Mercedes team boss Toto Wolff described their car as “undriveable” and said that Lewis Hamilton “deserves better from us”

Mercedes team boss Toto Wolff described their car as “undriveable” and said that Lewis Hamilton “deserves better from us” after the seven-time world champion could only finish 13th in the Emilia Romagna Grand Prix. Wolff apologised to Hamilton on team radio at the end of the race. Team-mate George Russell did manage to finish fourth after a superb start.

Hamilton said it was a “weekend to forget” and that he “just wasn’t fast enough to overtake” at Imola. To add insult to injury, he was lapped by race winner Max Verstappen in the Red Bull. He also reiterated that he was no longer fighting for the drivers’ title, saying: “I am out of the championship, for sure. There’s no question about that.” Hamilton said the one bonus for the team was fellow Briton Russell’s climb through the field after starting 11th – although he apologised for not also getting into the points.

“Everyone is feeling it and everyone is head down, trying their best,” he added. “There’s no-one that’s giving up and everyone is just trying to move forward as fast as they can.”  Formula 1 heads to the United States next for the inaugural Miami Grand Prix, from 6-8 May.

Charles Leclerc opens up after watch robbery and insists he’s ‘fully focused’ for Emilia Romagna GP

Charles Leclerc insists he is “fine” and “fully focused” on the Emilia Romagna GP after being the victim of a robbery earlier in the week in Italy. 

Leclerc, F1’s championship leader, had his watch stolen while with friends and his trainer, Andrea Ferrari, in the Tuscan city of Viareggio on Easter Monday. 

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How Friday’s practice sessions for Australian GP unfolded

Leclerc fastest from Verstappen in Melbourne

Charles Leclerc headed Red Bull’s Max Verstappen in Friday practice at the Australian Grand Prix. Leclerc ended the session 0.245 seconds ahead of the Dutchman, who appeared to have the potential to go faster had it not been for traffic and some errors.

The second Ferrari of Carlos Sainz was 0.398secs off the pace in third place, ahead of the Fernando Alonso’s Alpine, impressively competitive in fourth.

Mercedes drivers George Russell and Lewis Hamilton were only 11th and 13th.

Red Bull’s Sergio Perez was fifth ahead of the second Alpine of Esteban Ocon, Alfa Romeo’s Valtteri Bottas, McLaren’s Lando Norris, Alpha Tauri’s Pierre Gasly and the second McLaren of Daniel Ricciardo.

Max Verstappen vs Lewis Hamilton

The two heads clash as F1 driver Lewis Hamilton and Max Verstappen could be the greatest rivals of the 2022 GP race to come head-to-head, as this season’s match up explores its finest rally drivers, entering the track with an amazing force to be at the top of the charts start-up line.

The war of words between Mercedes and red bull looks mere minutes to begin as the first race weekend of the year got underway in Bahrain, with Lewis Hamilton vowing to be more aggressive on the track in 2022 – as max Verstappen accuses his rivals of having sandbagged during pre-season running.

Hamilton was facing the media in Friday morning’s press conference ahead of the season-opening Bahrain Grand Prix when he was asked whether, in light of his often- explosive rivalry with Verstappen in 2021- which saw the pair come together on multiple occasions before Verstappen was crowned champion in Abu –Dhabi, fans would see a more aggressive Lewis Hamilton out on the track in 2022.

‘’I will be a more aggressive driver this year, ’replied Hamilton bluntly after a brief pause.

‘’You’ll see’’.

There are question marks over Mercedes’s performance in 2022. Click here.

 

The driver who beat Sebastian Vettel at his own team has suddenly fallen behind a young teammate at McLaren

When Daniel Ricciardo arrived at Red Bull Racing in 2014, he was expected to be Sebastian Vettel’s quiet sidekick. He was there, it seemed, to give Red Bull a second driver capable of winning races that would also be willing to stay out of the way of the company’s leading man. Ricciardo beat the reigning four-time world champion head to head that season instead. Seven years later, he finds himself on the wrong end of a similar situation.

This is the thirteenth installment of our driver-by-driver preview of the 2022 Formula 1 season. This weekend, “we will be covering McLaren”. You can find the rest of our previews here.

Ricciardo is a race winner with McLaren, an already-successful relationship that seems to be steady whether or not he is the team’s lead driver. The question is whether or not he can compete for a championship with the team, something that becomes significantly more difficult if he is not regularly competitive with his own teammate.

HOW HE GOT HERE

Daniel Ricciardo, like so many F1 drivers, got to the sport through an optimistic Red Bull Racing farm system that spent the 2010s seemingly churning out as many F1 drivers as possible. Having been in cars since 2005 and highlighting his junior career with a runner-up finish in the, then-crucial Formula Renault 3.5 series in 2010, Red Bull called him up to a mid-season replacement seat at the independent Hispania Racing Team in 2011. A year later, he was at their Scuderia Toro Rosso junior team.

Ricciardo’s two years at Toro Rosso were not particularly notable, but his call-up to Red Bull led to immediate success. He won three races in 2014, enough to finish third in the championship and beat preseason favorite Sebastian Vettel in the championship by 61 points. It led him to a brief leading role at Red Bull while the team was between eras of power, but he lost that title quickly when the team called up Max Verstappen and made their young prospect a clear preference. Ricciardo left for Renault, where he put together two strong seasons highlighted by fifth in the 2020 championship.

But he wanted more, and he felt McLaren offered a better opportunity to get it. So he left Renault, the team where he had been a dominant midpack force for two years, to join the papaya orange crew in 2021. Source: Road and Track