The Herald - Herald Sport

Leclerc demands Ferrari fix problems

- Philip Duncan

A WOUNDED Charles Leclerc has demanded Ferrari eliminate their reliabilit­y woes to prevent this season’s Formula One battle from becoming a onehorse race.

Max Verstappen extended his championsh­ip lead by driving unopposed to victory at the Azerbaijan Grand Prix after Leclerc and team-mate Carlos Sainz failed to finish on a desperate afternoon for Ferrari in Baku.

Leclerc was bidding to avenge Ferrari’s flat-footed strategy in Monaco a fortnight ago which cost him victory at his home event. But on lap 20 of 51, Leclerc’s engine expired and he retired from the lead. A power unit failure at Barcelona’s Circuit de Catalunya last month means the Monegasque has now failed to finish in two of his last three appearance­s.

Leclerc led Verstappen by as many as 47 points after the third round in Australia – the scene of his last triumph – on April 10. But, ahead of next weekend’s

Canadian Grand Prix at Montreal’s Circuit Gilles Villeneuve – the ninth race of 22 this season – Leclerc trails the Dutchman by 34 points in the championsh­ip standings.

Yesterday’s race could prove pivotal in Verstappen’s quest to win back-to-back crowns. Sergio Perez finished second to complete a Red Bull one-two and is now the closest challenger to Verstappen after he leapfrogge­d Leclerc in the standings. The Mexican, who took a bonus point for the speediest lap, is 21 points adrift of his Red Bull team-mate.

George Russell claimed his third podium finish for Mercedes in third, while team-mate Lewis Hamilton was fourth.

“It hurts,” said Leclerc, 24. “We really need to look into that

for it not to happen again.

“I can’t really find the right words to describe what has happened. It is just very, very disappoint­ing.

“We were fast and didn’t have big problems in the first part of the season. But now it seems we have more problems even if we haven’t made massive changes to the car. It is difficult to understand.”

Verstappen had little sympathy for Leclerc.

“I would always say s*** happens. That’s racing. It happened to me, it happened to many people in the past and unfortunat­ely it’s happening to Charles now.

“If I would be in the same situation I would also be disappoint­ed. That’s very normal, but it’s about how you come out of it. You learn from it, you don’t like it and you are angry, but you turn it around.

You have to prevent these issues

from happening.”

 ?? ?? Red Bull’s Max Verstappen celebrates his straightfo­rward win in Azerbaijan
Red Bull’s Max Verstappen celebrates his straightfo­rward win in Azerbaijan

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