MAX ON POLE, MERCEDES AMG DRIVERS ENDED IN BARRIERS - FORMULA 1

Breaking

FORMULA 1

Formula 1 Image Story

Friday, July 8, 2022

MAX ON POLE, MERCEDES AMG DRIVERS ENDED IN BARRIERS

Red Bull Racing’s Max Verstappen narrowly beat title rival Charles Leclerc to take pole position for Austrian Grand Prix Sprint, eclipsing the Ferrari driver by just under three hundredths of a second in a qualifying session twice interrupted by red flags as both Mercedes AMG cars crashed out.
At the start of Q1 Leclerc took an early top spot and Sergio Pérez in the second Red Bull slotted into second place. The times were coming down rapidly, however, and after Leclerc extended his advantage at the top, the Ferrari driver’s team-mate Carlos Sainz Jr. took P2 ahead of the Haas cars of Mick Schumacher and Kevin Magnussen to shuffle Pérez back on the timesheet. The Mexican was on another flyer, however, and he jumped to P1.
With a little over 10 minutes left in the session Verstappen took to the track for the first time but his opening flying lap was deleted for exceeding track limits in Turn 10. Lewis Hamilton then rose to P1.

Verstappen was soon on another flyer, though, and he briefly took top spot before being pushed to P3 by Leclerc who went quickest and Sainz Jr. who crossed the line a little under two hundredths of a second off his team-mate.

The top three remained in their garages and after the final runs they went through to Q2 in that order ahead of Alonso and Hamilton.

At the other end of the table, Daniel Ricciardo was eliminated in 16th place, followed by Lance Stroll, Zhou Guanyu, Nicholas Latifi and in last place Sebastian Vettel, who had his final lap time deleted for exceeding track limits in Turn 1.
It was Hamilton who led the way at the start of Q2, with the Mercedes driver setting a time three hundredths of a second ahead of Verstappen. The Briton then lowered the benchmark further.

Pérez, meanwhile, was in trouble. He locked up in Turn 3 on his first flying lap and later had a lap deleted for a track limits infringement in Turn 9 and with six minutes left he slipped into the drop zone in P11.

With three minutes left on the clock, Leclerc jumped to top spot and as the Ferrari driver crossed the line, Pérez exited the pit lane to start his crucial final run. Verstappen jumped to P2 behind Leclerc, while behind him Pérez vaulted to safety in P6 thanks to a final lap of 1:05.805.

However, further trouble was brewing for the Mexican and in the break between Q3 and the top-10 shootout the stewards noted a potential track limits infringement by the Red Bull driver on his final run.

The matter was set to be investigated after the session. Eliminated at the end of Q2 were Gasly in 11th place, followed by Alex Albon, Valtteri Bottas, the second AlphaTauri of Yuki Tsunoda and Lando Norris.
In the first run of Q3 it was Verstappen who powered to the top of the timesheet. Sitting in the Dutchman’s slipstream on that lap was Pérez, but the Mexican’s time was only good enough for fourth place behind the Ferraris of Leclerc and Sainz Jr..

With a little over five minutes remaining, the session was red-flagged when Lewis Hamilton lost control into Turn 7 and went off hard into the barriers on the outside of the corner.

After a 10-minute delay to recover Hamilton’s wrecked car, the session resumed.

First out on track were Alonso and Russell but the red flags were soon flying again as a bad afternoon for Mercedes AMG got worse. Russell pushed too hard into Turn 10 and lost the rear of his car. He slid backwards through the run-off and crushed into the barriers.
With just over two minutes left on the clock a queue of cars formed at the pit exit with the Bulls last to take to the circuit, Verstappen ahead of Pérez. Ahead of them, Leclerc jumped to provisional pole, with Sainz Jr. just five hundredths of a second behind.

But a few hundred metres behind, Verstappen was finding time and he crossed the line as the only man under 1m05s with a lap of 1:04.984 to take his third pole of the season and the third Red Bull Ring pole of his career to date.

Leclerc took P2 just 0.029s behind the Dutchman, with Sainz Jr. third ahead of Pérez who failed to improve on his final run. The unfortunate Russell held on to fifth place at the end of the session, with Esteban Ocon qualifying sixth.

Haas had cause to celebrate with Kevin Magnussen seventh ahead of team-mate Mick Schumacher while Alonso qualified ninth ahead of Hamilton.

UPDATE - Perez had his lap times deleted for lap 17 of Q2 and for all laps in Q3 for leaving the track without justifiable reason.

No comments:

Post a Comment