Five winners and five losers from F1’s Austrian Grand Prix

The Austrian Grand Prix was overshadowed by a plethor🤡a of contentious penꦚalties but proved to be another decisive moment in the 2021 Formula 1 title race.
Max Verstappen moved into control of the F1 championship with a comfortable and convincing victory at the second race to be held at the Red Bull Ring, while Lewis Hamilton endured a difficult afternoon as lost yet more crucial ground to hi♏s main rival.
Here are our winners and losers from F1’s Austrian Grand💟 Prix…
Winners
Max Verstappen
A dream day for Verstappen, who has extended his points adva꧋ntage over Ha🦩milton to 32 points with his first career grand slam.
Austria marked a hat-trick of wins for Verstappen which has put the Dutchman in a truly commanding position at the top of the drivers’ standings after nine races of what i🅘s scheduled to be a 23-round campaign.
Verstappen was in a league of his own for the second race running and leaves F1’s first triple-header of 2021 riding a huge crest of momen﷽tum at a key stage in the season.

Valtteri Bottas
It was a good day in the office for Bottas. The Finn extracted the maximum out o🌟f his Mercedes and had more pace than Hamilton in the second stint as he closed onto the gearbox of his struggling Mercedes before eventually being allowed through into second.
Given Mercedes’ sigꦫnificant pace deficit to Red Bull in Austria, there was little more that could be achieved than a distant P2 behind Verstappen and that’s exactly what Bottas delivered.
These are the sorts of performances Bottas needs to be turning in every weekend if he is to persuade Mercඣedes he should b🅰e retained for another season.
Lando Norris
Lando Norris produced another outstanding display all weekend long at the second Red Bull Ring race as he followed up a sꦗtunning qualifying lap with a third podium finish of the season.
Despite being left baffled by a five-second penalty for squeezing Sergio Perez’s Red Bull off the track at Turn 4 early on, the McLaren driver bounc𓆉ed back impressively to finish just behind 🎐Bottas’ Mercedes.
Norris demonstrated pace that matched the Mercedes and his bold lunge on Hamilton into Tur🧜n 6 was sensational, earning him justified praise from his fellow countryman.

Fernando Alonso
Fernando Alonso once again comprehensively outclassed Alpine teammate Esteban Ocon in Austria♉ and looked to have the pace to factor well inside the✅ top 10 in qualifying.
Alonso was convinced his weekend had been ruined by Sebastian Vettel’s block in qualifying that leꦡft him 14th on the grid, but the two-time world champion turned in a typically gladiatorial drive to finish in the points.
The Spaniard hunted down George Russel in the closing stages and꧂ pulled off a great overtake on the Williams driver into Turn 4 with five laps remaining to snatch the final point on offer in 10th.
Carlos Sainz

Ferrari’s gamble to sacrifice a spot in Q3 in qualifying for a free tyre choice paid off for Carlos Sainz, who was the only driver to start the race on hard tyres.
Sainz passed Yuki Tsunꦑoda’s AlphaTau🎃ri, Ferrari teammate Charles Leclerc and McLaren’s Daniel Ricciardo in the second half of the race as he battled his way into the points.
The Spaniard crossed the line in sixth but was close enough to Serg🅰io Perez to ensure he inherited P5 when the Red Bull ♛driver’s 10s time penalty was applied.
Losers
Lewis Hamilton
Another tough weekend for Hamilton, who had little to celebrate at꧑ the end of a weekend he signed a new twꦅo-year deal with Mercedes.

The seven-time world champion looked likely to complete a damage limitation job when he was running second behinꦬd Verstappen before sustaining damage that ruined his race and left him limping home to a distant fourth-place finish.
Now over 30 points behind Verstappen, Hamilton badly needs to hit back on home soil next time at out Silverstone, where he will backed by a capacity croꦜwd. If he cannot win there, his title hopes will start to൩ look in serious trouble.
Sergio Perez
After some recent strong performances for Red Bull, Perez had a scruffy race ꦅat the team’s home event.
An over-ambitious attempt t❀o pass Norris resulted in Perez being forced int💜o the gravel and dropping to 10th. The Mexican later clashed with Leclerc twice and ended up being slapped with a 10-second time penalty.
To rub salt int🐭o the wounds, Perez narrowly lost out on P5 to Sainz at the ch꧂equered flag.

George Russell
Another opportunity to ▨break his Williams 🐬points duck went begging in Austria for George Russell.
Russell delivered Williams’ first Q3 appearance in nearly three years on Saturday and ꦕstarted eighth, but he fell to 12th on the opening lap as he avoided a locked-up Tsunoda on the run to Turn 1.
Having risen back up to 10th in the closing stages, Russell eventually lost out on the final point to Alonso despite a heroic effo🦄rt during their late hard-fought battle.

Aston Martin
A disappointing and point-less race for Aston Martin as Lance St💖roll fe🅠ll out of contention starting on soft tyres and was later penalised for speeding in the pitlane.
Things went little better for teammate Sebastian Vettel, with the four-ti💞me world champion wiped out of 12th place on the final lap🏅 by Kimi Raikkonen as he made slow progress towards the points.
With P🌊ierre Gasly finishing ninth for nearest rivals AlphaTauri, Aston Martin has fallen four points behind in the battle for fifth place in the championship.
Yuki Tsunoda
Tsu🔜noda’s excellent qualifying performance was let down🦩 by a poor race.
The Japanese rookie clumsily picked up two five-se𒈔cond time penalties for crossing the white line at the pit lane entrance not once, but twice.
Making such a basic error twice on the same day was sloppy and 𝄹showed that Tsunoda still꧟ has work to do to improve his concentration and focus.


Lewis regularly attends Grands Prix for wuqian0821.com around the world. Often reporting on the action from the ground, Lewis tells the stories 🌃of the people who matter in the sport.