Cape Argus

Gasly amazed at fourth place finish

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MANAMA: Pierre Gasly struggled to come to terms with his stunning Bahrain Grand Prix performanc­e on Sunday after finishing fourth for Honda-powered Toro Rosso and scooping the Driver of the Day vote.

The points were also the first of the 22-year-old Frenchman’s Formula One career on his seventh start.

“I’m still struggling to realise what’s happened today because we never expected to finish fourth in our second race weekend with Toro Rosso-Honda,” he said.

Gasly was best-of-the-rest behind only Ferrari race winner Sebastian Vettel and Mercedes pair Valtteri Bottas and Lewis Hamilton.

“I don’t actually know what to say...just unbelievab­le,” he declared.

Gasly, who made his debut last October at the Malaysian Grand Prix and is in his first full Formula One season, had already made an impression before Sunday’s race by setting the sixth-fastest time in qualifying on Saturday.

He started fifth, after Lewis Hamilton dropped five places down the grid due to an unschedule­d gearbox change.

Little did he know he would go one better on Sunday.

“We knew that the car is fast but we didn’t expect to finish in the top five,” he said. “We thought that we would be fighting with the McLaren, with the Renault, but finally the car was just so fast today and I could push flat out.”

Team boss Franz Tost hailed his heroics: “He controlled the race as if he had driven 100 races in Formula One,” he said. “It was extraordin­ary. It was a fantastic job today. I hope that this will only be the start.”

The result equalled Toro Rosso’s second best to date.

It also gave new power unit partners Honda a boost after a bruising threeyears with McLaren marked by unreliabil­ity and a lack of performanc­e blamed chiefly on their engines.

They split with the former champions, who now use Renault power, at the end of last season and have enjoyed a far more promising start to their partnershi­p with the Red Bull sister team.

The combinatio­n looked quick and reliable in testing with none of the frustratio­n many had predicted. – Reuters

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