Tag Archives: Ferrari

Hamilton expecting to “roll the dice” in Singapore GP

Hamilton is cautious about his prospects in Singapore

Lewis Hamilton says he will have to “roll the dice” at the Formula 1 Singapore GP this weekend as he has doubts about the competitiveness of his Mercedes W15.

Hamilton believes that the car is not well suited to street tracks, and that Ferrari will be on strong form after showing so well in Baku.

The former World Champion has had three difficult weekends since winning at Spa prior to the summer break.

The team has been swapping back and forth between its old and new floor specs, with the older version again in use this weekend.

The four-time Singapore GP winner is cautious about his prospects for this weekend.

“Similar to the past races probably,” he said when asked about his chance. “It’s not been great for some time. I don’t know. I’m just going to roll the dice and see how it goes.

“I wouldn’t say this has ever been a really great track for me, it’s been a bit of a bogey track, I would say for us in general.

“I think just the way we design cars, or we have designed cars, if you look at a lot of street circuits we’ve never been particularly strong at, whereas the more open circuits we would be better at.

“So look at us compared to Ferrari, for example. They were mega at Monaco, mega in the last race, they’ll be strong this weekend, just a certain design that they have that seems to bode well for those circuits.

“And then when we get to somewhere like Silverstone, we’re very, very strong. So I think there’s lots of good lessons to take from those, but ultimately, when it comes to track like this, it’s a struggle.”

Asked what had changed in the car since his Spa in Hamilton suggested that it was more a case of rivals improving.

“I don’t think it has changed. I think the others have gained,” he said. “We haven’t brought enough. We’ve brought an upgrade to Spa, but then we didn’t end up using it. And then I think the others from Zandvoort to Monza have brought upgrades, particularly Ferrari. And I think McLaren have as well.

“So we’re waiting for ours in a couple of races. McLaren seemed to be the ones that are evolving and advancing the fastest, if you look at their impressive wing. We just have to kind of wait and see, and do the best with what we have.”

Hamilton made some interesting observations about how hard it is to drive the W15 on the limit.

“I’ve been thinking about it a lot, and honestly I don’t think it’s necessarily that I’m not being able to access it,” he said. “It’s just the envelope that we have is much more on a knife-edge.

“You’ll be in the braking zone, and the rear is out of the window, and then all of a sudden mid-corner, or before the apex, it’s in the window, and then it’s out of the window again.

“And I think it’s the aero characteristics are shifting every week. So from having a bigger wing to smaller beam wing to having the bigger beam wing to having the front wings that are flexing, rear wings that are flexing – it’s such a competitive and really challenging time I think for the aerodynamicists and for simulations, to have them make sure they correlate each weekend.

“I think it’s been probably one of the most challenging times at least for I know for my engineers. It’s been a very, very challenging time to try and get this car in the perfect window.

“When we were in Spa, we had no understanding, but all of a sudden we were quickest. We’re hoping that that comes back to ourselves on stage.”

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Hulkenberg spoke to FIA after “surprise” late VSC call in Baku

Hulkenberg was caught out by the track staying green

Nico Hulkenberg admits that he was surprised by the late call for a VSC after Sergio Perez and Carlos Sainz crashed that ultimately cost him two places in the Formula 1 Azerbaijan GP.

He also spoke to FIA race director Niels Wittich on the matter immediately after the Baku race.

The Haas driver passed the yellows at the accident scene, and he assumed from past experience that given its scale that there would be an immediate red flag or safety car situation.

In fact the rest of the track remained green and on realising that both Lewis Hamilton and Hulkenberg’s own team mate Oliver Bearman got the jump on the German, demoting him from ninth place to 11th before the VSC was called for and positions were frozen.

“I think I was certainly surprised that it went back to green, and it took quite a while then for the VSC to come out,” Hulkenberg said in Singapore on Thursday.

“I think in recent history, and for example in Melbourne last year after the Alpine crash, the red flag happened very, very quickly. So certainly a bit different to I think how it’s been handled in the past. So that was surprising.

“But all-in-all it was a difficult weekend in Baku somehow. And Sunday actually looked pretty alright, it looked like we were on for a happy end.

“But in the last two laps, things went south, and slipped through our through our hands, which obviously is very frustrating, and a missed opportunity. But I’ve turned the page, I’ve moved on.”

Hulkenberg confirmed that he spoke to Wittich about the yellow flag situation.

“I went to see Niels after the race,” he noted. “I can’t say too much. He felt that he handled it how he usually handles it. He didn’t feel that it was different.”

He added: “I suspect it’s going to come up tomorrow in the drivers’ meeting. I don’t know what the outcome will be, or the consequence, but I think we’ll talk about it and see if it’s going to be any different in the future.”

Hulkenberg insisted that his frustration wasn’t compounded by the fact that he was jumped by own his rookie team mate.

“No, the contrary to be honest, that we did pick up a point, and more relief than frustration,” he said when asked by this writer.

“Ollie did a great job all weekend. He almost didn’t put a foot wrong. A very challenging track. I guess it helps that I think someone said that it’s one of his favourite tracks, and he was very confident. He was really on the money. So fair play to him, he did really well.”

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Albon: Williams FW46 still has problems despite “luxurious” Baku result

Albon says that Williams still has work to do…

Alex Albon admits that his Williams FW46 still has “some problems” despite what he called a “luxurious” result for the team in the Azerbaijan GP.

Albon finished seventh in Baku and his rookie team mate Franco Colapinto was eighth as the team bagged 10 points and jumped its close rivals Alpine for eighth place in the constructors’ championship.

However despite the ostensibly similar nature of the venues Albon is cautious about the car’s potential in Singapore this weekend, noting that the team has items to test on Friday.

“I would say Singapore historically has been maybe the worst track of the year for us,” he said when asked by this writer about his prospects. “A hot track, a lot of tyre overheating problems.

“As good as the car was this weekend, there’s still some problems with it. We’ve got some items we want to test for next week in FP1 and FP2. Hopefully we can come up with a better solution for Singapore.”

Nevertheless Albon agreed that the Baku result was a boost for the team, and a clear sign that recent upgrades are working.

“I think we’re in front of Alpine now, which was the target at the end of the year,” he said. “We were talking before about how difficult P10 and P9 was, so to get a P7 and a P8 is luxurious.

“We’ll take that and, yeah it shows that we’ve made great progress with the upgrade again.

“That’s another points finish. That’s another weekend where we’ve been positively quick, I think, very similar to the Aston Martin in terms of pace. Let’s see next week. But for this weekend, it’s been very strong.”

Albon was the highest placed driver on the Baku grid to start on the hard tyres, and his long first stint saw him mixing it with the leaders after they had pitted, while also holding off fellow hard starter Lando Norris.

“We did a different strategy to pretty much the majority of the grid,” he said. “I don’t think it was the quickest strategy in the end. The reason for that was the amount of time we lost with the top teams in that midfield fight when I think I was getting overtaken by everyone, Oscar, Charles and Checo.

“It was 6-7 seconds of race time that would have put us quite easily in front of Fernando, I think, on a race pace. But that was actually because we were almost too quick.

“We thought they were going to come out in front of us, and I would have carried on on my own race, but actually they came out behind me.”

Regarding his time loss while running with the leaders he added: “I wasn’t trying to race them. I was trying to reduce as much lap time as possible, but it was almost identical to blue flags, because I had worn tyres, and then I was getting all the dirty air.

“I was losing a lot of tyre temperature when I was fighting them. So actually it wasn’t that enjoyable. I was hoping they would pull away a little bit quicker.”

Albon was frustrated that he didn’t get a chance to attack Alonso in the closing laps after the Perez/Sainz collision.

“I would like to have seen, because I just got within DRS as the crash happened,” he said.

“But to be honest with you, it’s not that easy to overtake Fernando obviously, and he was on a lower rear wing, so I don’t think it would be that easy.”

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Krack: Aston F1 team hoping to avoid “scary” AMR24 floor swapping

Krack is hoping that “track specific” floors don’t become a trend

Aston Martin team principal Mike Krack hopes that the Silverstone outfit doesn’t get into a routine of experimenting with different AMR24 floors on race weekends in search of a track specific benefit.

In Baku last weekend the team tried different options and eventually decided to go back to an earlier version that worked well at that venue.

Traditionally teams have brought floor upgrades that stay on the car for all types of circuits.

However this year many teams have been swapping back and forth after finding that their latest updates don’t necessarily work as planned.

Krack is wary of getting into a situation of flying multiple versions of the floor around the world in search of what works best at a given venue.

While floors are obviously very light their large size and the volume of the flight cases in which they need to travel means that they are hugely expensive to freight, with a direct impact on a team’s cost cap allowance.

“They are different,” said Krack when asked by this writer about the team’s floor experimentation in Baku.

“Some are better in this area, some are better in that area. And that is what we chose to do that, we tried it.

“And you can even call it circuit specific by now, which is scary, because you have to carry floors around the world, which is not a cheap way to transport.”

Asked if a circuit specific floor choice could become a regular feature he said: “Well, I hope not. You have here a track with this heavy low-speed bias, and then you have tracks where you have basically all speeds, and then you have tracks where there is more high-speed bias.

“And with the way the aerodynamics have evolved, they are so on the limit that for us, and maybe also for some other teams, you always have to consider what is the best for you now. I don’t think that the race winner is doing that at the moment.”

Krack says that there are more updates to come for the AMR24.

“We are were still working on bringing parts going forward,” he said. “These are parts that have been developed already, and we try to bring them when they are finished, as quickly as possible.

“We bring them as quick as we can. If something is finished earlier, we bring it to Singapore, and if not, we bring it later, as they come.”

The team was given a boost by Fernando Alonso’s sixth place in Baku, the Spaniard gaining from the late Sainz/Perez crash after working his way into eighth.

“It was the maximum,” said Krack. “We saw from these fights that were going on you had to be on your toes, and you had to be there, because something could happen anytime.

“Even at the very front with Piastri and Leclerc, with the fights that were going on, we said we need to be we need to have this position, because if something happens, we can capitalise on it. And we managed to.

“To be honest we were quite concerned for the tyres going into the race. Fernando managed them really well, and he still had some juice in them when it mattered at the end, when Albon came with fresh mediums, I was surprised how easy was to hold him off.”

Krack acknowledged that Alonso’s drive would probably go under the radar: “It’s super unfair to be honest, because it will go down like a P6. But if you see yesterday, if you see today, I don’t think that the car was really in that position. So we maximised obviously the good starting position.

“But then you have also to bring it home, because you have quick cars all around you trying. One is undercutting, the other one is staying out. What do you do? And this was really well managed, I think, from the pitwall as well.

“You know what you do in that situation. But then also we attacked. We are hard on tyres, so to bring it home was a fantastic achievement.”

Alonso also benefited from a lower downforce setup than his team mate Lance Stroll.

“It was a choice,” said Krack. “Basically coming here we saw here that you need to have proper speed. We were surprised about the low grip. So I think what happened to us, is what happened to everybody, you had to go up on load because the grip of the track was too low.

“The cars were different. We had a little bit more load on Lance’s car, but he was still having speed. Fernando said in the debrief that he was not feeling vulnerable on the straight at any time. So that was good.”

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Bearman: Racing with Hamilton in Baku was “clean but hard”

Bearman let Hulkenberg past, but then got him at the end….

Oliver Bearman says that going wheel-to-wheel with veteran Lewis Hamilton in only his second Formula 1 start in Baku was “very clean, but hard” racing.

Hamilton got past Bearman in the late stages, and then both men gained places from the Sainz/Perez crash.

They also both passed Bearman’s Haas team mate Nico Hulkenberg immediately after the accident scene, just before the VSC was dispatched.

In taking 10th place Bearman also became the first driver in history to score points for two different teams in his first two races.

“It’s definitely cool,” he said when asked by this writer about the record. “It was a tough race. I wasn’t running in the points until the end, because of the crash in front.

“The car was really fast, and honestly, I was really fast as well. I just lost a lot of time in the first stint, just not driving very fast, just saving the tyres too much.

“And that was not really necessary. I took too much the experience from FP2 into the race.

“But honestly, the track is so different in the race that you can almost forget the long runs in FP2, and start again. I put it down to experience.”

Hamilton caught him at one stage early in the race before dropping back to save his tyres and the closing back up again.

“We were going like that, like a yo-yo, quite a lot,” he said. “I was really pushing hard for some laps to overtake Franco [Colapinto].

“And my tyres were really hot, and it was exactly at that point that he pounced on me, and could overtake me quite easily.

“After that, I needed a few laps, then I caught him back up, and I was almost catching the DRS again. So yeah, it’s annoying that I let him overtake. But a guy like that, you can do little mistakes.”

Asked what it was like to race the seven-times champion Bearman said: “You know when you go on the outside that he’s going to leave you space, which is a nice feeling.

“Like in Turn 1, I knew he wasn’t going to put me in the wall, which is a bit less sure with some other drivers! So that’s a nice feeling. And it was always very clean but hard when I was racing him.”

Regarding his opportunistic late pass of Hulkenberg he said: “It went green again, and I managed to get him, with Lewis. Yeah, it was an overtake. Of course I’m sorry for him – he had a problem – to lose the position, also to Franco, but good to take a point.”

Earlier in the race when Bearman was ahead the team asked its drivers to swap positions, so he allowed Hulkenberg to pass.

“I wanted one more lap to speed up, but they didn’t want that,” he noted. “But that’s fine, I wasn’t fast enough at that point in the race, and I was getting in the way of the strategy at that point.

“Nico was by far the faster car, so it’s really my fault that I wasn’t pushing hard enough. That really compromised my race, the fact that I was too slow in the first stint, because I got myself in some traffic for the second one.”

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Colapinto: Williams made a “difficult bet” giving me race seat

Williams had a great day in Baku in earning seventh and eighth

Franco Colapinto admits that his Williams Formula 1 team and its boss James Vowles made a “difficult bet” by promoting him to a race seat and ousting Logan Sargeant.

The Argentine driver adds that he hopes that he has been able demonstrate that he deserves to have a seat.

Colapinto impressed the F1 paddock in Baku by not letting an FP1 crash distract him and by subsequently qualifying ninth and finishing eighth at a track he had not previously seen.

He still has a chance to land a Sauber race drive for net year, with the Swiss outfit in no hurry and assessing all its options.

“They showed so much confidence and trust in putting me in a seat,” he said of the Williams decision.

“It was a very difficult bet, and a bet that many people didn’t understand. But I hope I come to be showing what I’m capable of, that I deserve a seat in F1.

“The opportunity that James gave me is helping me to show that. I am just doing a lot of work to try to learn quick I have very little mileage in an F1 car. It’s only two races, and FP1, and a few laps in Abu Dhabi last year.

“But I think with the little mileage I got to be in the points in the second race, is something really positive, and really good.”

Colapinto chased Fernando Alonso at one stage in the Baku race and admitted that holding off Lewis Hamilton really brought home what he has achieved in finding himself battling with multiple World Champions.

“When I started to think a bit of that was when Lewis caught me,” he said. “First, I had to keep him behind for Alex [Albon], because if he catches Alex, we were going to lose some points.

“So I tried to use the tyres again. And then suddenly they woke up. And it was that moment where I started to pull away from Lewis, and having a really, really strong pace again with those tyres that were really old.

“It was a point in the race that made me realise a bit where I was, and that was keeping Lewis behind. A proud moment. He said he was driving very well, but we managed to keep him behind, so it was very nice.”

Colapinto didn’t have an easy Sunday in Baku, spending much of the race managing tyres after he was the first driver to pit and had to do 41 laps to the flag on the hards.

“I found very tough the middle part of the race,” he said. “We were really struggling with the tyres. I managed very well the mediums in the first stint. It was very hot, and the mediums were suffering a lot, but we did a great job on that first stint.

“Then a good pit stop, but the tyres were out of the window completely. I was managing a lot the rears. I was just not sure how much I had to manage, how much I could push.

“And I think it’s part of experience, to be very close to Alonso, but I was not sure how much the tyres were going to last. I still had 25 or 27 laps to go, and I was like, really crazy to attack him now!

“I kept doing a lot of management, which the team was asking me to do. But then whenever anyone started to get close to us we stopped the management, and after Hulkenberg passed me, we started to push.

“And then suddenly the front tyres woke up again, and my front was completely open since the first few laps. My front was fully grained, and I had no grip. And then suddenly they woke up, they switched on again, and I started to get a lot of grip.

“That’s why I finished the race so strong and in very good lap times, keeping Lewis behind and pulling away and making a gap. So it was I think a very strong end to the race.”

Colapinto also praised engineer Gaeten Jago, who in a radio pep talk on the grid reminded him that it would be a long race and that there could be points as a reward.

“He’s been on it in every race, in every session that I’ve been doing,” said Colapinto. “He knows how much help I need at this stage, and how much I need the support from the team, and how much I need someone to be there helping me.

“I don’t know many, many, many things, and it’s really tough to come straight into an F1 weekend and be on it with all these things, but they are helping me to do so. I changed the mode like 25 million times this race in between walls.

“My seat was getting really hot. I was asking if there was a mode to maybe make the seat a bit colder, but there wasn’t! It was a good race, and I am still learning a lot. I’m learning to manage the car better, and just really happy to be improving every session.”

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Horner: Red Bull chasing McLaren “changes the dynamic” of F1 title fight

BAKU, AZERBAIJAN – SEPTEMBER 13: Max Verstappen of the Netherlands and Oracle Red Bull Racing talks with Oracle Red Bull Racing Team Principal Christian Horner in the garage during practice ahead of the F1 Grand Prix of Azerbaijan at Baku City Circuit on September 13, 2024 in Baku, Azerbaijan. (Photo by Dan Mullan/Getty Images) // Getty Images / Red Bull Content Pool // SI202409130340 // Usage for editorial use only //

Horner says that Red Bull has to go on the attack

Red Bull boss Christian Horner says that losing the lead of the Formula 1 constructors’ title fight “changes the dynamic” and will see the team “throw everything at it.”

The team had a frustrating weekend, with Sergio Perez in the fight for a podium finish until his collision with Carlos Sainz, and Max Verstappen finishing fifth after struggling all race with a difficult car.

Oscar Piastri’s win and fourth place for Lando Norris saw McLaren move into the lead of the constructors’ table by 476 to 456 points.

“We took big hit in the constructors’ today,” said Horner. “We’ve got 20 points as a deficit now, so we’ve got to attack.

“And we’ve still got seven races to go, three sprint races to go. There’s a lot of points up for grabs, and a lot of different circuits coming up. So it’s far from over.”

He added: “We’re pushing hard. We’re now not defending, we’re chasing. So it changes the dynamic again, and we’re just going to throw everything at it.

“It’s frustrating, particularly after where Lando qualified, that we didn’t beat him today, but thankfully, he hasn’t scored big points. But we’ve got to build on what we’ve learned already, and there’s still a lot of racing to do.”

The team improved the RB20 with a floor upgrade for Baku, and while Perez benefited Verstappen took a wrong turn on set-up heading into qualifying.

“I think there’ll be a big post mortem to see what the variances between the two cars are, which are obviously reasonably subtle,” said Horner.

“But he was not as comfortable as Checo was today. So obviously we need to get into that, to understand why.

“I think if you take the positives out of this weekend, Sergio was in contention with a victory throughout the race. And I think if we can build on that, and extract more performance, there’s no reason why we can’t be competitive in Singapore.”

Horner blamed Sainz for the crash that robbed Perez of his shot at a top three result.

“Frustrating because with Checo, he certainly should have been on the podium, at the very least,” he said.

“In third place, probably second. I think actually he could have won that race, had it not been for he lost a lot of time behind Alex Albon initially, and then Lando whilst he was on new tyres, and Oscar was still out on the old tyres.

“Lando backed him up, which allowed Oscar to keep track position. I think without that, we would have been ahead of Oscar, and then he would have passed Leclerc, and he would have been fine. So, hugely frustrating.

“I’ve just watched the incident several times, and you can quite clearly see that Carlos if you take the wall as a reference and the white line on the right hand side of the track.

“You see him look in his mirror, and just drift to the left. So knowing that he was there. And Checo doesn’t move left or right. So hugely frustrating to lose that.”

Horner was keen to praise Perez, who has had a difficult 2024 season thus far.

“I thought he was super,” he said. “I thought Checo had a very strong weekend, and he had great pace throughout that race. I mean, to sit on the tail of that for the entire Grand Prix distance.

“He was on the pace throughout the weekend, and just a great shame for him not to have capitalised with a podium which has been costly in constructors’ points and in crash damage.”

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Stella thought Piastri’s pass on Leclerc would “go wrong”

Piastri’s pass was key to a fantastic victory in Baku

McLaren Formula 1 boss Andrea Stella admits that he thought Oscar Piastri’s crucial passing move on Charles Leclerc would “go wrong”.

He adds that the fact the move succeeded was another demonstration of the Australian’s talent and ability to surprise even his own team.

Piastri slipped past Leclerc at Turn 1 at the start of lap 20, and stayed in the lead for the remainder of the race, while successfully fending off the Ferrari driver.

“I think Oscar just took advantage that his hard tyres were in a really sweet spot when Leclerc pitted ahead of him,” said Stella. “And he just seemed to have an edge to be able to attack him in corner one.

“But if you look where Oscar is coming from, where he attacks Leclerc, in corner one, that’s from quite a far, and still he negotiates the apex in corner one.

“So I think it’s one of those cases in which you have to point out the ability of the driver, because he delays the braking point so much, and still negotiates corner one in such a precise way.

“He doesn’t even have to rely on Leclerc conceding any space. So it’s one of those cases in which just, I think the talent, the precision in the execution, from Oscar’s point of view, just made a difference.”

Stella admitted that his first thought was the move would not work.

“When I watched it live, and I saw him going, my instinct said, like, it’s going to go wrong, because the delay in the braking point was kind of like, if Leclerc braked there, that must be the braking point, and he’s delaying.

“So my instinct was, it’s going to go wrong. But that’s why I wanted to emphasise in my answer before, just the precision in the execution to then actually be on the inside apex kerb in corner one.

“So yeah, I was surprised, but Oscar is always surprising us with his talent, with his ability, and I would say today he gave also a demonstration of his mental strength.

“He drove like a driver that has a lot of experience, that has been under this kind of pressure before, that can move with one eye at the mirror, with the other eye of where is the braking point?

“And Oscar did it again with a great level of precision, and pretty controlled. Even when he was talking on the radio he seemed very much under control. So a phenomenal driver, brilliant drive today.”

On several occasions Piastri successfully defended from Leclerc at the first corner while also being able to get out of it with enough speed to move left and block him into Turn 2. 

Asked if the characteristics of the car helped Stella said: “I think it’s a combination, 90% is Oscar, I think, his judgment.

“The most difficult one will have been the first one, because when you do the first one of these kind of manoeuvres, actually you don’t have references. I think after the first one, he will have found some references.

“And therefore, I think later on, it became easier for him. But when you do it the first time, you really have to judge things very precisely, not to be under attack braking for corner three with the next DRS zone, or for corner two.

“I think where the 10% of the car comes to us came to Oscar’s advantage is that the car is good traction. I think we know that our rear end is good, especially when we are around 100kph or more, which is where you are in corner one.

“And I think this is definitely something that Oscar did exploit, but it wouldn’t work without this precision from a driving point of view.”

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Norris still frustrated by yellow flag blow after charge to “great result”

Norris recovered to fourth after his qualifying disaster

Lando Norris says his charge to fourth place in Azerbaijan was a much better result than anticipated, but the McLaren star was still left frustrated by the “unfair” yellow flag that saw him stranded in 17th in qualifying.

Norris has to back off and abort his final lap in Q1 after a yellow flag was briefly displayed as Esteban Ocon toured back to the pits after clipping the wall.

He then gained two places on the final grid after Pierre Gasly was disqualified and Lewis Hamilton demoted to a pitlane start.

A long opening stint on the hard tyres moved him up the order from his initial 15th, and despite losing time behind fellow hard tyre starter Alex Albon he was able to pass Max Verstappen on the road for sixth.

The Perez/Sainz crashed gifted him two places in the closing laps, although title rival Verstappen also benefited.

Meanwhile his team mate Oscar Piastri won the race, showing just how competitive the car was in Baku.

“I don’t think we could have asked for a lot more today,” said Norris. “A good start, good strategy. I would have loved to have got past Alex a bit earlier. He made my life tough. But I couldn’t pass.

“So I don’t think I could have asked for a lot more. It’s definitely better than we were all expecting before today.

“So yeah, fourth was a great result. To be ahead of Max, just on merit and from pace and strategy, again, was a good result. So I mean, the car was flying. Because it was so good, it almost made me more annoyed about yesterday, and how silly that yellow flag was.”

Asked for his view on the qualifying flag incident he said: “No, it wasn’t fair. You don’t have to be a scientist to work it out. I don’t know. This is not for me to decide. It’s not for me to say it was unfair, and for it to ruin my whole weekend. I know I got a fourth today, and that’s not bad, but it could have been better.

“And I think Oscar showed what was possible today. So it was unfair. There was no yellow the whole lap, and he put a yellow out just as I come past, did I go off the track just before it. Yes? Would I still easily have got into the top 15? Yes. So I know there’s a lot of people that thought that that ruined my lap.

“I was still easily in, even with my off-track, I only lost like, a couple tenths, and I still easily would have been in. So yeah, people can say what they want, and I find a lot of it funny. 

“But this was out of my control, and it was something that was unfair, and cost me a good amount of points in the championship today, and kind of ruined my weekend.

“So it’s disappointing, especially because of how good the car was today. Like I said, I’m the guy that’s thinking of what could have been, not how we did today, necessarily, but I’m very happy with today still.”

Norris said that team simulations put him in eighth place at the end behind the cars from the top four teams, although Hamilton’s pitlane start gifted him one spot.

“We would have been happy with eighth,” he said. “We just expected the top four teams to go, obviously me being eighth car. So we expected them to go and beat everyone else, but I got into 10th, I think quite quickly, I was in 10th already, I think five, six laps into the race.

“I had a good start, good opening lap, even on the hard tyre, and everyone else on the medium. So that’s a good kickstart to the whole day. And then I got behind Alex.

“I couldn’t do a lot. Carlos got past. I fought Max for a little bit, and Max just getting stuck behind me for a few laps, and overheated his tyres, and I could race against him.

“And Alex boxed. And then this made my race. As soon as Alex boxed, my pace was, I think, the best on track, even on the hards from the beginning of the race, and I managed to create a good gap and just unlock all the potential that the car had.

“So, yeah, eighth was our target, but we knew doing a hard start, and if things went well, better was possible. But it’s hard to anticipate and know what that was going to be.”

Norris admitted that he didn’t expect to be able to pass Verstappen on the road.

“A little bit surprised,” he said. “I mean, when you start 15th I didn’t really expect to beat him, especially because they were boxed and were behind me. So I was about 20-22 seconds behind on real terms where they were.

“So I played the game well. I couldn’t defend against Carlos, but I could defend against Max. But the main point was I defended against Checo, and just allowed him to not get ahead of Oscar.

“And then that pretty much allowed Oscar to go and get a win. So I did my small part for the team, which I’m very happy for, because it got us to P1 in the constructors’. And that’s really the thing that makes me happiest.”

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Alonso lands sixth for Aston on “opportunistic Sunday”

Alonso had his best finish since Montreal

Fernando Alonso earned a valuable sixth place for his Aston Martin Formula 1 team on an “opportunistic Sunday” in Baku having taking advantage of the late collision between Sergio Perez and Carlos Sainz.

The Spaniard had already put himself in the best of the rest position in eighth behind seven cars from the top four teams, with Lewis Hamilton still catching up having started from the pitlane.

It was Aston’s best result since Alonso finished sixth at Montreal in June.

“Yeah, definitely quite happy,” he said when asked by this writer about his race. “Obviously, on a normal weekend, only ninth and 10th is available for the midfield teams.

“And today, thanks to some action in front of us, sixth was available, and we were there to take it. So yeah, an opportunistic Sunday for us, a lot of points. So happy for the team.”

Alonso was the second driver to change tyres, coming in on lap 11 in response to Franco Colapinto pitting. That left him with a 40-lap stint to the flag on the hards.

“We were flexible today, one or two stops were still working for us,” he said. “So we followed more or less the trend, and whatever the people around us were doing, we copy and mirror the strategy.

“And yeah, it was the good one at the end. We were able to maintain the position with Franco, Alex and Nico at one point. So yeah, a tough race. Obviously, no time to relax, but in a way, well-executed.

“Good pit stops with the strategy, good tyre deg. Maybe not super pace this weekend, but we’re still executing the race well enough to score a lot of points. So happy for the team.”

He added: ”I think very similar to Monza. I think the level of risk and precision that you have to apply in a race like today is outstanding, let’s say, for everybody, all 20 drivers, I think, with a low level of grip.

“I think we were driving close to 100% every lap. So it was very impressive that no safety car, no accident happened in the race. It was no different for us.

“Obviously, Monza, P11, not really any prize from that race, and here a lot of points, so one compensates the other. And this is very typical in F1.”

Alonso opted for a low downforce spec that gave him speed on the straight, and he said it worked out well for him, despite the extra stress put on the tyres by sliding.

“I think we had more deg than we anticipated, and that we would love to, but the top speed was definitely a help today,” he said.

“Some moments that they were close behind I saw in the straight they were not even catching with the DRS, so I was a little bit more relaxed than other races.”

Alonso concedes that Aston still has to find more speed even to compete with the midfield group.

“I think Williams and Haas generally they’ve been quicker the last three events,” he said. “I would say. Kevin [Magnussen] in Monza was outstandingly quick and fast, even with a 10-second penalty he finished in front of us.

“So there are a couple of races that we fall behind, and we want to reverse this, and we want to become the fifth fastest team as soon as possible. So yes, Singapore another opportunity.”

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