Carlos Sainz Jr, Ferrari, Silverstone, 2023

Sainz had to let Leclerc past “all the time” in qualifying

RaceFans Round-up

Posted on

| Written by

In the round-up: Carlos Sainz Jnr explained how he had to allow his team mate ahead of him multiple times in qualifying to respect Ferrari’s regular driver agreement.

In brief

Sainz had to let Leclerc past “all the time” in qualifying

Sainz said he had to let his team mate pass him several times in qualifying yesterday as part of Ferrari’s arrangement, which he felt risked compromising his performance at times.

Ferrari rotate which driver gets the beneficial position in their running order during qualifying from race to race. As a result Sainz said he had to let Charles Leclerc past “at the exit of the pit lane all the time,” which made him concerned he might miss an opportunity to set a lap time.

At one point Sainz overtook his team mate at the end of a lap in order to ensure he was able to start a new lap.

“Obviously when you are behind in quali you feel like you are more in a rush to get a lap in and I really nearly didn’t get a lap in, that’s why I had to go,” he explained.

Bearman’s off “karma” for defence – Doohan

Jack Doohan says that Oliver Bearman’s late off in the Silverstone F2 sprint race was “karma” for his robust defending against him.

Doohan had been furious with Bearman’s defensive moves as the pair battled over fourth place (later third), the Virtuosi driver’s complaints over team radio regularly broadcast on the world feed. Bearman eventually ran off the road at Vale with two laps remaining, dropping to sixth and moving Doohan up onto the podium.

“It was probably my 13th time trying to get past him,” Doohan told media including RaceFans. “He pushed me all the way out onto the double kerb at the exit of turn 15 [Vale] and then swerved under braking into 15, locked up and goes off.

“I just did a little wave because I felt karma had come back. A little ‘au revoir my friend and see you later’.”

Barnard penalised for punting Montoya

F3 racer Taylor Barnard was handed a post-race time penalty after hitting Sebastian Montoya out of the lead of the sprint race at the Safety Car restart.

Montoya led the race from pole until the restart, when Barnard hit him from behind approaching the first corner at Abbey, sending Montoya skidding off and dropping both down the order.

Stewards deemed Barnard “wholly responsible” for the incident, but the penalty makes no difference to his final result as he remains 30th and last in the final race classification. Montoya eventually finished eighth.

Garcia extends F1 Academy lead after thrilling finishes

Marta Garcia extended her championship lead in the F1 Academy series after two exceptionally close finishes in the opening two races of the weekend in Monza and a post-race penalty for closest rival Hamda Al Qubaisi.

Garcia held off Lena Buhler in race one to win by just nine-thousandths of a second as the top five finishers were covered by less than seven tenths. Buhler then took victory in race two, just under a tenth-and-a-half ahead of Bianca Bustamante.

A post-race penalty for Hamda Al Qubaisi for causing a collision in race two dropped her from eighth to tenth, meaning Garcia’s championship advantage now sits at 29 points. Following a dramatic accident at the start of race one, Chloe Grant was withdrawn from the rest of the weekend’s racing.

Advert | Become a RaceFans supporter and go ad-free

Social media

Notable posts from Twitter, Instagram and more:

Advert | Become a RaceFans supporter and go ad-free

Comment of the day

With Toto Wolff continuing to argue that anyone interested in joining the F1 grid should buy an existing team, @tommy-c laments the lack of teams on the grid…

It’s so frustrating hearing these kinds of remarks. So many great drivers made it to the grid and showed their talents in backmarker teams. Minardi was never going to win a championship for example, and everyone knew that. Still, it’s the team that gave Alonso and Webber their big break. Likewise, Ocon and Ricciardo entered the sport with backmarkers. The saddest thing about having so few teams is that great drivers aren’t even getting a chance. Value can be added to the sport outside of a team’s success.
Tommy C

Happy birthday!

Happy birthday to Huzeifa!

On this day in motorsport

Author information

Will Wood
Will has been a RaceFans contributor since 2012 during which time he has covered F1 test sessions, launch events and interviewed drivers. He mainly...

Got a potential story, tip or enquiry? Find out more about RaceFans and contact us here.

10 comments on “Sainz had to let Leclerc past “all the time” in qualifying”

  1. Yellow Baron
    9th July 2023, 0:36

    Another penalty with absolutely no meaning to it. Wonder if the F1 drivers will just start punting max on the first lap. Only a 5 second penalty

    1. I highly doubt.

  2. Ferrari rotate which driver gets the beneficial position in their running order during qualifying from race to race. As a result Sainz said he had to let Charles Leclerc past “at the exit of the pit lane all the time,” which made him concerned he might miss an opportunity to set a lap time.

    Well, maybe Ferrari should let Leclerc go out first.

    1. notagrumpyfan
      9th July 2023, 9:17

      It might very well be beyond their capabilities to organise that ;)

    2. You’d think that a slip stream would be worth something at Silverstone? So going behind would be beneficial? Maybe I’m wrong

    3. @stever They can, but in changeable conditions, it makes sense to put the drivers out as quickly as possible onto the fast lane. Sainz’s garage is on the right, so the alternative would be for him to wait for Leclerc to go by fully and then come out, at which point it goes into unsafe release territory if someone is following Charles.

  3. COTD is wholly spot-on & a fun fact about former driver Sakon Yamamoto:
    He’s a politician in Japan’s parliament nowadays, if no one here knows, as I only found out last year.

  4. The Sainz show. He knows what his position is within the team. He chose to be in this position. Resistance is futile.

    1. You’re right: he should do the talking on the track, not in the media.

  5. Jose Silva
    9th July 2023, 9:30

    People complain about Liberty Media because it’s going all for the shouw and ruining the pure traditional sport. The same people believe Q1 was a show of pure sport, and also quite entertaining.

Comments are closed.