The promoter for the Australian Grand Prix in Melbourne is in hot water with the FIA following a track invasion that took place on Sunday at Albert Park before the race had ended.
In a first for F1, The Australian Grand Prix Corporation, the promoter of the Melbourne round of the F1 word championship, was summoned to the Stewards after Sunday’s event.
As race winner Max Verstappen and the field of cars made their way past the checkered flag under the safety car regime “a large group of spectators managed to break the security lines and accessed the track while the race was still ongoing,” according to a report from the FIA.
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Furthermore, “a large group of spectators” was even able to approach the stranded Haas car of Nico Hulkenberg which had stopped out on the track at Turn 2 during the in-lap, with the VF-23 in an “unsafe condition” as it “still had its light flashing red”.
This was a clear breach of Article 12.2.1.h of the International Sporting Code. The FIA subsequently requested that the promoter “urgently present a formal remediation plan to the FIA”.
The stewards stated that “the security measures and the protocols which were expected to be in place for the Event were not enforced resulting in an unsafe environment for the spectators, drivers and race officials” and stated that, owing to its severity, the matter would be referred to the World Motor Sport Council “for a further investigation to determine whether any additional steps need to be taken or penalties applied beyond the remediation plan presented by the Promoter (and reviewed by the FIA) to ensure the safe and orderly conduct of future events in Australia.”
The AGPC has requested that it be given until June 30 2023 to conduct its investigation into the beach, a deadline that has yet to be approved by the FIA.
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Max Verstappen overcame some early teething problems and a disastrous accident-strewn late red flag restart to deliver a third successive Red Bull victory in 2023 with a win over Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton in Australia.
Fernando Alonso continued his run of podium appearances for Aston Martin with third place. That was despite being involved in a collision with Carlos Sainz at the restart, after race control rolled back the order to before the accident.
Sainz was penalised for the collision dropping him out of the top ten. His Ferrari team mate Charles Leclerc had already spun out out of the race triggering the first of two early safety cars, with Williams’ Alex Albon the cause of a second.
The latter became an early red flag that had compromised George Russell’s race, who had succeeded in taking the lead at the start but then subsequently suffered an engine fire soon after the restart.
- 2023 Australian Grand Prix – Race results
After two days of cloudy, cool conditions in Melbourne, blue skies and sunshine were the order of the afternoon on Sunday as 18 cars and drivers headed to the grid for the start of the Australian Grand Prix with Max Verstappen leading the way ahead of Mercedes pair George Russell and Lewis Hamilton with Fernando Alonso following in fourth in the Aston Martin. With the exception of Alpine pair Pierre Gasly and Esteban Ocon on softs, all the front runners had opted for to start the race on the medium compound. Missing in action were Verstappen’s Red Bull team mate Sergio Perez and Alfa Romeo’s Valtteri Bottas who were both starting from pit lane after the teams made overnight changes to address the problems they experienced in qualifying.
When the lights went out, Russell got the best start and forced his way ahead of Verstappen who was struggling for grip. He tried to respond by sweeping around the outside of turn 1. That didn’t work, and it opened the door for Hamilton to pounce and make it an immediate Mercedes 1-2 despite Verstappen’s protestations over the radio that Hamilton had pushed him wide. Carlos Sainz managed to pick off Alonso for fourth and even had a nibble at Verstappen, while Alex ALbon took advantage of Williams’ best qualifying of the year to jump up to sixth after contact between Charles Leclerc and Lance Stroll.
This was a disaster for the Monegasque, whose car was tipped into a spin sending him off into the gravel from which there was no return. This necessitated a brief safety car while the stricken Ferrari was retrieved by the safety crew. Leclerc could only watch on as he suffered his second retirement in two races.
It wasn’t long before the race was back underway on lap 4 with Russell and Hamilton ensuring that Verstappen remained bottled up in third followed by Sainz, Alonso, Albon, Stroll, and Gasly, with Haas’ Nico Hulkenberg and AlphaTauri’s Yuki Tsunoda rounding out the top ten for now with many of those further back having made an early pit stop to free up their hands when it came to race strategy from this point on.
The top three were running close together as they pulled away from Sainz. It meant Hamilton and Verstappen both had DRS when it was enabled on lap 6, piling the pressure on Russell who was at a disadvantage. “You’re asking me to manage [the tyres] when I’m being attacked by my own team mate!” he told the Mercedes pit wall. Before that battle could play out there was a second outing for the safety car after Albon lost the rear end of the FW45 and crashed into the barrier at turn 7.
Russell and Sainz both responded by pitting to take on hard tyres, but the tactic misfired when the race was red flagged due to the condition of the barriers and the amount of gravel thrown onto the track by Albon’s impact. It meant everyone returned to pit lane, where those that had not yet stopped – like Hamilton, Verstappen, Alonso, Stroll, Gasly and Hulkenberg – would now be able to make a free tyre change of their own before the race resumed. Mercedes boss Toto Wolff’s verdict of this outcome was immediate: “Sorry George, that’s screwed us,” Russell having dropped to seventh due to the initial pit stop.
The stoppage was relatively brief and the race resumed with a standing start on lap 10 with Verstappen complaining that Hamilton was dropping too far behind the safety car heading to the grid, resulting in some near misses as the compression rippled through the field behind him, meaning the restart procedure was placed under review even as the lights went out. Everyone was now on hard tyres with the exception of Williams’ Logan Sargeant and AlphaTauri’s Nyck de Vries.
Hamilton got another good start while Verstappen once again struggled but managed to fight off Alonso, while Stroll dropped places allowing Gasly to jump up to fourth and Russell make up two places to fifth .Further back, de Vries clipped the front right of Ocon which sent the AlphaTauri running wide and dropped him to P17.
DRS had been unavailable for the restart, but as soon as it was enabled on lap 12 he full advantage to dispatch Hamilton with contemptuous ease to seize the lead for the first time. Less than a lap later he was already two seconds ahead. There was better news for Russell who successfully leaned on Gasly and managed to take fourth place from the Alpine on lap 14, already setting his sights on catching Alonso ahead of him, leaving Gasly struggling to ward off Stroll and Sainz. Further back, Perez – having got boxed in at the restart – now picked off Sargeant for 15th place and then swiftly forced his way past Kevin Magnussen in the Haas as his comeback drive finally took flight. By lap 17 he had caught and passed Zhou Guanyu despite another lock-up reminiscent of his qualifying woes the previous day.
The man on the move was Alonso, who laid down purple sector as he hunted down Hamilton for second place. But it was Hamilton’s team mate who was really feeling the heat as the back of Russell’s Williams erupted in flame from a massive power unit failure immediately triggering a Virtual Safety Car as he was forced to pull to the side of the track along the main straight, having decided not to bring an active fire down into the heart of pit lane. “When it’s not your day, it’s not your day,” he posted on Twitter once everything had cooled down.
The VSC ended and the race resumed on lap 19, with Hamilton using the opportunity to jump out of DRS range of Alonso but sounding concerned over the team radio. “Alonso is pretty quick, I don’t know if these tyres will make it to the end,” he reported to the Mercedes pit wall, just 11 laps into the stint, later adding: “I don’t feel it will go all the way.” Meanwhile Perez continued to press the advantage, snatching 11th from Ocon on lap 21 and immediately joining the fight between Tsunoda and Oscar Piastri over the last of the top ten points positions. Both presented little problem for the rampant Bull, and Perez was now up to ninth and charging.
Also on the move was Sainz, with a late dummy on Gasly through turn 3 on lap 25 successfully putting the Ferrari back into fourth place although Gasly was able to stay close to the back of the Ferrari for now. Further back, Gasly’s team mate Ocon put an extraordinary amount of trust in a rookie’s driving ability with a forceful move on Piastri on lap 26, and the Alpine then swatted aside Tsunoda to make it into the points. That allowed Piastri to have a go at the Japanese driver, and he duly picked up the spot on lap 30.
With the halfway point of the race now behind them, Verstappen’s lead over Hamilton was up to more than eight seconds. Alonso was still just out of DRS range in third followed by Sainz, Gasly, Stroll, Hulkenberg, Norris, Perez and Ocon. Piastri was running in 11th followed by Tsunoda, Zhou, Magnussen, Sargeant and Valtteri Bottas in 16th, with de Vries now last following three retirements (Russell, Albon and Leclerc).
“[Alonso] is trying to push you to use your tyres, don’t fall for it,” Hamilton’s race engineer Peter Bonnington told his driver, but Hamilton remained anxious about the Aston’s sniping attacks: “They can’t be on the same strategy as us mate,” he replied on lap 34. Despite Bono’s reassurances, Hamilton was indeed becoming something of a bottleneck for the train of cars building up behind him. “These guys are quick mate,” Hamilton concluded, and he was forced to respond by turning up the power and set some quick lap times to pull four tenths away from Alonso regardless of the impact on tyre longevity. “There’s not way I’m losing out to him,” a feisty Hamilton declared. But even as he pushed, Alonso responded with fastest laps of his own.
With less than 20 laps remaining, no one had the option to make a new pit stop for fresh tyres at this point without suffering a catastrophic loss of positions, because the field was still so closely packed together. With the exception of Verstappen, who was serenely cruising away at the front, the gaps between the top ten cars on track were surprisingly tight, as illustrated by Perez being able to sail past Norris for P8 on lap 44, and then Hulkenberg for seventh moments later. Norris tried to take the fight to the Haas going through turn 11 on lap 49 but was successfully repelled; Norris kept up the pressure and went side-by side with Hulkenberg through turn 13, managing to force the German driver wide to finally stamp his authority on eighth.
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At the front, Verstappen had lost three seconds after going in to turn 13 after locking up the front left and running too deep into the corner and off onto the grass. No great harm was done – but it was a wake up call to Red Bull that nothing could be taken for advantage, even this deep into the race.
Jus when it looked as though the race was winding down to a sedate conclusion, the safety car was out for a late encore as Kevin Magnussen pulled over to the side of the track with right rear suspension damage from hitting the barrier that had ripped the tyre carcass off the wheel rim, scattering debris onto the racing line. Just when it looked as though the race would end under yellow, the colours changed to red for a second time this afternoon. Suddenly it was all game on again, with two laps to go at the standing restart and no DRS on tap.
When the race got underway from the grid for the third time today with everyone having changed to soft tyres, all eyes were on whether Verstappen could finally put together a decent launch for the first time, or whether Hamilton could snatch an unlikely late victory. Taking up a defensive posture, this time nailed it and Hamilton had no chance ot taking advantage of the situation. But behind them there was utter mayhem with multiple collisions radially rewriting the order.
Alonso had tried attacking Hamilton, but had instead been tapped into a spin by Sainz which plunged him out of the top ten. Perez ended up running through the gravel in avoidance and Stroll was also caught up in the mayhem, while the two Alpines had taken each other out. Further back, de Vries collected Sargeant and both were out of the race. The surviving cast continued touring around, but the result now hinged on how race control decided to implement the rules. and whether the cars had managed to complete a full sector after the restart before the red flags flew once more.
As things stood when the cars returned to pit lane, Verstappen was the winner from Hamilton and Sainz, with Hulkenberg fourth, ahead of Tsunoda, Norris, Piastri, Zhou, Bottas and Perez. But race control ordered that a rolling restart should be undertaken according to the previous grid order – except for those cars such as both Alpines now unable to take part – and then complete the final lap behind a safety car. The icing on the cake was a five second penalty levied on Sainz for causing the initial collision with Alonso, dropping him out of the points entirely.
It confirmed Verstappen’s victory and Hamilton in second, with Alonso restored to third followed by Stroll, Perez, Norris, Hulkenberg and Piastri, the Aussie claiming his maiden championship points ahead of Zhou and Zhou in ninth and tenth. But such as the confusion that almost any twists and turns could be in store when the protests and recriminations fly during the evening.
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