After just three days, 2021 pre-season Formula 1 testing is over – and despite the carryover cars, the picture is far from what would’ve been expected. According to the teams’ test runs we have come up with team rankings based on our own analysis of the three testing days. 1. RED BULL Best time: 1m28.960s – Verstappen, day 3, C4 tyresTotal laps: 369 It is difficult to envisage how Red Bull’s test could have gone better. Max Verstappen was quickest, the RB16B looked brilliantly responsive on the front and stable at the rear, and its all-new Honda engine proved reliable enough for Red Bull to tick off everything it needed to over three days of running. Verstappen’s feedback that the car was responding well to set-up changes offered a different kind of encouragement, while Sergio Perez seems to have started life at the team solidly – although he is talking with the sort of caution that suggests he might be short of his full potential early on, given his limited preparation. 2. MERCEDES Best time: 1m30.025s – Hamilton, day 3, C5sTotal laps: 304 Many will doubt Mercedes’ claim it is slower than Red Bull heading to the season opener, but the world champion is a wounded giant. Once Friday’s early gearbox problem had been overcome, and half a day’s running sacrificed in the process, Mercedes was able to rack up laps in a more familiar manner. But its work rate was not the most impressive and performance did not seem so easily forthcoming. The car looked better on high-fuel runs on the final day than earlier in the test, when Lewis Hamilton spun into the gravel and Valtteri Bottas said the W12 was “quite snappy and unforgiving”. But it was still slower than Red Bull, and on Sunday evening Hamilton had a spin on soft tyres, while the team professed itself “confused” by the lack of pace on lower fuel. Some think this is all just a bluff and Mercedes will win the season opener. It might do. But Mercedes does have a lot of work to do to get there. 3. McLAREN Best time: 1m30.144s – Ricciardo, day 3, C4sTotal laps: 327 The transition to Mercedes power here was accomplished astonishingly smoothly. McLaren was the team that pushed hardest to have the test two weeks before the first race rather than one week – because of the big technical task of changing power unit provider, especially with an engine so different in architecture to the previous one. Yet the new car ran reliably from the off and what’s more it looks a driveable, lithe machine, one in which Daniel Ricciardo immediately pressed on hard. 4. ALPHATAURI Best time: 1m29.053s – Tsunoda, day 3, C5sTotal laps: 422 With a fastest lap time just half a second slower than the team’s qualifying best in Bahrain last year, and a tendency to run Honda’s higher engine modes at the end of testing, we can make the relatively assured assumption we saw very close to AlphaTauri’s best in Sunday’s final hour. Is the sister team really a tenth slower than Red Bull? Almost certainly not. But its performance, coupled with what looked like a neat package on-track, bodes well for AlphaTauri. It looks like it has established itself firmly in the top half of ‘the rest’ again. How far forward Pierre Gasly and Yuki Tsunoda can be will depend on how much the other teams were holding back – but AlphaTauri has sent a decent statement of intent through testing, with a real lap time to back it up. 5. ASTON MARTIN Best time: 1m30.460s – Stroll, day 2, C5sTotal laps: 314 It was a frustrating few days for the newly-badged team and its beautiful-looking AMR21, which suffered problems that seriously limited the much-needed running for Sebastian Vettel and Lance Stroll. An electrical glitch, a gearbox problem and a troublesome turbo at various points had the car sitting in the garage and the driver doing nothing. But Stroll showed in the ‘happy hour’ of Friday that the car has pace and there’s no reason yet to believe it won’t be vying hard for the ‘best of the rest’ status throughout the season. 6. FERRARI Best time: 1m29.611s – Sainz, day 3, C4sTotal laps: 404 Ferrari has reason to be encouraged but not elated. The new car looks a definite step on from last year. Both Charles Leclerc and Carlos Sainz Jr completed solid race simulations on the final day and with more power unit performance apparently unleashed late in the day Sainz’s single lap pace put Ferrari nominally at the upper end of the group behind the two Honda-powered teams. At no point did the car look to have the sheer performance of the Red Bull and we might suspect that whatever is at the root of Mercedes’ struggles, it will soon enough be fixed and that Ferrari will therefore be demoted from its apparent position on the final day. 7. ALPINE Best time: 1m30.318s – Alonso, day 3, C4sTotal laps: 396 Fernando Alonso’s performance looked so assured and Alonso-like despite his two years away that the biggest novelty about Alpine’s running wasn’t the two-time world champion being back in an F1 car, but the eye-opening girth of the A521’s airbox. The team is adamant the packaging gains are worth it. On track, Alpine looked strong without being exceptional, and was hard to split from Ferrari in terms of performance. There was no obvious sign of a step forward from where it sat in 2020 in its Renault guise, but encouraging long runs and a generally trouble-free test present a good building block for the first year of its new era. 8. ALFA ROMEO Best time: 1m29.766s – Raikkonen, day 3, C5sTotal laps: 422 There was an Alfa Romeo driver in the top six on all three days of testing and no team racked up more miles than the Sauber-run operation. That means every box was ticked – and more – even if the car isn’t as rapid as setting the fourth-fastest time suggests. On track, the C41 looks reasonably well-balanced…