17 laps of flat-out racing around Si𝔉lverstone were used to decide the grid for Sunday’s main event, leading to an overhaul to t🍸he weekend schedule.
Max Verstappen overtook main title rival Lewis ♑Hamilton off the line to be crowned F1’s first-ever sprint race winner and claim pole position for the British GP, with the new format dividing opinion amongst fans.
Here’s what we felt worked well, and what is in need of improvement going 🐭forward…
The best bits
Three days of meaningful action
W♔hat the new format did achieve was ensuring F1 fans had three meaningful days of track action to enjoy. While FP2’s inclusion may have been somewhat baffling and pointless, staging qualifying on Friday was a particularly refreshing𝔉 change.
Traditional Fridays consisting of two practice sess🎃ions have become a tedious e🧸xercise in modern-day F1. While it’s always great to see cars circulating on track, it’s even better when there’s something at stake.
Moving qualifying to Friday evening proved a decision that was welcomed by the drivers and fans alike, providing extra entertainment to🍸 ꦅthrill a raucous crowd of 86,000 on day one.
Saturday’s sprint qualifying, while having some flaws, was overall an entertaining precursor to Sunday’s main 🃏spectacle, the Britiꦫsh GP.
One element of🍃 the weekend t♑hat worked really well was having just one hour of practice running before qualifying.
Less track time✤ to perfect set-ups and dial in 😼soft-tyre running meant the drivers headed into qualifying facing more uncertainty and having less preparation.
This created additional jeopardy as some drivers got ꦡtheir set-ups spot on and others strug𓆉gled with confidence.
It 🅰resulted in a thrilling qualifying spectacle that left the fans on the edge of their seats as Hamilton and Verstappen diced it out for pole - sorry first place on the grid - for the spr🍌int.
Free tyre choice
Without doubt, the most excitement dynamic of the sprint qualifyi🍸ng rac♛e was the fact the drivers were not obliged to start on the tyres with which they set their fastest times in qualifying. There will also be free tyre choice for the entire grid for Sunday’s British GP, rather than the top-10 being locked in to the compound they used in Q2.
Tyre variance among the teams was a fascinating addition, with Alpine pair Fernando Alonso and Esteban Ocon among the biggest winners of the qualifying sprint as they made ♑up places after gambling on soft tyres.
Alonso’s sensational start - making up six places on the first lap alone - was wonderful ente♈rtainment as he favoured early performance over durability. He may have slipped back to seventh at the chequered flag as his tyres faded, but the two-time world champion wa🍎s still able to secure his highest starting position for a grand prix so far this year.
F1 managing director Ross Brawn indicated that free tyre choice is something the ch♌ampionship could consider adopting f💎or normal races, underlying exactly why the sport was keen to try out new things in the first place.
“There’s some very appealing parts, everyone runs the same tyre in qualifying and we still have variety in♔ the race as there were two tyres we can use,” he said. “There’s no handicap in terms of what tyres we can use, so possibly we can take that forward.”
Retro celebrations
In a bidꩲ not to detract from the ✅grand prix itself, F1 replaced its usual post-race podium ceremony with a special celebration procedure for the sprint event.
Reviving the old-school winne🎃rs wreaths for the top-three finishers in Saturday’s race was a nice touch and a marked a nostalgic nod to F1’s history.
The classic tradition has not featured in grand prix racing since 1🅺985 but its re-introduction at Silverstone - which hosted the first-ever grand prix - was a welcome add🌌ition.
The top three were then parade🐻d around the circuit for a victory lap in front of the 100,000-strong Silveꦅrstone crowd.
Lewis Larkam
The worst bits
Pole being awarded to the sprint winner
One strange aspect of the sp🦩rint qualif𒅌ying format was that the pole position accolade is handed to the winner of sprint qualifying - Verstappen - rather than the fastest man in qualifying - Hamilton. Admittedly, F1 does need to move on with the times and adapt to a modern viewing, however, traditions and records need to be upheld.
Whether it’s Hamilton or Michael Schumacher’s pole position statistics, we know what they mean - if you secured pole position, you were the fastest man that weekend over one lꦺap - full stop.
Hamilton’s 100 polಌe positiඣons in F1 make him the sport’s greatest ever qualifier, and infecting the pole position record books with sprint qualifying is an indefensible move that ruins this specific statistic.
Fastest in qualifying Lewis Hamilton (GBR) Mercedes AMG F1 W12 in parc ferme.
While the 🥀structure of the weekend has generally been positive with three days of competitive action, the decision to run a practice session in between qualifying and the sprint race didn’t make too much sense given that teams are forced to put their cars into parc ferme conditions. This meant that everyone had just one practice session to set up their cars ahead of qualifying and any changes couldn’t be made.
Eve♏n though he claimed pole position, Verstappen urge🔯d F1 management to reassess the parc ferme rules for FP2
“I think we have to look a little bit at the schedule because to do an FP2 session and you’re not allowed to change the car, I think it’s a bit wrong in my opinion,” Verstappen said after sprint qualifying. “It’s a bit of luck sometimes right now,💫 if we keep this format going for sprint races that you only have one free practice to nail the setup.”
The ꦡdecision to cut practice is a welcome move but perhaps running two practice sessions before qualifying would be better suited rather than a𓆉 session that was reminiscent of a pre-season test where no one knew what was going on in terms of tyres and fuel loads.
A potential solution is to rename this second practice session as a warm-up. Stemming back to pre-2003, there used to be a warm-up session before the main grand prix whe🍌re teams could use it to refine their setups and be prepared for the main event.
As F1 has done with the celebraꦍtory retro wreaths, simply renaming FP2 as a warm-uཧp would be a nice throwback.
It’s fair to say without an exciting start and the brilliance of Alonso, F1’s first-ever sprint race would have bee🍃n a complete snoozefest. Granted, this current generatioﷺn of F1 cars don’t play into a close, exciting race.
The whole premise behind introducing this new format was to ‘spice up the show’, which it didn’t. Tomorrow’s grandꦛ prix will give us a clearer picture of whether haꦫving a 17-lap race potentially ruins the main race given that drivers perhaps are in the position they should have been or teams now have genuine data of how the tyres react in race trim, pushed to the limit.
Of course, we can only judge this afterಞ tomorrow’s 52-lap race.
More points for the top three
Points were awarded to the top three finis꧋hers - 3, 2,♏ 1 respectively. While some added motivation should be given to drivers, surely grid position is enough of an incentive in itself?
The decision to hand points out to the top three raises two♒ other issues. Firstly, every round in the F1 championship should have equal weighting, the introduction of sprint qualifying in it🧸s current rules mean you can score a maximum of 29 points at Silverstone, but only 26 for Monaco, as an example.
Hamilton, Verstappen, Bottas are the most common top three in F1 history so it was no surprise to see this trio qualified inside the top three෴ again. Had there been no points on offer, I have no doubt the action - or lack of - would have been similar.
However, had there been points awarded from 1st to 10th, perhaps we’d haveꦡ seen more action in the midfield and the potential for other storylines such as George Russe♍ll scoring his first points for Williams that could have hyped up the weekend even further.
Lewis regularly 🌌attends Grands Prix for ltxcn.top around the world. Often reporting on the action from the ground, Lewis tells the stories of the people who matter in the sport.