Sportstar

Verstappen in a league of his own

- S. DIPAK RAGAV

Max Verstappen started the Belgian Grand Prix in 14th place, thanks to a grid penalty, but it made no difference to him as he surged ahead of the rest of the field to take the chequered flag. Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc, on the other hand, finished a lonely sixth to drop to third in the drivers’ championsh­ip.

After a four-week summer break, the Formula One bandwagon regrouped at the iconic Spa-francorcha­mps circuit for the Belgian Grand Prix. Teams are usually positive about their chances of success in the second half of the season after having had the time to analyse their mistakes from the first half.

In 2021, the title fight between Max Verstappen and Lewis Hamilton went down to the wire. The gulf between the top two was much wider this year — Verstappen had an 80-point lead over nearest rival Charles Leclerc with just nine races to go.

Grid penalty

If Ferrari still had any hopes of mounting a title challenge, it needed to hit the ground running at Spa. But even before the

weekend began, the team suffered a blow. Leclerc had to start from the back of the grid as he had been forced to extra power unit components beyond the mandated number that was allowed.

Verstappen, too, attracted the grid penalty for the same offence and the duo lined up 14th and 15th on the grid despite Verstappen setting the fastest time in qualifying. What was evident on Saturday (August 27) was that far from Ferrari taking the fight to the Red Bull, Verstappen was in a league of his own.

Ferrari’s Carlos Sainz inherited pole position from Verstappen and held off Red Bull’s Sergio Perez, who had a poor getaway. Perez dropped a few places before regaining his second position as Fernando Alonso collided with Lewis Hamilton.

Dominant win

Verstappen quickly got into the top 10 on the second lap and was cutting through the field like a hot knife on butter. It took only 10 laps for him to get right behind team-mate Perez. By the end of lap 12, Sainz made his first pit stop, allowing Verstappen to get into the lead.

From there on, Verstappen was in complete control of proceeding­s. He dropped behind Sainz after his first stop, but took just a few more laps to regain the lead. Such was his dominance that he finished 17 seconds ahead of Perez in the same car.

Leclerc finished a lonely sixth. He is now 98 points behind the leader and seven points behind second-placed Perez in the drivers’ championsh­ip.

With just eight rounds to go, Verstappen can seal the title as early as the Japanese Grand Prix if he nets another 11 points over the next four rounds. Whatever hopes Ferrari had of putting up a fight in the title battle now looks extinguish­ed.

Developmen­ts on the track may have been a bit dull, but there were numerous off-track developmen­ts.

Driver contracts

A day after the Hungarian Grand Prix, Alonso announced a shock move to Aston Martin Racing to replace Sebastian Vettel, who will retire at the end of this year. Alonso’s announceme­nt shocked his team Alpine, which was hopeful of signing the former two-time champion for another year.

Alpine had initially planned to loan its reserve driver and 2021 F2 champion Oscar Piastri to Williams for a year before bringing

him to take Alonso’s seat a year or two later.

But with a seat now available, Alpine announced Piastri would take Alonso’s seat but the press release did not have any quotes from Piastri himself. A few hours after the announceme­nt, Piastri took to social media saying he was announced as a driver without his consent and that he would not be driving for Alpine in 2023.

What seemed to have transpired is that Piastri’s management, led by fellow Australian and former F1 driver Mark Webber, seemed to have signed a deal with Mclaren to replace the underperfo­rming Daniel Ricciardo after he was not guaranteed a seat at Alpine.

At Spa, the first piece of the puzzle fell into place when Ricciardo announced he will leave Mclaren at the end of this year. He had come to an agreement with his team that the partnershi­p was not working. Ricciardo has been a pale shadow of his best and scored only 19 points; his team-mate Lando Norris has scored 76.

FIA Contract Recognitio­n Board will adjudicate which team has the right to the services of Piastri, a driver who is yet to make his debut but is widely believed to be one of the most promising talents coming up.

Audi to join F1

Ahead of the Belgian GP, German premium automotive brand Audi announced that it will enter Formula One in 2026 and that it has registered itself as a Power Unit supplier.

Earlier in August, the FIA, the sport’s governing body, unveiled new regulation­s for Power Units that will come into force in 2026. The new engine rules will have more electrical power and use sustainabl­e fuels that will ensure net zero C02 emissions. This move, along with cost caps for teams and power-unit manufactur­ers, has made the sport attractive for new automotive brands at a time when F1 is seeing a huge boost in popularity, especially in the U.S.

While Audi has not said which team it will partner with yet, it is widely expected it will buy into the Alfa Romeo Sauber team. Hours after Audi’s announceme­nt, Alfa Romeo said it will end its title-partnershi­p deal with Sauber at the end of 2023, paving the way for Audi to enter the fray.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Unstoppabl­e: Max Verstappen celebrates his victory at the Belgian Grand Prix. With just eight rounds to go, Verstappen can seal the title as early as the Japanese Grand Prix if he nets another 11 points over the next four rounds.
REUTERS Unstoppabl­e: Max Verstappen celebrates his victory at the Belgian Grand Prix. With just eight rounds to go, Verstappen can seal the title as early as the Japanese Grand Prix if he nets another 11 points over the next four rounds.
 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Lewis Hamilton (right) and Fernando Alonso (centre) collide while fighting for second place during the early stages of the race. Sergio Perez (back) profited from the incident and regained his second spot.
GETTY IMAGES Lewis Hamilton (right) and Fernando Alonso (centre) collide while fighting for second place during the early stages of the race. Sergio Perez (back) profited from the incident and regained his second spot.
 ?? REUTERS ?? Special guest:
Manchester City midfielder Kevin de Bruyne (left) with Red Bell team principal Christian Horner before the start of the Belgian GP.
REUTERS Special guest: Manchester City midfielder Kevin de Bruyne (left) with Red Bell team principal Christian Horner before the start of the Belgian GP.

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