2018 Formula One Bahrain Grand Prix Discussion Thread

Paul Jeffrey

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Bahrain Grand Prix Discussion Thread 2018.jpg

Welcome to the central discussion thread for the 2018 Formula One Bahrain Grand Prix!

Round two of the 2018 FIA Formula One World Championship is fast approaching, heading to the sandy dunes of the Bahrain desert for the next instalment of what looks like a potentially tight and fierce battle for the 2018 Drivers World Championship between Mercedes, Ferrari and Red Bull Racing.

Can Vettel and Ferrari win against the odds again at Sakhir, will Hamilton and Mercedes show the true form of the new W09? Can Red Bull lift themselves into victory contention? All to play for in the desert, and I've not even mentioned the Halo yet....

Session Report Links:
 
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THURSDAY FIA PRESS CONFERENCE

DRIVERS – Valtteri BOTTAS (Mercedes), Kimi RAIKKONEN (Ferrari), Fernando ALONSO (McLaren)

PRESS CONFERENCE

Kimi, if we can start with you. It was third place in Australia for the opening and it could have been even better and you said you were happy with the car during the first weekend. Could you just tell us what about this car you like and does it suit you more than last year’s car?
Kimi RAIKKONEN: Obviously it’s hard to say. I think it was a pretty straightforward weekend. For sure, we could have done more things and improved always, but it’s the same: it doesn’t matter if you win or are tenth of something; there are always things to improve or work on. Obviously we have a very limited amount of time over the weekend to do things, with the practice, and also with the weather it was a bit tricky. Overall, I think we were quite pleased with how things went. You want more, better positions, but I think we take that happily. As a team we did a pretty job out of it. Not much to complain about really. We want to win races, but it’s the first race out and we managed to do decent points, so we go forward here, try to make a good practice. So far the car has been working well, even with pretty limited testing over the winter, with some illness and obviously the weather was not ideal on the first test, so I’m pretty OK with how things are running, so let’s just keep doing our normal things and improving.

Thank you. Valtteri, coming to you: it was a difficult weekend for you in Australia, especially with the crash in qualifying. How much does a weekend like that play on your mind in the gap between races and how eager are you to get out on track this weekend?
Valtteri BOTTAS: Well, not so much been in my mind, because everything was kind of processed during the weekend. It was a bad weekend, that’s it. Now we still have 20 races to go and we’re here in Bahrain, so nothing really to worry about at this point. We have a competitive car. We know we still have a lot of work to do to make it better. Just a bad weekend, so looking forward to this one.

Thank you very much. Fernando, you said on Saturday evening in Melbourne that hopefully you’d finish higher than P7 or P6 in Australia and you went and finished in fifth place, so where will you finish this weekend?
Fernando ALONSO: I don’t know, I don’t have the crystal ball anymore! I think definitely the car has some potential. Over the winter we had some ups and downs in testing and then in Australia it was the same thing – the free practice was affected by the weather and the qualifying was not smooth enough for us to show the potential. It was a good race, a lucky race with the two Haas retirements and the Virtual Safety Car. Nevertheless, I think we take this fifth place and we move on. There is still a lot to improve for us if we want to catch up to the top three teams, but I think we have the potential there and hopefully we can unlock some performance in the next races.

QUESTIONS FROM THE FLOOR

Q: (Dan Knutson – Auto Action and Speedsport) Fernando, following on from that: as you say, ups and downs and still potential to come, but are happy days here again?
FA: Well, I think there’s still quite a reasonable gap to close with the leaders, but I think it’s up to us now. It’s up to the team to deliver the performance in the next weeks, in the next four or five or six Grands Prix. If we are able to bring the performance to the track and close that gap and, you know, being in a reasonable distance to the pole position and the podium finishes and things like that, then it’s up to us to deliver the result on the weekend. I think the next two months are crucial for our hopes in this year’s championship, but hopefully we can keep improving the car, keep putting more performance and if it’s not a world championship fight, it will hopefully be some podium positions during the year or it can be regular top six or top five positions, not only in Australia P5 because of the Virtual Safety Car and the two Haas retirements. Maybe P5 could become a normality. That’s something we need to discover and to find out and as I said before, it’s probably the first time in the last three years that it’s up to us now to deliver that result, so we will try to do our best.

Q: (Heikki Kulta – Turun Sanomat) Kimi, you have eight podiums here but the qualifying results have not been that good – only one P3. Is that the biggest difference you have between racing and qualifying in any circuit, and, if yes, where is that coming from?
KR: I don’t look too closely what has happened in the past, you probably know better. To be honest we try to do our best. Sometimes it works; sometimes not and obviously, you start where you qualify. If it’s a good place or not that great you try to make the best out of it. To be honest some years it’s been working out well here. You can choose the tyres and do a different race and it worked out well. Could it be better if you started at the front? Who knows? Another weekend where we try to do a good job and be up there and see where we end up. It’s a bit unknown. This is a completely different circuit to the previous two where we’ve been in Barcelona and Australia – so yeah, we have to see how everything plans out and where we are, where others are – but it’s been a pretty decent place in past years.

Q: (Livio Oricchio – Globoesporte.com) To Kimi and Valtteri, starting with Kimi. Kimi, you were almost seven-tenths slower in qualifying in Australia. Do you think Mercedes can also have such an advantage in qualifying here? And, in race conditions, if you believe Ferrari will be more or less in the same gap to Mercedes – or even smaller due to characteristics of the track, and considering the history of Ferrari in this track?
KR:
Who knows. You can keep guessing as long as you want, we see over the weekend where we are. I have zero interest to start guessing where we are, what’s the difference in qualifying. There’s so many things that will change that and y’know, we’ll do our best and see where we end up in qualifying and the race – but the most important part is the Sunday after the race where it will be finished. I am finished to be two seconds off if we win every Sunday. I don’t care. It’s pretty irrelevant on Saturday in that way. But yeah, I don’t know. That’s why we come here. To find out.

VB: I think pretty much the same. You can always guess but at this point we can only guess, so yeah… I think historically Ferrari has been good here. They had good race pace in Australia. Last year they had stronger pace here than in Australia, so I think it’s going to be a threat and they’re going to be close to us. Even Red Bull. But more than that, just can’t say. We will see how the weekend develops.

Q: (David Croft – Sky Sports F1) Interesting day coming up tomorrow where we understand Liberty Media will be presenting their blueprint of the future of Formula 1 to the teams. I was just wondering, as drivers, what input you’ve had, what consultations you’ve had and where you see any changes necessary from a racing perspective to improve Formula 1 for the future. It’s a question to you all.

FA: I don’t think that there is anything thing that we can probably can say about that. Definitely Liberty has been quite open to us from Day One and they’ve been asking us all of last year about opinions and different ideas that we may have. So, they were very productive conversations. So, now I think they have a plan. They will show it tomorrow to the teams and we will agree with whatever their decision is because they have all the power and they have all the knowledge of who to do things. Hopefully they’ll bring new ideas, new things that can improve the show and that will be welcome from all of us.

Kimi, has there been any feedback you’ve been giving to Liberty about the direction of Formula 1?
KR: No, in the end it’s no our decision, it’s up to them. It’s their business. They make plans and obviously take decisions they feel is correct. I don’t know what they’re doing now. I know very little about it and I’m not interested in it, so we’ll see tomorrow what they say. It’s in many years’ time anyhow. I doubt I’ll be here so it doesn’t really bother me.

Valtteri, anything to add?
VB: Not really. I think Fernando covered well. In the end, it’s their decision and tomorrow we’ll see what they will recommend. It’s difficult to speculate more than that – but it will be interesting to see what they recommend.

Q: (Jerome Pugmire – Associated Press) Valtteri, you say it’s been processed - what happened at the Australian Grand Prix - but how much pressure do you feel to have a good performance here?
VB: I think it’s a normal race weekend, that’s my feeling at the moment, honestly. Sometimes you have bad races and then there’s always the next one and of course you always want to perform but there is no point in gathering pressure from one mistake in qualifying. Of course, I always hope for a good weekend but yeah, I feel a normal race weekend ahead.

Q: (Livio Oricchio – GloboEsporte.com) Just coming back to the previous question, to all drivers, Fernando said they have the power to change Formula 1. If you had the power, what would you change in the Formula 1 we have today?
KR: I don’t have it, so…

Q: Nothing you’d change at all?
KR: No, I don’t have the power so what’s the point to wasting… even thinking about it because I don’t understand why you… what’s the point for me, to give you a list, because in the end I have zero power? I can’t. You understand? We can’t, we don’t make the rules, that’s my point. What’s the point of even making a story out of it.
FA: Well, I think it could be a closer battle, that will always be welcome but it has always been like that in F1. I remember watching the TV in the very old days… it was on television last week a race from ’90 or ’89 and apart from the first four cars, everyone was flat. We remember that era like a golden era, with big names etc and they’ve always been a big spread but I think if you see now, other series, if you watch a race of IndyCars or whatever, that unpredictable result until the last ten laps makes you excited in front of the television and now we can put (down) the qualifying order for this race right now, on Thursday and that’s a little bit sad.
VB: Well, I think, like everyone, all the spectators, all the drivers, we would all love more closer racing like Fernando said but how to do that? It’s not in my hands.

Q: (Dieter Rencken – Racing Lines, Racefans.net) Fernando, one of the current stated objectives this year is to return to the podium. Now based on what you’ve experienced in testing and the race, what you’ve just said etc, in order to get onto the podium you have to beat both or one or both Ferraris, one or both Mercedes, plus two Red Bulls which have got the same engine. Do you honestly believe that that’s do-able and achievable this year?
FA: Yes. We were two places from that podium already in Australia. They were very close, the last ten laps, Ricciardo and Kimi fighting together so anything can happen in a race. I won two races in 2008 with that ING Renault. I was on the podium in 2009 with the introduction of KERS and that car that we were, I think, ninth in the World Championship or something like that, and I was on the podium so anything can happen in F1. If you are close to that position, sooner or later that opportunity will come and we will be there to take it. I think it’s very possible this year.
 
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FREE PRACTICE ONE REPORT

Ricciardo All Smiles With Opening Shots Fired in Bahrain
Bahrain Grand Prix FP1 Result.jpg

Daniel Ricciardo and Red Bull start strongly in Bahrain as teammate Verstappen left on the sidelines following yet more trouble for the young Dutchman.

Racing under clear blue skies in the Kingdom of Bahrain, it would be the ever happy Australian Daniel Ricciardo who had the most to smile about following the conclusion of Free Practice One, the Red Bull driver setting fastest time of the day ahead of Mercedes and Ferrari in what was a solid if unspectacular opening day of running for the second round of the 2018 FIA Formula One World Championship.

Running a conservative 14 laps in unrepresentative conditions this morning, Ricciardo wound out the day in far better fettle than his young teammate Max Verstappen, the popular Dutchman having a woeful morning of (lack of) activity as he ground to a halt with suspected electrical issues just two laps into his morning work.

Despite the obvious setback a lack of running would inflict on Verstappen all would not be lost, as with the opening session being run under normal daylight conditions it would be a reasonably meaningless 90 minutes for many drivers, with conditions proving to be considerably warmer than when qualifying and race day are run under the evening floodlights later in the weekend.

Despite the strange nature of FP1 several drivers would perform notably in the desert today, with the newly upgraded Honda strapped to the back of Pierre Gasly doing enough to launch the Toro Rosso into an impressive seventh on the timesheets, just two tenths behind the equally impressive Romain Grosjean driven Haas Ferrari, himself again performing well to embed the American team well inside the top ten for the second consecutive Grand Prix weekend.

Further down the grid it would be a solid day for new Sauber driver Charles Leclrec, the 2017 Formula Two champion ending up an impressive 12th overall in what was his most composed showing in the striking new Alfa Romeo branded car so far this season.

Free Practice Two continues under lights later today.

Provisional FP1 Results:
  1. Daniel Ricciardo - Red Bull Racing TAG Heuer 1:31.060 14
  2. Valtteri Bottas - Mercedes 1:31.364 +0.304s 24
  3. Kimi Räikkönen - Ferrari 1:31.458 +0.398s 18
  4. Sebastian Vettel - Ferrari 1:31.470 +0.410s 17
  5. Lewis Hamilton - Mercedes 1:32.272 +1.212s 21
  6. Romain Grosjean - Haas Ferrari 1:32.516 +1.456s 23
  7. Pierre Gasly - Scuderia Toro Rosso Honda 1:32.779 +1.719s 26
  8. Carlos Sainz - Renault 1:32.885 +1.825s 21
  9. Kevin Magnussen - Haas Ferrari 1:32.971 +1.911s 19
  10. Nico Hulkenberg - Renault 1:33.104 +2.044s 18
  11. Fernando Alonso - McLaren Renault 1:33.223 +2.163s 24
  12. Charles Leclerc - Sauber Ferrari 1:33.278 +2.218s 20
  13. Stoffel Vandoorne - McLaren Renault 1:33.364 +2.304s 25
  14. Lance Stroll - Williams Mercedes 1:33.379 +2.319s 22
  15. Sergey Sirotkin - Williams Mercedes 1:33.467 +2.407s 29
  16. Brendon Hartley - Scuderia Toro Rosso Honda 1:33.497 +2.437s 27
  17. Marcus Ericsson - Sauber Ferrari 1:33.508 +2.448s 22
  18. Sergio Perez - Force India Mercedes 1:33.662 +2.602s 26
  19. Esteban Ocon - Force India Mercedes 1:33.794 +2.734s 23
  20. Max Verstappen - Red Bull Racing TAG Heuer 2
 
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FREE PRACTICE TWO REPORT

Räikkönen Lights Up The Night In Bahrain
Bahrain Grand Prix FP2 Result.jpg

Kimi Räikkönen continues his strong start in Bahrain with fastest time during the second Free Practice session of the 2018 Formula One Bahrain Grand Prix.

With the lights turned on and the sun firmly over the horizon it would be a surprisingly strong evening of running for the Ferrari squad, with Australian Grand Prix winner Sebastian Vettel backing up his in form teammate Kimi Räikkönen for a Scuderia one-two in the second Free Practice session of the Bahrain Grand Prix weekend.

Running in much more representative conditions at the Sakhir track, Ferrari looked to have everything under control at the top of the times during the second 90 minutes of running this weekend, not even a session ending gremlin befalling Räikkönen enough to put the dampeners on a practice where the red cars ending up over half a second clear of their Mercedes rivals in conditions very similar to those expected during the Grand Prix on Sunday evening.

Räikkönen would have to pull his car over to the side of the circuit towards the end of the session following a improperly connected front wheel (Haas know all about that kind of problem), but other than that minor mishap it would be a very slick evening of running for the Prancing Horse, raising hopes that coupled with a grid penalty for Hamilton this could be a good opportunity to further stretch the points advantage enjoyed by the team following a successful Australian Grand Prix open last time out in Melbourne.

Just behind the two pace setting SF71H's would be a slightly out of sorts Mercedes team, headed by Valtteri Bottas this time, with FP1 pace setter Red Bull a further three tenths shy for a recovering Max Verstappen, just shading team mate Ricciardo for fifth and sixth positions.

Behind the Red Bulls would be a vocal Nico Hulkenberg driven Renault, the German complaining of a poor balance from his nevertheless competitive yellow car, shadowed by the again impressive Pierre Gasly, some 1.5 seconds clear of his timesheet propping up team mate Brendon Hartley in the newly upgraded Honda powered Toro Rosso machine. Rounding out the top ten would be McLaren due Alonso and Vandoorne, both drivers still looking like they have work to do to break into the top six ahead of qualifying tomorrow afternoon.

Provisional FP2 Results:
  1. Kimi Räikkönen - Ferrari 1:29.817 32
  2. Sebastian Vettel - Ferrari 1:29.828 +0.011s 37
  3. Valtteri Bottas - Mercedes 1:30.380 +0.563s 31
  4. Lewis Hamilton - Mercedes 1:30.472 +0.655s 32
  5. Max Verstappen - Red Bull Racing TAG Heuer 1:30.745 +0.928s 32
  6. Daniel Ricciardo - Red Bull Racing TAG Heuer 1:30.751 +0.934s 31
  7. Nico Hulkenberg - Renault 1:31.220 +1.403s 34
  8. Pierre Gasly - Scuderia Toro Rosso Honda 1:31.232 +1.415s 38
  9. Fernando Alonso - McLaren Renault 1:31.282 +1.465s 29
  10. Stoffel Vandoorne - McLaren Renault 1:31.422 +1.605s 35
  11. Romain Grosjean - Haas Ferrari 1:31.591 +1.774s 33
  12. Carlos Sainz - Renault 1:31.601 +1.784s 34
  13. Esteban Ocon - Force India Mercedes 1:31.809 +1.992s 31
  14. Sergio Perez - Force India Mercedes 1:31.868 +2.051s 34
  15. Kevin Magnussen - Haas Ferrari 1:31.969 +2.152s 35
  16. Charles Leclerc - Sauber Ferrari 1:32.372 +2.555s 37
  17. Lance Stroll - Williams Mercedes 1:32.382 +2.565s 30
  18. Sergey Sirotkin - Williams Mercedes 1:32.474 +2.657s 37
  19. Marcus Ericsson - Sauber Ferrari 1:32.733 +2.916s 32
  20. Brendon Hartley - Scuderia Toro Rosso Honda 1:32.908 +3.091s 38
 
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FREE PRACTICE THREE REPORT

Räikkönen on Form in Final Bahrain Practice Session
Bahrain Grand Prix FP3 Report.jpg

Kimi Räikkönen and Ferrari issue statement of intent with fastest time ahead of the upcoming qualifying for the Bahrain Grand Prix.

Building on his fine performance from Friday, the oldest driver on the Grand Prix grid showing he has last none of his pace in 2018 as Räikkönen once again set fastest time in Bahrain Free Practice Three, heading the times by over half a second from Red Bull due Max Verstappen and Daniel Ricciardo, signalling his intentions ahead of what could be an electric qualification session under lights at the Bahrain International Circuit.

Red Bull would prove to be the strongest challengers to Räikkönen during FP3, with Verstappen making up for a difficult opening day of running with his 1.30.393 and second fastest of all, however most noteworthy would be the apparent relative lack of pace displayed by the Mercedes team, Hamilton only managing a lacklustre fourth, some eight tenths adrift of the top, and Bottas a further tenth adrift in P6.

Renault and Toro Rosso would perform strongly inside the top ten, as would Fernando Alonso's McLaren who sneaked in at the end of the session to finish in tenth overall, just ahead of former engine partner Honda in the back of Brendon Hartley's Toro Rosso.

Williams would continue to suffer a difficult weekend of running, both cars looking slow and uncompetitive on track as they ending the day in 19th and 20th, compounding one of the most difficult starts to a season in recent memory for this once great British team.

Provisional FP3 Results:
  1. Kimi Raikkonen - Ferrari Ferrari 15 1'29.868
  2. Max Verstappen - Red Bull TAG 8 1'30.393 0.525
  3. Daniel Ricciardo - Red Bull TAG 8 1'30.452 0.584
  4. Lewis Hamilton - Mercedes Mercedes 14 1'30.691 0.823
  5. Sebastian Vettel - Ferrari Ferrari 8 1'30.719 0.851
  6. Valtteri Bottas - Mercedes Mercedes 16 1'30.781 0.913
  7. Nico Hulkenberg - Renault Renault 11 1'31.144 1.276
  8. Carlos Sainz - Renault Renault 12 1'31.200 1.332
  9. Pierre Gasly - Toro Rosso Honda 18 1'31.438 1.570
  10. Fernando Alonso - McLaren Renault 13 1'31.445 1.577
  11. Brendon Hartley - Toro Rosso Honda 18 1'31.460 1.592
  12. Romain Grosjean - Haas Ferrari 14 1'31.513 1.645
  13. Esteban Ocon - Force India Mercedes 17 1'31.554 1.686
  14. Sergio Perez - Force India Mercedes 14 1'31.564 1.696
  15. Kevin Magnussen - Haas Ferrari 14 1'31.737 1.869
  16. Marcus Ericsson - Sauber Ferrari
  17. Stoffel Vandoorne - McLaren Renault 14 1'31.860 1.992
  18. Charles Leclerc - Sauber Ferrari 19 1'32.047 2.179
  19. Sergey Sirotkin - Williams Mercedes 11 1'32.463 2.595
  20. Lance Stroll - Williams Mercedes 12 1'32.865 2.99
 
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QUALIFICATION REPORT

Vettel on Pole as Gasly Shines in Bahrain Qualifying
BAhrain Grand Prix Quali.jpg

Sebastian Vettel secures Pole Position for the Bahrain Grand Prix in what will be his 200th Formula One start on Sunday evening.

Having looked likely to be right up at the sharp end all weekend, it would be down to a last gasp Vettel flying lap to dislodge Ferrari team mate Räikkönen at the head of the field on Saturday evening, locking out the front row of the grid for the scarlet cars ahead of Valtteri Bottas in his Mercedes and a somewhat disappointing Lewis Hamilton fourth, soon to be ninth following a five-place grid penalty incurred yesterday as a result of an unscheduled gearbox change on his W09.

With the front four places occupied by Ferrari and Mercedes, it would be down to Daniel Ricciardo to maintain Red Bull pride in P5, albeit a further two tenths adrift of the Mercedes cars and never really looking likely to challenge for a strong result, something the Australian will be keen to turn around come Sunday, as the Milton Keynes based squad look to make ground on an out of sorts Mercedes who look to be struggling somewhat for outright pace in the desert.

The start of the show on Saturday would undoubtedly be in form Toro Rosso rookie Pierre Gasly, never putting a wheel wrong as the young Frenchman lit up the Bahrain International Circuit to put his Toro Rosso Honda an impressive sixth overall, the highest dry qualification performance for a Honda Power Unit in the current Hybrid turbo era. Gasly would show good short and long run pace all weekend, and with teammate Hartley in P11 it could be a very solid points haul for the small Italian team tomorrow.

Rounding out the top ten would be Hass driver Kevin Magnussen in seventh, Renault's ever impressive Nico Hulkenberg eighth, Esteban Ocon giving Force India some much needed cheer in ninth and Carlos Sainz Jr. rounding out the top ten. Of course with the penalty for Hamilton applied to the starting grid on Sunday, Ricciardo, Gasly, Magnussen, Hulkenberg and Ocon will be promoted to fourth, fifth, sixth, seventh and eighth places respectively, with the British four time World Champion slotting into ninth just ahead of the second Renault of Carlos Sainz Jr, himself under pressure having been shaded by the sister car all weekend.

Provisional Qualification Results:
  1. Sebastian Vettel - Ferrari Ferrari 1'27.958
  2. Kimi Raikkonen - Ferrari Ferrari 1'28.101 0.143
  3. Valtteri Bottas - Mercedes Mercedes 1'28.124 0.166
  4. Daniel Ricciardo - Red Bull TAG 1'28.398 0.440
  5. Pierre Gasly - Toro Rosso Honda 1'29.329 1.371
  6. Kevin Magnussen - Haas Ferrari 1'29.358 1.400
  7. Nico Hulkenberg - Renault Renault 1'29.570 1.612
  8. Esteban Ocon - Force India Mercedes 1'29.874 1.916
  9. Lewis Hamilton - Mercedes Mercedes 1'28.220 0.262
  10. Carlos Sainz Jr. - Renault Renault 1'29.986 2.028
  11. Brendon Hartley - Toro Rosso Honda 1'30.105 2.147
  12. Sergio Perez - Force India Mercedes 1'30.156 2.198
  13. Fernando Alonso - McLaren Renault 1'30.212 2.254
  14. Stoffel Vandoorne - McLaren Renault 1'30.525 2.567
  15. Max Verstappen - Red Bull TAG
  16. Romain Grosjean - Haas Ferrari 1'30.530 2.572
  17. Marcus Ericsson - Sauber Ferrari 1'31.063 3.105
  18. Sergey Sirotkin - Williams Mercedes 1'31.414 3.456
  19. Charles Leclerc - Sauber Ferrari 1'31.420 3.462
  20. Lance Stroll - Williams Mercedes 1'31.503 3.545
 
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Hopefully Bottletas has a good race. he needs one after Australia. Shame it went the way it did after his strong finish to 2017. Joking aside i like Valtteri i really hope he is able to step up to Lewis and Seb's level this year.

Looking for a good race, might not happen but Bahrain is a better track at racecraft than Albert Park so we might get a few bright moments.
 
If it bothers you to read. :p

Speaking of Bottas ....hope he doesn't have any penalties to serve from Melbourne still ? He totally wrecked the car so maybe there's some still need to be implemented here. But I believe not. If Mercedes is really THAT faster than anyone else... HE may be the only one who can give us any sort of entertainment. For a first place at least.
Although expecting something like that famous Nico/Ham Rumble in the Desert battle ...is probably too much. :whistling:
 
Unless Bottas outright beats Hamilton in points this year I think he is going to be shuffled out. Too much talent waiting in the mid-field to overlook. Merc and Ferrari want to get the drop on each other so Ricciardo is coveted. I'm going to make a bold prediction that if McLaren fail to improve to at least 4th best Alonzo will go to factory backed Renault next year who can afford him.

BTW, gotta love Kimi's no B.S. replies. "I don't know, I don't have the power so why do you ask?" Okay not a direct quote but his answer to most questions. Also Alonzo apparently had a crystal ball, just not anymore, if I read the reply correctly....hmmm
 
Hoping Vettel pulls a win, he indicated that his car had more pace, made a corner error at Melbourne, so there's clearly more in the Ferrari, not just the Merc. Hoping Alonso nabs a 4th place finish!
 
Max his live motto is #keeppushing. In P1 he took that very literally. Gladly in P2 a better session for him.
P1 & P2 was just ok not very spectacular.

And Lewis takes a fiveplace grid penalty for changing gearbox
 
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