Bottas fastest as Ferrari slump at Spa

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Brendan Lines     29th Aug, 2020 09:00am

Birthday boy Valtteri Bottas topped FP1 at the Belgian Grand Prix ahead of teammate Lewis Hamilton by just +.069s, Red Bull’s Max Verstappen was hot on the heels of Mercedes just one thousand of a second off Hamilton.

The flying Finn was in full flight setting his fastest lap on the Soft tyre, a good start to his weekend after forgettable Silverstone Grand Prix weekends.

“It’s been a good birthday so far for me – I can definitely think of worse things to do on your birthday than driving this track. The first session was good, the second turned out to be a bit more tricky. It was nothing major, and I didn’t get the laps quite right, but I think we might have to revert some set-up changes back to FP1,” he said.

Mercedes’ Friday program focused on rear wing comparisons and understanding tyre performance on low and high fuel around the Spa-Francochamps circuit.

As Mercedes dialled in the balance if it’s car, Verstappen radioed that his Red Bull felt tight in the front-end on the Hard tyre, overcoming the RB16’s recent mid corner understeer problems.

Verstappen’s run on the Soft tyre was just over a tenth quicker than Racing Point’s Sergio Perez in P4 and three tenths quicker than Perez’s teammate Lance Stroll who was in P5

Both Racing Point drivers are optimistic there’s more pace to extract from the RP20.

Red Bull’s Alex Albon had a fast car from the get go finishing in P6 around half a second off Mercedes, the Spa layout suiting his RB16, with little sign of recent understeer problems.

Esteban Ocon was the fastest of the Renault’s in P7 two tenths ahead of teammate Daniel Ricciardo in P9, both Renault cars ran inside The top ten as FP1 progressed.

Carlos Sainz split the Renault’s in his McLaren for P8 as Lando Norris went P10 just five hundredths adrift of Sainz , just seven tenths of a second covered the top ten in FP1.

Despite damaging the floor of his AT01 on a kerb, Alpha Tauri’s mechanics had Pierre Gasly back out on track, Gasly and teammate Daniil Kyvat finished P11 and P12 respectively.

Kimi Raikkonen was the only Alfa Romeo out On track the Finn placed a respectable P13, a power unit issue kept Antonio Giovinazzi’s Alfa in the garage for FP1.

Fifty horespower down on engine power on a fast Spa layout, Ferrari were punching with one arm tied behind its back, both Charles Leclerc and Sebastian Vettel languished in P14 and P15 respectively, but over one and a half seconds off Mercedes pace.

Nicholas Latifi was the fastest of the Williams cars in P16, while George Russell finished P17,both cars opting for lower downforce settings for top end speed come qualifying.

Both Haas cars remained garaged for FP1 after encountering power unit issues on drivers Romain Grosjean and Kevin Magnussen’s out laps.

Full FP1 Results:

Pos No Driver Car Time Gap Laps
1 77 Valtteri Bottas Mercedes 1:44.493 18
2 44 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 1:44.562 +0.069s 17
3 33 Max Verstappen Red Bull Racing Honda 1:44.574 +0.081s 20
4 11 Sergio Perez Racing Point BWT Mercedes 1:44.629 +0.136s 22
5 18 Lance Stroll Racing Point BWT Mercedes 1:44.868 +0.375s 22
6 23 Alexander Albon Red Bull Racing Honda 1:45.049 +0.556s 22
7 31 Esteban Ocon Renault 1:45.099 +0.606s 20
8 55 Carlos Sainz McLaren Renault 1:45.222 +0.729s 24
9 3 Daniel Ricciardo Renault 1:45.225 +0.732s 21
10 4 Lando Norris McLaren Renault 1:45.274 +0.781s 28
11 26 Daniil Kvyat AlphaTauri Honda 1:45.447 +0.954s 25
12 10 Pierre Gasly AlphaTauri Honda 1:45.503 +1.010s 17
13 7 Kimi Räikkönen Alfa Romeo Racing Ferrari 1:45.704 +1.211s 19
14 16 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 1:45.759 +1.266s 18
15 5 Sebastian Vettel Ferrari 1:46.179 +1.686s 15
16 6 Nicholas Latifi Williams Mercedes 1:46.488 +1.995s 19
17 63 George Russell Williams Mercedes 1:46.570 +2.077s 21
18 20 Kevin Magnussen Haas Ferrari 1
19 8 Romain Grosjean Haas Ferrari 2
20 99 Antonio Giovinazzi Alfa Romeo Racing Ferrari 2

 

 

 

 

 

 

Hinkley: ‘This is a selfish mistake’

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Brendan Lines 21st Aug, 2020

Port Adelaide coach Ken Hinkley has slammed the actions of players Chris Ladhams and Dan Houston as a ‘selfish mistake’ in the wake of their breaches of AFL return to play protocols relating to COVID-19.

Speaking today at Alberton, Hinkley scolded the pair, as Ladhams and Houston were handed three and two match suspensions respectively on Thursday.

“It’s not just our issue it’s an AFL issue, it’s a disappointing outcome and we all understand the rules,” he said.

“I’m really clear this is not an easy mistake to make when you know all the information, this is a selfish mistake.”

Ladhams invited Houston and friends to his home following Port Adelaide’s game against the Western Bulldogs on Monday August 3rd, following Port Adelaide’s game against the Western Bulldogs on Monday August 3rd.

Hinkley reinforced all players are ‘one hundred percent educated’ of their obligations under the AFL protocols.

The consequences of Ladhams and Houston is cause for concern says Hinkley.

“The outcome hurts the industry and hurts us a football club,” he said.

With the AFL imposing a $50,000 ($25,000 suspended) fine to the club for the breach, Hinkley backed away from commenting how the club intends to take the financial hit to the club’s already shrinking bottom line in the face of COVID-19 affected finances.

Hinkley dismissed any suggestion of ill effects the furore will have on the team.

“The team will be ok, the team is fine, we’re a good team and ready to go,” he said.

Opting for the tall ruck duo of Scott Lycett and Ladhams in recent weeks, Hinkley has brought in utility Justin Westhoff to replace Ladhams

Three additional changes sees the inclusion Riley Bonner, Jarrod Lienert and Brad Ebert.

Further heat on Ladhams and Bonner came on Thursday as Port Adelaide General Manager of Football Chris Davies said the pair will have to earn back the club’s respect.

Port Adelaide has taken our responsibilities toward the global pandemic seriously since the outset, but ultimately everyone has a responsibility,” Davies said.

“Pete and Dan knew the rules and will now have to work hard to earn back the respect of their teammates and coaching staff.

“The AFL considered Pete’s breach to be worth extra on the basis that he was the instigator of the gathering.

“As a club, code and as a community we have to remain vigilant and disciplined against the spread of COVID-19. There is absolutely no room for complacency.”

Port Adelaide play Hawthorn at Adelaide Oval Saturday 4:05pm ACST.

Happy ‘daze’ as Hamilton dominates Spanish GP

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Brendan Lines 17th Aug, 2020 09:30am

Lewis Hamilton took a flawless victory leading the Spanish Grand Prix from start to finish from pole, scoring his fourth win of the 2020 season, ahead of Red Bull’s Max Verstappen and Mercedes teammate Valterri Bottas.

Hamilton was in a world and class of his own, the Brit dominated off the line racing unchallenged into Turn 1, lapping the field up to P4 finishing +24.0s ahead of Verstappen.

This feels absolutely incredible. I was just in a daze out there, I didn’t even know it was the last lap in the end, that’s how in the zone I was,” Hamilton said.

“I can’t remember the last time I felt like that. It was really special and a real surprise after our recent tyre problems,

“We brought all of our learnings from the previous weekend into this one and that enabled us to do well today,

“A fantastic effort from everyone in the team, I’m so grateful for all their hard work and for continuing to push, so a huge thank you to everyone at the factories,

“I got the perfect start and then it was all about tyre management. It was so hot out there and very demanding, but I was just focused on protecting the tyres and bringing the car home. What an incredible result.

Verstappen, starting from P3 split the Mercedes cars, placing his Red Bull in the slipstream of the Mercedes, Verstappen passed and blocked Bottas, dropping the Fin back to P4 and into the clutches of the Racing Point cars.

Racing Point’s Lance Stroll seized P3 in the Turn 1 jostling, Bottas eventually recovered to P3. Stroll dropped to P5 as the race unfolded, but was promoted back into P4 after the race, when teammate Sergio Perez was handed a five-second time penalty for disobeying blue flags.

Perez was demoted to P5 still finishing ahead of McLaren’s Carlos Sainz in P6, who muscled his way through the tight mid-field order on the Soft tyre in the early phases of the race.

Sainz passed the Ferrari of Sebastian Vettel in P7 in the closing stages, Vettel held on to P7 seemingly running his own one-stop strategy amid much confusion over Ferrari’s team radio from the pitwall.

Vettel finished a second ahead of Red Bull’s Alex Albon who finished P8, Albon’s day was marred when his team opted to put him out on the Hard tyre in traffic — Albon seemed to play ‘Guinea Pig’ for Verstappen’s later move to the Medium tyre.

Alpha Tauri’s Pierre Gasly had a ‘day out’ passing Charles Leclerc’s Ferrari and McLaren’s Lando Norris on the opening lap, a middle stint stuck in mid-field traffic held up the Frenchman’s charge settling for P9 ahead of Norris who rounded out the top ten.

Dan Ricciardo’s ‘delicious’ pace in free practice was soured by disappointing race pace from Renault, the Aussie made up places starting from P13, but finished outside the points in P11, teammate Esteban Ocon finished P13.

Daniil Kyvat held station for Alpha Tauri starting and finishing P12, but the Russian fought hard passing Ricciardo on lap 2 on the outside of Turn 4, and eked out his first stint on the Soft tyre to lap 33 hoping to over-cut the midfield.

Charles Leclerc was the only DNF for the race, his Ferrari engine shutdown at the chicane locking up the rear tyres sending his SF1000 into a spin, he managed to restart the car but later pitted to retire the car.

With Leclerc out, Haas’ Romain Grosjean was classified last in P19, another late defensive move, this time on Alfa Romeo’s Kimi Räikkönen, might leave Grosjean some explaining to do in the next Grand Prix Drivers’ Association (GPDA) meeting for the Haas driver/GPDA chairperson.

Grosjean added an incident with Alfa’s Antonio Giovinazzi at Turn 1, together with a half-spin at Turn 8 on the penultimate lap to really make it a forgettable Spanish Grand Prix for himself.

Räikkönen finished P14, ahead of Haas’ Kevin Magnussen, the sister Alfa of Antonio Giovinazzi placed P16, with the two Williams of George Russell and Nicholas Latifi in P17 and P18.

This time around Mercedes handled its tyres hot conditions to great effect as Hamilton thwarted any chance Verstappen might repeat his superiority from Silverstone, the win now places Hamilton 37 points clear of Verstappen in the Drivers Championship standings.

Formula 1 now moves to Spa- Francochamps, Belgium for the next round in two weeks time.

Hamilton scores 92nd pole from Bottas, Red Bull close the gap in P3

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Brendan Lines 16th Aug, 2020 07:30am

Lewis Hamilton scored his 92nd pole at the Spanish Grand Prix, his fourth of the 2020 season, beating teammate Valtteri Bottas by just 0.059s, as Racing Point’s Sergio Perez was the feel good story in P4 for his F1 return behind Max Verstappen in P3.

Hamilton’s fifth pole at Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya sees him move ahead of Ayrton Senna (4 poles) at the circuit.

This is a great result for the team and I’m grateful for everyone continuing to push. It was very hot and quite gusty out there which made for a tricky session,” Hamilton said.

“We changed a few things overnight, made a good step forward and I was pretty happy with my first laps in each Qualifying session,

“The first Q3 lap was really solid but there was still a bit of room for improvement. But my second lap wasn’t particularly great and I just couldn’t go quicker. In the end, it was very close with Valtteri out there, he’s keeping me on my toes and every millisecond counts.”

Tomorrow is going to be challenging, as the race scenario is completely different. Over a single lap, we seem to have the edge, but Red Bull’s race pace looks strong and the run down to Turn 1 is very long, so I’m expecting a tough battle.

The Red Bull of Max Verstappen has been hot on the heels of the Mercs all weekend, holding down P3 in every session.

Qualifying was the same for the Dutchman, but now Verstappen has closed the gap to Mercedes down to just six tenths of a second.

Sergio Perez heads the charge at Racing Point in P4 +0.20 ahead of teammate Lance Stroll in P5.

Perez, who was cleared for a return to F1 after testing negative to COVID-19, kept his cool in the heat of Q3.

We had to be very careful preparing the tyres on the out lap, not pushing too hard because the track was so hot,” Perez said.

“It was also a physical challenge having missed the last two weekends,

“I’m very pleased that – once again – we’ve been able to show the strengths of the car in different conditions and on a different circuit.”

Red Bull’s Alex Albon took P6 just one-hundreth of a second ahead of Carlos Sainz’s McLaren in P7, on his home track, Sainz beat teamate Lando Norris who finished P8.

Norris pipped the Ferrari of Charles Leclerc by three-thousands of a second, the Monegasque would have to settle for P9.

Pierre Gasly continued his run of Q3 appearances to round out the top ten, knocking out Ferrari’s Sebastian Vettel who misses Q3 again this week.

The Spanish Grand Prix starts 10:40 ACST tonight.

Hamilton back on top, Ricciardo ‘delicious’ P4 in FP2

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Brendan Lines 15th Aug, 2020 10:00am

Lewis Hamilton reversed the order at Mercedes finishing FP2 for the Spanish Grand Prix in P1, two tenths of a second ahead of Valtteri Bottas in P2, who was fastest in the morning session.

As the temprature climbed for the afternoon session, there was much interest around Mercedes’ performance on the Pirelli tyres after its troubles at the second race at Silverstone, despite Hamilton going fastest with a lap of 1:16.883s.

It’s definitely been quite tough out there today. I don’t think I’ve ever been to Spain when it’s been this hot,” Hamilton said after FP1.

“The weather is beautiful, but it’s tricky for the car and very tough on the tyres as well. It’s also been quite windy and that can make it difficult out there, but it’s a good challenge. It’s been a positive day, particularly the second session which went better for me,

“We didn’t see any blistering, the tyres felt OK and the long runs didn’t look too bad, but we also didn’t see any blistering last Friday, so we’ll have to remain careful,

“We’ll debrief this evening and see where we stand and what we can do to improve. The Red Bulls look very close to us on the long runs, so we can expect another close race here.

It wasn’t all smooth sailing for Bottas who despite taking P2, survived a wobble at Turn 15 and a venture onto a gravel trap late in the session.

Max Verstappen held P3 across both Friday’s sessions, closing the gap to the Mercedes to just six tenths of a second in FP2, Red Bull teammate Alex Albon had quiet session managing just P13.

Daniel Ricciardo rocketed within a second of Mercedes in P4, while teammate Esteban Ocon struggled for rear-end stability in P9.

The Aussie, Ricciardo actioned his words that his R.S.20s pace in free practice was ‘delicious.’

It was really similar [to Silverstone] actually,” said Ricciardo.

“We had a quiet Silverstone FP1, then a delicious FP2, similar here today. Max just got me for [third], I wanted that again so he’s cut me deep, but it was a good day. We found a bit in P2. I wasn’t particularly that happy with P1, so we made some changes. I thought at the time they were a little bit bold but it worked out so I think we’ll stay as we are for now.”

Romain Grosjean pulled out another surprise result for Haas, a lap of 1:18.133 was a tenth quicker than his FP1 time, teammate Kevin Magnussen finished out if the top ten in P12.

Charles Leclerc placed his Ferrari in P6, heading the tight mid-field tussle, as point-six of a second covered P6 back to P16. Sebastian Vettel had a bumpy ride through the final chicane dropping to P12.

Carlos Sainz improved taking P7 and remains the quicker McLaren on his home track, the Spaniard finished well ahead of teammate Lando Norris in P14.

Sergio Perez kept his claim as the fastest of the Racing Point cars taking P8 ahead of Lance Stroll in P11, both cars hovered just under +1.5s slower than the Mercedes.

Pierre Gasly rounded out the top ten for Alpha Tauri, the Frenchman building up for a third successive run at Q3, Daniil Kyvat finished the session in P15.

The Alfa’s of Kimi Räikkönen and Antonio Giovinazzi struggled in the heat finishing P17 and P18 respectively.

George Russell was back in his Williams, but complained both axels was like ‘driving on ice’ as he finished P20 behind Nicholas Latifi in P19 some seven tenths ahead.

FP3 and Qualifying from 7:30pm ACST tonight.

Bottas P1, Vettel back on the pace in FP1

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Brendan Lines 15th Aug, 2020 08:25am

Valtteri Bottas set the pace in FP1 for the Sapnish Grand Prix, with Lewis just +0.039s behind in P2 for the morning session at Circuit de Catalunya.

Track temperatures were upward of 40°C in the searing Spanish heat, over double that when the teams visited Catalunya for winter testing six months ago.

Tyre management was high on Bottas’ FP1 program.

It’s a nice feeling to be back on track here and feeling the improvements of the car since we were last here, back in pre-season testing. The car felt good out there, but obviously there’s some fine-tuning to do.” Bottas said after FP1.

We did long runs on all of the tyre compounds today and I didn’t experience any blistering, so there will be lots of learnings for us to look into in order to really maximise tyre performance here,

“We’re looking strong but the main thing will be Sunday with these temperatures and whether we can keep these tyres in a good condition.”

Red Bull’s Max Verstappen took P3 with a lap of 1:17.724s nearly a second off from Bottas’ pace, teammate Alex Albon spent the morning tuning mid-corner oversteer out of his car, finishing P8 +1.821s adrift of the leaders.

Ferrari were back on the pace with Charles Leclerc in P4, a change of chassis seemed to make a world of difference for Sebastian Vettel, the German snared P5 with a lap of 1:17.981, just +0.011s off Leclerc’s time.

Haas signalled it might be able to turnaround its early season slump with top ten finishes for drivers Romain Grosjean and Kevin Magnussen finishing P6 and P9 respectively.

Sergio Perez slotted into P7 in his first session back in anger, sitting out the Silverstone rounds after a positive COVID-19 test, the Mexican lead the charge for Racing Point finishing ahead of teammate Lance Stroll in P10.

Carlos Sainz got accustomed to a new chassis tub in his McLaren taking P11 ahead of teammate Lando Norris in P13.

It was a low key day for Renault with Esteban Ocon in P12, Daniel Ricciardo tweaked his front-end aero settings on the Hard tyre to finish P18.

Alpha Tauri focused on long runs, Pierre Gasly finished P14 with Daniil Kyvat in P18.

The Alfa Romeo’s of Antonio Giovinazzi and Kimi Räikkönen finished P16 and P17 respectively, notably the only team to run the Soft tyre exclusively.

Williams reserve driver Roy Nissany made his free practice debut, after a nervous spin he managed P20 in George Russell’s car, just behind teammate Nicholas Latifi in P19.

Bottas takes pole, ‘Hulk’ steals the show in P3

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Brendan Lines 9th August, 2020 08:00am

Mercedes’ Valtteri Bottas scored the 13th pole position of his career, his second of the 2020 season and his second at Silverstone on Saturday pipping teammate Lewis Hamilton in a closely-fought battle for pole by just +0.063s, but Racing Point’s super-sub Nico Hülkenberg stole the show qualifying P3 for his second race back in F1.

It’s been a crazy week and after the highs and lows of my comeback last week, P3 on the grid for tomorrow is a nice highlight! Last week definitely helped me feel more prepared for this weekend,but qualifying was still a real challenge today. In Q2, I made life hard for myself a little bit and I thought I might have damaged the car.” Hülkenberg said after qualifying.

“I haven’t been through the motions of a race start and going wheel-to-wheel for a while now, and I’m still learning the car. But I’ll give everything I’ve got to make sure we get a strong result.

‘Hulk’ was the only driver to get within a second of the Mercs front row lockout headed by Bottas.

I knew I’d have an opportunity to improve on the second run in Q3 and I pulled the sectors together, I got absolutely everything out of myself and the car,” Bottas said.

“A one-stopper will be difficult with the compounds we have this weekend – but I know the team will be looking at all the options for tomorrow. I think the race pace is there and I hope I can get another good start like last weekend.”

Lewis didn’t quite build on his first lap of Q3, the Brit not getting the final sectors lit up they way he expected on the Medium tyre.
“Valtteri did a fantastic job today, he put in a very strong lap when it mattered in Q3 to take pole. My first lap in Q3 was good, but the second one wasn’t really all that great,” Hamilton said.

“I just didn’t pull it together, made a couple of mistakes right at the end and ultimately you pay for that. The change in wind direction made it a bit trickier out there today, but that was the same for everyone so no excuses.”

Rounding out the second row was Red Bull’s Max Verstappen a tenth adrift from Hulk in P4.

Daniel Ricciardo who has showed consistent pace all weekend on the Medium tyre, slotted into P5, equalling Renault’s best qualifying for the season.

Lance Stroll couldn’t match Hulk in the sister Racing Point qualifying P6, behind Stroll, Pierre Gasly kept up his great run of Q3 appearances for Alpha Tauri taking P7.

Charles Leclerc was the best of the Ferrari’s in P8, while Sebastin Vettel could not get out of Q2 and will start from P12.

Lando Norris makes up the top ten for McLaren, scraping into Q3 but couldn’t better his position for the race.

The 70th Anniversary GP at Silverstone begins 10.40pm ACST.

Mercedes fastest, Ricciardo romps to P3 in FP2

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Brendan Lines 8th August, 2020 10:00am

Valtteri Bottas set the pace in the morning’s FP1 session, with Lewis +0.138s back in P2, the positions were reversed in the afternoon for FP2, as Lewis topped the timesheets with Valtteri +0.176s shy in second.

Teams favoured running their usual practice programs on the Soft compounds, opting to keep the Medium and Hard tyre allocations for qualifying — teams had learnt their lessons from the previous week’s blow-outs in the final laps, not to push the Softs in the hot Silverstone conditions.

We focused a lot on the tyres today and there doesn’t seem to be a lot between the Medium and the Soft when it comes to single lap pace. The Soft is struggling with the high-speed corners, especially in these hot temperatures and if you’re running on higher fuel,” Bottas said yesterday.

Daniel Ricciardo proved Renault’s claim on third in the Championship may not be an idle threat, as the Aussie took P3 in FP2 running just eight tenths off Hamilton’s time.

In the morning we did quite a bit of data gathering so we knew it wasn’t going to be totally representative. For the afternoon, we had a bit of a warm-up, made a change to the car, which worked,” Ricciardo said.

Our long runs also looked decent, so that’s a good base for Sunday.

Ricciardo’s teammate Esteban Ocon finished P10 across both sessions with respective laps of 1:27.701 and 1:26.928.

Red Bull’s Max Verstappen was P3 and P4 across the sessions, Verstappen says he doesn’t expect the change in tyres to really set the order any differently.”

Alex Albon’s Red Bull went fast enough for P6 in FP1 and P11 in FP2 with respective laps of 1:27.280s and 1:26.960s.

Nico Hülkenberg came back to fill Sergio Perez’s seat at Racing Point this weekend and was on the pace from the out set of FP1 scoring P4 seven tenths off Mercedes, with Lance Stroll in P8 (1:27.539s).

The Racing Point cars reversed their order in FP2, as Stroll took P5 ( 1:26.501s) and Hülkenberg P6 (1:26.746s).

It was another tough day for Ferrari’s Sebastian Vettel who’s SF1000 came to a halt with drive issues effectively red-flagging FP2. Vettel would have to be satisfied with P7 for FP1 and P14 for FP2.

Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc had a more positive day in P5 for FP1 and P7 in FP2.

FP2 proved to be a more competitive showing for McLaren, opting to spend most of FP1 correlating data on its cars.

Lando Norris was the fastest if the McLaren’s in FP2 holding down P8 whole Carlos Sainz was P9 just +.051s adrift from Norris.

Out side the top ten, Alpha Tauri’s Pierre began his bid for a Q3 appearance again this week, the Frenchman posted P13, but Daniil Kyvat slotted ahead of Gasly in P11.

Williams is hoping to consolidate on its performance from last week, George Russell showsed some consistency placing P15 and P16 across the sessions, while Nicholas Latifi placed P16 and P19.

Alfa Romeo’s Antonio Giovinazzi made way for Robert Kubica in FP1, Kimi Räikkönen was the best of the Alfa’s in P17 and P18 in the Friday sessions.

FP3 and Qualifying for the 70th Anniversary GP at Silverstone begins from 07:30pm local time tonight.

Safety First: Australia’s role in 70 years of F1

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Brendan Lines August 6, 2020

A Grand Prix is one of world sport’s greatest live spectacles showcasing high-octane speed and fanfare, but once upon a time competing in a Grand Prix was equally as dangerous as being there. Across Formula 1’s 70 years, Australian officials and marshals have come to be world leaders in training and safe operation of Grands Prix the world over.

In a second part to our series ‘As Aussies As They Come: 70 Years of Australians in F1’ Local Goals takes a look at our unsung heroes standing track-side.

The dangers of competing in Formula 1 is a confronting thought drivers and fans have sometimes naively put to the back of their minds says former F1 driver (from 1970 to 1974) and now Motorsport Australia Director Tim Schenken.

“It’s strange because racing in those days, we used to think ‘thank goodness we’re racing today and not in the fifties,” Schenken says.

Schenken recalls the time he lost close friend Ronnie Petersen, as a result of his injuries from a first-lap incident at the 1978 Italian Grand Prix.

“Even today it’s a bit of a lump in my throat, it’s sad so many lives were lost, but that’s the nature of the sport at the time and of course today that wouldn’t be accepted to have those sorts of accidents.” — Tim Schenken

Today, those accidents would not be accepted, as planning and implementing measures that mitigate and prevent their occurrence has not only lead to safer races but overall better Formula 1 events.

1985: A line in the sand

The Australian Grand Prix (AGP) remains the ‘gold standard’ as one of the best organised Grands Prix in Formula 1.

When the inaugural world championship race was green-lit to go ahead in Adelaide in 1985, many people outside of the city never took race organisers seriously.

Aus GP10001

1985 proved to be a ‘line in the sand’ for Motorsport Australia organisers, known then as CAMS (Confederation of Australian Motor Sport).

“At that time CAMS wasn’t very highly thought of and a lot of people were concerned or critical that CAMS should be the organisers,” Schenken says.

“A number of people were asking ‘how can this happen? they may be able to run club events but not a Grand Prix!’

“That just showed actually just how good we are and I think from that time onwards Australian motorsport not only drivers, but also officials and organisers have been seen as world class.”

Formula 1’s ventures to US street circuits in Dallas and Detroit the previous year were less than ideal.

Hot mid-summer conditions, coupled with crumbling tracks and the infamous Caesar’s Palace carpark circuit in Las Vegas some years earlier — it’s understandable no one was excited about the addition of another street circuit to the Formula 1 calendar.

Yet the resounding success of the 1985 AGP, the 50th race in AGP history, came from all corners of Formula 1, former F1 commercial supremo Bernie Ecclestone lauded Adelaide’s achievements.

“What Adelaide has done is very bad for Grand Prix racing! They have set a standard some of the established circuits in Europe cannot reach.” — Bernie Ecclestone

Setting the standard

“Not only have we got the best quality marshals in the world but we’ve got the most dedicated army of officials in the world as well, they’re truly outstanding.” — Michael Smith, Motorsport Australia

The standard set by AGP race organisers that year set the bar for all AGP’s that followed, but just what is it about Australian officials and marshals that’s innate to their success?

Director of Motor Sport and Commercial Operations Michael Smith says other Grands Prix around the world have benefited from the assistance and expertise of our race officials and marshals, born out of the AGP success.

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Marshals at the AGP – Image myroadtrip.net

“I just think it’s probably part of the Australian mentality, we’ve got a really ‘can do’ attitude and that comes through with our motorsport,” Smith says.

“I think we’ve developed a reputation as far back as the Adelaide Grand Prix in the eighties of delivering terrific motorsport events or events generally, that has enabled us to do some training projects with some other Grands Prix around the world.”

“We’ve been involved with the Singapore Grand Prix, Malaysia, Russia, Korea, Abu Dhabi, Bahrain and now the Vietnam Grand Prix.”

What Australians have become renowned for is setting out the framework of safety and engineering around start-up events, especially those run on temporary street circuits like the Adelaide Parkland and Albert Park circuits.

This comprehensive assistance relies solely on an army of volunteer track officials that have helped make the AGP operate year after year.

The AGP enlists the help of just over 950 marshals, despite the eventual cancellation of the 2020 AGP, ironically Smith says the 2020 event is a testament to the dedication of Australian marshals.

“We had all the uncertainty around wether or not the Grand Prix would go ahead on Thursday evening, and as I left the circuit in the very early hours of Friday morning, the one worry I had was wether or not with all the media reporting that was going on, was wether our marshals would turn up,” Smith says

“To turn up at the morning briefing at about eight o’clock the next morning and to see a full contingent of nine hundred and fifty marshals, I think says everything you need to say about the quality and dedication of our marshals, it really was just an outstanding effort and I’m pretty proud to be honest.”

The Volunteers

One of those volunteers at the 2020 AGP, was fire marshal Graham Dickson, Graham was assigned to the McLaren team garage, who were forced to withdraw when a positive COVID-19 case was diagnosed within the team.

Graham Dickson

Fire marshal Graham Dickson in the Ferrari garage at the 2019 AGP – Image supplied

Graham has been an AGP volunteer for 12 years, bringing to the role over 40 years experience as a volunteer fire fighter, being a motorsport fan is just one of the reasons Graham keeps coming back year after year.

“I have the best seat in the house and because of the camaraderie from making lifelong friendships, you also get placed on a different part of the track each year” Graham Dixon, Fire marshal

Graham’s expertise as a fire marshal plays a hands-on part in the training of other marshals around the world.

“I have officiated at the Singapore Grand Prix for eight years, mentoring and training a young local person there as a fire marshal placed in pit lane with the overseas teams,” Graham says.

It’s these unsung heroes like Graham that put their hand up to play a role in making events safer, despite their proximity to the apparent dangers of motorsport.

Saving the life of a Champion

Over the years of the AGP we as fans remember incidents like Martin Brundle’s crash at Albert Park in 1996, Fernando Alonso’s upside down McLaren in 2016 — the drivers are fortunate to walk away, the marshals make the track safe again and the most delay we have is a safety car, the show goes on.

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Mika Hakkinen talks about his Adealide crash to Sky Sports.

But if we think back to Mika Hakkinen’s crash at Adelaide 1995, when a deflated tyre sent Hakkinen off the track at Brewery Bend, one the circuit’s fastest corners — Fans then witnessed an unabridged instance where all the planning and deployment of track safety and medical personnel came together to save the life of a future World Champion.

Under the then direction of Dr. Sid Watkins, an emergency tracheotomy was performed on track and Hakkinen was rushed to the Royal Adelaide Hospital for life saving treatment.

Recently in his column for Unibet.com, Hakkinen recounted his devastating accident owing his life to the on-track medical teams.

“That caused some serious injuries, putting me in hospital, and I have the medical teams at the circuit and the Royal Adelaide Hospital to thank for saving my life,” Hakkinen says.

Three-time Formula 1 World Champion and motorsport safety advocate Sir Jackie Stewart stressed how vital the on-track response was in Adelaide to Hakkinen’s survival.

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Medical crews at the Brewery Bend incident. Image: Eurosport

“It must be said that the tremendously fast response to his accident and to the medical crew going out, particularly all the people under Professor Watkins literally saved his (Hakkinen’s) life,” Stewart says.

“Without that action, I fear that we would have been saying different things.”

It’s interesting to note that after Hakkinen’s recovery, his donation to the Royal Adelaide Hospital built a much needed heli-pad on the site.

Taking over the reins

Australian officials role in operating Grands Prix peaked in 2019 when Aussie Michael Masi took over as Formula 1 Race Director and safety delegate in the wake of his predecessor passing, the legendary Charlie Whiting.

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Michael Masi (AUS) FIA Race Director. at the Singapore Grand Prix – Image: http://www.xpbimages.com

Masi recounts the tragic weekend in an interview with Tom Clarkson, where he was one of the few who knew about Whiting’s passing before it was public.

“It was a tough emotional weekend, particularly knowing what had happened very soon after getting to the circuit but not being able to literally tell a soul,” Masi says.

“But it was something on the other hand I couldn’t be more proud of, the way the entire FIA staff, the F1 community as a whole, with the support of the teams, I was very fortunate that we were in Australia and it was a trackside officiating team that I knew extremely well.”

“Obviously with Tim Schenken as Clerk of the Course, the entire CAMS team and the Australian Grand Prix Corporation whom I’ve had a long relationship, without everyone, that weekend wouldn’t have happened.”

At the time it was the necessary step, but in hindsight it was the natural progression for Masi to take the job, forged by his time in Supercars, F2 and F3 — Masi has just the right pedigree to be the most senior official of the FIA at a Grand Prix says Michael Smith.

I think Michael in the role he does is absolutely a reflection of the environment he’s come from,” Smith says.

“It’s an absolute endorsement of what we do here in Australia and the quality of our people.”

In an F1 season like no other in 2020, Masi has certainly been dealt some challenges trying to put safety first in the face of the COVID-19 pandemic, but we have a season and Masi keeps delivering races that are both safe on track and from a virus.

Featured Image: F1.com

Hamilton survives last lap blowout to win seventh British GP

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Brendan Lines 3rd Aug, 2020

Lewis Hamilton had lady luck on his side taking his seventh British Grand Prix, limping his car home on the final lap on three wheels, ahead of a barnstorming final fastest lap dash from Red Bull’s Max Verstappen in P2.

All eyes were on the midfield battle for 90 per cent of the race as the Mercedes of Hamilton and teammate Valtteri Bottas ran line astern from its front row lockout start positions.

But on lap 50 of 52, it all went wrong as Bottas’ front left tyre suffered a puncture at Turn 3 after showing nervous signs of wear some 10 laps earlier.

Bottas plummetted down the field to finish P11 as he had to complete nearly a full lap on the deflated tyre, his near 30 second lead over Verstappen frittered away as Mercedes were forced to pit Bottas.

With Hamilton looking as though he may just keep his tyres alive with an unasailable gap, Red Bull pitted Verstappen to have a run at the extra championship point on offer for fastest lap.

If only Red Bull had rolled the dice to stay out.

On the final lap Hamilton’s left front also gave way to the brutal loads of Silverstone’s high-speed high-downforce layout.

Hamilton miraculously kept up enough pace and integrity in the tyre after a lockup at the final chicane at Vale to take the grandstand win ironically with no adoring fans to celebrate.

I have never experienced anything like that before. That last lap was one of the most challenging laps I have ever had,” Hamilton said after the race,

“It was a heart-in-your-mouth feeling and then I was just trying to keep the speed up without damaging the car,

“Bono (Hamilton’s engineer) was giving me the gaps; I think it was 30 seconds at one stage, but it was coming down quite quickly and I was thinking ‘How far is it to the end of the lap?’

McLaren were set to take P5 and P6, until Carlos Sainz suffered the same fate as Mercedes on the final lap.

As the field frantically reshuffled on the final lap, Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc was promoted to third, his second podium in 2020.

While Renault’s Daniel Ricciardo seized the opportunity to pass McLaren’s Lando Norris to take a well deserved P4.

The race really came alive and that was really good. We had some pace at the end and I was able to get Lando and then Carlos had a problem. I saw Charles [Leclerc] getting closer and maybe with a couple more laps we could have had a podium! We have another chance next week. We were assisted by some chaos, but we were definitely a top six car today and that’s pleasing,” Ricciardo said.

Ricciardo’s teammate Esteban Ocon took sixth from Racing Point’s Lance Stroll after a race long scrap, it was a low hanging fruit result for Racing Point’s Stroll in P9 while Nico Hülkenberg’s car failed to make the grid on his comeback race.

Pierre Gasly finished in P7 after a strong race that saw him take on battles with Stroll, Ferrari’s Sebastian Vettel (P10), and Alfa’s Antonio Giovinazzi (P14).

Alex Albon salvaged points from an otherwise challenging day in P8, after a five-second time penalty from an incident with Haas’ Kevin Magnussen dropped Albon back to last.

Sebastian Vettel held on to P10 from Bottas coming home on new soft tyres.

Hamilton now extends his 2020 championship lead over Bottas out to 30 points.

Formula 1 returns to Silverstone next week for the 70th anniversary Grand Prix.