Formula 1 Racing

Norris fastest in FP1, Bearman third on return

Sergio Perez, Red Bull Racing RB20

Sauber’s Valtteri Bottas led the pack out of the pits at the start of the one-hour session – with Pierre Gasly behind carving marks into the new track surface with his very low-slung Alpine – as a flurry of different drivers had short stints at the top on the opening runs.
These took place on the medium tyres for all apart from the RB drivers on softs, with Oscar Piastri ending the opening five minutes leading with a 1m13.200s.

Verstappen and Russell then lowered the first place benchmark, before Perez nipped ahead on a 1m12.099s.

Sergio Perez, Red Bull Racing RB20

Photo by: Zak Mauger / Motorsport Images

That stood as the top spot for a little while, before Russell and then Verstappen got back ahead with 1m11.806s and 1m11.712s efforts respectively.

After a lull in action to allow for initial set-up adjustments, the drivers headed back out on the same rubber as before – with Hamilton climbing the order to sit second with his first timed lap back on track.

Approaching the final third, Russell made an early switch to the softs and duly retook first with a 1m10.791s, but it took a chunk more of the session before any more of the frontrunners did likewise.

When they did in the final 10 minutes, following another period with many cars in the pits, Franco Colapinto jumped up the order to run second – albeit 0.828s slower than Russell.
Into that gap slotted Bearman, Alex Albon, Liam Lawson and Piastri a short while later – the first named just 0.014s slower than Russell’s leading time.

That looked to be toppled when Verstappen went quicker than Russell in sector one on his first flier on the softs in the closing minutes, before the Dutchman lost enough time in sector two to be behind the benchmark and he then aborted the lap in any case.

This confined Verstappen to 15th with his best time coming from the mediums, while Perez did complete a softs run that was only good for 19th in the replaced chassis he is running this weekend.

Russell was finally beaten with Norris’s final lap in the closing minute, as the McLaren driver posted a 1m10.610s, which did not feature Norris’s best final sector on the session.

The final order behind the three Britons at the top of the time ended up as Piastri, Albon and Charles Leclerc, who gained with an improvement on his second run on the same set of softs, as Norris had also done. Carlos Sainz did not and finished seventh, ahead of Nico Hulkenberg, Fernando Alonso and…

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