F1 2022

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Hamilton has now put in 20 laps on his current run, using the Hard tyres, and the Mercedes driver has improved to a 1:23.030.

Ricciardo is also on track running the Medium compound.

Perez sets a lap of 1:20.452 on the Medium tyre, with the lap times edging ever closer to those we saw in this morning's session.

Hamilton returns to the pits after a run of 27 laps, which included two short pit-stops to change tyres. The Briton seems to be getting far more laps in today than during his appearance in yesterday's morning session.
 

Several teams unable to run this afternoon​

Aston Martin join Alpine and Haas as teams unable to participate in this afternoon's session due to earlier issues.
There has also been no sign so far of AlphaTauri after Gasly went off track in the car this morning.
 

Further improvement for Ricciardo​

Ricciardo sets a lap of 1:20.790, putting him up to seventh on the timesheets. It will be interesting to see how much further the times comes down in the remaining hour and a half of this session.

Albon has the circuit to himself at the moment, with the Williams driver 13 laps into his run on the Medium tyres.

He remains P5 on the timesheets, having set the fastest time of this afternoon's session so far.
 

Albon joined by Hamilton​

Albon is no longer alone on track, with Hamilton also now on circuit. The Mercedes driver is two laps into a run on the Hard tyres.
 

Hamilton flying!​

He's gone purple in sector one...
He's was up in sector one but he's not improved on Russell's sector two time...
It's a new personal best for Hamilton, but he's still not as quick as his teammate. He is on the Soft tyres (C4) and puts in a 1:19.674. Mercedes and Red Bull now share the top four spots on the timesheets.
 

The fastest man on track today​

MP9_2540_2022-02-24-211204_kiev.jpg
 

Steiner reveals who would have 'first call' over Haas seat​

Haas team boss Guenther Steiner has confirmed who will be first preference for Haas if the team need to find a stand-in driver for Nikita Mazepin in the near future.
With economic sanctions being placed on Russia in light of the country beginning military action in Ukraine, Haas have opted to pull their Uralkali branding from their cars, team trucks and social media. Uralkali are a Russian potash fertiliser company and exporter, and are the personal backers of Mazepin.
Should Haas be forced to give up their Uralkali sponsorship, or visa restrictions prevent Mazepin from entering certain countries, the team may need to find a replacement driver – whether temporary or permanent.

Fittipaldi would get the call up for Haas​

With Haas having an official reserve driver on their books, Steiner explained that it would be Pietro Fittipaldi who gets the call if required.
"If Nikita couldn't drive for whatever reason, the first call would go to Pietro," Steiner confirmed during a broadcast with Speed City's Bob Varsha.
"He's [been] with us for a few years and then we would see what to do next."
Fittipaldi has been a long-term reserve for Haas and drove for the team in the final two races of the 2020 season as a replacement for the injured Romain Grosjean.
"Pietro's always around with us for that reason," Steiner added.
"In the last two years, with COVID around, we needed a reserve driver. So he's always around – he knows the team, he knows the car. To jump in from one day to the other, there is no nobody better than Pietro around at the moment."

Steiner: Everybody supports our decisions​

With Haas running a plain white livery for Friday's running in Barcelona, having elected to pull their Uralkali branding, Steiner explained how he and team owner Gene Haas had come to the decision to change their livery.
"Yesterday morning, Gene and I were at breakfast and we discussed the situation, what happened during the night," he said.
"We just discussed it and talked it through and then you digest it. Then, when we got into the track, some of the partners told us they were unhappy with the situation, but they were behind us.
"We sat down with Gene and we just decided to take it off. It was very, very simple, because I think that is what we should have done and have done."
As for what the reaction in the paddock has been to Haas having to take such drastic action, Steiner said the other teams are very supportive.
He added: "I think everybody supports us. Everybody supports the action – we didn't have any negatives from it."
With F1 pre-season testing getting underway in Barcelona this week, our journalists Dieter Rencken, Mike Seymour and Thomas Maher look ahead to what to expect.
 
Almost wore out the report button there.

Pretty decent coverage of the "non-testing testing" that happened these last couple weeks. Quite enjoyed the brief bits we saw.

I'm curious how closely the times shown here will mirror the actual pace of the cars come proper testing. I reckon Merc, RB, McLaren and Ferrari will be top 4 but I'm curious about the rest.

Also excited to see Fittipaldi in the Haas.
 
Almost wore out the report button there.

Pretty decent coverage of the "non-testing testing" that happened these last couple weeks. Quite enjoyed the brief bits we saw.

I'm curious how closely the times shown here will mirror the actual pace of the cars come proper testing. I reckon Merc, RB, McLaren and Ferrari will be top 4 but I'm curious about the rest.

Also excited to see Fittipaldi in the Haas.
If you look 2021 and compare the pre-season testing lap times to the qualifying times of same track then lap times are anywhere from -6 to +2 seconds for each driver.
 
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