Baku, FP: Verstappen quickest in disrupted practice session

F1 gets back on track in Baku

By Franck Drui

28 April 2023 - 12:41
Baku, FP: Verstappen quickest in (...)

Max Verstappen set the fastest time of the sole practice session for this weekend’s FIA Formula 1 Azerbaijan Grand Prix as F1 returned to action at the Baku City Circuit. The Red Bull driver finished just under four hundredths of a second ahead of Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc with Sergio Pérez third in the other Red Bull RB19.

After a four-week hiatus following the Australian Grand Prix, a gap brought about the cancellation of the Chinese Grand Prix, F1 returned in Baku to the first of six Sprint weekends this season and with a new format in place.

Following ratification by the World Motor Sport Council earlier this weekend, Saturday’s Sprint will have its own dedicated Saturday morning Shootout to determine its grid. Qualifying for Sunday’s Grand Prix takes place on Friday afternoon and as such, teams had just one practice session to prepare.

With many teams bringing car updates to this weekend’s event, the session got off to a busy start with a queue of cars lining up at the pit exit.

And in the opening minutes of the session it was Aston Martin’s Fernando Alonso who set the pace, with the Spanish driver posting a time of 1:48.447 as drivers gradually ramped up their pace on the almost wholly resurfaced street track. McLaren’s Lando Norris then claimed P1 with Leclerc then going quickest with a time of 1:45.129.

Ferrari’s Carlos Sainz had a nervy moment early on when he clipped the wall on the inside of Turn 5 and both Mercedes complained of brake issues, which forced them back to the garage, but as the opening 10 minutes elapsed a trio of incidents disrupted the session.

First AlphaTauri’s Yuki Tsunoda hit the wall and spun in Turn 3, resulting in a puncture that separated his rear right tyre from its wheel rim. The Japanese driver limped back to the pits but with the bulk of the circuit to navigate he shipped substantial damage to the rear of his car as it grounded on his long way back.

Pierre Gasly then brought out yellows when he slowed dramatically with flames visible under the engine cover at the rear of his Alpine. The Frenchman, suffering from a hydraulic leak, tried to get his car back to the pit lane but eventually had to pull over at the side of the track where fire marshals tried to get the blaze under control.

Almost simultaneously, at Turn 1, Haas’ Kevin Magnussen went into the escape road and stopped. With the Dane unable to restart, the red flags were flown.

Just prior to the stoppage Verstappen had climbed to the top of the timesheet with a lap of 1:43.834, set on medium tyres and as the cars headed back to the pit lane for what would prove to be a 13-minute delay, the Dutchman led team-mate Pérez by almost three tenths of a second with Leclerc third, over half a second off Verstappen

When the action resumed Alonso jumped to fourth place with a lap of 1:44.893 but as the pace increased he was shuffled back by AlphaTauri’s Nyck de Vries who posted a time of 1:44.866. Alonso’s team-mate Lance Stroll then moved to fourth place on medium tyres and then found more time to take P2 with a lap of 1:44.053.

With a quarter of an hour left the field retreated to the pits to plot a soft tyre run ahead of this afternoon’s qualifying session.

And it was the Red Bull drivers who were the first to emerge on the red-banded tyres. Verstappen set the first soft benchmark with a lap of 1:43.042, but with 10 minutes remaining that was beaten by Pérez who stopped the clock at 1:42.651.

Williams’ Alex Albon then moved to third with a lap of 1:43.628 and Hamilton took P4 with a medium-tyre lap of 1:43.798.

Leclerc, after going off track on his first run, then split the Red Bulls with a time of 1:42.744 set on his second attempt. Pérez fought back with a lap of 1:42.600 but Leclerc found more pace to retake P1 with a lap of 1:42.352.

That looked to have settled matters, but in the final seconds of the session Verstappen rose to the top of the order with a final tour of 1:42.315.

Behind the top three, Sainz took fourth for Ferrari ahead of McLaren’s Lando Norris, with De Vries in sixth. Stroll finished in seventh place ahead of Alonso with Albon in ninth. Zhou Guanyu finished in 10th for Alfa Romeo.

Pos.DriverCarTimeLaps
01 Max Verstappen Red Bull Honda RBPT RB19 1:42.315 22
02 Charles Leclerc Ferrari SF-23 1:42.352 21
03 Sergio Pérez Red Bull Honda RBPT RB19 1:42.454 22
04 Carlos Sainz Ferrari SF-23 1:42.899 23
05 Lando Norris McLaren Mercedes MCL60 1:43.125 22
06 Nyck de Vries AlphaTauri Honda RBPT AT04 1:43.414 24
07 Lance Stroll Aston Martin Mercedes AMR23 1:43.455 23
08 Fernando Alonso Aston Martin Mercedes AMR23 1:43.560 20
09 Alex Albon Williams Mercedes FW45 1:43.628 25
10 Guanyu Zhou Alfa Romeo Ferrari C43 1:43.748 23
11 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes W14 1:43.798 21
12 Oscar Piastri McLaren Mercedes MCL60 1:43.980 23
13 Valtteri Bottas Alfa Romeo Ferrari C43 1:44.010 23
14 Yuki Tsunoda AlphaTauri Honda RBPT AT04 1:44.137 18
15 Nico Hülkenberg Haas Ferrari VF-23 1:44.323 21
16 Logan Sargeant Williams Mercedes FW45 1:44.900 16
17 George Russell Mercedes W14 1:45.082
18 Esteban Ocon Alpine Renault A523 1:45.955 8
19 Pierre Gasly Alpine Renault A523 1:46.321 7
20 Kevin Magnussen Haas Ferrari VF-23 1:47.798 8

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