Hamilton: We haven't taken a step forward yet

Lewis Hamilton bemoaned his sixth-placed finish at the Miami Grand Prix and hinted that his car was damaged early on.

Hamilton started in sixth on the grid after an impressive resurgence from the Mercedes team who have had a miserable start to the campaign.

Alterations to the car’s front and rear wing appeared to have the Mercedes running behind Ferrari and Red Bull but ahead of the rest of the Formula One pack, and Hamilton ended up in sixth, usurped by his teammate George Russell, who finished fifth.

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Russell overtook the seven-time champion towards the end of the race as he benefited from the safety car coming out at just the right time to let him swap over his hard tyres without losing track position.

Hamilton however had more bad luck, as he was clipped in the opening stages when Fernando Alonso brushed wheels with him.

The Briton was insistent that he had incurred damage, though communication from his team claimed that there was no under-performance showing on their data.

Speaking after the race, Hamilton reaffirmed his opinion, saying: “The car definitely didn’t feel the same as it did, I’m sure they’ll check it. It was quite a hard hit but otherwise it will be ok. We’ve got good points as a team today. We’ll take it and move on.”

He also complained that the safety car interrupted his race, and hinted that he expects an improved showing in the next Grand Prix in Spain on May 22.

“In that scenario I have no clue where everyone is, that’s what you rely on the guys for,” he stated.

“It’s just been a bit unfortunate with the safety car. I’m excited to take a step forward, which we haven’t done yet.”

Russell was similarly frustrated, and expects better performances to come.

“It was mixed feelings, based on yesterday it was a good result,” Russell said, given he started from 12th. “We have a fast race car in there, we don’t have the key to unlock it. There’s more to do.

“It’s frustrating but I’m sure we’ll get there at some point.

“It’s good, when you battle with your teammate you show more respect, give more space. I enjoyed it. I think there’s good respect between us. I was pushing as hard as I could.

“I didn’t really like the tarmac, what did I like? I liked that we were in Miami.”

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Hamilton: We haven't taken a step forward yet

Lewis Hamilton bemoaned his sixth-placed finish at the Miami Grand Prix and hinted that his car was damaged early on.

Hamilton started in sixth on the grid after an impressive resurgence from the Mercedes team who have had a miserable start to the campaign.

Alterations to the car’s front and rear wing appeared to have the Mercedes running behind Ferrari and Red Bull but ahead of the rest of the Formula One pack, and Hamilton ended up in sixth, usurped by his teammate George Russell, who finished fifth.

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Russell overtook the seven-time champion towards the end of the race as he benefited from the safety car coming out at just the right time to let him swap over his hard tyres without losing track position.

Hamilton however had more bad luck, as he was clipped in the opening stages when Fernando Alonso brushed wheels with him.

The Briton was insistent that he had incurred damage, though communication from his team claimed that there was no under-performance showing on their data.

Speaking after the race, Hamilton reaffirmed his opinion, saying: “The car definitely didn’t feel the same as it did, I’m sure they’ll check it. It was quite a hard hit but otherwise it will be ok. We’ve got good points as a team today. We’ll take it and move on.”

He also complained that the safety car interrupted his race, and hinted that he expects an improved showing in the next Grand Prix in Spain on May 22.

“In that scenario I have no clue where everyone is, that’s what you rely on the guys for,” he stated.

“It’s just been a bit unfortunate with the safety car. I’m excited to take a step forward, which we haven’t done yet.”

Russell was similarly frustrated, and expects better performances to come.

“It was mixed feelings, based on yesterday it was a good result,” Russell said, given he started from 12th. “We have a fast race car in there, we don’t have the key to unlock it. There’s more to do.

“It’s frustrating but I’m sure we’ll get there at some point.

“It’s good, when you battle with your teammate you show more respect, give more space. I enjoyed it. I think there’s good respect between us. I was pushing as hard as I could.

“I didn’t really like the tarmac, what did I like? I liked that we were in Miami.”

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Hamilton says Mercedes car has ‘definitely improved’ after strong Miami showing

After a disappointing start to the F1 season for Lewis Hamilton who has lacked pace so far, the Mercedes driver has admitted the car is improving after clear issues in the opening four Grand Prix’s.

He managed a fourth place finish in the second practice session of the Miami Grand Prix, with team mate George Russell dismantling championship leader Charles Leclerc at the top of the leaderboard.

Despite the strong showing on American soil, the seven-time world champion says he is “still struggling” with the car, but says he can see the car is improving “bit by bit”.

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“It feels similar to me,” Hamilton said. “We seem to be quicker here, and later on they were explaining to us that we definitely have improved in some way – and I’m not exactly sure why that is.

We still have the bouncing, so we haven’t cured it, but bit by bit we’re improving the car.

The fourth place finish for Hamilton indicates there could be a genuine three-team battle for Sunday’s much-anticipated street race.

“There are definitely positive elements to take from today,” Hamilton said.

“I’m still struggling with the car – George [Russell] looked great out there – but we’re trying a lot of different things. We’ll converge and hopefully improve.”

Russell – who currently sits in P1 after the second practice session – is not getting too carried away and also seemed dumbfounded at the car’s sudden improvement.

“I don’t really understand it to be honest, why we’ve hit the ground running,” he admitted.

“We always knew coming into the weekend that the conditions should suit us better, because we’ve been struggling with tyre warm-up. For sure that’s played a big factor, but the car’s working well.

It’s only Friday, we’re not getting too carried away.”

The 24-year-old sits fourth in the overall championship standings, three places ahead of his teammate Hamilton, and admitted the second practice session had been a “really productive” day.

“It’s definitely been a really productive day for us and probably the most productive Friday we’ve had

“You have races where things work in your favour and others where everything works against you. Imola wasn’t the strongest circuit for us but so far from what we see the car is working well around Miami.

Practice means nothing… we go again tomorrow.

Red Bull team principal Christian Horner said it was “only a matter of time” before Mercedes ironed out their problems and began to compete again.

“I have been saying since pre-season it is only a matter of time before they sort themselves out. You can see that is starting to happen,” Horner said.

“The characteristic of this circuit obviously helps as well but you can see they are starting to get on top of their issues and they are looking competitive.”

With the first Miami Grand Prix looming, McLaren’s Lando Norris and Red Bull’s Sergio Perez have criticised the track, claiming several drivers have struggled with the track’s “punishing conditions”.

“It is extremely tricky. It is very bumpy in some areas which is not quite what we were expecting,” Norris said.

“I think everyone was expecting it to be very smooth and beautiful but it’s not.”

Alfa Romeo’s Valtteri Bottas was a victim of the track in th opening practice session after spinning backwards into the tyre barrier at turn seven, damaging his car’s rear wing.

Norris added: “The surface is very tricky as well, because you go off line anywhere and it is pretty much game over and you end up in the wall – it’s punishing let’s say.

“That is why you have seen quite a few people ending up in the barriers. I feel like it isn’t going to be great for racing now. That is the negatives, but the positives are it is still a good track.”

Perez was in agreement with Perez, and admitted he was “really disappointed” with the conditions.

“It’s wet on that side; it feels very gravelly. Racing will be hard. I think it’s going to be an interesting race.

“We are all in the same boat. We don’t know exactly where we are.”

Horner also commented on the track, and said drivers need to find a way to handle the corners.

“There’s only really one line; you go off line and there’s zero grip,” he said.

“That’s going to make racing a little bit tricky but they are finding their way into it and finding the balance and setup compromise for the types of corner that you’ve got here. It’s quite challenging.”

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Hamilton says Mercedes car has ‘definitely improved’ after strong Miami showing

After a disappointing start to the F1 season for Lewis Hamilton who has lacked pace so far, the Mercedes driver has admitted the car is improving after clear issues in the opening four Grand Prix’s.

He managed a fourth place finish in the second practice session of the Miami Grand Prix, with team mate George Russell dismantling championship leader Charles Leclerc at the top of the leaderboard.

Despite the strong showing on American soil, the seven-time world champion says he is “still struggling” with the car, but says he can see the car is improving “bit by bit”.

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“It feels similar to me,” Hamilton said. “We seem to be quicker here, and later on they were explaining to us that we definitely have improved in some way – and I’m not exactly sure why that is.

We still have the bouncing, so we haven’t cured it, but bit by bit we’re improving the car.

The fourth place finish for Hamilton indicates there could be a genuine three-team battle for Sunday’s much-anticipated street race.

“There are definitely positive elements to take from today,” Hamilton said.

“I’m still struggling with the car – George [Russell] looked great out there – but we’re trying a lot of different things. We’ll converge and hopefully improve.”

Russell – who currently sits in P1 after the second practice session – is not getting too carried away and also seemed dumbfounded at the car’s sudden improvement.

“I don’t really understand it to be honest, why we’ve hit the ground running,” he admitted.

“We always knew coming into the weekend that the conditions should suit us better, because we’ve been struggling with tyre warm-up. For sure that’s played a big factor, but the car’s working well.

It’s only Friday, we’re not getting too carried away.”

The 24-year-old sits fourth in the overall championship standings, three places ahead of his teammate Hamilton, and admitted the second practice session had been a “really productive” day.

“It’s definitely been a really productive day for us and probably the most productive Friday we’ve had

“You have races where things work in your favour and others where everything works against you. Imola wasn’t the strongest circuit for us but so far from what we see the car is working well around Miami.

Practice means nothing… we go again tomorrow.

Red Bull team principal Christian Horner said it was “only a matter of time” before Mercedes ironed out their problems and began to compete again.

“I have been saying since pre-season it is only a matter of time before they sort themselves out. You can see that is starting to happen,” Horner said.

“The characteristic of this circuit obviously helps as well but you can see they are starting to get on top of their issues and they are looking competitive.”

With the first Miami Grand Prix looming, McLaren’s Lando Norris and Red Bull’s Sergio Perez have criticised the track, claiming several drivers have struggled with the track’s “punishing conditions”.

“It is extremely tricky. It is very bumpy in some areas which is not quite what we were expecting,” Norris said.

“I think everyone was expecting it to be very smooth and beautiful but it’s not.”

Alfa Romeo’s Valtteri Bottas was a victim of the track in th opening practice session after spinning backwards into the tyre barrier at turn seven, damaging his car’s rear wing.

Norris added: “The surface is very tricky as well, because you go off line anywhere and it is pretty much game over and you end up in the wall – it’s punishing let’s say.

“That is why you have seen quite a few people ending up in the barriers. I feel like it isn’t going to be great for racing now. That is the negatives, but the positives are it is still a good track.”

Perez was in agreement with Perez, and admitted he was “really disappointed” with the conditions.

“It’s wet on that side; it feels very gravelly. Racing will be hard. I think it’s going to be an interesting race.

“We are all in the same boat. We don’t know exactly where we are.”

Horner also commented on the track, and said drivers need to find a way to handle the corners.

“There’s only really one line; you go off line and there’s zero grip,” he said.

“That’s going to make racing a little bit tricky but they are finding their way into it and finding the balance and setup compromise for the types of corner that you’ve got here. It’s quite challenging.”

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Hamilton says Mercedes car has ‘definitely improved’ after strong Miami showing

After a disappointing start to the F1 season for Lewis Hamilton who has lacked pace so far, the Mercedes driver has admitted the car is improving after clear issues in the opening four Grand Prix’s.

He managed a fourth place finish in the second practice session of the Miami Grand Prix, with team mate George Russell dismantling championship leader Charles Leclerc at the top of the leaderboard.

Despite the strong showing on American soil, the seven-time world champion says he is “still struggling” with the car, but says he can see the car is improving “bit by bit”.

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“It feels similar to me,” Hamilton said. “We seem to be quicker here, and later on they were explaining to us that we definitely have improved in some way – and I’m not exactly sure why that is.

We still have the bouncing, so we haven’t cured it, but bit by bit we’re improving the car.

The fourth place finish for Hamilton indicates there could be a genuine three-team battle for Sunday’s much-anticipated street race.

“There are definitely positive elements to take from today,” Hamilton said.

“I’m still struggling with the car – George [Russell] looked great out there – but we’re trying a lot of different things. We’ll converge and hopefully improve.”

Russell – who currently sits in P1 after the second practice session – is not getting too carried away and also seemed dumbfounded at the car’s sudden improvement.

“I don’t really understand it to be honest, why we’ve hit the ground running,” he admitted.

“We always knew coming into the weekend that the conditions should suit us better, because we’ve been struggling with tyre warm-up. For sure that’s played a big factor, but the car’s working well.

It’s only Friday, we’re not getting too carried away.”

The 24-year-old sits fourth in the overall championship standings, three places ahead of his teammate Hamilton, and admitted the second practice session had been a “really productive” day.

“It’s definitely been a really productive day for us and probably the most productive Friday we’ve had

“You have races where things work in your favour and others where everything works against you. Imola wasn’t the strongest circuit for us but so far from what we see the car is working well around Miami.

Practice means nothing… we go again tomorrow.

Red Bull team principal Christian Horner said it was “only a matter of time” before Mercedes ironed out their problems and began to compete again.

“I have been saying since pre-season it is only a matter of time before they sort themselves out. You can see that is starting to happen,” Horner said.

“The characteristic of this circuit obviously helps as well but you can see they are starting to get on top of their issues and they are looking competitive.”

With the first Miami Grand Prix looming, McLaren’s Lando Norris and Red Bull’s Sergio Perez have criticised the track, claiming several drivers have struggled with the track’s “punishing conditions”.

“It is extremely tricky. It is very bumpy in some areas which is not quite what we were expecting,” Norris said.

“I think everyone was expecting it to be very smooth and beautiful but it’s not.”

Alfa Romeo’s Valtteri Bottas was a victim of the track in th opening practice session after spinning backwards into the tyre barrier at turn seven, damaging his car’s rear wing.

Norris added: “The surface is very tricky as well, because you go off line anywhere and it is pretty much game over and you end up in the wall – it’s punishing let’s say.

“That is why you have seen quite a few people ending up in the barriers. I feel like it isn’t going to be great for racing now. That is the negatives, but the positives are it is still a good track.”

Perez was in agreement with Perez, and admitted he was “really disappointed” with the conditions.

“It’s wet on that side; it feels very gravelly. Racing will be hard. I think it’s going to be an interesting race.

“We are all in the same boat. We don’t know exactly where we are.”

Horner also commented on the track, and said drivers need to find a way to handle the corners.

“There’s only really one line; you go off line and there’s zero grip,” he said.

“That’s going to make racing a little bit tricky but they are finding their way into it and finding the balance and setup compromise for the types of corner that you’ve got here. It’s quite challenging.”

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Mercedes’ Russell takes the lead in action-packed Miami practice session

George Russell has taken pole position in FP2, overtaking Ferrari driver Charles Leclerc who had previously topped the standings in the first-ever Miami Grand Prix practice session.

The Mercedes driver set the fastest lap time of 1m 29.938s, to edge ahead of Championship leader Leclerc, who finished 0.106s off the pace.

With track temperatures slightly dropping for the second practice session, drivers began the FP2 race on medium compounds and it was Ferrari’s Carlos Sainz who took the lead on those tyres with a time of 1m 31.463s.

Formula 1

Leclerc quickest at Miami Grand Prix first practice session

YESTERDAY AT 20:10

The first piece of drama came when Sainz brought out the first red flag of the session with 40 minutes remaining, who spun and crashed entering the tight chicane on turn 14.

Red Bull’s Max Verstappen showed clear signs he was struggling with his steering, and in the final sector – without setting a time – called it a day and returned to the pits with a hydraulics issue.

Russell shot to the top of the leaderboard in his upgraded W13 when the soft tyres came into play, recording a lap time of 1m 29.938s – 0.106s faster than FP1 leader Leclerc.

Perez finished third whilst Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton ended in P4, 0.241s behind teammate Russell.

Alpine’s Fernando Alonso looks to lead the midfield after wrapping up the top five, setting a time 0.434s slower than Russell in P1.

McLaren’s Lando Norris ended the day in sixth, 0.597s down on the leader, with AlphaTauri driver Pierre Gasly just behind in P7.

Alfa Romeo’s Valtteri Bottas sat out the session after his FP1 spin, but teammate Zhou Guanyu managed eighth, as Alpine’s Esteban Ocon as Haas’s Kevin Magnussen wrapped up the top ten.

Magnussen’s Haas teammate Mick Schumacher finished in 15th, seven-tenths behind Magnussen, with McLaren’s Daniel Ricciardo, AlphaTauri’s Yuki Tsunoda and Aston Martin’s Sebastian Vettel wedged in between the Haas drivers.

Lower down the pecking order, Lance Stroll managed P16 for Aston Martin after he avoided the slowing of Verstappen early on, ahead of Williams pair Alex Albon and Nicholas Latifi, who finished 17th and 18th respectively.

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Mercedes’ Russell takes the lead in action-packed Miami practice session

George Russell has taken pole position in FP2, overtaking Ferrari driver Charles Leclerc who had previously topped the standings in the first-ever Miami Grand Prix practice session.

The Mercedes driver set the fastest lap time of 1m 29.938s, to edge ahead of Championship leader Leclerc, who finished 0.106s off the pace.

With track temperatures slightly dropping for the second practice session, drivers began the FP2 race on medium compounds and it was Ferrari’s Carlos Sainz who took the lead on those tyres with a time of 1m 31.463s.

Formula 1

Leclerc quickest at Miami Grand Prix first practice session

YESTERDAY AT 20:10

The first piece of drama came when Sainz brought out the first red flag of the session with 40 minutes remaining, who spun and crashed entering the tight chicane on turn 14.

Red Bull’s Max Verstappen showed clear signs he was struggling with his steering, and in the final sector – without setting a time – called it a day and returned to the pits with a hydraulics issue.

Russell shot to the top of the leaderboard in his upgraded W13 when the soft tyres came into play, recording a lap time of 1m 29.938s – 0.106s faster than FP1 leader Leclerc.

Perez finished third whilst Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton ended in P4, 0.241s behind teammate Russell.

Alpine’s Fernando Alonso looks to lead the midfield after wrapping up the top five, setting a time 0.434s slower than Russell in P1.

McLaren’s Lando Norris ended the day in sixth, 0.597s down on the leader, with AlphaTauri driver Pierre Gasly just behind in P7.

Alfa Romeo’s Valtteri Bottas sat out the session after his FP1 spin, but teammate Zhou Guanyu managed eighth, as Alpine’s Esteban Ocon as Haas’s Kevin Magnussen wrapped up the top ten.

Magnussen’s Haas teammate Mick Schumacher finished in 15th, seven-tenths behind Magnussen, with McLaren’s Daniel Ricciardo, AlphaTauri’s Yuki Tsunoda and Aston Martin’s Sebastian Vettel wedged in between the Haas drivers.

Lower down the pecking order, Lance Stroll managed P16 for Aston Martin after he avoided the slowing of Verstappen early on, ahead of Williams pair Alex Albon and Nicholas Latifi, who finished 17th and 18th respectively.

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Mercedes’ Russell takes the lead in action-packed Miami practice session

George Russell has taken pole position in FP2, overtaking Ferrari driver Charles Leclerc who had previously topped the standings in the first-ever Miami Grand Prix practice session.

The Mercedes driver set the fastest lap time of 1m 29.938s, to edge ahead of Championship leader Leclerc, who finished 0.106s off the pace.

With track temperatures slightly dropping for the second practice session, drivers began the FP2 race on medium compounds and it was Ferrari’s Carlos Sainz who took the lead on those tyres with a time of 1m 31.463s.

Formula 1

Leclerc quickest at Miami Grand Prix first practice session

13 HOURS AGO

The first piece of drama came when Sainz brought out the first red flag of the session with 40 minutes remaining, who spun and crashed entering the tight chicane on turn 14.

Red Bull’s Max Verstappen showed clear signs he was struggling with his steering, and in the final sector – without setting a time – called it a day and returned to the pits with a hydraulics issue.

Russell shot to the top of the leaderboard in his upgraded W13 when the soft tyres came into play, recording a lap time of 1m 29.938s – 0.106s faster than FP1 leader Leclerc.

Perez finished third whilst Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton ended in P4, 0.241s behind teammate Russell.

Alpine’s Fernando Alonso looks to lead the midfield after wrapping up the top five, setting a time 0.434s slower than Russell in P1.

McLaren’s Lando Norris ended the day in sixth, 0.597s down on the leader, with AlphaTauri driver Pierre Gasly just behind in P7.

Alfa Romeo’s Valtteri Bottas sat out the session after his FP1 spin, but teammate Zhou Guanyu managed eighth, as Alpine’s Esteban Ocon as Haas’s Kevin Magnussen wrapped up the top ten.

Magnussen’s Haas teammate Mick Schumacher finished in 15th, seven-tenths behind Magnussen, with McLaren’s Daniel Ricciardo, AlphaTauri’s Yuki Tsunoda and Aston Martin’s Sebastian Vettel wedged in between the Haas drivers.

Lower down the pecking order, Lance Stroll managed P16 for Aston Martin after he avoided the slowing of Verstappen early on, ahead of Williams pair Alex Albon and Nicholas Latifi, who finished 17th and 18th respectively.

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Mercedes’ Russell takes the lead in action-packed Miami practice session

George Russell has taken pole position in FP2, overtaking Ferrari driver Charles Leclerc who had previously topped the standings in the first-ever Miami Grand Prix practice session.

The Mercedes driver set the fastest lap time of 1m 29.938s, to edge ahead of Championship leader Leclerc, who finished 0.106s off the pace.

With track temperatures slightly dropping for the second practice session, drivers began the FP2 race on medium compounds and it was Ferrari’s Carlos Sainz who took the lead on those tyres with a time of 1m 31.463s.

Formula 1

Leclerc quickest at Miami Grand Prix first practice session

14 HOURS AGO

The first piece of drama came when Sainz brought out the first red flag of the session with 40 minutes remaining, who spun and crashed entering the tight chicane on turn 14.

Red Bull’s Max Verstappen showed clear signs he was struggling with his steering, and in the final sector – without setting a time – called it a day and returned to the pits with a hydraulics issue.

Russell shot to the top of the leaderboard in his upgraded W13 when the soft tyres came into play, recording a lap time of 1m 29.938s – 0.106s faster than FP1 leader Leclerc.

Perez finished third whilst Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton ended in P4, 0.241s behind teammate Russell.

Alpine’s Fernando Alonso looks to lead the midfield after wrapping up the top five, setting a time 0.434s slower than Russell in P1.

McLaren’s Lando Norris ended the day in sixth, 0.597s down on the leader, with AlphaTauri driver Pierre Gasly just behind in P7.

Alfa Romeo’s Valtteri Bottas sat out the session after his FP1 spin, but teammate Zhou Guanyu managed eighth, as Alpine’s Esteban Ocon as Haas’s Kevin Magnussen wrapped up the top ten.

Magnussen’s Haas teammate Mick Schumacher finished in 15th, seven-tenths behind Magnussen, with McLaren’s Daniel Ricciardo, AlphaTauri’s Yuki Tsunoda and Aston Martin’s Sebastian Vettel wedged in between the Haas drivers.

Lower down the pecking order, Lance Stroll managed P16 for Aston Martin after he avoided the slowing of Verstappen early on, ahead of Williams pair Alex Albon and Nicholas Latifi, who finished 17th and 18th respectively.

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Mercedes’ Russell takes the lead in action-packed Miami practice session

George Russell has taken pole position in FP2, overtaking Ferrari driver Charles Leclerc who had previously topped the standings in the first-ever Miami Grand Prix practice session.

The Mercedes driver set the fastest lap time of 1m 29.938s, to edge ahead of Championship leader Leclerc, who finished 0.106s off the pace.

With track temperatures slightly dropping for the second practice session, drivers began the FP2 race on medium compounds and it was Ferrari’s Carlos Sainz who took the lead on those tyres with a time of 1m 31.463s.

Formula 1

Leclerc quickest at Miami Grand Prix first practice session

18 HOURS AGO

The first piece of drama came when Sainz brought out the first red flag of the session with 40 minutes remaining, who spun and crashed entering the tight chicane on turn 14.

Red Bull’s Max Verstappen showed clear signs he was struggling with his steering, and in the final sector – without setting a time – called it a day and returned to the pits with a hydraulics issue.

Russell shot to the top of the leaderboard in his upgraded W13 when the soft tyres came into play, recording a lap time of 1m 29.938s – 0.106s faster than FP1 leader Leclerc.

Perez finished third whilst Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton ended in P4, 0.241s behind teammate Russell.

Alpine’s Fernando Alonso looks to lead the midfield after wrapping up the top five, setting a time 0.434s slower than Russell in P1.

McLaren’s Lando Norris ended the day in sixth, 0.597s down on the leader, with AlphaTauri driver Pierre Gasly just behind in P7.

Alfa Romeo’s Valtteri Bottas sat out the session after his FP1 spin, but teammate Zhou Guanyu managed eighth, as Alpine’s Esteban Ocon as Haas’s Kevin Magnussen wrapped up the top ten.

Magnussen’s Haas teammate Mick Schumacher finished in 15th, seven-tenths behind Magnussen, with McLaren’s Daniel Ricciardo, AlphaTauri’s Yuki Tsunoda and Aston Martin’s Sebastian Vettel wedged in between the Haas drivers.

Lower down the pecking order, Lance Stroll managed P16 for Aston Martin after he avoided the slowing of Verstappen early on, ahead of Williams pair Alex Albon and Nicholas Latifi, who finished 17th and 18th respectively.

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