Tag Archives: Max Verstappen

Leclerc frustrated by surprise Mercedes speed as Ferrari lacks “raw pace”

Leclerc didn’t expect Mercedes to be so fast in the Belgian race

Charles Leclerc insists that the Belgian GP was not a “positive weekend” for his Ferrari Formula 1 team despite taking pole and finishing fourth and only 8.5 seconds behind original winner George Russell.

Leclerc, who subsequently moved up to third when the English driver was disqualified for being underweight, noted that a strong performance was outweighed by the fact that Mercedes proved faster in the race.

He acknowledged that he expected that McLaren and Red Bull would be more competitive than Ferrari, but not Mercedes.

“If it was a Red Bull in front then I think it would have been a positive weekend,” he said. “But now it was a Mercedes, which we thought we were on a par with, and they had the edge on us. I don’t consider this result a very positive one.”

He added: “I think fourth was what I thought would be the best result possible today, with two McLarens in front, and one Red Bull.

“But again, that’s what makes me not so happy about today, is that we have two Mercedes and one McLaren in front, and the Mercedes, we thought that we were on a par with them. So yeah, worse than expected.”

Like others Leclerc expected McLaren to be the team to beat in Sunday’s race.

“I personally thought that McLaren had huge advantage of pace for this weekend, which I saw a little bit less today,” he said.

“They were still the fastest, probably with Red Bull and Mercedes today, but I thought McLaren had the edge.

“It’s good to see that everybody’s so close, but unfortunately, we are still the fourth fastest team, and the top three keeps changing, but we are consistently behind them, on a par with Mercedes. We just need more pace.”

As the first stops as rivals pitted Leclerc suggested to the team that he if he was going to be undercut, he should go long.

However he then stopped on lap 12, just one lap after Lewis Hamilton, Sergio Perez and Oscar Piastri, the cars immediately around him.

“It’s very, very difficult to know at that point,” he said when asked by this writer about his radio request.

“Because when you have so many cars, obviously we were in a position where second on track, when you are getting undercut by one car, two cars, three cars, four cars, it starts to be quite tricky, and you take a lot of risks.

“It was just better to align ourselves to the other strategy. We didn’t know even what was the hard like, because we hadn’t run it before the race.

“So all of this, I don’t think it’s fair to say that we did a mistake at that point, and I understood the point of view of the team.

“I just felt like the raw pace is not good enough. And when it’s like this, unfortunately, you can do whatever you want with the strategy, but you’re always going to lose places. We are just not fast enough.”

Leclerc suggested that it would have been difficult to replicate the one-stop strategy used so well by Russell.

“It was one of our plans, but I knew that it was very, very, very unlikely for me to do so,” he said.

“Just for the reason I explained before, when you are in front to keep going and to get undercut by three, four cars and just lose so many positions if the one-stop doesn’t work, it was just better to align ourselves with the guys behind.

“But we knew it wasn’t too far, But I think they just had more pace, so they made the one-stop work, because they were super, super strong today. So we had it on our card. It was just not possible in our race situation.”

Asked to summarise the season so far he admitted that Ferrari has work to do.

“Our first half really good,” he said. “I think we couldn’t hope for better. We maximised the potential of the car. Then we’ve had four races where we’re going extreme setups from extreme setups.

“And for me, it was just impossible to get to quali and to know where the limit of the car was. And we lost a lot of points.

“And the last two races, we focused again on maximising the results, and I think we did, but just not fast enough, as I said.

“So that’s where we really need to focus and to do a step for the second half if we want to have any better results.”

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Perez’s Red Bull F1 future under debate as he misses Spa race target

Perez needed a strong race at Spa ahead of F1’s summer break

Sergio Perez endured a difficult run to eighth place on the road in the Belgian GP amid the ongoing internal debate at Red Bull over his Formula 1 future.

Perez has clearly been under pressure to raise his game after a disappointing recent run, and he did a good job to qualify third at Spa, before gaining a spot from the grid penalty taken by team mate Max Verstappen.

Prior to the race Red Bull’s simulations suggested that from second on the grid he could hang on to third place, while team mate Verstappen could climb to fifth from 11th.

The Mexican ran third initially behind Lewis Hamilton and Charles Leclerc, but he slipped down to eighth at the flag before George Russell’s penalty gifted him a place.

Red Bull is having a meeting on Monday that could potentially lead to a reshuffle of the drivers across its two teams for the rest of the season and heading into 2025, with some VCARB filming day and TPC car running at Imola this week potentially having an impact.

Reserve driver Liam Lawson and F2 championship leader Isack Hadjar are both waiting in the wings, while Daniel Ricciardo has some momentum behind him.

It was clear after the race that much more was expected of Perez at Spa.

“Starting on the front row our objective pre-race was we felt that third and fifth would be achievable,” said team boss Christian Horner.

“We achieved the fifth [with Verstappen], but we didn’t achieve the third. We obviously need to go through the data to understand where his loss of pace was. I think that based on his starting position we didn’t envisage finishing eighth from second on the grid.

“Checo’s had a tough run over the last few races. And what’s so confusing for us is the season started so well for him, and then has tailed off.

“He did a great job, a super job in qualifying yesterday. Obviously, we need to go through and understand the issues in the in the race. We’ve got the time to do that and analyse that and work with him.”

However he downplayed the significance of the timing of Monday’s discussion: “We’re constantly analysing, constantly looking at things. We’ve got a meeting tomorrow, but it’s not just about Checo. We have other topics on the agenda as well, which we always do going into the summer break.”

Perez explained that his race was compromised by PU issues that cost him performance, and by a short middle stint, with his early pit stop clearing the way for pursuer Verstappen.

“I was just struggling a lot on the straights,” he said. “I don’t know what was going on, but I had to save battery early on in the first couple of laps. And I was just very weak on the straights.

“And once I managed to clear it, charge the pack a bit, I was pretty much the same as Lewis and Charles, I was staying there. But then the second stint, jumping onto the medium tyre with all the traffic behind, it just made it really, really difficult, very tricky, and we did quite a short stint as well. 

“So yeah, we were just out of sync. I think we were just not good with the tyres today. Balance wasn’t there as well. So yeah, plenty of things to analyse on our side.”

“I think there were some strategic reasons behind it, but I don’t know why we went so short. I think we were obviously very compromised by having just two sets of mediums. 

“So again, I think strategically, it wasn’t a perfect execution. It’s something that we will get together as a team and obviously understand.”

Perez insisted that one poor race will not decide his future.

“Yesterday I had a good qualifying, a good day,” he said. “It doesn’t change anything. I think we have too much going on in the team, a lot of things that we have to focus on, and we cannot waste any energy with all this speculation surrounding.

“So this is the last time I will speak about the future. Just to make it clear for everyone, I will not answer any more questions about my future.”

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Norris left frustrated by run of “stupid stuff and mistakes”

Norris admits that things haven’t always gone to plan recently

Lando Norris says he’s looking forward to a reset in the Formula 1 summer break after “stupid stuff and mistakes” have hurt his title bid in recent races.

The McLaren driver started fourth in Belgium but ran wide at the exit of the first corner, and thus he was only seventh at the end of the lap.

Although the Woking team was expected before the race to have good pace relative to other top teams he had only recovered one more position, from Carlos Sainz, before the chequered flag. However disqualification for George Russell gifted him fifth place.

“I misjudged it, honestly,” he said when asked by this writer about his start. “I just didn’t want to get taken out in Turn One, so I’ve left the gap and just misjudged the exit a little bit. I lost four or five positions.

“Just impossible to overtake, the overtaking sucked today, and I think there were very few overtakes actually done on track, most of it was just in the pit stops. There were some overtakes, but only when you had like a 10-lap tyre advantage.

“So otherwise a bit of a tough race with the overtaking. And I felt like we were quick, The car was quick. Just don’t feel like we maximised what we could have done.”

Norris admitted that things haven’t gone right for him in recent weeks.

“I think I just need to reset,” he said. “I’ve given away a lot of points over the last three, four races, just because of stupid stuff and mistakes and bad starts. Turn One now.

“I don’t know why. It’s just silly things. It’s not even difficult stuff. It’s just Turn One, trying to stay out of trouble, trying to make sure there’s a gap and not get hit, and then I put myself off the track. So just some stupid things. The pace is good. The team are doing an amazing job.

“So I’m happy. And in a way, I feel like I just don’t want to take a break. I just want to continue, because we’re on good form. Even today, I felt like the pace was very strong.

“But the last two, three races, I’ve just not clicked as much as I needed to, and given up a lot of points, so hopefully I can come back stronger.”

Asked to elaborate on his issues he highlighted his starts as a key weakness recently.

“It’s many different things,” he said. “It’s just different stuff. Obviously, my starts have not been great.

“I’ve lost probably a good amount of points off the line, and now Turn One again, easily a podium or even more. So there isn’t one reason. It’s maybe just trying a bit too hard and paying the price for that.”

Regarding his plan to reset during the break he added: “Just forget about it. Still another week of debriefs and stuff, so I’m in the factory for half of next week.

“Just kind of review everything and look over everything, make sure we take a break on a good note. Which I think we have, honestly, I feel like there’s a lot of positives. Just things haven’t clicked for us.

“But I feel like we’ve still got what we need and what we want, so I’m happy we’ve got what it takes to fight and to put up a good battle. But I’ve just not been on it from my side.

“So review my things and go away and forget about it for a good time, and then come back stronger.”

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Alonso uses “a little bit of luck” to make unplanned one-stop work for Aston

Alonso used a one-stop strategy to land an eighth place

Fernando Alonso says Aston Martin’s call to stop him only once in the Belgian GP was not planned – and it needed “a little bit of luck” to work.

Alonso was one of only five drivers to stop only once, along with original race winner George Russell, Yuki Tsunoda, Kevin Magnussen and his own team mate Lance Stroll.

Alonso used the unexpected strategy to finish ninth on the road, which became eighth when Russell was disqualified for a weight infringement.

At the previous race in Hungary he was left frustrated after what he thought was an unnecessarily early first stop as the team reacted to other soft tyre starters coming in.

“We had the plans, as always, Plan B, Plan C, whatever,” said Alonso. “So we covered the one-stop and the three-stops. We were P12, and we were just waiting for a safety car, maybe to play in our hands.

“And then 11 laps in the end, we started considering, ‘Okay, safety car is not coming, but maybe we go to the end?’

“So it was just being very flexible, and lap-by-lap, judging the conditions, and at the end, it was the right call. But let’s say it was not planned just to go for one-stop.”

Like Russell Alonso was able to make it work because degradation was not as bad as had been feared, and the tyres didn’t fall off a cliff.

“I think especially with the new asphalt, you sometimes get very low deg,” he said. “Or you get graining, you can have the two things. And today was one of those days. Maybe the temperature helped, to be a little bit hotter on Sunday.

“We had a lot of graining on Friday, and we didn’t have any today, but I think no one could predict even the last five laps. If the degradation was not linear, and you have a big cliff, the strategy will not work. It’s a little bit of luck sometimes when you take these decisions.”

Alonso conceded that having track position by staying out and obliging two-stoppers to catch him helped the strategy to work, while his choice of a higher downforce level – which protected the tyres from sliding – was also key.

“It depends to the cars you’re fighting,” he said of track position. “In our case it was crucial, because the Williams and the Alpines, they were the two fastest cars [on the straights], and if you fall behind, the race is over.

“So we underestimated a little bit that, but at the end our car thanks to the extra drag and downforce, maybe was taking care of the tyres a little bit better, and made it possible to do one-stop. So it was a trade-off, and I think it was the right call for us.”

Asked to review the first half of the season Alonso admitted that it hasn’t been what he had expected.

“A little bit disappointed,” he said. “We cannot hide the fact that we are fighting today, with Williams, RB and Alpine last year, we were looking maybe to the top four teams.

“Now they are out of reach, and we are just defending from the guys behind. Even at the beginning of the year in qualifying, especially, we were always top five, top six, in the mix.

“So definitely a lot of work to do for us in the summer break, and the second part of the year. We will not give up.”

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Sainz frustrated as Ferrari strategy “risks” at Spa don’t pay off

Sainz admitted that Ferrari’s strategy didn’t work out at Spa

Carlos Sainz said that Ferrari didn’t get his strategy right in the Belgian GP and that the timing of his first pit stop was not ideal for either a one or two-stop option.

Sainz was the only driver at the front of the field to start on the hard tyres, and he rose from seventh on the grid to the lead as others pitted.

He came in on lap 20 but despite the long first stint he then ran a similar two-stop strategy to most of his competitors – other than George Russell, who stopped once on lap 10 on his way to victory on the road.

The Mercedes driver was subsequently disqualified, promoting Sainz from his seventh at the flag to sixth.

However the Spaniard felt he might have done better had he tried to stop once.

“I feel like we took some risks at the start, starting on the hard,” he said. “We even won a position [from Norris]. So I was very optimistic and positive about this strategy.

“We managed to extend it quite a bit to lap 20, with hindsight, not long enough, because probably one-stop seemed like a good possibility today.

“And yeah, probably the main thing is that we didn’t do a one, but we also didn’t do an optimal two, because we boxed too late for the two, or too early for the one.

“It’s easy to say now in hindsight, but I felt like the race was promising a lot more. After 20 laps, I was like, we might have a shot at the podium.

“And then suddenly I finished P7 nine seconds behind the P6, so clearly, there’s something that we will have to look at. At the same time I think our direct competitors today were quicker, so I don’t think it would have changed much.”

Expanding on what could have been done differently he said: “Starting on hards, if anything, we would have needed to commit to extending another 10 laps at least.

“On a two-stop, maybe boxing five, six laps earlier to spend as much time as possible on that hard tyre that today was performing really well.”

While team mate Charles Leclerc took pole and finished fourth on the road and third in the final results Sainz said there was no real sign of progress.

“When you see the pace of Mercedes, Red Bull and McLaren in the race, I don’t think so,” he said. “I think two or three-tenths. So yeah, we started on pole, and we still finished P4.

“With my car, I felt like we were on for a podium.  And then as soon as everyone put their hards on, you could see which pace everyone was doing, and even though my last stint, I felt very competitive and quick, then when they told me the lap times of the others, I was not quite as quick as I thought I was.”

Regarding bouncing he said: “Yeah, the quicker we go through corners, the worse it gets, so towards the end of the race, we were not on holidays!”

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Vowles: “Odds are in our favour” on Williams signing Sainz

Vowles is pretty confident that Williams will get the nod from Sainz

Williams Formula 1 boss James Vowles says “the odds are in our favour” in terms of the chances of signing Carlos Sainz for 2025 and beyond.

He also indicated that an announcement could come as early as next week, before the summer break, after he drew a “line in the sand” in terms of the decision process.

Sainz has been considering his options since Ferrari announced that he would be replaced by Lewis Hamilton in 2025, with Audi, Alpine and Williams the three choices that he had been considering in recent weeks.

Management changes at the first two, plus Alpine’s plan to use customer engines from 2026, have given him extra food for thought.

Vowles is convinced that Williams is now the favourite to land him.

“More than 50%, how’s that?,” he said when asked what the chances were of securing the Spaniard.

“How confident am I? I think the odds are in our favour, but I’ve been stung by this already once this year. So let’s see.”

Regarding the possibility of a driver announcement in the coming week he said: “Tentatively, yes. I think I’ve already said before, going into summer break, yes. And I think there’s a there’s a line in the sand that I’ve created, and I hope it’s one that we remain within.”

Vowles has long stressed that Sainz is the team’s number one target, with Valtteri Bottas the likely Plan B.

“I’m open minded, but I want excellence within the team,” he said. “I want race-winning performance within the team. I want individuals that are leaders. In other words, they’re established.

“So out of all those, the top of the list, I’ve said it from the start, I’ll maintain it here now as well, is Carlos.

“In adversity last year, he won a race, and he did it in a bloody intelligent way, against some of the best individuals, that includes Lando and Charles. He beat them in the circumstances.

“I know he had a pretty poor qualifying yesterday, but look at Q1 and Q2 he’s there or thereabouts. He brings excellence along with him. And I’ve said it once, and I keep saying it, that is where my heart is set, and let’s see if the journeys collide.”

Vowles stressed that he has worked hard to convince Sainz to come on board.

“It’s interesting conversations he and I have had pretty late into a few nights, and we present it from both sides,” he said.

“My perspective is this. I know I wear Williams shirt, but I believe so much in what we’re doing. That’s why I left Mercedes to come here.

“I believe in everything we are doing here, and I’m in it day-to-day, and I can see the changes day to day.

“With Carlos, he can’t see much of that. What he looks at is what you can see externally. Where are you, where have you qualified? Why did you have a bad race here? What’s going on here?”

Vowles admitted that Audi’s offer is tempting for Sainz: “He has one of the largest OEMs in the world chasing him. That’s hard to turn down, an OEM that his father has won with.

“At the same time, he has a team [Alpine] that has, let’s be clear about it, historically, beaten us, fundamentally, and again, that becomes hard to turn down. They won races not that long ago, or won a race not that long ago [Hungary 2021].

“But irrespective, I can see that perspective on things. Here’s what he told me, which actually resonated the most – ‘the reason why I’m doing this is when I commit, I need to commit with all my heart, and all my soul, 100% and to do that means I can’t have any doubts.’ And that’s why it’s taking the time. And that resonated with me a lot.”

Expanding on Sainz’s decision process he said: “He’s a very sensible chap. Whatever happens with Audi, they are an OEM, they’ll pour what is required financially into this to make it successful. 

“And I think change there? I’m not sure if it’s good or bad. I’m not enough in the team to be able to know it, but I don’t think that’s necessarily resonating.

“Remember, he’s looking at the long term, what’s the right long term solution, and with Alpine, they’ll take an amount of pain, and then they’ll have an amount of success from it as well.

“At the same time, I think he’s trying, as you all are as well, to weigh up what the options are. I’m biased.

“We’re a stable management here. We have no changes ongoing, and we have a hell of a lot of investment in the background. This is why, for me, it’s an easy decision for him.”

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Ocon and Gasly opt for different wings as Alpine splits cars at Spa

Gasly is running more downforce than Ocon at Spa

Alpine Formula 1 drivers Esteban Ocon and Pierre Gasly have gone in very different directions on downforce levels for the Belgian GP – and it didn’t work out as expected in Saturday’s wet qualifying.

As part of a general package of updates the Enstone team brought a new low drag wing to Spa.

It was tried for the first time in FP2, and while Ocon preferred to stick with it for qualifying and the race, Gasly went back to a high downforce version.

He should thus in theory have had the advantage in the wet qualifying session, and indeed he was an impressive second in Q1.

However he slipped back to 12th in Q2 while Ocon progressed to Q3 and earned what became ninth place on the grid after Max Verstappen’s penalty was applied.

“A good afternoon for us,” said Ocon when asked by this writer about his session. “I think we optimised well the car potential today. Unfortunately, we didn’t have any new sets for Q3, which hurt us a little bit.

“We decided to stick on a dry setup, to have little bit more straight-line performance. That’s why we were very quick in sector one. And we decided to split across cars, which is never an easy decision as well. But to me, it was quite important, the race aspect of things.

“And if it’s dry tomorrow, touching wood, we can hopefully look ahead and have some good opportunity, more than looking behind, looking to fall back, really.

“On the dry it was clear that it was the better option. Obviously, on the wet, it should be quicker, the higher downforce. But yeah, today we’ve maximised the potential we had. And even with the light car in sector two, we were quite strong in general.”

Ocon noted that as qualifying went on he was able to understand how best to make use of his low-drag configuration.

“Pierre in Q1 was a good, four or five tenths quicker,” he said. “I kind of thought that’s how we are going to qualify, basically, it was quite clear.

“But somehow after a couple of runs I managed to figure out where I could gain from that low downforce and use the potential of it. And it turned out to work alright in the end.”

He added: “I think we were on the max downforce in Budapest, and we killed the tyres. So we go the other way.”

Meanwhile Gasly remains hopeful that his wing choice will prove beneficial in Sunday’s race.

“On my car we decided to go with more downforce,” he said. “So a different approach between the two cars. We’ll see if it pays off tomorrow in the race. But we’re quite confident that it matched what we expect in terms of gains with this new package.

“We know it can be a long race here. It’s going to be hot tomorrow. It was between the one and two stop before, and we seemed quite good on the tyre. So we’ll have to see what we can do.

“But I think we’re going to be in the fight for P10, P9 with these guys ahead of us. So that’s where our race will be.”

Gasly admitted that things went wrong for him as qualifying progressed and he had issues with tyre temperatures.

“Q1 was really good,” he said. “The car felt great, and the track obviously dried up a bit. And I just think we got it wrong with our out-laps, going faster in the out-laps, and my tyres were cooked every time in my push laps.

“So just from a very strong balance and potential in Q1 the car just felt very different in Q2. I’m doing the same lap time when the track’s drier, and it’s just quite disappointing because there was obviously good potential. But that’s the difference between a Q3 and Q2.”

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Wet qualifying helps Hamilton as Mercedes abandons new floor

Hamilton believes that a wet qualifying session flattered Mercedes

Lewis Hamilton says that an overnight change to an older spec floor has improved the Mercedes W15 at Spa – but he admits that it was only the wet conditions that allowed him to qualify fourth.

Hamilton was unhappy after Friday’s running with the latest update package, and he was only 10th fastest in FP2.

Prior to the uncertainty of the wet Saturday running the team opted to switch both Hamilton and team mate George Russell back to the floor used until Hungary to provide a stable baseline.

It paid off in wet qualifying as Hamilton took fourth and Russell seventh, with both men also set to gain a place from a grid penalty for Max Verstappen.

“If it was drying I’d be struggling to be in top 10, I would imagine,” he said. “And then I think just out there timing was everything, getting out on track at the right point.

“I think we were a little bit too early at the end, we were first out, and that was when we used our new tyres. And then we didn’t have any new tyres towards the end, when the three guys ahead did. So a bit unfortunate in that respect. But I’m grateful to be up there.

“I’m okay with being on the second row, for sure. It’s close enough. I think today, if we got everything perfect, we could have been on the front row, or even first, but it wasn’t meant to be.”

Hamilton admitted that the car was difficult to drive with the update package as used on Friday.

“Our car is not really feeling strong this weekend,” he said. “Yesterday, we were a second off. I’m hoping it’s not the case tomorrow. But it was a real struggle yesterday.

“We made changes overnight, so I’m hoping we’ll be in a better position. But even with the changes, we’re not on par with McLaren. They’re much faster, and the Red Bulls.”

However he admitted that the rain made it hard to properly assess those changes: “It’s impossible to say today, because we didn’t drive yesterday’s car in the rain, but I’m pretty sure it will be better than what we had yesterday.

“It couldn’t get much worse than that! So it will be better, but how much better? I don’t know.”

Regarding the changes Mercedes trackside engineering director Andrew Shovlin confirmed that there were also mechanical set-up changes as well as the floor.

“We weren’t happy with the balance or pace of the car yesterday, so we made some fairly major changes to the mechanical and aero specification of the car overnight,” he said. We’d hoped for a dry window in FP3 to evaluate those, but unfortunately it stayed wet throughout and there was no chance to accumulate any meaningful running.
 
“Wet qualifying sessions are difficult at present as the grid is tight. You need to time your new sets to coincide with when the track is at its quickest. By Q3, we were down to one new set of Intermediates. We’d decided to carry more fuel and do multiple laps to try and land one with the driest conditions. That was similar to McLaren. We lost out to the Ferrari of Leclerc though who used his new set right at the end. Had we not been carrying the fuel, we would have had the pace for P2.
 
“We don’t know where we will stack up on race pace, as the car is quite different to the one we ran in the dry yesterday. Starting from P3 and P6 though, we are hopefully well placed to fight for a podium.”

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Norris: Verstappen “definitely a threat” to McLaren from 11th on Spa grid

Norris believes that McLaren will have to fight off Verstappen in Sunday’s race

Lando Norris says that Max Verstappen is still a threat for victory in the Belgian GP despite starting only 11th after taking a PU grid penalty.

He added that Verstappen’s qualifying pace indicated that McLaren still has work to do despite the Woking team’s recent strong form.

Norris and team mate Oscar Piastri are starting fourth and fifth after the wet qualifying session, but they are expected to be competitive relative to the cars ahead – those of Charles Leclerc, Sergio Perez and Lewis Hamilton – in what will be a dry race on Sunday.

However Norris concedes that Verstappen is likely to come through the field and provide the biggest challenge to the Woking team.

“Definitely a threat,” said Norris when asked about Verstappen’s chances of winning. “I think he’s clearly been quickest all weekend, even yesterday in FP2, they just didn’t turn up the engine, and we had. So considering we were only two-tenths ahead, they had a lot more in their bag, basically.

“So yes, in a way, a good thing, it shows that we still have a lot more work to do, even after a lot of great races the past few weeks, I think Red Bull have always been there thereabouts.

“People want to try and count them out at times, but Max was easily on par with us in quali last weekend, and pretty much the same race pace, just made more mistakes than what we did, simple as that, but just as quick.

“At the minute, they look very strong. He has been since the first lap in FP1, he was quite easily the strongest, so going to be a threat tomorrow.

“But that’s low fuel, and hopefully high fuel is a little bit more even, but 100% he’s going to be coming through quickly, and I’m sure he’ll be a threat for us at some point.”

Norris said he wasn’t worried about Sergio Perez potentially holding the McLarens up and allowing Verstappen to close.

“I wouldn’t say it’s a concern, honestly,” he said. “For our race against Max, we have to get past all of them. I know Checo potentially will have bit more defensive mindset than the others, but Charles is still fighting off pole and for a win, so he’s going to be fighting hard for it.

“He’s not just going to let things go easily. Same with Hamilton. He’s always going to be aggressive and defensive what he needs to be.

“So I wouldn’t say Perez is any more of a threat from that side, but he’s in the quickest car, so in terms of getting past that, kind of making the tyres last better than him, and that kind of thing is going to be harder than some of the others.

“I think when you look at the pace from Friday, it gives us decent amount of confidence that if we can just keep our heads down and focus on ourselves we can hopefully get through them at some point in the race. And try and keep Max behind.”

Piastri suggested that a big delta between old and new tyres means that it won’t be hard to overtake.

“I pitted at one point in practice, and I was three seconds a lap faster than the car ahead of me,” said the Australian.

“So if you manage to defend and the car behind is three seconds quicker than you, then that’s pretty impressive!

“So I think it will kind of work itself out naturally, let’s say, depending on how the race goes. But obviously we’re in a fight with Red Bull in the constructors’, and Max is leading the world championship in the driver’s standing.

“So of course, I’m expecting Checo to put up a fight. I think even for his own sake, it’s not been the easiest run for him.

“And I think, of course, more than anyone, he probably wants a really good result for himself. So I think he’ll fight hard for it, but I don’t think any harder than he would if was another situation.”

Piastri says that Red Bull has been more competitive in recent races that many people might think.

“I think we definitely do still have some different characteristics,” he said. “I think in my opinion, Budapest is really the only weekend for us where you can clearly say we were the quickest.

“And even in saying that, I think had Max got through the traffic a bit quicker in the race, he would have posed a serious threat at the end. So I think they were still, very competitive, and qualifying obviously it was very close.”

Piastri says that “little things” have helped to determine the pecking order: “I think just some days we’ve made mistakes. Some days Red Bull have made mistakes.

“Last weekend, I think our car probably favoured that track a little bit more. This weekend it probably favours Red Bull a little bit more. So all these little things put together is what’s making the difference at the moment.

“And I think we just need to try and make sure we maximise the ones that are in our control, really. But I don’t think we’ve necessarily had the edge over them for the last five or six races.

“I think it’s fair to say we’ve been very even, but I don’t think we’re quicker week in, week out. I think again, Budapest is really the only one where I think we did have a bit of an edge.”

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Alonso: Higher downforce is key for “into the unknown” Spa race

Fernando Alonso believes he has the right package for Sunday’s race

Fernando Alonso believes that the Belgian GP will be a step “into the unknown” for all teams and drivers given the limited preparation time.

Having qualified ninth the Spaniard is hoping that a higher downforce level than some of Aston Martin’s immediate rivals will prove beneficial in terms of tyre usage during the race, due to less sliding.

Rain on Saturday meant that teams only had Friday to prepare for what is expected to be hot and dry race on Sunday, with a new track surface making it hard to judge how tyres will behave over the full distance.

“We go into the race into the unknown I think for everybody,” said Alonso. “We had a little bit of long runs yesterday, but in this track, being so long the lap, you cannot do more than six or seven laps, because of time restrictions on the sessions.

“So with the new asphalt, it’s very grippy, but we don’t know exactly the degradation tomorrow.

“The good thing is that with a wet qualifying, we have all the dry tyres available for everybody, so we should be able to push all the way through.”

Asked who his competition will be in the race he said: “Not the cars in front, unfortunately! But I think we will have to see behind us. It’s going to be a challenging race in terms of tyre degradation, some nice battles for sure.

“I think we have the Alpines very fast this weekend. We have, I think, Albon as well, very fast. So, yeah, I think that will be our battle.

“They are a little a bit quicker on the straights. We have a little bit more downforce in the car, maybe we take care better on the tyres. So hopefully that comes to us at the end of the race.”

Alonso, who will gain a place on the grid thanks to a PU penalty for Max Verstappen, believes that he couldn’t have done better in qualifying, indicating that it was the best he felt in the car all weekend.

“P9 behind the top four teams probably was the maximum today,” he said. “So happy with that. The car felt good in qualifying. I struggled a little bit the rest of the three practices this weekend. I was never confident in the car. I needed three or four laps to get the rhythm into the session.

“So finally now in qualifying I was flat out since lap 1, and yeah, that extra confidence, it was very important in these kinds of conditions.”

Regarding the latest updates he added: “We’ve been experimenting with the setup yesterday as well. So yeah, the new upgrades are a little bit more optimised.”

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