2021 Qatar Grand Prix interactive data: lap charts, times and tyres

2021 Qatar Grand Prix

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Pierre Gasly, Fernando Alonso and Lando Norris started the Qatar Grand Prix consecutively, from second to fourth respectively. But all had rather different afternoons.

While Alonso finally scored his first podium finish of the year, Gasly failed to score from the front row of the grid and Norris was struck by a late puncture which ruined his race.

Gasly and Norris were possibly disadvantaged by the dirty side of the grid but that wasn’t where either driver lost time. Alonso moved ahead of the Alpine with a superb pass for second place on the outside of turn two as the race began.

As the lap time chart shows, Gasly was slower than the McLaren and the Alpine in the first stint, with Alonso having an additional edge over Norris. As Gasly’s pointed out later, even on fresh tyres he had no chance of keeping pace with the Alpine, which was easily able to out-pace him on older rubber.

Norris began to edge towards Alonso in the second stint. But as he admitted, the McLaren would have been hard pressed to challenge Alonso, whose lap times remained consistent. This was despite Alonso taking particular care to avoid the kerbs, particularly once Valtteri Bottas’ lap 33 failure put everyone on notice. Indeed, Norris stopped gaining on Alonso a few laps before his puncture and pit stop on lap 49.

A Virtual Safety Car was triggered as other drivers also encountered tyre troubles. Until then, Alonso was being caught by Sergio Perez at a tremendous rate – up to two seconds per lap at times. Had it not been for the VSC, Perez would have been on Alonso in the last couple of laps, fighting for the final podium spot.

Fernando Alonso, Alpine, Losail International Circuit, 2021
Alonso out-ran Perez thanks to Virtual Safety Car
After the VSC, Max Verstappen took a fresh set of rubber and further lowered the fastest lap time which he already held, ensuring a vital bonus point.

That stop made Verstappen the only driver to do a three-stop strategy. Most teams aimed for single stops though the title contenders made two each as they had the luxury of time over their rivals and a strong desire to avoid tyre problems.

Charles Leclerc and Carlos Sainz Jnr ran the longest opening stints: Ferrari double-stacked them in the pits after 27 laps. It worked, keeping both their cars in the points and ahead of Daniel Ricciardo. They finished ahead of both McLarens thanks to Norris’ puncture.

The longest pit stops of the race, unsurprisingly, belonged to those who had punctures. Valtteri Bottas had to switch the front wing on his Mercedes, as well as the tyres, after his lap 33 puncture. Appropriate for car number four, Norris had the fourth-best and fourth-worst pit stops.

Here too the title contenders showed they are letting no opportunity for an advantage slip. The three quickest stops of the race were all performed on the cars of Verstappen and Lewis Hamilton.

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2021 Qatar Grand Prix lap chart

The positions of each driver on every lap. Click name to highlight, right-click to reset. Toggle drivers using controls below:

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2021 Qatar Grand Prix race chart

The gaps between each driver on every lap compared to the leader’s average lap time. Very large gaps omitted. Scroll to zoom, drag to pan and right-click to reset. Toggle drivers using controls below:

Position change

DriverStart positionLap one position changeRace position change
Lewis Hamilton100
Valtteri Bottas6-5
Max Verstappen735
Sergio Perez1127
Lando Norris4-1-5
Daniel Ricciardo14-22
Lance Stroll1226
Sebastian Vettel10-70
Esteban Ocon934
Fernando Alonso310
Charles Leclerc1305
Carlos Sainz Jnr5-2-2
Pierre Gasly2-1-9
Yuki Tsunoda80-5
Kimi Raikkonen1642
Antonio Giovinazzi1843
Mick Schumacher1913
Nikita Mazepin2002
George Russell150-2
Nicholas Latifi17-2

2021 Qatar Grand Prix lap times

All the lap times by the drivers (in seconds, very slow laps excluded). Scroll to zoom, drag to pan and toggle drivers using the control below:

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2021 Qatar Grand Prix fastest laps

Each driver’s fastest lap:

RankDriverCarFastest lapGapOn lap
1Max VerstappenRed Bull-Honda1’23.19657
2Lewis HamiltonMercedes1’25.0841.88850
3Sergio PerezRed Bull-Honda1’25.6132.41749
4Lando NorrisMcLaren-Mercedes1’25.7462.55051
5George RussellWilliams-Mercedes1’25.7682.57255
6Kimi RaikkonenAlfa Romeo-Ferrari1’26.3583.16253
7Sebastian VettelAston Martin-Mercedes1’26.4343.23853
8Charles LeclercFerrari1’26.5553.35946
9Carlos Sainz JnrFerrari1’26.5703.37446
10Fernando AlonsoAlpine-Renault1’26.6823.48648
11Pierre GaslyAlphaTauri-Honda1’27.0193.82346
12Yuki TsunodaAlphaTauri-Honda1’27.0433.84750
13Esteban OconAlpine-Renault1’27.0613.86546
14Daniel RicciardoMcLaren-Mercedes1’27.1984.00250
15Valtteri BottasMercedes1’27.2464.05039
16Nikita MazepinHaas-Ferrari1’27.3404.14455
17Lance StrollAston Martin-Mercedes1’27.3564.16044
18Antonio GiovinazziAlfa Romeo-Ferrari1’27.8234.62740
19Mick SchumacherHaas-Ferrari1’28.4125.21646
20Nicholas LatifiWilliams-Mercedes1’28.7325.53644

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2021 Qatar Grand Prix tyre strategies

The tyre strategies for each driver:

Stint 1Stint 2Stint 3Stint 4
Lewis HamiltonC2 (18)C1 (24)C2 (15)
Max VerstappenC2 (17)C1 (24)C2 (14)C3 (2)
Fernando AlonsoC3 (23)C1 (34)
Sergio PerezC2 (19)C1 (22)C2 (16)
Esteban OconC3 (24)C1 (33)
Lance StrollC2 (23)C1 (34)
Carlos Sainz JnrC2 (27)C1 (30)
Charles LeclercC2 (27)C1 (30)
Lando NorrisC3 (25)C1 (24)C2 (7)
Sebastian VettelC3 (26)C2 (30)
Pierre GaslyC3 (13)C2 (22)C2 (21)
Daniel RicciardoC2 (26)C1 (30)
Yuki TsunodaC3 (9)C2 (25)C1 (22)
Kimi RaikkonenC3 (10)C2 (20)C1 (26)
Antonio GiovinazziC3 (15)C2 (17)C2 (24)
Mick SchumacherC3 (22)C2 (34)
George RussellC3 (17)C1 (32)C3 (6)
Nikita MazepinC2 (31)C3 (24)
Nicholas LatifiC3 (18)C1 (32)
Valtteri BottasC2 (33)C1 (15)

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2021 Qatar Grand Prix pit stop times

How long each driver’s pit stops took:

DriverTeamPit stop timeGapOn lap
1Max VerstappenRed Bull25.17541
2Lewis HamiltonMercedes25.2350.06018
3Max VerstappenRed Bull25.3000.12517
4Lando NorrisMcLaren25.3190.14425
5Antonio GiovinazziAlfa Romeo25.3470.17232
6Lewis HamiltonMercedes25.3810.20642
7Sergio PerezRed Bull25.4190.24419
8Sergio PerezRed Bull25.4200.24541
9Max VerstappenRed Bull25.4650.29055
10Esteban OconAlpine25.5170.34224
11Daniel RicciardoMcLaren25.5620.38726
12Pierre GaslyAlphaTauri25.6300.45513
13Kimi RaikkonenAlfa Romeo25.6330.45830
14Carlos Sainz JnrFerrari25.6390.46427
15Yuki TsunodaAlphaTauri25.6590.4849
16Sebastian VettelAston Martin25.7260.55126
17Charles LeclercFerrari25.7990.62427
18Nicholas LatifiWilliams25.8110.63618
19Mick SchumacherHaas25.8810.70622
20Antonio GiovinazziAlfa Romeo25.9870.81215
21Fernando AlonsoAlpine25.9910.81623
22Pierre GaslyAlphaTauri26.1090.93435
23George RussellWilliams26.1210.94617
24Lance StrollAston Martin26.1570.98223
25Kimi RaikkonenAlfa Romeo26.1740.99910
26Nikita MazepinHaas26.5151.34031
27Lando NorrisMcLaren26.5521.37749
28Yuki TsunodaAlphaTauri26.6741.49934
29George RussellWilliams35.0069.83149
30Valtteri BottasMercedes36.34111.16633

2021 Qatar Grand Prix

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Author information

Hazel Southwell
Hazel is a motorsport and automotive journalist with a particular interest in hybrid systems, electrification, batteries and new fuel technologies....

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4 comments on “2021 Qatar Grand Prix interactive data: lap charts, times and tyres”

  1. HAM and VER are indeed in another league… In the ‘gap to leader’ race chart Max has a flat line and all the others lose time and get further back on each lap. The only other driver to get something closer to a flat line is PER on his final stint.

  2. A Virtual Safety Car was triggered as other drivers also encountered tyre troubles. Until then, Alonso was being caught by Sergio Perez at a tremendous rate – up to two seconds per lap at times. Had it not been for the VSC, Perez would have been on Alonso in the last couple of laps, fighting for the final podium spot.

    Not quite, Alonso was losing a little more than one second per lap in the final stage of the race, and he still had a cushion of 8 seconds to Perez before the VSC. He ended up just 3 secs. ahead of Perez exactly because of extra care with those fragile Pirelli tyres. He couldn’t risk that much an even bigger delay of his podium.

  3. Alonso would have stayed ahead of Perez even without the VSC.

    He was just balancing tyre reliability against keeping ahead of Perez. All he needed to do was keep Perez out of DRS at the end of lap 56. At the end of lap 53 just before the VSC the gap was 8.3 seconds. Perez would have had to make up 7.3 seconds (probably 7.5 to be close enough to pass) at the end of lap 56. He never gained 2.5 seconds in a lap at any time other than the last lap when Alonso was cruising to the finish. Perez would likely have had to do low 1.24s to get near Alonso who was doing mid to high 1.26s immediately before the VSC (lap 53 was 1.26.98). Perez’s fastest lap was a 1.25.6 and he did a 1.25.8 on lap 53. His only hopes were a full safety car with 1 lap of green at the end or Alonso getting a puncture.

    1. Michael
      Exactly, the VSC at the end made Alonso’s race a little less dramatic in the end, but to say it was a VSC that saved him is somewhat lazy in judgement. Time and gap charts show a slightly different picture. Ocon defense and the VSC at the end prevented a nail-bitting fight for the podium in the end, nevertheless it was still an amazing conclusion for his podium comeback mission.

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