Max Verstappen showed his mettle to win the Spanish Grand Prix, his second in a row and seventh of the season. However, the Dutch driver shouldn’t have won the race as McLaren emerged as the most rapid car on the grid. Lando Norris finished within three seconds of Verstappen in Barcelona after making an early error in the race. The Woking-based team has finished P2 in the last four races after Norris claimed his maiden Formula 1 victory in Miami.
This weekend’s Austrian Sprint Race weekend pits Red Bull and McLaren against each other at the energy drink team’s home circuit. Mercedes, who showed improved pace in Spain, will hope to continue the momentum into Austria, with Ferrari hoping to bounce back from disappointing fifth and sixth places last weekend.
The Track
The 4.318 km-long circuit is one of the shortest on the calendar but packs a punch with three DRS zones. The top speed is around 330km/h, and so-called DRS trains might be a common sight in the Sprint and Grand Prix.
The Red Bull Ring features elevation changes (up to 63.3 metres from the lowest to the highest point) and long straights punctuated by short, fast corners that will work the tyres hard over the weekend and cause higher degradation. F1 tyre supplier confirmed it has chosen to bring the three softest tyres in the spectrum: the C3, C4, and C5 compound.
The three straight sections, the longest being 868m, in the first half of the lap rely on power and low drag to gain an advantage. The second half of the lap, as mentioned, features quick corners and a car with higher downforce setup will gain ground here. Spielberg demands teams to find a balance for their car over the weekend and determine at which section of the track they want to be fastest.
Triple-header
The Austrian GP is the second of three consecutive races as the teams travel across Europe. Logistically it makes it easier for teams to courier parts etc and we’re likely to see upgrades for this weekend’s race. Mercedes introduced a new floor last week that weighed less than its old component. The Brackley-based team saw Lewis Hamilton score his first podium since last October after finishing on the rostrum in Spain.
As normal with a Sprint weekend, the 10 teams will only have one practice to gather data and ready their cars for the Sprint qualifying, Sprint, and Grand Prix.