2023 Formula One Singapore Grand Prix

AstonMartinArtofLiving_SingaporeGP.jpg

Who are you cheering on in the 2023 Formula One Singapore Grand Prix?

  • Max Verstappen

    Votes: 48 20.9%
  • Sergio Perez

    Votes: 9 3.9%
  • Charles Leclerc

    Votes: 36 15.7%
  • Carlos Sainz

    Votes: 69 30.0%
  • Lewis Hamilton

    Votes: 42 18.3%
  • George Russell

    Votes: 16 7.0%
  • Lando Norris

    Votes: 27 11.7%
  • Oscar Piastri

    Votes: 13 5.7%
  • Fernando Alonso

    Votes: 30 13.0%
  • Lance Stroll

    Votes: 1 0.4%
  • Esteban Ocon

    Votes: 6 2.6%
  • Pierre Gasly

    Votes: 10 4.3%
  • Alexander Albon

    Votes: 9 3.9%
  • Logan Sargeant

    Votes: 3 1.3%
  • Yuki Tsunoda

    Votes: 6 2.6%
  • Liam Lawson

    Votes: 19 8.3%
  • Nico Hulkenberg

    Votes: 7 3.0%
  • Kevin Magnussen

    Votes: 7 3.0%
  • Valtteri Bottas

    Votes: 4 1.7%
  • Guanyu Zhou

    Votes: 4 1.7%

  • Total voters
    230
The European season is firmly behind us as the 2023 Formula One Singapore Grand Prix kicks off the final, flyaway leg of this year's World Championship. Who will end up on top?

Image credit: Aston Martin on Newspress

The summer break is done. We have now visited the last few remaining European rounds and the Formula One paddock is readying its sprint around the globe towards the season finale. Indeed, eight rounds remain, all of which are fly away events; the first of which takes place this weekend at Singapore.

This year's visit to the Marina Bay Street circuit will be F1's thirteenth to the venue. However, it will be the 22nd official Singapore Grand Prix following some Formula Libre racing in the mid-1960's. This will be the first time in Marina Bay history that the race will run on a dramatically reduced track length. Much of the traditional third sector disappears this year with the chicanes under the bridge being bypassed in favour of an extended straight.


Whilst this is sure to make qualifying less exciting, it is aimed at improving the raceday show. Whether it will work or not is as yet unknown. All we can do is hope that the altered layout will provide an interesting challenge to the drivers as they learn new corner approach speeds.

Aside from the circuit modifications, there are many stories going on around the paddock. Here are just some of the stories to look out for going into the race weekend.

Max Verstappen win record​

In Monza, Max Verstappen did the unthinkable: After a hard-fought battle for the first half of the Grand Prix, he stormed past the Ferrari of Carlos Sainz and cruised to his 10th win in a row. Surpassing Sebastian Vettel, he now sits as the driver with the most consecutive wins in a row.

With such a dominant run of form all season and Red Bull reliability seemingly not looking to challenge the team's results, the question now is, how far can he go? It is looking ever more likely that the Dutch champion will reach Abu Dhabi having not dropped below P2 all year and having won every race since Miami.


For those tired of the constant domination of the sport, this will certainly be a disappointing prediction. But those impressed by this consistent level unmatched by any driver or team will surely continue to be in awe this weekend.

A street circuit, Singapore plays right into the Red Bull RB19's strengths. In fact, the combination of rapid direction changes and slow speed turns is exactly where this car appears strongest. If that wasn not enough, the racer's straight line speed advantage will come in handy with the newly elongated straight between turns 14-16.

F1 2024 driver line-up​

Behind Verstappen is a thoroughly competitive grid that looks set to continue its fight throughout the tail end of this year and into next. However, there are still three seats yet to be filled for 2024. Indeed, the Red Bull owned Alpha Tauri squad is taking its time to finalise its line-up for next year, as is Williams with its second seat alongside Alex Albon.

In fact, Logan Sargeant is yet to truly show what he is made of in his rookie season and is running out of chances to do so. With Williams' fantastic top-end advantage, last time out at Monza should have been his chance to shine. However, DRS trains and a qualifying performance falling in the shadows of that of his teammate, Sargeant failed to score points yet again.

Alpha Tauri seats are still up for grabs.jpg

Image credit: Red Bull Content Pool

Whilst Albon now leads the mid-field battle on an impressive 21 points, the Floridian is languishing as the only non-Alpha Tauri driver yet to leave the marks.

Although Alpha Tauri has had four drivers race its car this year, only one has managed to score points so far. Bar Nyck De Vries, all three remaining racers will be in contention to fill the two seats left unaccounted for at the Italian team. With each of his new teammates, Yuki Tsunoda has so far shown that he is able to keep his place as the lead driver.

But as Liam Lawson continues to build confidence in the sport with Ricciardo still injured, the Japanese driver is under serious threat. Tsunoda must use each race he has up against Lawson to show he is the superior driver in order to preserve his seat. With Red Bull seemingly in favour of Ricciardo racing next year, the battle may well be between these two youngsters. Each race from now on, especially Singapore, will be crucial.

What will you be keeping an eye on during the 2023 Singapore Grand Prix weekend?
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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

George sucks. People say Hamilton can only win when he is ahead, but at least he doesn't bin it constantly when he has a chance to improve his position,
 
Do people "know" Max (or ANY driver), yet they dislike him. Personally I dislike the sanctimonious and prefer down to earth types....which is why "I" dislike Lewis.
At the elite level of sports, there are no " down to earth types". To be that successful you have to have a certain percentage of " butthole".

Some just hide it better than others.
 
At the elite level of sports, there are no " down to earth types". To be that successful you have to have a certain percentage of " butthole".

Some just hide it better than others.
Indeed in the modern era of PR trained drivers with not much personality I agree, but Kimi was very much down to earth, someone who just said it as it is, not someone who has to think how it would sound on social media. I don't like self imposed "ambassadors" of humanity. Same reason why I don't like Vettel.
 
Premium
Wondered what was going on, it seemed a little off, hence wondered if that was intended or not.

But to answer your question, 'dick activity' regardless of if I like or dislike someone is irrelevant.
ok, fair enough, one sees that 'activity' on forums too sometimes
 
Premium
George is trying too hard and overdriving by the looks of things, Similar thing happened to Perez. But no he does not "suck".
I think Hamilton didn't help. He was so desperate to finish ahead of Russell, who had bested him all weekend, that the pressure he applied to Russell meant Russell had to defend whilst trying to attack Lando. The desperation to get to Russell by Hamilton showed at the start where he used a signature 'track-limits-overtake'
Having said that, disappointed that Russell cocked up.
 
Last edited:
I think Hamilton didn't help. He was so desperate to finish ahead of Russell, who had bested him all weekend, that the pressure he applied to Russell meant Russell had to defend whilst trying to attack Lando. The desperation to get to Russell by Hamilton showed at the start where he used a signature 'track-limits-overtake'
Having said that, disappointed that Russell cocked up.
Hamilton clearly had the fastest car. If Russell wasn't able to handle the pressure, it's his problem. Blaming Lewis for Russell's mistake is farcical.
 
Hamilton clearly had the fastest car. If Russell wasn't able to handle the pressure, it's his problem. Blaming Lewis for Russell's mistake is farcical.
Pretty much this. If these are the best drivers of the world as people tout them, I expect for them to handle the situation. I like Russell, but today he cracked.
 
Premium
Hamilton clearly had the fastest car. If Russell wasn't able to handle the pressure, it's his problem. Blaming Lewis for Russell's mistake is farcical.
I didn't actually say I blamed Hamilton for Russell's cockup. I just thought the 2 Mercs had a chance for both higher up. But I have no problem with you seeing my comment as farcical :)
How about that, eh.
 
At the elite level of sports, there are no " down to earth types". To be that successful you have to have a certain percentage of " butthole".

Some just hide it better than others.
Lewis likes mind games. His self-directed multi media attention that goes quite far. I can't think of many top athletes with this trait. With often jealous behavior towards Verstappen's victories. I'm not a fan of this Mr. Hamilton at all.
 
If Lando had 200 seconds of IndyCar P2P Sainz wouldn't be looking so brilliant.
 
Premium
Hamilton clearly had the fastest car. If Russell wasn't able to handle the pressure, it's his problem. Blaming Lewis for Russell's mistake is farcical.
However it's not the way a team gets maximum points when in a three* way fight for 2nd in the constructors championship, but if you can get your team mate to throw it away it can go a long way towards putting him in his place!
Ferrari cocked up a bit but again as in Monza they didn't get the No 1 driver to frighten his team mate off the road.
Ferrari 37 points v Mercedes 16 points
whereas had Hamilton played the team game the results would have been
Ferrari 35 points v Mercedes 28 points
*possibly four way with the McLaren resurgence.
 
I didn't actually say I blamed Hamilton for Russell's cockup. I just thought the 2 Mercs had a chance for both higher up. But I have no problem with you seeing my comment as farcical :)
How about that, eh.
My apologies. But the way your comment was phrased led me to think you were blaming Hamilton.
 
Premium
With safety cars and such, was surprised that Verstappen made it to 5th.
 
With safety cars and such, was surprised that Verstappen made it to 5th.
Max 5th, Perez 8th, Red Bull managed to salvage whatever points they could score. Meanwhile, the Haas cars once again were great in qualifying but faded quickly in race conditions.
 
George sucks. People say Hamilton can only win when he is ahead, but at least he doesn't bin it constantly when he has a chance to improve his position,
Short memory? I remember Hamilton binning it totally on his own around here last year.
 
Pretty much this. If these are the best drivers of the world as people tout them, I expect for them to handle the situation. I like Russell, but today he cracked.
not so much cracked, certainly not from the pressure from behind, but he made the classic sim driver mistake. He followed Lando, so when Lando kissed the wall, so did Russel. Ya gotta drive the track, not your competitor's car.
 

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