Sunday News

Hartley collects his fourth F1 grid penalty

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NEW Zealander Brendon Hartley will start his fourth race in Formula One with a fourth grid penalty after his Toro Rosso team replaced part of his car’s Renault power unit for the season-ending Abu Dhabi Grand Prix.

The 28-year-old double world endurance champion and Le Mans 24 Hours sportscar winner made his F1 debut with a 25-place penalty at the US Grand Prix in October.

Hartley was then handed a 20-place demotion in Mexico and another penalty in Brazil as the Red Bull-owned team wrestled with engine reliabilit­y.

Formula One technical delegate Jo Bauer yesterday said that Toro Rosso had replaced the motor generator unit-heat (MGUH) in Hartley’s car, which recovers energy from the exhaust. That breach will incur a 10-place penalty. Toro Rosso are sixth in the constructo­rs’ championsh­ip, four points clear of Renault and a further two ahead of Haas.

Hartley posted the slowest time in the first practice, 3.579 seconds behind Ferrari’s Sebastian Vettel and was 19th in the second practice, 3.619 seconds adrift of F1 champion Lewis Hamilton.

Hamilton, chasing a 10th win of the year after wrapping up the championsh­ip in Mexico last month, lapped the floodlit Yas Marina circuit in one minute 37.877 seconds in the evening session.

Vettel, who had set the pace in the afternoon with a lap of 1:39.006 and looked quick on long run pace, ended the day 0.149 slower.

‘‘It’s close and I think it will be close also tomorrow,’’ Vettel said.

The German is set to become the first non-Mercedes driver of the last four years to finish in the top two of the championsh­ip, leading Valtteri Bottas by 22 points into the final round.

Both Hamilton and Vettel, a quadruple world champion with Red Bull, are three-times winners in Abu Dhabi although Ferrari have yet to triumph there.

Red Bull were third in both sessions, with 20-year-old Dutch driver Max Verstappen taking that place in the first and Australian Daniel Ricciardo in the second.

Ferrari’s Kimi Raikkonen and Mercedes’ Valtteri Bottas were fourth and fifth.

Brazilian veteran Felipe Massa, preparing for his last Formula One race with Williams, was 11th fastest.

The tight battle for sixth place in the constructo­rs’ championsh­ip between Toro Rosso, Renault and Haas – with just six points separating the three teams – is another focus for the weekend.

Nico Hulkenberg and Carlos Sainz were ninth and 13th respective­ly for Renault with Toro Rosso’s Pierre Gasly 15th and the two Haas drivers, Kevin Magnussen and Romain Grosjean, 16th and 20th.

British youngster George Russell, taking part in first practice only, was 11th fastest in Esteban Ocon’s Force India and less than a second off the pace of the team’s Mexican driver Sergio Perez.

Russell also took part in first practice in Brazil, and looks set for a reserve role in future.

With both championsh­ips wrapped up, Mercedes having clinched their fourth successive constructo­rs’ title in Texas last month, most teams used the opening session as an early test for 2018.

Some also tried out the ‘halo’ head protection device that will be introduced next year.

 ??  ?? Toro Rosso’s New Zealand driver Brendon Hartley.
Toro Rosso’s New Zealand driver Brendon Hartley.

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