F1 Driver POWER Rankings – Styria Edition

Welcome to the eighth edition of my F1 driver POWER rankings list. I hope you enjoyed my previous edition after the French Grand Prix but if you didn’t get around to reading it and don’t want any spoilers, you can find it here

Well that looked pretty ominous. If Mercedes can’t catch up in this development race, and Toto Wolff has already indicated that they wont be bringing any more significant updates to this year’s car – focusing on next years big regulations change – then this championship is Max Verstappen and Red Bull’s to lose. Max never looked in doubt on Sunday as he won in as nearly dominate fashion as modern day f1 allows. It quickly became a two horse race in Austria Part 1, as the championship has, with the usual close midfield battle behind. It was not a classic but a race full of intrigue and some close racing. Lando Norris was my driver of the day as he once again got the most out of that McLaren for a routine fifth place and could have made life much harder for Perez and Bottas. Honourable mention goes to Kimi with a drive to eleventh after starting eighteenth proving the race craft is well and truly still there.

After Stryian Grand Prix (8 of 23)

1. Max Verstappen (-+)

That looked pretty imperious from Max Verstappen. These straight line improvements that Red Bull have made have given them the best overall package in F1 and Max is putting it to good use. This is now 3 wins out of the last 4 and it should really be 4 for 4. He never looked troubled on Sunday and looked the quickest throughout the weekend. He has that feeling about him that Lewis has, you always expect him to go quicker in qualifying when needed and produce. He led from pole and didn’t really look back. Luckily for him, he gets to do it all over again this weekend.

2. Lewis Hamilton (-+)

This is a new feeling for Lewis Hamilton in the turbo hybrid era – he does not have the fastest car. He did however, get the most he could from the weekend with a second place and a fastest lap thanks to a late stop for soft tyres. It is a long season and Hamilton does seem to get better as the season goes on so it is far from over but are Mercedes sacrificing this season for the future?

3. Lando Norris (+1)

I am probably horrendously bias but that was one hell of a drive in Styria for Norris. He seems to love this place – he gained his first podium there last year. He legitimately outqualified a Red Bull to line up third after Bottas’ penalty and was holding off both Perez and Bottas before letting them through to run his own race. Stick a fantastic overtake on Perez into Turn 4 on Lap 1 into the mix and it was a thoroughly impressive weekend, one of many this season.

4. Sergio Perez (-1)

Sergio would be disappointed to miss out on a podium as a slow pitstop, when running in third, meant Bottas was able to get ahead when he made his stop a lap later. He tried the second stop and catch back up on fresher tyres but missed out on the opportunity by about one lap. Perez has now consistently entered the front running battle but his qualifying pace let him down this time.

5. Pierre Gasly (-+)

Pierre keeps his place on this list after getting caught by Leclerc on the way up to Turn 3 on Lap 1, causing a left rear puncture which ripped the rear of his car to pieces and ended his race. He qualified in sixth and only half a tenth off a Red Bull shows that his performance levels have not dropped.

6. Charles Leclerc (-+)

A race of two halves for Charles Leclerc but they happened to be in a 1:70 lap split. It was a clumsy move from Leclerc to cause the contact with Gasly and break his front wing as he tried to get into the Alpha Tauri’s slipstream. He dropped to the back by nineteen seconds but then set to righting his wrong. He climbed back to up to his starting position, seventh, with some great pace and nice overtaking. His strategy seems to have paved the way for the two-stop next week as the tyres are one step softer and he robbed the one stoppers at the edges of the points late on. One point of feedback for Charles moving forward – leave a bit more room when overtaking others, its not worth it.

7. Carlos Sainz (+1)

Carlos had a race to help forget the struggle around Paul Richard last week. He qualified twelfth but drove a really nice race to climb up to sixth by the flag, followed by his teammate. Sainz has turned into a really mature driver who rarely has days when he doesn’t finish ahead of where he started and this Ferrari is a quick car to give him the tools to do it.

8. Sebastian Vettel (-1)

A trickier weekend for Seb Vettel as he missed out on Q3 by just over two tenths of a second to line up fourteenth and didn’t really trouble the points, finishing in twelfth. He doesn’t drop because of the run of results that he has been on and I am trying to not be overly dramatic between these two Austria races.

9. Fernando Alonso (-+)

This is three points scoring finishes in a row for the Spaniard alongside three Q3 appearances. This is the consistent Alonso that F1 fans know and love (well some of them do) and he has shown up his teammate since they signed that long term deal. Another strong drive this weekend rewarded him with two points for ninth and we can expect more of the same at Austria Round 2.

10. Lance Stroll (-+)

Stroll may have pulled off pass of the weekend over Alonso around the outside at Turn 6 on the first lap which was a beauty. This would sum up Stroll’s race as this was all the progress he was going to make, coming home in eighth and collecting four points.

11. George Russell (+2)

As I say I am not going to get overly dramatic about the changes between the Austria double header, I go ahead and promote a driver who didn’t finish the race. Russell missed out on Q3 by 8 thousandths of a second to line up eleventh, outqualifying an Aston Martin, McLaren and Ferrari in the process. He then was running comfortably in eighth, chasing down Alonso before a power unit failure put pay to all his good work. What impressed me the most was that he was in the fight, not just holding people up and actually looking ahead in a Williams which has been the worst car in F1 for three years. He constantly shows up his teammates and surely his first points in a Williams aren’t far away.

12. Daniel Ricciardo (-+)

Despite not qualifying for Q3 again, Daniel Ricciardo was having a good start to the race, finding himself in the points after navigating the first lap but had a power issue that dropped him down to thirteenth and was never able to recover. This was unfortunate as he was making good progress and the result wont look favourably on him but it does not show the whole picture,

13. Esteban Ocon (-2)

Ocon hasn’t been the same driver since he signed that three year contract extension with Alpine. He was knocked out of qualifying in Q1 and was not near the points on Sunday, finishing thirteenth. Alonso is showing that the car is capable of consistant points finishes, Ocon just needs to find that consistency.

14. Valtteri Bottas (-+)

Bottas was the victim of one of the more peculiar penalties in recent times – spinning in the pitlane. This does seem like an incident only Valtteri would get himself in to at the moment. This meant instead of starting second, he started fifth and this kind of ruined his race. He was stuck behind Norris and Perez and watched the front two disappear up the road. He was able to get ahead of both Norris and Perez to take another podium but these small mistakes are still costing Bottas dearly.

15. Yuki Tsunoda (+1)

This is the sort of weekend, if not better, that should be expected of Yuki Tsunoda in this car. He just missed out on Q3 but then got himself in the points with tenth after running in the points for most of the race. He was even very close to nabbing Alonso’s ninth place but just ran out of laps.

16. Kimi Raikkonen (-1)

Kimi produced a quality drive that was unfortunately not rewarded with points after he was caught by the charging Charles Leclerc with ten laps to go. He started eighteenth and finished eleventh which I feel Kimi does pretty much every week. They need to sort out their qualifying performance so they don’t have to pull so much back in the race.

17. Antonio Giovinazzi (-+)

Antonio was unlucky to be caught up in the Lap 1 scrap as he was caught and spun by Gasly at Turn 3 which put him to the back and he never really recovered, finishing in his starting spot – fifteenth.

18. Mick Schumacher (-+)

Another race, another commanding performance over his teammate and this time easily finished ahead of Latifi, after his puncture on Lap 1. The Haas is barely visible during the race weekend so we only have the stats to tell us how they went and this went resoundingly to Schumacher.

19. Nicolas Latifi (-+)

Another driver unlucky to be caught up in the Lap 1 incident as Latifi was also clipped by Gasly but given a puncture as well. He limped back to the pits and was only able to beat Mazipin to the line while his teammate continues to shine well up the field.

20. Nikita Mazipin (-+)

Even his team boss is taking the piss out of him in regard to the ‘Mazispin’ memes that are going around. It is good he has a sense of humour about it, but hey, he is a billionaire F1 driver, so not much to be unhappy about in that department.

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