Thursday, 27 March 2025

Drive to Survive - Season 7 Review

Can we guess who, in the whole entire world of F1 was the second person to appear on the new season of D2S?  Yes!  A Spice Girl!  Newly Posh Spice, formerly Ginger, Gerri Horniwell.  Also making a career change comback is Claire Williams, who now seems to be a pundit for the show.

There was an interesting snippet where Sainz and Hamilton were "caught" discussing  Mercedes drive for the 2025 season; Lewis was advising that he didn't think the team were going to win again.  Carlos said that he had not heard from the team boss so felt an offer of driver there was unlikely.  It seemed a very sad start to the season already.

The release of the cache of messages and emails that were sent to team principals and every member of the press about Horner's alleged misbehaviour was a key selling point for the series.  He was looking hunted already on the show but it was starting to look like D2S was on Horner's side but also did manage to make him look a little shady.  It seems like it was a very long time ago and all has been forgotten now.  Geri's face could not have looked more tense if she was taking Ozympic.

The editor and director didn't seem to know what direction they wanted to take the first episode, was it all about Sainz's departure from Ferrari or Horner's failure to depart from Red Bull?  It finished with Sainz beating Red Bull at Australia.

In the second episode, they brought up the name Lando "No Wins" Norris.  I've never heard this, neither had Jenson Button.  Having created a little extra jeopardy for the McLaren driver, in episode three, they went for George Russell.  I don't think there was ever any question that George Russell had a drive at Mercedes in the 2025 season but it was played that he was contending for the lead driver position.  There was a lot of comment about how he needed to step things up to achieve this.

Where it used to be that Netflix were lucky to be embedded in the right team at the right time, they are now staging increasingly awkward interactions between drivers and their team principals and other staff.  It's really taking away from what was a somewhat serious sporting documentary.

The episode felt rushed, Antonelli's announcement coming hastily at the end and Toto Wolff not looking completely confident in his decision.

Episode four can't have been easy viewing for Logan Sargeant.  It was his crash highlights, with Williams Team Principal, James Vowles, listing the parts he had gone through.  The title was "Carlos Signs".  We didn't know that Sainz had backed out of the first signing with Williams.  It was the second coming of Briatore.  Some of us remember him from the first time around and his no holds barred support of Schumacher.  Those younger will remember crashgate, when he was the engineer of Piquet Jr deliberately crashing to enable Alonso a late-career win.

There were some episodes where the focus was so obvious I had nothing to comment on about it.  The one where they gave them phones to film on and focused on the brotherhood was sweet. Then they moved on to the Danny Ric Story.  Someone, probably Will Buxton, made the point that if he had only stayed at Red Bull and not left to go to McLaren, he could have been world champion.  You could see that Netflix were sad to lose him from the show and this was his grand finale.

With Steiner gone, the production team were looking to the returning Briatore to bring some fire.  You could see he was tired with the idea.  One episode was Haas vs. Alpine.  Ocon really presented that he chose to go to Haas.  This was contrasted with Flavio calling him "a spoilt brat"; then we saw someone in the Haas factory questioning his appointment there.

The final episode tied up loose ends with Verstappen winning the Drivers' Championship and McLaren winning the Constructors'.  As well as the number of drivers leaving teams.  The bizarre outpouring of emotion at Hamilton leaving but only for Ferrari, not forever, was shown.  He was allowed to do doughnuts, what will they do when he finally quits F1?  Shoot him, embalm him and set in a glass tomb in Stevenage?

Didn't mention: Sargeant being dismissed, Newey leaving Red Bull.

Sunday, 23 March 2025

China GP Race Report

As with the Sprint race, Lawson was going to be starting in the pit lane.  Oil had been spilled on the main straight as well.  The worst indignity though was Brundle having to interview a Chinese influencer dressed as a unicorn.   He interrupted Antonelli and Bearman chatting, they claimed they were discussing the wind direction but we all know they were talking about Fortnite.

Several drivers were under investigation before the race even started, for not performing their practice race starts correctly.  Given that the rule had only been clarified that morning, there was no excuse.

It was racy but clean off the start.  The action had to play out over a few corners before we definitely knew the running order.  Norris overtook Russell for 2nd.  As LeClerc was overtaking Verstappen, he slightly bumped the rear of Hamilton.  I don't know how Hulkenberg lost 7 places off the start.

The first retirement was Alonso in his Aston Martin, as his brakes caught fire and then went completely.

As the first round of pit stops came and went, Norris lost out to Russell as Piastri pitted first.  A lap or two later, he took the place back.  The Williams were among the cars who didn't go early and Albon led the race on his birthday, not for very long though.  LeClerc was due to change his front wing but didn't.

Unusually and surprisingly, Hamilton spotted that he was holding his team mate up as he struggled with tyres.  He radioed in and the cars swapped places.

There were various bits of overtaking, as cars tried to get back into some kind of regular order.  LeClerc commented on how good the Mercedes were running.

The overtaking petered out towards the end of the race.  Doohan received a penalty for pushing Hadjar off the track.  Tsunoda's front wing broke of it's own accord and he had to pit for a new one.  Norris's brake went long and he would have to ease up.  Verstappen took 4th place from LeClerc with 3 laps to go.

Norris's brake situation became critical with 1 lap to go.  We barely saw his team mate all race.  McLaren managed their one-two finish. Russell fought a little harder and got the last podium place.  Antonelli won Driver of the Day for starting 8th and finishing 8th.  His family must have rung up a large phone bill.

After the race, some of the checks revealed some necessary disqualifications.  Hamilton was first, for blocks for being too small.  LeClerc and Gasly for being underweight.  

Ocon ended up with 5th place and Bearman in 5th so that was a big points haul for Haas.  Antonelli was 6th.  Albon was 7th and Sainz was 10th, so some points for Williams.  We'll have to hope that the next track suits them better.  Stroll was the other points finisher in 9th.  If the big teams are going to make cock-ups, you need to be ready to pick up the points.

For the rookie report: Doohan was scrappy and penalised for it, Lawson had a could-do-better 12th, I don't think we've seen Bortoleto's face yet.

Saturday, 22 March 2025

China GP Qualifying Report

Hot on the heels of the first Sprint of the season came Qualifying.  Doohan had been awarded a fine and 2 penalty points for his collision with Bortoleto at the end of the Sprint.  He then went on to spin on his first attempt to put in a timed lap.  I can't see Briatore being happy with his performance so far.  With 2 reserve drivers at Alpine, he needs to make rapid improvements.

LeClerc made a very scrappy lap in the first session and Norris had a time deleted.  Both had to rely on their second and final attempt.  The track got better and better as more rubber was laid down.  The name at the top changed with every car past the chequered flag.  Norris managed to get the McLaren to give the fastest lap, which should have been a confidence boost after a dodgy weekend to that point.  Behind him was Hadjar and Tsunoda in their Racing Bulls, definitely catching some eyes with Lawson finishing last.  Out went Gasly, Bearman, Doohan and Bortoleto with him.

The second session was incident-free.  Again the Racing Bulls finished well, Hadjar 4th and Tsunoda 5th.  Out went Ocon, Hulkenberg (former team mates next to each other on the grid), Alonso, Stroll (still not out-qualifying his geriatric team mate) and Sainz, who was unable to improve his first lap time set.  Hamilton has now laid down a clear marker for how quickly a top driver can fit in with a new team; Sainz is not living up to it.

After the first round of laps set in the final session, only Antonelli had any drama, with a lap deleted for exceeding track limits.  Piastri put in a record lap for the track to secure his first proper pole.  Russell put in a good lap too to be alongside him.  Norris aborted his final lap and finished 3rd.  Then it was Norris, Verstappen, Hamilton, LeClerc, Hadjar, Antonelli, Tsunoda and Albon.

Horner, TP of Red Bull, thought it would be all about strategy and not about starting position, batting off comments about Lawson.

I don't think it will be long before LeClerc really starts complaining.  Could Fred have already been setting things up in deference to Hamilton's preferred style?

An early prediction is that Tsunoda will get a mid-season call up to the Big Team, Red Bull.

China GP Sprint Report

In the morning there was no news from Sprint Qualifying but Hadjar and Gasly did something wrong on the way to the grid.  Albon was also being investigated and fined for not returning some cameras and footage because of the new wing rules that came into force this weekend.  Pirelli had also changed the mandatory tyre pressures, which would need a lot of management by drivers.

Hulkenberg would start from the pit lane after changing his suspension, which meant that Lawson would be last on the grid but not absolute last.

Hamilton got off to a great start, cutting off Verstappen.  Norris locked a wheel and dropped back to 9th.  Throughout Sprint Qualifying the time bar kept failing and the same happened during this race, which is very frustrating.  Gasly and Sainz made up a few places.

By lap 9 of 19, Verstappen was right up behind Hamilton and tyres were beginning to go.  You either had to manage the tyres and not gain position or risk losing them to stay ahead or push ahead.  At the back, they were two abreast across the track with most of the rookies up against each other.  Piastri crept closer to Verstappen and Hamilton escaped the DRS zone.

It looked like Sainz was out of the race and brought in to pit but they sent him out again, it meant he was last.  Were Williams using this session as Free Practice?

With 4 laps to go, Piastri got past Verstappen (who admitted afterwards that he let him by) but Norris was struggling and conversations were happening on the radio, where it couldn't be solved.  LeClerc was right behind Russell for 4th position but he was carrying a problem.

Hamilton secured his first victory for Ferrari, albeit a Sprint, followed by Piastri, Verstappen, Russell, LeClerc, Tsunoda, Antonelli and Norris, as the points finishers.  It was a quiet race for the Racing Bull but successful.  Bortoleto and Doohan came together on the last lap and spun.  I think the rookies' behaviour will have an impact on the races for a while to come.

A lot of the drivers seemed to be surviving, which would make for an interesting race.

Friday, 21 March 2025

China GP Sprint Qualifying Report

It was a beautiful sunny Friday in Shanghai for Sprint Qualifying and I think it caught a lot of fans off-guard that the second race of the season, and in a double-header too, would be a Sprint weekend.

The first session saw Hamilton put in the quickest lap with Doohan, Gasly, Ocon, Hulkenberg and Lawson going out.  The Kiwi complained that he "could not get the tyres down".  I expect Gasly, Ocon and Hulkenberg had high hopes that this was the year that they weren't all out in the first session of every session.  I caught myself realising that the Haas were now green and then remembered Hulkenberg had moved to mark the back with a different team this season.

In the second session, it looked like all the promise Williams had made at the first race of the season was disappearing, with Sainz out.  But Albon put in a great lap to get through in 7th.  Hadjar gave his team mate Tsunoda a slip stream to get him through but didn't set a lap time himself.    Out went Alonso, Bearman, Sainz, Bortoleto and Hadjar,  Norris was quickest.

The third and final session had a funny end.  Norris didn't set a particularly fast lap and pitted to withdraw from the contest.  Hamilton was fastest (and surprised), followed by Verstappen (spicy), Piastri, LeClerc, Russell, Norris, Antonelli, Tsunoda, Albon and Stroll.  Hamilton was presented by some strange Pirelli gismo for this endeavour.

How many times will Tsunoda outqualify Lawson by many many places before he gets called up to Red Bull?  Lawson had nothing much to say to the press other than "um" and "frustrating."

Russell thought the Sprint will be an interesting race.