australian grand prix ndtv sports – Artifex.News https://artifex.news Stay Connected. Stay Informed. Sun, 24 Mar 2024 06:07:34 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.5 https://artifex.news/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/cropped-Artifex-Round-32x32.png australian grand prix ndtv sports – Artifex.News https://artifex.news 32 32 Carlos Sainz Wins Australian GP In Ferrari 1-2 After Max Verstappen’s DNF https://artifex.news/carlos-sainz-wins-australian-gp-in-ferrari-1-2-after-max-verstappens-dnf-5300882/ Sun, 24 Mar 2024 06:07:34 +0000 https://artifex.news/carlos-sainz-wins-australian-gp-in-ferrari-1-2-after-max-verstappens-dnf-5300882/ Read More “Carlos Sainz Wins Australian GP In Ferrari 1-2 After Max Verstappen’s DNF” »

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Ferrari’s Carlos Sainz surged to victory at the Australian Grand Prix Sunday to snap Red Bull’s winning start to the season after three-time world champion Max Verstappen sensationally failed to finish. The Spaniard, who had appendicitis surgery two weeks ago and missed the last race, took the chequered flag 2.3 seconds ahead of teammate Charles Leclerc, with McLaren’s Lando Norris a bold third. It was Sainz’s third grand prix win and first since Singapore last year. But it was a disastrous day for pole-sitter Verstappen, who limped out with smoke billowing from his car after being passed by front-row partner Sainz on lap two.

“I have smoke, blue smoke, fire, fire,” the Dutchman said on the team radio before his first retirement in more than two years after what appeared to be a rear brake issue.

It was also a horror race for Lewis Hamilton in his inconsistent Mercedes, with the British seven-time world champion suffering engine failure on lap 17.

To add to Mercedes’ woes, teammate George Russell crashed heavily on the last lap with the car ending on its side. Russell climbed out unscathed.

Verstappen emphatically won the opening two grands prix of the season in Bahrain and Saudi Arabia in a Red Bull 1-2 and was hot favourite to make it three from three.

He had been aiming to match his own record set last year of 10 consecutive wins — one more than Sebastian Vettel in 2013 — and was unbeaten in his last 18 starts from pole position.

But while Verstappen was favoured to win, the Ferraris had proved highly competitive in practice and qualifying on the fast and flowing Albert Park track.

Despite not being fully fit, Sainz topped Q1 and Q2 to fire a warning shot before Verstappen pounced in Q3.

“P1 baby, P1 baby, it’s amazing. Life’s a rollercoaster at times, said Sainz, whose seat at Ferrari is to be taken by Hamilton next year.

‘Wasn’t easy physically’

“Very happy, I felt really great out there. Of course it wasn’t easy physically, but I was lucky I was more or less on my own out there and I could manage my pace.”

On a fine day, Oscar Piastri in the other McLaren was fourth ahead of Sergio Perez in the second Red Bull. Fernando Alonso was sixth ahead of Aston Martin teammate Lance Stroll.

RB’s Yuki Tsunoda was eighth, with Haas pair Nico Hulkenburg and Kevin Magnussen rounding out the top 10.

“It feels good mostly for the team of course, first and second didn’t happen since Bahrain 2022,” said Leclerc.

“Carlos has had an incredible weekend to come back from his surgery, he’s done an amazing race.”

Verstappen made a clean start and pulled clear of Sainz when the lights went out, with Norris holding onto third as they jostled for position.

But his lead didn’t last with Sainz opening his DRS on lap two to slice past and take the lead.

“I just lost the car — really weird,” Verstappen said on the radio, before smoke started pouring out and headed to the pits and retirement.

The race took on a different characteristic with Sainz leading from Norris and Leclerc with Perez down in sixth.

The pit stops began on lap eight with Hamilton coming in, followed by his Mercedes teammate George Russell, with both having started on soft tyres to the mediums of almost everyone else.

Sainz pitted on lap 17.

With the stops done, Sainz had a 2.6sec lead from Leclerc at the halfway mark, closely followed by Piastri and Norris.

With no Verstappen to contend with, the Spaniard gradually built the gap as Norris passed Piastri to move into third.

Leclerc pitted again as his tyres began failing and he came back out in fifth on hards, but with fresh rubber quickly surged back to second.

Sainz also pitted again and retained a narrow lead to cruise home in front of 130,000 fans.

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Max Verstappen On Pole Ahead Of Carlos Sainz At Australian Grand Prix https://artifex.news/max-verstappen-on-pole-ahead-of-carlos-sainz-at-australian-grand-prix-5295164/ Sat, 23 Mar 2024 06:50:38 +0000 https://artifex.news/max-verstappen-on-pole-ahead-of-carlos-sainz-at-australian-grand-prix-5295164/ Read More “Max Verstappen On Pole Ahead Of Carlos Sainz At Australian Grand Prix” »

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Dominant three-time world champion Max Verstappen clinched a third straight pole of the season on Saturday at the Australian Grand Prix as the flying Dutchman targets a record 10th consecutive win. In overcast conditions at Melbourne’s Albert Park, Ferrari’s Carlos Sainz, back in the car barely two weeks after appendicitis surgery, came second in tense qualifying and will keep the Red Bull ace company on the front row.

“A bit unexpected today, but very happy — both (Q3) laps felt very nice,” said Verstappen, who is looking to repeat his feat from last year when he won in Australia from pole.

“A bit of a tricky weekend so far, Ferrari seem very quick in the long runs so that makes tomorrow exciting.”

The Dutchman knocked out his rivals with a flying lap of one minute 15.915, 0.270 secs ahead of Sainz.

Sergio Perez in the other Red Bull will start third alongside Lando Norris, who scored a surprise fourth in his McLaren.

The 2022 Melbourne winner Charles Leclerc in the second Ferrari was fifth with McLaren’s Oscar Piastri sixth on his home track.

Mercedes’ George Russell came seventh ahead of RB’s Yuki Tsunoda and the Aston Martin pair of Lance Stroll and Fernando Alonso.

But there was disappointment for seven-time world champion Lewis Hamilton who missed Q3 and will start in 11th.

“It’s been a tough couple of weeks, a lot of days in bed waiting to see if I could be here today,” said a relieved Sainz, who missed the last race in Jeddah for his surgery.

“To put it on the front row after leading through qualifying, I was almost not believing it.”

But despite his best efforts, he could not topple Verstappen, who won the opening two races of the season in Bahrain and Saudi Arabia, both from pole.

The 26-year-old is chasing a 10th straight victory to match his own record set last year, while Red Bull are attempting to score a third straight 1-2 finish for the first time in the team’s history.

Sainz topped Q2 from Verstappen and Leclerc with Hamilton — an eight-time Australian pole-sitter — a key casualty.

His loss was Tsunoda’s gain as the only interloper outside of the big five teams joining the Q3 ranks.

Haas’ Kevin Magnussen also missed out in Q2, along with Valtteri Bottas in the Sauber, Esteban Ocon in his Alpine and Alex Albon in the sole Williams.

Sainz was also fastest in Q1 ahead of Perez and Verstappen.

Sauber’s Zhou Guanyu came last with RB’s Daniel Ricciardo, Pierre Gasly in the other Alpine and Haas’ Nico Hulkenberg also failing to progress.

Logan Sargeant was absent after his Williams was given to teammate Albon.

Albon crashed on Saturday and with no spare chassis Williams was left with just one car and opted for the Anglo-Thai driver over the American.

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Charles Leclerc Outpaces Max Verstappen In Second Practice For Australian Grand Prix https://artifex.news/charles-leclerc-outpaces-max-verstappen-in-second-practice-for-australian-grand-prix-5288800/ Fri, 22 Mar 2024 07:50:42 +0000 https://artifex.news/charles-leclerc-outpaces-max-verstappen-in-second-practice-for-australian-grand-prix-5288800/ Read More “Charles Leclerc Outpaces Max Verstappen In Second Practice For Australian Grand Prix” »

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Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc went quickest ahead of world champion Max Verstappen in second practice at the Australian Grand Prix on Friday, with Carlos Sainz third barely two weeks after surgery. Leclerc clocked a best lap round the Albert Park circuit of one minute 17.277 seconds, 0.381 clear of Red Bull’s Verstappen, who won in Melbourne last year from pole. Verstappen ran over a kerb late in first practice and damaged the floor of his car, meaning the team were still working on the issue when the second session started.

The Dutchman eventually emerged as the last driver out after missing 22 minutes and he struggled initially to make inroads on medium tyres as others switched to softs.

But when he made the tyre change he began flying to narrowly miss topping the timesheets.

The Red Bull ace won the first two races of the season in Bahrain and Saudi Arabia, but they were overshadowed by turmoil within the team camp.

The 26-year-old is hoping to put the off-track distractions behind him with records on the line in Melbourne.

Verstappen is chasing a 10th consecutive victory to match his own record set last year, while Red Bull are attempting to score a third straight 1-2 finish for the first time in the team’s history.

Third in second practice was a remarkable achievement for Ferrari’s Sainz, who underwent appendicitis-related surgery and missed the last race in Saudi Arabia.

There was concern about how his body would fare in Australia, but he appears to have put any doubts to bed.

The Aston Martins of Lance Stroll and Fernando Alonso were fourth and fifth ahead of George Russell of Mercedes.

Russell’s teammate, the seven-time world champion Lewis Hamilton, could only finish 18th, some 1.5secs behind Leclerc. He was heard on the team radio saying “something’s wrong”.

McLaren’s Oscar Piastri was seventh ahead of Sergio Perez in the other Red Bull and Lando Norris, who was fastest in opening practice.

RB driver Yuki Tsunoda rounded out the top 10, which was covered by less than one second.

Albon smash

Under blue skies, Valtteri Bottas and Perez led the way out of the pits as the lights went green, with the Red Bull driver setting the pace.

But he was quickly bettered by Alonso and a host of others.

The times kept coming down with Stroll on top at the halfway mark.

Leclerc then took control and Verstappen began ominously climbing the leaderboard when he switched to softs, but the Dutchman was unable to better his rival.

In an eventful first practice, Williams’ Alex Albon smashed into the wall at turn 8.

It caused heavy damage on the right side of his car and left debris littering the track. Albon was uninjured but did not compete in FP2 as Williams assessed the carnage.

There were several other mishaps in a reminder of the dangers of a track that witnessed multiple crashes last year, with just 12 drivers completing the race.

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Carlos Sainz Set For Australian GP Return After Appendicitis Surgery https://artifex.news/carlos-sainz-set-for-australian-gp-return-after-appendicitis-surgery-5276074/ Wed, 20 Mar 2024 11:45:52 +0000 https://artifex.news/carlos-sainz-set-for-australian-gp-return-after-appendicitis-surgery-5276074/ Read More “Carlos Sainz Set For Australian GP Return After Appendicitis Surgery” »

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Ferrari’s Carlos Sainz came third behind the two Red Bulls in Bahrain GP.© AFP

Ferrari’s Carlos Sainz is set to be back in the cockpit at the Australian Grand Prix this week after recovering from surgery for appendicitis, the team said Wednesday. The Spaniard missed the last Formula One race in Saudi Arabia, with 18-year-old British reserve driver Oliver Bearman a late replacement. The teenage rookie finished an impressive seventh in his debut, driving with the cool aplomb of a seasoned campaigner to underline his huge potential. But Bearman is set to return to Formula 2 with Sainz fit again.

“Carlos Sainz is expected to be back in the car, having had to miss Jeddah with appendicitis,” Ferrari said in its race preview.

Sainz came third behind winner Max Verstappen and Red Bull teammate Sergio Perez at the opening race of the season in Bahrain.

Red Bull repeated the one-two feat in Jeddah, where Sainz’s teammate Charles Leclerc filled the podium.

“We expect to be front runners on this track, which could produce a similar pecking order to the one seen in Jeddah,” Ferrari team principal Fred Vasseur said of Melbourne’s Albert Park.

“We intend adopting an aggressive approach with the aim of putting pressure on the team that’s won the first two races.”

Sainz is leaving Ferrari at the end of the season to make way for Mercedes’ seven-time world champion Lewis Hamilton.

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Max Verstappen Heavy Favourite In Melbourne As Red Bull Drama Rumbles On https://artifex.news/max-verstappen-heavy-favourite-in-melbourne-as-red-bull-drama-rumbles-on-5273216/ Wed, 20 Mar 2024 03:17:01 +0000 https://artifex.news/max-verstappen-heavy-favourite-in-melbourne-as-red-bull-drama-rumbles-on-5273216/ Read More “Max Verstappen Heavy Favourite In Melbourne As Red Bull Drama Rumbles On” »

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Max Verstappen will be heavy favourite to make it three wins from three this season as his Red Bull team attempt to put weeks of paddock intrigue behind them at the Australian Grand Prix. The Dutch three-time world champion emphatically led home teammate Sergio Perez in Bahrain and Saudi Arabia, but the celebrations were overshadowed by team disunity and allegations against Christian Horner. The long-serving Red Bull boss was cleared of inappropriate conduct involving a woman colleague ahead of the season-opener in Sakhir and tried to put a lid on the drama in Jeddah.

But the unnamed woman has appealed to Red Bull GmbH, the parent company of the all-conquering Formula One team.

She has also reportedly lodged an official complaint to Formula One’s governing body the FIA, ensuring the saga will rumble on in Melbourne this weekend.

Horner has guided Red Bull to six constructors’ and seven drivers’ world championships since 2005, including the last three won by Verstappen.

But the star driver’s father, the former racer Jos Verstappen, claimed earlier this month that Red Bull faced being “torn apart” if Horner remained in his position.

His son also issued a veiled threat to quit if team adviser Helmut Marko was sidelined in any power struggle.

Horner insisted “it is absolutely fine with Max”, but added the caveat that “we are a team and no single individual is bigger than the team”.

That piqued the interest of Mercedes boss Toto Wolff, who needs a replacement next season when Lewis Hamilton departs for Ferrari.

“There is no team up and down the grid who wouldn’t do handstands to have him (Verstappen) in a car,” Wolff told reporters ahead of arriving in Australia.

Momentum

Intrigue aside, victory in Saudi Arabia was Verstappen’s ninth in a row, with more of the same expected at Albert Park, barring any technical hiccups.

“It has been a great start to the year and we don’t know the full potential of the car yet, so now we want to keep the momentum going,” said the Red Bull ace.

Verstappen won a chaotic race from pole in Australia last year, holding off Hamilton after the grand prix was red-flagged three times, with multiple crashes and just 12 drivers finishing.

It was his maiden win in Australia and Red Bull’s first in the country since Sebastian Vettel in 2011.

Perez, in the other Red Bull, is the only driver to get close to Verstappen this year.

The Mexican is determined to keep pressing hard as Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc snaps at his heels.

“Max is driving at a super-high level and I think he is the only driver who has maximised qualifying and the race so far this season,” said Perez.

“It is great though because I have the best possible challenge in him. I must keep evolving weekend after weekend.”

With Verstappen already 15 points clear of Perez and 23 ahead of Leclerc, the Ferrari number one is desperate to break the stranglehold in Australia and close the gap before it widens too far.

Whether his Ferrari partner Carlos Sainz returns is up in the air after the Spaniard missed Saudi Arabia with appendicitis.

In his absence, reserve driver Oliver Bearman, just 18, scored a stunning seventh on his debut after just one free practice session, showcasing the Briton’s huge potential.

Hamilton’s Mercedes has now gone 47 races without a win, and judging by the car’s performance so far, they won’t be breaking the barren streak any time soon.

Instead, it looks set to be another week of battling for the minor places with Aston Martin and McLaren.

Seven-time world champion Hamilton, who came ninth in Jeddah, believes his car has potential but admitted it was struggling with grip at high-speed corners.

“These next few races will be tricky but we will be putting in a great deal of effort to improve as much as we can,” he said.

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