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George Russell admitted it was ‘heartbreaking’ after losing his victory at the Belgian Grand Prix to Mercedes team-mate Lewis Hamilton following his disqualification for an illegal car.
Russell appeared to have taken just his third F1 win following a fascinating race where the young Briton rolled the strategy dice to beat Hamilton by just half a second.
But two and a half hours after the chequered flag fell at the Spa-Francorchamps circuit, and with both Hamilton and Russell already heading back home to Monaco, the latter was thrown out of the official result as Russell’s Mercedes was found to be 1.5 kilograms underweight.
The stewards’ decision provided Hamilton with his second win from his last three appearances, and a record-extending 105th of his career, but denied the Silver Arrows their first one-two finish since the penultimate round of the 2022 season in Brazil.
“Heartbreaking,” Russell wrote on social media after his disqualification was announced.
Heartbreaking… We came in 1.5kg underweight and have been disqualified from the race.We left it all on the track today and I take pride in crossing the line first. There will be more to come.🏆💙 pic.twitter.com/6RfucAqPyF
“We have to take it on the chin,” Mercedes team principal Toto Wolff added. “A mistake has happened and a one-two would have been a great result going into the summer break.
“We have to learn from that. As a team there were positives but for George it is a massive blow for it to be taken away. He is going to win more.”
Russell, still dressed in his Mercedes overalls, had just completed his media rounds – where he lauded his display as the best of his career – when he was told his triumph was in grave danger.
A report from the FIA’s technical delegate Jo Bauer published at 17:50 local time (16:50 BST) spelled doom for the Englishman.
Russell’s car had breached the regulations and all those at Mercedes knew it was a slam-dunk disqualification.
Ron Meadows, the team’s sporting director, was summoned to the stewards at 18:10 local time and, at 18:55, Russell’s fate was officially sealed.
But Russell, who started sixth, had other plans and he adopted a bold one-stop strategy to outfox his rivals and claim just the third victory of his career. Russell crossed the line a mere half a second ahead of Hamilton, with McLaren’s Oscar Piastri third and only six tenths behind the runner-up.
Ferrari pole-sitter Charles Leclerc took fourth place.
Max Verstappen started 11th following an engine penalty and crossed the line in fifth, one place ahead of a disappointed Lando Norris, to extend his championship lead over the British driver heading into Formula One’s four-week summer shutdown.
WHAT A LAST LAP! 😯George Russell holds off the fight from Lewis Hamilton & Oscar Piastri to WIN in Spa 🤯👏 pic.twitter.com/wSbaBbh0vA
Mercedes are a team rejuvenated. Following a painful start to the season for the Silver Arrows, this marked the constructor’s first one-two finish since the penultimate round of the 2022 season in Brazil. Russell claimed his maiden win on that day in Interlagos, and here, seemingly against all the odds, it was his turn again.
For much of this fascinating contest, it looked as though it would be Hamilton who would win after he started third, and blasted past Red Bull’s Sergio Perez on the run up to Eau Rouge on the opening lap before moving clear of Leclerc on lap three. But on lap 26, Hamilton peeled into the pits for his second change of rubber with Russell calling on his team to consider a one-stop strategy.
With a dozen laps remaining, Russell, on ageing rubber, was seven seconds clear of Hamilton. “Am I on target to beat him?” Hamilton asked. “It will be close,” came the reply from his race engineer, Peter Bonnington. With a handful of laps remaining, Hamilton was occupying Russell’s mirrors but he never got close enough to threaten. “I had tyres left, but the team called me in,” Hamilton said. “Unfortunate. But that is what it is.”
A jubilant Russell was lauded as “the tyre whisperer” by team principal Toto Wolff over the radio. “Amazing result,” Russell said. “We did not predict the win this morning but I kept saying we could do the one-stop and the strategy guys did a great job.”
For Norris, he will be feeling this was a missed opportunity to take a chunk out of Verstappen’s championship lead. Norris lined up from fourth on the grid, but a week after a poor getaway at the Hungaroring allowed Piastri to take control of the race and claim his maiden win, the Englishman was left to rue another bad start.
The 24-year-old held his position ahead of the opening La Source corner, but he dipped his rear-left tyre into the gravel which cost him dearly on the 220mph drag through Eau Rouge and into the Kemmel Straight. Suddenly, Norris was seventh and midway through the second lap Verstappen – who had started seven places behind him – was just one position back in eighth.
McLaren’s strategy will also be back in the spotlight after Verstappen undercut Norris at the opening round of stops. Verstappen stopped on lap 10 but Norris was not hauled in for his first of two tyre changes until lap 15. When he left the pits, he was six seconds behind the Dutchman and he did not have the pace to get back past his title rival.
Whether mistakes from drivers, operationally or strategically, they are not making the most of their opportunities – as good as their car is.
Mercedes have won three races to their two, including a 1-2 today. McLaren talk about taking the positives and that is right. It’s not a disaster but they are just missing that final few per cent that will make the difference in either championship.
Another one of them, really. Not a disaster but just didn’t extract the most from the car again. He made a mistake early on which, as he says below, really cost him.
Strategy was good. I think it seemed to be whoever undercut the most won the race. I went off in turn one and that ruined my race. We did what we thought was the best, with hindsight, undercut seemed to be the correct thing. Pace in the car was good, I think maybe could have been more aggressive. I felt like the pace was good, just the dirty air costs you so much and I was always in the dirty air.
I just feel in the last few races I’ve messed up a lot and given away a lot of points.
For the last 6 GP, the person on pole has NOT won the race! Astonishing really. But true. #f1
The 2024 season has become exceptional in the last three months.
Is it enough for him to keep his Red Bull seat? In the end he finished eighth, last of the top-four team runners and 34 seconds behind Verstappen, who started nine spots behind him.
Yes, he stopped three times so he could claim the fastest lap point but, regardless he would have been a good chunk of time behind. A good Saturday but a slightly anonymous Sunday, even taking into account him being slightly compromised by being pulled in by his team a little earlier as Verstappen got back.
Here’s how the teams stand:
That is the thing that works in his favour. Yes, Red Bull have been caught but their rivals Verstappen’s rivals are taking points off one another. Here is how the drivers stand after 14 races
Amazing, amazing result. Definitely didn’t predict the win this morning in our strategy meeting. The car was feeling pretty awesome. The tyres felt great and I just kept saying I think we can do the one-stop. Well done to Lewis, he really controlled that race.
1-2 for the team is such an awesome result and such a good way to go into the break. It was a team effort [to go for the one-stop]. We rolled the dice but it was only possible because the car was feeling great and the pace was there.
Did they expect a 1-2?
No we didn’t. First, congratulations to George and the team. We had such a disaster on Friday, the car was really nowhere. Hard to see what it would feel like but the car was fantastic today. I was trying to get closer obviously but George did a great job on going long on the tyres. Every stint I had tyres left but the team pulled me in. Unfortunate, but it’s one of those days.
Can he go for the championship?
No. It would be high hopes. If we can continue this kind of performance that we’ve had the last few races it will be fantastic. We just got to keep pushing.
Again in the cooldown room he says that he is a little annoyed at the team for bringing him in when he had tyre life.
I thought I could [catch the Mercedes cars] but clean air was such a big difference today. Once I got a little bit of clean air in the middle stint I picked up a lot of pace and managed to get a good tyre delta for the last stop. Clearly didn’t need a tyre delta, just needed to keep going as George showed.
I think that’s the second or third time this year that we’ve run over the front jack. It took my a couple of laps to get past Charles and really overheated the tyres doing that. We just didn’t have enough pace to mow [George Russell] down. In the end it wasn’t quite enough.
That has not happened since the 2020 season. At the end of that year he had a total of 10 wins. He now has 61, less than four years later.
I expected him to challenge for the podium today but he just did not have the pace to break through those cars ahead. Russell and Piastri say the same thing in the cooldown room, noting that the medium tyres wre not the correct choice.
It was a very good drive from Piastri to third. But had he not overshot his marks and had a 4.4sec stop (costing him at least 1.5sec) then he might have cleared Leclerc and been on the Mercedes cars a lap or three sooner.
Maybe, but it’s not a clear cut error costing a certain victory. Perhaps didn’t slip away but didn’t ultimately nail it.
Norris had a bit of an anonymous afternoon, lacking the pace to overtake Verstappen after a poor start dropped him back.
Russell crosses the line ahead of Hamilton and Piastri. A great climax and a 1-2 finish for Mercedes! A great final lap.
WHAT A LAST LAP! 😯George Russell holds off the fight from Lewis Hamilton & Oscar Piastri to WIN in Spa 🤯👏 pic.twitter.com/wSbaBbh0vA
Who saw that one coming?! Hamilton caught him rapidly but when he got to the rear wing of his team-mate Russell did not really give him a chance, despite having tyres that were 16 laps older than his team-mate’s. And all with the threat of a charging Piastri behind.
Hamilton locks up in the final corner and is that his chance to win the race gone? I think it might be… Piastri is there to pounce should any mistakes be made but I think that is what it will take for this top three to change. There’s still the bus-stop chicane, though.
Hamilton closes up in the final sector but he falls back a bit as they enter the flat-out final sector heading into the chicane…
Russell’s corner exit traction has been excellent and he hasn’t given Hamilton a sniff.
Both Mercedes cars go deep into turn one and that allows Piastri to close up further but he is running out of laps…
Russell is driving brilliantly here, defending from his team-mate for the victory. But will it be enough?
Soon Piastri will have DRS on Hamilton on the final lap. But will he be close enough to try a move?!
1.6sec between the top three as they enter the final lap!
Hamilton gets DRS on the Kemmel Straight but doesn’t take the opportunity. It would have been risky. Piastri closed up by 1.2sec on this battleand he will be closer, I think, by the end of the lap as the two Silver Arrows fight over the lead.
Russell is presumably using his battery power very wisely here. Hamilton hasn’t really had a sniff to be honest. He’s very, very close but hasn’t really made a mistake. Piastri takes another 1.1sec out of Hamilton as still Russell holds on…
He doesn’t do it at the bus stop chicane. Hamilton is told “just make sure you give each other plenty of space” which suggests they can race. I don’t think Russell has the pace to hold off Hamilton, though.
Piastri takes another 0.7sec out of Hamilton ahead but that isn’t really quite enough. The gap is still around four seconds with four laps to go. Hmmm.
Leclerc-Verstappen-Norris battling for fourth with just 1.2sec between them.
Hamilton is on the back of Russell in the final sector. Russell’s hard tyres are 16 laps older. The one-stop is going to work for Russell, I think, but I don’t think he can resist Hamilton here…
He still holds him off but Hamilton is going to be very close on the Kemmel Straight next time if he doesn’t mess up turn one…
Is that enough? Well, no – not really. He needs the Mercedes cars to squabble really but I am not sure that will happen. Piastri still 4.7sec behind Hamilton which is a lot of ground to make up in the final four or five laps.
But it’s not quite a tenth faster than Hamilton. Should Russell fight Hamilton it brings Piastri much more into play and also jeopardises a potential second for him.
Sainz gets Perez for seventh at Les Combes. Not a great race from Perez today, though how much did that short second stint hamper his afternoon? A little, but not this much.
Carlos Sainz gets the job done on Sergio Perez and moves into P7! 👏 pic.twitter.com/slpwGx78ln
1.3sec between leader Russell and Hamilton behind.
He isn’t really making any inroads into Hamilton ahead. 5.6sec the gap as it was a couple of laps ago. Hamilton now within 2.6sec of Russell in the lead. It’s between the three men at the front but Hamilton the clear favourite now, though he will still need to overtake Russell. He has the pace to do that but you do wonder how much resistance Russell puts up.
Norris within DRS range of Verstappen but just cannot find a way through. Perez has dropped to nearly 10 seconds behind his team-mate and is in seventh.
He gets a better exit too and is right behind him on the Kemmel Straight. Leclerc does not want to yield but Piastri commits around the outside again and gets the move done! Great racing and a great move from the young Australian. A supreme talent he is.
Piastri now Hamilton’s biggest threat, certifiably.
3.8sec the gap between leader Russell and team-mate Hamilton behind. Piastri is 5.5sec behind Hamilton, though, having lost 1.5sec or so overtaking Leclerc and failing.
That’s a tough move. You really want it up the inside or to be ahead a lot earlier than he was there.
Verstappen told to give “10 of his finest”. Hamilton about 0.5sec per lap faster than leader Russell and about 0.2sec or so faster than Leclerc. It could all converge in the final few laps. I don’t think Russell is in contention for victory here but definitely a podium.
He is told about target lap times and is told “it’s close”. “How much time do I need to beat him?” is what he asks exactly. But who is the “him” he is talking about? Piastri is the bigger threat on lap time as it stands.
That gap is coming down at about 0.8sec per lap. Piastri is nearly within DRS range of Leclerc in third. Does he have the pace to win this race? Not sure. Hamilton’s pace looks good but Piastri is slightly faster as it stands. He will need to clear Leclerc sharpish, though.
Norris passed Perez on the last lap and is within DRS range of Verstappen once again but on fresher tyres, slightly.
Norris and Verstappen have both been given permission to push. Let’s see how this pans out.
7.1sec in it. Russell says he is happy to stay out, so it looks like a one-stop race from him for now.
Perez ahead of Verstappen, who undercut his team-mate. Norris ahead of Sainz, at least, who is on 1-lap old hard tyres so will need to stop again. Perez moves out of the way to let Verstappen through. I think fourth is perhaps the limit of Verstappen’s ambitions today.
Piastri is called into the pits which will then put George Russell into the lead, assuming he does not stop too.
Piastri has a very slow stop, going long on his marks. A 4.4sec stop. A two-second loss, really. Will he come out ahead of Perez and Verstappen?! Yes, just about but Verstappen is the fastest man on track currently.
He has the net lead. Norris pits to try and cover off Verstappen. A messy-ish afternoon for Norris today. A poor start hampered him and then he has been strategically boxed in so to speak.
He is the race leader. He is told “this looks good, let’s go!”. Are they cranking it up now he has some clean air?
Whilst Piastri has clean air and is setting fastest laps, Hamilton is about to hit the rear wing of Carlos Sainz. Does this bring Piastri into contention for the win? Well, it moves him closer, perhaps. But let’s see what happens in the next few laps.
Piastri sets a 1:47.6, Hamilton was about two tenths faster than that. He will most likely need to charge through on fresher tyres at the end, if that works.
But they may stop again. They don’t need to and Russell wants to consider a one-stop race, possibly because it’s the only thing that might give him the most outside chance of a podium.
What will McLaren do? Piastri is still in contention here, just about. Hamilton comes into the pit lane as team-mate Russell wants his team to consider the one-stop.
It’s a quick stop for Mercedes, which means Hamilton keeps position ahead of Leclerc, though he has the other Ferrari ahead of him on the track, but Sainz is not really in Hamilton’s race.
And he says the tyres – 13 lap-old hards – are still good. Don’t know if anyone has the pace to disrupt him as it stands but Ferrari are going to try the undercut? Or are they protecting from Perez and the undercut? Let’s see. And will Mercedes bring Hamilton in now? It’s a slow-ish stop from Ferrari, though – 3.4sec so that may well seal the deal and keep Hamilton in the lead…
George finally finds the opportunity and clears Perez! ⚔ pic.twitter.com/pyJ8isaphm
He locks up at the final chicane and loses a bit of time and tyre life for the rest of the race. He’s still within DRS range of Verstappen, though.
Hamilton extends his lead a little to 2.3sec over Leclerc.
Leclerc and Hamilton had just 0.006sec between their most recent lap times. Just two seconds between them.
Norris within DRS range of Verstappen. Perez says “we are very slow on the straights”. I don’t know if he thinks it’s a problem somewhere or just generally compared to his rivals. Probably the former.
George finally finds the opportunity and clears Perez! ⚔ pic.twitter.com/pyJ8isaphm
Perez now has Verstappen on his rear wing and surely Red Bull will ask him to let his team-mate through at some point soon. Perez will be reluctant to do that given that he’s actually having an OK race but I don’t think that matters. Norris now only 1.2sec behind Verstappen so they need to do something soon, really…
Red Bull bring Perez in so that sorts that one out. Russell had cleared about 1.7sec on Perez since overtaking him.
Is he? Well, he was going into La Source but Russell perhaps not quite close enough to try a move down the Kemmel Straight. No, not quite. Russell having DRS from Perez is helping keep the Mercedes driver ahead of Verstappen behind.
Meanwhile, Sainz leads Hamilton by 2.7sec.
Sainz is about to come into the pit lane, so Hamilton will return to the lead.
The Red Bull doesn’t appear to have the power (or at least the top speed) on the straights to get Russell. He has DRS, too.
Norris sets the fastest lap as he takes nearly a second out of Verstappen ahead. Norris will be helped if those ahead of him start squabbling as looks to be imminent. Just 4.3 behind Norris in eighth and Verstappen in seventh.
LAP 12/44The race leader comes into the pits and also switches to hard tyres. Hamilton returns to the track in P6 #F1 #BelgianGP pic.twitter.com/rg1H5OQD3V
Verstappen asks whether he should try and push on and overtake the cars ahead and he is told to “go and get them”. “Them” being Russell first and then Perez and Piastri.
He comes out in eighth, behind Verstappen by around six seconds but with clean air in front of him. He might be able to make that time up as Verstappen struggles to make progress.
Meanwhile race leader Carlos Sainz takes a little excursion through the gravel with the left-side of his car. Probably lost him a big chunk of time. Possibly a few seconds.
He has not stopped yet and lost 1.4sec to Hamilton the last lap round. Hmmmm. This could be a difficult afternoon.
In comes Norris from second.
Lance Stroll not happy with the Aston Martin’s grunt:
Straight line speed is a f—— joke.
He has just set the fastest lap of the race. Sainz and Norris look to be going long. They will have to come back on fresher tyres later in the race, if they can. Too late to try anything else yet, unless there’s a safety car.
Here’s the current order:
*yet to stop
Piastri is right behind him and Russell is right behind him. Verstappen closing up on that battle. Sainz inherits the lead, he hasn’t stopped. Neither has Norris.
Piastri gets Perez for sixth at the end of the Kemmel Straight. Piastri sets the fastest first sector of the race, almost half a second faster than the Mexican Red Bull driver.
So it has worked out. Or it did for a while as Piastri gets Russell at the end of the straight. Leclerc and Norris have stayed out, as has Sainz. Sainz on the hard tyres of course will always be going a bit longer in this stint.
Indeed, in comes Verstappen in an attempt to undercut Norris and perhaps a couple of others. Russell also pits. 2.3sec for Russell and 2.7sec for Verstappen.
Russell – and Verstappen by extension – comes out into traffic, behind Tsunoda in the RB in 12th.
What will McLaren do here with Norris? Could they run him long and counteract Verstappen? Or will they prioritise Piastri? Probably too close together to double-stack. In fact, definitely so.
The undercut hasn’t really worked for Russell or Verstappen. The former is being held up by Magnussen and Verstappen makes had work of passing Tsunoda in the RB.
He’s currently stuck, a bit, behind Norris though there is a DRS train ahead so it’s not really Norris being slow. Norris again runs slightly into the gravel out of Malmedy. Not for the first time.
Asked Plan A or B, whatever that is. He wants to stick with A. Hamilton is told to get on top of his lift and coast, i.e. save fuel.
The field is spreading out a little. Hamilton with strong pace but Piastri has been dropped a bit by Perez, who is two seconds Leclerc. Pit stops starting likely in the next couple of laps.
Alonso in ninth and Albon in 10th.
“Something is moving down by my legs,” he says. I’m reminder of a stray spanner that was left in the cockpit of Johnny Herbert’s Sauber in the 1998 Italian Grand Prix at Monza. It made its way into the footwell and caused Herbert to spin out of the race. You never want something rattling around in the cockpit at any track but Spa or Monza would probably be the bottom of the list.
Verstappen is 0.8sec behind Norris ahead and the Briton looks less vulnerable now. Leclerc hanging onto the back of Hamilton, just about but the Mercedes man has broken the DRS threat, now being more than one second ahead of the Ferrari.
…as Norris makes an error.
IT’S LIGHTS OUT AND AWAY WE GO IN SPA! 🚥 pic.twitter.com/fOfF8pW5Ze
Norris holding off Verstappen for now, partly because he’s within a second of Carlos Sainz ahead and has the use of DRS.
It’s not a brilliant exit from the Ferrari driver and Hamilton is on the back of him through Eau Rouge and Raidillon. With DRS Hamilton goes through at the end of the Kemmel Straight and takes the race lead!
LEWIS HAMILTON TAKES THE LEAD! 👏After a great start from Charles Leclerc, the Ferrari now falls into P2! pic.twitter.com/JtfGaPWrHA
Norris under big pressure from Verstappen already on this lap. Again, just a few too many errors from Norris in the last couple of months.
We have a slow moving Sauber. It’s Zhou who looks to have lost power. He tries to keep going but he should probably pull to the side of the track near a recovery point. It’s a long way from there.
It was good defending from Hamilton on lap one, from Perez.
Norris is having a bit of a tricky opening couple of laps. He thinks he has Sainz for sixth at the end of the first straight but goes in too deep and runs off the track, handing Sainz the place back. Verstappen now into eighth, snaring Alonso in the Aston Martin. The next man on the track for the Dutchman is Lando Norris…
It’s a decent start from Leclerc who keeps his lead but Hamilton has aced his start too and goes into second, pushing Perez down into third. It’s a poor start from Lando Norris who runs wide and onto the gravel slightly coming out of La Source and he is down to seventh already.
Verstappen up to 10th.
Leclerc leads Hamilton, Perez and Piastri. They went very close to one another at the end of the Kemmel Straight.
Verstappen goes around the outside of Albon at the Bus Stop Chicane and is up to ninth.
In many ways you do not really want to lead at turn one because the slipstream effect is so strong heading down the Kemmel Straight that you are likely to come off second best even before the corner.
Leclerc leads the field away from the front to great applause. No Belgian drivers on the grid today but three men with Belgian mothers: Norris, Stroll and Verstappen – who was born in Belgium.
The drivers set off on the formation lap 👉Lights out is moments away! #F1 #BelgianGP pic.twitter.com/W9JTqMZMbS
Mediums the order of the day, as is usually the case. The only exceptions are Sainz in seventh on used hards, Ricciardo on 13th on used softs and Zhou in 19th on used hards.
Predictions? Hmmm. Going to say Norris-Verstappen-Hamilton.
Perez to get involved in some nonsense at some point.
Podium possible for his drivers?
“I think on strategy various options but on tyre degradation the McLarens were very good and of course Max.”
Can they win?
“It’s a long shot but you can never discount it, it’s a motor race.”
It’s going to be tough, it’s not like previous years but we’re going to give it our damnedest.
On Perez’s chances from the front row.
The best thing he can do is take the lead at turn five and b—– off!
1. LEC 2. PER 3. HAM 4. NOR 5. PIA 6. RUS 7. SAI 8. ALO 9. OCO 10. ALB11. VER 12. GAS13. RIC 14. BOT15. STR 16. HUL17. MAG 18. SAR19. ZHO 20. TSU
“We’re going to try and go as fast as possible. I think we have two cars capable of winning. Just a good, clean first lap. Oscar just told me I’ve got a real mohawk if he wins…”
“He’ll be past pretty soon” 💨Alex Albon is not fancying his chances against Max Verstappen, who is starting behind him 😅 pic.twitter.com/wK2GuQwMrY
Excess fluid, apparently.
Tattoo? ❌Mohawk? ✅Zak Brown promised Oscar Piastri he would get a mohawk for his first race win, and he kept his promise (in his own way!) 😂 pic.twitter.com/kbpbPtoZ4u
And we an unusual camera angle from the back of a Mercedes as it leaves and it looks like a significant amount of fluid is leaking (intentionally or otherwise) from its rear end. Not sure if that is a problem or not.
1998 up there for me, partly because of this start but also because it was a maiden win for Jordan and a 22nd (and final) win for Damon Hill.
1998 Belgian GP: Murray Walker – “This is the worst start to a Grand Prix that I have ever seen in the whole of my life!” #BelgianGP pic.twitter.com/2uGCOaJcKy
They believe it is going to be a certain two-stopper. That’s good. It’s often a one. This race can, occasionally, be good but it is quite often not all that entertaining with huge gaps opening up throughout the field. Hopefully we see a divergence of strategies throughout the grid.
Strategies for the #BelgianGP: compared to last year, the new track surface has made the Hard much more suitable for the race than it was one year ago, to the detriment of the Soft. However, all three compounds are still perfectly viable. #F1 pic.twitter.com/dWyK6Vf1U8
Bahrain: VerstappenSaudi Arabia: VerstappenAustralia: SainzJapan: VerstappenChina: VerstappenMiami: NorrisImola: VerstappenMonaco: LeclercCanada: VerstappenSpain: VerstappenAustria: RussellGreat Britain: HamiltonHungary: Piastri
Seven different winners from four different cars.
It’s a lot easier to see Red Bull being overtaken in the constructors’ though. Mind you, if Perez can start performing to the level he knows he can and needs then perhaps not.
Again, Red Bull have been reeled in massively in recent months but I think overturning 76 points in 11 races is a tall ask for Lando Norris. It would take a couple of DNFs or finishes outside the major points-scoring positions. But it is not totally outlandish.
“This is my favourite track, it’s always special!” 🤩Max Verstappen just LOVES racing around Spa 🙌 pic.twitter.com/3hcJJyHt3t
Welcome to our coverage for the 2024 Belgian Grand Prix from the Circuit de Spa-Francorchamps in the Ardennes. This is the final race before the summer break and one thing is certain: Max Verstappen will head into that hiatus with a healthy lead in the drivers’ championship. He currently leads Lando Norris of McLaren by 76 points.
Can he even extend that lead today? Despite his 10-place engine penalty he will start in 11th because he dominated the field in qualifying yesterday, nobody else getting within half a second of him. Given Spa is the track where you can overtake (which is exactly why Red Bull have chosen to take the change this weekend), it is not impossible that he finishes in the podium, at the very least. In fact it is probably likely.
Of course, yesterday’s session was in wet conditions and that is often where Verstappen excels. It is no longer a guarantee that he can simply race through to the front from the back of the field. We do not yet know if Red Bull’s pace will be superior or inferior to their rivals. If it is then it is possible that Norris eats into Verstappen’s advantage.
That said, Norris has some work to do. He was largely unsatisfied with his qualifying performance – or rather the result – yesterday, finishing fifth being Verstappen, Charles Leclerc, Sergio Perez and Lewis Hamilton. The McLaren has usually excelled in race trim, despite the team struggling to convert that pace into regular wins. With four different constructors in the top four it will be interesting to see how that pans out.
The two men on the front row are certainly in need of a good weekend. Not so much that Leclerc has been poor but Ferrari have slipped back from being the second fastest team early in the season to the fourth in recent rounds. A podium would be a boon. And there was talk of Sergio Perez being dropped by Red Bull with a poor performance this weekend. So far he has avoided that but he will still want to convert a front-row start into a podium. If he can finish ahead of Verstappen, then all the better.