McLarens 1-2 in China as Piastri wins

It was a Papaya 1-2 finish at the Chinese Grand Prix with Oscar Piastri achieving his third career victory, leading home his McLaren teammate Lando Norris.

With tyre management the order of the day throughout the field, Piastri was able to control his race and finished ahead of Lando Norris, who was forced to manage a worsening brake issue in the closing stages.

George Russell was too far behind to pass Norris despite the tumbling pace but sealed consecutive third-place finishes for 2025.

With fifty of one-two finishes in the history of McLaren Racing, the team showed it is again the outfit to beat at present.

Max Verstappen put in a strong performance to finish fourth for Red Bull, finishing ahead of the Ferrari pair of Charles Leclerc and Lewis Hamilton.

Having been the worst team on the grid in the season-opening Australian Grand Prix, Haas secured a double points finish with Esteban Ocon seventh and a determined Oliver Bearman in tenth.

Andrea Kimi Antonelli held on to his eighth-place starting position to score points in back-to-back races, with Alexander Albon ninth for Williams.

Piastri squeezed Russell off the line, allowing Norris to make a move as the Papaya Rules saw the McLaren teammates work together to lead the field.

It was the opposite story at Ferrari, however, as Leclerc clipped Hamilton and suffered wing damage, although the duo did both pass Verstappen’s Red Bull.

Fernando Alonso was forced to retire on lap four as the brakes on his Aston Martin gave up. He was the only driver to retire in this race.

Meanwhile, Norris was complaining of graining on the troublesome left-front tyre with just eight laps on the board, with Piastri taking advantage of running in clean air.

The pitstop window opened on lap 11 as Leclerc disagreed with his team over which plan to use, as Charles ran close behind Lewis.

The undercut worked well for the midfield runners and lower points positions, with Yuki Tsunoda getting past Antonelli.

Both Hamilton and Verstappen stopped on lap 14, with Piastri boxing a lap later and having a slower stop than he would have wanted as he was stationary for 3.8 seconds.

Norris was in a lap later and lost out to Russell, who came in a lap earlier to regain his net second position in the Chinese Grand Prix, but it lasted just one lap before the McLaren retook the position into turn one the next time around.

On his 29th birthday, Albon inherited the lead, having not stopped yet, but soon fell into the clutches of the overall frontrunners.

Elsewhere, Hamilton was resisting requests from Ferrari to swap positions with Leclerc, with both homing in on Russell, but gave in to the team call at the start of lap 21.

McLaren was managing its two lead drivers well, Piastri pushing the pace to allow Norris to follow suit and pull further clear of Russell without entering the dirty air of the race leader.

As those two-stopping started to pit again, the leaders were quick enough to stay out on the hard compound, with Verstappen coming alive and chasing the pack.

Hamilton opted to pit on lap 38 for fresh hard tyres in the aim of catching the top five towards the end of the race, although it did not work out for the winner of Saturday’s sprint race.

The Racing Bulls of Tsunoda and Isack Hadjar also both opted for a second stop and were cutting through the field towards the top ten until Tsunoda suffered a front wing issue and Hadjar was run wide by Jack Doohan’s Alpine, who was hit with a 10-second penalty as a result.

Out front, Norris reported a brake issue as the pitwall urged caution rather than pushing to close in on Piastri in the closing stages.

There was no such warning for Verstappen, who attacked Leclerc and got through with three laps left.

Piastri took the chequered flag and Norris nursed the second McLaren over the line despite losing over three seconds to the chasing Russell on the last lap.

So not the most thrilling Chinese Grand Prix due to tyre management. And yet congratulations to Oscar Piastri in winning the race. Following a disappointing home race in Australia last weekend, Piastri was able to bounce back by finishing first in China.

As for McLaren, that MCL39 is a beast and it will be fascinating if the others can challenge them over the course of this long season.

UPDATE – Following a post-race scrutineering Leclerc’s and Gasly’s cars were both found to weigh 799kg after fuel was removed, one kilogram below the minimum weight limit. In Leclerc’s case, his damaged front wing was replaced by a spare example during the weighing. The scrutineers also took issue with Hamilton’s rearmost underbody skid block showing excessive wear beyond the 1mm wear limit. Hamilton’s blocks were down to 8.5 to 8.6mm thickness depending on the measuring point, with the minimum limit set at 9mm.

Chinese Grand Prix, race results:
1 Oscar Piastri McLaren 1:30:55.026
2 Lando Norris McLaren +9.748s
3 George Russell Mercedes +11.097s
4 Max Verstappen Red Bull +16.656s
5 Esteban Ocon Haas +49.969s
6 Andrea Kimi Antonelli Mercedes +53.748s
7 Alexander Albon Williams +56.321s
8 Oliver Bearman Haas +61.303s
9 Lance Stroll Aston Martin +70.204s
10 Carlos Sainz Williams +76.387s
11 Isack Hadjar Racing Bulls +78.875s
12 Liam Lawson Red Bull +81.147s
13 Jack Doohan Alpine +88.401s
14 Gabriel Bortoleto Sauber +1 lap
15 Nico Hulkenberg Sauber +1 lap
16 Yuki sunoda Racing Bulls +1 lap
Charles Leclerc Ferrari DSQ (+23.211s)*
Lewis Hamilton Ferrari DSQ (+25.381s)**
Pierre Gasly Alpine DSQ (+67.195s)*
Fernando Alonso Aston Martin DNF

*Disqualified for being underweight following post-race scrutineering
**Disqualified for excessive skid block wear in post-race scrutineering

Piastri earns his first career pole in China

Oscar Piastri achieved his first Formula 1 career pole position by setting the quickest time in the Chinese Grand Prix for McLaren.

George Russell splits the McLarens by taking a solid P2 ahead of the championship leader Lando Norris, who will start in P3.

Starting from the front is an important step given how badly the field struggled with tyre degradation throughout the sprint race.

Piastri had previously started on the front row on seven occasions but secured his first P1 with an impressive time of one minute 30.641 seconds, with McLaren teammate Lando Norris in third.

A fantastic lap from George Russell split the McLarens with reigning world champion Max Verstappen fourth for Red Bull.

Piastri had taken second place in the sprint race earlier in the day but now has the chance to convert pole position into Grand Prix victory on Sunday.

Norris had topped the timesheets in Q1 and Q2 but was unable to hook up his final attempt and bailed into the pits instead of taking the flag, admitting once again he had made “a couple of mistakes”.

Lewis Hamilton had won the sprint race from pole but was only quick enough for fifth on the grid for the main race, ahead of Ferrari teammate Charles Leclerc in sixth.

After crashing out before the start of his debut race in the Australian Grand Prix last weekend, Isack Hadjar was the pick of the rookies with seventh positions for Racing Bulls with fellow newcomer Andrea Kimi Antonelli in eighth.

Yuki Tsunoda and Alex Albon rounded out the top ten with starting position key given the tyre management issues so far in Shanghai.

Haas have looked more on it this weekend and Esteban Ocon will start P11, ahead of the team’s former driver Nico Hulkenberg who will be aiming for back to back points finishes for Sauber.

The Aston Martins will start alongside one another on row seven with Fernando Alonso just edging ahead of Lance Stroll in the closing stages of Q2.

In what was another difficult day at his new team, Carlos Sainz could only manage P15, having admitted that he is still yet to feel at home at Williams.

Q1 proved a tough session for four of the rookies, especially Liam Lawson who was again P20 and last, with Oliver Bearman, Jack Doohan and Gabriel Bortoleto also knocked out, along with Pierre Gasly.

So congratulations to Oscar Piastri in finally taking his first pole in the sport. After taking a solid second in the sprint earlier and seeing Lewis Hamilton converting pole to win, the McLaren driver is in prime position to win the Chinese Grand Prix.

Chinese Grand Prix, qualifying results:
1 Oscar Piastri McLaren 1:30.641
2 George Russell Mercedes 1:30.723
3 Lando Norris McLaren 1:30.793
4 Max Verstappen Red Bull 1:30.817
5 Lewis Hamilton Ferrari 1:30.927
6 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 1:31.021
7 Isack Hadjar Racing Bulls 1:31.079
8 Andrea Kimi Antonelli 1:31.103
9 Yuki Tsunoda Racing Bulls 1:31.638
10 Alexander Albon Williams 1:31.706
11 Esteban Ocon Haas 1:31.625
12 Nico Hulkenberg Sauber 1:31.632
13 Fernando Alonso Aston Martin 1:31.688
14 Lance Stroll Aston Martin 1:31.773
15 Carlos Sainz Williams 1:31.840
16 Pierre Gasly Alpine 1:31.992
17 Oliver Bearman Haas 1:32.018
18 Jack Doohan Alpine 1:32.092
19 Gabriel Bortoleto Sauber 1:32.141
20 Liam Lawson Red Bull 1:32.174

Hamilton takes sprint victory in China

Lewis Hamilton achieved his first victory for Scuderia Ferrari by taking the chequered flag in P1 at the sprint race at the Chinese Grand Prix.

Oscar Piastri passed Max Verstappen to finish in P2 for mcLaren while the Red Bull driver was already thinking about the championship by not being aggressive in defending and took P3 at the finish.

In a 19-lap race where tyre wear became the main talking point, Hamilton benefitted from driving in clear air to convert sprint pole into a win to add to his six Grand Prix successes in Shanghai.

Championship leader Lando Norris endured a tricky race, having qualified out of position down in sixth and spent almost the entire race trying to get into the points following another mistake on the first lap.

The leading pack all started well and ran in order, other than Norris who ran wide at Turn 6 and lost three positions as a result.

George Russell edged past Charles Leclerc by the end of the first lap to go up to fourth as Norris was unable to make any headway in regaining places, with Lance Stroll able to keep the Australian Grand Prix winner behind him.

Liam Lawson, trying to recover having started last, banged wheels with fellow rookie Jack Doohan to pass the Alpine but was cleared following a stewards’ investigation.

Out front, Hamilton was complaining of graining on the troublesome front-left tyre, with Norris also unhappy.

Tyre management took centre stage as Verstappen had a couple of laps putting pressure on Hamilton before dropping off.

That put him into the clutches of Piastri, who was able to mount a longer offence and eventually got through into second at the end of lap 15.

Hamilton, though, had built up a gap while Verstappen and Piastri fighting and was almost five seconds clear heading into the final two laps.

The seven-time champion took in the adulation from the Chinese fans after taking the chequered flag, while his Ferrari teammate Leclerc was unable to fight back ahead of Russell, who finished fourth for Mercedes.

Yuki Tsunoda put in a strong showing to take sixth for Racing Bulls, fending off Andrea Kimi Antonelli as Norris found a way past Stroll to take eighth place and the final sprint race point.

So not the most thrilling sprint race and yet a feel good story for Formula 1 with the most successful driver in the sport winning in red. Congratulations to Lewis Hamilton in taking victory for Scuderia Ferrari. Okay, this is not the main race but a win is a win. Hopefully the first of many.

Chinese Grand Prix, sprint race results:
1 Lewis Hamilton Ferrari 30:39.965
2 Oscar Piastri McLaren +6.889s
3 Max Verstappen Red Bull +9.804s
4 George Russell Mercedes +11.592s
5 Charles Leclerc Ferrari +12.190s
6 Yuki Tsunoda Racing Bulls +22.288s
7 Andrea Kimi Antonelli Mercedes +23.038s
8 Lando Norris McLaren +23.471s
9 Lance Stroll Aston Martin +24.916s
10 Fernando Alonso Aston Martin +38.218s
11 Alexander Albon Williams +39.292s
12 Pierre Gasly Alpine +39.649s
13 Isack Hadjar Racing Bulls +42.400s
14 Liam Lawson Red Bull +44.904s
15 Oliver Bearman Haas +45.649s
16 Esteban Ocon Haas +46.182s
17 Carlos Sainz Williams +51.376s
18 Gabriel Bortoleto Sauber +53.940s
19 Nico Hulkenberg Sauber +56.682s
20 Jack Doohan Alpine +60.212s

Hamilton takes Chinese Grand Prix sprint pole

Lewis Hamilton achieved his first pole position for Scuderia Ferrari by taking P1 for the sprint race at the Chinese Grand Prix. The seven-time champion will start alongside his old title rival Max Verstappen.

McLaren had looked dominant until the third sprint qualifying segment, with Oscar Piastri only third while Lando Norris was down in sixth after making mistakes on both of his attempts.

Hamilton had been hooked up for the whole day and, having taken six Grand Prix poles and six victories in Shanghai, he will once again start from P1 with a lap-record time of one minute 30.849 seconds.

The seven-time world champion struggled on his Ferrari debut in Australia but looked much more comfortable and will be hoping to convert pole to sprint victory on Saturday.

Verstappen, who finished second in Melbourne, starts on the front row following his own fine lap, while Charles Leclerc is fourth for Ferrari.

The Mercedes pair of George Russell and Andrea Kimi Antonelli will be disappointed to only be fifth and seventh, respectively, while Yuki Tsunoda, Alex Albon and Lance Stroll rounded out the top ten.

It had appeared the McLarens were trying to edge each other to take pole but Piastri’s best effort was ultimately beaten by both Hamilton and Verstappen while two small mistakes cost Norris a shot at being further up the field.

Fernando Alonso will start the sprint race in P11 with Oliver Bearman impressing for Haas by taking P12 ahead of Carlos Sainz, Gabriel Bortoleto and Isack Hadjar.

While Norris ran wide on his first SQ1 run, Piastri took half a second out of the Ferraris who had been sitting at the top of the timesheets.

However, it was another tricky session for Liam Lawson, who was last and over a second and a half off SQ1 pace-setter Hamilton having had a lap time deleted.

Both Alpines were also eliminated in SQ1, Jack Doohan beating Pierre Gasly for P16, while Esteban Ocon and Nico Hulkenberg were slower than their respective rookie teammates down in P18 and P19.

So a surprising and yet welcoming news that Lewis Hamilton achieved his first pole position in red. Yes, this is for the sprint but it is still a fantastic result for Lewis. That gives confidence that the seven-time champion still has the speed.

Chinese Grand Prix, sprint qualifying results:
1 Lewis Hamilton Ferrari 1:30.849
2 Max Verstappen Red Bull 1:30.867
3 Oscar Piastri McLaren 1:30.929
4 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 1:31.057
5 George Russell Mercedes 1:31.169
6 Lando Norris McLaren 1:31.393
7 Andrea Kimi Antonelli Mercedes 1:31.738
8 Yuki Tsunoda Racing Bulls 1:31.773
9 Alexander Albon Williams 1:31.852
10 Lance Stroll Aston Martin 1:31.982
11 Fernando Alonso Aston Martin 1:31.815
12 Oliver Bearman Haas 1:31.978
13 Carlos Sainz Williams 1:32.325
14 Gabriel Bortoleto Sauber 1:32.564
15 Isack Hadjar Racing Bulls No time
16 Jack Doohan Alpine 1:32.575
17 Pierre Gasly Alpine 1:32.640
18 Esteban Ocon Haas 1:32.651
19 Nico Hulkenberg Sauber 1:32.675
20 Liam Lawson Red Bull 1:32.729

Norris wins a chaotic wet race at Australia

That was Drive to Survive for Lando Norris as the McLaren driver won the opening race of the new 2025 Formula 1 world championship at the Australian Grand Prix.

Starting in the wet and with changeable conditions throughout the afternoon, Norris took the chequered flag and showed its advantage over the rest of the field.

Max Verstappen finished second, pushing Norris to the very end of the 57 laps as last season’s top two show off its class.

The curse of the home drivers hit Oscar Piastri, who finished a lowly P9 after bogging down in the grass, having followed Norris off the track on lap 44.

It was a good day for Mercedes, with George Russell largely keeping himself out of all of the trouble to take the final step of the podium.

Russell’s new teammate Andrea Kimi Antonelli crossed the line fourth but was hit with a five-second penalty for an unsafe release and dropped below Alex Albon, who put in a fine performance for Williams.

Ferrari had underperformed in qualifying and suffered a tough race, Charles Leclerc finishing eighth and Lewis Hamilton in tenth after a gamble with the weather did not pay off.

There were strong performances for Lance Stroll, who was sixth for Aston Martin, and Nico Hulkenberg a place further back for Sauber.

The demanding conditions caught out four of the 2025 rookies, with Isack Hadjar, Jack Doohan, Gabriel Bortoleto and Liam Lawson all crashing out.

Inclement weather throughout the day meant no decision over whether to start the new season behind the safety car was taken until the last moment, with a traditional start in place as the rain held off and all 20 drivers opted for the intermediate tyre.

Hadjar was out before the race even began as he spun his Racing Bulls at turn two, damaging his rear wing against the barrier, leading to an aborted start and leaving visibly upset.

Once the delayed race was under way, Alpine’s Doohan lost it into the wall as his hopes of performing well in his home race were ended, bringing out the safety car as a result.

It was not only the newcomers who were struggling, however, as Carlos Sainz, last year’s race winner at Albert Park, crashed out on the final corner behind the safety car, prematurely ending his Williams debut.

By that point, Verstappen had already passed Piastri in the opening corners to split the McLarens, with Norris having got away with incident to lead the pack as the two accidents were cleared away.

Racing resumed at the end of lap seven with the track continuing to dry out and very quickly the drivers were having to go off-line to seek wet patches and keep the intermediate tyres working.

Piastri battled back up to second as he closed in on Verstappen before the reigning world champion made a rare mistake in the wet, going straight on at turn 11 and just avoiding the gravel.

Verstappen was unhappy with his tyres and dropped off the back of the McLaren duo, while Piastri began to make inroads into Lando’s lead up front.

The removal of Papaya Rules had suggested Norris and Piastri would be free to race one another, but as the latter closed in he was told over team radio to maintain position as both drivers worked through the first clutch of backmarkers.

“Time to go racing,” McLaren CEO Zak Brown told Sky Sports F1 after the Haas pair had been lapped, although Piastri ran wide to give Norris some breathing space as the track entered the window for slick tyres to be considered.

The stops were triggered as Fernando Alonso became the next driver to find himself in the wall; the Aston Martin spun at turn 6 with Antonelli closing in, bringing out the safety car again.

Norris and Piastri both switched to the hard compound while Verstappen, who had been nowhere near the top two before the Alonso crash, switched on a set of mediums ahead of the restart.

As the Alonso wreckage was slowly cleared away, all eyes on the pitwall turned skywards with rain clouds moving over Albert Park, although the 16 remaining runners were all on slicks by the time the safety car peeled off.

Remarkably, those collective decisions were undermined almost immediately as heavy rain started to fall, with both McLarens running off, Norris holding on to pit but Piastri running onto the grass.

With Norris pitting, Verstappen inherited the lead for the first time in the race and Hamilton moving up to second having battled past team-mate Leclerc, the Williams of Albon and Yuki Tsuonda’s Racing Bulls.

With the rain falling ever harder, Ferrari took the gamble to stay out as both Bortoleto and Lawson spun and brought out a third safety car – ruining the chances of Hamilton or Leclerc springing a surprise as they were both forced to pit for intermediates.

Once again, Norris was leading a safety car restart with just five laps remaining and he was able to keep ahead of the pack, while Leclerc edged past Hamilton as the Ferraris fought over the minor points.

Verstappen set about Norris in the closing stages but was unable to find a way past, while Piastri recovered to ninth by passing Hamilton on the final lap.

So a crazy race at Albert Park and yet Lando Norris kept calm to take McLaren first win of the new season. This is an excellent start and hopefully can build up the points to take the championship.

Australian Grand Prix, race results:
1 Lando Norris McLaren 1:42:06.304
2 Max Verstappen Red Bull +0.895s
3 George Russell Mercedes +8.481s
4 Andrea Kimi Antonelli Mercedes +10.135s
5 Alexander Albon Williams +12.773s
6 Lance Stroll Aston Martin +17.413s
7 Nico Hulkenberg Sauber +18.423s
8 Charles Leclerc Ferrari +19.826s
9 Oscar Piastri McLaren +20.448s
10 Lewis Hamilton Ferrari +22.473s
11 Pierre Gasly Alpine +26.502s
12 Yuki Tsunoda Racing Bulls +29.884s
13 Esteban Ocon Haas +33.161s
14 Oliver Bearman Haas +40.351s
Liam Lawson Red Bull DNF
Gabriel Bortoleto Sauber DNF
Fernando Alonso Aston Martin DNF
Carlos Sainz Williams DNF
Jack Doohan Alpine DNF
Isack Hadjar Racing Bulls DNF

McLaren front row at Melbourne with Norris taking pole

It is a Papaya front row in the opening race of the new 2025 Formula 1 season with Lando Norris leading Oscar Piastri to a McLaren 1-2 at the Australian Grand Prix. Defending world champion Max Verstappen is third for Red Bull.

In the other Red Bull, Liam Lawson was eliminated in Q1, as was new Mercedes recruit Andrea Kimi Antonelli, while Alex Albon and Yuki Tsunoda producing awesome Q3 efforts for Williams and Racing Bulls respectively.

The McLaren drivers had to work for it on the final runs in Q3, as both made mistakes on their first runs, after which Verstappen led the pack.

Piastri, who slid too deep at the penultimate corner on his first flying lap in the final segment, going at the top of the pack on the final laps – the home crowd favourite set a time of one minute, 15.180 seconds and provisional pole with a huge gain on the rest in the final sector.

But behind came Norris – having lost his first Q3 lap for a track-limits slip at Turn 4 – and Abu Dhabi winner went even quicker in the final sector after leading the opening third too, with pole established at one minute, 15.096 seconds by a 0.084 seconds margin to Piastri.

Because the rest could not match the McLarens, as Verstappen’s Q3 run two improvement left him 0.385 seconds adrift at the finish.

George Russell took fourth for Mercedes, with Tsunoda’s final lap missed by Formula 1’s world television feed as it came after so many of the rest – including Albon ahead on the track – and finished.

The Racing Bulls driver demoted Albon to sixth, plus the Ferrari pair led by Charles Leclerc in seventh.

Lewis Hamilton was eighth in his first qualifying session with the Scuderia.

Pierre Gasly and Carlos Sainz trailed Hamilton at the end of the top ten, with all three producing personal bests at the end of Q3.

In the middle segment, Isack Hadjar’s late personal best was not enough to progress and it was the same story for the Aston Martin drivers behind – Fernando Alonso leading Lance Stroll – with the racing green team later stating Alonso had damaged his floor in an early Q2 off in the gravel behind Turn 10.

Jack Doohan went to P14 on a late lap set just after Hamilton spun awkwardly at Turn 11 as Ferrari kept its drivers circulating on aging softs, with Gabriel Bortoleto was the last Q2 faller but left a memorable first impression on Formula 1 qualifying by saving a wild moment exiting Turn 4 on his final flier.

In Q1, Bortoleto’s last-gasp improvement knocked out Antonelli, who produced a personal best on his final flying lap after his previous lap had featured his Mercedes scraping dramatically along the ground and the team later said was linked to damage to his car’s floor.

Sauber’s Nico Hulkenberg and his replacement at Haas, Esteban Ocon, were eliminated in P17 and P19 – either side of Lawson, the other shock Q1 faller.

After missing FP3 with his engine issue he headed out immediately, but multiple wayward moments on his final lap meant he abandoned it in the pits. This was a challenging start for Lawson.

Lawson only qualifies ahead of Oliver Bearman in the other Haas, who reported a gearbox issue on his Q1 outlap, which followed his FP1 crash, missed FP2 and FP3 gravel-beaching.

So an awesome start to the new season with a solid team effort by McLaren to take the front row. Rain is on the horizon on Sunday so expect Max Verstappen to showcase his impressive wet weather driving. Bring on race day!

Australian Grand Prix, qualifying results:
1 Lando Norris McLaren 1:15.096
2 Oscar Piastri McLaren 1:15.180
3 Max Verstappen Red Bull 1:15.481
4 George Russell Mercedes 1:15.546
5 Yuki Tsuonda Racing Bulls 1:15.670
6 Alex Albon Williams 1:15.737
7 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 1:15.755
8 Lewis Hamilton Ferrari 1:15.973
9 Pierre Gasly Alpine 1:15.980
10 Carlos Sainz Williams 1:16.062
11 Isack Hadjar Racing Bulls 1:16.175
12 Fernando Alonso Aston Martin 1:16.453
13 Lance Stroll Aston Martin 1:16.483
14 Jack Doohan Alpine 1:16.863
15 Gabriel Bortoleto Sauber 1:17.520
16 Andrea Kimi Antonelli Mercedes 1:16.525
17 Nico Hulkenberg Sauber 1:16.579
18 Liam Lawson Red Bull 1:17.094
19 Esteban Ocon Haas 1:17.147
20 Oliver Bearman Haas No time

Red Bull showcase the RB21

Red Bull Racing has revealed their 2025 Formula 1 challenger, the RB21, prior to the pre-season test at Bahrain.

This is the car that Max Verstappen hopes will lead to a fifth consecutive drivers’ title.

Ahead of Formula 1’s three-day winter test, Red Bull unveil its updated car design for the upcoming season, the final one under the current ground-effect based regulations cycle that will be driven by Verstappen and his new teammate Liam Lawson.

Sporting a very similar livery to last season’s car, which had already been revealed at F1 75 launch in London, the RB21 is an evolution of the RB20 and has undergone a variety of changes to address the car balance issues that plagued its predecessor, although the low-light studio images released by the team still carefully kept most of its secrets hidden from view.

Verstappen and Red Bull started the 2024 season in dominant form, but as McLaren caught up and then overtook, Verstappen and especially teammate Sergio Perez started to struggle much more with balance problems on the RB20.

It took until the Italian Grand Prix for Red Bull to gain a deeper understanding of where it had gone wrong, but by that time it was too late to avoid slipping to third behind McLaren and Ferrari in the constructors’ standings.

According to technical director Pierre Wache, Red Bull has been hard at work to make its new car easier to balance and set up, but without compromising the car’s peak performance potential.

“The main thing that you are trying to achieve is a balance between making a car that is quicker than the others and making it nice to drive so that drivers can extract the most from it,” Wache said. “You know that if you increase the [operating] window you also reduce the overall potential.

“In 2023 we were proved that our direction was correct because we were quicker than the others. Last season we were proved that we were not correct. Every time there is a limit when the balance takes the benefit compared to the overall potential of the car. We have to fix it for this year.”

Going to be interesting if this car has the speed to match their rivals especially McLaren and Ferrari.

Shakedown appearance of Alpine’s A525

Alpine’s new 2025 Formula 1 racer was revealed in a shakedown ahead of the new season at the Bahrain International Circuit.

Officially a filming day, the test was run over a maximum of 200km (124 miles) with demonstration tyres, as per the regulations.

Both Pierre Gasly and his new, rookie teammate Jack Doohan got a first taste of the A525, with the day “split evenly” between them, team principal Oliver Oakes said.

Alpine had previously revealed its latest blue-and-pink livery at the F175 Live event in London, but now we see the actual 2025 car.

“It is only a shakedown, limited running, so it’s not like we are driving the car at its full potential, but the initial feeling felt smooth, and I am just looking forward to getting going and having a proper run later this week for official pre-season testing,” Gasly commented.

Alpine revealed its line-up for the upcoming pre-season running, which will also take place in Bahrain this week. Gasly and Doohan will share the track on all three days.

“It will be three busy days where we have many things to run through in order to develop the A525 ahead of the season start,” Doohan said, while Oakes mentioned “multiple areas of interest for us to keep learning and progressing”.

Gasly previously gave Alpine an ambitious top-five goal in the 2025 constructors’ championship, which would require the squad to be the ‘best of the rest’ behind the four established top teams.

Mercedes presents the W16

This is the 2025 Mercedes AMG Formula 1 car, the W16, which was unveiled a few days before pre-season testing.

Like its rival teams, Mercedes had already shown off this season’s livery at last week’s F1 75 launch event in London, using an older model. Now it has unveiled the launch spec of the W16 car that its drivers George Russell and debutant Andrea Kimi Antonelli will contest the upcoming Formula 1 world championship.

With the W16 Mercedes is aiming to make fundamental changes to its lineage of ground-effect cars that have proven very hard to get in the optimal set-up, and have seen dramatic performance swings from circuit to circuit.

“Our primary focus has been on dialling out the W15’s slight reluctance to turn in slow corners, along with the imbalance in tyre temperatures that made the car inconsistent from session to session,” the team’s technical director James Allison explained.

The team explained it has changed “every aerodynamic surface” of the car for 2025, as well as designing a new front suspension.

Russell and Lewis Hamilton managed to win two races apiece over the 2024 season, including a dominant one-two in Las Vegas, but at other times they found the W15 much less competitive and complaint, and tricky to balance.

That meant that over the balance of the season Mercedes struggled to keep up with its fellow frontrunners and finished fourth in the constructors’ standings, behind McLaren, Ferrari and Red Bull.

Russell is now the team leader at the Silver Arrows after Hamilton’s departure to Ferrari. At just 18 years old, long-time Mercedes protege Antonelli will become the youngest-ever driver at the outfit, with the Italian having been fast-tracked through its junior programme to fill Hamilton’s vacant seat.

“It’s going to be a significant change this year,” Russell said. “To be honest, we say every year we’ve uncovered a problem, we’ve solved it, and it’s created a new one.

“We’ve probably been a lot more disciplined with every change that we’ve made, and being more thorough than ever in terms of the simulator running, just to ensure we’re not going to fall into a new trap. So far, it’s a reasonable step. It’s going to be quite an interesting season with how people deploy the resource between 2025 and 2026.”

Mercedes will conduct a filming day with the W16 at the Bahrain International Circuit on Tuesday ahead of the pre-season test at the same venue on 26-28 February.

Hopefully the revised aerodynamic treatments will make the car more user friendly to set-up and no more porpoising. The silver and black livery looks elegant too. Best wishes to the team ahead of the new 2025 season.

Aston Martin presents their 2025 racer

Aston Martin becomes the latest Formula 1 team to show off their definitive 2025 racer, after revealing its livery at the F1 75 Live event earlier.

These are the first images of the AMR25 which features much changed sidepods compared to its predecessor than the AMR24. While unlike Ferrari, Aston Martin has stuck with a pushrod front suspension and the British outfit has also applied this arrangement at the rear of its machines.

The AMR25 features a largely unchanged livery from 2024, having been first disclosed along with the colour schemes for the other nine Formula 1 outfits at F175.

It comes after a disappointing year for Aston Martin, as it finished fifth in the 2024 constructors’ standings with no podiums having claimed eight of them in 2023.

“We learnt a lot in 2024 and the team have been using that as a driving force as we head into this season with the AMR25,” said its driver Fernando Alonso.

“The competition is going to be very tight in the last year of the current regulations, but I know the team have been working hard at the AMRTC to make sure we are ready.”

His teammate Lance Stroll added: “Everyone at the AMRTC has put in a lot of work over the winter to improve for 2025. As a team, we all want to perform well and we will continue to learn over the course of the year.

“What we are building here is such an exciting project with great tools and talented people, and 2025 is a key year for us to make progress.”

Aston Martin views the upcoming campaign as one where it must demonstrate to owner Lawrence Stroll that it will not go backwards having fallen away since the start of 2023 and in the AMR25 that its technical team has taken onboard the feedback from Alonso and Stroll Jr.

In particular, the team has wanted to address the low-speed corner handling and through-corner balance for its drivers.

The AMR25 is also the first Aston Martin to really benefit from the team’s rebuilt and expanded factory situated across the road from British Grand Prix venue, Silverstone.

At F1 75, new team boss Andy Cowell – the ultra-successful ex-Mercedes engine chief – was keen to highlight to the assembled media that the reworked factory has meant the AMR25 spent longer being designed before going into production compared to its predecessors.

This should benefit Aston Martin in its new design being that bit more mature regarding its development before even being assembled for the first time.

Alonso and Stroll will complete a filming day with the AMR25 on Monday – alongside Mercedes and its W16 challenger – in Bahrain ahead of 2025 pre-season testing starting at the Sakhir track on the 26-28 February.