aston martin amr21 may not be that good on the track

Aston Martin AMR21 may not be that good on the track

AlphaTauri boss Franz Tost believes that their rivals Aston Martin do not have a good car on their hands in the AMR21. Pre-season testing gave Aston Martin reason for concern as the iconic brand made its return to Formula 1. The team completed the second-lowest number of laps, while new recruit Sebastian Vettel spent a chunk of time in the garage thanks to several reliability issues. The RP20 of 2020 was controversially based very closely on the 2019 Mercedes, but for this season that philosophy seems to be hurting them. The works Mercedes team appear to have been impacted quite severely by the new aerodynamic regulations, and the AMR21 also looked quite the handful at the Bahrain season-opener. Vettel said he “did not feel at home” in the car as he suffered Q1 elimination in Bahrain and later shunted Esteban Ocon in the race. The four-time World Champion was also forced to start from the back of the grid after not observing double yellow flags in Q1. And from his observations, Tost, Vettel’s former boss at Toro Rosso, was not impressed with the Aston Martin car. “Theory is one thing, reality is another,” Tost told Sport1’s AvD Motor und Sport Magazin. “In reality, the car is not that good, it is very unstable at the rear end.” But on a more positive note, Tost thinks Aston Martin have a driver in Vettel who is very capable of taking the team forward. “With his experience, he can bring a team forward. He knows how to win races and world championships,” he explained.

aston martin amr21 may not be that good on the track

F1 reports 12 positive COVID-19 cases during Bahrain GP

Formula 1 and the FIA have confirmed there were 12 positive cases of Covid-19 from testing across the Bahrain Grand Prix weekend. In order to return to racing last year, F1 introduced a strict Covid testing regime, with all personnel attending a grand prix event required to return a negative test before being granted admission into the paddock. In a change from 2020, when figures released also included offsite results, now only the results of those tested onsite are included in the latest numbers. This is due to the way testing has changed across Europe with lateral flows and private testing. A statement said: “The FIA and Formula 1 can today confirm that at the 2021 FIA Formula 1 Bahrain Grand Prix, between Monday 22nd March and Sunday 28th March, 8,150 tests for Covid-19 were performed on drivers, teams and personnel. “Of these, 12 people tested positive. The FIA and Formula 1 are providing this aggregated information from each grand prix for the purposes of competition integrity and transparency.”

aston martin amr21 may not be that good on the track

The penalty Verstappen would have gotten if he didn’t give back the position to Hamilton

Emanuele Pirro, who was the race steward for the season-opening F1 2021 race in Bahrain discusses how he would have penalized Max Verstappen had the Dutchman not given the position back to Lewis Hamilton. During the final few laps, Red Bull’s Verstappen managed to overtake Mercedes’ Hamilton around the outside of turn 4 for the race lead. Unfortunately, the Dutchman had all four wheels of his Red Bull RB16B off the race track prompting the race officials to inform him to give the position back. “He would have got a maximum 5-second penalty,” Pirro told Corriere dello Sport. “You cannot overtake where you go over the track limits. Vertappen did so, although he did not do it on purpose, he simply went a bit straight/wide. At that moment Masi warned Red Bull and advised Verstappen to give back his position. “A race official will never force anything, because he may not do that he may only suggest it. Verstappen gave back his position and we did not have to deal with the case specifically. Pirro also discusses how the race director Michael Masi, also warned Hamilton and Mercedes regarding the Englishman’s exit at turn 4 during the race. “Hamilton went over the track limits a little too often, creating a repeated advantage,” Pirro explained. “So Masi, the only one with the authority to talk to the teams, called Mercedes to warn them that if Hamilton did it more often he would get the white black flag. That could end up giving him a penalty. “He stopped immediately and that was that as far as Hamilton was concerned.” Pirro also explained that the teams and drivers were warned about their approach to the turn with several drivers having their lap times deleted over the course of the weekend. “It was clear both in practice and in qualifying that whoever went off track in Turn 4 would lose his lap time. This also happened several times to several drivers,” Pirro continued. “Masi warned the teams that if one went over the track limits several times or benefited from it, the commissioners would assess the situation.”

aston martin amr21 may not be that good on the track

Alonso’s F1 return was cut short by a sandwich wrapper

Formula 1 fans were treated to a great, down-to-the-wire race in Bahrain this weekend. But for Spain’s most successful F1 driver, it ended all too early. Fernando Alonso, celebrating his return to the sport after a two year hiatus, had to retire following a mechanical issue that was caused by a very unlikely source. “After the second stop, a sandwich wrap paper got stuck inside the rear brake duct of Fernando’s car,” Marcin Budkowski, Alpine’s executive director, told Motorsport. “This led to high temperatures and caused some damage to the brake system, so we retired him for safety reasons. It was a very unlucky first race for Fernando considering how strong he looked.” Indeed, after a strong qualifying performance in which the two-time world champion finished ninth, seven places ahead of his teammate, Esteban Ocon, the early end to Alonso’s race was a disappointment. With better luck, Alonso might have earned some points in his first race back to the series. But he was positive about his return to the sport. “Firstly, it was great to be back racing in Formula 1,” said the Spaniard. “The start was fun, we gained some places and I had some enjoyable battles with old colleagues. However, it was disappointing to not see the chequered flag in the end.” Ocon, meanwhile, ended up in 13th, failing to earn any points. His race, though, was hurt after he was crashed into by Aston Martin’s Sebastian Vettel. Alonso will look to score his first points of the season at the second race in Italy at the legendary Imola Circuit on April 18.

aston martin amr21 may not be that good on the track

Verstappen on why Red Bull failed in Bahrain

Max Verstappen has outlined the list of failings that his Red Bull team made in Bahrain and issued a warning that the team must “try to do better” as it bids to win the title this year. Verstappen went into the season-opener wearing the favourite tag but ended up second best to reigning champion Lewis Hamilton. The Dutch driver started from pole but spent the early laps complaining of a differential issue and ended the day admitting the team must work harder on its strategy, flexibility and tyre planning. “Last year we would have been super-happy with this result and now we are disappointed,” he said. “There are a lot of positives but also things we have to improve. “I don’t know what was going on [early in the race] but I had more wheel-slip on one side, on the rear, so that’s of course not what you want. I managed to drive around the issue a bit but we’ll have to look into that. “Strategy-wise, we’ll have to analyse what we could have done better. But also we didn’t have the tyres like they had, so we didn’t really have a lot of flexibility in the strategy. We could have done better in choosing our tyres during practice.” Verstappen led the early stages but stayed out longer than Hamilton in his first stint then dropped behind the Mercedes after his first stop and had to play catch-up for the rest of the race. He added: “With these cars, I think the last three years, it is very important to have track position and we gave that up today. Of course, it is still a very long season. So… yeah… we just have to get on with it and try to do better.”

aston martin amr21 may not be that good on the track

Hamilton wins Bahrain season opener after holding off Verstappen

Seven-time world champion Lewis Hamilton began his quest to win a record-breaking eighth Formula 1 world title in perfect fashion after beating Max Verstappen to a thrilling victory at the Bahrain Grand Prix. The seven-time world champion had trailed Verstappen by almost 0.4s in qualifying but was able to overturn the deficit into a 96th career win partly thanks to an ingenious strategy call from his Mercedes team. Hamilton kept Verstappen honest throughout the first stint and was able to leapfrog the Dutchman in the first stint when Mercedes pulled off a successful undercut on Lap 13 by pitting Hamilton early and moving him on to a two-stopper. The Briton led until Lap 28 when he pitted for a second time to take on another new set of Hards, before Red Bull responded by stopping Verstappen for a second time on Lap 39, pulling off a stunning sub-two-second pit stop. From there, Verstappen was able to capitalise on his fresher tyres as he relentlessly hunted down Hamilton, who made what looked to be a critical error when he locked up and ran wide at Turn 10 with just four laps to go, allowing Verstappen to get within DRS range. Verstappen thought he had made the race-winning move on the next lap when he brilliantly swept around the outside of the Mercedes driver at Turn 4, only to run wide off the track. Facing the prospect of penalty, Verstappen was forced to give the position back to Hamilton on the run to Turn 11, with the reigning world champion remarkably holding on despite being on tyres that were 10 laps older than the Red Bull driver to take a sensational win by just 0.745s. Behind the duelling leaders, Valtteri Bottas was a distant third to complete the podium after switching to a three-stop strategy when a slow second stop ruined his chances of a victory that never looked likely.

aston martin amr21 may not be that good on the track

Vettel will start last after being handed a five-place grid penalty

Sebastian Vettel has been handed a five-place grid penalty after being investigated for allegedly ignoring yellow flags at the end of the first period of qualifying for the Bahrain Grand Prix. The punishment means Vettel will make his Aston Martin debut from last on the grid after initially qualifying 18th after being held up by yellow flags during the first period of qualifying. Post-qualifying the stewards initially investigated potential yellow-flag infringements at turn eight after Carlos Sainz almost ground to a halt in his Ferrari. But Vettel was cleared, along with Aston Martin team-mate Lance Stroll, Williams’ George Russell and Alpine’s Esteban Ocon. But later on Saturday evening, the stewards announced Vettel alone would also be investigated for a potential second yellow-flag infringement after Nikita Mazepin spun on the entry to turn one shortly prior to Sainz’s incident. After delaying the hearing until early afternoon local time [late morning UK], it has been determined that Vettel was at fault. A stewards statement read: “Car nine [Mazepin] spun at turn one in the last moments of Q1 bringing out a double yellow flag in the marshalling sector. “Bottas, Vettel, Perez and Russell approached the scene and drove past Mazepin. Bottas, was immediately instructed by his team to abort his lap in accordance with the Race Director’s Event Notes (Point 7.1). “Perez and Russell had received the chequered flag, and were instructed to slow, with Russell receiving the additional information that it had been a double yellow sector. “Vettel did not abandon his lap. He explained to the stewards that he saw the smoke ahead of him, but was unsure if it was a lock-up or a stopped car until he was quite close to the car and the smoke was lifting. “The stewards observed that he had already passed the signal panel when it illuminated as he approached the scene, and that the marshals in that turn had not yet reacted with a yellow flag. “Nevertheless, Vettel was approaching a car that was stopped sideways on the track and by the rule this would necessitate a double yellow flag. “During the drivers’ briefing, the race director emphasised that the flag code must be rigorously enforced. “The Stewards consider that the requirement to abandon the lap during practice and qualifying, both in the Code and in the race director’s notes was instituted to disincentivise the drivers from any type of management of their speeds approaching an incident, with a view to maybe setting a lap time, when the requirement is that they should be able to completely stop when approaching such an incident. “In this case, it was clear that the driver slowed slightly approaching the incident, but continued trying to set a meaningful lap time. “In this case, the driver would have received a warning on his dash and the team should have been able to see that the sector had been a double yellow and could have advised the driver as other teams did. “While the argument that the driver was already inside the sector when it went double yellow evokes sympathy, the stewards feel it is important to note that he was approaching an incident visible ahead of him. “Further, the car ahead, in the same position, was instructed to abandon the lap, as is intended by the race director’s notes. “The stewards, therefore, order the usual penalty in this case, a drop of five grid positions.” Vettel has also had three penalty points applied to his licence, which are his first in the relevant last 12-month period.

aston martin amr21 may not be that good on the track

FIA will be taking strict mearsures on the opening phase of F1 races, drivers will be penalised more

Last year, at the Bahrain Grand Prix, Romain Grosjean collided hard with the wall, causing a huge fireball. To prevent future start crashes, the FIA has taken new measures. Michael Masi will take stricter action against incidents that take place in the opening phase of the race. “We looked at some feedback and the discussions we had with drivers. There was a feeling that we needed to let them race more, but we need to start taking that back a little bit around the incidents on the first lap,” Masi acknowledged in conversation with Motorsport.com. “We will still treat it differently than an incident during another round.” With nineteen cars surrounding a driver, the chance of an incident is always a lot higher and Masi takes that into account as well. “We still take a free position in that, but it won’t be as free as last year. After feedback from teams and drivers we have decided that we have to be a bit stricter”. So that’s what fans will see next season. “When it’s a group of drivers, it’s difficult to assign blame. If it’s two drivers clashing, there’s a chance we’ll look at it more quickly and not be so easy on them.” The FIA will also be paying more attention to other incidents. “Movement during braking is also something we’re going to pay more attention to, that’s something we’ve heard from the drivers several times”, Masi explains. We can therefore expect stricter measures from the FIA in the event of on-track incidents next season.

aston martin amr21 may not be that good on the track

Hamilton claims rule changes were focused on holding Mercedes back

Lewis Hamilton said Mercedes will rise to the challenge of coping with the Formula One rule changes designed to “peg us back” after he was beaten to pole at the Bahrain Grand Prix by Max Verstappen on Saturday. The defending seven-time champion, bidding this year for an unprecedented eighth drivers’ title, said it was “no secret” that the revised aerodynamic regulations were introduced to hold Mercedes back. “I mean it’s no secret that the changes, of course, they’ve been done to peg us back,” he told reporters on Saturday. “We had the changes, of course, last year – to our engine – to do the same thing. “But that’s ok. We love a challenge and we don’t look down on these things. We just work hard to do the best we can and that’s what we’ll do.” His team-mate Valtteri Bottas, who was third on Saturday, said he had no answer to give on the same subject. “I like aero stuff,” he said. “I’m a bit of a geek, in some ways. I like aerodynamics, I’m really interested, but I don’t know the facts.” Hamilton said he was buoyed by Mercedes’ reaction since struggling to match Red Bull at a pre-season test earlier in the month. “We’ve worked very hard over the last week to try and understand the package that we have,” he said. “We made some steps forward, but we couldn’t compete with that last lap Max did today, but P2 puts us in a position to cause Red Bull trouble tomorrow. “Max did a great lap and nearly 0.4 seconds is a big gap so we have some work to do. We pushed, but just at the end I couldn’t get any more out of the car. “Still, it was exciting and I am immensely proud of everyone.”

aston martin amr21 may not be that good on the track

Qatar MotoGP FP1: Morbidelli leads as four riders crash

Petronas SRT rider Franco Morbidelli continued his brilliant form of last season as he topped the first free practice session of the 2021 MotoGP season. The session got underway with an initial flurry of fast laps between Jack Miller and Aleix Espargaro as the pair changed places at the front several times. In what were very warm conditions at the Losail International CIrcuit, many of the top riders from testing showed their pace including Maverick Vinales, Fabio Quartararo and Francesco Bagnaia who all briefly led the way too. However, it wasn’t long before Morbidelli took over at the top, a position he held until the closing stages. As the session came to a close, a late surge from Espargaro momentarily put the Spaniard top, but as the checkered flag came out, the Petronas Yamaha rider regained top spot with a 1m 54.921 Perhaps the biggest takeaway from FP1 was Espargaro and Aprilia, who showed that their form in pre-season testing is a true sign of their progression this year. Fastest during the Qatar test was Miller, who recovered from an early crash at turn 4 to take third spot. Fourth was Quartararo on his competitive debut for the factory Yamaha team, while reigning world champion Joan Mir put a fast lap in at the end to take fifth. It was a good start for the Spanish rider who was unanimously called the title favourite during Thursday’s press conference. Sixth was Vinales who was once again seen practising his race starts at every pit exit. While Alex Rins was seventh for Suzuki. Rounding out the top ten were Bagnaia in eighth, Valentino Rossi on his Petronas debut in ninth and Miguel Oliveira in tenth. Along with Miller, Johann Zarco was the first rider to crash which was also at turn 4, while Pol Espargaro and Enea Bastianini were the other fallers. MotoGP riders will be back on track later today at 20:00 local time for FP2.

aston martin amr21 may not be that good on the track

Hamilton explains why he will continue taking a knee before F1 races

Lewis Hamilton has explained why he’ll keep taking the knee before races, saying “it sparks an uncomfortable conversation”, as well detailing the steps he has taken to help alleged Bahraini torture victims. Since the Black Lives Matter movement came to the fore last year, Hamilton has been particularly vocal in his support, taking a knee as a demonstration against racism and inequality before races as well as wearing t-shirts in support of BLM. F1 also responded with its #WeRaceAsOne initiative, which focused on tackling inequalities and racism as well as showing solidarity with frontline workers in the face of the Covid-19 pandemic. Whilst there was no obligation for any to do so, the majority of drivers joined the Mercedes driver in taking a knee pre-race, but several did not. Protocol has now been changed to give drivers a “moment to show united support for important issues” however they wish to do so before each race. Hamilton says his stance remains unchanged. “I plan to continue to take the knee, because I think what’s really important is that when young children are watching what we’re doing here in this sport, and when they see us take the knee, they will sit and ask their parents or their teachers: ‘Why are they doing that? What are they taking the knee for?’ – and it sparks an uncomfortable conversation,” he said. “It means parents have to educate themselves and the kids are getting educated, so I think it’s a fight that’s not won. “It’s a fight that will continue on for a long time I’m sure, but I think we’re in a good time where conversation is healthy.” Hamilton also expanded on his view on F1’s relationship with human rights, owing to the fact the grand prix calendar has often visited countries with questionable human rights records. Bahrain, where the F1 season kicks off this weekend, is one of these countries, and last year Hamilton was sent personally addressed letters by three alledged Bahraini torture victims. In response, the Mercedes driver said he hoped discuss the issue with the Salman, the Crown Prince of Bahrain. Whilst this has not yet occurred, Hamilton has still put great efforts into meetings and discussions with organisations in Bahrain to address the issue. “I received those letters last year, which weighed quite heavily on me,” he said. “It’s the first time I’ve received letters like that along my travels. “These last few months I’ve taken the time to try and educate myself, because coming here all these years I wasn’t aware of all of the detail the human rights issues. “So I’ve spent time speaking to legal human rights experts, organisations like Amnesty, I’ve seen the UK ambassador here in Bahrain and I’ve spoken to Bahrain officials also. “At the moment, I think the steps that I’ve taken really have been in private and I think that’s the right way to go about it. “So I don’t really want to say too much that may jeopardise any progress. That’s the position we’re in, but I’m definitely committed to helping in any way I can.” The reigning world champion said this represents a wider stance for him on F1’s interaction with the places it races. “As a sport, we do go to a lot of different places we visit lots of different beautiful countries and cultures and naturally there are issues all around the world,” he commented. “But I don’t think that we should be going to these countries and just ignoring what is happening in those places and arriving, having a great time, and then leave.” This attitude mirrors the approach in the new Extreme E series, in which Hamilton owns a team. Although its bent has been primarily environmental, it also seeks to promote equality by having one male and one female driver in each team. The series’ broad mission statement is to highlight areas of environmental fragility by racing there, but for Hamilton, the idea of promoting gender equality at a location such as Saudi Arabia, where the series will visit, might have extra appeal. The seven-time champion has frequently been lobbied by various human rights groups to take a stand against F1 and/or the locations it goes to, due to the way several countries on the calendar treat their own citizens. He suggested F1 could theoretically have some influence on the human rights stance of countries it races in, but ultimately stopped short of saying whether FOM should take a position on the matter. “It’s not in my power to choose where we go and race,” he said. “I think the powerful position that we are in terms of the responsibility… human rights – I don’t think – should be a political issue. We all deserve equal rights. “In terms of what, whether it’s Formula 1’s responsibility, I don’t know if that’s for me to say.”

aston martin amr21 may not be that good on the track

Leclerc predicts 2021 season will also be difficult for Ferrari

Ferrari is unlikely to rebound quickly from its poor campaign in 2020, Charles Leclerc said ahead of the first race of the new season. Leclerc salvaged two podium finishes from an otherwise poor campaign for Ferrari last year, in which they slumped to a 40-year low in the constructors’ championship. With limited changes permitted to the cars for the 2021 F1 season, Leclerc doubts the team will perform significantly better this year.“I know that, being realistic, it’s going to be a very difficult season,” said Leclerc in Bahrain yesterday. “But that doesn’t change my motivation. “For me, if I’ve got a car where I feel like sixth is the best place we can do – I’m not saying it’s the case for this year it’s just an example – but if sixth is the best I can do, I’m extremely motivated to try and do third, second or first. “So whatever we expect from us, I’m always finding the motivation to try to exceed those expectations, and that’s the way I will approach the season.” Like its rivals, Ferrari had just three days of pre-season testing to ready its revised car for the new championship. “We are as ready as we can be,” said Leclerc. “It’s only been three days, which is quite a lot shorter than what we have been used to in the past, but I think we did everything we wanted during these three days, or at least everything we could and everything that was programmed. So I think it was a nice preparation and now it’s up to the track to see our real performance.” Ferrari’s sporting director Laurent Mekies told RaceFans their new power unit is “a large step forward” compared to last year. Leclerc, however, would not be drawn on what gains the team has made. “I think we’ll just have to wait for for qualifying once we’ve put everything flat out to see how much of a step we did,” he said. However he admitted some of the car’s handling characteristics are an improvement on what they had last year. “I think in the balance itself, in the way it behaves in the different parts of the corners, from entry to exit, I think this is a little bit better. So it’s a bit easier to drive and this is nice already. “We’ve had some positive signs, but again, it’s quite difficult to judge until we put everything on the limit in qualifying.”

aston martin amr21 may not be that good on the track

Marko: Mercedes bluffed during winter test in Bahrain

Red Bull’s senior advisor, Helmut Marko has often said in recent years that they had the best winter break ever, but in 2021 that really seems to be the case. The winter test for Red Bull Racing went very well, whereas for Mercedes it was a lot less. Marko isn’t ready to celebrate just yet. Mercedes has been dominating Formula 1 since 2014 and every year there is hope that someone can close the gap to the Germans. In 2017 and 2018 Ferrari came somewhat close, but despite big words from Marko and Horner, Red Bull Racing never really came close. In 2021, however, there seems to be the ideal opportunity there. ‘We know Mercedes bluffed during the winter test, we just don’t know how much. The fact is that their car is a bit unsettled at the back, and if they haven’t solved that yet then we will be in front of them. Mercedes now have to play catch-up and that’s a fine situation for us. Mercedes has to find a solution now, where we can optimise our package,” Marko told the Kronen Zeitung. ”There are circuits where our aerodynamic concept will work perfectly, but if you want to compete for the title you have to be competitive everywhere. The RB16B is the best car Max has ever had from us”, said the Austrian. In Bahrain, the Red Bull chief believes conditions are also in his team’s favour. ”It is very changeable and there is a lot of wind. If you have an unstable car then it’s not advantageous. I’m very happy to see that”, smiles Marko with a beaming confidence.

aston martin amr21 may not be that good on the track

Mercedes to unveil a new technical innovation – Wolff

Toto Wolff has hinted that Mercedes is about to unleash a new technical innovation on the world of Formula 1. The narrative heading into this weekend’s season opener in Bahrain is that the previously dominant team has fallen behind Red Bull over the winter. “Honestly, I think so,” seven time world champion Lewis Hamilton told the Belgian broadcaster RTBF. “For the moment it looks like they are faster than us. We don’t yet know by how much, and at the same time other teams look really good as well – Alpha Tauri and McLaren among others.” Team boss Wolff agreed, telling Kronen Zeitung: “We are definitely not the strongest force now. “If we take everything there was before, including the seven world championship titles, and turn it to zero, then Red Bull will certainly have the fastest car. “That doesn’t mean it will stay that way. We will defend ourselves with everything we have,” he added. However, he warns that Mercedes is yet to find the “silver bullet”. “The car is very sensitive, the rear is unstable,” Wolff explained. “By trimming the floor, the airflow that is directed around the tyres is disturbed. Downforce is lost,” the Austrian explained. “Cars with a steeper rake, like the Red Bull, seem to suffer less than we do.” But he admitted that a lot of “deception and disguise” always characterises the pre-season period. And so he hinted that Mercedes is about to begin its clawback with a new innovation, after the ‘DAS’ pull-and-push steering system was banned for 2021. “You haven’t seen what we intend to install on the car,” Wolff told Canal Plus. “Thankfully there is still room for innovation, which always makes me happy. “Every day we are trying to do something a little different. I’m not sure if it will make a big difference in the speed of the car, but it will be good if it works.”

aston martin amr21 may not be that good on the track

Vettel names his 2021 Aston Martin F1 car after James Bond film girl, Honey Ryder

Four time world champion has chosen to name his Aston Martin Formula 1 car after the first James Bond girl, Honey Ryder. The 33-year-old who has joined the rebranded Aston Martin squad for the 2021 season following his departure from Ferrari, revealed ahead of this weekend’s Bahrain Grand Prix the name he has given to his first Aston Martin F1 car – the AMR21. Vettel’s name choice pays homage to Swiss actress Ursula Andress’s portrayal of the first ‘Bond girl’ in the 1962 film Dr. No, which starred Sean Connery as James Bond. “Favourite movie? Favourite Bond? I think Sean Connery and to be fair Piers Brosnan. That’s my youth but yeah, Sean Connery. I think just very good style. “And which movie? I quite like the first one. It kicked it off, obviously because of Honey Ryder.” Although Vettel admitted he felt around “100 laps” short of the mileage he would have hoped to have completed during a troubled pre-season test in Bahrain, the German remains confident he can still get up to speed quickly. “Obviously we didn’t get maybe the amount of laps we’re looking for but it is what it is,” he explained. “I don’t think that any anyone is really fully prepared for what’s coming. “We have a lot of races and we didn’t have a great amount of testing, but yeah that’s what it is. So I’m confident that we should be in a reasonable position. Hopefully we can use the track time that we have, and get on top of it straight away to get ready for qualifying and then the race.” Speaking about adjusting to Aston Martin’s 2021 challenger, Vettel added: “I’m quite happy. I think I felt quite comfortable straightaway despite the little running, I think I think I got along with the car. “There’s some things that I still need to work on and I need to get used to, but I think time will take care of these things. Even with more laps in the test, there will still be some things that would need some getting used to. So, yeah, I’m pretty relaxed. I think it will be okay.”

aston martin amr21 may not be that good on the track

Haas will make their last update of the VF-21 in Imola

Haas boss Guenther Steiner says new components planned for next month’s Formula 1 Emilia Romagna Grand Prix will be the last brought to the VF-21. Haas has previously outlined its decision to all but abandon development of its 2021 car with a view to focusing its resources on overhauled 2022 regulations. Steiner emphasised earlier in the week that scoring one or two points would be a “fantastic” achievement for Haas in 2021, suggesting that it is braced for a year marooned at the rear of the field. On the Bahrain-spec VF21 Steiner said: “Everything we planned to have here is here. We had a late development which we will introduce at Imola but that’s the last step of this car. “There will be some smaller parts for Imola, no big changes to be honest. It’s just some small parts which we didn’t get ready in time but we knew that since some months that they wouldn’t be ready. “It’s not that they were late or anything. We will have some parts for Imola and then we don’t change the car anymore as I said before.” Haas is entering 2021 with a revised driver line-up of Nikita Mazepin and Mick Schumacher, marking the first time that the team has run a rookie pairing. Haas previously fielded Kevin Magnussen and Romain Grosjean for four successive seasons. “After the second and third season with Kevin and Romain we knew each other very well and everything gets a little bit automatic,” said Steiner. “Now, everything is new, they’re putting a lot of time in with the engineers just to try and get ready as best as possible. “For sure the excitement is high because if you think about it these guys since they were 10 years old this is the moment they worked for and now it’s coming. They’re starting their first Formula 1 race on Sunday. “I think there’s a lot of excitement and they’re getting anxious to go and nervous on the other side but that’s a good thing. They will grow. The whole team is in good spirits.”

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