The Independent on Saturday

SEB MUST BE SUBLIME ONCE MORE IN PORTUGAL

- MORGAN BOLTON morgan.bolton@inl.co.za

THIS weekend sees the continuati­on of the battle between Mercedes and Red Bull at the Portuguese GP, so strap yourself in for an almighty clash between the two current heavyweigh­ts of Formula One.

Here we look at a handful of highlights, and a concern, that could define the race at the Algarve Internatio­nal Circuit, colloquial­ly known as Portimão.

Checo must find control

Red Bulls' Sergio Perez has not had the best of race weekends in the two GPs thus far, despite qualifying strongly in both. At the Bahrain GP he was forced to start in the pit lane, and yet managed to race to a magnificen­t fifth-place finish. At Imola he secured second on the grid, 0.053 seconds behind pole-sitter Lewis Hamilton, only to spin out at the Villeneuve chicane on the Sunday to drop down to P12.

Checo certainly has the pace, but that must now be translated into consistenc­y on race day. Red Bull needs the Mexican to be in the mix up front if they are to apply maximum pressure to Mercedes and push for control of the Constructo­rs' title. In a high-pressure environmen­t such the Red Bull paddock, he can ill-afford to continue not performing when it matters most.

Hopefully, this weekend will belong to him.

Battle old as time

As the days of yore, Ferrari and McLaren find themselves fighting it out amongst themselves for podium honours. It might not be the championsh­ip battle of years gone past, but it is wonderful to see the two most successful teams in F1 once again being competitiv­e.

Ferrari, after a disastrous 2020, are stringing together some good performanc­es with Charles Leclerc and Carlos Sainz jun at the wheel. Meanwhile, McLaren are fast becoming the team that can. Lando Norris is one of the drivers in form, and has secured a fourth and third-place finish in the two races so far. The Brit has been brilliant, even though his teammate Daniel Ricciardo has battled at his new outfit.

If the chips fall their way, then both teams could find themselves fighting it out for a foot on the steps of Portimão on Sunday, and that can only be a healthy developmen­t for F1.

Mercedes v Red Bull, part III

It cannot be stressed how important Max Verstappen's victory at Imola was for Red Bull and F1. It revealed a team that has all the tools and speed to take the fight to Mercedes, and this weekend will once again be a defining moment for the season.

Last year Mercedes finished 1-2, Lewis Hamilton making history in the process when he overtook Michael Schumacher's record for most GP wins – 92 of them. It shouldn't be that easy this weekend, as Red Bull certainly have the pace to grab victory, but Hamilton will be furiously pushing for victory. On a track that is fast and wide, overtaking as much as strategy could come into play as the two teams jostle for control.

Bring on another fascinatin­g and exciting Sunday afternoon.

And that concern: Seb is nowhere

Four-time world champion Sebastian Vettel was positive before the season started that he could engineer something great at Aston Martin. As yet, that has not come to fruition with the German battling at his new team. This season seems to be on track to repeat 2020 with Vettel running at the back of the grid – he has only managed two 15-place finishes in the first two races.

Vettel, probably more than any other driver right now, needs a good weekend at Portimão, and another one a week later at Barcelona, to emphasise that he is not a spent force in Formula One. The RP20 is not the fastest car around, but it is certainly a top 10 contender, as evidenced by teammate Lance Stroll's outings, so Vettel needs to pull up his socks, find some form and pace, and get in there, son.

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