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Lawson 'positive' after Spanish GP practice; Piastri fastest

Lawson 'positive' after Spanish GP practice; Piastri fastest

RNZ News2 days ago

Liam Lawson driving for Racing Bulls in practice for the Spanish Grand Prix.
Photo:
Photosport
Liam Lawson has produced two top-10 finishes in practice for the Spanish Grand Prix while Formula One world championship series leader Oscar Piastri was quickest overall.
New Zealand driver Lawson pronounced himself happy with twin sessions for Racing Bulls that saw him place sixth and then 10th fastest at the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya.
Like the rest of the field, he needed to adjust to new wing foil specification introduced this week by F1 bosses to meet stricter flex tests.
He was pleased to continue his resurgent form after notching his first points of the season at last weekend's Monaco Grand Prix, when he placed eighth.
"It's been a positive day and a good start to the weekend. We've got a strong base to build on, but obviously tomorrow afternoon (qualifying) is what really counts," he said.
Kiwi Formula 1 driver Liam Lawson.
Photo:
photosport
"We'll keep working on improving the car. Everybody's chasing it and I think we were all a bit further away at the start of FP1 (first practice session) because of the new front wing, however we'll still be chasing the balance.
"I could definitely feel the difference in the car and we're in a good place right now, but obviously we'll be expecting every team to improve."
Piastri kept McLaren on top in the second session after teammate and title rival Lando Norris set the pace earlier in the afternoon.
The Australian lapped the Circuit de Catalunya with a quickest time of one minute 12.760 seconds after Norris, winner in Monaco, set a best of 1:13.718.
Australian Oscar Piastri of the McLaren F1 team.
Photo:
PHOTOSPORT
Red Bull's Max Verstappen, last year's winner, was second and third respectively in the sessions with Mercedes' George Russell Piastri's closest rival in practice two - 0.286 slower - with Norris fourth (+0.310)
Norris has closed the gap to Piastri in the standings to only three points after eight of 24 rounds and will retake the lead on Sunday if he wins.
Verstappen, who took his first F1 win at the circuit in 2016, missed some 20 minutes of the first session with mechanics working to change the car's rear suspension.
Ferrari's Lewis Hamilton - winner a record-equalling six times in Spain - was third on the timesheets in practice one but only 11th later on when teammate Charles Leclerc was fifth fastest.
Friday was the first sighting of the new front wings but there was no immediate indication of any significant change.
Christian Horner and Max Verstappen of Red Bull Racing.
Photo:
PHOTOSPORT
"I think it's going to take more than one session to see if there is an impact. Or if so, how it's affected the different cars," said Red Bull team boss Christian Horner.
"It didn't sound from the drivers' comments too different to a normal Friday."
Mercedes' Kimi Antonelli was sixth fastest in practice two with Aston Martin's Fernando Alonso seventh and Alpine's Pierre Gasly eighth.
- Reuters

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Formula 1: Liam Lawson finishes 11th at Spanish GP
Formula 1: Liam Lawson finishes 11th at Spanish GP

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time5 hours ago

  • 1News

Formula 1: Liam Lawson finishes 11th at Spanish GP

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Lawson narrowly misses points in Spain
Lawson narrowly misses points in Spain

Otago Daily Times

time9 hours ago

  • Otago Daily Times

Lawson narrowly misses points in Spain

A frustrated Liam Lawson has narrowly finished outside the points at Formula One's Spanish Grand Prix, falling to an 11th place finish when the late cards didn't fall his way. World championship leader Oscar Piastri extended his lead with a front-running win, holding off team-mate Lando Norris in a McLaren one-two finish. New Zealand driver Lawson was 10th before his Racing Bulls team chose not to pit ahead of a late safety car stoppage, leaving him vulnerable to be passed by Aston Martin's Fernando Alonso. It was a disheartening outcome for Lawson, who was coming off his first points of the season when placing eighth at last week's Monaco Grand Prix. He had driven solidly throughout the week at the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya before earning a 13th-placed start on the grid. "From our side, it was a very strong race," Lawson said. "Despite spending a lot of it in traffic, we had good speed and were overtaking cars, so it was working out. "We ended up in the wrong position and missed the safety car line by half a second because everyone in front of us boxed. "To be that close after all the work we did in the race is really unfortunate. As we look ahead to Canada, we'll take the positives of great race pace. Points are always the goal." Piastri wins again Polesitter Piastri won by 2.471 seconds to go 10 points clear of Norris with his fifth victory in nine races, and McLaren's seventh of the season. Ferrari's Charles Leclerc completed the podium in a race that left the drama to the end with a late safety car deployment. "It's a nice way to bounce back from Monaco. A superb weekend," said Piastri, who finished third last weekend in a race won from pole by Norris. Meanwhile, Max Verstappen was left on the brink of a ban after a clash with Mercedes' George Russell. Verstappen, who made four stops in total and ended up fighting on hard tyres against rivals with faster softs, collided with Leclerc and then twice with Russell after the safety car restart with six laps to go. Stewards handed the four-times world champion a 10-second post-race penalty for the second collision with Russell, which appeared deliberate, dropping Verstappen from fifth on the road to 10th. The Dutch driver was also given three penalty points to take his total tally to 11 for the 12 month period. One more before the end of June would incur a one-race ban. Nico Rosberg, Mercedes 2016 world champion and now a pundit for Sky Sports television, said Verstappen should have been black-flagged for what looked to him like intentional retaliation for the earlier contact. Another investigation into the clash with Leclerc drew no further action. Russell finished fourth while Sauber's Nico Hulkenberg finished a surprising and morale-boosting fifth for the future Audi team after passing Ferrari's seven-times world champion Lewis Hamilton on the penultimate lap. Hamilton ended up sixth, Isack Hadjar seventh for Racing Bulls and Pierre Gasly eighth for Renault-owned Alpine to cap a solid weekend for the Frenchman celebrating soccer side Paris St Germain's Champions League win. First points Ferrari moved up to second from fourth in the constructors' standings, now 197 points behind McLaren. Verstappen remained third in the drivers' championship but now 49 points behind Piastri in what is becoming a McLaren battle. Home hero Alonso scored his first points of the season in ninth for Aston Martin, who had only one car on the grid due to Lance Stroll's withdrawal through injury after Saturday's qualifying. Piastri led away at the start with Verstappen seizing second from Norris while Hamilton and Leclerc moved up to fourth and fifth as Russell lost out. Hamilton let Leclerc through on lap 10 of 66 after the two Ferraris had run nose to tail. Norris took back second place from Verstappen on lap 13, the Dutch driver making no attempt to defend against the quicker McLaren and pitting in the next lap for fresh tyres. Verstappen took the lead again on lap 23 after Piastri pitted, with Norris making his first stop on lap 21 and coming out behind the Red Bull, but that lasted only until Verstappen pitted for a second time on lap 30. He came in for a third stop on lap 47 but Norris pitted the lap after to defend second place. A safety car deployment on lap 55, after Italian rookie Kimi Antonelli beached his Mercedes in the gravel, bunched up the field and triggered a rash of stops. The McLarens came in together for fresh tyres, double-stacking, and resumed ahead of Verstappen who had only hards available to him. "That safety car just came at the wrong time," he said. - Reuters/RNZ

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