Welcome to the seventh edition of my F1 driver POWER rankings list. I hope you enjoyed my previous edition after the Azerbaijan Grand Prix but if you didn’t get around to reading it and don’t want any spoilers, you can find it here. Sorry this edition is a bit late, some birthday celebrations got out of hand…
This was by far the best French Grand Prix since its return in 2018 at Paul Richard. While the others were bore-fests, this edition of the race was packed full of excitement, action, and suspense right to the chequered flag. It was also the biggest sign yet that this year’s championship should have the legs to go the distance and has the potential to be the best in years as this traditional Mercedes stronghold was finally breached by the rampaging Red Bull. The strong and changeable winds caused drivers to change their style from lap to lap and helped the effectiveness of the DRS which is a good combination for on-track action. We saw the four-car fight that we have been waiting for all year between Red Bull and Mercedes with Red Bull finally being able to deploy the second car, in this case Perez, to interfere and outfox the Silver Arrows. You really didn’t know which of them would win the race, it was that close. The usual midfield battle ensued behind with McLaren coming out on top and Ferrari having a race to forget. If there can be a good race in France this year, it bodes well for everywhere else and the double header in Austria next should be another cracker with the simple yet effective layout of the Red Bull ring cooking up lots of action in the last couple of years. Can Red Bull extend their advantage even further on home turf? We only have to wait five days to find out.
After French Grand Prix (7 of 23)
1. Max Verstappen (-+)
A clean sweep of pole position, race win and fastest lap for Max at Paul Richard. The Red Bull looked the best car all weekend, especially with Max Verstappen at the wheel. The only real blip on the CV for this weekend was the loss of control into Turn 1 as he lost the backend, had to correct the slide and missed the turn. This relinquished the lead to Lewis Hamilton, but Max would retake it due to the powerful undercut and a fantastic out lap at the first round of pitstops. Once it was looking like the two-stop strategy was going to be quicker due to higher tyre degradation, Red Bull took the initiative and got Max on the faster mediums, even though they gave up track position. This caused the opposite to Barcelona with Max chasing Lewis this time and he retook the lead on the penultimate lap with a calm, consistent stint to haul the Mercedes back into view. The stint of a champion in waiting.
2. Lewis Hamilton (-+)
Hamilton once again recovered from a tricky Friday to stick his Mercedes on the front row. Him and Bottas switched chassis this weekend which put an end to the theories that Bottas’ car was somehow different, causing his bad form, as Lewis was quicker when it counted. He was given a gift by Verstappen at the first corner and did well to build a small gap of three seconds by the first pitstops. However, Mercedes left him out too long and he lost his lead to Verstappen. Once Max made his second stop, it left Hamilton no choice but to stay out and try to eke out the hard tyre to the end of the race, something he could not quite pull off and he had to settle for second. It was a great effort and his ability to keep the tyres in working range despite lots of wear was on full display in the race but it was just not quite enough to keep the Red Bull of Verstappen at bay.
3. Sergio Perez (-+)
This was another great example of why it was the right decision by Red Bull to hire Checo Perez this season. His different strategy – he went nine laps longer than the others – gave Mercedes two things to think about and it got him ahead of Bottas at the end. It also meant that Mercedes couldn’t perform the undercut without going through him, something that wasn’t a problem in Spain. Expect this four-way fight to happen quite often for the rest of the season as Perez seems to have found his consistent race pace in the Red Bull.
4. Lando Norris (+2)
Norris jumps back up to fourth on this list after a fantastic Sunday for the young Brit. He would have been disappointed to start eighth and then lost places at the start to find himself in tenth by the end of Lap 1. However, he was able to keep his tyres going better than those around him to stretch his first stint ten laps longer before putting on the hard tyre. He then carved his way through the pack with some characteristically opportunistic and brave moves to come home fifth with his teammate right behind to complete a great race for McLaren, on the weekend they commemorate Mansour Ojjeh, a long-time investor in McLaren and a big reason for their historical success.
5. Pierre Gasly (+1)
Another points finish for Gasly at his home race with a seventh place. Like I have said before, Q3 and points for the Frenchman are now the norm and expectation. He was frustrated at the end as he lost out to the undercut in the pitstops, and couldn’t get ahead of Ricciardo at the end but it shows his performance levels that seventh in an Alpha Tauri is a disappointment. The Red Bull Gasly is long in the memory now.
6. Charles Leclerc (-2)
A Sunday to forget for Charles Leclerc as the Ferrari ate through its front tyres and he was forced to make two stops, which dropped him to sixteenth by the finish as everyone but Verstappen did one stop. While both Ferraris qualifying in the Top 10 showed that their pace at the street circuits wasn’t a huge fluke, it was not their natural positioning at the moment. With their straight-line speed issues seemingly fixed, it looks like the next problem to deal with is tyre wear. This could be tricky as we head to Austria twice next which can be a tyre killer if the temperatures are high enough.
7. Sebastian Vettel (+1)
That is three points scoring finishes in a row now for Vettel after a tricky start to the season to say the least. He started twelfth but on the hard tyre compared to everyone in front who started on the mediums. It seems like Aston Martin are liking the alternate strategy at the moment as a way of finding their car’s strengths. This strategy was also helped by some bold overtaking by Sebastian, in particular a lovely move around the outside of Ocon at the first corner to get into the points. It looks like Vettel has really turned a corner with this car and it shows, not just in his results but also the lack of errors in his game over the last month.
8. Carlos Sainz (-1)
It was both Ferraris eating through their tyres on Sunday in France. While they qualified really well – Sainz in fifth – their pace dramatically dropped off as the tyres wore down during the race. It didn’t seem like they made any overtakes on Sunday but just kept falling back. This is an issue that needs to be fixed quickly but one that seems to have stumped Ferrari as Matteo Binotto revealed that they don’t yet know why they have such high tyre wear. While Sainz started fifth, he finished out of the points altogether by the flag which did scupper Ferrari’s progress in the fight against McLaren this year. Back to the drawing board for the Ferrari boys and girls as when one problem is fixed, another appears.
9. Fernando Alonso (+2)
Fernando kept the momentum going in France with another very solid all-round performance in France, completely outperforming his teammate for the second race running and in this one both of them finished, just emphasising the point. A Q3 appearance and a points finish are what Alonso expects from himself at this point and he seems to have got up to speed with the current regulations and class of car.
10. Lance Stroll (-+)
This was the second weekend in a row where Lance Stroll wasn’t able to get out of Q1 but this time it wasn’t because he crashed. He seemingly wasn’t able to get a lap in during the heavily interrupted qualifying session and lined up nineteenth for the second weekend in a row. However, this time he was able to make good progress up the field to gain a solitary point for his Aston Martin team. This car seems to be gentle on it’s tyres and the team have used that to good effect, going long in France and then having tyres to attack with at the latter stages.
11. Esteban Ocon (-2)
A sub-optimal weekend for Ocon at his, and the team’s, home Grand Prix. He was knocked out of qualifying in Q2 and was not able to trouble the points on Sunday in fourteenth while his teammate was in the game. This is a peculiar turnaround after a strong run of races for the Frenchman compared to Alonso but I guess blips like this can be expected in such a tight midfield battle. It will be interesting to see the battle between the two teammates during the double header at Austria to see who can assert themselves as the top dog moving forward.
12. Daniel Ricciardo (-+)
Daniel was looking more of his punchy best in France, going from ninth on the grid up to sixth at the flag, with some nice overtaking and good use of the undercut to jump Gasly and Sainz at the first stops. The reason I haven’t moved him this week is that I want to see this type of performance repeated by the Aussie in Austria to see if this is now the Daniel Ricciardo to expect, hoping it wasn’t just a one-off in Paul Richard. His performance boost would solidify McLaren as the bonified third best team in F1.
13. George Russell (+1)
This could well have been Russell’s best performance in F1 so far, we just didn’t see any of it. Twelfth in this Williams around a track that requires good aero, balance and mechanical grip is something to talk about. This result was based on nothing but merit as well, there was no safety car or red flag to bunch up the pack, which makes it even more impressive. He was even able to overtake Tsunoda on track, showing that the Williams may have fixed its drag issues that have plagued them in one-to-one battles the last couple of years (when they have been in them). This should be seen as a massive step forward and hopefully they can build on this to get into the midfield battle more regularly.
14. Valtteri Bottas (+2)
On the face of it, it would look like another weekend where Bottas was beaten by his teammate in qualifying and the race, which he was. However, he gains some respect from me due to his forceful telling off of the team on the strategy. Mercedes have been very conscious of not giving one of their drivers an advantage on strategy or tyres while they have been battling themselves for the title but now they have Red Bull to worry about, they need to ease this policy. Bottas was telling them early on that two stops were the way to go in France and he was right. He was ignored and I think Mercedes cost themselves a double podium. They need Bottas firing on all cylinders if they are going to beat Red Bull in both championships this year and it does sometimes feel like Mercedes forget they have two cars in a race, focusing too much on Hamilton. If only Bottas had put up more of a fight against Verstappen when he came up behind, it looked like he wilted under the pressure to be honest.
15. Kimi Raikkonen (-2)
Apart from an action packed first lap where Kimi overtook multiple cars with some excellent car positioning and forward thinking, it was not a happy weekend for him or Alfa Romeo. Kimi started and finished seventeenth and it is hard to think of anything else more to write at this point. After some early season promise, they are lagging behind the midfield and falling towards the Williams.
16. Yuki Tsunoda (-1)
One step forward, two steps back for Tsunoda at the moment. Another rookie error put him in the barriers during qualifying and required him to start at the back due to a different floor having to be put onto the car. He just needs to put together a quiet, smooth weekend to build his confidence and hopefully two attempts at Austria will give him that. The talent is there, no doubt about it, it just needs to be controlled better and maybe only experience and time will bring that. Patience is key. Him moving to Italy and the Alpha Tauri factory was a good first step.
17. Antonio Giovinazzi (-+)
Antonio beat his teammate which, in qualifying at least, has become a pretty regular occurrence this season but unfortunately for the Italian he fell back in the race from his thirteenth place starting position to come home fifteenth. It was probably a frustrating evening as he wasn’t quite able to close the gap to the battle between Ocon, Russell and Tsunoda in front towards the end.
18. Mick Schumacher (-+)
Mick was able to get out of Q1 for the first time in his career but unfortunately for him it was because he crashed and caused a red flag, which ended the session and put Lance Stroll out. His pace was not really there on Sunday and he was beaten handily by his teammate. This would make a difference if Mick hadn’t beaten his teammate at every race this year. You can forgive Mick for having an off weekend after dominating his teammate so far.
19. Nicolas Latifi (-+)
Latifi’s result wouldn’t have looked out of the ordinary in France if not for his teammate’s outstanding result. While Russell seems to get the best out of the car every week, Latifi just looks like a classic pay driver that won’t last as far as his money. I feel harsh saying it every week, but Nicolas Latifi just is not relevant at the moment.
20. Nikita Mazipin (-+)
Mazipin beat his teammate for the second time in three races which is a start. He also seems to have got his elbows out and as a result we are seeing some fighting spirit from him. This isn’t enough to get off the bottom spot on this list as he also feels like a pay driver which is more of a practical solution to keep the team alive rather than being there on merit. He wasn’t even that good in F2.