F1 in Austria: Starts off exciting, then goes the opposite way

Ars Technica ·

F1 in Austria: Starts off exciting, then goes the opposite way

Max Verstappen dominated the Austrian Grand Prix, securing a comfortable victory while Ferrari's performance suffered due to engine limitations. …

Another few laps would have let Antonelli catch up to Verstappen, too—the young Italian finished just shy of two seconds behind the Red Bull. Russell retakes second place in the standings, Antonelli’s third place means the gap remains large, and Verstappen leaves his team’s home track with a smile on his face and a greater chance of staying in the sport a while longer. Ferrari, on the other hand, had a horrible weekend. The FIA determined that Ferrari’s engine is significantly behind the most powerful V6 in the field—Red Bull’s new in-house motor—so it is allowed two engine upgrades this season. Ferrari introduced the first of these in Austria, along with a new synthetic Shell fuel, which many thought would be the missing piece that would propel the chassis and aero upgrades from Barcelona to the front of the pack. That didn’t happen. During Friday’s practice sessions, Hamilton could do no better than fifth, behind various combinations of Mercedes, Verstappen, and McLaren. On Saturday, Leclerc managed to beat him in qualifying, claiming second on the grid, with Hamilton in third. Antonelli was in fourth, having aborted his final run after Verstappen crashed and brought out a yellow flag at turn 9. Verstappen drives past a legion of his supporters. Luca Martini/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images Verstappen drives past a legion of his supporters. Luca Martini/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images Lewis Hamilton tried to hold off Verstappen but couldn’t. …

Original source: Ars Technica

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barcelona · Verstappen