2023 Formula One Australia Grand Prix

Can Aston Martin challenge for the win in the Australian Grand Prix.jpg

Who will win the 2023 Formula One Australian Grand Prix?

  • Max Verstappen

    Votes: 599 62.9%
  • Sergio Perez

    Votes: 28 2.9%
  • Fernando Alonso

    Votes: 201 21.1%
  • Lance Stroll

    Votes: 4 0.4%
  • Charles Leclerc

    Votes: 24 2.5%
  • Carlos Sainz

    Votes: 2 0.2%
  • Lewis Hamilton

    Votes: 55 5.8%
  • George Russell

    Votes: 7 0.7%
  • Esteban Ocon

    Votes: 2 0.2%
  • Pierre Gasly

    Votes: 2 0.2%
  • Oscar Piastri

    Votes: 2 0.2%
  • Lando Norris

    Votes: 2 0.2%
  • Kevin Magnussen

    Votes: 1 0.1%
  • Nico Hulkenberg

    Votes: 4 0.4%
  • Zhou Guanyu

    Votes: 1 0.1%
  • Valterri Bottas

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Logan Sargeant

    Votes: 6 0.6%
  • Alex Albon

    Votes: 3 0.3%
  • Nyck Devries

    Votes: 1 0.1%
  • Yuki Tsunoda

    Votes: 8 0.8%

  • Total voters
    952
Round three of the FIA Formula One World Championship takes place at Melbourne, Australia this weekend. Who will claim the top step of the podium around Albert Park?

Image Credit: Aston Martin Racing on Newspress

One month into the season and it's already Round three of the 2023 Formula One World Championship. This time around, the paddock flies down under in a much-celebrated return to the Albert Park street circuit in Melbourne, Australia.

Europeans will be facing the early morning struggles. Practice sessions take place in the middle of the night whilst qualifying and the race both kick off at 8am CET. Despite making for an early start for a weekend, it is always a magical experience to wake up for an exciting race. Hear your alarm and immediately receive a rush of anticipation as you realise today's the day you get to watch the fastest race cars in the world take on a brilliant street course. Before feeling that magical excitement, here are some things to look out for in the Australian GP.

Understanding where everyone sits​

Two races in, we should by now have a good idea of where every team and driver sits in the field. However, with various outfits hitting trouble in the first pair of events, the paddock is still struggling to define a predictable order.

Red Bull are on a roll going into Melbourne.jpg


At the front, Red Bull are the clear favourites. But further down, it's difficult to know where cars should sit. Behind the dominating pair lie three teams, Aston Martin, Ferrari and Mercedes. With Ferrari suffering issues in both races so far and Aston Martin's drivers topping and tailing the six-car train, we don't know if Ferrari sits ahead or behind this pack. Visiting Melbourne, let's hope each team has a decent run of things in order to determine the true pace of the Italian Stallions.

Further down, the midfield is truly unpredictable given the close nature of the pack. Qualifying will be of upmost importance this weekend, so drivers can't afford to not extract the maximum out of their cars. Miss out on a tenth and you could find yourself dropping back several places. The midfield is where experts believe McLaren to be, but where exactly, no-one knows. The first two races saw issues befall both cars dropping them to the rear of the pack. Can the Papaya pairing finally have a clean race this weekend?

Piastri returns home​

Speaking of McLaren, its youngest driver will be racing on his home streets of Melbourne for the first time in his career. The young Aussie will want to make a good first impression on his home-grown fans, but a good result depends on the car underneath him.


From Daniel Ricciardo getting the boot at the end of last year to Oscar Piastri getting a poor start to the season from no fault of his own. McLaren won't be popular with Australian F1 fans, and if he struggles this weekend, Monday could see plenty of orange shirts filling bins around Albert Park.

Team management will be crucial​

With Red Bull undisputedly leading the field, its two drivers are beginning to lock horns. Last time out, Sergio Perez managed to out-do his World Champion teammate putting the two level on race wins this year. The tail end of the Saudi Arabian GP featured disobedience from both drivers, a trait sure to rear its head this weekend if the team can't get a handle of the situation.

Whilst this makes for exciting viewing to spectators, the teams always hope for an easy race without drama. It's all well and good fighting to close or maintain a five-second gap. But when these two get closer mid-race and start fighting wheel-to-wheel, that's when things could get nasty for the energy drinks outfit.

With a dominant car, Red Bull is looking to win as many races early on before their lack of wind tunnel time starts to hinder them. A double DNF this early on would throw a spanner in their plans and open the door for a championship challenge from another team. Fancy a shot at your third, Fernando?

Will you be getting up early for the 2023 Australian Grand Prix? Who are you putting your money on?
About author
Angus Martin
Motorsport gets my blood pumping more than anything else. Be it physical or virtual, I'm down to bang doors.

Comments

OK we can skip refuel... (maybe it has no difference bc the best and the worst car are too far apart no way to bring them closes unless cars are more equal)

but what do you guys think of Formula E knockout qualification system?

Would be good to be implemented?

I kind liked it.
 
Premium
There's a few stories to be played out in the next couple of years,
Mercedes and Hamilton both really want a record breaking 8th, (then TW can look at taking an FIA/FOM role) and LH can open a boutique... providing his dresser comes with him.
Alonso is desperate to get something that will hold him in the history books as a great because Hamilton has surpassed him by so much,
George Russell wants to be seen to have leadership qualities,
Verstappen wants to win a pile more but refuses to play the F1 political games and could walk away... as did JPM (there was a driver I'd have liked to have seen in F1 for longer)
Nico wants to prove that there's life in older dogs
Lando wishes that Bernie was still around cos he needs another watch.
 
There's a few stories to be played out in the next couple of years,
Mercedes and Hamilton both really want a record breaking 8th, (then TW can look at taking an FIA/FOM role) and LH can open a boutique... providing his dresser comes with him.
Alonso is desperate to get something that will hold him in the history books as a great because Hamilton has surpassed him by so much,
George Russell wants to be seen to have leadership qualities,
Verstappen wants to win a pile more but refuses to play the F1 political games and could walk away... as did JPM (there was a driver I'd have liked to have seen in F1 for longer)
Nico wants to prove that there's life in older dogs
Lando wishes that Bernie was still around cos he needs another watch.
Alonso doesnt care about what Hamilton did or didn't do. Why would he care? He raced against Schumacher and is the guy that ended his reign. That whole narrative is just pushed by the english media... Alonso won le mans, and has unfinished business at indy, he is already a Great in many people's books. He was never LH's "rival", his Rival was Raikkonen.
 
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Premium
Alonso doesnt care about what Hamilton did or didn't do. Why would he care? He raced against Schumacher and is the guy that ended his reign. That whole narrative is just pushed by the english media... Alonso won le mans, and has unfinished business at indy, he is already a Great in many people's books. He was never LH's "rival", his Rival was Raikkonen.
JPM also has two of the triple crown steps, and hopefully he gets gifted Lemans like Alonso did, don't get me wrong I think Alonso is fast but desperate for it all to fall into place, as for 'English Media'... I don't read that rubbish, so that insult is wasted.
He did have an advantage of a 'Banned' front Mass damper at Renault, he did try Blackmail at McLaren, he did try for an advantage in 'Crashgate' and he owns deck chairs for when things go wrong.
Alonso expected No 1 position at McLaren and the upstart Hamilton didn't care, that's what gave Raikkonen the title, Alonso can (like many) be his own worst enemy
 
JPM also has two of the triple crown steps, and hopefully he gets gifted Lemans like Alonso did, don't get me wrong I think Alonso is fast but desperate for it all to fall into place, as for 'English Media'... I don't read that rubbish, so that insult is wasted.
He did have an advantage of a 'Banned' front Mass damper at Renault, he did try Blackmail at McLaren, he did try for an advantage in 'Crashgate' and he owns deck chairs for when things go wrong.
Alonso expected No 1 position at McLaren and the upstart Hamilton didn't care, that's what gave Raikkonen the title, Alonso can (like many) be his own worst enemy
Desperate for what? IF he would be desperate, he wouldn't be there anymore. If you would get payed millions to race an F1 at his age, and still quick, and still enjoying, why would he refuse?

Well i can see you do remember all the "advantages" he had, maybe he also needed the "advantage" of destroying Raikkonen, and every other teammate he had, in any car until now on pace alone no? The "crashgate" was not his doing, and as for Mclaren, he tried to "blackmail" Ron Dennis so much that he even went after him later and brought him back to Mclaren with open arms, maybe after being stabbed in the back by his own Protege Hamilton one too many times right?... Yes Hamilton didnt care, and he screwed the whole mclaren team in the process, and Dennis was too stupid not to realize that then, but he came to his senses later when the golden boy hit the door on his way out because ironically, they didnt protect him against Button like they did against Alonso. Guess Alonso's only sin was being a spaniard in an english team.

I would love to see them back again in the same car. I have the feeling that even with Alonso's current age, it would be a different story this time.
 
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Premium
Desperate for what? IF he would be desperate, he wouldn't be there anymore. If you would get payed millions to race an F1 at his age, and still quick, and still enjoying, why would he refuse?

Well i can see you do remember all the "advantages" he had, maybe he also needed the "advantage" of destroying Raikkonen, and every other teammate he had, in any car until now on pace alone no? The "crashgate" was not his doing, and as for Mclaren, he tried to "blackmail" Ron Dennis so much that he even went after him later and brought him back to Mclaren with open arms, maybe after being stabbed in the back by his own Protege Hamilton one too many times right?... Yes Hamilton didnt care, and he screwed the whole mclaren team in the process, and Dennis was too stupid not to realize that then, but he came to his senses later when the golden boy hit the door on his way out because ironically, they didnt protect him against Button like they did against Alonso. Guess Alonso's only sin was being a spaniard in an english team.

I would love to see them back again in the same car. I have the feeling that even with Alonso's current age, it would be a different story this time.
Don't be so hurt, 7 out of 10 teams are English teams so there's not really much choice is there.
 
OK we can skip refuel... (maybe it has no difference bc the best and the worst car are too far apart no way to bring them closes unless cars are more equal)

but what do you guys think of Formula E knockout qualification system?

Would be good to be implemented?

I kind liked it.
I think that many fans and pretty much all F1 journalists HATE change. In fact, they hate anyone that supports change. They tried changing the F1 qualifying 5-10 years ago and there was complete outcry after a race or two they switched back.

I seriously doubt F1 would consider doing something like this; especially with the new Liberty Media ownership. First of all, the current qualifying method is pretty good. In fact, it's really good. Second of all, if they did the outcry of the Americanization/NASCARization/DTSing of F1 by the new ownership would be deafening.
 
Premium
Desperate for what? IF he would be desperate, he wouldn't be there anymore. If you would get payed millions to race an F1 at his age, and still quick, and still enjoying, why would he refuse?

Well i can see you do remember all the "advantages" he had, maybe he also needed the "advantage" of destroying Raikkonen, and every other teammate he had, in any car until now on pace alone no? The "crashgate" was not his doing, and as for Mclaren, he tried to "blackmail" Ron Dennis so much that he even went after him later and brought him back to Mclaren with open arms, maybe after being stabbed in the back by his own Protege Hamilton one too many times right?... Yes Hamilton didnt care, and he screwed the whole mclaren team in the process, and Dennis was too stupid not to realize that then, but he came to his senses later when the golden boy hit the door on his way out because ironically, they didnt protect him against Button like they did against Alonso. Guess Alonso's only sin was being a spaniard in an english team.

I would love to see them back again in the same car. I have the feeling that even with Alonso's current age, it would be a different story this time.
Interesting what you say about Button. I have always had the view that Hamilton didn't really like Button as a team-mate. a) He was good and b) he had as much attention with media(maybe more) as Hamilton. That latter certainly wouldn't have gone down well. I also think that was one of the reasons he looked elsewhere, ie. Mercedes. The only thing he has over Alonso is choosing teams, nothing else.
 
Premium
Interesting what you say about Button. I have always had the view that Hamilton didn't really like Button as a team-mate. a) He was good and b) he had as much attention with media(maybe more) as Hamilton. That latter certainly wouldn't have gone down well. I also think that was one of the reasons he looked elsewhere, ie. Mercedes. The only thing he has over Alonso is choosing teams, nothing else.
Yeah, I remember JB saying that, "I'm not really Lewis's kind of person" there was also the 672-657 which might rub him wrong too.
 
Don't be so hurt, 7 out of 10 teams are English teams so there's not really much choice is there.
You really like to try to guess what is on peoples minds, i suppose you are either a frustrated psychologist, or just a failed troll.

"Hurt" is dudebro talk, learn how to talk like a grownup please.
 

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