An Edge-of-Your-Seat Recap of the Drama-Filled Australian GP: Safety Cars, Red Flags, and DNFs Galore
What an action packed, full of drama, heartbreak, safety cars, red flags and DNFs the Australian GP has turned out to be. I personally was on the edge of my seat for the whole race. It was like it is one of them TikTok’s of not letting them know what’s coming next.
We saw Valtteri Bottas and Sergio Perez start from the pitlane due to taking on new components outside of Parc Fermé with Bottas taking on new suspension and Perez taking new Power Unit components.
At lights out we saw both the silver arrows of George Russell and Lewis Hamilton have an amazing start and both were ahead of Max Verstappen by turn 3, Mercedes showed great pace all race and we have potentially saw a glimpse of what we are yet to see from them for the rest of the season. It wasn’t long after lights out before the drama and heartbreak started as we see Charles Leclerc in the gravel as he collided with Lance Stroll in turn 3 which brought out the first safety car out since Leclerc was stuck in the gravel not able to move giving him an early exit from the race.
George Russell was enjoying the lead of the race until lap 7 where we saw Alex Albon losing control of his Williams and having a big shunt into the tyre wall bringing out the 2nd Safety Car of the race. Russell here took the opportunity to pit and gamble on a bold strategy giving up the lead to Lewis Hamilton. We heard Hamilton concerned by Russell pitting thinking he is going to be left vulnerable to Max Verstappen, but on lap 9 the FIA decided that there was too much gravel on track so they thought it’s best to red flag the race giving everyone a free stop and Russell losing out places to the red flag.
After we saw the 2nd restart of the race and we got going it wasn’t long before bad luck struck Russell once more as his Power Unit went up with flames taking him out of the race on lap 18 which caused a VSC bringing everyone’s pace down by 40%.
Max Verstappen Claims Victory in Dramatic Australian GP: Recap of Red Bull's Dominance and Chaos on the Track
Red Bull had such a good race car this weekend and even though we saw Max Verstappen lose the lead on lap 1 it wasn’t long after the 2nd restart to claim back the lead from Hamilton where we saw Max overtake Lewis on the outside on the straight leading onto turn 9. From then on Max got on with his race and started pulling ahead. Sergio Perez also had a brilliant race, where we saw Perez starting from the pit lane and finishing in 5th. Along the way Perez pulled some brilliant moves and had some nice overtakes which is why he was voted the Driver of the Day.
In Australia we saw McLaren getting their first points of the season with both their drivers finishing in the top 10, Lando Norris had a good battle with Nico Hulkenberg on lap 51 where we saw Hulkenberg almost going off as he was trying to defend against Norris. Oscar Piastri also had a respectable race and on his first home race he finished in 8th place bringing in his first 2 points in F1.
On lap 54 we saw the 2nd red flag coming out after Kevin Magnussen went wide on turn 4 where he lost his rear tyre, and this is where it is all about to get interesting. As expected, everyone put on the red stripe softs on for the 3rd restart of the race in Albert Park and the remaining 16 cars lined up on the grid to get going for the last 2 laps of racing, or so we thought.
Chaos hit as early as turn 1 after the restart where we saw Perez out braking himself going straight through the gravel, Alonso being spun round going from 3rd to last, Logan Sargeant hitting Nick de Vries in the back taking out the both of them in turn 1 and after Pierre Gasly managed to avoid all the chaos he didn’t see his team mate on his right and after colliding with Esteban Ocon both Alpines were out of the race. All this happened before all cars were past Sector 1 and the 3rd and final red flag was brought out sending the remaining 12 cars back to the pit lane.
The FIA had a lot of decisions to make but the main one was the order of the cars with 1 lap left in the race, this decision was taking the FIA some time, so the fans had no choice but to start enjoying themselves doing the Mexican wave. After a while, the FIA came to the decision that the order of the cars should be put back to that before the 3rd restart of the race given that not all cars had passed Sector 1 at the time the red flag came out. Given that there was only 1 lap left the lap was carried out more as a formality behind the safety car and the cars taking the chequered flag in the order the FIA determined.
This decision didn’t go down well with Haas specifically as Nico Hulkenberg had managed to get himself into 4th place through all the chaos that was happening after the 3rd restart of the race. Haas protested to the FIA about this but to no avail. Haas wasn’t the only Ferrari powered team who lost out in this chaos as we saw Ferrari themselves scoring no points at all in the Australian GP with only Carlos Sainz left in the race and after a decent drive from the Spaniard we see him finishing 12th overall as he was given a 5 seconds penalty for colliding with his fellow Spaniard and childhood hero Fernando Alonso after the 3rd restart drama in turn 1, and with no actual racing on the last lap this meant that all cars were bunched up together when crossing the finish line pushing Sainz from 4th to 12th.
As perfectly put by Fernando Alonso in the post-race interview held by David Coulthard, this race was a roller coaster of emotions from start to finish. I think we can all agree that I spoke way too early 2 weeks ago when I said that the Jeddah GP was the best race so far in the season. As an F1 fan I think this race was the best one so far in terms of action, drama, chaos and heartbreak.
Who do you think were the biggest winners and the biggest losers of the Australian GP? Signing off for now and I will see you all in 3 weeks when F1 will travel to the Azerbaijan GP in Baku.
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