Bangkok Post

Bottas quickest in practice at Suzuka

Japan GP hunkers down for typhoon, Mercedes pair benefit from aerodynami­c upgrade package

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>> SUZUKA: Valtteri Bottas was quickest yesterday in practice before the Japanese Grand Prix locked down ahead of an approachin­g super typhoon, finishing a tenth of a second ahead of teammate and world championsh­ip leader Lewis Hamilton.

The Mercedes pair, benefittin­g in Japan from an aerodynami­c upgrade package to their W10 cars, were comfortabl­y ahead of the third-fastest Red Bull of Max Verstappen in the second session of the condensed racing weekend at Suzuka.

“It was a very positive day,” said Bottas. “We tried the new bits with the car. It felt good since the beginning.”

Just before the first session began yesterday morning, race organisers announced that the entire Saturday track programme, including qualifying, had been scrapped for safety reasons in the face of the approachin­g Super Typhoon Hagibis.

Qualifying was reschedule­d to 10am (8am Thai time) tomorrow, with the race still taking place at 2.10pm (12.10pm Thai time) as originally planned, providing the weather improves.

“[We] still need to remember it’s only practice, Sunday is still going to be close with qualifying and the race,” Bottas said.

The Ferraris of Charles Leclerc and Sebastian Vettel, who had dominated practice and qualifying at the previous four grands prix, could only trail in fourth and fifth after failing to record a clean lap on the fastest soft tyres.

The loss of today’s timetable added extra spice with only yesterday’s two practice sessions available to prepare the cars for qualifying.

And should bad weather linger on tomorrow morning and prevent the qualifying session taking place, the governing body FIA confirmed that the timings from yesterday’s second practice will be used to determine the starting grid.

That would leave Mercedes sitting pretty with a front-row lockout as they look to secure the one-two finish they need to clinch a record sixth successive constructo­rs championsh­ip.

Finland’s Bottas recovered from a mid-session spin on the final bend to lap the 5.807km circuit in 1min 27.8785sec, 0.100sec ahead of Britain’s Hamilton.

Dutchman Verstappen was third on 1:28.066 in his Red Bull, 0.281sec slower than Bottas, with Monaco’s Leclerc was fourth on 1:28.141 and Vettel fifth on 1:28.376.

“Mercedes are looking very strong, which is no surprise on this track,” Verstappen said. “But we made a good recovery from this morning.

“I’m not worried about doing qualifying and the race on Sunday as it won’t affect my approach. We can’t change the weather and it’s out of our control, so now we just have to see what happens on Sunday.”

It was a timely riposte by Mercedes to the resurgent Ferrari team who had dominated practice and qualifying since the summer break.

A win for Hamilton tomorrow would leave only Bottas, who lies 73 points behind, able to catch him in the drivers’ standings with just four races to come after Japan. It would also put the Brit in line to wrap up a sixth title, a feat only previously achieved by Michael Schumacher, and third world title in a row at Mexico later this month.

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 ??  ?? Mercedes’ Valtteri Bottas takes part in a practice session at Suzuka yesterday.
Mercedes’ Valtteri Bottas takes part in a practice session at Suzuka yesterday.

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