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

Well done Perez!

Alonso FTW. Maybe if penalty, 5 sec because they touched the car instead of actually working on it like Stroll? :whistling:

Let's hope the field catches up a bit :O_o:
 
Last edited:
Anybody knows why there was a safety car instead of a virtual safety car when Stroll retired? Or maybe I didn't see it correctly, but it seemed to me like the Aston was in a rather secure spot and a VSC would have been enough.

The race was a snoozer, really. The end of the IMSA 12 hours of Sebring was a lot more interesting, if anybody saw it.
 
Last edited:
Premium
Disgusting. Ever since this American consortium took over, the cleansing and rigging becomes more and more obvious. For the record: I am not an Alonso fan. Now they are claiming the 5 second penalty was incorrectly served and now the penalty is 10 seconds, which gifts third place to Russel & Mercedes. This stinks. Just like that idiotic safety car, a virtual one would have been good enough.
This reminded me of a Daytona 500 race a couple of years ago (my first and last one ever).
"RAIN in Turn 3". FCY - to bunch the cars together. I was in turn 3. There was no rain, not even a drop from the sky, no clouds either - only a couple of guys opening cans of beer.

I am an F1 fan since the early 60', but it has morphed into coreographed show and sure enough multi class WEC or ELMS is so much better these days.

Sorry for my rant.

Cheers.
 
Anybody knows why there was a safety car instead of a virtual safety car when Stroll retired? Or maybe I didn't see it correctly, but it seemed to me like the Aston was in a rather secure spot and a VSC would have been enough.

The race was a snoozer, really. The end of the IMSA 12 hours of Sebring was a lot more interesting, if anybody saw it.
I saw it, a zillion safety cars to make sure the top guys were always close ended with total amateur hour with the first 3 taking each other out. I wouldnt call that exciting.

The FIA defended itself with sensor showing the car still on track.

As for the race, if it wasnt for DRS, it would have been a lot better.
 
Disgusting. Ever since this American consortium took over, the cleansing and rigging becomes more and more obvious. For the record: I am not an Alonso fan. Now they are claiming the 5 second penalty was incorrectly served and now the penalty is 10 seconds, which gifts third place to Russel & Mercedes. This stinks. Just like that idiotic safety car, a virtual one would have been good enough.
This reminded me of a Daytona 500 race a couple of years ago (my first and last one ever).
"RAIN in Turn 3". FCY - to bunch the cars together. I was in turn 3. There was no rain, not even a drop from the sky, no clouds either - only a couple of guys opening cans of beer.

I am an F1 fan since the early 60', but it has morphed into coreographed show and sure enough multi class WEC or ELMS is so much better these days.

Sorry for my rant.

Cheers.
Don't apologize. FIA deserves to come under fire for their penalty approach. Alonso shouldn't have been served that penalty to begin with (nothing gained, by a gnats ass) and the safety should have remained a VSC (clear as day). Races shouldn't be determined by stewards. What a joke.

Alonso earned that podium. He and the fans were robbed IMO. Good show by RB as expected.
 
Yet another weekend of #FireTheStewards;

- Sargent loses his qualifying lap because one tyre was over the white lines when the track limits are never enforced that way

- Alonso gets penalised post race because Mercedes whinge about the serving of the first penalty and the stewards flip flop after previously judging it to be fair.
F1 Stewards should work on a circus honestly
 
Don't apologize. FIA deserves to come under fire for their penalty approach. Alonso shouldn't have been served that penalty to begin with (nothing gained, by a gnats ass) and the safety should have remained a VSC (clear as day). Races shouldn't be determined by stewards. What a joke.

Alonso earned that podium. He and the fans were robbed IMO. Good show by RB as expected.
totally agree!!! I don't need those penalties for every mosquito either.. let them race
 
BTW, imagine 80-90s F1 with these "penalties" standards. Unbelievable! We could see dozens in each race.
 
Premium
When you get penalties for not taking any advantage and some cars track-cutting only get penalty after repeating it, but every cut is getting an advantage. Ridiculous.
Perhaps we could have penalties for track cuts by issuing a DRS ban for the next DRS section, with 3 strikes and it's over for the race, drivers would suffer the penalty and it would be a stiff warning.

Either way the stewards should make all judgments within the race and not wait till after... unless it's on the last couple of laps, all incidents should be viewed by sufficient personnel and penalties should be within a handful of laps, it's the fans that pay for the sport/business and they are the ones being cheated by late decisions.
 
That sucks for FA, deserved that 3rd place.
Blame the one with the jack though, rules are rules and it's dumb to try to get away with that.
If that was a recently successful team like mercedes the karens would all be out with their pitchforks to get that penalty served.
 
Disgusting. Ever since this American consortium took over, the cleansing and rigging becomes more and more obvious. For the record: I am not an Alonso fan. Now they are claiming the 5 second penalty was incorrectly served and now the penalty is 10 seconds, which gifts third place to Russel & Mercedes. This stinks. Just like that idiotic safety car, a virtual one would have been good enough.
This reminded me of a Daytona 500 race a couple of years ago (my first and last one ever).
"RAIN in Turn 3". FCY - to bunch the cars together. I was in turn 3. There was no rain, not even a drop from the sky, no clouds either - only a couple of guys opening cans of beer.

I am an F1 fan since the early 60', but it has morphed into coreographed show and sure enough multi class WEC or ELMS is so much better these days.

Sorry for my rant.

Cheers.
The violation wasn’t just an FIA claim, it was pretty clear on video. Yes, it’s a gift to Russell, but it’s also consistent with Ocon’s penalty two weeks ago.

The issue I have is why did they wait until after the race for the stewards to announce it. But I generally don’t go for conspiracy theories . “Never attribute to malice that which is adequately explained by incompetence“
 

Latest News

Article information

Author
Angus Martin
Article read time
3 min read
Views
12,382
Comments
169
Last update

Are you buying car setups?

  • Yes

  • No


Results are only viewable after voting.
Back
Top