi after a stray plastic bollard became stuck under his car for the last part of his final lap in Q1.

Hamilton hit it after it was dislodged by Kevin Magnussen, who cut across the inside of a corner in an effort to get out of the way.

He was left stranded in 18th at the end of the session, but he gains two places thanks to grid penalties for Alex Albon and Charles Leclerc.

In contrast to his struggling team mate George Russell Hamilton was happy with his W15 after making set-up changes through the weekend, and thought he was in the fight for the top three.

He made his frustration clear on team radio, although later he downplayed his disappointment.

“I don’t have that many emotions,” he said when asked by this writer about his feelings in the circumstances. “I’m pretty chilled. It was an unfortunate session, and I got the bollard under the car.”

Hamilton acknowledged the special circumstances of his last weekend with Mercedes.

“I think for me I’ve just been very present, I’ve been enjoying every moment,” he said. “I’ve got the car in a really good place, the set up changes we’ve been making.

“The car has been completely different to the last five races this weekend, it’s been feeling really great. And so it is unfortunate.”

He noted that he’d been losing out in the slow last sector of the lap.

“That’s where we struggled the most as a team this weekend, but the car was feeling really good in general. In P3 I was third, and so I honestly, I thought we’re going to be fighting for podium, and my race pace was second quickest.”

He added: “It’s not going to be easy to overtake tomorrow. I’ve got to work on strategy now, and instead of fighting for a podium, let’s see how far I can get. If I can get into the top 10, that would be amazing.”

Asked how he might feel on Sunday he said: “It’s going to be like, I made it. I survived a very, very hardcore year. And kind of, I’m going to be sad not to be racing anymore this year, but hopefully next year comes around soon enough, and I’m just going to miss all these people that I got to work with.”

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Ferrari veteran Greenwood takes up fulltime Alpine F1 role

Greenwood is with Alpine this weekend ahead of a fulltime role in 2025

Veteran former Ferrari Formula 1 race engineer Dave Greenwood is to officially take up a fulltime role as Alpine’s racing director in January.

Greenwood has latterly been working for Hitech as the right hand man of boss Oliver Oakes, and he has been overseeing the F2 operation since Oakes moved into the Alpine team principal job.

Greenwood attended the recent US GP with Alpine, and in Abu Dhabi this weekend he is starting the transition into his new job, although Oakes has confirmed that he officially starts next month. He will leave his Hitech F2 job to focus solely on the F1 operation.

The new role sees him sit below Oakes and alongside executive technical director David Sanchez in the management structure.

In addition to his links with Oakes Greenwood is also the latest of a number of former Enstone staff members to have returned to the team since Flavio Briatore became involved as executive consultant.

“He’s been with me a long time,” Oakes told this writer. “He’s got a lot of F1 experience, he’s obviously returning to Enstone, and he’s been a right hand of mine for a few years.”

Defining Greenwood’s job description as racing director he added: “I think every team has a different remit. In his case, he’s in a leadership position with myself and David there.

“He’ll bring a lot of experience, as the title says across all the racing team, but also across technical and engineering as well. It’s a broad role, and it’s good to have him by my side.”

Greenwood is best known for his spell at Ferrari where he worked as Kimi Raikkonen’s race engineer, but he brings experience from several teams to the Alpine camp.

He started his F1 career as a vehicle dynamicist with BAR Honda in 2000. He joined Renault at the start of 2005 as a race and performance engineer, and was with the team through its two World  Championship seasons with Fernando Alonso.

He joined the startup Virgin/Manor team in 2010, staying with the new operation under the Marussia name until late 2014, when he joined Ferrari. He remained at Maranello until early 2018.

Greenwood then had a spell in sportscar racing, initially as technical director with Manor Endurance, before he took up a similar role with Zak Brown’s United Autosports operation.

He joined Hitech in early 2022 and was one of the key players in building up a fledgling team as Oakes tried to gain an F1 entry. When the bid was rejected the F1 operation was closed down.

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Slade leaves Haas F1 team on eve of Magnussen’s final race

Kevin Magnussen has had a change of race engineer for his final weekend at Haas

Veteran race engineer Mark Slade has left the Haas Formula 1 team on the eve of Kevin Magnussen’s final race in Abu Dhabi.

Slade was still looking after Magnussen last weekend in Qatar, but he is not at the Yas Marina Circuit, and is understood to have cut his ties with the team. Haas declined to comment on the situation.

Slade will be replaced this weekend by head of performance engineering Dominic Haines, who used to be a race engineer for Romain Grosjean and others before stepping back into a more factory-based role.

He was due to be in Abu Dhabi anyway for the upcoming test, but is now running Magnussen this weekend as the team fights Alpine and VCARB in the constructors’ championship.

Slade brought a wealth of experience gained with McLaren, Renault/Lotus and Mercedes to Haas when he joined in September 2022.

He started at McLaren in 1991, and over 18 years with the Woking outfit he worked in a variety of engineering roles, notably with Mika Hakkinen, David Coulthard and Kimi Raikkonen, including during the latter’s two title near misses in 2003 and 2005.

He moved to Renault for the 2010 season but then switched to Mercedes in 2011 to engineer Michael Schumacher, assisted by Lewis Hamilton’s current engineer, Peter Bonnington.

However he again stayed for only one season before moving back to Renault in 2012. He stayed with the Enstone team through the Lotus years, when he was reunited with Raikkonen.

In 2017-’19 he ran Nico Hulkenberg. His last trackside role with Renault was running Esteban Ocon in 2020, before a reshuffle at the end of the season. He subsequently left the team, and was on the sidelines for a while before he joined Haas.

Slade is highly regarded by drivers with whom he’s formed a close bond, such as Heikki Kovalainen, who worked with him at McLaren in 2008 and 2009 and again briefly at Lotus in 2013.

“I think having Mark Slade as my engineer was a significant factor,” the Finn told this writer. “It was relatively easy to start working with him [at Lotus] because I knew him from McLaren days, and I knew how he works.

“He knew what I needed as well. If I got lost he could actually make suggestions just by looking at the telemetry, so it was really helpful. I had a good time at McLaren with him and he’s worked with some really good drivers, and he’s obviously a great engineer.”

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Norris fears “bad consequence” of Qatar penalty if McLaren misses F1 title

Norris says Qatar will be more painful if Norris misses the title

Lando Norris says he’s moved on from his contentious yellow flag penalty in Qatar – but he fears that could yet be a “bad consequence” if McLaren misses out on the Formula 1 constructors’ title due to the lost points.

Norris was given a 10 second stop and go penalty for not slowing when yellow flags were shown after Ale Albon’s mirror was left lying on the track on the approach to Turn 1.

He initially dropped out of the top 10 but recovered to take 10th place and the fastest lap point – however Ferrari was able to significantly close the gap to just 21 points heading into the final race.

“I was disappointed,” said Norris when asked by this writer about putting the penalty behind him. “I wasn’t happy with myself on Sunday night, but I’ve not been down or anything over the last few days.

“It’s been nice that we can come here and focus already on the final weekend of the season. And there’s a lot of focus on it.

“There’s not been a bad consequence of what’s happened, it might be on Sunday afternoon I feel the consequence more so, but we’re working hard to make sure that doesn’t happen, and I don’t feel the real pain of last weekend.”

Norris insisted that it was impossible for him to have seen the yellow light on the straight.

“There was no yellow lights that I passed,” he said. You can say that there was one, but no chance any driver can see that. So I mean, not ideal. Obviously, I was pretty disappointed. I let a lot of people down, but it happened. It’s in the past.

“I’ve apologised to the team. I would never want something like that to happen. Normally, I think, pretty good with those kind of things, and we never take the risk and normally be on the safer side of things. #

“So it was just unfortunate, difficult to see the yellow flags in the dark and that kind of thing. Just a shame, but it’s happened, and I feel like I moved on pretty well from it.”

Asked about the scale of the penalty he said: “I’m going to have to accept the penalty for what it was. Yes, that’s the ruling. For what the safety measures were. You know, in an ideal world, maybe there could be some differences. I get why there’s a such a severe penalty for it, but no people were in danger. It wasn’t like there was someone on track.

“It was a wing mirror. And if it’s something so severe, the race should be stopped, like a VSC or a safety car, then cleared, then continued. Double yellow is be prepared to stop.

“No one’s prepared to stop when you’re going 300 kph, not one driver on the grid is prepared to stop. I think there’s something completely separate to actually what happened? I didn’t see the yellow flag, and I got the penalty, and I paid the price.

“But I think everyone can agree that what it was is severe for what you see, and what the actual danger was. But the rule is the rule.”

Norris denied that there’s any extra pressure on McLaren this weekend

“There’s a lot of external pressure, but I think within the team, not a lot changes. There’s been pressure the whole season to perform and to do well, there’s been pressure the whole season for me as a driver, to perform well, especially the second half of the year.

“I feel like I’ve been doing that, but it’s more external pressure that I think people have to deal with.

“And that’s engineers, mechanics and things like that. I’m sure everyone within the team feels a little bit more nervous coming into the final race, but at the same time, nothing should change.

“Nothing needs to change. The job we’ve been doing is very good. I’m proud of the whole team, and we just continue doing the same as what we have been doing.”

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Verstappen: “No regrets at all” on Russell comments in Qatar

Verstappen won’t back down on his Russell comments

Max Verstappen says he has no regrets on any comments he made either to George Russell directly or to the media in the wake of the FIA stewards’ hearing in Qatar.

He also accused the Mercedes driver of “lying” in the stewards’ hearing that led to him being sanctioned.

Verstappen received a one-place grid penalty after being found to have driven excessively slowly in Q3 and hampered Russell.

After winning the race Verstappen told the media that Russell had actively tried to get him a penalty and that he had never seen a fellow driver act that way.

Although he didn’t reference it himself after the hearing Verstappen had threatened to put Russell “on his head” at the first corner should he receive a penalty.

Asked by this writer on Thursday in Abu Dhabi if he had any regrets about anything he said Verstappen was unrepentant.

“No regrets at all, because I meant everything I said,” he said. “And it’s still the same. If I had to do it again, maybe I would have said even more, knowing the outcome of the race result. I still can’t believe that someone can be like that in a stewards’ room.

“For me, that was so unacceptable, because I mean, we’re all racing drivers. We all have a lot of respect for each other. We even play sports together. You travel together. And of course, you have moments where you get together, you crash or whatever.

“You’re not happy. In my whole career, I’ve never experienced what I have experienced in the stewards’ room in Qatar. And for me, that was really unacceptable.”

Asked if Russell being a director of the GPDA and thus a representative of all the drivers Verstappen said that had no impact on his thinking.
 
“No, it has nothing to do with him being the director of the GPDA. I just never expected someone to really try and actively get someone a penalty that badly and lying about why I was doing what I was doing.

“But clearly, it had an influence to them. Yeah, it was just really not nice, and actually very shocking what was going on there.”

Regarding the way he reported Lando Norris for not slowing for yellows in Sunday’s race he said: “It was just a normal question. I mean, I knew that I lifted, and I suddenly look in the mirror, and I saw that the gap closed up a lot.

“So I just asked, did he lift or not, just to double check. Of course, sometimes with yellow flags, some people lift more than others. And yeah, you can gain some tens here or there. I luckily tried to play it safe, and then just asked and see the outcome of it.”

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