Tag Archives: Max Verstappen

Horner: Verstappen/Norris contact in Austrian GP was “inevitable”

Verstappen managed to salvage fifth after his clash with Norris

Red Bull Racing Formula 1 boss Christian Horner believes that it was inevitable that Max Verstappen and Lando Norris would end up in an incident after battling for the lead at several recent races.

The pair made contact in the late stages of the Austrian GP after Verstappen thwarted several earlier attempts to get past, leaving Norris complaining that the Dutchman was moving in the braking area.

The touch left both men with rear punctures and put Norris out of the race, while Verstappen managed to salvage fifth after stopping for a new tyre, despite picking up a 10-second penalty that in the end made no difference to his result.

“I think it’s inevitable given how close they’ve been racing the last few weeks,” said Horner of the contact. “It’s a shame. Lando was already on four [track limits] strikes. He was probably going to get a five-second penalty anyway. And it was a racing incident.

“I thought it was a bit harsh that Max got a 10-second penalty. His race had already been damaged by the puncture that he picked up.”

Horner believes that Norris’s attacking mood was in part a reaction to the previous day’s sprint, when he passed Verstappen at Turn 3 only to lose out not only to the Dutchman but also his McLaren own team mate Oscar Piastri at the following corner.

“I think Max is a hard racer,” he said. “And they know that. I think Lando was trying to make up for yesterday, and it was inevitable, you could see this building perhaps for a couple of races, that at some point there was going to be something close between the two of them.

“He was getting his elbows out. Probably a bit of a hangover from yesterday. Max passed him without DRS down into Turn 4, and then he got mugged by his teammate.

“So there’s probably a little bit of a hangover of that. But it was a shame, because we had everything under control today. And I think the final pit stop put Lando back into contention, and then with the advantage on tyre that he had, that was enough to get him into the DRS.” 

Horner was adamant that Norris wouldn’t have caught Verstappen in the final stint without the pit stop delay, despite having a new tyre advantage.

“The first part of the race was going very well,” said Horner. “We pulled out a six-second gap I think in the first stint on the medium tyre, everything was under control. On the hard tyre, the temperatures with the cloud cover a bit lower, we still got up to an eight-second lead at one point. By the time they’d gone through the traffic, it was about six-and-a-half.

“We then pitted on the same lap as McLaren, and there was a sticking left rear nut, and the gun man just had to go on it twice. I think it was six-second stop, we lost four seconds, and that then put Lando on a fresh set of mediums versus a scrubbed set for Max, he got that new tyre advantage.

“Had they gone out six seconds apart, he’d have probably closed the gap, but I think we’d have had enough to manage it in those final laps.”

Looking at the positives Horner added: “The pace of the car has been very strong, we’ve had two poles, he’s led all but nine laps of the race, the sprint race yesterday. He’s extended his lead in the championship. We’ve extended our lead, I think, in the constructors’ championship. So despite not getting the win, it’s not been totally disastrous.”

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Cowell gives Aston Martin F1 team boost ahead of Honda era

After two years away Cowell returns to F1 with Aston Martin

Former Mercedes AMG HPP managing director Andy Cowell is to join the Aston Martin F1 team as Group CEO.

Cowell will take over from incumbent Martin Whitmarsh, who is transitioning out of the role, in October.

It was Whitmarsh who in his McLaren days headhunted Cowell, then at BMW, to join HPP. The pair had worked together when Cowell was at Cosworth and Ford supplied its HB V8 to McLaren in 1993.

Over nearly two decades at HPP Cowell played a significant role, with Mercedes winning the World Championship with Lewis Hamilton and McLaren in 2008 and then Jenson Button and Brawn in 2009 before Hamilton began a run of success with the works team and the hybrid V6 in 2014.

Cowell left the Brixworth organisation in 2022. While he will have a range of responsibilities it’s clear that he will play a key part in integrating Honda and Aston as the 2026 power unit project is developed.

“I would like to thank Martin who has been instrumental in our growth phase as a business,” said owner Lawrence Stroll.

“In the last three years, he has developed the team and has helped us achieve some significant milestones, including fostering our relationship with Honda, and delivering our state-of-the-art AMR Technology Campus at Silverstone.

 “I am delighted to welcome Andy to our team at a crucial time. Together with our works partnership with Honda, the commitment from our title partner Aramco and Andy’s leadership we are on track to become a world championship winning team. Andy has my full backing and will have every resource available to win.”

Whitmarsh said of Cowell: “He will be an incredible asset to Aston Martin Aramco and will make a significant contribution to the execution of our strategy going forward. Andy’s arrival in October and the completion of the AMR Technology Campus will allow me to step away and focus on other projects in my life, knowing that the foundations have been established with an impressive team, inspiring vision and advanced facilities to achieve success in F1.”

“I am thrilled to join Lawrence’s exciting project and look forward to working with the talented group of people that has been assembled,” said Cowell. “F1 has always been my competitive passion, and I am joining Aston Martin Aramco at an exciting time with the imminent completion of the AMR Technology Campus and our transition in 2026 to a full works team with our strategic partners Honda and Aramco.”

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Verstappen: “We did everything wrong that we could have done wrong…”

Verstappen wasn’t happy with the way his race unfolded in Austria

Max Verstappen rarely criticises his Red Bull Racing team, which is hardly surprising given the success that they have enjoyed together.

However after his torrid race in Austria, which culminated in a fifth place after his clash with Lando Norris, the World Champion was not shy about referencing mistakes.

His point was that slow pit stops and what he perceived as strategy errors left him more vulnerable to attack from Lando Norris than would otherwise have been the case.

That their battle resulted on contact for which Verstappen was not the fault of the team, but he was adamant that it resulted from the circumstances.

To be fair he used the word “we” in reference to things being done wrong. Nevertheless it was a sign perhaps not just of the increased pressure being applied by Norris and McLaren but also the ongoing tensions in the RBR camp, amid Christian Horner’s feud with Jos Verstappen and the question marks over Max’s long-term commitment to the team.

“I think the first stint was quite good,” said Verstappen when I asked him about his race. “Then, of course, at the end of that first stint, I caught quite a bit of traffic. We should have just boxed, for me personally, because I just gave up free lap time. So we basically did a lot of things wrong today.

“I think for me personally, it started with the strategy. Then the pit stops were a disaster. The first one was already bad, the second one was even more of a disaster. And then, of course, you give free lap time. It’s seconds that you give away, six seconds over those two pit stops. And then, of course, it’s a race again.

“And that’s why, I think also, we put ourselves in a position for unfortunately an accident to happen between us, which you never want to happen. But yeah, we did everything wrong that we could have done wrong today.”

He added: “Today’s has just been off. Everything has been wrong. I mean, I’m complaining about the tyres. We didn’t pit, I was stuck in traffic. Bad execution with a pit stop. So everything just went wrong,”

Verstappen, which switched from intended new hards to a used set of mediums for his finals stint in an effort to find performance, even suspected that there was something wrong with the car.

“I honestly have no explanation why suddenly the car just transformed from an okay balance in the first stint into just undriveable behaviour afterwards, which normally indicates that something was also wrong,” he said.

“But even with that, we should have won today, if you didn’t make so many errors as well, with the pit stops.”

Regarding the medium/hard tyre choice he said: “They both felt bad. So I don’t even think that we did the wrong thing with the tyres.

“My balance in the first stint wasn’t even that bad. But then I don’t know why, but the car just started to become worse and worse throughout the race. So that is also something that we have to look into, maybe that something broke on the car.”

“Today’s has just been off. Everything has been wrong. I mean, I’m complaining about the tyres. We didn’t pit, I was stuck in traffic. Bad execution with a pit stop. So everything just went wrong.”

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How Aston Martin won the race to test Pirelli’s 2026 F1 tyres

Aston, Alpine and McLaren will be the first to try the 2026 F1 tyres

Aston Martin will kick off the test programme for Pirelli’s 2026 Formula 1 tyres after coming out on top in a draw for teams who wanted to become involved from the start.

The Silverstone team is to run an AMR22 modified to replicate 2026 downforce levels at Barcelona on September 17-18.

Reserve Felipe Drugovich set to drive as the date falls between the Azerbaijan and Singapore GPs, and race drivers Fernando Alonso and Lance Stroll will be travelling.

Thus far Pirelli has only been testing the narrower 2026 tyres virtually, with the first physical prototypes due to be manufactured in August.

All teams are expected to participate in the full test programme with mule cars over the course of 2025.

However there were only three spots for the initial running in the latter half of this season, and all the teams with the resources to take part – such as ongoing TPC 2022 car test programmes – wanted to be involved.

To cut the list down to three a draw was made at the last F1 Commission meeting, with Aston, Alpine and McLaren all earning the right to join the early testing within this season.

“We will be the first team to test these ‘26 tyres,” said Aston team principal Mike Krack when asked by this writer about the testing. “There was a selection process or a lottery process because there were a number of teams who wanted to be part of this test programme.

“We were drawn first, so we are the first to do this, between Baku and Singapore, I think. So we’re exchanging with Pirelli obviously what the programme will be and we’re trying to replicate the car that has been defined from the FIA according to a technical directive. I think it’s 54 something like that.

“So we try to replicate as close as possible the figures that are requested and required, and work then with Pirelli on how we go about it.”

After this year’s initial testing Pirelli will have a full programme of 2026 running next year shared between the 10 teams, and culminating in the post-season Abu Dhabi test.

The idea of having a dedicated car provided by one team for the early running was abandoned some time ago.

“That was a proposal that was rejected by the teams,” Pirelli motorsport boss Mario Isola told this writer. “So we will have mule cars provided by the teams. They have the freedom to decide which car they want to adapt, from ’21 onwards – they can also decide to use an old 13-inches car.

“The first idea for 2026 was to have the 16-inch tyre with much smaller diameter, and the much smaller diameter was more in line with the old 13-inch tyre. So they said, okay, let’s keep open the opportunity to use also the last car with a 13-inch for that. But now that it was decided to stay on 18-inch no one is going to use this.

“They can use ’22, ’23, ’24, and ’25 cars. The idea is that if we test after a race, like we usually do when it’s possible on a Tuesday and Wednesday, they can modify a current car and race car to simulate as much as they can.

“They save money because they don’t have to fly an additional car for testing. For a standalone test it’s different, because in any case, you have to send the car. But for post-race tests it makes sense to use a race car modified for 2026.”

Pirelli has yet to finalise next year’s 2026 testing programme, which as usual is made more complicated by having to work around the busy race schedule.

“We are defining a plan for next year,” said Isola. “But luckily, we have already the calendar for next year, so it’s a bit easier, because we can make some assumptions on post-race tests and so on.

“We will send a draft to the FIA to understand who is available and where. I believe that everyone is going to test, because with this option to use also the current car, the race car is clearly an advantage for small teams. Maybe big teams want to use an old car, because they can work around the car to modify it more. But is their decision.”

The challenge Pirelli faces is to sign off on a tyre that will work for the whole 2026 season as downforce levels increase.

“We based our assumption on simulations we received from the FIA,” said Isola. “So it’s the latest available information, obviously with a bit of margin, because we know how fast the development is, especially during the first year.

“And when you freeze the tyre, you cannot change it for one year. So we need to be aware that our design is for the estimation at the end of 2026.”

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How the “huge potential” at Alpine convinced Gasly to stay on

Gasly had a look at other options before deciding to stay put at Alpine

Pierre Gasly says that the “huge potential” he sees at the Alpine Formula 1 team convinced him to remain in the Enstone camp after he’d had a look at other options.

On Thursday the team announced that the Frenchman has signed a multi-year deal that takes him into the period of the new regulations that come into force in 2026.

Gasly had been linked with a Sauber/Audi seat should Carlos Sainz turn it down, and he admits that he had looked around before committing to staying with Alpine.

“Contractually, you always need to have a look quite a long time in advance,” he said when asked by this writer about his other options.

“And obviously, when Lewis [Hamilton] announced at the start of the year, it sort of started and triggered the whole market a lot earlier than what we would have anticipated.

“Since the Lewis news there was a lot of talks here and there, obviously always having in mind that I’ve signed with Alpine to be at the top with Alpine, and it definitely hasn’t been the result so far that I’ve dreamt of with the team.

“But I definitely believe there is huge potential. I repeat it, I’ve seen a lot of positive signs happening inside the team, not only at the track, but also back at the factory.

“I followed closely also the development for 2026 which to me, was the most important thing for my next contract, because we start into a new regulation.

“And then it was a constant conversation, very open. And the team obviously showed from day one a lot of interest and the desire to work with me, which is something very important to me – to work with people that are definitely pushing hard to get you, and want to get you on the project.”

The news of Gasly’s contract came shortly after Flavio Briatore was announced as an advisor to Renault Group CEO Luca de Meo, with drivers as part of his job description.

However Gasly says that the Italian wasn’t key to the timing of the deal.

“Flavio didn’t really influence, it was already long conversation over the last couple of months, and it was about time to commit for my future,” he said.

“And I’m very, very happy and very excited to commit to the team, because it’s good to have some stability.

“I think in my career I went through Toro Rosso to Red Bull back to Alpine, but not always with a strong dynamic, and from what I’m seeing from the team, and my relationship with the team, with Luca de Meo, with Bruno, is going extremely well, and we’ve got clear ambitions.

“I really like Luca’s vision and where he wants to bring the team over the next few years. And I trust as well in his management, and I’m just very excited to be part of the project.”

Regarding Briatore’s suggestion that it will take two years to turn the team around Gasly said: “I’m an optimistic person and a positive person. And I definitely welcome anyone who’s coming to contribute positively to the team.

“So he’s got very clear ideas and clear ambitions. He’s been there as well. He’s been working with the team, and he seems very excited to bring all these ingredients to Enstone. And if we can make it in two years, I’ll be more than happy.”

He added: “I don’t think there is a secret person or tool that can really trigger a big change. Obviously, we talk a lot about the main figures of a race team.

“But when you see the amount of people working back at the factory and who are actually providing the performance, finding the gains in the wind tunnel, in the CFD, mechanically, I’ve been going quite deep in the team with all the different departments and giving my inputs and working quite closely with them, trying to lead them to where I want.

“And there is a very good communication, very transparent. Obviously, it will take some time before we were able to correct the slow start of the year we have.”

Gasly says that his faith in the technical structure was the key to his decision.

“I think personally I’ve seen enough in F1 to know that you can’t really rely on a single car concept,” he noted.

“McLaren has proved it in the last two years. Mercedes also has shown that sometimes you get it right, and sometimes you can get it wrong. And it takes some time to get back to the top.

“But it’s mainly in the structure, the facilities and the technical track you are bringing which was the most important to me.

“So that’s why I tried to pay attention over the last couple of months, and trying to see the dynamic going on at the factory, and how, regardless of the performance on track, which is obviously miles away from where we want to be, but trying to see what sort of solutions we’re trying to bring on board.

“Obviously Luca and Bruno [Famin] played a big part, because everyone’s trying to defend what they have, and 2026 is also going to be a big change of regulations. That’s why I took a bit of time before making my own decision.”

Suggestions that the team may use a customer Mercedes or Honda PU in 2026 and abandon the Viry project have added an intriguing twist to the situation at Alpine. However, Gasly sees plenty of commitment from Renault.

“I have constant conversations with Luca, pretty much almost weekly,” he said. “And it’s been very clear, and I think it’s been very clear in the media, that his goal in F1 is to bring the team, and he’s committed 100% with Alpine.

“So it’s never really been a question mark on my side. And I know how committed they are as a brand they are with Renault, with Alpine. no and I know also how much belief they’ve got in the team, and how much belief I have in the guys that that we have in Enstone and in Viry.”

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Albon: Williams FW46 still struggling with wind sensitivity

Williams endured a frustrating weekend in Barcelona

Alex Albon was left frustrated after a suspected gust of wind sent him off the road in the closing stages of the Spanish GP, exposing the sensitivity problem that has been a topic at Williams in recent years.

Having started from the pitlane Albon was running 18th and chasing Kevin Magnussen when on lap 59 a sudden snap of oversteer sent him through a gravel trap.

The off cost him around nine seconds and any chance of catching the Haas driver ahead, but he managed to resume in front of the chasing Yuki Tsunoda.

He immediately asked his team, “What the hell was that?”, to be told “It’s all OK from our side.”

Not happy with the prompt reply he said, “No it’s not OK, don’t just say that in five seconds.”

Further discussion ensued, and after the flag Albon was told that there was a 17kph gust at the point where he went off.

“The wind’s been up and down all race,” he said when asked by this writer about the incident. “I don’t know how it was for everyone else, but for a car that’s sensitive in the wind, it was not enjoyable.

“Doing our race, I felt like we were on plan to get the Alfa [Valtteri Bottas] and the Haas in front of us. We had a good tyre strategy, I think we were doing the right choices. The main issue was really that off.

“But I know what the limit is on my car, and that wasn’t the limit. And I had a huge off. So I got told there was nothing wrong immediately afterwards, I was there is something wrong, In the end, I think we had a big gust just when I hit the brakes. We don’t like gusts, and it just caught me out. One of those things.”

Albon and Williams knew that Barcelona would be a tough weekend, but nevertheless he was not satisfied with the outcome as the team fell behind rivals.

“I wanted more,” he said. “I look at it two ways. I look at it, compared to last year, the car’s made a huge step forward. So in that sense, I’m happy. At the same time that whole midfield is so much stronger now that that’s not enough.

“And second to that is just when the midfield is getting so tight, and when we are in some ways, catching and we’re getting closer to the to the top, to the leaders, being a bit overweight, lacking a little bit of loads, it adds up, basically.

“And I’m not saying that this weekend exposed us, but I think it just highlights for us a little bit. It was a windy track, a hot track, on a very well-known track for everyone else. To me, just highlights the load, and that’s what’s not quite there. 

“Yet, we’re good on tracks which are a little bit more unique and unconventional, but we come to a track everyone’s been to, drivers have done a million laps, everyone’s confident around the circuit, you can’t really make that difference.”

Albon remains hopeful that the next two races will be better for the FW46.

“Look at Monaco, look at Canada,” he said. “Good pace in the car, real pace as well, nothing odd about it, no weird weather or anything like that. Austria and Silverstone, let’s see.

“I think what was clear about Monaco and Canada, tyres were quite easy, as in they were both kind on the tyres. There was no wind, because they are street tracks. So it kind of played to our advantage a bit more. So I hope for a non-windy Silverstone!”

One positive note was that Williams gave up Albon’s lowly 19th grid position for a pitlane start in order to give him a new energy store and control electronics, thus reducing the chances of a penalty later in the year. 

“It was a race we could in some ways use to sacrifice a little bit, get some components in the pool, and just basically prepare a bit more for Austria and Silverstone, tracks that should suit us much more.”

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Hulkenberg puts faith in Haas F1 update package for Silverstone

After another frustrating 11th place Hulkenberg expects more at Silverstone

Nico Hulkenberg is hoping that an upgrade package due for Silverstone will help to propel his Haas Formula 1 team back into points contention.

In Spain the German finished 11th for the fifth time in the last seven races in 2024, having chased Esteban Ocon to the flag.

On his in-lap he told the team that the performance was “just not enough” before adding that it had been a positive race and that “with the Silverstone stuff coming we should be OK.”

“We’ll see,” he said when asked by this writer about the about the upcoming changes to the VF-24. “Updates, you always want to verify them and feel them in reality, but I’m hopeful in a way that they will obviously bring something to the car.

“Silverstone is massively high speed, we know that, and that package is aimed more at high-speed, or those improvements. So hopefully they can give us an edge.”

He downplayed any lingering frustration about his recent run of 11th places.

“To be honest, I don’t even remember them,” he said. “They get erased from my mind. So just wipe your mouth, and go again in a few days.

“I need that new point system already. Next year when it comes I’m still going to invoice for this year!”

Although he just missed the points once more in Barcelona Hulkenberg insisted that it had been a good weekend for Haas.

“Positive race generally,” he said. “Obviously, not quite enough. But I felt the pace was pretty strong, especially the final stint did, how I was catching Esteban.

“When I really pushed to put him under pressure, I think the pace was very, very respectable and good at that moment.

“I tried to attack him, but then my tyres started to give up on me, so couldn’t do it. But like I said, all in all, I think I feel we maximised the race. Had a good start, a good lap one. And, yeah, I feel like this was the maximum today.

“Obviously Esteban was my reference, and I was definitely faster than him and catching him, but obviously he has 10 seconds to Pierre [Gasly], but there’s only fast cars ahead after. 

“Definitely positive, probably better than what I, or we, expected. So in a way, that’s encouraging.”

Regarding the 5-second pit speeding penalty he picked up he said: “I locked up quite badly, more than I expected. I had the brake balance rearwards, but I lost the front tyres quite badly on the way in.”

Hulkenberg is hoping for a competitive weekend in Austria, where he enjoyed a rare 2023 high by qualifying fourth and finishing sixth in the sprint.

“It was due to the mixed conditions, wasn’t it?,” he  said. “Especially the sprint, where we scored points.

“Austria I guess can always be a mixed bag in terms of weather, and I hope to be honest for similar conditions. It makes it more interesting, mixes things up, and I guess, more opportunity for us.”

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Krack: Time the biggest issue as Aston tries to improve the AMR24

Krack: says Aston still needs time to make steps with AMR24

Aston Martin Formula 1 team principal Mike Krack is confident that the Silverstone outfit can still make progress this year, but he admits that time is the biggest challenge.

Krack says that Aston knows what it has to improve, with Barcelona – where Fernando Alonso and Lance Stroll finished 12th and 14th – highlighting a weakness in long corners.

However, Krack concedes that the busy 2024 schedule means that races will continue to slip by before the issues that hamper the AMR24 can be improved.

“It is a reflection of where we are,” he said after the Spanish GP. “Barcelona as a track is unforgiving. You know after Barcelona where you are, and we have seen it today, and we have to work hard to fix it.

“You have now five races in six weeks, and we have had quite a lot of understanding after Monaco, Imola, Canada as well, where we scored 14 points by the way, with the same car. And it’s about fixing them.

“You have no time. That’s the main problem at the moment. So we have to hang on like this, get the best out of the car each weekend, and bring these parts as quick as possible.”

Alonso said in Spain that he expects the Austrian and British races to be “painful” ahead of updates that will improve the car before the summer break.

“I share his optimism, but also I have to share the optimism,” said Krack. “The results are encouraging, and it’s just about the time that until we have everything.

“This is a continuous process. It is not like from one day to the next, you say, ‘Oh, this is it.’ This is something that a lot of people are working on, and a lot of people are analysing.

“And you come to conclusions, and you go to another race. You adjust your conclusions, because you see, ‘Ah it’s maybe not like that.’ So, this is a continuous process.”

He added: “We have, clearly, a better understanding than we had before. That is also what makes us confident looking forward.”

Krack pointed out that just a few weeks ago Aston was at the same level as the currently resurgent Mercedes team.

“If you see Mercedes has been on our level at the start of the season for a couple of races, and now they are with the top guys,” he said. “So you can see it’s possible, but it is not automatic. You have to work hard, and bring the steps to make it happen.”

“They were in the same position at the start of the year. They were in our competitive level for the first three, four races, I think. And they made steps from there. So we have all the objective data where we can clearly see the difference that they have made in terms of lap time performance. So it is possible.”

However Krack did not want to put a timeline on when the AMR24 will improve.

“It’s easy to make a prediction,” he said. “It’s easy to say now it will be three races, it will be seven. Bringing new parts means also you have to understand them again. This is also stuff that takes time. You see, you have seen Mercedes when they brought the upgrades, it took them maybe one, two three races to be at the top, but they were on the podium today.

“So I think they have clearly made a big step forward. Now, this is a good team. We know that from the past. So it shows us, together with what McLaren has done last year and McLaren has done this year, that it is possible.”

He continued: “The development is not always a straight line. You develop your car in a certain direction, then on the track, you discover that there is going to be other issues, and that you have to understand.

“With the intensity of the calendar week-on-week, you have to perform, and week-on-week, you improve your understanding. And sometimes it takes you maybe a little bit longer.”

Krack also stressed that the team itself is still developing its processes.

“When we zoom out we see we are still a team in the build,” he said. “We have a nice facility, nice offices, but there is still a lot of building going on, and also the process of understanding how your development goes needs to improve.

“So all-in-all, I think you know what is important in such a situation is, keep calm, focus on your issues, and work on bringing them. And if there is a lot of races in between, the situation that we have now, you have to go through and make the best of the package you have.

“Which I think in Canada, you can see it is possible to do. If circumstances allow, you can still score a chunk of points with the same car.”

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Why Ocon told Piastri “don’t try anything silly” at Spanish GP start

Esteban Ocon knew his fight wasn’t with Piastri and McLaren in Spain

Esteban Ocon told Oscar Piastri “don’t try anything silly” at the start of the Spanish GP because he was not planning to keep the McLaren driver behind.

Ocon and Piastri started in eighth and ninth places, with the Australian having failed to set a time in Q3 due to track limits and a off-track moment.

Given that Lando Norris was on pole with the other McLaren Ocon accepted that there was no point in trying to hold up the potentially much faster Piastri.

At the start Piastri duly went round the outside at Turn 3, with Ocon backing off slightly to make it easier for the Australian.

“I told him I was going to let him go anyway, because he was going to be quicker than us the whole race,” said Ocon when asked by this writer about the pass. “I said, ‘Don’t try anything silly at the start. I’ll let you go afterwards.’

“And, yeah, that was not our fight today. It was not with him. It I thought was not going to be with Sergio [Perez], but he was close. So maybe we need to rethink who we are fighting next time.”

Ocon eventually finished 10th, having also been passed by Perez’s three-stopping Red Bull in the latter stages.

The Frenchman reported during the race that his Alpine was lacking grip and was “all over the place”.

He believed after the race that the car might have suffered some damage, although it’s understood that the team detected only a minor downforce loss.

“We need to investigate if that is the case,” said Ocon. “We picked up some debris or something, because there was no contact.

“It was such a quiet race, there was no fighting. I was just falling back the whole time. So, yeah, very positive day for us, because on those kinds of days earlier in the year, we would have been last, not inside the points.

“Clearly the car was super hard to drive, a lot of sliding, a lot of oversteer, and not where we wanted to be.”

Asked how early in the race the problems started Ocon said: “To be honest, it never felt great. I don’t know from when it was exactly, but there is clearly something that didn’t go right for us this race.

“We will dig into some of the differences that we saw, and hopefully come with some answers for next week, because it’s a triple header as well. So, yeah, it wasn’t a great one. It’s funny to say, but damage limitation in terms of result.”

The Alpine team was surprised by the pace of the A524 in Spain, with both Ocon and team mate Pierre Gasly making Q3 and scoring points.

“We have some clues,” said Ocon. “I think if it’s working in the next three, we should know why it is. But to be honest, it was very unexpected to be that competitive here. And, yeah, that’s still something that we need to make sure we understand.”

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Stella: McLaren didn’t change Norris strategy after bad start

Norris just missed out in Spain – but his strategy was not impacted by his start

McLaren boss Andrea Stella says that the team was “surprised” by how early rivals pitted in the Spanish GP, and he insists that Lando Norris’s strategy was not affected by his bad first lap dropping him from pole to third.

Norris was stuck behind George Russell in the opening stint, and despite the Mercedes driver pitting on lap 15 and leader Max Verstappen coming in on lap 17 Norris stayed out until lap 23, giving himself a six-lap tyre offset on the Dutchman.

At the second stops Norris pitted three laps later than Verstappen, but despite a charging final stint on his younger soft tyres Norris came up just short in second place.

Stella says that the pit stop timing would have been similar even if Norris hadn’t been stuck behind Russell in the early stages.

“I think we would have done exactly the same strategy, even leading, because we are in Barcelona,” he said.

“In Monaco, we would have done a different strategy. We were very surprised when we saw people go in lap 16-17, for me, that’s a bit of self-inflicted pain at this circuit, because the degradation is so high, overtaking is easy.

“So actually we thought this is going to bring us back in the race, and we went for our race. We just lost a little bit too long behind Russell at the start. Otherwise the race would have come to us at the end of the 66 laps.

“I would like to praise the good work of our strategists, because somehow this is what we had in mind, and it sort of unfolded the way we thought it would.

“Should people just feel the pressure to go and pit?  Obviously, sometimes the pressure to go and pit depends on how you use your tyres, and sometimes you just have to beat, if that makes sense. But here it can be very costly if you start pitting too early.”

Stella admitted that setbacks such as Norris getting caught behind Russell and a slightly long second stop can be very costly given the competitiveness of the field.

“It’s the second time that the gaps in qualifying are under 20 milliseconds,” he said.

“Everything is getting extremely tight, which means that the details, they do become very important, because you have no margin in which you can compensate any little imprecision.

“I would say that, as for today, the main factor is that we couldn’t defend the first position in Barcelona.

“This is not necessarily a surprise, because you have such a long run to corner one, the cars run high downforce, so as soon as you gain a bit of slipstream, it makes you so much faster than the car ahead, which meant that Lando was not in condition to defend his pole position.

“And I actually appreciated this wise approach, whereby stay out of trouble, the race we know is going to come to us. Just the time lost behind Russell, it was too much.

“So I would say that a couple of positions lost at corner one, and the time lost behind Russell, they are the two decisive factors. The pit stop probably another one second.

“But in fairness, even the one second, if we were in behind Verstappen at the start, I think we could have played our cards with good chances.”

Stella said that McLaren and Red Bull were well matched on overall performance.

“I think the race pace was very, very similar, very, very similar,” he said. “I think the fact that we were faster at the end is because we had fresher tyres. The fact that he was faster at the start is because we were behind Russell.

“It would almost look like the great balance of performance that we had in qualifying, parity of performance, almost transferred into the race, where normally you have some variations as a function of how you interact with the tyres.

“But actually today, I think it was very similar, which, once again, on a track that is so demanding on tyres, so demanding on aerodynamics, I think that’s really good news for the progress that we have made with the performance of the car.”

After the race a clearly frustrated Norris said he should have won, and blamed himself for the start.

“The fact that Lando is self-critical is a style, and sometimes we react very much on the style rather than on the content of things,” he said.

“I think actually, Lando’s start wasn’t very bad at all. It was decent start, like he is almost one car ahead of Max. 

“The fact is that Russell got the double slipstream of Lando and Max, and in corner one, I think Lando was just very wise, because it’s a second and your race is gone, and that’s not the way we want to race. We want to stay in the race.

“So I think from an opportunity point of view, as was said before, it’s more of a detail. Okay, you can do an even better start. You could have been one metre ahead, but it’s very, very marginal. And the fact that Lando might have been harsh on himself in terms of the responsibility for that, I think, is just a style aspect.

“Some of the drivers would have complained. ‘Oh, Barcelona, the straight is too long.’ Actually, I like that people look at their own opportunities before thinking that the world plays against you. I mean, that’s the way you actually work on the variables that you can control.

“We don’t overreact to the style of Lando being tough with himself. Certainly I’m sure this is something that he will keep fine tuning over the years. But from Lando’s point of view, I think he just drove very well the entire weekend.

“And if he is upset for a P2, finishing two seconds from Max, then this is really good news for everyone, including F1, because it means that we have races, and it means that with little details like defending your pole position, we finally can have some different winners than Max.”

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