2022 Formula One Saudi Arabian Grand Prix

Formula 1 Haas Team.jpg

Who will win the Saudi Arabian Grand Prix?

  • Charles Leclerc

    Votes: 270 43.7%
  • Carlos Sainz

    Votes: 81 13.1%
  • Lewis Hamilton

    Votes: 32 5.2%
  • George Russel

    Votes: 4 0.6%
  • Max Verstappen

    Votes: 183 29.6%
  • Sergio Perez

    Votes: 30 4.9%
  • Other driver

    Votes: 18 2.9%

  • Total voters
    618
  • Poll closed .
Jeddah Corniche Circuit is the next location the 10 F1 teams will do battle, with the long-term rankings of those teams still very much unknown.

Shortly after an exciting 2022 season opener in Bahrain, the field moves to Saudi Arabia for round 2. Bahrain was the first real test of the 2022 cars that adhere to updated regulations, and there has been significant shakeups in the field from recent years.

Ferrari's Charles Leclerc claimed pole, fastest lap, and a race victory, though he spent much of the race with Red Bull's defending world champion Max Verstappen within striking distance. Leclerc's teammate Carlos Sainz ran in 3rd position for much of the race, and ended up claiming second place at the end of the race.

Verstappen's race had an unfortunate ending, as various mechanical issues that had been discussed with his team throughout the race finally ended the race for car #1 with just three laps to go. His teammate had an even more unfortunate result, as Sergio Perez' car spun mid-corner in turn 1 and was unable to continue.

The late exit by the Red Bull cars left a door open for a Mercedes team that was off pace versus the Ferrari and Red Bull front-runners, but ahead of the remaining seven teams. This put Lewis Hamilton onto the podium, and gave George Russell a 4th place finish in his first race as an official Mercedes team driver.

While the Ferrari, Red Bull and Mercedes teams were predictably leading the way, further down the field there were some significant surprises.

Kevin Magnussen's return to Formula 1 was a tremendous success, as he finished 5th in his HAAS, a car not expected by many to finish in the points at any race this season. In fact, his 5th place finish gave his team more points that they had scored in the previous two years. His teammate Mick Schumacher finished outside of the points, but still a respectable 11th.

Valtteri Bottas is a name we are used to seeing finish in the points, though not in a car thought to be a non-contender. His Alfa Romeo finished in 6th, ahead of teammate Zhou Guanyu who finished an impressive 10th in his Formula 1 debut.

The biggest surprise near the bottom of the running order was McLaren, whose performance last season included a 1-2 finish at Monza. The team of Lando Norris and Daniel Ricciardo ran near the back of the order the entire race, and ended up 14th and 15th, respectively.

Whether Bahrain was merely an extended test session for the top teams to work out bugs and shortly return to the form we've seen in recent seasons, or whether the team rankings in F1 have truly been upset remains to be seen, but Saudi Arabia will be a telling session for trends.

Who do you expect to come out on top at Jeddah? Let us know your predictions in the comments below or share your votes via the poll.
About author
Mike Smith
I have been obsessed with sim racing and racing games since the 1980's. My first taste of live auto racing was in 1988, and I couldn't get enough ever since. Lead writer for RaceDepartment, and owner of SimRacing604 and its YouTube channel. Favourite sims include Assetto Corsa Competizione, Assetto Corsa, rFactor 2, Automobilista 2, DiRT Rally 2 - On Twitter as @simracing604

Comments

The track, Saudi Arabia, of course, turned out to be outstanding, it is quite possible to repeat last year's race with red flags and restarts, but it was interesting to watch
Street racing is all about the colision and red flags. But that is the way the tracks are going as it is hard to finance a permanent track. The problem is the race is around 200 miles (round up or down to nearest lap) Whitch is quite short and pace car eats laps if there is a big cleanup. At the end of the day its 100-150 miles. I would like to see longer races like 300-600 miles like in NASCAR.
 
Although I doubt it given that it‘s only been a week, I really hope Mclaren has managed to at least make some progress dealing with a few of the problems that dogged them in the last race.

Go Lando, go Daniel, go Zak.
 
Premium
Big fire with black smoke billowing towards the circuit from a nearby oil depot now…

Put fuel up by another 50p a litre excuse coming down the shute from petrol companies I expect…
 
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Premium
I heard it was possibly drones used… but terrorism of some form or other no doubt… interesting its a Aramco facility, who are sponsoring F1 very visibly last and this year…

I don’t think the timing is by chance… when the worlds eyes are looking at the F1 circus currently… a PR opportunity waiting to be grabbed…

And oil (energy reserves) being so important to the west, with the Russian taps to be turned off…
 
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Missile strike - they should do themselves a favour hightail it the hell out of this place.
Terrible track anyway.
 
Race should be called off for sure, the interviews regarding the situation in fp2 were a bad joke at least on german TV. paraphrased: "We only know there is a big fire, but we need to wait for further information, so for now FP2 is on".

The track is terrible too, they had all the saudi money and space and designed this... Why make a track so dangerous, intentionally?!
 
Premium
I guess this is one way to remind everyone that Saudi Arabia is currently engaging in warfare...
 
I guess this is one way to remind everyone that Saudi Arabia is currently engaging in warfare...
And also to remind everyone that in this particular case the motto of those who are in war against Saudi Arabia is "death to US, death to Israel, curse to the Jews"...
 
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Premium

Well, hipocrisy at it's finest.

I hope these people realize that from now on, if (and i hope not) some tragedy happens, they will be held acountable (like Toto loves to say).
to quote from that article:
“I mean, who are they targeting? They are targeting the economic infrastructure, not the civilians and, of course, not the track.

“Of course we have checked the facts from them and we have had assurances from the high authorities of the safety here and let’s go racing.

I mean, okay, that's... a decent assessment to make I guess? It makes sense that if you were a group of people currently being bombed by the saudi government, you'd want to hit the things that the saudi government uses to pay for those bombs, and not... err... the tourism industry that's also paying for those bombs.

Oh wait
 
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to quote from that article:


I mean, okay, that's... a decent assessment to make I guess? It makes sense that if you were a group of people currently being bombed by the saudi government, you'd want to hit the things that the saudi government uses to pay for those bombs, and not... err... the tourism industry that's also paying for those bombs.

Oh wait
The tourism industry in Saudi Arabia is not significant. Even if the country developped tourism as they have recently planned, it would still be peanuts compared to oil in 10 years time.
 
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