Should McLaren focus on one driver in title battle?
Venue: Circuit Gilles Villeneuve, Montreal Dates: 13-15 June Race start: 19:00 BST on Sunday
Coverage: Live commentary of first practice, third practice and qualifying on BBC Radio 5 Sports Extra 2, with FP2 on Sports Extra. Race is on BBC Radio 5 Live; live text updates on BBC Sport website and app
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Formula 1 heads back to North America this weekend for the Canadian Grand Prix in Montreal.
There is now some daylight at the top of the drivers' standings between the McLaren drivers and the rest with Oscar Piastri 10 points ahead of team-mate Lando Norris, and Red Bull's Max Verstappen a further 39 points behind Norris.
Before the race at Circuit Gilles Villeneuve, BBC Sport F1 correspondent Andrew Benson answers your latest questions.
Should McLaren be focusing on one driver for the title? We have seen other teams be dominant at the beginning of a season and slip back later on. - Luke
This debate is an interesting one.
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On one side, teams often receive criticism when they impose team orders and favour one driver over another.
On another, the same can happen when they have two evenly matched drivers, both in a title fight, and they split the points between them against a rival who is the only driver challenging from another team.
The second is clearly the case this year.
For parallels in history, one can look back, for example, to 1986, when the Williams was the fastest car but Nigel Mansell and Nelson Piquet made a pair of warring team-mates and McLaren's Alain Prost drove a wonderful season to slip through the middle and claim the title in a dramatic final race in Australia.
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Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri are - so far - very much not Mansell and Piquet. Relations between them are good and the intra-team battle is being conducted in a way for which all teams would wish.
McLaren don't really have a choice at the moment but to conduct this season as they are so far doing.
Norris and Piastri have contracts that guarantee them equal treatment, and as a team McLaren's philosophy is to allow free competition between their drivers.
The one proviso is that they remember they are driving for a team and that, from time to time, they may be asked to do something that maximises the team's interests but perhaps not their own.
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McLaren are approaching this with a philosophy of openness. Keep talking. Don't let anything go unsaid. Be honest. If an issue comes up, it'll because no one had thought of it. Not because of any attempt to conceal.
They accept that the drivers are likely to clash, but they believe that, because of their approach, they will be able to handle that, too.
So far, it's working. They accept that Max Verstappen is a real threat, even that there is a risk he could 'do a Prost'.
But as Piastri put it in a BBC Sport interview in Monaco: "It is a possibility, yes. But, on both sides of the garage here, we want to win because we've been the best driver, the best team, including against the other car in the team. You always want to earn things on merit and you want to be able to beat everyone, including your team-mates.
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"So that gives Lando and I the best chance of our personal goals of trying to become drivers' world champion, while also achieving the main result for the team, which is the constructors' championship.
"If we do get beaten by Max, of course that would hurt, but we would know that we both had the same opportunity, we were racing everybody out there and that's just how it panned out.
"For us it's the most straightforward, the fairest way of going racing and that's what we've asked for."
Has the Franco Colapinto swap at Alpine backfired? He does not seem to have been much of a step over the less experienced Jack Doohan. - Tim
It would be going quite far to say that it has backfired after just three races, but it's true to say that it's hard to discern any major difference between Colapinto's performance and Doohan's before him.
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When executive adviser - and de facto team boss - Flavio Briatore brought Colapinto in, he said he wanted him to "be fast, not crash and score points".
So far, the Argentine has failed to meet that target on every level.
Colapinto had a significant crash on his debut weekend at Imola. In his three qualifying sessions so far, he is 0.392 seconds on average slower than team-mate Pierre Gasly, compared with Doohan's 0.366secs over the first six races. And, like Doohan, he has scored no points.
Colapinto has another couple of races before he reaches the five Alpine's statement announcing his elevation to the race seat said he would have before the situation was reassessed - a deadline Briatore immediately rejected as soon as he spoke in public about the swap.
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What happens next is anyone's guess.
Why is the last chicane in the Canadian Grand Prix so difficult, causing many drivers to hit the 'Wall of Champions'? - Christopher
The concrete wall on the exit of Turns 12 and 13 at the Circuit Gilles Villeneuve earned its nickname after Damon Hill, Michael Schumacher and Jacques Villeneuve all crashed there in 1999.
Many others - including Sebastian Vettel and Jenson Button - have since followed suit.
It's tricky because it is approached from very high speed, drivers have to bounce over the kerbs to be fast, and if they misjudge that, there is a wall waiting to collect them on the outside, with no run-off area.
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Put that combination together, and it's no wonder drivers crash there.
Donington Park hosted the 1993 European Grand Prix, a race won by Ayrton Senna in one of his greatest performances. It was the last time a circuit other than Silverstone staged an F1 race in the UK [Getty Images]
With Spain likely having two races next season and Italy having had two for the last few years, I find it odd that the UK hasn't had more than one at different tracks in a season since 1993. Considering the majority of the teams are based here, the massive F1 fanbase that Britain has and the very good attendances Silverstone gets every year, why do you think the UK has not been considered to host more than one? - James
Two reasons - money and circuit specification.
Imola returned to the calendar in the pandemic year of 2020, and a way was found to keep it on afterwards because the local region of Emilia-Romagna and the Italian government saw its promotional value and found the sanctioning fee. Hence the event's rather convoluted and inelegant official title.
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Of course, it didn't hurt that F1 chairman Stefano Domenicali is from Imola and was keen for the race to continue.
In Spain, Barcelona has kept its place next year because it has a contract through 2026, while Madrid is entering the first year of its new contract. Again, state funding is involved in both events.
Britain has two issues. One, while the country has many terrific race tracks, only Silverstone meets modern F1 standards. And there is no money for any of them to pay F1 to host a race. Making the British Grand Prix work on a financial basis is difficult enough for Silverstone as it is.
On top of that, slowly but surely the idea of countries hosting more than one race is likely to die away, so it's highly unlikely there would be any appetite for another country to have two.
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Apart, that is, from the USA, where there are three races, in Austin, Miami and Las Vegas, because it is such a large and important marketplace for the sport's commercial rights holders, Liberty Media.
Would competition be more level across all teams, and expenditure lower if rules existed for longer periods without change? - Matthew
Expenditure is set by the budget cap. It makes no difference what the rules are, teams will spend to that limit and no more.
As for keeping the rules in place for a longer period, yes, everyone accepts that the field closes up the longer a set of regulations remains in place. You can see that this year, when the field is probably more compact in terms of time from front to back than it has ever been.
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But it is part of the DNA of F1 to change the rules every few years.
Often it's because there is a feeling the cars need to be slowed down, or changed in character in some ways; sometimes it's because it has been perceived that the engine formula needs to change.
For 2026, it's all of those reasons.
The new power-unit rules were conceived as a way of simplifying the engines and attracting the VW Group into F1. After Audi committed, Ford and General Motors followed suit.
Having created a new power-unit design, with a much greater proportion of its performance derived from the electrical part of the engine, the chassis rules needed to be changed to ensure the cars worked holistically with that engine, and also to iron out some issues that were perceived to have arisen with the existing ones.
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The process of refining the 2026 chassis regulations has not been without its difficulties, to say the least, and there are questions as to how successful the new rules will be.
But that at least is why they're being introduced.
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New York Times
2 hours ago
- New York Times
Chin up, Yuki...
Follow live coverage as Spa hosts Round 13 of the 2025 Formula One world championship and the Belgian Grand Prix weekend Getty Images Championship leader Oscar Piastri will start on pole for Saturday's Belgian Grand Prix sprint race at Spa-Francorchamps. Red Bull's Max Verstappen will be sandwiched by the two McLarens, with Lando Norris P3 and the Ferrari of Charles Leclerc on the second row. However, Lewis Hamilton suffered a surprise spin to seal a first-session exit. The Ferrari driver will have just two cars behind him on tomorrow's sprint race grid, starting 18th. The sole hour of free practice this weekend saw Piastri fastest in FP1 by a distance, with Saturday's sprint race followed by grand prix qualifying ahead of Sunday's race. Saturday: Sprint race and GP qualifying, ahead of Sunday's race Sprint race and GP qualifying, ahead of Sunday's race Join the conversation: live@ GO FURTHER Lewis Hamilton: 'I refuse' to be another failed Ferrari F1 world champion Getty Images Yuki Tsunoda has just been speaking in the media pen following his SQ2 exit — and I have to applaud the Japanese driver for keeping a straight face when being asked if things might improve when he gets the same Red Bull upgrades Max Verstappen is carrying. If only, hey Yuki… Getty Images Here is who misses out on the top-10 sprint qualifying shootout… 11: Liam Lawson (RB) (RB) 12: Yuki Tsunoda (RBR) (RBR) 13: George Russell (MER) (MER) 14: Fernando Alonso (AST) (AST) 15: Lance Stroll (AST) It was Lando Norris fastest with a 1:41.412 — ahead of Max Verstappen, Charles Leclerc and (DO NOT ADJUST YOUR SETS) the Haas of Esteban Ocon. Really not a good day for Mercedes. Kimi Antonelli was already out, and now George Russell exits SQ2 in 13th, meaning it'll be a big ask for the Silver Arrows to score any points in the sprint race tomorrow. The team scored a 1-2 on the track at the grand prix here last year before Russell was disqualified, handing the win to Lewis Hamilton (still with Mercedes then, of course). GO FURTHER George Russell disqualified from Belgian Grand Prix, making Lewis Hamilton the winner SQ2 0:00 — George Russell is OUT! How did that happen? A shocker for the Mercedes. It was close for Oscar Piastri too. Blimey, there was a lot of improvement from everyone else there. SQ2 0:00 — Checkered flag out. Two Aston Martins and Yuki Tsunoda in trouble now… The length of the lap here at Spa has made for some interesting strategies for the laps in SQ2, as there's not really time for two runs. The McLarens have tried it, but it's otherwise basically a one-shot session for everyone. SQ2 1:17 — Interestingly, both Max Verstappen and Charles Leclerc go quicker than Lando Norris. Lots of drivers still without a lap time… Not Oscar Piastri though. He sets a 1:42.128 to at least post a time. Getty Images SQ2 2:20 — BUT wait a minute. Oscar Piastri's lap time is deleted for exceeding track limits — while Lando Norris' 1:42.182 sticks. It wasn't much, but it was enough. So now Norris is quickest, and Piastri has a bit of pressure to nail his second lap… SQ2 5:01 — Both McLarens head out first, with Lando Norris leading the pair. Clear run, clean air and a chance to show what they've got. But Oscar Piastri is still quicker: 1:41.736 — which is more than four-tenths up on the time Norris set. Wowsa. SQ2 7:07 — Again, no hanging around here. All 15 remaining cars out, and all will try to get in two flying laps I imagine. SQ2 10:00 — Interesting conversations as the track is cleared of gravel ahead of the 0 minutes of SQ2. Notably that Lewis Hamilton's big and costly spin might have come from a mechanical issue. It was certainly strange. Likewise with Nico Hülkenberg, who has also had his engineer come onto team radio to apologize for something. Fortunately for Oliver Bearman, it sounded like he made a clear lift on his throttle under that late yellow flag — and still went quick enough to get into SQ2. And that session has just started! I do get the criticism some make about sprint weekends, given it can serve as a 'spoiler' for the rest of the on-track action to follow. But when it's the choice between competitive action and another practice session, to me it's quite an easy call... Getty Images Here is who exits sprint qualifying in the opening session… 16: Alex Albon (WIL) (WIL) 17: Nico Hülkenberg (SAU) (SAU) 18: Lewis Hamilton (FER) (FER) 19: Franco Colapinto (ALP) (ALP) 20: Kimi Antonelli (FER) Disaster for everyone in this group, to be honest. For the record, Oscar Piastri was quickest with a 1:41.769 — which was three-tenths quicker than everyone else. Kimi Antonelli's recent rough run continues with that mistake and SQ1 exit too. Bono, his race engineer, tells him they'll take a look at the floor on his car that may have been damaged when he went off. Tough time for the rookie. A really weird mistake from Lewis Hamilton, and a costly one. He lost control of the car under braking into the Bus Stop chicane, at a time when he needed a lap to get through. P18 for the start of the sprint is going to make for a long Saturday. SQ1 0:00 — Kimi Antonelli and Franco Colapinto are heading out here. They've crossed the line and not improved enough... OH NO! Lewis Hamilton goes off too at the Bus Stop chicane! Yellow flags out, so that might be it for everyone. SQ1 0:00 — Checkered flag out. This is it for the opening sprint qualifying session… SQ1 2:14 — Still no competitive times from Kimi Antonelli or Oliver Bearman, whose first lap time was deleted for exceeding track limits. It looks like Lewis Hamilton ran wide similarly to Antonelli on his first run. There's time for a second run, but not for any more mistakes… SQ1 3:18 — Bad news for Mercedes as Geoorge Russell complains about getting caught in Antonelli's gravel cloud. Lewis Hamilton the man in trouble right now. Only P14 after his first run. Time ticking. Alex Albon in a spot too, in P15.


Motor 1
3 hours ago
- Motor 1
Perfection on Wheels: Driving the Pagani Huayra R Evo at Monza
Hurry up and wait, they said. Red flags waved up and down the front straight at Autodromo di Monza—Italy's so-called Temple of Speed, the fastest track on the F1 calendar. Reports came back that a driver had speared off track and anxiety poured through the Pagani pit box like a choking fog. "It's okay. In a minute, you go. Just be ready to go," the PR handler insisted. My gloved fingers drummed against my race suit. A few moments became five minutes. Five minutes became 25. My shoulders relaxed. "Don't worry, we'll put you into a different session later," he said. I pulled the HANS off my shoulders, pried the helmet off my head, and did my best to put on an easygoing smile. My confrontation with the 900-horse, 2,300-pound, multimillion-dollar Pagani Huayra R Evo Roadster would wait. But like a whip crack, the unmistakable howl of a Pagani V-12 broke the silence, echoing from beyond Monza's legendary front straight and down to its terminus as the red-flagged car roared back into pit lane. "Okay. Now izzz time to go." An Italian engineer pushed me gently toward the cockpit and suddenly there was no more "Wait!" Only "Andiamo!" In a few frantic seconds, I'd clipped back into my HANS and humped over the Pagani's carbon-weave LMP-style crash structure and into the belly of the thing. Another engineer yanked at the five-point harness then flashed a quick thumbs-up and a smile. Photo by: Sevian Daupi | Motor1 Photo by: Sevian Daupi | Motor1 Photo by: Sevian Daupi | Motor1 Before me, all possibilities. Greatness and ruin. What a beautiful view. In the Huayra R Evo Roadster —colloquially called "REVO" by Pagani staff—you sit more upright than you'd think, a perfect sightline aimed over the car's narrow sloping nose. The driver-friendly design owes its roots to this Pagani's purpose. Despite its looks, the REVO isn't a race car. Nor is it a road car. This Pagani is destined for track use only, earmarked for the marque's 'Arte in Pista' events. Effectively, these are track days for Pagani's Huayra R (and now REVO) clients, in the vein of Ferrari's Corse Clienti program. But according to one well-heeled Pagani owner I spoke with in a cooldown session between track stints, "These [Pagani events] are the best. The customer service here is… This is ten times the other brands," he said. "I didn't get to have lunch with Enzo, and from what I understand, it wouldn't have been a very pleasant lunch anyway." Photo by: Sevian Daupi | Motor1 Before me, all possibilities. Greatness and ruin. What a beautiful view. That means Horacio Pagani is there in person, glad-handing attendees like the mayor. The Arte in Pista also provides beautifully catered meals with endless espresso, shuttles to and from the airport and race track and hotel, a pit box stuffed with race engineers, and nothing but the world's greatest tarmac laid like a red carpet in front of your NA V-12 Pagani hypercar. Of course, there are dinners at night, and driving coaches there for one-on-one instruction, an engineer to parse your driving data, and even planned outings for the kids. Horacio reiterated, again and again during the program itself, that these track days are about enjoying family, whether that's biological or fellow Paganisti. I want so badly to be cynical about these sorts of things—the ultra-wealthy enjoying their toys— because they don't cater to my specific dirtbag sensibilities. But I can't. The customers are too joyous, the cars too awesome, the company itself so deeply admirable, I just couldn't help but enjoy the… Pagani-ness of it all. Photo by: Sevian Daupi | Motor1 Photo by: Sevian Daupi | Motor1 At a dinner for Arte in Pista customers the night before the first track sessions, one Huarya R owner from Miami with a similar build to mine (long, lean) recommended some foam under the seat of my race suit, so I'd have enough room to elbow the REVO around Monza without hitting my elbows on the car's crash structure. It proved salient advice. A deep breath and a moment to focus while my hand flicked at the master and ignition switches on the REVO's center console. I craned my head down at the steering wheel, fighting at the HANS straps to recall the starting procedure. Photo by: Sevian Daupi | Motor1 "START" fired the mighty 6.0-liter V-12 over with a whirr whirr whirr BAM . Then it all went noisy. The uncatalyzed, unmuffled exhaust manifolds absolutely howitzered a racket at the back of the garage, vibrating and resonating in a full basso that played my kneecaps like tuning forks. A flick at the wheel-mounted paddle shifted the REVO into first, and I sat and revved the engine like a buffoon before remembering the car's clutch is engaged and disengaged by a servo on the sequential transmission, which is actuated by a "DRIVE" button on the steering wheel. This setup avoids a typical hand-clutch like you'd find on a similarly gnarly race car, another little touch on this track-special Pagani that's supposed to wrap the most extreme performance in a truly driver-friendly package. For context, the REVO's quickest lap at Monza wouldn't have just kept up with LMP2 the last time WEC ran here, it would've put the REVO on pole. It's that quick. Prototype-quick. In truth, after I wheeled out onto the track and saw Monza's first chicane over the REVO's hood, my mind snapped free of notary mode and left the journalist-observer framework behind. In slower cars, in cheaper cars, on tracks you know, you develop the ability to prod a car quickly up to its limits and record some mental notes about what it likes, what it doesn't like, and what sticks out that's worth relaying to the reader. Not here. Not with 900 NA V-12 horses shouting Vivaldi fortissimo at the grandstands. Not with millions of dollars in crash damage separated from Monza's strangling walls by only my right foot. Mostly, I vacillated between "If you crash this, it better kill you," and "this has to be the greatest thing I've ever driven." Photo by: Sevian Daupi | Motor1 Photo by: Sevian Daupi | Motor1 Of the scheduled 40 minutes at the wheel, I had just a few flying laps to learn the track and the car, owing to the red-flagged session earlier on, so I never settled fully into the car or track. It's not meant as a gripe, but as a disclaimer: If you're shopping for a REVO and landed here, or are just a curious reader, I won't be able to relay much about this Pagani's limit handling or its balance flat-out through Monza's high-speed bends. What I can tell you, emphatically, is that the REVO is perhaps the most awesome piece of rolling machinery on this planet. I've driven every model of Pagani in anger at this point, including a pair of Huayras, the new Utopia (manual transmission, grazie mille), and Horacio's own Zonda F. That final car will always have the largest piece of my heart, but the REVO is something else entirely. No road car can match a race car's sense of immediacy or connection. Equally, race cars aren't always friendly to their drivers. Often, they're an equation on wheels, asking for solutions you aren't naturally inclined to provide. The REVO occupies a special pocket between the two, where it pretends to be a race car, but is wrapped in just enough cotton that you can enjoy stretching its legs with confidence. Through Monza's iconic first chicane, I kept waiting for a hint of push from the nose, equally ready to snatch at the rear end going loose when I trailed that last bit of speed down from more than 190 mph and tossed the REVO's nose toward that first apex. Photo by: Sevian Daupi | Motor1 What I can tell you, emphatically, is that the REVO is perhaps the most awesome piece of rolling machinery on this planet. All I found was more grip than I'd thought to ask for, every single time I rolled through the curves. As track temps soared near 100 degrees, the tires stuck firm out of every corner exit. My stint wasn't long enough to find out how they'd hold up over the course of a day, but the bespoke Pirelli P Zero slick compound got rave reviews from the Huayra R customer-drivers, and several of Pagani's instructors and test drivers, all of whom are pros. Pirelli developed the compound to bring a smidge of road-tire feel and breakaway character to these mile-wide racing slicks. It's a tough task to balance both, and a tougher task to satisfy whoever's in the driver's seat. But that's the car's mission—flatter everyone, bring them joy. Pagani's Arte In Pista customers run the gamut from former F1 drivers to people who had never driven a car on track before buying their track-special Pagani. That's not hyperbole. In speaking to the customers, both types were equally satisfied with the car. So was I, despite myself. Data showed I was something like 9 seconds a lap slower than the 'pole' time on my final flier, braking many meters sooner than I needed to, and with far less pedal pressure than the pro driver's fastest lap. I committed every sin in the name of abundant caution, giving up entry and apex speed everywhere. About the only things I did right, according to the data analyst, were steering smoothly and getting on throttle quickly and early (which is easier to do when you're parking in the corners). Still, by picking up throttle earlier and earlier on each successive lap and learning to trust where the car would stick, my confidence grew. On the final lap, I was bumping past 300 kph on the front straight. I had so much fun. Photo by: Sevian Daupi | Motor1 Photo by: Sevian Daupi | Motor1 Photo by: Sevian Daupi | Motor1 The REVO looks about as thrilling as it does intimidating, but once you're at speed, nothing wants to hurt you. The brakes are slightly boosted, I was told, still with that race-car-like resistance across the pedal's travel that's so critical to modulating your braking efficiently while still offering a granular accuracy. The steering is light, with a hyper-quick rack that makes for economical efforts, especially in Monza's first chicane, which is best taken with a super squared-off approach. In corners, and especially once all that downforce kicks in, weight builds beautifully in the steering effort, perfectly relaying how the car's behaving. Then there's the REVO's excellent visibility, its simple, user-friendly control layout, and the balance of the whole package… I've met Girl Scout Cookie sellers who were less friendly. But, more than anything about the REVO, there's that noise. To be honest, the engine sounds better when you're stood on pit wall than it does from inside the car. Impossibly vicious and harmonic, echoing its siren call from nowhere and RIGHT THERE all at once. Even if you never get the chance to drive one, make it out to your nearest Arte In Pista to hear these things run flat out. Photo by: Sevian Daupi | Motor1 Its 60-degree, 6.0-liter naturally aspirated V-12 is on par with the best-sounding engines I've ever heard. No road car ever built sounds this good. Only golden-era Formula 1 could surpass the Pagani unit for soundtrack bliss. The engine itself is a masterpiece. This unit, designed and built from scratch by HWA, produces a glorious cavalcade of numbers. Nine-hundred horses at 8,750 rpm and 568 pound-feet from 5,800 - 8,200 rpm. Twelve naturally aspirated cylinders. Sixty-degree banking that imparts a natural balance and refinement. But really, it's the sound that impresses me most. From inside the cockpit, it's more like a mechanical thrash, a roar of gnashing whine and frequencies from the six-speed dog-ring sequential 'box. A sintered-metal three-disc clutch reins in all the power. At the REVO's astonishing 9,250-rpm redline, there's this glorious intoxicating metallic shout from all that rotating mass and the wind rushing over the overhead portholes sculpted into the carbon monocoque. It is cacophonous. It is glorious. It is Pagani at its absolute best. 30 Source: Sevian Daupi | Motor1 And that's my takeaway from my brief time meeting the REVO. I spent maybe 15 minutes behind the wheel and the rest of the day listening to it scream down Monza's front straight. When the car was still, I stood by it, mesmerized. I prodded around its beautifully constructed suspension and hunched over to view every last component. I bothered Pagani's engineers about every last detail as the car sat with its carbon clamshell off, exposed, waiting for the next driver. I got just as much joy sharing in the infectious pride of the people who built the car as I did edging up to 200 mph on that front straight. Writing about cars requires a balance wherein you must still be in love with the subject matter and yet be distanced enough from the subject itself. Personally, I'm enamored by Pagani and the things it builds. Professionally, I'm struck by Pagani's adherence to ultimate quality, to blending money-no-object craftsmanship with an artful spirit and cutting-edge composites. These are values worth admiring, and the REVO hasn't fallen short by any metric. It is, simply, a dream on wheels. Perfection. More From Pagani The Pagani Huayra Codalunga Loses Its Roof and Adds a Manual 'No One Showed Interest:' Pagani Customers Don't Want An Electric Hypercar Get the best news, reviews, columns, and more delivered straight to your inbox, daily. back Sign up For more information, read our Privacy Policy and Terms of Use . Share this Story Facebook X LinkedIn Flipboard Reddit WhatsApp E-Mail Got a tip for us? Email: tips@ Join the conversation ( )


New York Times
3 hours ago
- New York Times
The SQ2 exits
Follow live coverage as Spa hosts Round 13 of the 2025 Formula One world championship and the Belgian Grand Prix weekend Getty Images Championship leader Oscar Piastri will start on pole for Saturday's Belgian Grand Prix sprint race at Spa-Francorchamps. Red Bull's Max Verstappen will be sandwiched by the two McLarens, with Lando Norris P3 and the Ferrari of Charles Leclerc on the second row. However, Lewis Hamilton suffered a surprise spin to seal a first-session exit. The Ferrari driver will have just two cars behind him on tomorrow's sprint race grid, starting 18th. The sole hour of free practice this weekend saw Piastri fastest in FP1 by a distance, with Saturday's sprint race followed by grand prix qualifying ahead of Sunday's race. Saturday: Sprint race and GP qualifying, ahead of Sunday's race Sprint race and GP qualifying, ahead of Sunday's race Join the conversation: live@ GO FURTHER Lewis Hamilton: 'I refuse' to be another failed Ferrari F1 world champion Getty Images Here is who misses out on the top-10 sprint qualifying shootout… 11: Liam Lawson (RB) (RB) 12: Yuki Tsunoda (RBR) (RBR) 13: George Russell (MER) (MER) 14: Fernando Alonso (AST) (AST) 15: Lance Stroll (AST) It was Lando Norris fastest with a 1:41.412 — ahead of Max Verstappen, Charles Leclerc and (DO NOT ADJUST YOUR SETS) the Haas of Esteban Ocon. Really not a good day for Mercedes. Kimi Antonelli was already out, and now George Russell exits SQ2 in 13th, meaning it'll be a big ask for the Silver Arrows to score any points in the sprint race tomorrow. The team scored a 1-2 on the track at the grand prix here last year before Russell was disqualified, handing the win to Lewis Hamilton (still with Mercedes then, of course). GO FURTHER George Russell disqualified from Belgian Grand Prix, making Lewis Hamilton the winner SQ2 0:00 — George Russell is OUT! How did that happen? A shocker for the Mercedes. It was close for Oscar Piastri too. Blimey, there was a lot of improvement from everyone else there. SQ2 0:00 — Checkered flag out. Two Aston Martins and Yuki Tsunoda in trouble now… The length of the lap here at Spa has made for some interesting strategies for the laps in SQ2, as there's not really time for two runs. The McLarens have tried it, but it's otherwise basically a one-shot session for everyone. SQ2 1:17 — Interestingly, both Max Verstappen and Charles Leclerc go quicker than Lando Norris. Lots of drivers still without a lap time… Not Oscar Piastri though. He sets a 1:42.128 to at least post a time. Getty Images SQ2 2:20 — BUT wait a minute. Oscar Piastri's lap time is deleted for exceeding track limits — while Lando Norris' 1:42.182 sticks. It wasn't much, but it was enough. So now Norris is quickest, and Piastri has a bit of pressure to nail his second lap… SQ2 5:01 — Both McLarens head out first, with Lando Norris leading the pair. Clear run, clean air and a chance to show what they've got. But Oscar Piastri is still quicker: 1:41.736 — which is more than four-tenths up on the time Norris set. Wowsa. SQ2 7:07 — Again, no hanging around here. All 15 remaining cars out, and all will try to get in two flying laps I imagine. SQ2 10:00 — Interesting conversations as the track is cleared of gravel ahead of the 0 minutes of SQ2. Notably that Lewis Hamilton's big and costly spin might have come from a mechanical issue. It was certainly strange. Likewise with Nico Hülkenberg, who has also had his engineer come onto team radio to apologize for something. Fortunately for Oliver Bearman, it sounded like he made a clear lift on his throttle under that late yellow flag — and still went quick enough to get into SQ2. And that session has just started! I do get the criticism some make about sprint weekends, given it can serve as a 'spoiler' for the rest of the on-track action to follow. But when it's the choice between competitive action and another practice session, to me it's quite an easy call... Getty Images Here is who exits sprint qualifying in the opening session… 16: Alex Albon (WIL) (WIL) 17: Nico Hülkenberg (SAU) (SAU) 18: Lewis Hamilton (FER) (FER) 19: Franco Colapinto (ALP) (ALP) 20: Kimi Antonelli (FER) Disaster for everyone in this group, to be honest. For the record, Oscar Piastri was quickest with a 1:41.769 — which was three-tenths quicker than everyone else. Kimi Antonelli's recent rough run continues with that mistake and SQ1 exit too. Bono, his race engineer, tells him they'll take a look at the floor on his car that may have been damaged when he went off. Tough time for the rookie. A really weird mistake from Lewis Hamilton, and a costly one. He lost control of the car under braking into the Bus Stop chicane, at a time when he needed a lap to get through. P18 for the start of the sprint is going to make for a long Saturday. SQ1 0:00 — Kimi Antonelli and Franco Colapinto are heading out here. They've crossed the line and not improved enough... OH NO! Lewis Hamilton goes off too at the Bus Stop chicane! Yellow flags out, so that might be it for everyone. SQ1 0:00 — Checkered flag out. This is it for the opening sprint qualifying session… SQ1 2:14 — Still no competitive times from Kimi Antonelli or Oliver Bearman, whose first lap time was deleted for exceeding track limits. It looks like Lewis Hamilton ran wide similarly to Antonelli on his first run. There's time for a second run, but not for any more mistakes… SQ1 3:18 — Bad news for Mercedes as Geoorge Russell complains about getting caught in Antonelli's gravel cloud. Lewis Hamilton the man in trouble right now. Only P14 after his first run. Time ticking. Alex Albon in a spot too, in P15. F1 TV SQ1 6:57 — Time is FLYING. All 20 cars are already out on track, six of them having recorded a time. Isack Hadjar fastest to date: 1:42.711s. Pierre Gasly slowest. And Kimi Antonelli has gone off the track too. Flat-spotted his tires but still running. It was a nasty one though.