Tag Archives: Ferrari

Bottas still awaiting call on Audi/Sauber future as “odd situation” continues

Bottas remains optimistic about staying with Sauber

Valtteri Bottas is still waiting a call on his future in the Sauber/Audi Formula 1 team camp, but the Finn remains positive in the face of what he calls an “odd situation.”

Bottas was hoping that a decision on who partners Nico Hulkenberg from 2025 would be taken before this weekend’s US GP.

However team boss Mattia Binotto is still weighing up the pros and cons of either keeping Bottas or taking a young driver, with Gabriel Bortoleto the favourite should the call favour youth.

“I think I mentioned that I was hoping before Austin to be sorted, but I’m still waiting for the final decisions,” said Bottas. “And I think that question is more for Mattia to answer, rather than me. I’ve got the message that there’s nothing I can do at the moment.

“It’s not in my hands. So of course, I’m trying to perform the best I can this week, and hope that will boost things up. But that’s what we are.”

He added: “The situation I’m in now, with only one seat available, of course, that there is a risk. I love F1, and I want to race in F1. So naturally, it’s a bit of an odd situation, but that’s where we are.

“And, yeah, I’ve had lots of time to think about different things, but still, I’m always positive. I will stay positive. And because I really, I feel and believe that I should be in that seat, I feel like I would be best for the interest of the team.

“So that’s why I’m staying positive. And like I said, not much more I can do now, other than performing on the track, and working hard with the team.”

Bottas is hoping that a decision doesn’t take too long.

“Well, one month ago, it was as soon as possible!,” he said. “Of course from my side, eventually there will be a deadline as well, because even then, looking outside of F1, or other roles in F1, soon it’s Christmas, and then when it comes to Christmas, there’s not much availability anywhere. So, yeah, hopefully, soon.

“I am positive. I have been all the time, but until pen hits the paper, you can’t get too confident. But honestly, I’m still positive. So yeah, just a shame that it’s a bit of the wait.

“They obviously have options, but in the end, it’s going to come down to experience versus youth. So they have all the time in the world unless at some point I need to set a hard deadline.”

Bottas insisted that a deal had been agreed in principle should he be chosen, and that there is no longer a discussion about money or contract terms.

“We’ve been in in touch on a weekly basis. And I know the terms that I’m up for, and just basically waiting for the green light.

“I think the terms we’re talking about, they are like they should be, and I think Audi should have the budget. At least that’s the word out there!”

Meanwhile having had the slowest car in the field in recent weeks Sauber has some updates for Austin.

“Actually, a few things,” said Bottas. “We’ve got a new rear suspension, new front wing, I think front suspension fairings. So it’s going to be a busy practice session before the sprint quali, and we’re hoping for an improvement.”

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Komatsu: “Perfect combination” of Haas and Toyota won’t impact Ferrari deal

Komatsu with with Akio Toyoda and TGR boss Tomoya Takahashi

Haas Formula 1 boss Ayao Komatsu says that the new collaboration with Toyota is a “perfect combination” that won’t impact the current arrangements with Ferrari.

Haas has signed a technical partnership with Toyota Gazoo Racing that starts immediately, with TGR logos on the car at the upcoming US GP.

While few details have been given on what the new deal involves will involve as initial steps Toyota will help Haas to install a simulator at its Banbury base.

It will provide the resources for a TPC programme that will see the 2023 car next season used for private testing that will allow Toyota to give its young drivers some F1 mileage.

Both parties insist that there are no plans for Toyota to eventually develop its own power unit.

“We are the smallest team on the grid and we’re lacking certain resources and hardware capability to understand certain things,” said Komatsu.

“And then in terms of being more competitive in the midfield, we are looking for somebody who can give us more resources, that horsepower, and also have the hardware and the know-how to use that hardware.

“And Toyota Gazoo Racing gives exactly that. They have a great facility in Cologne, so we will be able to utilise that also.

“F1 is a high technology sport, but really what matters is people, personnel. So we both would like to educate, trying develop our personnel in a F1 environment to be a mutual benefit to each other.

“So lots of let’s say objectives that are coherent in each other’s organisations. So that’s why that was the key in deciding to go for this technical partnership.”

Regarding the first steps he said: “We’ll be able to kick off some activities such as simulator and TPC with this collaboration.

“And then our, let’s say, for our mutual benefit, they are looking for, let’s say latest know-how or skill set, which we have. But we don’t have their facilities, we don’t have the number of people, their resource.

“So that’s how we are tapping into each other’s expertise, and then learning in the areas that we are weak relative to each other. So it’s really sort of like perfect combination to have the mutual benefit.”

Komatsu insists that the new arrangement has no impact on the existing Haas deal with Ferrari, which currently extends to 2028.

He also kept Fred Vasseur fully informed about the discussions with Toyota.

“Our partnership with Toyota, just to be clear, it’s not to replace the Ferrari partnership,” he said.

“The Ferrari/Haas partnership is the foundation, and it’s always going to be the foundation, and this partnership is not to take away from it, but actually enhance the fundamental partnership with Ferrari.

“What we have with Ferrari, what we get from Ferrari, is amazing. That’s really the foundation of Haas F1 team. But the areas Toyota TGR can help us are outside of that.

“Again, we’ve been completely transparent with Ferrari management, of course, from the early stage of this discussion.

“So we both have a clear understanding of what engagement we have in which area with TGR, how we need to protect the IPs over the each company. So that’s how we are planning to do it.”

He confirmed that Haas will still work in the Ferrari wind tunnel, and that design work will continue to be based in Italy.

“Of course, we need the Maranello design office, because nothing changes the fact that we are going to be buying a gearbox and suspension from Ferrari,” he said.

“So to that extent, it makes sense to have our DO in Maranello. We’ll continue to use the Ferrari wind tunnel, so our aerodynamicists will continue to be based there.

“But for instance, we will start designing some other carbon composite parts by ourselves, and then also starting some testing, and then simulator work, some other areas that contribute to the performance of the car.

“Where we house them exactly, whether it’s in Maranello or the UK, is something we need to define in the future. But again, I just like to stress that it’s not to replace what we have with Ferrari.”

Regarding chassis manufacturer Dallara he added: “Dallara is our important partner. They’ve been with us from day one. As you know, they’ve been building our chassis from day one. So that’s another key, important relationship.

“And then again in due course we’ll be discussing which parameters will keep working with Dallara, which parameters we’re going to work with Toyota, but we will co-exist. It’s not to replace one another.”

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Komatsu: Haas F1 team must “get on top” of latest updates in Austin

Komatsu hopes that Haas will quickly optimise its update package for Austin

Haas Formula 1 boss Ayao Komatsu stresses that it’s important for the team to make progress with its latest update package from early in the US GP weekend.

All teams are expected to bring upgrades of varying degrees to Austin, and they face the challenge of having only FP1 in which to test them before heading straight into qualifying for the sprint event.

However under the 2024 regs after the sprint and before qualifying for the main race teams have a chance to change set-up and potentially swap between new and old parts.

Komatsu admits that if the updates don’t work as planned straight away the option is there to take them off.

“In Austin we’ve got stuff coming,” he told this writer.  “So we’re focused on just making sure we get on top of that quickly.

“And then if it doesn’t work, we’ve got to be honest with ourselves and roll it back. I hope it works. I think it will work, but there’s no guarantee.

“I’m concentrating on our team, I cannot control if say Alpine is going to be suddenly competitive at one race. Like in Barcelona, we were good, but annoyingly, Alpine was even better than us. You can’t control that.”

Komatsu conceded that the team has the option to run different specs on each car in an attempt to find the optimum.

“We need to finalise the discussion,” he said. “Yes, we can, but whether we want to do that or not is another matter. If we split the cars for a sprint weekend, we get amazing data from the sprint race. So then we can make actually a very good judgment for the main race.”

Komatsu cited the points situation as a good reason to use the sprint as a test session for the Grand Prix, where potentially more is on offer to those outside the top four teams: “We’ve got to assume we cannot score points in the sprint, and in the main race,  you’ve got to assume it’s only one or two points available.

“So I said to my guys three races ago it’s eight races to go, and we’ve got to be scoring one point every race. It’s good that we are there or thereabouts.”

Komatsu is confident that the team has demonstrated that it can improve the VF-24 over a weekend, citing the recent races in Azerbaijan and Singapore as examples of how that was achieved after a difficult start on Friday.

“This FP1, FP2, FP3 thing, it’s always up and down,” he said. “So it’s really trying to focus on chipping away on our side, which I think we’ve done very well in Baku, and I think we’ve done very well in Singapore as well.

“Both races neither driver was happy with the car in FP1, which has got something to say about our lack of ability to put the car competitively straight away. But the reaction from that at both events, I’m really proud of our guys.

“We weren’t very happy, but then FP1 to FP2 we made a very good step considering, because sometimes if you have a knee-jerk reaction, you can be out of sync with track evolution.

“Baku and Singapore, with street circuit evolution always high, and on top of that track temperature difference, five, six degrees, that makes a difference as well.

“So you’ve got to stay calm, and take a mature approach to chip away, so that you are still in sync with track evolution. You can get it wrong so easily. But I’m very happy that we managed to do that correctly.”

Regarding Nico Hulkenberg’s P6 in Singapore qualifying he added: “We improved the car from FP1, and then the drivers, they were better as well, because they didn’t panic from FP1 either. And then in terms of operation, Q1, Q2, Q3, from our plan with track evolution etcetera, it was perfect, and we executed exactly how we needed to execute.

“So after that qualifying session, I was so happy. It was not just the position, P6, it just proved to us that we can put that together – this is what we can achieve.”

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Haas: Outscoring RB and Williams is “our primary objective”

Haas boss Komatsu says outscoring RB and Williams is the priority

Haas Formula 1 boss Ayao Komatsu stresses that the team’s “primary objective” in the remaining six race weekends is to outscore championship rivals RB and Williams.

An example of that focus was seen in Singapore, where Haas didn’t react to Fernando Alonso pitting while the Spaniard was battling with Nico Hulkenberg.

By staying out Hulkenberg lost an overall position to the Aston Martin driver. However he also ensured that he ultimately finished in a safe ninth place, while Franco Colapinto and Yuki Tsunoda were out of the points in 11th and 12th respectively.

The result meant that Haas cut the gap to sixth-placed RB from five to three points, while extending its advantage over Williams to 15.

“Just to avoid any confusion or unnecessary discussion in real time we just said to ourselves our race is against RB and Williams,” Komatsu told this writer.

“We’ve got to take points away from RB. That’s the primary aim. And secondary is points away from Williams.

“So we thought, are we racing again Alonso? If he tries to undercut us, are we going to do it? Our philosophy was, no. It was good communication and alignment.

“The thing is because of the safety car risk, if we tried to cover Alonso, pit early, and then two laps later the safety car comes, Williams can take points away from us. That was the worst scenario.

“The situation was made simpler by Albon and Tsunoda being out of the equation very early on, so were we only looking at Colapinto.

“We knew that Alonso was pitting. And we knew that if we pit now, he’s going come in between Stroll and Gasly, we’re going to be the same. Do we want to do that? We could have done it, but then again, there’s a safety car risk in Singapore.

“If it was a more normal circuit of course we would have done it. Nothing happened, but in previous years it’s been 100% safety car at some point. So it’s just how to manage that risk, and what’s our primary objective is.

“By not fighting Alonso, we lost two points, yes it’s true. But at least we just made the alignment.”

Komatsu stressed that Haas cannot take anything for granted as a high attrition race could open up the points position for any of the teams outside the big four.

“The thing is you only have to look at the Baku race, where Williams scored 10 points,” said Komatsu.

“And we scored 12 points in Austria. So any of us can score 10-12 points if something happens in front. So for Williams to be 13 points behind us is not comfortable. And they’re quick.

“We cut the gap to RB, we extended the gap to Williams. So now with six races to go we are three points behind RB, 15, ahead of the Williams. So again, in terms of primary objective, that’s achieved.”

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Stella downplays impact of Norris start issues

Norris has had some difficult first laps in 2024

McLaren Formula 1 boss Andrea Stella has downplayed the damage caused to Lando Norris’s title campaign by poor starts.

Norris has lost ground on the first lap several times this season when starting from pole position.

That streak finally ended in Singapore, when he retained the lead at the end of the first lap.

Stella says that McLaren has taken a close look at starts this season and concluded that Norris couldn’t have done any better.

“I don’t disagree that at face value starts and overall approach to the first corner of first lap might have looked like an opportunity for Lando,” he said.

“But having done a little bit of analysis as a group, including Lando, we have gone through the season, every single start, and every single first lap.

“And in fairness, we haven’t found that even in cases in which Lando started in pole position and he was not P1 at the end of the first lap, he had kind of given up very much in terms of performance.

“We reviewed Barcelona, and we thought that Russell would have been P1 even with Lando trying something different.”

Stella acknowledged that the issue at the Dutch GP, where both McLaren drivers lost a position, was down to a team choice.

“There were some opportunities in terms of execution of the start, but we recognised that that was also on the team side,” he said.

“For instance, I think it was Zandvoort, the one in which both cars had old tyres because of an issue from a team point of view, and both cars didn’t have great a great start. So I think while at face value, it looked like Lando had a significant opportunity there, actually the facts weren’t so clear.

“But definitely we have been focusing on the execution of the start and preparation of the tyres, Lando himself, even the time we focus on start preparation during a weekend is now more concentrated.”

Stella said that Norris is now more used to starting from pole: “You gain confidence, and you gain familiarity with starting from pole position and understanding, even in terms of territorial defence, what you need to do, even to dissuade people for going.

“So I think this is part of the journey, and it’s just good that we are now having to face this kind of opportunity.”

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How Alonso beat Aston Martin’s race simulations in Singapore

Alonso’s eighth place was better than the team’s number crunching predicted

Aston Martin Formula 1 boss Mike Krack says that Fernando Alonso beat the team’s own pre-race simulations by finishing in eighth place in the Singapore GP.

He also stressed that the team shouldn’t get too excited by Alonso’s recent results given that the main opposition is still far ahead.

Alonso started seventh in Singapore, and while he lost places to two Ferraris he passed Nico Hulkenberg’s Haas on strategy to claim eighth.

The result followed a sixth place for the Spaniard in Baku the previous weekend, with Aston the best-placed car behind those of the established top four in both events.

Alonso has frequently suggested that he’s been outperforming the car, and Krack backed up that assertion regarding Singapore.

“I think we are not P8,” said Krack. “Where we are really, we have to look at properly and analyse. But certainly we finished in a better place than we were thinking we would finish.”

Asked by this writer if Alonso continues to surprise him he said: “Yes. At the end of the day we have our numbers, and we do our pre-race estimations. Now in Baku, obviously you finish higher up because there was attrition.

“But [in Singapore] again full transparency, none of our simulations were predicting that we could finish where we finished.

“Now, you could say the predictions are bad. Normally, they work out pretty well.

“We had I think good calls, not getting distracted by others, and very good management in a phase where we had a little bit of a gap, and then this was sufficient to hold on.

“Obviously, if we are very similar, it’s also difficult for others to pass you. But first of all, you have to maintain that position. And we also passed Hulkenberg by strategy.”

Krack stressed that the team can’t draw too much satisfaction from its recent results.

“The worst comment that you can make is we are best of the rest,” he said. “We should not go into full destruction mode now, as a team.

“But we have to be make sure that the positive results that we are accumulating are not hiding from the facts that we have to improve, or that we are not where we wanted to be.

“And that is critical as a whole team, because from outside you see you are scoring, scoring, scoring, scoring.

“But the four teams ahead of us are always scoring more than three or four times the points per race, and that is what where you see at the end of the day.”

Meanwhile Krack suggested a couple of difficult weekends for Lance Stroll at the Baku and Singapore street venues were related to the car.

“I think what is lacking is the confidence,” he said. “We see with Lance if you give him a car that is performing, it’s very, very good. You remember Zandvoort, a monster lap in Q2, when the car gives you confidence.

“But then if you have no confidence, and you have to drive close to the walls, it’s much more difficult. And then it’s up to us to provide the car that gives the confidence.”

Asked if last year’s heavy crash in Singapore was on Stroll’s mind Krack said: “No. We talked about that. He’s pretty cool on these things. He can put these things behind him. We had this discussion pre-Baku, how are we going to approach that.”

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Allison: Singapore GP soft tyre strategy for Hamilton “a clear mistake”

Mercedes got it wrong with Hamilton in Singapore

Mercedes Formula 1 team technical director James Allison admits that the strategy deployed on Lewis Hamilton’s car in the Singapore GP was “a clear mistake.”

Hamilton was the only frontrunner to start on the soft rather than medium tyres, with the general idea that they might help him get a better start and possibly challenge Lando Norris and Max Verstappen up ahead.

However he stayed in third place at the start, and also found the softs losing performance earlier than had been predicted. After an early stop he was left with a long run to the flag and an eventual sixth place.

Hamilton made his frustration clear on team radio, while after the race his boss Toto Wolff admitted that it had been a “painful evening” for the Brackley team.

“We shouldn’t have started on the softs,” said Allison. “That was a mistake. If we could turn back time, we would do what those around us did and select the mediums.

“The reasoning was that the soft tyre very often allows you to get away from the start abruptly and allows you a good chance of jumping a place or two in the opening laps of the race.

“We had no real expectation before the race that we were going to suffer the sort of difficulties that we then experienced on the soft rubber. We imagined we would get the upside of the soft rubber, of getting a place or two. We didn’t, because that just isn’t the way the start played out.

“And then we hoped that the downside of the soft being a bit more fragile wouldn’t really play out particularly badly because on the whole, if you look back over the years in Singapore, on the whole the pace starts very, very easy at a Singapore race and the drivers then build up the pace over many, many laps, leaving a soft tyre perfectly okay to run relatively deep into the pit window.

“So we didn’t get the places at the start, the pace started building up from around about lap five and that left Lewis with a car that was not particularly happy anyway, suffering from quite poor tyre degradation and needing to come in early as a consequence and really ruined his race for him. So just a clear mistake.”

Allison admitted that a strong qualifying session in Singapore was an “anomaly”, sandwiched by a poor Friday and a difficult race.

“I think Sunday’s result was pretty difficult for the team and Friday was signalling some of maybe what we might have expected by way of difficulty.

“The anomaly really was Saturday where we managed to get from a difficult Friday to a pretty creditable grid position and there we have to give great credit to the team back at the factory who really did help turn around a difficult Friday, put us much further up the grid than Friday might have suggested and give us a result that while disappointing was not disastrous as a consequence.

“I would say that probably the trade we made, although unwittingly, was that we improved the car for a single lap for qualifying but it was quite a painful thing then on long runs.”

Allison stressed that the W15 doesn’t like hot track temperatures: “We suffered again from a thing that has been problematic for us which is on softer rubber at tracks where tyre temperature is at a premium, where it’s very easy to overheat, we lose relative competitiveness and Singapore is at the extreme end of that experience and it was quite a difficult thing for them to manage.”

He also confirmed that address the temperature issue is one of the key targets of ther coming weeks as the team prepares its Austin upgrade package.

“We’ll be trying to figure out how to mitigate what ailed us this weekend, how to figure out how to make the tyres run better on these sort of overheating circuits, and we’ll be also doing quite a lot of work to bring our last upgrade of the season together.

“We’ve got a fairly substantial set of new clothes for the car coming for Austin that we hope will give us a decent weekend there. So we’ve got to deliver all that and get ourselves ready for these last few races of the year.”

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Gasly frustrated at being “sacrificed” to help Ocon

Gasly says he was “sacrificed” to help out Ocon

Pierre Gasly was left frustrated at the Singapore GP after being “sacrificed” to help the race of Alpine Formula 1 team mate Esteban Ocon.

Ocon started 15th with Gasly three places behind him on the grid. After Ocon pitted on lap 29 Gasly stayed out on track in an effort to hold up other cars and allow Ocon to jump them.

When he came in on lap 37 he was given soft tyres for the 25-lap run to the flag, and he’d fallen behind some of the cars that he’d been racing earlier.

Gasly eventually finished 17th, beating only Daniel Ricciardo after the Aussie made three stops, while Ocon was 13th.

“Today, I got sacrificed, left out on track to block the others and try to help Esteban to catch up,” he said when asked by this writer about his race.

“Fundamentally, we are just too slow, and it forces us to try some interesting strategies.

“When you’re lapping five second off the pace the last 10 laps, not much point. But I understand we try to help one car in a way, because we are obviously not able to fight on pure pace for the top 10.”

Asked if he was surprised to be given soft tyres at his stop he said: “I was just surprised to be in the first place to be left out like that. I think, obviously I started out of position, made my way back, I think we were running three or four seconds behind Esteban.

“And then after I’ve been left out for another 15-20 laps when everybody around me was just overtaking right, left.

“There’s not much to do on afternoon like that, but I obviously, hoped that we will be able to do slightly more than just use me for blocking the others.”

Like its rivals Alpine still has an update package coming, although the team has yet to confirm that the new parts will make it to Austin.

“It’s going to be a step when we have some more upgrades,” said Gasly. “But at the moment, we just need to look at the delta.

“Three races ago I finished ninth in Zandvoort. The last three races, we’ve been absolutely nowhere. So I think we got to be objective about what we do. We got to review what we have in our hands.

“We are clearly the ninth fastest car at the moment. I think there are just the Saubers behind us, and the gap with the guys with the guys ahead is just growing weekend after weekend.

“So we do need some new parts to come, which is going to come. And I know we got the team and actually the people to make the right steps. It’s just at the moment it’s coming too slowly, and season is almost coming to an end.

“Next year’s car is going to be very different. Got to maximise what we have, but on a day like today, we probably maximised what we could do on one car, and on my side, it was just a compromise from the moment we decided to leave me out on track.”

Gasly stressed that the team has to make significant progress: “This year it’s 13 points. Since January, we’ve been telling that the car was completely out of the window.

“We’ve managed at times to get a P9/P10, but then we need next year to clearly make a big step forward, not even in the midfield, the goal was to try to get close to the top three.

“We drifted away from the midfield and drifted back, actually, so just need to make sure we put ourselves in a much better position.”

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Vasseur: Ferrari must do “a better job” over whole race weekend

Ferrari missed an opportunity in Singapore

Ferrari boss Fred Vasseur admits that his team must do a “better job” and be consistent through a whole race weekend in the wake of a frustrating Singapore GP.

The red cars were fast on Friday, but the team lost its way on Saturday, with a Q3 mistake for Charles Leclerc and a crash for Carlos Sainz – both blamed on cold tyres – leaving them starting only ninth and 10th on the grid.

They recovered to fifth and seventh in the race, but that was rather less than what the SF-24 would have been capable of from better starting positions.

“It’s always good to finish the weekend on a positive tone, and honestly today, it was a very good race,” said Vasseur.

“It’s true that on the other hand you increase a little bit the frustration after a poor Saturday, when you have this kind of race.

“But I prefer to have a frustration on Sunday evening, after Saturday, with a good race, than a poor race. And you say, ‘Okay it was like this.’ I think it’s good to finish and to attack the three or four weeks break with a positive tone.”

Vasseur admitted that the team had got it wrong in qualifying and paid the price on Sunday.

“On Friday we were in better shape, and it means that we missed something during the weekend, it’s clear,” he said. “When you start in Singapore ninth and 10th, you know that we made something wrong on Saturday.

“But it’s not the Sunday that we have to blame something or someone. It’s more to do a better job on Saturday.

“I don’t want to blame something or someone, that it’s part of the game, and we have to be focused honestly to do a more consistent weekend.

“I think it’s true for everybody. When you are in this pack today, as soon as you will do a small mistake, it doesn’t matter if it’s quali or race, or even free practice now, it’s quite difficult to recover.”

Vasseur provide some insight into the tyre temperature issues in Q3, and which left Leclerc especially frustrated.

“I think the story had nothing to do with the blankets, the story is that when we exit from the pit that we were all playing a kind of a game, because nobody wanted to be first,” he noted.

“Nobody wanted to be last. We did a fake to release the car from the pit lane, and everybody was trying to copy the others.

“And then we stopped a little bit at the pit exit. And we recovered a large part of this, but it’s true that we arrived at Turn 2 slightly lower on tyre temp, but marginally.

“And again, we have one lap, you are chasing the last kph in Turn 1, because at the end of the day, when you are one hundredth behind the guy in front of you, that you have some regrets if you didn’t push.

“It is like it is. We have to take this, I discussed with Charles, and it’s part of the game.”

Vasseur insisted that both drivers showed good pace in the latter part of the race on the hard tyres.

“I’m not focused on the others,” he said. “But the last 25 laps, I think we did the same race time as Lando. Perhaps he was doing some push, cool, push to recharge the battery and to try the fastest lap, I didn’t follow.

“But at least we were into the pace, and its encouraging. But the target was not to match to Lando today, it was to come back to score points. And on this, I think we had a good recovery.”

He added: “The strict result of the weekend, is not the one expected, but the result of the Sunday is a good one. It’s a good race. We had a strong pace. Good start for Charles, Carlos was a little bit on the dirty side and a bit blocked, but then a good strategy, a good pit stop, with tyre management in the line of the last couple of events.

“And I think we can be pleased with this. Now we have a couple of weeks to prepare for  the last six races, and to be ready power for Austin.”

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Stella: McLaren can’t back off on MCL38 development

Stella says that McLaren can’t risk holding back on updates

McLaren Formula 1 boss Andrea Stella says that his team can’t back off on its development plans for the MCL38 despite its current advantage.

The team has made a point of not bringing many updates recently, and has instead focus on optimising what it has.

The car has been the pacesetter at most venues, with Lando Norris scoring a dominant win in Singapore last weekend.

More updates are coming for Austin and beyond, but the team faces the challenge of possible disrupting its currently successful package while it tries to optimise the car for the new parts.

With that in mind plus the need to focus on 2025 it’s tempting for the team to rein in its development plans, but Stella says it would be wrong to do that.

“We do have some stuff in the pipeline,” he said. “And obviously, when you have this kind of performance on track, you always may approach things from a cautious point of view in terms of development.

“At the same time, we need to trust the process. We need to trust the way we’ve been working so far. I’ve said already that we have taken our time to make sure that once we deliver [parts] trackside, we have done the due diligence. So I don’t think this will change our plans.

In F1, I’m not sure you can back off too much, because backing off means that the others may catch. And we don’t know what the plans of the others are.”

Stela cited Red Bull’s return to form in Singapore as an example of how quickly things can change.

“In Red Bull we see that in a track in which they thought they would have not been very competitive, ultimately, they were potentially second best,” he said.

“I think we haven’t seen Ferrari today very well, but even Ferrari, FP1/FP2 they seem to be as fast as us. And the final stint of Leclerc was very competitive. So I think the race may give us a little bit of maybe flattering. I think you say like this.

“The situation from a competitiveness point of view, I would say we need to keep being aggressive in terms of development.”

Stella said that the advantage in Singapore was down to the car working especially well at high downforce levels rather than the MCL38 getting inherently better relative to rivals.

“I think if I look at previous races, at this high level of downforce, we seem to be very competitive,” he said. “So I think it might have to do more with the level of downforce than with the fact that we may be chipping away at getting more and more out of the car.

“I think the car has been strong in this configuration.

“I always make the examples of Hungary and Zandvoort. Even Hungary was a relatively dominant victory in itself, and like Zandvoort and like this one. So I think at the moment is more that the car in this configuration has the better aerodynamic efficiency across the grid, while at low drag, I think the efficiency of Ferrari and Red bull is much more comparable to our car.

“We know certainly that we have invested much more at this level of downforce, than what we have done at lower downforce, even though I’ve said already after races like Spa and Monza, we have definitely made a step forward in terms of retaining downforce when we reduce the level of drag.”

Stella said that Norris’s advantage over Verstappen shrank in the late stages of the Singapore race because of concerns about backmarkers.

“In fairness, in the second part of the second stint, our attention was drawn on the fact that as soon as you got behind the back markers, the car started to feel tricky. So if it was all about like, no issues, no mistakes, no lockup.

“We had seen already in practice that as soon as you are behind a slow car, things look like there’s something wrong with the car. It’s just the effect of the dirty. So the focus was entirely on bringing the car home.

“We suggested to Lando to have an attempt at the fastest lap, which we achieved. But after that, we didn’t want to talk about fastest lap anymore.”

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