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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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Permane: Hadjar’s focus shows he has the potential to become a great

Hadjar’s third place in Zandvoort was mighty impressive and hinted at real potential

Isack Hadjar’s superb run to third place in the Dutch GP was a highlight of the Zandvoort weekend, and just the latest in a series of impressive performances by the Frenchman.

His strong form has made him an obvious candidate for a promotion to the hot seat at Red Bull Racing, sooner or later. It will be then be up to him to prove that he could be one day be in the Vettel or Verstappen league.

Since his disastrous start to the season in Melbourne he has got better and better, consistently making it to Q3 and usually feeling a little bit frustrated to be “only” seventh or eighth on the grid.

Indeed last weekend he joked that he was finally happy to be as high as fourth….

What made his performance all the more noteworthy was that his FP1 session was compromised by a PU issue which subsequently caused him to lose the whole of FP2.

He went into Sunday’s race relying on long run data gathered by team mate Liam Lawson, as he’d been denied the opportunity to do his own homework.

However he put any frustrations behind him, and simply got on with the job. Under the most intense pressure, and in a race made complicated by safety cars and restarts, he didn’t put a foot wrong. The retirement of Lando Norris gifted him a place, but he’d done the rest himself.

“He drove a perfect race,” Racing Bulls team principal Alan Permane told me. “And it actually all started Friday night, overnight, because he was struggling with the car on Friday.

“And between his engineers, himself and the simulator back in the UK, they put together a really good setup for P3 which then, of course, worked in quali. We extracted the most out of it.

“He did no laps in P2 at all. But honestly, we were pretty confident with our race pace. Liam had shown decent race pace, so we weren’t very worried about that.

“And in the race, it was fantastic – to be able to race and beat the Ferraris and beat the Mercedes was very impressive.”

The fact that he was able to put his Friday disaster behind him is what really impressed Permane, who has worked with the likes of Michael Schumacher and Fernando Alonso.

“One of the things that separates the great from the good is that they’re able to just focus on what’s in front of them,” he noted.

“So he had an awful day on Friday. He was just able to put that out of his mind and get on with it. And that’s that shows real character. I think that shows that he’s got at least part of what it takes to get to the very top, for sure.”

Racing Bulls CEO Peter Bayer was equally impressed by the young Frenchman’s performance, especially in such stellar company at the front of the field.

“He didn’t put a foot wrong honestly, the whole race,” he told me. “And we were a bit nervous, to be honest, before the start. Because of the technical issues, we didn’t have all the long run data we were hoping to have.

“But we were quite convinced that we can go with the one-stop. The team put a car together which was magic honestly, in terms of pace. He easily kept the Ferraris behind, he kept the Mercedes behind, and he was on par with Max.

“Honestly, [at the front] it’s different. You feel that everything becomes ultra precise, and you know that every tiny error will immediately cost you a position. And Charles was putting a lot of pressure, actually twice, with all the restarts. But Isack was racing like a big boy today!

“Obviously with Isack we see how quickly he’s picking up pace. He had no FP2. It takes some talent, it takes a lot of hard work, dedication and focus. And that’s what he shows on a daily basis.”

However Bayer hadn’t forgotten that Lawson was unlucky, and should have been well inside the top 10.

“I think here the third consecutive race where we had both cars in Q3,” said Bayer. “We think the car has the ability to be quick on almost every track. Honestly, Liam was on the hunt for big points as well, but unfortunately he got taken out by Carlos.”

Permane is also encouraged by the potential of the VCARB 02, which has been consistently competitive everywhere of late.

“We’ve got a very good car,” he said. “We look at this championship one race at a time, and we know that if at the track the guys at the track operate in a perfect way, which they have done this weekend, we will do well – and we have a very good chance to beat all our midfield rivals.”

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