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OK, we get another formation lap and we’re off again. Let’s see if everyone can stay on the track this time.
Still unsure as to whether Norris will be found guilty and if so, if he will be penalised. Also, Norris was the first to go, but others followed him. Are they all found guilty?
Verstappen was one of the drivers who did not leave the grid after the aborted start. He thought everyone at the front should have waited to go after the aborted start.
There is now a wait for Norris. The McLaren driver is now being investigated for a starting procedure infringement for going after the aborted start. The replay shows there was no green light and he went ahead anyway.
There is a lot of confusion as to what is going on right now. Some of the drivers just remained where they were on the grid when an aborted start was announced while others took another lap … what a mess.
Race control confirms we get an aborted start and the drivers get another formation lap. Stroll is now out of his car and they are trying to get his car away.
Formation lap: Stroll completely locked-up the rears at Turn Four, fails to break and ends up in the wall. Yikes! He’s now in the gravel after trying to turn the car around. The leading cars are now at the start line but surely we will be delayed here.
São Paulo Grand Prix race begins
Off they go for the formation lap! We are underway at Interlagos.
The starting grid.
We’re inching nearer to the start! We start with a lovely rendition of the Brazilian national anthem at Interlagos and the drivers are undergoing their final preparations.
Norris’ race engineer tells Sky Sports that they do “not have any concerns” regarding the weather.
It feels dry, it feels quite bright and hot now. Whether or not the track will dry out for the race start, I’m not sure.
Potentially there’s more weather on the way, but I don’t really want to give away too much what we think the weather is going to do.
Ferrari have changed Carlos Sainz’s power unit and gearbox and now the Spaniard will start the race from the pit lane.
Albon releases his own statement after not being able to race due to damages his car:
Today is a tough one to swallow when qualifying was coming along nicely. We don’t know what caused the crash but we’ll look into it, apologies to everyone in the garage, this was a race where anything could happen and I felt we could have done something great.
The FIA has just confirmed that Verstappen will still start in P17 despite Albon not racing. Everyone else will move up one place but the Dutchman remains because of his penalty.
It will be interesting to see how Red Bull and Verstappen’s mindset once the pit lane opens. Verstappen was extremely frustrated after his qualifying exit and Christian Horner said it was “the second day in the row that we have had late calls”.
Alex Albon will not race for Williams after damage was sustained to his car during qualifying due to the weather conditions. Albon progressed to Q3 and was up in second position when he lost control of his car for the first corner and crashed into the barriers causing damage to all four corners. Full team statement below.
It was a nightmare qualifying session for Verstappen and Red Bull in Brazil. The Dutchman and his teammate Sergio Perez went down in Q2 after a late red flag caught them out following a Lance Stroll crash. Verstappen was visibly angry about the delay in throwing the red flag because he felt it had lets others to knock him out of the top 10.
It’s stupid, it’s ridiculous. If a car hits a wall it needs to be a straight red flag, I don’t know why it has to be 40-seconds for a red flag to come out.
A review of the session shows it did not make a difference to Verstappen, who will start all the way down in P17 given he has a five-place grid penalty.
Norris, on the other hand, secured pole position after scraping by in the first session. He was in the drop zone before jumping up to 15th and was the final car to progress.
Here are the full results:
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Lando Norris (McLaren) 1:23.405sec
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George Russell (Mercedes) +0.173
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Yuki Tsunoda (VCARB) +0.706
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Esteban Ocon (Alpine) +1.070
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Liam Lawson (VCARB) +1.079
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Charles Leclerc (Ferrari) +1.120
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Alex Albon (Williams) +1.252
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Oscar Piastri (McLaren) +1.281
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Fernando Alonso (Aston Martin) +5.593
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Lance Stroll (Aston Martin) – no time
ELIMINATED IN Q2
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Valtteri Bottas (Kick Sauber)
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Max Verstappen (Red Bull)
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Sergio Perez (Red Bull)
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Carlos Sainz (Ferrari)
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Pierre Gasly (Alpine)
ELIMINATED IN Q1
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Lewis Hamilton (Mercedes)
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Oliver Bearman (Haas)
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Franco Colapinto (Williams)
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Nico Hulkenberg (Haas)
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Zhou Guanyu (Kick Sauber)
Preamble
São Paulo’s current weather forecast may leave much to be desired but it certainly won’t dampen our spirits on what may be the most important race of the year.
Red Bull’s Max Verstappen leads McLaren’s Lando Norris by 44 points and the two have been at odds due to the defending champion’s aggressive driving style despite reportedly being good friends. All eyes will be on the two today to see if there is any movement at the top.
It would also be silly to discount Ferrari. After going back-to-back in Austin and Mexico City, Charles Leclerc and Carlos Sainz are in good form and will want to continue their hot streak.
The race time was moved up to 3.30pm GMT/12.30pm BRT but before we get to that let’s see how qualifiers went.
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