The Hindu (Visakhapatnam)

Carlos Sainz — the smooth operator with a hard edge

The 29-year-old returned from emergency appendix surgery to win the Australian GP, remaining the only driver outside Red Bull to triumph since 2022. Out of contract at the end of the season, the Spaniard’s analytical approach and aggressive driving style

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my, woeisme mood.

Sainz, however, got to work. “As soon as I got my appendix removed, I went on the internet and started talking with profession­als and said, ‘OK, what helps to speed up recovery?’,” he told reporters.

“I started doing all the sort of things that you can do to speed up recovery, the wounds, the scar tissue, what you can help to be faster on that, talking to other athletes, talking to other doctors in Spain, internatio­nally. And then I put together a plan with my team.

“The reason why athletes recover faster is because you can dedicate 24 hours per day for seven days to recovery. And that’s exactly what I did.”

Sainz had twice daily hourlong sessions in a hyperbaric chamber, breathing pure oxygen at higher pressure, and used an electromag­netic INDIBA machine for tissue repair. He programmed his time spent in bed, walking and eating “the kind of food that you have to recover.”

Stunning recovery

Two weeks after surgery, Sainz was back in his Ferrari, ready for the Australian Grand Prix.

“Nine days ago, when I was about to catch the flight to come to Australia, I was still in bed. I could barely use my abdominal [muscles] to move. And I was like, this is not going to happen,” he said. “But I took the flight, and suddenly when I landed in Australia, the feeling was a lot better.

“And every 24 hours, I was making a lot more progress than the first seven days, which is actually what all the doctors and profession­al people told me. Don’t worry, because the second week, every day is going to improve a lot more than the first week.”

Although he was improving, Sainz knew that driving a Formula 1 car — a physically punishing experience at the best of times — would be even more challengin­g after an appendecto­my. So he consulted Williams driver Alex Albon, who had had his appendix removed in 2022.

“I feel like it’s exactly what Alex told me,” Sainz said. “With the gforce and everything, on the inside, it just feels like everything is moving more than normal and you need some confidence to brace the core and the body as you’re used to doing, but you get used to it.

“There is no pain, nothing to worry about. It’s just a weird feeling that you have to get used to. Especially on this circuit, we’re pulling five to six Gs in some of the braking zones and corners.”

If he felt stiff and tired by the end of the race at Albert Park, the result exceeded all expectatio­ns. Sainz handled the “weird feeling” to capitalise on a mechanical failure for threetime world champion Max Verstappen — the back of his Red Bull began spewing smoke, with fire following, forcing Verstappen’s retirement — and win the Australian

Grand Prix.

The reason why athletes recover faster is because you can dedicate 24 hours per day for seven days to recovery. And that’s exactly what I did

I am still without a job for next year. I don’t race to prove to team principals my value. I race for myself. That’s the mentality and approach I have and will continue to [have]

Resilience that runs deep

The Spaniard was the first driver since Austrian Gerhard

The calm, clinical approach is married to a scrappy, aggressive driving style. Unlike Verstappen and Charles Leclerc, he enjoys a less skittish car. “I prefer a car that understeer­s than a car that oversteers,” he once said. “Why? because my driving is really aggressive. When I am out on track, I know everyone calls me ‘Smooth Operator’ but I can make a car rotate… I turn the car myself with the steering wheel and the pedals.”

Underrated and respected

With just three career race wins, Sainz may not have the numbers some others on the grid have — but that is also a function of him rarely having cars that could contend for victory. Sainz does, however, have the respect of his peers and predecesso­rs. Regarded as the most underrated driver in the sport, he is a man team principals will be keeping a close eye on. With vacancies, or potential vacancies, in top teams such as Mercedes and Red Bull for next season, Sainz should have attractive options to choose from. He is giving himself “enough time and enough informatio­n” to make a decision on “probably the most important three or four years of my career”, but his focus for the moment is more immediate.

“I am still without a job for next year,” Sainz said after his victory in Melbourne. “Everyone more or less knows what I’m capable of doing. I don’t race to prove to team principals my value. I race for myself. That’s the mentality and approach I have and will continue to.” If Ferrari’s early promise holds, Sainz, who has already ended two Red Bull streaks, will back himself to pull off something truly breathtaki­ng in his final season in red.

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