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Slipstream Saturdays: Green With Envy

Lance Stroll, Aston Martin Amr23

This is the first of a nine-article series in this column looking at this season in Netflix’s Formula 1: Drive to Survive.

The first episode, appropriately titled “Money Talks,” is a look at Aston Martin. It really is pretty incredible looking at where that team is now when the first season of Drive to Survive had an episode looking at the downfall of that team’s predecessor, Force India.

It has been a long road for everybody since that time, even though it was just six years ago. For both the team- now having a world class world champion in Fernando Alonso helping to kick things off in a world class party- and for Formula 1. There is no more real drive to survive anymore, as all of these teams are worth hundreds of millions of dollars.

We got a tiny little hint from Lewis Hamilton in this episode of a larger theme of this season, with his comment “Our car still looks different from all the others” during the promotional shoot. He also mentioned near the end of the episode in an interview that Mercedes instead fell to the fourth fastest team instead of jumping up to challenge for the lead.

You definitely get the sense during the promotional shoot section of the episode, during in which Ferrari and Mercedes are highlighted, that there’s about to be a big fight between the two teams. And that’s almost exactly what happened both in reality and in the TV series.

Still, Aston Martin is the focus of the episode, and it was a good choice all-around just due to how fast the car was in pre-season testing. There was media picking them as the second best car on-track, only behind a seemingly invincible Red Bull.

In the episode, it seems to hint that Lance Stroll did not appear in the car until Saturday of that first weekend. In reality, Stroll had driven the day prior and had looked very rough with his wrists.

It was bad enough to where I was surprised at the time that Aston Martin did not stick reserve driver Felipe Drugovich in the car for one of the three practice sessions, just in case it was decided Stroll could not race. F1 rules require a driver to participate in one of them prior to qualifying or the race in order to be eligible for either.

Drugovich would have been the better option that weekend anyway, as he had tested the car the week prior anyway. But it makes sense for the Strolls not to take Lance out of the car because, well, what would happen next would be almost exactly what we’re seeing now with

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