
Three things we learned from the Spanish Grand Prix
Only McLaren team-mate Lando Norris appears to have the package to deliver a sustained challenge, but he, like four-time champion Max Vestappen, cannot match the 24-year-old Melburnian's consistency or cool under pressure.
AFP Sport looks at three things we learned from Sunday's incident-filled race at a sizzling Circuit de Catalunya:
Piastri leads McLaren surge
After being beaten by Norris in Monaco, Piastri returned to his best with a demonstration of concentration, composure and technical excellence.
His fifth win of the season, in nine races, lifted him 10 points ahead of the 25-year-old Briton, who has won twice, and meant he had scored as many wins already this season as Alan Jones did for Williams on his way to the title in 1980.
His fellow Melburnian, now 78, was 34 when he won the championship with a tough, no-nonsense and hard-fighting approach to his racing – not unlike aspects of Red Bull's Vestappen – and total commitment.
Jones, an admirer of Piastri's 'old head on young shoulders', last month suggested Norris lacked the mental toughness required to beat his team-mate and Verstappen's aggression, praising his compatriot as having 'the mental strength not to put up with that crap'.
It seemed Norris's perfect weekend in Monte Carlo had rebuffed Jones' comments and restored his mojo, but in Spain the studious Piastri was on top again in a tight contest, overshadowed by Verstappen's red mist racing in the final laps.
'This weekend's been exactly the kind of weekend I was looking for,' said Piastri, whose two-tenths advantage for pole was the biggest this year.
'I don't know if it's my best, but certainly it's been a strong one.'
Verstappen boils over
While Piastri studied and progressed, Verstappen fell into old habits that revealed he struggles with a temper as quick as his car.
His clashes with Charles Leclerc's Ferrari and George Russell's Mercedes came as a red mist engulfed him in the final laps after a Safety Car intervention.
His frustration with Red Bull's decision to put him on hard tyres for the final five-laps sprint led to both collisions, but only the ramming of Russell on lap 64 of 66 was intentional.
He was universally condemned with 2016 champion Nico Rosberg suggesting he should have been 'black flagged' and disqualified.
His Red Bull team chief Christian Horner labelled Rosberg a 'sensationalist' but Verstappen's 'mea culpa' on Instagram on Monday, having declined to comment after the race, was more honest.
'Our tyre choice to the end and some moves after the safety car restart fuelled my frustration, leading to a move that was not right and shouldn't have happened,' he conceded.
However, as Russell pointed out, he lost points for Red Bull and added three to the eight on his superlicence, to leave him within one point of a ban.
Toothless front wing ruling
The weekend began amid speculation that a new rule restricting flexibility of the cars' front wings might be a 'game-changer' but it had little or no effect.
Seven-time champion Lewis Hamilton, who finished a disgruntled sixth for Ferrari, extending a run of poor races, summed up when he said it was 'a waste of everyone's money – it's changed nothing. Everyone's wings still bend... They should have given it to charity.'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New Straits Times
11 hours ago
- New Straits Times
Pogacar pounces to reclaim Tour de France lead
MÛR-DE-BRETAGNE, France: Tadej Pogacar won stage seven of the Tour de France on Friday to regain the overall lead with a trademark burst up the short, steep slope of the Mur de Bretagne. Visma's Jonas Vingegaard was second, doggedly staying right on Pogacar's wheel to the line with Briton Oscar Onley third after a late nine-rider pile-up marred the finale. On his 19th career Tour de France stage win the 26-year-old Pogacar gained four seconds on Vingegaard with 10 bonus seconds to the Dane's six. "It was super hot today, and super fast but we had a plan and we stuck to it," said the Team UAE rider who was champion in 2020, 2021 and 2024. In the overall standings, Remco Evenepoel is second overall at 54 seconds after coming in sixth on the day, two seconds adrift. "The Tour de France isn't over yet," said Evenepoel, who lost time in a crosswind on the opening day before winning the stage five individual time-trial. French starlet Kevin Vauquelin continues his bright run in third at 1min 11sec while two-time champion Vingegaard is fourth at 1min 17. Fans cheered for Vauquelin along much of the route. On Thursday a hot-air balloon flew over the peloton with his face on it. "All you could hear was 'Kevin, Kevin' all along the road, it's so good to have a new face competing with us," said Pogacar. The overnight leader Mathieu van der Poel rounds out the top five at 1min 29sec after wilting on the final climb, scene of his 2021 coming of age win and his first yellow jersey. "I kind of knew I was going to lose the yellow jersey here, but it was a special occasion for me coming back here. It was a great day," said the Dutch rider who climbed top of the overall rankings Thursday. The day's action revolved around two ascents of the Mur de Bretagne, a 2km climb at an average of six percent, that has been written into Tour de France folklore. With the Tour returning to Brittany after a four-year gap, huge festive crowds packed the villages and pretty country lanes as the temperature hit 30 degrees Celsius (86 Fahrenheit). The 179 remaining riders left Saint Malo on the north-west coast passing the magnificent Sillon beach with its granite sea wall and chic seafront buildings. Fewer of them will take the start line for Saturday's flat run to Laval, with doubts over key Pogacar teammate Joao Almeida and the Colombian Santiago Buitrago. "I really hope he's okay, he's on his way for an x-ray. I'm proud of how he's been riding. He's done an amazing job. It would have been a perfect day," Pogacar said of Almeida's fall ahead of the second climb of the Mur de Bretagne. "I dedicate this victory to him." In the best form of his career Almeida had been a candidate for a place on the podium in Paris, but has slipped to 12min 21sec off the pace in the overall standings. For Bahrain Victorious their Tour de France appears massively compromised. Not only did the Australian rider Jack Haig leave the Tour after the fall 6km from the line, their leader Buitrago finished 13min down on the day and left the medical centre holding his right arm to his side. One man who negotiated the crash well was Ireland's Ben Healy. The sixth stage winner managed to fall sideways into the heap and roll over it, before remounting immediately to finish a respectable 26th. - AFP


The Star
a day ago
- The Star
Motor racing-Mekies warns of big challenges as he starts work at Red Bull
Formula One F1 - Austrian Grand Prix - Red Bull Ring, Spielberg, Austria - June 27, 2025 RB team principal Laurent Mekies during the press conference REUTERS/Gintare Karpaviciute/File Photo LONDON (Reuters) -Frenchman Laurent Mekies got down to work as Red Bull team principal on Thursday, a day after replacing Christian Horner, and recognised big challenges ahead for the once-dominant former champions. The Formula One team released a video interview after a filming day with the current RB21 car at Silverstone, with Mekies meeting staff and doing plenty of hand-shaking. Horner, who had been in position for 20 years during which time Red Bull won eight drivers' titles and six constructors' championships, was fired on Wednesday. "I still look at these guys as most people outside of the team look at them... we see the very best people in the world at what they do," Mekies said in a Q+A put together by the Red Bull press office. "It's a privilege to join the team... the focus will really be at making sure that all the talented people here have what they need to perform at their best because they are already the very best," he added. "We are not underestimating the challenge ahead. Formula One is going to face probably the biggest challenge of regulation in its history... so its going to be an incredible challenge and we will need everyone." Red Bull are building their own power unit for 2026 when they will take on major manufacturers Mercedes, Honda and Ferrari. While Mekies hailed his team as the best, Red Bull are only fourth overall and have won two of 12 races so far this season. Four-times world champion Max Verstappen is 69 points behind McLaren's Oscar Piastri. Verstappen's future remains uncertain, despite a contract until 2028, with Mercedes and Aston Martin keen to secure his services. Mekies, 48, has a track record in F1 dating back to 2001 with now-defunct Arrows when Verstappen's father Jos was one of the drivers. He subsequently worked with Minardi, who became Red Bull-owned Toro Rosso and are now Racing Bulls. The Frenchman also spent four years at the governing FIA as safety director and deputy race director. He was sporting director at Ferrari from 2018 and then deputy principal before leaving in 2023 and returning the following year to Racing Bulls as principal. As Mekies began work, the sport assessed the fallout of Horner's departure and what it might mean for him and Verstappen. Former F1 supremo Bernie Ecclestone, who is close to Horner, told Reuters he had been as surprised as anyone when his compatriot told him the news. Horner had a contract until 2030, according to reports, and told staff on Wednesday that he would remain employed by the company. That suggested a long period of well-paid 'gardening leave' before being able to go anywhere else, and Ecclestone said he would be surprised if Horner knew what the future held. "What he's going to do with the rest of his life, difficult to know. I very much doubt he knows what he's going to do," he said. (Reporting by Alan Baldwin, editing by Clare Fallon)


The Star
2 days ago
- The Star
Motorcycling-Double Dakar winner Sunderland chasing round the world record
(Reuters) -Double Dakar Rally motorcycle champion Sam Sunderland is gearing up to ride around the world in 19 days, a record bid that the Briton expects to be mentally more challenging than anything he has done before. He has raced across Saudi deserts, been slowed by gun-toting soldiers in Morocco and stood alone at the pinnacle of Dubai's half-mile high Burj Khalifa, but says this latest adventure may top them all. The bid, launched on Thursday, targets a record of 19 days, eight hours and 25 minutes set in 2002 by Kevin and Julia Sanders for the fastest circumnavigation of the globe by motorcycle. To beat the feat, which is no longer recognised by Guinness World Records because of the dangers involved, the 36-year-old will have to ride 1,000 miles every day and on public roads across Europe, Turkey and into the Middle East. A flight will take him on to the Australian outback, New Zealand and the Americas. From there, he and the Triumph Tiger 1200 go to Morocco and loop back through Europe to Britain. What could possibly go wrong? "I don't think you can ride around the world and cover that many miles a day without having a few hiccups along the way," Sunderland told Reuters with a grin. "When I try and compare it to the Dakar it's going to be probably, in some sense, tougher. Not physically but mentally. "In the Dakar you've got a heap of adrenaline, you're super focused, things are changing quite often which makes you have to react. And this is like: 'Right, those are your miles for the day, get them done'. It's more like a mental fatigue." ONE DIRECTION The target time excludes ocean crossings but the journey, starting in September, must go one way around the world and start and finish at the same location on the same machine. Two antipodal points must be reached on a journey through more than 15 countries and 13 time zones. The Dakar rally covers 5,000 miles over two weeks. "I was trying to put it into perspective for my mum the other day, and my mum lives in Poole in the south of England, and I was like 'Mum, it's like you driving up to Scotland and perhaps halfway back every day for 19 days'," said Sunderland. "I'm on the bike for around 17 hours (a day). I set off at 5 a.m. and arrive around 10, 11 p.m. most nights. So definitely later into the day you feel that sort of mental fatigue setting in, and to stay focused and stimulated is not that easy. "But at least I don't have dunes and mountains to deal with and other riders in the dust, and hopefully not getting lost either." Dakar competitors, who now race entirely in Saudi Arabia, are also unlikely to get stopped for speeding or become delayed by traffic congestion. "I need to behave, let's say, I need to follow the rules of the road and be a good boy with it," said Sunderland, who announced his retirement from professional racing last year. Sunderland will have a support crew of six travelling behind by car, for security and assistance, but the Red Bull-backed rider expects to be well ahead. He also hopes his bid will have a positive effect. "In the news today, it's all sort of doom and gloom in the world, with all the wars going on," he said. "And I think it's quite nice to show people that you can still get out there and experience the world for what it really is." (Reporting by Alan Baldwin, editing by Ros Russell)