Across Japan, the pretty pale pink petals of the Sakura tree have become nature’s way of signalling that spring has officially come.
As the season that follows the cold and dark days of winter, spring is celebrated for how it promises new beginnings and opportunities.So as Formula 1 arrived at the Suzuka International Racing Course in the month of April for the first time ever, the cherry blossoms could have been taken as a good omen. With Red Bull suffering a rear defeat in the previous round in Australia following Max Verstappen’s early brake failure and Sergio Perez’s lack of race pace, would they prove vulnerable again at one of the truly great and challenging circuits on the calendar?
On Saturday, Red Bull’s first front row lock-out in over a year appeared to have answered that question with a resounding ‘no’.
The earlier slot for the race had brought cooler temperatures across the opening two days as track temperatures never breached 30C on Friday or Saturday. Early forecast midweek had left the possibility of rain open, but as the drivers sat on the grid, the track was over 40C. A race that was already tough on tyres would see drivers facing an even greater challenge.
Ten of the first 11 cars on the grid left the dummy grid sporting fresh medium tyres – Alonso the only rebel having fitted softs. But seven of the lowest nine drivers had joined him and were eager to make the most of what should hopefully be superior traction to the cars ahead of them at the start.
Back in the pack, however, the two RBs of Yuki Tsunoda and Daniel Ricciardo were swamped by the soft started behind them. Ricciardo looked to his inside mirror at Lance Stroll threateningly close behind him, but then a moment later something suddenly sent him spinning and skidding through the outside gravel trap and into the tyre wall. That something was Alexander Albon’s Williams.
“I don’t think Daniel saw me and then it was just a bit of a pinching moment,” Albon later explained. “I tried to back out of it but I couldn’t quite get out of the way quick enough.”
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Ricciardo’s collision put him out on the spot, while Albon’s did a number on the tyre wall as well as his Williams. Despite the visible damage to the structure, racing continued for almost 20 more seconds before race director Niels Wittich red flagged proceedings. The field crawled back to the pits to line up, with many drivers seeking the shade of the pit building as they did so.
The restart provided much the same outcome as the initial one. Despite some wheelspin as he punched through the lower gears, Verstappen had enough room to hog the inside line from his team mate to again keep his lead through turn one. The only position change in the top ten came when Leclerc boldly swept around the outside of Hamilton at turn three for seventh, appearing to make slight contact with the Mercedes as he did so.
Further back, tenth-placed Nico Hulkenberg’s Haas sank like a stone down the order after a poor getaway. This caused some drama for those driving around him as both Alpines of Pierre Gasly and Esteban Ocon clashed together on the run to turn one, giving the team mates bad enough damage that would ultimately doom them both to a lonely race at the back.
At the end of the first racing lap, Verstappen’s lead over Perez sat at just under a second with Norris and Sainz still fourth and fifth while Alonso retained fifth on his soft tyres. Perez kept the gap at around a second until lap six, when Perez ran just slightly wide at the exit of the second Degner, roughly riding the jagged kerbing as he did so. That minor blip cost Perez over a second to his team mate, but Norris behind was not able to take advantage and put the second Red Bull under any pressure.
Hamilton was still in touch of Leclerc ahead of him, but team mate Russell behind was closer. The touch with Leclerc at the restart, Hamilton believed, may have left him with minor damage and he realised he was likely not going to be his team’s sharpest weapon over the rest of the race. He offered to allow Russell through, before doing so approaching the chicane.
With Verstappen’s lead now at five seconds, his two closest pursuers, Perez and Sainz, both pitted for mediums at the end of lap 15. But when they emerged, Norris was ahead of the Red Bull with the two Mercedes between them, which Perez first had to dispatch through back-to-back passes at 130R before he could close up on the McLaren. Verstappen also made his first stop for another set of mediums on the next lap, successfully keeping ahead of the McLaren driver before setting off in chase of Leclerc who, not for the first time, was attempting to do something different to the cars around him by extending his first stint.
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Verstappen sailed by the Ferrari to reclaim his lead at the start of lap 21, before Perez took back his second place from Norris on the following lap. Luckily for Perez, he wouldn’t have to work hard to get by Leclerc himself as the Ferrari made an exaggerated version of the same error Perez had committed earlier by running wide at the second Degner. That was enough for Ferrari to finally bring him in for hard tyres to last the remaining 26 laps.
Verstappen’s advantage out front was now at ten seconds over Perez. The leader had made a minor front wing adjustment during his first stop, which had only increased his confidence in the car.
“Basically after the first stint, some tiny adjustments were made to the car and that helped me then to feel even more comfortable and whenever I needed to go faster, I could,” he explained after the race. “Whenever I needed to look after my tyres, I could. That’s always a very nice feeling to have once you’re driving.”
Perez pitted first of the Red Bulls once more as they switched onto the hards for their final stints of the race. That handed the lead over to Sainz while Perez dropped behind Norris and Leclerc who was now in the thick of his long second stint trying to get to the end of the race. Perez quickly picked off the two pretenders over consecutive laps to move back behind his team mate, before Sainz eventually came in for his second stop and fell down to seventh.
One-stopper Leclerc naturally began to fall away from the Red Bulls, with Norris also following suit with equally old rubber. With Verstappen and Perez appearing in total control out front, the real intrigue was who would finish behind them – and Sainz was best placed to attack.
Russell’s second stop gifted Sainz sixth, then passed Hamilton on track for fifth before Hamilton had the opportunity to make his own switch onto the mediums. Sainz had 16 laps left to make up six seconds on Norris and then get by his team mate to secure a podium.
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With Sainz approaching, Norris was the next to make a slight error at the exit of Degner 2. He resignedly warned his team that the Ferrari driver would “easily pass me” and so it would prove when, on lap 44, Sainz breezed by in the sole DRS zone to take fourth. Soon after, Ferrari cautioned Leclerc to “not lose time with Sainz” due to the threat of Norris behind and he duly moved aside with eight laps remaining to usher Sainz through and up into third.
Stalking the McLaren along the back straight and through 130R, Russell attempted a bold pass from more than a car-length behind into the final chicane. While he made the apex, Piastri skipped the final part of the chicane after the pair made slight contact in the right-hander, keeping his position. The stewards would deem it all fair enough in a post-race investigation, but Russell was now even more determined to get by.
He had to wait until the final lap of the race to do it, but by then Piastri’s defences were exhausted. He drove around the McLaren along the pit straight, even with Piastri having the advantage of DRS of his own, taking seventh from him as he did so.
But while this battle for six points had raged, there had been no doubt over who would be taking home the full 25 – and even the bonus point for fastest lap. After Red Bull’s lowest scoring round in over two years in Melbourne, Verstappen had not just returned to winning ways instantly, but Perez’s performance over the weekend had seemingly thwarted any hopes that Albert Park was a sign their dominance may be about to wane.
“Of course, Melbourne felt like a bit of a hiccup but what we did today, that’s what we want to do,” Verstappen said. “And that’s what we aim to do every single weekend.”
Perez was 12 seconds behind his team mate at the flag – securing a third one-two for Red Bull in the first four rounds. While not able to challenge Verstappen for victory, he felt he at least understood why.
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“Unfortunately, I think we got caught out with the increase of temperature,” he explained. “I think with the balance, we just couldn’t get on top of that in the first stint, which meant that the degradation was a little bit higher.”
“I was hopeful of achieving a podium that in the end we managed to achieve, even if it was a very tough race, very strategic,” said Sainz. “At one point, I thought the podium wasn’t possible, but then with a new hard, the pace was mega and I could get back onto the podium.”
Leclerc’s fourth place after his one-stop strategy prompted a conflict of emotions from the Ferrari driver as the congratulations from his team after the chequered flag were met with radio silence until he was informed he had been voted Driver of the Day. “I thought we could’ve done something better at one point,” he eventually replied. “But that’s life.”
The sakura around Suzuka had failed to usher in the change that many might’ve hoped to see, with Red Bull coming away from Japan looking as strong as they ever have in the early part of 2023. But while Verstappen was naturally happy to be leaving Japan with a full quota of points and an extended championship lead following his failure to finish in the last round, he did at least offer some hope to his rivals that they would not always be as strong as they had been over this weekend.
“I know there will be tracks coming up that might not be so favourable for us,” he said. “But then, of course, when we do get to tracks where we know that we can be quick, we have to really take advantage of it and score the maximum amount of points as a team, and that’s what we’ll continue to try and do.”
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2024 Japanese Grand Prix
- “Am I in a race here or what?”: How Ferrari aced their Suzuka strategies
- Suzuka showed Mercedes “have a more stable platform” now
- Ferrari’s strategy gains in 2024 are “purely down to the car” – Sainz
- Tsunoda ‘at Verstappen and Alonso’s level’ with Suzuka performance – Marko
- Japan was first race where Red Bull’s winning margin was bigger than last year
F1 race reviews
- Norris achieves feat which eluded Hamilton by taking McLaren to constructors’ title
- Verstappen masters race track and rule book with satisfying Qatar victory
- Russell strikes gold in Vegas as Verstappen’s title comes at a canter
- Verstappen counters critics with champion’s drive in soaking Sao Paulo
- Sainz seizes swansong Ferrari win as Perez endures home race horror show
Sonny Crockett (@sonnycrockett)
8th April 2024, 7:45
Yaaaaaaaaaaaawwwwwwwwwwwnnnnnnnn!!!
Retired (@jeff1s)
8th April 2024, 11:27
After the race summary and the race analysis, here comes the race report. Can’t wait for the race summary report.
Nick T.
8th April 2024, 14:10
Yes. It seems like slight variations of the same article keep getting published.
Coventry Climax
8th April 2024, 15:03
And for the race summary analysis report, and let’s also not forget the race summary analysis statistics report, although these offer less room for poetic language.
Coventry Climax
8th April 2024, 10:56
I won’t buy the book or a ticket to the movie made out of it, sorry.
Fer no.65 (@fer-no65)
8th April 2024, 11:39
Some negativity above. I think it was a great race. Sure the winner was predictable, but as a race it was enjoyable. There were battles all through the grid with different strategies and on track action.
Yes (@come-on-kubica)
8th April 2024, 11:44
I think this era of cars has beaten the fans badly into thinking this was good. Poor cars, poor tyres and predictable running order even with the difference in strategies.
Fer no.65 (@fer-no65)
8th April 2024, 22:45
My childhood was spent watching cars running very far appart from each other in the late 90s early 2000s so sorry if this race felt more exciting.
I’d ditch the DRS tho. That’s just a buzz killer.
BasCB (@bascb)
8th April 2024, 14:58
I agree, I had a lot of fun seeing the battles through the field, with Sainz, Tsunoda and Stroll pulling off pretty amazing moves, Perez making a few really solid ones and the defense against Russel Alonso (and Piastri) gave us towards the end also made for a high not in the closing stages.
Especially for Suzuka, this was a better race than average, even more so for a dry race.
Josh (@canadianjosh)
8th April 2024, 22:34
I’m having an incredibly hard time tuning into this predictable Red Bull domination right now. Japan was the first race I’ve missed in years. The hype of a race weekend is gone. The pre race shows can’t sell the first corner drama anymore because we know what will happen. This Red Bull/ Verstappen dominance is BORING
Esploratore (@esploratore1)
8th April 2024, 23:59
Yes, again I had very low expectations, and given the current situation even if time-wise I could’ve watched the race live, I was not interested, because I cannot speed up the moments where nothing happens, so I just watched the replay later and sent forward 5 sec every time nothing was happening, and that meant I ended up watching at normal speed a good chunk of the race cause there were interesting battles between the cars directly following red bulls, again nothing extraordinary when place number 1 and 2 are locked in, the awesome battle between alonso, piastri and russell for example was for 6th, 7th and 8th place, a bit of a meagre haul when you compare to austin 2018, where we had 3 drivers exactly in the same position (all 3 within 2 sec of each other) but fighting for the win, raikkonen, verstappen and hamilton with hamilton being faster than verstappen, so exact same situation, but much better than circumstances than now.
James Bond (@jamesbond)
9th April 2024, 2:29
Senna winning — Boring
Schumacher winning — Boring
Hamilton winning — Awesome best racing and best driver ever
Verstappen winning — Yaaaaaaaaaaawn
enough said
Moi
9th April 2024, 7:15
Well yes, but His tires were gone and these guys are really fast so ..
RH
9th April 2024, 7:20
Best race so far. Still terribly boring though. I’d take a season like 2019 in a heartbeat.