Daniel Ricciardo, AlphaTauri, Interlagos, 2023

AlphaTauri “definitely a lot faster” than Q1 exit suggested – Ricciardo

RaceFans Round-up

Posted on

| Written by

In the round-up: Daniel Ricciardo believes AlphaTauri did not fulfil their potential in qualifying

In brief

AlphaTauri “definitely a lot faster” – Ricciardo

Ricciardo believes AlphaTauri had the pace to reach Q2 and potentially Q3 on Friday but failed to capitalise on their pace. He was knocked out of Q1 in 17th, one place behind team mate Yuki Tsunoda, but reckons he should have at least progressed into Q2 but for a mistake through the Senna esses.

“I think we were definitely a lot faster than the overall time showed,” he said. “Just that last lap, honestly I nearly had a spin in turn two. I just came in a bit hot into turn one, probably didn’t get the tyres in the right spot for the side of the lap, so we’d already lost a chunk in the first sector .

“Our first run, we were P5 or P6 at the time. So I don’t know we would’ve stayed there, but we were looking like definitely a chance at that point of advancing through Q2 and potentially Q3. But obviously that last lap, we didn’t get it right. So obviously frustrated with that.”

Norris and Hulkenberg “both contributed” to practice clash

The Brazilian Grand Prix stewards took no action against Lando Norris and Nico Hulkenberg after the pair made contact with each other in Friday’s practice session.

Norris was on a push lap and attempting to pass Hulkenberg into the final braking zone of Juncao but appeared to miss the apex of the corner and the pair made minor contact, Hulkenberg’s left-front wheel clipping Norris’s rear-right.

After speaking to both drivers after the session, the stewards took no further action, deciding that “both drivers contributed to the contact and none of them is predominantly to blame for the incident.”

Haas later confirmed they changed Hulkenberg’s power unit between first practice and qualifying.

McLaren’s Ugochukwu moves to FREC

McLaren junior driver Ugo Ugochukwu will step up to the Formula Regional European Championship for 2024 after winning the Euro4 championship title this year.

The 16-year-old American driver has spent the last two years racing at F4 level, taking top three finishes in the British, Italian, and UAE F4 championship standings. Having raced with Prema throughout his F4 career, Ugochukwu will step up to the FREC next year with the team.

“After a successful year in Formula 4, I am happy to announce that I will move up to the Formula Regional European Championship next season with Prema,” Ugochukwu said. “I am looking forward to this new challenge in my career, and with the continued support of the McLaren Driver Development Programme I am confident we will have another positive year together.”

Advert | Become a RaceFans supporter and go ad-free

Social media

Notable posts from X (formerly Twitter), TikTok and more:

Advert | Become a RaceFans supporter and go ad-free

Comment of the day

With Formula 1 owners Liberty Media announcing increased income in the third quarter of 2023, Alan Dove would love to see some of that money trickle down to the lowest levels…

I’m somewhat bemused when I visit kart clubs, many of which played a crucial role in kickstarting the careers of several Formula 1 drivers, only to find them struggling. Whether it be with pure entry numbers or facilities. Not all, but enough. These clubs have been instrumental in shaping drivers who now hold immense value for entities like Liberty, yet they receive nothing in terms of grassroots funding. In contrast to other sports, which often have funding schemes in place, the disparity in support is striking.

I know Valtteri Bottas sold his car to help his club which is admirable. Michael Schumacher did a lot of Kerpen, etc. But other than that it’s incredible to think how little support the small clubs get considering the revenue being generated.

Personally, I actually strongly believe that F1 should have minimal involvement with karting as, in my opinion, it negatively affects the karting scene. I think its influence has really annihilated some of the best aspects of the sport. Nonetheless, if I put my pragmatic hat on for a moment, it’s perplexing how these discrepancies in revenue generation and investment in club karting are not discussed more.
Alan Dove

Happy birthday!

No RaceFans birthdays today

On this day in motorsport

  • Jacques Villeneuve Snr, the uncle of 1997 world champion Jacques Villeneuve, who failed to qualify in all three of his Formula 1 grand prix appearances, was born today in 1953

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.

One comment on “AlphaTauri “definitely a lot faster” than Q1 exit suggested – Ricciardo”

  1. Coventry Climax
    4th November 2023, 11:27

    So there goes the myth that Newey is the single brilliant mind behind the Red Bull car, with superior ground effect knowledge.

    I think Claire Cottingham was quite right about things in her nice recent article here.

    But I do have doubts about the size of the role people think Newey plays in it, with his magical ‘deep understanding of groundeffect’ advantage over other teams, as I explained in my comment there.

    The speed with which articles appear here, especially when there’s many of them on the exact same subject (such as post race reports) makes for certain articles to get less attention than they deserve, and cutting worthwhile discussion of them short.

Comments are closed.