Perez says he “should have been fourth” after error at start of final lap

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In the round-up: Sergio Perez believes he should have qualified on the second row of the grid for today’s Hungarian Grand Prix

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In brief

Perez “should have been fourth”

Red Bull driver Sergio Perez ended his streak of five consecutive rounds without a Q3 appearance in Hungary yesterday but believes he could have been higher than ninth on the grid.

Perez was four tenths of a second slower than pole winner Lewis Hamilton and Max Verstappen in the other Red Bull but only qualified ninth. However, Perez says he should have been further up the order.

“We showed very strong pace at times,” he said. “Unfortunately with this [Alternative Tyre Allocation] format we just played around a little bit too much with the tyre prep.

“I had a bad first sector, losing a tenth-and-a-half. So I think without that I should have been P4, but never mind. I believe that we’ve got a good car underneath us.”

Stroll spared penalty for impeding

Lance Stroll avoided a penalty for impeding Valtteri Bottas during Q1 as the stewards ruled several other drivers contributed to the Alfa Romeo driver’s delay.

“While it was clear that car 77 [Bottas] was impeded, Article 37.5 required that the car not be “unnecessarily” impeded by another car. Here, given the situation on track and the fact that the driver and the team representative of Car 77 did not feel that there was a single other competitor that unnecessarily impeded, we decided that there would be no further action,” the stewards ruled.

Haas fined over tyre error

Haas were fined a total of €10,000 (£8,650) for failing to electronically return a set of intermediate tyres from each of their cars during Friday practice at the Hungaroring. Both sets had been physically handed back to Pirelli.

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Novalak hit with grid penalty for Boschung clash

Trident driver Clement Novalak will start five places lower on the Formula 2 feature race grid than he qualified after stewards deemed him “wholly responsible” for colliding with Ralph Boschung in yesterday’s sprint race.

Novalak locked up under braking for turn one and tagged the right-rear of the Campos driver, causing him damage that ended his race. The stewards held Novalak responsible and handed him a five-place grid penalty for today’s feature race, that will drop him from 15th on the grid to 20th.

Formula 3 feature race shortened over tyre fears

Gabriele Mini, Hungaroring, 2023
Concerns over tyre wear has led F3 to shorten one race
The FIA has shortened today’s F3 feature race due to concerns with tyre wear.

Originally 24 laps, the race has been reduced to 19 laps (or 45 minutes, plus one additional tour) after a recommendation from tyre supplier Pirelli due to the “level of wear experienced” during yesterday’s sprint race.

Hitech fined after battery breach

Hitech have been fined for releasing Gabriele Mini’s car in an unsafe condition before yesterday’s F3 sprint race.

The battery fell off Mini’s car after turn three at the Hungaroring when the Alpine junior driver was making his way from the F3 paddock to the Formula 1 pit lane.

Mini ultimately won the sprint race by 4.2 seconds and avoided losing his victory after the stewards ordered Hitech to pay a €500 (£432) fine instead.

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Social media

Notable posts from Twitter, Instagram and more:

@mercedesamgf1

Yessss! How the garage reacted to pole position for Lewis in Budapest. 👏👏👏 #F1 #Motorsport #MercedesF1 #LewisHamilton

♬ original sound – Mercedes-AMG F1

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Comment of the day

After Lewis Hamilton secured his first pole position for 33 rounds yesterday, David BR is left impressed by the multiple world champion’s efforts…

Finally pole position was within reach of the Mercedes, just about, and Hamilton nailed it first go by a tiny amount. That’s multiple champion-level driving. Really did not expect that: I thought Red Bull’s upgrades would see them (well Verstappen) comfortably ahead still.

Can’t see Hamilton turning this into a race win, but it’s a start for Mercedes. Like he said, it seemed like his first ever pole position all over again.
David BR

Happy birthday!

Happy birthday to Matt and Lalit Palaparthy!

On this day in motorsport

  • 35 years ago today Ayrton Senna took pole position for the German Grand Prix with Nigel Mansell’s Williams a surprise second

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...

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4 comments on “Perez says he “should have been fourth” after error at start of final lap”

  1. He should be first, as Verstappen failed to put the lap together, he should be there for the taking, but he wasn’t.

    Even his expectations are getting lower and lower. Sad.

    1. What looks really bad is that I got distracted in the end by the fact both norris and hamilton were attempting to steal pole from verstappen and then hamilton was successful and I knew most positions, so I thought: hamilton, verstappen, norris, I know leclerc was disappointed he was only 6th, piastri was doing a good job but not as good as norris, so I’m gonna assume perez got 4th, a decent qualifying for a number 2 driver, and lo and behold, no, he didn’t even make that, even once that he makes it to q3 the performance is abysmal again, to the point I assumed he had qualified way better than he really did, depite my low expectations!

  2. Indeed, but unfortunately for him, while he finally reached Q3 in a standard qualifying again, wholly returning to his pre-Monaco GP form still seems difficult.

    Indeed like a first, given hiatus length.

  3. 9th in a RB-19 in a qualifying session where Max dropped the ball and only scored 2nd.

    Not to mention destroying a bunch of expensive upgrades in FP1.

    Meanwhile Danny Ric after just effectively 2 FP sessions gets the Alpha Tauri into Q2 and 3 places ahead of his teammate and ONLY 4 places behind Perez.

    Perez’s future in RB does not look like its improving so far this weekend. I guess at least he got into Q3…

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