Verstappen wins chaotic Qatar GP

Max Verstappen won a chaotic Qatar Grand Prix after Lando Norris was punished with a 10s stop-go penalty for failing to slow for yellow flags. Verstappen got a perfect launch despite starting from second place on the dirty side of the grid, pulling …

Max Verstappen won a chaotic Qatar Grand Prix after Lando Norris was punished with a 10s stop-go penalty for failing to slow for yellow flags.

Verstappen got a perfect launch despite starting from second place on the dirty side of the grid, pulling himself alongside polesitter George Russell into the first turn to take the lead.

Norris briefly threatened to beat both to first place by diving underneath them at the long right-hander, but the Briton thought better of trying to hang around Verstappen’s outside through Turn 2, slotting instead into second place. The Briton shadowed the Dutchman for almost the entire race but had his night undone when Alex Albon lost a mirror at the end of the front straight just before lap 30.

Race control attempted to cover the on-track debris with yellow flags, and Verstappen registered with his pit wall that Norris gained around 0.8s on the lead into the first corner, suggesting he had ignored the caution.

The issue eventually made its way to the stewards, who on lap 45 handed the McLaren driver a race-destroying 10s stop-and-go penalty that dropped him to the back of the pack.

A late dash hauled Norris back up to 10th with the bonus point for fastest lap, but it eliminated McLaren’s chance of claiming the constructors’ championship this weekend. It also slashed Norris’s hold on second in the drivers standings to just eight points ahead of Charles Leclerc.

With Norris out of the picture, Verstappen was unchallenged in winning his second race in three grands prix, leading every lap in a dominant performance for his first weekend as the newly crowned world champion.

“It was a very good race,” he said. “It’s been a while in the dry to be this competitive.

“Very proud of everyone within the team to turn it around within a day [since the sprint], so they definitely also deserve this victory.”

The result wasn’t enough to prevent Red Bull Racing from being eliminated from constructors championship contention, leaving the team fighting for second at best in the Abu Dhabi finale next weekend.

Charles Leclerc beat Oscar Piastri to second place in a battle that also swung on the tardy deployment of the safety car.

Piastri lost a place to Leclerc in the first turn, but the restart from a first-lap safety car — to collect a three-way first-corner clash between Nico Hulkenberg, Esteban Ocon and Franco Colapinto, the latter two of whom retired on the spot — got him back into what was then fourth place behind Russell.

The McLaren was quicker than the Mercedes through the Lusail International Circuit’s high-speed sweeps but not down the straight, where this year’s shortened DRS zone made overtaking difficult among the equally matched front-runners.

It frustrated the Australian, whose car snapped off track several times at the final corner in dogged pursuit of Mercedes until lap 23, when Russell was hauled into pit lane for his sole tire change. It was a disastrous stop, with a stuck rear-right wheel holding him in his box for a massive 7s. He joined the race behind midfield runners Kevin Magnussen, Pierre Gasly and Fernando Alonso.

[lawrence-auto-related count=3 category=1388]

McLaren opted against responding immediately. Despite Piastri’s pressure, the Australian’s tires were still in good condition, and with clear air he was faster than the fresh-tired Russell buried in the pack, who was complaining of understeer on his hard rubber. What should have been an easy gain was undone by an unfortunately timed pit stop on lap 34, when Lewis Hamilton and Carlos Sainz both reported front-left punctures from the debris on the main straight.

Having attempted to mask the debris with a yellow flag, race control finally called for a safety car on lap 35 to clear the circuit, allowing every driver yet to pit to change tires cheaply. It shuffled Leclerc back ahead of Piastri, and the Ferrari driver was able to hold onto the unlikely result ahead of the McLaren.

Combined with Norris’s lowly score and Carlos Sainz finishing sixth, Ferrari improbably reduced its deficit to the constructors’ championship lead to 21 points with one round remaining.

“I’m really happy,” Leclerc said. “We knew it was going to be a very difficult weekend compared to the McLaren, but in the end we managed to take some points away from them.”

Piastri lamented that McLaren, which finished one-two in the sprint, was unable to capitalize on a circuit that strongly suited its car.

“Nice to stand up on the podium, but not quite the result we were looking for,” he said. “Hopefully we can be strong [in Abu Dhabi], but it’s going to take everything we’ve got to seal the deal [for the title].”

Russell finished fourth, his race rescued from its poor first stop by the succession of safety cars after the Hamilton and Sainz punctures. He lined up seventh after the field made their mandatory stops and gained two places at the restart — one for passing Gasly and another when Sergio Perez retired with what appeared to be a technical issue shortly before the race got back underway — but could make no progress towards rescuing a podium.

Russell was lucky to hold fourth after serving a 5s safety car infringement penalty, dropping him to just 2.6s ahead of Gasly, who took home a title-changing 10 points for Alpine, boosting the team back to sixth in the standings with a five-point advantage over Haas.

Sainz would have finished on the podium even with his puncture but for a slow 9s stop after his car was dropped off its front jack before his front-right tire had been changed, leaving him sixth ahead of Fernando Alonso, who battled to seventh for Aston Martin’s first score since September’s Singapore Grand Prix.

Zhou Guanyu scored his and Sauber’s first points of the season in eighth ahead of Kevin Magnussen and the penalized Norris.

Valtteri Bottas finished 11th ahead of Hamilton in a pitiful race. The seven-time champion was off the pace from the beginning before picking up his puncture and subsequently pleaded to have his car retired after picking up a drive-through penalty for speeding through pit lane during the safety car period, but he was told to continue, finishing 12th.

RB teammates Yuki Tsunoda and Liam Lawson had no pace on their way to 13th and 14th. Albon finished last after unsuccessfully gambling on soft tires for the safety car restart, leaving him plummeting down the order late in the race, which had already been compromised by a collision with Lance Stroll on the first lap, for which the Canadian was penalized and later retired.

Verstappen’s Qatar GP pole turnaround ‘a miracle’ for Red Bull

Max Verstappen described his pole position at the Qatar Grand Prix as “a miracle” after he managed to bounce back from a poor Sprint race. Red Bull was not competitive in the Sprint as Verstappen finished eighth and was unable to catch Nico …

Max Verstappen described his pole position at the Qatar Grand Prix as “a miracle” after he managed to bounce back from a poor Sprint race.

Red Bull was not competitive in the Sprint as Verstappen finished eighth and was unable to catch Nico Hulkenberg over the shorter race distance, leading him to say he needed a miracle to be competitive in qualifying. However, the four-time world champion was in the mix at the front of the field throughout Saturday night’s session and took pole by 0.055s from George Russell on his final lap.

“I mean, it couldn’t have been worse [in the Sprint] so we just looked at it,” Verstappen said. “It’s not all super clear, but we’re like, well, we have to go and try this direction. We put it on the car and it worked.

“There are a lot of people back at the factory analyzing a lot of stuff already throughout the whole weekend. But at the end of the day, you have to make the decisions on track if you want to do it or not. [The] simulator is running in the background as well, and yeah, a miracle happened!

[lawrence-auto-related count=3 category=1388]

“I did think that maybe we could improve the car a little bit, but not like this, that’s for sure.

“It just felt a bit more hooked up on entry, mid-corner, like everything that was bad before improved quite a lot. I felt it straight away from lap one that it all just felt a bit more consistent. That’s exactly what we needed to be a bit more competitive.”

Despite the step forward, Verstappen says the race performance in the Sprint was so poor that he is still not certain of how competitive Red Bull will be on Sunday.

“It’s still a bit of a question mark,” he said. “I did feel that yesterday we were not too far off in qualifying, and then I felt like we were quite far off in the Sprint. So this is great, to be on pole, but I’m not sure yet if it’s going to be enough to really be the outright fastest, but we’ll find out tomorrow.”

Red Bull to have shareholder meeting over Perez’s future

Sergio Perez’s future will be discussed in a Red Bull shareholder meeting after F1’s season-ending Abu Dhabi Grand Prix While Perez only signed a new two-year contract in May of this year, his form has since dropped significantly and he has scored …

Sergio Perez’s future will be discussed in a Red Bull shareholder meeting after F1’s season-ending Abu Dhabi Grand Prix

While Perez only signed a new two-year contract in May of this year, his form has since dropped significantly and he has scored just 49 points in the 16 races following the Miami Grand Prix. At the latest weekend in Las Vegas he was eliminated in Q1 and scored just a solitary point for 10th place after failing to find a way past Yuki Tsunoda in the closing laps.

RACER understands that there have already been discussions with Perez relating to his future, but that a wider meeting will address the situation after Abu Dhabi.

[lawrence-auto-related count=3 category=1388]

“If you take the difference between Max [Verstappen] and Sergio’s points then it’s clear where the problem is,” Red Bull advisor Helmut Marko told RACER after Verstappen won a fourth drivers’ championship on Saturday night. “There will be a decision – after Abu Dhabi we will get together and present to the shareholders what we think is best and they will make a decision.”

Red Bull team principal Christian Horner said Perez’s performance in Saturday’s Las Vegas Grand Prix was strong, but that the points return was not satisfactory given McLaren’s relative struggles with pace. Lando Norris finished sixth ahead of Oscar Piastri in seventh.

“Obviously a single point from Checo, it was a good drive from him, a good recovery, but the problem is he’s starting out of position,” Horner said. “On a day when McLaren were weak, we would have liked to take more points out of them.

“Anything regarding the drivers… We have drivers under contract and we have drivers with options that remain between the company and the drivers involved. There’s nothing to say on that.”

Unbelievable to win Sao Paulo GP from so far back – Verstappen

Max Verstappen says he can’t believe he won the Sao Paulo Grand Prix from so far back on the grid after a sensational recovery drive on Sunday. Qualifying took place on Sunday morning and Verstappen was knocked out in Q2 due to the timing of a late …

Max Verstappen says he can’t believe he won the Sao Paulo Grand Prix from so far back on the grid after a sensational recovery drive on Sunday.

Qualifying took place on Sunday morning and Verstappen was knocked out in Q2 due to the timing of a late red flag when Lance Stroll crashed. With a five-place grid penalty for exceeding power unit components already in place, Verstappen had to start from 17th, and while two cars ahead of him didn’t take the start he was still supreme in climbing through the field and then going on to win by almost 20 seconds.

“My emotions today have been a roller coaster,” Verstappen said. “With qualifying being really unlucky with the red flag, starting P17, I knew that would be a tough race but we stayed out of trouble, we made the right calls, we stayed calm and we were fine. So all of these things together make that result possible but I think it’s unbelievable to win here from so far back on the grid.

“My emotions today have been from almost trying to destroy the garage to winning the race. I mean, starting P17… I knew that we could have a good race, but in qualifying, I think it was quite clear that there was only one line that you could take. So I knew that overtaking was going to be quite tough.

“We had a good start. That helped already. We had a good first lap. From there, we just picked off a few drivers here and there. Then I got a little bit stuck behind the train of Yuki [Tsunoda], I think. Then we just stayed calm. It was still a very long race, naturally. We made the right calls.

“When some pitted, the rain was coming, we stayed out. which was very sketchy. And then I saw Esteban [Ocon] in front of me flying, like four seconds a lap faster and I was like, ‘I’m just happy to keep the car on the track.’

“At one point it was just red, like we needed a red flag. It was just undriveable, even on extreme tires, it would have not been possible because of the banking of the track here, you know — it’s filling up very quickly and it almost felt like I was driving a boat.”

[lawrence-auto-related count=3 category=1388]

A number of Verstappen’s moves were made into Turn 1 early in the race and he says he knew it would be crucial to his hopes to be decisive trying to overtake and get himself into contention.

“It’s very hard to pass around here with the new tarmac — there’s only one line you can take but I just knew I had to go for it. It’s of course easier if you’re at the front to try and balance that out and I had confidence on the brakes, that helps.

“I was just very motivated to get a good race and just let the race pan out and see what happens. Because in a wet race, always some crazy things can happen. But soon, I was passing a few cars, and when I had one lap or two laps of free air, I was always the fastest on the track. So, I knew that, ‘OK, we are quick, I just need to try and pass the guys to try and have a run to the front.’ I felt comfortable in the car. I feel comfortable in the wet anyway, but then when the car is also performing, it just doubles up and you can really pick up the pace.”

Verstappen streams past 14 cars to win drenched Sao Paulo GP

Max Verstappen claimed a sensational 15th-to-first victory ahead of a shock double podium for Alpine at a marathon wet-weather Sao Paulo Grand Prix. Polesitter Lando Norris, having spied a chance to make significant gains on Verstappen’s title lead, …

Max Verstappen claimed a sensational 15th-to-first victory ahead of a shock double podium for Alpine at a marathon wet-weather Sao Paulo Grand Prix.

Polesitter Lando Norris, having spied a chance to make significant gains on Verstappen’s title lead, finished a scrappy and error-prone sixth, his title challenge snuffed out. The Briton also ended the race under post-race investigation for a start procedure infringement, having bizarrely completed an additional formation lap after the first start was abandoned after Lance Stroll spun off the road and ended beached in the gravel before the start.

Verstappen capitalized on his rival’s mistakes and the intermittent heavy rain to break his 10-race victory drought with a masterclass wet-weather performance and put one hand on a fourth championship trophy.

The Dutchman — who technically started from 17th on the grid but Alex Albon and Lance Stroll failed to take the start — was up to 11th on the first lap and up to sixth by lap 11, putting himself within striking distance of the podium in the variable weather. From there his victory hinged on two key incidents between laps 27 and 32 of 69.

The first was Nico Hulkenberg spearing off the road at the first turn and getting stuck on a raised drain, triggering a virtual safety car. He was subsequently disqualified for having marshals dislodge his car to help him rejoin the race.

The timing of the caution was poor for erstwhile leader George Russell, who had taken top spot into the first turn on the first lap, and Norris, both having just powered down the front straight, and they were only just cresting the hill towards the pit entrance when virtual safety car was ending. Both committed to pitting anyway, dropping them to fourth and fifth behind Esteban Ocon, Verstappen and Pierre Gasly, who didn’t stop during the interruption. That premature pit stop came back to bite hard on lap 32, when Franco Colapinto crashed his Williams climbing the hill out of Juncao.

Safety car neutralization was already underway just as Norris retook what should have been the net lead, but Colapinto’s smash forced its suspension with red flags. It gifted Ocon, Verstappen and Gasly free tire changes, relegating Norris and Russell to fourth and fifth.

A rolling restart was called for once conditions mellowed enough for racing to resume, with Ocon nailing his start, gapping Verstappen, with Russell pinching fourth from Norris. The action lasted just five laps before Carlos Sainz sent his Ferrari careering into the wall at Turn 8, forcing another safety car.

The second resumption wasn’t as smooth for the leading Frenchman. Waiting until the last moment to put his foot down, Verstappen had no trouble shadowing him down pit straight and launching a move down the inside at Turn 1 to take top spot.

News got better for the Dutchman, with Norris losing his bearings in the first-turn melee and ending up off the track, where he dropped to seventh behind teammate Oscar Piastri when he rejoined, dumping him out of podium contention.

With only the relatively uncompetitive Alpines behind him and with overtaking tricky in the slippery conditions, Verstappen opened up a comfortable margin at the head of the field with ease to record a famous and dominant 19.2s victory.

[lawrence-auto-related count=3 category=1388]

“My emotions today have been a rollercoaster, with qualifying being really unlucky with that red flag,” he said of the events that left him down the grid order. “I knew it was going to be a very tough race. … We stayed out of trouble. We made the right calls. We stayed calm and we were flying. All of those things together made that result possible.

“Unbelievable to win here from so far back on the grid.”

Ocon was faultless after losing the lead to take his fourth career podium and his first since last year’s Monaco Grand Prix.

“What a day that was after a difficult season,” he said. “It’s really nice to be driving around here and having the performance a bit leveled out in the rain. … I felt at ease when it started to rain this morning. I love it here when it rains. Today [was] a special race for us.”

Pierre Gasly completed the podium double by holding off Russell’s faster Mercedes in the final laps of the race to claim the fourth piece of silverware of his career.

“It’s incredible for the whole team,” he said. “We’ve had such a tough season. We’ve struggled to score points. … Two cars on the podium — I don’t think anyone would’ve had that on their bingo card ahead of the season. It’s just fantastic.”

The 33-point double rostrum appearance leaps Alpine from ninth to sixth in the constructors championship, three points ahead of Haas and 37 behind Aston Martin.

Russell turned his early race lead into fourth behind Gasly, but both he and teammate Lewis Hamilton, who finished 10th, face a post-race investigation for Mercedes adjusting their tire pressures on the grid with wheels already fitted to the car.

Charles Leclerc finished a quiet fifth for Ferrari ahead of the chastened Norris in sixth, the Briton gifted the place by teammate Piastri in another team order. It dropped him to 61 points off the title lead, with the championship able to be settled against him at the next race in Las Vegas.

Norris, too, might have post-race pain to endure pending an investigation for a breach of start procedure.

An aborted start to allow Stroll’s beached car to be collected required cars to wait on the grid, effectively as though the formation lap hadn’t happened yet, but Norris instead embarked on another lap of the circuit, followed by Russell, Yuki Tsunoda and Liam Lawson. After a short delay, most of the rest of the field followed with permission from race control. Those four drivers will see the stewards after the race to explain an unprecedented situation.

Tsunoda finished seventh after being promoted a place ahead of Piastri, who copped a 10s penalty for hitting Lawson in the first half of the race. Lawson finished directly behind him in ninth after a spirited battle with Hamilton and Sergio Perez behind him in the closing laps, the Kiwi junior prevailing over his more experienced rivals.

Hamilton completed the top 10 ahead of the scoreless Perez, Oliver Bearman, Valtteri Bottas, the injured Fernando Alonso and Zhou Guanyu as the last among the finishers.

Horner refuses to confirm whether Perez will see out season

Sergio Perez’s seat at Red Bull could be under threat in the remaining four rounds of the season following what team principal Christian Horner described as a “horrible weekend” at the Mexico City Grand Prix. Horner gave Perez the target of scoring …

Sergio Perez’s seat at Red Bull could be under threat in the remaining four rounds of the season following what team principal Christian Horner described as a “horrible weekend” at the Mexico City Grand Prix.

Horner gave Perez the target of scoring points and beating Oscar Piastri in Sunday’s race after the Mexican dropped out in Q1 – along with the McLaren driver – during a disappointing Saturday. A strong start from Perez was negated by his being out of position on the grid, which earned him a time penalty, and after he made contact with Liam Lawson his race unraveled to eventually finish 17th.

“Checo again has had a horrible weekend,” Horner said. “Nothing has gone right for him this weekend. He knows Formula 1 is a results-based business and inevitably when you are not delivering, the spotlight is firmly on you.

[lawrence-auto-related count=3 category=1388]

“When anyone is underperforming, of course there is always going to be scrutiny on that. As a team we need to have both cars scoring points. That is the nature of Formula 1.

“It’s constant. It’s always there. From the team’s perspective we are working with him as hard as we can to try and support him, we’ve done everything that we can and we’ll continue to do so in Brazil next weekend, but there comes a point in time that you can only do so much.”

Pushed on whether Perez will see out the season, Horner refused to confirm his place beyond the next race in Interlagos.

“That scrutiny is always going to be there,” he said. “There comes a point in time that difficult decisions have to be made. We’re now third in the constructor’s championship. Our determination is to try and get back into a winning position, but it’s going to be a tall order over these next four races.”

Horner did acknowledge that the contact with Lawson had led to significant damage that limited Perez’s chances of getting back into the top 10 despite his earlier penalty.

“Unfortunately he started out of box position, so he picked up a penalty for that,” he said. “His first lap was strong. His start was strong. And then the damage he picked up with Liam, he picked up about 70 points worth of load with a hole in the sidepod and half the side of the floor missing (main image). So at that point, you’re effectively wounded and scoring points was never going to be on the cards.

“First of all I think it demonstrates that the two teams do race each other, and whilst having the same ownership are independent in the way that they go racing. Liam has apologized, I think, to Checo for the incident. Obviously they’ll be lessons that come out of that, but frustrating certainly for Checo’s race to pick up the damage and lose valuable points.”

‘I’m not going to cry about penalties’ – Verstappen

Max Verstappen says he isn’t going to get overly upset by the penalties he was given in the Mexico City Grand Prix, but more about the pace Red Bull showed. The championship leader received two 10s time penalties – one for forcing Lando Norris off …

Max Verstappen says he isn’t going to get overly upset by the penalties he was given in the Mexico City Grand Prix, but more about the pace Red Bull showed.

The championship leader received two 10s time penalties — one for forcing Lando Norris off track at Turn 4, and then another for doing the same a few corners later and gaining a lasting advantage by overtaking the McLaren. Verstappen says his opinion on those incidents is not central to his current concerns, after finishing sixth and being unable to close in on the Ferrari, McLaren or Mercedes ahead.

“Honestly, 20s is a lot, but I’m not going to cry about it, and I’m not gong to share my opinion,” Verstappen said. “The biggest problem I have is today was a bad day in terms of race pace; that was quite clear again on the mediums and hard tires.

[lawrence-auto-related count=3 category=1388]

“I just felt that Turn 4 was a bit more of like question mark, [Turn 8] is what it is. Honestly, those two things are also not my problem. The problem is that we are too slow and that’s why I’m being put in those positions. That is my problem.

“To get back to sixth was alright, but I couldn’t even fight the Mercedes drivers in front. I had no grip, was sliding a lot, couldn’t brake… [It was a] very tough one.”

Given the past two races have seen multiple incidents involving both Norris and Verstappen, the Dutchman says he doesn’t see any difficulties between the two.

“We didn’t touch, so [it was] just racing hard,” he said. “I just drive how I think I have to drive. Last week that was alright, this week a 20s penalty. It is what it is; life goes on you know.”

Although he is concerned by the race pace Red Bull showed — losing 10 points to Lando Norris in the drivers’ championship in the process — Verstappen says there have been signs that the team is getting on top of recent issues with its car.

“We’re trying, but I mean, Austin was more promising, here a bit more tough,” he said. “A bit odd — a few more things to look at. Hopefully Brazil we can be a bit more competitive.

“Still, 47 points.”

Mexico City front row ‘an incredible result’ for Verstappen

Max Verstappen describes his front row qualifying position at the Mexico City Grand Prix as “an incredible result” for Red Bull after his troublesome Friday. FP2 saw Verstappen complete just four laps and fail to set a time as a power unit problem …

Max Verstappen describes his front row qualifying position at the Mexico City Grand Prix as “an incredible result” for Red Bull after his troublesome Friday.

FP2 saw Verstappen complete just four laps and fail to set a time as a power unit problem ended his running early, having already impacted the first session. The championship leader bounced back to beat main rival Lando Norris and secure second on the grid behind Carlos Sainz, and he says it was an extremely unexpected result given his car’s performance.

“Yesterday I did like four laps, two laps on lower fuel, and two laps on high fuel,” Verstappen said. “It was basically just a complete write-off, no information. So for me FP3 was very crucial, tried to do as many laps as I could. We were behind, the car was not feeling great and everything was just very difficult.

“I knew it was going to be a tough qualifying, but we made some final adjustments and it all started to feel better. But to be on the front row is I think an incredible result for us.

“I barely did any laps, so it could only go better, really. We were massively on the back foot. So far it has been a terrible weekend in that sense, but to be on the front row with the difficulties that we had I think showed that we stayed calm and just tried to look into the data to try and understand the car a bit more and try to just be a little bit more competitive.”

[lawrence-auto-related count=3 category=1388]

Verstappen admits his long run pace is a major area of uncertainty due to his lack of running, and he’s expecting a challenge from both Ferrari and McLaren.

“Yeah, it is. I don’t expect miracles,” he said. “I think [in] Austin, Ferrari was really, really fast. Of course maybe that weekend McLaren was not as strong, but then in the race I think they were still competitive, so from my side I don’t know, I guess we’ll find out tomorrow.”

Starting from the front row, Verstappen is only likely to be able to get a slipstream from Sainz on the long run to Turn 1 but he says the track layout doesn’t alter his tactics from other races.

“It just depends where you start and what happens in front of you,” he said. “I think I’ve been in a lot of different starting positions around here! It’s a long run, anything can happen, but I don’t really think about it too much.”

‘I cannot stop the car’ – Perez after Mexico City Q1 exit

Sergio Perez says he is struggling with braking in his Red Bull after dropping out in Q1 at the Mexico City Grand Prix. Qualifying saw the home favorite eliminated in 18th place despite three attempts to make it through, as he was some 0.2s away …

Sergio Perez says he is struggling with braking in his Red Bull after dropping out in Q1 at the Mexico City Grand Prix.

Qualifying saw the home favorite eliminated in 18th place despite three attempts to make it through, as he was some 0.2s away from advancing. Perez has been finding the going difficult throughout the weekend so far, and says a braking issue is holding him back that Red Bull has been unable to solve so far.

“I’m been struggling quite a bit with braking,” Perez said. “Every time I try to brake and attack the braking, I just put too much energy through the tires, and that makes it very tricky for me to stop the car.

“The last three races … I cannot stop the car. I’m having to modulate my braking [quite a lot], and that’s something we can see in the data, but we are not able to fix it at the moment.

“It’s mainly on a straight line, the issue that we’re facing. I cannot stop the car … I just slide too much. Given that it’s all surface sensitivity here, it makes it a lot harder.”
[lawrence-auto-related count=3 category=1388]

Starting from the penultimate row on a circuit where track position can be important due to overheating, Perez admits he’s braced for a difficult Sunday because the problem is not solely one that he has in qualifying.

“It’s going to be harder, because it’s also present there in the long runs,” he said. “I will try everything. I will try and see what we are able to do with the team, and see what solutions we are able to find.

“We will discuss all the options. It probably means, we are also very tight on parts that we have available. We don’t have the spec of floor that we would like to go onto. I don’t know, we will discuss for sure with the team.

“It’s obviously very disappointing. If there’s a grand prix I want to do really well, it’s this one. Unfortunately it’s been really difficult and tricky, this event.”

‘I know I’ve had a terrible season’ – Perez

Sergio Perez says he knows he has “had a terrible season” in 2024 as he looks to turn his form around in front of his home crowd at the Mexico City Grand Prix. Red Bull Racing signed Perez to a new two-year contract to cover 2025 and 2026 after this …

Sergio Perez says he knows he has “had a terrible season” in 2024 as he looks to turn his form around in front of his home crowd at the Mexico City Grand Prix.

Red Bull Racing signed Perez to a new two-year contract to cover 2025 and 2026 after this season’s Monaco Grand Prix, at which point he had 107 points to his name. Perez has added just 43 points across the following 11 races and not finished higher than sixth, and he hopes to replicate his podium finishes from 2021 and 2022 in Mexico to try and kickstart a stronger finish to the year.

“I know I’ve had a terrible season, a very difficult one,” Perez said. “It started really well, but it’s been really, really difficult. And for me, if I get a strong result, it can definitely change my season massively in terms of feeling, personal feelings. So I’m really up for it.

“I think that moment will stay with me forever, having my son up there with me on the podium, watching me. It’s something that I hope he remembers forever. If not, I’ll have the picture at least to show him when he’s older. And those moments, I think, are the ones that really matter to me. And I hope I can repeat that one this weekend.”

[lawrence-auto-related count=3 category=1388]

Perez was fighting for a podium result in Azerbaijan last month before a final lap crash with Carlos Sainz took both cars out of the race, and he says it could have marked a turning point but he still can’t get comfortable with his RB20.

“I think momentum in Formula 1 is very important — when you just put the car on track and you know that everything is working and you are further ahead of the people that put the car on track and have a lot of problems.

“I think it’s the same for everyone, but I also know how this sport works and it’s all about your last race. So if I get a good one here… I got a good one in Baku, but it didn’t work out. If I get a good one here, then my season can definitely take a U-turn.

“Most important is that we are able to feel comfortable with the car. At the moment we are just not able to unlock the full potential of the car. We come to the weekends trying a lot of different things, and so that just makes the whole grand prix a lot more difficult.”