Matt 'Trumpets' Ragsdale takes us on a voyage through qualifying for the Australian GP in a way that only he can...
Ambient 23° Track 39° Humidity 70%
Wind 0.5 m/s
Prelude
The sun shone clear and strong,
perforating the greenery and dappling the ground, a stark contrast to
the feelings of the paddock after the unexpected death of Charlie
Whiting, a reminder to us all to enjoy life while we still can....
Still the show must go on and so it
did, with Mercedes almost immediately reasserting its suffocating
dominance at the sharp end and Ferrari appearing to have lost the
magic it had found in Barcelona. OF course, Melbourne is not a
representative circuit per se, and given the colder temps in Barca
perhaps what was was not what appeared to be. None of that really
mattered, as near the end of the session, HAAS put in some staggering
laps, that saw them finish P4 and P5 and looking to be the class of
the midfield, assuming they can survive tomorrow's pitstops
intact.... of course that's only relative and the gaps between the
strongest of the midfield were frequently measured in hundredths or
thousandths throughout the opening practices with Formula B looking
once again to supply the fierce competition often in short supply at
the sharp end...
Summary
Green Light!! Norris and Kubica led the
way for the first session of the 2019 season with Russell not far
behind. Just as Ferrari were dawdling out of the garage with a set of
Mediums, Norris hit the line for a 1:24.654 followed by Russell and
Kubica, already well off the pace. 12 minutes left and the
lackadaisical atmosphere continued with only half the field out and
circulating.
Leclerc was ahead of him, though and
rocked briefly up to the top, nearly half a second up and then Kvyat
was by, 0.013 up on the Ferrari neophyte, who was trailed by
Giovinazzi and Raikkonen. .
9 minutes to go and the Mercedes were
out and unlike FP3, not well clear, with Bottas taking top honours in
a 1:22.658. Perez then became the midfielder to notice as he went P4
and just 0.227 off the Mercedes.
Vettel took advantage to improve to P3,
but his teammate languished in P12 as HAAS took to the circuit. It
was a good lap for Grosjean, up to P5 and just behind Perez, but
Magnussen had a mistake and ran wide and with just 2 minutes left, he
was in the drop zone, followed by Stroll, Albon, Russell and Kubica.
1 minute to go and it was go time for
Stroll, and up to P8, but not for long as hulkenberg and Raikkonen
both outpointed him. Giovinazzi was next and up to P4 he went and
then it was Charles Leclerc, with a new set of Softs, to the top.
Kmag ws up to P6 and in the ensuing confusion it was Stroll, who
initially looked to have been safe, who wound up P16 and out,
followed by Gasly, Sainz, Russell and Kubica, who suffered a puncture
in addition to the indignity of having to wrestle the Williams abou
the track. Off to the barbie they went as the rest turned themselves
around for Q2.
Q2 was led by both Ferraris and
Hamilton, with Vettel this time sensibly sporting the Soft tyre.
Hamilton was first across the line with a 1:21.861 and Vettel slotted
in neatly behind him, with Leclerc just ahead. Lewis had run wide,
having come upon traffic near the end of his lap but fortunately
batting clean up was Bottas, who had a flawless go and rocked up to
P1 with a 1:21.241.
8 minutes to go and it was Kmag, up to
P6 with his first run, with Grosjean having ruined his first run with
a mistake in the hairpin, losing the back and being forced to give it
another go. With Gasly having gone out in the first session it was
left to Verstappen to raise the flag for Red Bull, and he did so with
aplomb, taking P2 just 0.471s off the Mercedes.
5 minutes to go and it was just
Verstappen rolling home, as the rest of the field was already in the
pits getting ready for their last run at the glory of Q3. On the
outside looking in were Grosjean, Kvyat, Albon, Giovinazzi and
Norris. Hardly glory days for McLaren with Sainz gone out having been
trapped in the aftermath of Kubica's puncture.
As the field rolled back out it was
Raikkonen best of the rest, in P6 and both Hamilton and Vettel chose
to put on a new set and rock back out, just in case....
Kmag was one of the first on it, and
Hamilton, not far behind was clearly putting in a fast lap. P6 for
Magnussen, then P5 for Grosjean as Hamilton went to the top, with a
new lap record of 1:21.014. Norris got the job done as well, up to P9
and then it was Ricciardo, unable to get the job done, 0.008s off
Hulkenberg in P10. At least until Perez got around to sticking the
knife in deep and kicking Hulkenberg to the kerb. Thus it was that
Hulkenberg, Ricciardo, Albon, Giovinazzi and Kvyat were off in search
of some Bundaberg to drown their sorrows. The rest turned it around
to chase the ultimate palmares of Q3.
Q3 was led by the pair of HAAS Grosjean
ahead of K-Mag, until the Mercedes duo smashed through, Hamilton with
a 1:21.055 and then Bottas, with a superior 1:20.598, 0.6s up on the
best that Vettel could deliver. Leclerc slotted behind him and it was
Verstappen just eensing into P5 with a bit of a sloppy effort and
Norris into P8. Raikkonen and Hulkenberg sat out the first round, and
as everyone rolled into the pits for new tyres and last minute
tweaks, the anticipation of the final showdown hung heavily in the
air.
3 minutes to go, and it was into a line
of traffic the Mercedes departed. Hanging back were the Ferraris,
tailed only by Raikkonen, with Leclerc leading Vettel this time
round. Verstappen was very late to the party, rolling out with nary a
minute and a half to the checquers, barely time to get round and have
a go.
Hamilton was on it, purple mini sectors
lighting up across his lap, but still off halfway through. Bottas was
nowhere near fast enough on round 2 and it was a squeaker, with Lewis
just pipping Bottas by a tenth when all was said and done. Neither
Ferrari was even in the neighborhood and then it was just Max,
howling around the track and then crashing into the all red 2nd row,
ahead of Leclerc when the dust settled.
Dismal news for fans of the Scuderia,
0.7s down despite their best efforts, overlooking that Melbourne is
always a bit of a one off, and of course that points are handed out
on the morrow. Fantastic news for Red Bull, in between the Prancing
Horses at the first race seems a big improvement, but given the
distance to the Mercedes one wonders whether it's more a case of
Ferrari stooping to their level than vice versa.
Formula B was, in the end, dominated by
HAAS, as much as domination is possible given in the ever tight and
competitive midfield. Grosjean ahead of Magnussen then Norris,
spreading hope to forlorn Macca fans around the world, followed by
Raikkonen and Perez. The gap to the sharp end was 0.4s and looking
back, less than a second covered the cars from P6 to P15. All of
which augurs well for the race tomorrow....
Discuss!!
Remember, Play Nice in the Comments!
No comments:
Post a Comment