MAX UNSTOPPABLE IN FRONT OF HOME FANS - FORMULA 1

Breaking

FORMULA 1

Formula 1 Image Story

Saturday, August 26, 2023

MAX UNSTOPPABLE IN FRONT OF HOME FANS

Max Verstappen took pole position for his home race at Zandvoort half a second clear of Lando Norris in a wet/dry qualifying for the Dutch Grand Prix that was twice interrupted by red flags.

After separate crashes for Logan Sargeant and Charles Leclerc brought the final top 10 shootout to a halt, Verstappen held his nerve in the tight final handful of minutes to post an unbeatable lap, 0.537s clear of Norris, with George Russell in third ahead of Alex Albon in a much improved Williams.
At the start of the Q1 session Norris took top spot in the opening stages, almost four tenths of a second ahead of Verstappen. His team-mate Oscar Piastri then took P1 and with a little under seven minutes remaining Sergio Pérez, in the second Red Bull, jumped to P2.

The track was improving all the time, however, and Verstappen was soon back in P1, posting a lap almost two tenths clear of Piastri who had improved and third-place Norris who was almost two tenths further back.
With three minutes left, Alex Albon stole P1 and light rain beginning to fall in the pit lane. There were few improvements during the final laps of Q1, though Charles Leclerc needed a last-ditch attempt to escape the drop zoner and the Ferrari driver’s nervy, sliding final flyer boosted him to P14.

Out at the end of the Q1 session were Zhou Guanyu, Esteban Ocon, Kevin Magnussen, the second Alfa Romeo of Valtteri Bottas and rookie Liam Lawson, taking part in his first Qualifying session for AlphaTauri in place of the injured Daniel Ricciardo.
At the start of Q2 Verstappen set that pace, while Piastri took P2, ahead of Aston Martin’s Lance Stroll and Fernando Alonso.

With a little over seven minutes remaining, Verstappen improved to take P1 ahead of Lando Norris, with Lewis Hamilton in P3.

With the sun now shining and with conditions steadily improving, Verstappen took six tenths of a second out of his own P1 time to lower the benchmark. Pérez, on a new set of intermediates, then jumped from P11 to P2.

But once again the Red Bull drivers were shuffled back by Albon who took P1 with a lap of 1:19.399.
With just over a minute left Piastri moved the top of the timesheet. The Australian was the first to take the flag, however, and with a host of improvements being made elsewhere he couldn’t hold onto P1.

Verstappen duly took top spot at the end of the session. Piastri held on to P2 ahead of Albon, with Alonso fourth ahead of Leclerc, with George Russell sixth for Mercedes ahead of Norris, while Pérez went through in P8 ahead of Carlos Sainz Jr. and the second Williams of Logan Sargeant.

Out went Stroll, in P11, ahead of Gasly, Hamilton, Yuki Tsunoda and Nico Hülkenberg.
At the start of the top 10 shootout it was Albon, on slick tyres, who set the pace, with the Williams driver posting a lap, a second clear of team-mate Sargeant, Sainz Jr. and Russell.

There was no time for any other flying laps, however, as the red flags were flown when Sargeant lost control of his Williams and went off hard into the barriers at Turn 2.

After a 20-minute delay due to barrier repairs, running resumed, with eight minutes left in the session and with the remaining drivers on slick tyres.
Russell was the first to set a flyer and the P1 time immediately dropped. Norris quickly rose to the top of the order, ahead of Piastri, while Verstappen slotted into third place.

However, with four minutes remaining the red flags came out again when Leclerc, on his second flyer, went off at Turn 9, causing extensive damage to the left side of his Ferrari.

When the green lights were shown again, Verstappen punched in what proved to be an unbeatable benchmark to take his eight pole position of 2023.

Norris got closest to the Dutchman, though the McLaren driver took the front row with a full half second adrift of the champion, while Russell will line up third alongside Albon.

Alonso and Sainz Jr. are set to start on row three, and Pérez will start the Dutch Grand Prix from P7 on the grid ahead of Piastri and the unfortunate Leclerc and Sargeant.

No comments:

Post a Comment