
Is Austria F1's most beautiful track? Plus, Norris leads early at the Red Bull Ring
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Welcome back to Prime Tire, where today we're going to celebrate something wonderful in Formula One.
I'm Alex, and Luke Smith will be along later.
The hills are alive with the sounds of Styria.
F1 sounds, in fact, as the current V6 hybrid engines make their final appearance at this glorious track. The deeper, flatter engine notes the current cars produce compared to previous eras may not be one of every F1 fan's favorite things, but the sights of the Austrian Grand Prix venue are surely up there.
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There's just something great about the Red Bull Ring, or the Österreichring, as it was, or even the A1-Ring for F1 fans of the 1990s and early 2000s. It mainly comes down to the track's stunning location in central Stryia, where the undulating topography has the drivers feeling like they're climbing (and descending) a mountain every lap.
Ringed by proper peaks, here fans can see the cars at multiple places around the track from just a single vantage point. It's a stunning location for a race track. Now then, all together…
🎶 Doe — deer have made famous appearances at this place (nearly tragically for Stefan Johansson in 1987 and more amusingly for Juan Pablo Montoya in 2001).
🎶 Ray — the track gets plenty of golden sun during the summer months, but the altitude can have rain coming down thunderously very quickly.
🎶 Me — I've been twice, to cover Formula Two in 2017 when Charles Leclerc ran riot for Prema Racing and again in 2023, when Max Verstappen did likewise for the home F1 team.
🎶 Fa-r — over 120 miles from the Austrian capital Vienna, to be precise. But it's a lovely drive down the Autobahn, in and out of many mountain-hewn tunnels.
🎶 Sew — I guess those lederhosen outfits Red Bull and Mercedes wheel out fairly regularly here?
🎶 La — the vociferous voices of Verstappen's orange army, which camps out en masse every year at the Red Bull Ring.
🎶 Tea — no, really just Red Bull here, and Madeline Coleman tells me iced gummy bear flavor is on offer this year.
🎶Do-n't worry, I won't break out into full 'Edelweiss,' and it must be noted here that there have been several high-profile negative incidents at this track even in recent years.
The 2022 Austrian GP, for example, was marred by appalling harassment of female fans, as well as instances of homophobic and racist slurs being hurled from some out-of-control 'fans'. F1 issued a statement, but all-around good egg Sebastian Vettel said something that was actually worth listening to.
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'There should be zero tolerance,' said the then Aston Martin driver. 'If people have a good time and drink too much, that's OK, but it doesn't justify or excuse wrong behavior.'
But at least the setting for the Austrian GP is magical, and the racing tends to back that up.
Think Michael Schumacher versus Montoya here in 2001, Schumacher versus everyone and briefly on fire in 2003, and Lewis Hamilton and Nico Rosberg colliding on the last lap in 2016. Or Verstappen's thrilling battle with Leclerc in 2019, and of course, that Lando Norris clash for the Dutchman in 2024.
Did you also know that Mercedes boss Toto Wolff, who hails from Vienna, also worked here as a driving instructor in the mid-1990s?
'I was working for a racing school and I was living in the farmhouse,' Wolff explained in Friday's team principals' FIA news conference in Austria.
'There were lovely people — egg and bread in the morning, a glass of milk. And then I was teaching people to drive Formula Ford cars around the old Österreichring. The highlight of the day was shaking those cars down in the evening and making them ready for the next day.'
This place just seems to breed stories, so over to Luke to reveal the lovely view they tend to get written alongside in Austria.
I am writing today's Inside the Paddock from the media center at the Red Bull Ring, which offers what is unquestionably the best view of the season from our 'offices' for any F1 weekend.
The incredible glass structure alongside the main straight has the media center at the very top, offering views of the majority of the circuit. I've got Turn 1 right ahead of me, Turn 3 to my right in the distance, plus the left-handers of Turn 6 and 7. It's hard when the race is ongoing to keep an eye on the screens in the media center and not watch the actual cars out on the track!
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It's a funny thing to explain to reporters in other sports, often watching in stadiums that offer a total view of an entire field. It's actually quite rare for us to get any kind of view of the track in F1 media centers nowadays (some don't even have windows!), so we're making the most of it this weekend.
The only tiny drawback is we're not actually inside the paddock — the title of this section is a lie! — meaning it requires taking an elevator down the back of the track's main grandstand and then walking through a tunnel under the main straight to get up to the paddock for interviews and chats with sources. But, overall, this has to be one of the best facilities of the season.
Oh, and to Alex's point about the beauty of this race, I've been loving the drive to and from the track each day through the mountains. Way to go, Austria. Swapping you for Milton Keynes next week, where we're staying for the British GP, will bring me rather back down to earth…
Here are the main takeaways from today's on-track action in Austria:
Final practice in Austria takes place at 7:30 p.m. ET and 11:30 a.m. UK on Saturday, with qualifying to follow at 11 a.m. ET and 3 p.m. UK. Follow it all with us.
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New York Times
39 minutes ago
- New York Times
Q3: Nine out of 10 on the board
The Red Bull Ring hosts Round 11 of the 2025 Formula One world championship Getty Images Formula One is back in Europe for the Austrian Grand Prix at the Red Bull Ring, where Lando Norris will start on pole for tomorrow's race. The McLaren man has dominated the majority of the sessions so far this weekend, and he did so again in qualifying — enjoying the buffer of more than half a second to Charles Leclerc's Ferrari, which will start the race alongside him on the front row. It was an ideal response from the Brit after he ran into the back of his McLaren teammate and championship leader Oscar Piastri at the Canadian Grand Prix last time out. Piastri will start third while defending champion Max Verstappen could only manage P7 in his Red Bull — sneaking ahead of Gabriel Bortoleto, who made it into Q3 for the first time in his F1 career. Provisional grid: 1>NOR, 2>LEC, 3> PIA, 4>HAM, 5>RUS, 6>LAW, 7>VER, 8>BOR Grand Prix: Lights out at 9am ET Lights out at 9am ET Join the conversation: live@ GO FURTHER Is Austria F1's most beautiful track? Plus, Norris leads early at the Red Bull Ring ⏰ 2:57 Liam Lawson is the only car yet to post a lap. Everyone else has a time in the bag. Here come the crucial second runs… ⏰ 5:35 Wow. Lando Norris banks a first lap with a 1:04.268. Honestly, I just don't see anyone beating that McLaren here. Charles Leclerc is second, more than two-tenths down, with Oscar Piastri and Lewis Hamilton completing the current top four. ⏰ 7:16 We're closing in on the first runs, but there were about three unsafe releases in the pit lane before the top 10 cars even made it onto the track. That should be fun for the stewards to pull apart. ⏰ 12:00 As for at the top end of the time sheets, Lando Norris was quickest again with a 1:04.410 — ahead of Oscar Piastri, Charles Leclerc and Max Verstappen, with Gabriel Bortoleto next. Pierre Gasly, George Russell, Lewis Hamilton, Liam Lawson and Kimi Antonelli complete our Q3 line-up. And we are already underway. Here we go: 10 minutes to sort the top of the order for tomorrow' grand prix grid. Getty Images Gabriel Bortoleto is through to Q3 for the first time in his F1 career — and he has been in the top 10 of every session so far this weekend. So he is clearly in a very good groove. Great stuff from the rookie. Meanwhile, according to the FIA: 'the grass fire was caused by a car going off track, rather than by sparks flying off from cars on track, as in previous cases. 'Additional dampening of the grass will take place during the break between Q2 and Q3.' Brilliant from the Brazilian. Gabriel Bortoleto makes it into Q3 for the first time in his F1 career — and it will be the first time Sauber has appeared in the final 10 minutes of qualifying this season too. Outstanding. Not so fortunate were this quintet, who miss out on the top-10 shootout… 11: Fernando Alonso (AST) 12: Alex Albon (WIL) 13: Isack Hadjar (RB) 14: Franco Colapinto (ALP) 15: Oliver Bearman (HAS) ⏰ 0:00 The checkered flag soon follows for Q2. The second Williams of Alex Albon is struggling now… ⏰ 0:30 Woah, that's an excellent lap from Gabriel Bortoleto. Can he and Sauber break into Q3 for the first time this season? Huge 1:04.846… ⏰ 3:38 Of course, while the red flag came at a handy time given everyone had completed their first run — it also means they will only head out at the last moment to get their final lap in. So right now, everyone is sat in their garage waiting for the right moment. It could get congested out there… ⏰ 5:41 Fires out. Let's get Q2 in the bag... On the fire that has caused the red flag, there was a test back at the Spanish Grand Prix for the cars being fitted with steel skid blocks and not titanium, as is normal per F1's technical rules, to try and reduce the sparks that caused similar fires in China and Japan over the last two seasons. The FIA decreed: 💬 'Titanium skid blocks will remain the mandated material for the remainder of the season. However, teams are requested to have stainless steel skid blocks available at all events, as they may become mandatory if similar grass fire incidents occur as seen in Suzuka early this year. 'Additional testing of stainless steel skid blocks will be conducted at selected events throughout the season to support further evaluation.' Race control confirms we'll be back underway in four minutes. Count it down, people. I'm right there with you… If I had a pound for every time there'd been a red flag for the grass being on fire in F1 this season... I'd only have three pounds. But it's strange it keeps happening. Getty Images ⏰ 5:42 The timing isn't too bad here, with most of the drivers having already completed their first run in Q2. And unlike free practice, the clock does stop under a red flag in qualifying until we're ready to resume. ⏰ 5:42 We're all stopped with a red flag. The circuit grass is on fire. It's like Japan all over again! ⏰ 7:37 Another slow start but we're hitting our straps now, including Max Verstappen who slides his way around the Red Bull Ring — and yet he sticks his Red Bull to the top of the time sheets. That is until the two McLarens go quicker, with Lando Norris clocking a 1:04.410‚ just 0.146s ahead of his teammate. ⏰ 15:00 Straight back on it with Q2. That's 15 minutes to decide places 11 to 15 on tomorrow's grid. Away we go… Getty Images Another Q1 exit there for Yuki Tsunoda — but it is by far the closest he has been to Max Verstappen since they started as Red Bull teammates. The short track in Austria means the margins are always going to be smaller, with Tsunoda's 0.263s deficit to Verstappen worth an enormous 12 positions. The closest Tsunoda had got to Verstappen prior to this race was last time out in Canada, where he was 0.464s off. Carlos Sainz is soon on the radio too, saying there was damage to the front of his WIlliams and that it was 'undriveable'. At the pointy end, Lando Norris was fastest in that opening session with a 1:04.672 from Oscar Piastri, Liam Lawson, Pierre Gasly, and Isack Hadjar. Which was an unlikely top five. Even for Q1.
Yahoo
44 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Why "everything fell apart" for Max Verstappen in hot F1 Austrian GP qualifying
Max Verstappen's Formula 1 qualifying session for the Austrian Grand Prix was hampered significantly when Pierre Gasly spun ahead of him on his last lap - but believes Red Bull's performance had already waned amid the changing conditions. After FP3, Verstappen was only 0.2s behind Lando Norris' top-line pace and looked to be an outside bet for pole, but the gulf to the McLaren had grown to over 0.4s during Q1 and Q2 - which he put down to the hotter temperatures and changing wind direction later in the day. Advertisement Following the opening runs in Q3, Verstappen was only sixth, but had been among the early takers for a final lap in an effort to improve his position on Sunday's grid. But his last attempt was nixed by Gasly's Turn 10 spin, which brought out the yellow flags. Verstappen did not encounter Gasly immediately, but the yellows had lingered long enough to force him into backing off ahead of the final corner. He was not left with enough time to get a final lap in, and thus dropped a further position when Racing Bulls' Liam Lawson trickled past for sixth by 0.003s. Verstappen said that he was reasonably happy with his car in FP3 and that the team had barely touched his set-up between sessions, and added that the 47C track temperatures had started to sap performance away from his RB21. Advertisement "The conditions for sure are not that good for our car," rued Verstappen. "In terms of gap, I think it was very big. Certainly in qualifying everything just felt a lot worse. Max Verstappen, Red Bull Racing Max Verstappen, Red Bull Racing "Not a lot [of expectations in the race]. The hot conditions, they don't help as well and so far this year we've never really been more competitive in the race than qualifying as well, so we'll see what we can do tomorrow." Asked if there was any relation to the updates that Red Bull introduced at the Austria weekend, Verstappen believed that it was not the case. Advertisement "I don't want to talk about the upgrades because I think it was not only the upgrade that caused all this," the four-time world champion added. "It's just suddenly, we really took a step back, which is not what you want in qualifying. "We didn't touch the car [after FP3], just very tiny little changes that shouldn't influence the car balance. I mean that's all manageable, but suddenly with the higher track temps and more wind, everything just fell apart." Polesitter Norris said that, although Verstappen was starting from seventh, he was not going to count the Red Bull driver out of the reckoning for victory on Sunday. Lando Norris, McLaren, Oscar Piastri, McLaren Lando Norris, McLaren, Oscar Piastri, McLaren He added that he expected Red Bull to be more in the hunt this weekend, but noted it was too long a season to be discarding Verstappen from the championship battle. Advertisement "Max has been our main contender for every race this season," said Norris, who is second to team-mate Oscar Piastri in the championship. "I think just because he's had a slightly worse qualifying today, I'm definitely not going to count him out of the race tomorrow and definitely not going to count him out for the rest of the season. "They brought upgrades; maybe they've not worked as well as they wanted, or maybe they have - I don't know. But I think we expected them to be quicker here this weekend. They've still looked pretty good for the most part this weekend. "We as team-mates [Norris and Piastri] are probably the main rivals of each other at the minute, but at the same time - unless he's out of the race, I don't think we're ever going to take Max out of the equation. It's still a very long season." Advertisement Additional reporting by Ronald Vording Read Also: Christian Horner plays down 'noise' of Verstappen to Mercedes talk Frustrated Oscar Piastri sees final Austrian GP qualifying lap ruined To read more articles visit our website.


Newsweek
44 minutes ago
- Newsweek
Lando Norris Secures Stunning Pole Position For McLaren at the Red Bull Ring
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. McLaren's Lando Norris secured the pole position for the Austrian Grand Prix by a significant margin over rival cars. Setting a blisteringly fast lap time of 1:03.971, Norris proved he was untouchable on the Red Bull Ring. Charles Leclerc, who secured second place on the grid, set a time of 1:04.492. Norris got one step closer to winning the Austrian GP, given the superior pace of his MCL39 F1 car, which will help create a significant gap if he starts the race perfectly tomorrow. The Briton revealed after the qualifying session that he felt good about his Q3 run and praised the positive weekend so far. While Norris' qualifying performances have often set him back, he emphasized that today's run in Spielberg was something he will 'savor' for a long time. He told the media: Lando Norris of Great Britain and McLaren looks on prior to practice ahead of the F1 Grand Prix of Austria at Red Bull Ring on June 27, 2025 in Spielberg, Austria. Lando Norris of Great Britain and McLaren looks on prior to practice ahead of the F1 Grand Prix of Austria at Red Bull Ring on June 27, 2025 in Spielberg, Austria."It was a good lap, that's for sure. My Q3 run one was good, but I knew there were a few places where, if I just got it right, I could still get quite a bit more time, and I did exactly that. "I did what I planned to do, and when I plan to do something, and it goes right, it normally goes very, very well. So very happy. A good day, and it has been a good weekend for me so far, so hopefully we can keep it up. "It's a long season and I still savour this moment, especially as some of my tougher moments have been in qualy. So to put in the lap like today, to put in the performance like I had, was pleasing for myself. I'm excited. I want to prove to myself over and over again, and hopefully this is the beginning of it." Norris showcased top form on Friday during the second Free Practice session, where he set an impressive lap time of 1:04.580. McLaren's front suspension upgrade seems to be working well for Norris so far, who said the car was set up in the right direction. He said after FP2: "The car felt good from the off. Alex gave good feedback this morning after FP1 and he was on the pace straightaway, so it was good to see. "I think they moved the car in the right direction for FP2, and we just need to understand whether we want more of that [on Saturday], or a little bit less, or somewhere in the middle. So good steps in the right direction, but still a little bit more to come hopefully. "We've shown a bit more pace than some of the others. I certainly think they're going to catch up. Max is not far behind and they usually improve a lot into Saturday."