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PRIXVIEW – Saudi Arabian Grand Prix

Round two sees F1 across the Arabian Peninsula and to the Red Sea port city and commercial capital of Jeddah for the fourth Saudi Arabian Grand Prix. Built-in 2021 intended as a temporary circuit before moving Qiddiya near the Saudi capital of Riyadh, it looks to be the home of the race until 2027.

The 6.174 km (3.836 mi) Jeddah Corniche Circuit located on the Red Sea coast is the third-longest circuit on the calendar and has Average speeds around the Jeddah Corniche Circuit are around 250kph (155mi), quicker than those at Silverstone, and second on the 2021 calendar only to Monza, ‘The Temple of Speed’. It is, quite simply, the fastest street circuit ever seen.

Jeddah is another night race, like its neighbours in Abu Dhabi, Doha and Sakhir, the last one for the teams until Singapore, this again makes it very important to not overreact if things aren’t going right in the late afternoon session as the sunsets. It gives teams the opportunity in similar conditions to Bahrain to learn and improve in these conditions for Singapore, Lusail, Las Vegas and Abu Dhabi.

Although the time of FP1 & FP3 will also be useful as the time is similar to all other qualifying sessions, its going to be another weekend where the teams don’t need to overreact if they are off the pace in the daytime sessions. So presents an opportunity for teams to put right lessons they may have learned in Bahrain.

The circuit runs past large recreation areas, pavilions, and large-scale civic sculptures as well as King Fahd’s Fountain, the highest fountain in the world. The circuit has twenty-three corners and was designed by Carsten Tilke the son of Hermann, who has designed many of the circuits we have seen in the last two decades.

Additionally, three consecutive sections of the circuit which are DRS Zones adding to the opportunities to overtake. There was a determination by the designer not to create these ‘Mickey Mouse’ street circuits, and in the two races we have seen in Jeddah, there have been accidents, drama and overtaking on track. The regulation changes last season did create more overtaking opportunities on track.

The circuit since joining the calendar in 2021 has provided drama, a fast-flowing circuit with twenty-three corners, a more flowing circuit and should, in theory, favour the top speed advantage enjoyed by the SF-23, a factor that enabled Max Verstappen to win in 2022 when the car characteristics were seemingly reversed.

Additionally, three consecutive sections of the circuit which are DRS Zones adding to the opportunities to overtake. There was a determination by the designer not to create these ‘Mickey Mouse’ street circuits, and in the two races we have seen in Jeddah, there have been accidents, drama and overtaking on track. The regulation changes last season did create more overtaking opportunities on track.

There are of course other controversies around this race, human, woman and LGBT rights, but the Saudi government are trying “to make our society more inclusive and diverse and to promote equality.” Accusations of double standards over the Russian invasion of Ukraine given Saudi Arabia’s involvement in the war in Yemen.

Renewed concerns given the War in Gaza and the conflict with Houthi Rebels in Yemen who have attacked shipping in the Red Sea, and the response by Western Allies, may place more concerns about security this weekend.

The 2022 race saw Sergio Perez take pole position, beating Charles Leclerc by two-hundredths of a second. That meant the Mexican set a new record for most races started without starting from pole position, after piping the Ferrari driver to deny the team a second consecutive front-row lockout.

Leclerc pushed his teammate Carlos Sainz off pole out qualifying the Spaniard by a tenth, but Perez’s teammate Max Verstappen couldn’t improve on his final run. The session had been suspended for almost an hour when Mick Schumacher had a huge crash in the second part of the session.

The Haas driver lost control at turn twelve hitting g the wall on both sides and ripping a tyre off which hit the halo. Haas confirmed the German driver was ok, Verstappen went onto take his first win of the season after lunging past Leclerc on lap forty-six. The two title rivals had battle “to the limit” through out the race before the Red Bull driver found a way past the Ferrari.

Leclerc’s teammate Carlos Sainz couldn’t join the battle at the front as the leaders played chicken in the final ten laps, the Spaniard finishing the race eight seconds behind Verstappen. Verstappen’s teammate Sergio Perez led early on after converting his maiden pole into the lead before losing out with the timing of the safety car.

Race & Circuit Guide

Round 02 of 24
Race Formula 1 STC Saudi Arabian Grand Prix
Venue Jeddah Corniche Circuit, Jeddah, Saudi Arabia
Configuration 2021 Grand Prix
Circuit Length 6.174 km (3.836 mi)
Laps 50
Race Distance 308.450 km (191.662 mi)
Lap Record Race 01:30.734 (Sir Lewis Hamilton, Mercedes W12, 2021, F1)
Outright N/A
Most wins drivers Sir Lewis Hamilton (1)
Max Verstappen
Sergio Perez
Most wins manufacture Red Bull (2)

Fast facts

  • Jeddah Street Circuit was the 75th different venue to join the Formula 1 calendar.
  • With the previous race marking F1’s first visit to Qatar, the 2021 Saudi Arabian Grand Prix was the first time that the sport visited two new countries in succession since the inaugural season in 1950.
  • Formula 1’s links to Saudi Arabia go all the way back to the 1970s, when the Saudia national airline sponsored the Williams team.
  • The hairpin at Turn 13 of Jeddah Corniche Circuit features twelve degrees of banking. It’s seven degrees less steep than the banking at Zandvoort.
  • Saudi Arabia has a total land area of 2,150,000 km2, but there are no rivers in the country! It is the largest country in the world without a river.

Event timetable

Session

Local (AST)

UK (GMT)

Thursday

P1 16:30-17:30 13:30-14:30
P2 20:00-21:00 17:00-18:00

Friday

P3 16:30-17:30 13:30-14:30
Qualifying 20:00-21:00 17:00-18:00

Saturday

Race 20:00 17:00

What happened in 2023?

Sergio Perez beat Charles Leclerc by a tenth to take pole by a tenth of a second, after Max Verstappen was knocked out in Q2 because of a drive shaft issue. The Mexican was comfortably fastest despite him not getting a second run in Q3, while others did close it was clear that no one could fight for pole.  That was despite him making a mistake on his first run.

Leclerc however had a ten-place penalty is the result of two separate failures of his car’s electronics control units in Bahrain two weeks ago. That meant Ferrari needed to fit a new one in Saudi Arabia, and only two were permitted for the entire season.  Fernando Alonso continued to show Aston Martin’s strong pace, the Spaniard going third fastest ahead of George Russell by almost a tenth and a half.

Perez took victory ahead of Verstappen, the Mexican beating his teammate by five seconds despite losing the lead to Alonso at the start, the Aston Martin driver having to recover from two five-second penalties for being out of position on the grid.

The Dutchman’s dominant form was such that he remained second favourite, and only marginally behind Perez, to win Sunday’s race. That clear advantage was taken away from Perez on lap eighteen when Lance Stroll stopped bringing out the safety car. While it was only the Mexican’s fourth win of his career, with Red Bull’s third one-two in a row.

Alonso was third on track finishing twenty-eight seconds off the lead however the way he served that five-second penalty, the stewards ruled that the team touched the car too early and awarded Alonso a ten-second penalty. But he had enough of a gap to maintain third ahead of Russell.

In the closing stages despite closing down Alonso, Russell had ignored instructions just before the halfway stage to let Hamilton pass. Hamilton had switched under the safety car, triggered by Lance Stroll stopping on track, to the faster medium tyre. That should have allowed Hamilton to close down Alonso and pass him.

The seven-time champion opted for the alternate strategy, he started on hards and completed a 32-lap stint on the medium compound. That kept him ahead of Carlos Sainz who had overcut Stroll.

 

Pole Position
Sergio Perez
Red Bull – Honda RBPT
01:28.265
Podium
Po
Name
Nat
Team
Time
Points
1 Sergio Perez MEX Red Bull – Honda RBPT 01:21:14.894 25
2 Max Verstappen NED Red Bull – Honda RBPT +00:05.355 19
3 Fernando Alonso ESP Aston Martin – Mercedes +00:20.728 15
Fastest
Lap
Max Verstappen NED Red Bull – Honda RBPT 01:31.906 1

What to watch for?

Red Bull still looks like the team to beat this weekend following Max Verstappen’s dominant and commanding victory in Sakhir last weekend. But Jeddah is a very different circuit a high-speed street circuit while Red Bull and Verstappen are the favourites, they can’t take that for granted given this is a street circuit and there are so many more variables in Jeddah.

Red Bull may be winning, but there continues to be turbulence off track given the fallout from the Christian Horner allegations while the parent company has cleared him, there appears to be more questions than answers from F1, teams and The FIA. I think this isn’t going to go away as they would like it to, a row has emerged between the Verstappen’s, Horner’s and Red Bull, even rumours of Max joining Mercede, if Horner isn’t dismissed… this is going to rumble on.

As we predicted behind Red Bull, it’s very tight between Ferrari and Mercedes for the best of the rest to me they look even, and the likes of McLaren and Aston Martin aren’t much further behind. There was a very tight battle for ‘best of the rest’, but with Jeddah being a high-speed street circuit anything can happen!

The fight will answer who has the advantage on a street circuit, we can see very different performances from cars and drivers. Jeddah’s challenges add to that for the reasons given above. Watch Charles Leclerc and Sergio Perez they tend to be very good at single lap pace and the latter in races on street circuits.

Street circuits add another variable for all the teams, throughout the weekend the drivers need to build confidence to find the ultimate lap time. Thus that can lead to accidents, VSCs, safety cars and red flags the teams and drivers need good communication and the ability to react to the unexpected.

Its very competitive behind Red Bull, I think if a few teams were to start beating Red Bull regularly we would have a very competitive season. But the thing is cars are so reliable now it is harder to do that now. Mercedes and Ferrari in my view look to be equal at this stage in the season, and McLaren is looking as if they have the edge over Aston Martin

2022 vs 2023 Race Data

P1 Fastest

P2 Fastest

P3 Fastest

Q1 Fastest

Q2 Fastest

Q3 Fastest

Race Time

Fastest Lap

2023

01:29.617 01:29.603 01:28.485 01:28.761 01:28.635 01:28.265 01:21:14.894 01:31.906

Diff

-01.155 -00.529 -01.250 -00.094 -00.051 +00.065 -03:05.601 +00.272

2022

01:30.772 01:30.074 01:29.735 01:28.855 01:28.686 01:28.200 01:24.19.293 01:31.634

2023 Lap time comparison

FP1
FP2
FP3
Q1
Q2
Q3
Race
Team
Fastest Time
Gap
Fastest Time
Gap
Fastest Time
Gap
Fastest Time
Gap
Fastest Time
Gap
Fastest Time
Gap
Race. Time
Gap
Inter
Mercedes
01:30.771 +01.154 01:30.070 +00.467 01:29.568 +01.083 00:00.000 +00.000 01:29.132 +00.497 01:28.857 +00.592 01:21:40.760 +00:25.866 +00:05.138
Red Bull
01:29.617 +00.000 01:29.603 +00.000 01:28.485 +00.000 01:28.761 +00.000 01:28.635 +00.000 01:28.265 +00.000 01:21:14.894 +00:00.000 +00:00.000
Ferrari
01:30.924 +01.170 01:30.341 +00.738 01:29.588 +01.103 01:29.376 +00.615 01:28.903 +00.268 01:28.420 +00.155 01:21:50.770 +00:35.876 +00:04.811
McLaren
01:31.491 +01.874 01:30.721 +01.118 01:29.690 +01.205 01:29.706 +00.928 01:29.378 +00.739 01:28.730 +00.978 01:22:39.021 +01:25.021 +00:07.543
Aston Martin
01:30.315 +00.698 01:29.811 +00.208 01:29.489 +00.998 01:29.298 +00.537 01:28.757 +00.122 01:28.420 +00.465 01:21:35.622 +00:20.728 +00:15.373
Alpha Tauri
01:31.110 +01.493 00:00.000 +00.000 01:30.797 +02.312 01:29.939 +01.178 N/A N/A 01:22:22.388 +01:07.494 +00:02.663
Alpine
01:30.949 +01.332 01:29.811 +00.208 01:29.701 +01.219 01:29.707 +00.946 01:28.757 +00.122 01:29.079 +00.813 01:22:07.726 +00:52.832 +00:09.670
Haas
01:31.552 +01.874 01:30.181 +00.578 01:29.933 +01.448 01:29.547 +00.786 01:29.451 +00.816 N/A +00.000 01:22:19.720 +01:04.826 +00:10.079
Alfa Romeo
01:31.970 +02.353 01:30.837 +01.234 01:29.917 +01.448 01:29.654 +00.893 01:29.668 +00.826 N/A +00.000 01:22:30.954 +01:16.060 +00:05.472
Williams
01:31.030 +01.413 01:30.810 +01.173 01:29.984 +01.498 01:29.994 +01.233 N/A N/A 01:22:41.187 +01:26.293 +00:01.272

Tyres

White Hard (C2)

Yellow Medium (C3)

Red Soft (C4)

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