Japan – Free Practice 2: Bottas and Mercedes Strike Again, Verstappen Comes In-Between

Valtteri Bottas dominated the second free practice session on Friday, ahead of Hamilton and Verstappen. The Ferraris were far behind in a session that could define the starting grid on Sunday if the qualifying session were to be canceled.

Logo Mi mini
Rédigé par Par

In trouble during the recent timed sessions, Mercedes set things straight. On a circuit favoring high downforce, the Silver Arrows clearly dominated the practice sessions.

During the second session, Lewis Hamilton struck first in the first half-hour with a time of 1:27.896, 478 milliseconds ahead of his teammate Valtteri Bottas. The Finnish driver spun at the start of his first flying lap, ruining a set of tires. Behind the Mercedes, Ferrari halved its gap compared to the first session. Vettel, in third, completed a lap less than half a second behind, ahead of Leclerc and Verstappen.

The second attempt allowed Valtteri Bottas to get ahead of Hamilton by one-tenth, with a time of 1:27.785. Max Verstappen came in third. The Red Bull driver clocked a time less than three-tenths behind Hamilton. His teammate Alex Albon slotted in between the two Ferraris, six-tenths off the pace.

While time seemed frozen halfway through the session, Ferrari attempted a final timed lap. Charles Leclerc improved his time and took fourth place ahead of Vettel and Albon.

The best of the others was once again Carlos Sainz Jr., seventh in his McLaren, 1.266 seconds from Bottas. Renault could do no better than 17th and 18th, only ahead of the Williams.

On the French side, Romain Grosjean finished the session thirteenth with his Haas, a little more than two-tenths ahead of his teammate Kevin Magnussen. Pierre Gasly, absent from the first session (replaced by Yamamoto), set a nice time at the very end of the session to move from 17th to 9th place, two-tenths ahead of Daniil Kvyat, his teammate at Toro Rosso. He is nevertheless the big loser from the cancellation of Saturday’s day, as he only had one practice session during the weekend.

Apart from the last five minutes, the hunt for lap times stopped after the first half of the session. The teams then tested race stints. Especially Ferrari, which prepared the car more for the race than its competitors. The team observed that in race trim, medium tires are about two seconds slower than the softs, compared to a six-tenths difference in qualifying trim. The qualifying will take place on a “fresh” track as the typhoon will have completely washed it on Saturday.

The qualifications should take place at 3 a.m. on Sunday, French time. In case of cancellation due to bad weather conditions, the times from free practice 2 will be used to determine the grid.

Driver Team Times Gap Laps
1
Bottas Mercedes AMG Petronas Motorsport 1:27.785
33
2
Hamilton Mercedes AMG Petronas Motorsport 1:27.885 +0.100
34
3
Verstappen Aston Martin Red Bull Racing Tag Heuer 1:28.066 +0.281
24
4
Leclerc Scuderia Ferrari 1:28.141 +0.356
28
5
Vettel Scuderia Ferrari 1:28.376 +0.591
37
6
Albon Aston Martin Red Bull Racing Tag Heuer 1:28.402 +0.617
34
7
Sainz Jr. McLaren Renault F1 Team 1:29.051 +1.266
29
8
Perez Racing Point Force India Mercedes 1:29.299 +1.514
28
9
Gasly Scuderia Toro Rosso 1:29.354 +1.569
34
10
Norris McLaren Renault F1 Team 1:29.358 +1.573
35
11
Räikkönen Alfa Romeo Sauber Ferrari 1:29.477 +1.692
29
12
Kvyat Scuderia Toro Rosso 1:29.512 +1.727
35
13
Grosjean Haas F1 Team 1:29.553 +1.768
28
14
Stroll Racing Point Force India Mercedes 1:29.597 +1.812
27
15
Giovinazzi Alfa Romeo Sauber Ferrari 1:29.651 +1.866
33
16
Magnussen Haas F1 Team 1:29.749 +1.964
31
17
Ricciardo Renault F1 Team 1:29.859 +2.074
30
18
Hülkenberg Renault F1 Team 1:30.854 +3.069
29
19
Kubica Williams Racing 1:30.916 +3.131
35
20
Russell Williams Racing 1:31.071 +3.286
36
Votre commentaire

Vous recevrez un e-mail de vérification pour publier votre commentaire.

Haut
Motorsinside English
Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies so that we can provide you with the best user experience possible. Cookie information is stored in your browser and performs functions such as recognising you when you return to our website and helping our team to understand which sections of the website you find most interesting and useful.