Formula 1 Racing

Alonso beats Russell to lead FP2 for Aston Martin

George Russell, Mercedes F1 W15

The start of the second one-hour session on Thursday in Jeddah was delayed by 10 minutes as the FIA checked drain covers in the pitlane, but it ran to time under the lights in what is the only representative practice night-time running ahead of qualifying and the race.

Oscar Piastri led the pack out of the pits in his McLaren and set the initial first place benchmark at 1m32.956s, after Valtteri Bottas had lost the rear of his Sauber and spun at Turn 1.

With most of the pack heading out on the medium or hard tyres, bar the two RB drivers on the softs from the start, Zhou Guanyu took a brief turn at the top with his first lap on the mediums before the two Red Bull drivers immediately blasted ahead.

Verstappen’s first medium flier came in at 1m30.447s before Sergio Perez nipped quicker by 0.02s, also on the mediums. But the pair were then shuffled back by Alonso’s first effort, a 1m29.846s, also set on the mediums.

Verstappen’s second flying lap on the mediums brought him to 0.051s behind Alonso, before the Spaniard moved the benchmark again just past the 10-minute mark, with a 1m29.560s.

But a few minutes later Verstappen finally got back to the top spot with a 1m29.543s, with a lull in action then ensuing as the drivers returned to the pits to prepare for their qualifying simulation efforts on the soft tyres.

These were kicked off by Bottas, but Alonso emerged first of the frontrunners soon afterwards and was quickly again lighting up the timing screens.

At the 25-minute mark, he registered the quickest time in sectors one and three on his way to a session-topping 1m28.827s.

Following shortly behind, Verstappen set a personal best but was a big chunk behind – a 0.550s gap into which Leclerc and Perez soon plunged to sit 0.353s and 0.473s back on Alonso.

George Russell, Mercedes F1 W15

Photo by: Mark Sutton / Motorsport Images

Just past the halfway mark, as the two Mercedes cars were gearing up for their soft-tyre runs, with Lewis Hamilton at this stage sitting bottom of the times and facing a post-FP2 investigation for appearing to impede Logan Sargeant at Turn 10 in the early phase, Verstappen went again on his set of softs.

He improved to end up 0.331s behind Alonso, Verstappen having put in a pair of slow cooldown runs before being able to use the softs again on what is a smoother surface here in Jeddah compared to the abrasive circuit used for last week’s opening round in Bahrain.

Leclerc, who made a…

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