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With the Dutchman’s dominance having reduced the remainder of this season to an extended victory lap, the main issues at hand are either political – see this week’s fallout over Red Bull’s penalty – or the philosophical: ie working out Verstappen’s place in the pantheon. To that end, a win in Mexico City tonight would see him eclipse the record of Michael Schumacher and Sebastian Vettel with two meetings to go. Not half bad.
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A strange quirk amid Verstappen’s season of supremacy is his relative paucity of pole positions – six so far – but even that sliver of hope was not afforded to his rivals yesterday as he roared through an impressive final lap to secure pole by 0.304secs – a display that will have done little for his rivals’ flagging morale.
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That said, Mercedes, whose season never recovered from the early derailment – bouncing, porpoising and all that – will be quietly confident going into this race after seeing their drivers qualify in second and third. With the pressure off and the technical issues allaying – both drivers raving about the car yesterday – will Mercedes make a statement of intent ahead of next season?
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Meanwhile, Ferrari face an uphill battle with Charles Leclerc starting seventh – the first time he’s been outside the top three since Canada – and Carlos Sainz fifth. Sergio Perez will begin his home race from P4 in front of a packed house of revering fans. Can he give them a race to remember?
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Lights out 8pm GMT.
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Key events
Lap 35/71: Russell finally pits and comes out with hards, as Hamilton did. Hamilton is now restored to second, and has been matching Verstappen pace since coming out of the pits.
Lap 34/71: Norris pits and opts for hards. “We are good on any tyre today, the car feels good,” breezes Alonso. Meanwhile the current leader is feeling confident. “Let’s put softs on at the end,” says Russell. “We need to go very long to make that work,” comes the reply.
Lap 33/71: So Russell has inherited the lead, trailed by Verstappen, Hamilton and Perez, who have all pitted. Both Ferraris now head in.
Lap 31/71: Verstappen turns the radio waves blue with some gripes about his gear shifts. Then Hamilton ducks into the pits from leads and comes out with a set of hards. Is he aiming for a one-stopper?
Lap 28/71: The volume in the stands increases tenfold as Perez attacks Leclerc and makes the move stick – he now splits the Ferraris in P5.
Lap 26/71: Red Bull go again, beckoning Verstappen into the pits – and this time they nail it, the Dutchman emerging ahead of the Ferraris in third. Hamilton now leads followed by his teammate Russell. Your move, Mercedes.
Lap 24/71: Perez pits first, and it’s a wince-inducing five-second extravaganza. He returns to the fray in sixth, with a new set of mediums, behind the Ferrari duo.
Lap 23/71: Verstappen is complaining about bouncing, though any discomfort he’d feeling has not been reflected in the first third of the race, throughout which he has maintained a stead lead. And Ferrari are being shut out of the race here with Sainz and Leclerc languishing in P5 and 6.
Lap 21/71: Leclerc, stuck in traffic in sixth and making little headway, has asked for Plan C – whatever that is. Russell meanwhile is very slowly eating away at the gap between him and Perez, which is now around a second and a half.
Lap 18/71: The gaps are opening up now: Verstappen leads Hamilton by two seconds, Hamilton leads Perez by three. Gasly will get a 5sec penalty for forcing Stroll off the track as he went past him for 15th.
Lap 15/71: Verstappen says he’s struggling for grip – as does Stroll – but holds a 1.75sec lead over Hamilton, who right now does not look like narrowing the gap.
Lap 14/71: Bottas, who has lost three places in the early stages, attacks Alonso for P7 but the Spaniard fends him off and sneaks out of DRS range.
Lap 12/71: Word on the grapevine – AKA the Mercedes radio – is that Perez is struggling with his rear tyres. Interesting … what does that mean for the rest of the drivers?
Lap 9/71: Ricciardo snaffles up DRS on the straight and streaks past Zhou for P12. Up top, the gaps between Verstappen, Hamilton and Perez are staying sread at about 1.5secs each.
Lap 6/71: “You’re in a very good position here,” Bottas is told over the radio. “Plan A… you need to stick to Plan A.” Would that mean a one-stopper?
Lap 4/71: Verstappen is well clear of DRS range of Hamilton, who is now looking over his shoulder at a hellbent Perez.
Lap 2/71: Perez also managed to get past Russell, who’s dropped two places to fourth, while Leclerc sees of Bottas for P6. Stroll has jumped five places to P15.
Lap 1/71: Verstappen gets the start he wanted – away like lightning. Perez tries a move from wide, Russell responds, but by doing so is dragged wide and loses a place to his teammate Hamilton, who has begun with intent.
And we’re off!
The drivers scurry off for the formation lap. Not long now …
How they start
1 Max Verstappen (Red Bull)
2 George Russell (Mercedes)
3 Lewis Hamilton (Mercedes)
4 Sergio Perez (Red Bull)
5 Carlos Sainz Jnr (Ferrari)
6 Valtteri Bottas (Alfa Romeo)
7 Charles Leclerc (Ferrari)
8 Lando Norris (McLaren)
9 Fernando Alonso (Alpine
10 Esteban Ocon (Alpine)
11 Daniel Ricciardo (McLaren)
12 Guanyu Zhou (Alfa Romeo)
13 Yuki Tsunoda (AlphaTauri)
14 Pierre Gasly (AlphaTauri)
15 Mick Schumacher (Haas)
16 Sebastian Vettel (Aston Martin)
17 Alexander Albon (Williams)
18 Nicholas Latifi (Williams)
19 Kevin Magnussen (Haas)
20 Lance Stroll (Aston Martin)
Kevin Magnussen has had an issue with his car – a loose rear tyre, apparently – but all seems to be well now. He went back into the garage for a while but has been given the all-clear.
And a happy Día de Muertos to you
Fernando Alonso is feeling bullish. “I’ve been not so good normally in Mexico on the first couple of laps. Hopefully today we overtake Lando [Norris, ahead of him in P8], especially starting on the clean side, but then it’s going to be a very long race. Temperature, brakes – it’s going to be very demanding.”
A reminder of this week’s off-track fallout:
It’s Charles Leclerc’s 100th grand prix today. The previous 99 have brought five wins, eight in second place and 10 in third. What chances of a 23rd podium finish in Mexico City?
All set for another Verstappen victory? Not so fast: the last time a driver won from pole was way back when in 2016, when Hamilton took victory. In fact, that was the last time the pole-sitter here finished on the podium, that long run to turn one adding an element of glorious chaos.
The Checo-worship is up and running:
Preamble
How do you measure greatness? On the one hand, it’s one of sport’s great unanswerables. On the other hand, clocking up the most wins in an F1 season would go some way to making Max Verstappen’s case.
With the Dutchman’s dominance having reduced the remainder of this season to an extended victory lap, the main issues at hand are either political – see this week’s fallout over Red Bull’s penalty – or the philosophical: ie working out Verstappen’s place in the pantheon. To that end, a win in Mexico City tonight would see him eclipse the record of Michael Schumacher and Sebastian Vettel with two meetings to go. Not half bad.
A strange quirk amid Verstappen’s season of supremacy is his relative paucity of pole positions – six so far – but even that sliver of hope was not afforded to his rivals yesterday as he roared through an impressive final lap to secure pole by 0.304secs – a display that will have done little for his rivals’ flagging morale.
That said, Mercedes, whose season never recovered from the early derailment – bouncing, porpoising and all that – will be quietly confident going into this race after seeing their drivers qualify in second and third. With the pressure off and the technical issues allaying – both drivers raving about the car yesterday – will Mercedes make a statement of intent ahead of next season?
Meanwhile, Ferrari face an uphill battle with Charles Leclerc starting seventh – the first time he’s been outside the top three since Canada – and Carlos Sainz fifth. Sergio Perez will begin his home race from P4 in front of a packed house of revering fans. Can he give them a race to remember?
Lights out 8pm GMT.