2023 Formula One Saudi Arabia Grand Prix

Saudi Arabian Grand Prix feature image.jpg

Who are you supporting in the 2023 Saudi Arabian Grand Prix?

  • Max Verstappen

    Votes: 121 27.1%
  • Sergio Perez

    Votes: 47 10.5%
  • Charles Leclerc

    Votes: 81 18.2%
  • Carlos Sainz

    Votes: 26 5.8%
  • Lewis Hamilton

    Votes: 65 14.6%
  • George Russell

    Votes: 25 5.6%
  • Fernando Alonso

    Votes: 219 49.1%
  • Lance Stroll

    Votes: 9 2.0%
  • Esteban Ocon

    Votes: 12 2.7%
  • Pierre Gasly

    Votes: 20 4.5%
  • Lando Norris

    Votes: 25 5.6%
  • Oscar Piastri

    Votes: 12 2.7%
  • Nico Hulkenberg

    Votes: 21 4.7%
  • Kevin Magnussen

    Votes: 18 4.0%
  • Valterri Bottas

    Votes: 15 3.4%
  • Zhou Guanyu

    Votes: 6 1.3%
  • Yuki Tsunoda

    Votes: 11 2.5%
  • Nyck De Vries

    Votes: 19 4.3%
  • Alex Albon

    Votes: 8 1.8%
  • Logan Sargeant

    Votes: 20 4.5%

  • Total voters
    446
Round 2 of the 2023 Formula One season takes place in Saudi Arabia this weekend on the Jeddah Corniche circuit. Here are all the stories to look out for.

Image Credit: Mercedes Benz Group Media

After a two-week trip across the Arabian desert, Formula One is paying Jeddah a visit in Saudi Arabia. This weekend is the Saudi Arabia F1 Grand Prix as the championship moves on to Round 2 of the season.

Compared to Bahrain, the Jeddah Corniche street circuit is a totally different beast. The fast-flowing nature of this high-speed venue is sure to produce a different pecking order to Bahrain. In fact, the tyre-shredding stop-start layout of Bahrain couldn't be further from the upcoming circuit if it tried.

The opening round of the season at Bahrain saw pre-season testing concerns become a reality as Red Bull proved this year will be a fight for second place. Elsewhere, a fantastic battle for the final step on the podium raged on throughout the race between Mercedes, Ferrari and Aston Martin.


Further down, an equally fraught competition for the lower point-scoring positions saw Alex Albon claim a point for Williams and Pierre Gasly climb from the back of the grid to the top-ten. The biggest surprise of the weekend was certainly the McLarens which suffered from major reliability issues all while showing little to no pace. It will be a difficult second race for them.

Top stories in F1 Jeddah​

Whilst Aston Martin showed they could keep up with the top teams in Bahrain, Jeddah is a different kettle of fish. Whether or not the AMR-23 can maintain its pace on the much faster street circuit is an important aspect of this week's event. This track will be a good representation of many circuits on the 2023 calendar, so if the team in green can compete this weekend, we'll know they're in for a season-long fight.

As mentioned above, McLaren had a torrid event in Bahrain. Not only were they off the pace, both Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri fell to reliability issues early on. Although the more experienced Brit continued to the chequered flag, he was forced to stop regularly to top up on pneumatic fluid. Meanwhile, a total electronic systems malfunction rendered Piastri's car immobile. The Papaya squad will be hoping they can show what they have in the second round, though with upgrades not expected before Baku, it will be a tricky first quarter of the season.


The biggest heartbreak in Bahrain was when Charles Leclerc once again came to a halt in his Ferrari F1 car. An engine issue forced his retirement from the race. But it gets worse. The Monegasque already has a 10-place grid penalty for using too many ECU parts this season. On the Sunday in Bahrain alone, the Ferrari squad used up their two allowed ECU components meaning every new parts from now will incur a grid drop. This early on in the season, Ferrari will be worried that this is a recurring issue. It will be interesting to see if either driver has the same problem in Jeddah this weekend.

Aside from the Aston-Mercedes-Ferrari battle, the best on-track action was as ever provided by the midfield. From eighth down, drivers sat in a line fighting for the final points paying positions. We saw in qualifying for Race 1 that the entire field was close, which makes predicting a line-up impossible. It will be an important aspect of the early stages of the weekend to work out which teams are likely to score points this time out as the field shuffles once more.

Watch the 2023 Saudi Arabia Grand Prix​

As ever, Formula One race streams are available as part of the official F1 TV subscription while many channels around the world will show race coverage.

Timetable information for the 2023 Formula One Saudi Arabia Grand Prix


With practice getting away on Friday, fans can tune in as the work week comes to an end. Practice 1 starts at 14:30 CET whilst FP2 gets going at 6pm CET. Saturday's FP3 and Qualifying track action also gets underway at 14:30 and 18:00 respectively. You can watch the race from 6pm on Sunday CET as we find out if Red Bull really is the team to beat in 2023.

Will you be watching the 2023 Formula One Saudi Arabia Grand Prix?
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

Leclerc is beating the guy who beat Norris the two seasons he was his teamie. It's not as clear cut as it seems.
Leclerc seems to be a little fragile mentally. He's prone to make small mistakes and too often, he goes into full self-flagellation mode afterwards. I don't like Verstappen at all, but on that aspect, Max is miles ahead of Leclerc.
 
Premium
Leclerc is beating the guy who beat Norris the two seasons he was his teamie. It's not as clear cut as it seems.
Yeah, well it don't really work like that, Danny Ric beat Seb, Lando beat Danny, but Lando was beaten by Carlos who in turn has been beaten by LeClerk...
Now when we look at 7 time world champion Michael Schumacher... well, Rosberg beat Schumi, Hamilton beat Rosberg.... But Jenson Button outscored Lewis Hamilton overall during their time together at McLaren.... the reality of racing is different from what the stats say.
 
Premium
Leclerc seems to be a little fragile mentally. He's prone to make small mistakes and too often, he goes into full self-flagellation mode afterwards. I don't like Verstappen at all, but on that aspect, Max is miles ahead of Leclerc.
Max has an opinionated view of the world that I find refreshing in today's BS corporate sucking positive wording trained mediaspeak that drivers use, he has an honest belief in himself and will not digest a view that's different from his own, it's probably come from Jos, he was also a straight talker, he ain't gonna fill your boots with stuff you want to hear, he'll just tell you how he sees it.
I like honesty.
 
Max has an opinionated view of the world that I find refreshing in today's BS corporate sucking positive wording trained mediaspeak that drivers use, he has an honest belief in himself and will not digest a view that's different from his own, it's probably come from Jos, he was also a straight talker, he ain't gonna fill your boots with stuff you want to hear, he'll just tell you how he sees it.
I like honesty.
correct! a kind of Jochem Rindt,, no Bullshit talk
 
This track is scary with the blind/semi-blind corners. I never think 'dangerous' when watching F1, as opposed to when watching bike racing, but I do think 'dangerous' with this track.
yes I agree with you. I expected some changes to be made and I don't understand why this didn't happen. I also have the feeling that things will go horribly wrong here and it will be too late.... it seems as the cars get safer the safety relaxes and that's not good!!!
 
Premium
yes I agree with you. I expected some changes to be made and I don't understand why this didn't happen. I also have the feeling that things will go horribly wrong here and it will be too late.... it seems as the cars get safer the safety relaxes and that's not good!!!

As long as the Fans/Public is being led to believe the downforce is king then it will be an ever increasing battle to get good racing, the faster you go round a corner the shorter the next straight, that means the less time you have to perform an overtake and the greater the chance of getting it wrong, that could cost lives, going faster does not mean better racing, just look at Goodwood Revival and Members Meetings, close exciting racing with many a racing star.
 
This track is scary with the blind/semi-blind corners. I never think 'dangerous' when watching F1, as opposed to when watching bike racing, but I do think 'dangerous' with this track.
Sure!
All motorsport is dangerous.
The designers of this track though, seem to have gone to great lengths to promote speed over safety.
I hate the sheer amount of blind, high-speed corners.
Since it was placed on the calendar, I've breathed a sigh of relief after that race weekend is over.
I fully anticipate we...at some point, will see a massive car-on-car shunt there in the not too distant future.
It was stupid to put so many blind corners next to raised barriers the drivers cannot see past.
Know why corners like Pouhon are exciting, yet relatively safe?
You can see through the corner and take evasive action if it all starts to go wrong.
Jeddah doesn't have that luxury.
Come through any of those to find a crippled car at the last second...with a slow team spotter and F1 will have a catastrophe.
 
Premium
As long as the Fans/Public is being led to believe the downforce is king then it will be an ever increasing battle to get good racing, the faster you go round a corner the shorter the next straight, that means the less time you have to perform an overtake and the greater the chance of getting it wrong, that could cost lives, going faster does not mean better racing, just look at Goodwood Revival and Members Meetings, close exciting racing with many a racing star.
Yes, downforce is far too powerful, in all car racing actually. I think it should be limited to preventing the front lifting at speed. Let the engineers explore downforce extremes in sprints, not racing.
Re the Goodwood Revival. The first time I went (second time it was wet and a bit miserable) I was gobsmacked! The best car race meeting I have ever attended. Quality drivers clearly driving the cars at their limits...fabulous.
 
Premium
Sure!
All motorsport is dangerous.
The designers of this track though, seem to have gone to great lengths to promote speed over safety.
I hate the sheer amount of blind, high-speed corners.
Since it was placed on the calendar, I've breathed a sigh of relief after that race weekend is over.
I fully anticipate we...at some point, will see a massive car-on-car shunt there in the not too distant future.
It was stupid to put so many blind corners next to raised barriers the drivers cannot see past.
Know why corners like Pouhon are exciting, yet relatively safe?
You can see through the corner and take evasive action if it all starts to go wrong.
Jeddah doesn't have that luxury.
Come through any of those to find a crippled car at the last second...with a slow team spotter and F1 will have a catastrophe.
Agreed. I have no problem with a track being a bit dangerous in terms of the outside of corners, but not a series of blind corners. I am talking in terms of qualifying and practice actually, where cars can have massive differentials in speed at times. Once racing the danger reduces quite a bit.
 
Seriously, Mick is a bit of a slow learner. And from what I've seen, he looks more like Ralf than Michael.
Spot on.
If he ever does get some longer and steady seat time on the track instead of only in the Merc sim then he could be a good midfield driver - after a while.:)
 
The problem with F1 is generally the tension isn't in the races, it's how the title chase plays out. You may end up with an interesting title fight made of extremely boring races.
 
Guenther Steiner, Team Principal
“We need to find a little bit on Kevin’s car because he’s a little bit not so happy with his car, but I think we know what we have to look for.”

Go for it Guenther - find it!
I count on you :confused:

1.png
 
Yeah, well it don't really work like that, Danny Ric beat Seb, Lando beat Danny, but Lando was beaten by Carlos who in turn has been beaten by LeClerk...
Now when we look at 7 time world champion Michael Schumacher... well, Rosberg beat Schumi, Hamilton beat Rosberg.... But Jenson Button outscored Lewis Hamilton overall during their time together at McLaren.... the reality of racing is different from what the stats say.
I do understand that. But truth is, Norris still has lots to prove.
 
Premium
I do understand that. But truth is, Norris still has lots to prove.
Norris still needs a car to run at the front of the pack, LeClerc has/had that but threw it off the road too often last year, he had 8 poles and 3 three wins and two of those were in the first three races.
I'd put Norris higher than LeClerc for getting it home.
in fact if we were to extract Verstappen and place another driver in his seat then I believe that any of the below list would bring home the Championship (in no particular order)
Hamilton
Norris
Russell
LeClerc
Alonso
and perhaps Stroll
 
Premium
I know it's only practice but in FP3 it's approx 6 tenths from 3rd to 15th place! Max is an alien so in another world of ability but the field is mighty close to Perez's Red Bull.
 

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Angus Martin
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