Verstappen beats Hamilton for China Sprint win

Max Verstappen won the first F1 sprint of the year after passing Lewis Hamilton for the lead with 10 laps to go. Hamilton snatched the lead from polesitter Land Norris at the start, getting the better launch to run side by side into the first turn. …

Max Verstappen won the first F1 sprint of the year after passing Lewis Hamilton for the lead with 10 laps to go.

Hamilton snatched the lead from polesitter Land Norris at the start, getting the better launch to run side by side into the first turn.

The Mercedes driver had the inside line through the long, tightening right-hand bend. Norris attempted gamely to hold position, but grip from the slippery track abandoned him on the outside line. He understeered off the road and down to seventh, well out of victory contention.

Hamilton led Fernando Alonso from a surprisingly subdued Verstappen in third in the opening laps, with the Dutchman even briefly coming under attack from Carlos Sainz.

The reigning champion complained over radio that his battery was flat. Race engineer Gianpiero Lambiase instructed him to make some engine mode changes, after which his pace improved markedly.

On lap 7 he made an easy DRS pass on Alonso for second place down the long back straight, and by the following tour he was applying pressure to Hamilton, who locked up into the final-sector hairpin attempting to manage the gap.

The RB20 was all over the gearbox of the Mercedes on lap 9, and DRS on the back straight was more than enough to get him into the lead.

From top spot he gapped the field with embarrassing ease, putting two seconds in just one lap on his way to a dominant 13s victory in a 19-lap sprint.

“The first few laps were quite hectic,” Verstappen said. “They were pushing quite hard up front, and then of course I had Carlos behind with new tires.

“But then we became stronger and I felt a bit more comfortable with the balance of the car as well, and I could look after my tires, so very pleased for that.”

Despite being no match for Verstappen and struggling for turn-in through the slow corners, Hamilton was slick in second to cement the place, his best sprint finish since the United States Grand Prix.

“That’s the best result I’ve had in a long time, so of course I’m super, super happy and grateful,” he said.

“We couldn’t fight the Red Bulls today, but this is a huge step and improvement.

“I’m excited for [the grand prix] tomorrow.”

By the time Verstappen hit the lead, Sergio Perez in the sister Red Bull Racing car was showing strong pace too, but the Mexican was bottled behind the punchy Sainz.

The Ferrari driver was happily benefitting from Alonso’s DRS to aid his defense, which brought Charles Leclerc from sixth into play for the final podium place.

If it had been a deliberate defensive strategy by Alonso, it bit him hard on lap 16 when Sainz lunged on the Aston Martin into Turn 6, getting the better exit on switchback to take the place.

Alonso followed him through the sweeping Turns 7 and 8 and attempted to slip back through on the brakes at Turn 9, but the move caused contact, putting both drivers wide and allowing Perez to seize third place and gap the squabbling pack.

“It was really difficult to get through Carlos, through Fernando,” he said. “We were fighting and obviously we all had high degradation following each other.”

Things got worse for Alonso, who picked up a front-right puncture from the melee and was forced to retire.

Sainz now had Leclerc to worry about, with the Monegasque hoping to capitalize on the clash to follow Perez up the road.

DRS helped Leclerc draw side by side with Sainz on the brakes into the Turn 14 hairpin, but the Spaniard was super aggressive in defense, carrying both cars past the apex and banging wheels to hold the place.

Leclerc was frustrated but undeterred, getting his teammate back through Turns 1 and 2 to seal fourth ahead of Sainz in fifth, but the Monegasque was angered by the friendly fire post race.

“He’s fighting me more than the others,” he lamented, calling for peace talks.

Norris was unable to recover from his poor start, finishing sixth ahead of McLaren teammate Oscar Piastri in seventh.

George Russell, the only driver to gamble on the soft compound rather than the medium, scored the final point for eighth, up from 11th.

Zhou Guanyu finished ninth ahead of Kevin Magnussen, who completed the top 10 as the leader of a long DRS train that neutralized the battle for the lower places.

Daniel Ricciardo was first in the queue ahead of Valtteri Bottas, Esteban Ocon, Lance Stroll, Pierre Gasly, Yuki Tsunoda and Alex Albon.

Logan Sargeant finished 18th ahead of Nico Hulkenberg at the back of the field after claiming he was pushed off track in a battle with Stroll at the start.

Verstappen strikes back in dominant Chinese GP Sprint win

Max Verstappen rebounded from a surprisingly subdued showing in qualifying to dominate the first F1 Sprint of the year after passing Lewis Hamilton for the lead with 10 laps to go. Hamilton snatched the lead from polesitter Lando Norris at the …

Max Verstappen rebounded from a surprisingly subdued showing in qualifying to dominate the first F1 Sprint of the year after passing Lewis Hamilton for the lead with 10 laps to go.

Hamilton snatched the lead from polesitter Lando Norris at the start, getting the better launch to run side by side into the first turn. The Mercedes driver had the inside line through the long, tightening right-hand bend. Norris attempted gamely to hold position, but grip from the slippery track abandoned him on the outside line. He understeered off the road and down to seventh, well out of victory contention.

Hamilton led Fernando Alonso from a surprisingly subdued Verstappen in third in the opening laps, with the Dutchman even briefly coming under attack from Carlos Sainz. The reigning champion complained over radio that his battery was flat. Race engineer Gianpiero Lambiase instructed him to make some engine mode changes, after which his pace improved markedly.

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On lap 7 he made an easy DRS pass on Alonso for second place down the long back straight, and by the following tour he was applying pressure to Hamilton, who locked up into the final-sector hairpin attempting to manage the gap. The RB20 was all over the gearbox of the Mercedes on lap 9, and DRS on the back straight was more than enough to get him into the lead.

From the top spot he gapped the field with embarrassing ease, putting two seconds in just one lap on his way to a dominant 13s victory in a 19-lap sprint.

“The first few laps were quite hectic,” Verstappen said. “They were pushing quite hard up front, and then of course I had Carlos behind with new tires. But then we became stronger and I felt a bit more comfortable with the balance of the car as well, and I could look after my tires, so very pleased for that.”

Despite being no match for Verstappen and struggling for turn-in through the slow corners, Hamilton was slick in second to cement the place, his best Sprint finish since the United States Grand Prix.

“That’s the best result I’ve had in a long time, so of course I’m super, super happy and grateful,” he said. “We couldn’t fight the Red Bulls today, but this is a huge step and improvement. I’m excited for [the grand prix] tomorrow.”

By the time Verstappen hit the lead, Sergio Perez in the sister Red Bull Racing car was showing strong pace too, but the Mexican was bottled behind the punchy Sainz. The Ferrari driver was happily benefitting from Alonso’s DRS to aid his defense, which brought Charles Leclerc from sixth into play for the final podium place.

If it had been a deliberate defensive strategy by Alonso, it bit him hard on lap 16 when Sainz lunged on the Aston Martin into Turn 6, getting the better exit on switchback to take the place.

Alonso followed him through the sweeping Turns 7 and 8 and attempted to slip back through on the brakes at Turn 9, but the move caused contact, putting both drivers wide and allowing Perez to seize third place and gap the squabbling pack.

“It was really difficult to get through Carlos, through Fernando,” he said. “We were fighting and obviously we all had high degradation following each other.”

Things got worse for Alonso, who picked up a right-front puncture from the melee and was forced to retire.

Sainz now had Leclerc to worry about, with the Monegasque hoping to capitalize on the clash to follow Perez up the road. DRS helped Leclerc draw side by side with Sainz on the brakes into the Turn 14 hairpin, but the Spaniard was very aggressive in defense, carrying both cars past the apex and banging wheels to hold the place.

Leclerc was frustrated but undeterred, getting his teammate back through Turns 1 and 2 to seal fourth ahead of Sainz in fifth, but the Monegasque was angered by the friendly fire post race.

“He’s fighting me more than the others,” he lamented, calling for peace talks.

Norris was unable to recover from his poor start, finishing sixth ahead of McLaren teammate Oscar Piastri in seventh.

George Russell, the only driver to gamble on the soft compound tire rather than the medium, scored the final point for eighth, up from 11th.

Zhou Guanyu finished ninth ahead of Kevin Magnussen, who completed the top 10 as the leader of a long DRS train that neutralized the battle for the lower places.

Daniel Ricciardo was first in the queue ahead of Valtteri Bottas, Esteban Ocon, Lance Stroll, Pierre Gasly, Yuki Tsunoda and Alex Albon.

Logan Sargeant finished 18th ahead of Nico Hulkenberg at the back of the field after claiming he was pushed off track in a battle with Stroll at the start.

Hamilton excited by wet conditions as he secures front row for Sprint

Lewis Hamilton says the wet conditions provided him and Mercedes with an opportunity to be more competitive as he secured a front row start for the Sprint at the Chinese Grand Prix. Mercedes focused on hard tire and high fuel runs in the one free …

Lewis Hamilton says the wet conditions provided him and Mercedes with an opportunity to be more competitive as he secured a front row start for the Sprint at the Chinese Grand Prix.

Mercedes focused on hard tire and high fuel runs in the one free practice session on Friday, but then the team appeared to be struggling on the medium tires in Sprint qualifying. George Russell dropped out in SQ2 with Hamilton just making it through, but a wet SQ3 saw Hamilton excel to take second place behind Lando Norris.

“It was very tricky conditions — not a lot of grip, as you saw for everyone,” Hamilton said. “But yeah, so happy. As soon as I saw the rain coming, I was getting excited. Naturally in dry conditions, we’re not quick enough, so when the rain came, I thought I’d have a bit of a better opportunity, and that’s kind of when it all came alive.”

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Hamilton is hoping for more wet weather for the Sprint on Saturday as he believes the dry pace won’t allow him much chance of retaining his starting position across the 100km distance.

“It really depends what the conditions will be. If it’s like that [wet], maybe we’ll have a chance of being somewhere up there,” he said. “I think if it’s dry, then naturally the Ferraris and Red Bulls will come by. Maybe we can hold off some of the others.”

Despite Hamilton’s pessimism, team principal Toto Wolff told Sky Sports he expects to be able to fight with the likes of McLaren even in dry conditions.

“I think we should have the pace in the dry,” Wolff said. “I don’t think we have the pace against the Red Bulls — I think we are against the McLarens. But again, we don’t know because we have no data from FP1. It could be they are much quicker too, or the other way around.”

Hamilton was provisionally on Sprint pole when the checkered flag came out as Norris had his best lap deleted, but Wolff had no complaints when the McLaren driver’s time was reinstated due to the fact it was the previous lap that he had gone off.

“I haven’t seen the detail, I’ve just seen he has been four tires off track,” Wolff said. “But honestly, that was even slower, so he could probably have gone faster, so I’m OK with that.”

‘All or nothing’ final Sprint qualifying lap pays off for Norris

Lando Norris admits he was nervous heading into Sprint qualifying because McLaren was quick in the dry, before setting the fastest time with an “all or nothing” final lap at the Chinese Grand Prix. Teammate Oscar Piastri was second fastest in the …

Lando Norris admits he was nervous heading into Sprint qualifying because McLaren was quick in the dry, before setting the fastest time with an “all or nothing” final lap at the Chinese Grand Prix.

Teammate Oscar Piastri was second fastest in the only practice session on Friday morning, with Norris set to go comfortably quickest before aborting his best timed lap. However, rain started falling during SQ2 and created extremely slippery conditions for the final part of the session, with Norris overcoming a deleted lap time to lead Lewis Hamilton and the rest of the field by over a second.

“I’m extremely happy first of all, so big thanks to the whole team,” Norris said. “You’re always nervous going into a session like this, especially before qualifying when you almost know it’s going to rain and I was quite happy with how it was in the dry.

“They were conditions where you’ve just got to risk a lot — you’ve just got to push, build tire temperature and so forth. I was quick — I kept catching the Ferrari so I had to keep backing off! So I didn’t do the first two laps well at all, but I got a good final one, good enough for pole so I’m happy. Sad it’s not for a proper qualifying, but good enough.”

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Norris says there was no other option but to take risks in order to try and keep temperature in his tires and find lap time, with a number of drivers struggling in the conditions.

“You only have three laps — the first two I aborted on both so the last lap was all or nothing,” he said. “But it was getting wetter and wetter, so actually the conditions on the final two laps were a lot worse than the second lap at least. So I was a little bit nervous that I made a few mistakes, started to aquaplane quite a bit, but it’s good fun. It gets your heart going, and to end up on top is exactly what we wanted. So a nice surprise and a good position for tomorrow.”

However, the McLaren driver admits he’s not sure how competitive his car will be over the Sprint race distance on Saturday due to the lack of practice and low grip conditions throughout Friday.

“Not a clue! But we did some of our homework this morning,” he said. “We did some consecutive laps to try and understand. But it depends what the weather is — there’s still a chance of rain tomorrow, so if it’s like this then I think the chances are relatively decent. But the race is still very different to qualifying, so I’m sure everyone is going to catch up a bit tomorrow.

“But the pace is good whether it’s wet or dry and I think we’re in a good position. The team did a good job, the car’s feeling good and so am I. And it’s paying off.”

Zhou’s SQ3 delights home crowd

Zhou Guanyu admits the pressure at his home race weekend has been extreme, but he responded well in Sprint qualifying for Stake Sauber at the Chinese Grand Prix. China’s first-ever Formula 1 driver is making his debut in front of his home crowd due …

Zhou Guanyu admits the pressure at his home race weekend has been extreme, but he responded well in Sprint qualifying for Stake Sauber at the Chinese Grand Prix.

China’s first-ever Formula 1 driver is making his debut in front of his home crowd due to Shanghai being off the calendar for five years, despite this being his third season in the sport. Zhou duly delighted a large turnout on Friday by reaching SQ3 for the first time in his career.

“Yeah it’s a big relief,” Zhou told Sky Sports. “I’m just really happy for today. It’s a lot of pressure coming into this weekend — of course fans have high expectations like always, but first time at home, first day in the office, first time at the track, just great to be SQ3 also for my first time in my career.

“The pressure I think before the weekend was so extreme, like I never felt since the first race I did. So everyone is here to see you and you just want to do well, and that’s where normally mistakes can happen. But I’m happy with day one.”

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The laps that ensured Zhou joined teammate Valtteri Bottas in SQ3 were met with loud responses from the crowd, and he says he could hear that support ahead of each run.

“Yeah, every time before I jumped in the car, even in the garage I could see the crowd is cheering, so I’m just honored and I’m just really happy that I was able to give them some kind of result and reward them for coming here and sitting in the rain,” he said. “It’s been mixed conditions but a lot of fun out there.

“Of course (it was stressful), especially that last run in SQ3. I had no idea where the dry line was really and was just trying to figure out a lot. On the first lap I went very deep into Turn 6, so I had one lap. I was just thinking, ‘OK, let’s try to learn and just get a lap on board.’ So a lot of things to find in the rain, but the good thing is in the dry we look competitive.”

Stake has yet to score a point so far this season, with pit stop issues particularly hampering the team, but with no pit stops mandatory in the Sprint race, Zhou is targeting a top-eight finish to finally get on the board.

“If I want to score my first point of the season I’m going to pick Shanghai all day! So I’m going to give it everything — let’s see the mixed conditions, let’s make the best of it and let’s also prepare for Sunday’s race, which is the main race. But I’m just happy with the first day out there and great to have everyone there.”

P4 ‘deserved’ as Verstappen struggles for tire temperature

Max Verstappen says he was unable to qualify better than fourth for the Sprint at the Chinese Grand Prix because he struggled for tire temperature in wet conditions. Rain arrived during SQ2 at the Shanghai International Circuit, and left a fully wet …

Max Verstappen says he was unable to qualify better than fourth for the Sprint at the Chinese Grand Prix because he struggled for tire temperature in wet conditions.

Rain arrived during SQ2 at the Shanghai International Circuit, and left a fully wet track for the final part of the qualifying session as the top-10 drivers secured their starting positions for Saturday’s Sprint. Verstappen went off track on more than one occasion on the low-grip surface, and says he couldn’t extract the grip from his tires as effectively as he qualified behind Lando Norris, Lewis Hamilton and Fernando Alonso.

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“It was incredibly slippery,” Verstappen said. “I struggled a lot to get the temperature in the tires — it was very difficult to keep the car on track, and it never really switched on for me. It was just like driving on ice.

“That’s why I think it was quite deserved, where we are in qualifying, because it’s not really working for me in the wet, even though I think the dry we look quite good. So of course I’m quite happy with that (part).”

While Verstappen still feels he’s close enough to the front to fight for victory given the performance of the Red Bull in the dry, he says he has one further challenge at the start of the Sprint to negotiate before he can use that pace.

“It’s not ideal to start on the inside here — there’s a lot lower grip, left to right with this like painted stuff on the tarmac. We have to try and have the best start possible. Then of course it’s going to be quite a long stint on one set of tires in the Sprint, but that makes it quite interesting again.”

Verstappen’s feeling was echoed by Carlos Sainz — still within a race victory of Verstappen in the drivers’ championship — as the Spaniard also had tire-related issues in the wet.

“It was a bit of a mixed session,” Sainz said. “We made it well through SQ1 and SQ2 and then in SQ3 the rain arrived and we didn’t manage to switch on the tires. Around here we were struggling a lot with the rear tire, we dropped the tire (temperature) a lot queuing, and then the tire never came up so I couldn’t really push.

“So, two or three seconds off the pole in P5, which just shows that in these conditions you either switch on the tire or you don’t. Anyway, it seems that both cars struggled with tire temperature and warm-up, so if it’s wet tomorrow we will need to find something. If it’s dry, we are more or less in the mix.”

Norris tops wet and wild Sprint qualifying in Shanghai

Lando Norris will start Saturday’s Shanghai Sprint race from pole position after mastering a wet and wild sprint qualifying session at the Chinese Grand Prix. In soaking-wet conditions Norris was dramatically promoted to top spot when he had a …

Lando Norris will start Saturday’s Shanghai Sprint race from pole position after mastering a wet and wild sprint qualifying session at the Chinese Grand Prix.

In soaking-wet conditions Norris was dramatically promoted to top spot when he had a previously deleted lap time reinstated by the stewards. His pole time, a 1m57.940s, had been erased for Norris having run off the track at the last corner on the previous lap. Ordinarily that warrants the deletion of both that lap and the following tour to minimize the risk of a driver gaining an advantage from a mistake. But the treacherously slippery conditions following a sudden deluge meant there was no way to argue Norris had been advantaged by his mistake.

Lando Norris leads the way in the wet. Andy Hone/Motorsport Images

Apparently acknowledging that the McLaren driver set slower times in the first two sectors than on his previous laps, the stewards allowed the lap to stand, returning the Briton to top spot with a 1.261-second margin on Lewis Hamilton.

“It was tricky,” he said. “You’re always nervous going into a session like this. You’ve just got to risk lot. You’ve got to push for tire temperature and so forth.

“I’m sad it’s not for a proper qualifying, but it’s good enough.”

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The downpour shortly before the start of the Sprint pole-getting segment completely changed the complexion of the session.

The circuit yielded extremely low grip, which not only made the track very slippery but made tire warm-up painfully difficult. Lap times were almost half a minute slower than in the dry during FP1.

Hamilton was an unlikely front-row starter in that context, having struggled badly for tire temperature at the start of the segment. He was the only driver to voluntarily choose to pit for a new set of intermediates, fresh from their blankets, which paid big dividends by delivering a time quick enough to start second alongside Norris.

Fernando Alonso qualified third ahead of Max Verstappen, who lost two of three laps spearing off the road in the slippery conditions, once at Turn 6 and later through the gravel at the final turn.

Carlos Sainz will start fifth ahead of Sergio Perez and a fortunate Charles Leclerc, who spun off the road and into the barriers at the start of SQ3 but escaped without serious damage and was able to continue.

Oscar Piastri qualified eighth ahead of Sauber teammates Valtteri Bottas and home favorite Zhou Guanyu.

George Russell was knocked out in SQ2 by just 0.038s after rain arrived to disrupt the final minutes of the segment, calling off the final laps..

Ironically the start of SQ2 had been delayed by several minutes due to a grass fire at Turn 7. It was the second fire of the day at that corner, believed to be caused by the sparks generated by the cars as they bottomed out on a bump in the middle of that corner.

Haas teammates Kevin Magnussen and Nico Hulkenberg will lines up 12th and 13th for Saturday’s Sprint ahead of Daniel Ricciardo and an underwhelming Lance Stroll in 14th and 15th.

Pierre Gasly beat Esteban Ocon to 16th by 0.088s despite not running the upgrades enjoyed by his Alpine teammate.

Alex Albon was 18th ahead of a frustrated Yuki Tsunoda, who waited until late to set a representative time, and Logan Sargeant.

Technical updates: 2024 Chinese Grand Prix

Alpine and Haas have both introduced upgrade packages earlier than initially planned at this weekend’s Chinese Grand Prix. Alpine is currently last in the constructors’ championship and had targeted Miami for a major upgrade but has managed to bring …

Alpine and Haas have both introduced upgrade packages earlier than initially planned at this weekend’s Chinese Grand Prix.

Alpine is currently last in the constructors’ championship and had targeted Miami for a major upgrade but has managed to bring a new floor to China to try and accelerate its recovery from a poor start to the season. The floor changes are substantial, with heavily revised front floor fences described as providing a “significant change from flow to front of the floor gives an increase in overall downforce.”

As part of its floor, Alpine has also made revisions to the floor edge and the diffuser to improve flow conditioning further down the car and around the rear tires.

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Haas has even more areas that it has targeted with its developments, with new floor fences paired with a revised floor edge providing more downforce and aimed to improve drivability. On top of that, a change to the engine cover sees a slimmer central exit and larger cooling louvers for better airflow, while there are smaller changes to the mirror housing and rear corner to improve efficiency and downforce.

Kevin Magnussen in the upgraded Haas VF-24. Mark Sutton/Motorsport Images

There are very few updates elsewhere on the grid, with Mercedes and Williams both bringing small additions to the Halo fairing — in the form of additional flicks for Mercedes and revised geometry for Williams — that improve flow to the rear wing. While at RB the area of the headrest behind the driver’s helmet has been reshaped to improve airflow downstream.

The remaining five teams have not submitted any new parts for this weekend’s race in Shanghai, with the Sprint format meaning there is just one practice session on a circuit that Formula 1 hasn’t visited since 2019.

Stroll leads Chinese GP practice

Lance Stroll topped an unusual solitary practice session at the Chinese Grand Prix ahead of sprint qualifying later today. Formula 1 hasn’t visited China’s Shanghai International Circuit in five years, in which time little racing has taken place at …

Lance Stroll topped an unusual solitary practice session at the Chinese Grand Prix ahead of sprint qualifying later today.

Formula 1 hasn’t visited China’s Shanghai International Circuit in five years, in which time little racing has taken place at the 20-year-old circuit.

In recent years race organizers had sprayed the bitumen on the circuit surface in an attempt to seal the aging roads in lieu of resurfacing works. There was considerable debate about the effect the bitumen treatment would have on grip levels through the weekend, and the answer appeared to be rapid track evolution after only one hour of Formula 1 running.

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Stroll was the chief beneficiary, setting his fastest time on new soft tires in the final minutes to set the benchmark at 1m36.302s. The time was 2.391s slower than the best FP1 time from the sport’s previous visit in 2019 and 4.755s slower than the previous pole time.

The times suggest there is significant evolution still to come, which could lead to a frenetic sprint qualifying session.

Oscar Piastri was second, the McLaren driver 0.327s slower after setting his lap a few minutes earlier than the leading Canadian. His teammate, Lando Norris, looked set for top spot after going 0.45s up on Piastri in the first two sectors, but the Briton abandoned the attempt to return to pit lane, leaving him an unrepresentative 16th.

The scale of the track evolution was highlighted by Max Verstappen and Sergio Perez finishing third and fourth, 0.358s and 0.388s off the pace respectively. Both drivers spent most of the session on medium tires before switching to softs in the final 10 minutes. Among the first to set qualifying times, their laps didn’t stand by the end of the hour.

Nico Hulkenberg and Kevin Magnussen were more than 0.4s further back in fifth and sixth for Haas ahead of a punchy Esteban Ocon, who took Alpine’s only upgrade package to seventh and 0.911s off the pace.

Alex Albon and Daniel Ricciardo, both with new gearboxes, were closely matched in eighth and ninth ahead of Sauber teammates Valtteri Bottas and Zhou Guanyu and RB’s Yuki Tsunoda.

Ferrari ran an unusual single-tire strategy for the session, with Charles Leclerc and Carlos Sainz using just one set of softs each for the entire hour. On top early in practice, they sank to 13th and 14th, 1.788s and 1.982s off the pace respectively.

Logan Sargeant had a scrappy flying lap to 15th ahead of Norris and Mercedes teammates George Russell and Lewis Hamilton. Like Ferrari, the Mercedes drivers used a single set of tires each, in their case one set of hards apiece. Russell, with a new power unit this weekend, led Hamilton by just 0.033s.

Hamilton’s hour was more notable for having raised the ire of race control in a skirmish with Hulkenberg and Piastri. Attempting to find some clear air for a flying lap, Hamilton forced Hulkenberg off track at the penultimate corner and attempted to go around the outside of Piastri at the final turn. The Australian balked him. sending the Mercedes driver over the pit entry line and into pit lane, for which he was shown the black and white flag.

Fernando Alonso — both he and teammate Stroll had new gearboxes for the session — was 19th ahead of a deeply dispirited Pierre Gasly.

Gasly, who finished last, lamented over team radio he had learned nothing from the session, having been given a single set of softs for the hour and not having had access to the team’s latest upgrades, which were fast-tracked to Ocon’s car a week ahead of schedule.

The busy session was largely problem free with the bizarre exception of a grass fire on the inside at Turn 7. Red flags were called for marshals to extinguish the spontaneous combustion, thankfully costing the teams around only five minutes of their sole 60 minutes of free practice.

Racing on TV, April 18-21

All times Eastern; live broadcasts unless noted. Thursday, April 18 NOLA TA2 8:00- 9:00pm (D) NOLA TA 9:00- 1000pm (D) Shanghai practice 1 11:25pm- 12:30am Shanghai practice 1 11:25pm- 12:30am Friday, April 19 Shanghai Sprint qualifying 3:25-4:30am …

All times Eastern; live broadcasts unless noted.


Thursday, April 18

NOLA TA2 8:00-
9:00pm
(D)

NOLA TA 9:00-
1000pm
(D)

Shanghai
practice 1
11:25pm-
12:30am

Shanghai
practice 1
11:25pm-
12:30am

Friday, April 19

Shanghai
Sprint
qualifying
3:25-4:30am

Shanghai
Sprint
qualifying
3:25-4:30am

Talladega
qualifying
5:30-7:00pm

Long Beach
practice 1
5:50-7:05pm

Long Beach
qualifying
7:55-8:40pm

Shanghai
Sprint race
10:55pm-
12:00am

Shanghai
Sprint race
10:55pm-
12:00am

Saturday, April 20

Shanghai GP
qualifying
2:55-4:00am

Shanghai GP
qualifying
2:55-4:00am

Talladega
qualifying
10:30am-
12:30pm

Long Beach
practice 2
11:25am-12:25pm

Talladega 12:30-2:30pm

Long Beach
qualifying
2:25-3:25pm

Road
Atlanta 1
3:00-4:00pm

Talladega 3:30-4:00pm
pre-race
4:00-7:00pm
race

Long Beach 4:30-6:30pm

Nashville 7:00pm

Sunday, April 21

Chinese
Grand Prix
2:00-2:55am
pre-race
2:55-5:00am
race

Chinese
Grand Prix
2:00-2:55am
pre-race
2:55-5:00am
race

Imola 6:30-8:00am
12:00-1:30pm

Long Beach
warmup
12:00-12:30pm

Talladega 2:00-3:00pm
pre-race
3:00-7:00pm
race

Long Beach 3:00-6:00pm

Road
Atlanta 2
3:00-4:00pm

Key: SDD: Same day delay; D = delayed; R = Replay

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