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Williams driver Carlos Sainz says he is expecting to adapt to his new Formula 1 car within “five to 10” races while he tweaks his driving style.

Sainz joined Alex Albon at Williams after four years at Ferrari and has thus far had two low-key weekends for his new team in Australia and China, grabbing his first point of the campaign in Shanghai after others were disqualified.

A large part of Sainz’s deficit to high-flying Albon, who has already scored 16 points, stems from finding it tricky to extract the maximum out of the Williams over one lap, qualifying well behind his team-mate.

Sainz isn’t particularly worried by his slower-than-expected adaptation to a new style of car, revealing he has had to unlearn years of muscle memory built up driving vastly different Ferraris, which means he is now having to change his driving style to get the most out of the Williams.

“I was used to a certain type of car at Ferrari which made me end up driving, especially since 2022, in a very specific way to extract everything about that car,” Sainz explained in Japan. “You fall into habits in your driving that then you apply to the next car, and it might work in some corners but in other it makes you very weak. That’s probably a bit of it and then there’s also a side of set-up that can help me drive the way I like.

“I’ll be trying some different stuff here with my driving and different compromises with car set-up and see if they work. And if not, it’s back to the drawing board, to try different things until we find where that lap time is.”

Sainz said having to fight his instinct and change his driving style yet again at his fifth F1 squad is “the biggest challenge” a driver can face, but added he is relishing it so far.

Carlos Sainz, Williams

Carlos Sainz, Williams

Photo by: Andy Hone / Motorsport Images

“From a driving perspective, the biggest challenge that you can have is to relearn a bit the way to approach a corner because you have a certain level of muscle memory, and especially under pressure in qualifying you tend to go back to the way you drive,” the Spaniard said.

“It’s something that takes time and lot of effort from a mental and driving perspective, but it’s a challenge that I’ve always enjoyed and managed to get on top of in all my career. I’ve driven five different cars, different sets of regulations, and probably two races are still not enough to understand that. The car has completely different strengths and weaknesses to the car that I used to be driving for three years.”

Sainz gave a rather philosophical answer when asked how long he believes it will take to get to 100%, but has set the target of getting fully up to speed well before the summer break. “It depends how far away it is from your natural driving style, and also what you consider as being 100%.

“If your 100% is to close your eyes and you’re just naturally quick, then it takes even more than a year to get to that point.

“If your 100% is just to perform at a very high level in Formula 1, which is where I want to get to as soon as possible, that for me should take less than half a year; five to 10 races. And that’s what I am expecting and targeting myself to be as soon as I get to different kinds of tracks, surfaces and grip levels.”

Additional reporting by Erwin Jaeggi

In this article

Filip Cleeren

Formula 1

Carlos Sainz

Williams

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Williams driver Carlos Sainz says he is expecting to adapt to his new Formula 1 car within “five to 10” races while he tweaks his driving style.

Sainz joined Alex Albon at Williams after four years at Ferrari and has thus far had two low-key weekends for his new team in Australia and China, grabbing his first point of the campaign in Shanghai after others were disqualified. A large part of Sainz’s deficit to high-flying Albon, who has already scored 16 points, stems from finding it tricky to extract the maximum out of the Williams over one lap, qualifying well behind his team-mate.

Sainz isn’t particularly worried by his slower than expected adaptation to a new style of car, revealing he has had to unlearn years of muscle memory built up driving vastly different Ferraris, which means he is now having to change his driving style to get the most out of the Williams.

“I was used to a certain type of car at Ferrari which made me end up driving, especially since 2022, in a very specific way to extract everything about that car,” Sainz explained in Japan. “You fall into habits in your driving that then you apply to the next car, and it might work in some corners but in other it makes you very weak. That’s probably a bit of it and then there’s also a side of set-up that can help me drive the way I like.

“I’ll be trying some different stuff here with my driving and different compromises with car set-up and see if they work. And if not, it’s back to the drawing board, to try different things until we find where that lap time is.”

Sainz said having to fight his instinct and change his driving style yet again at his fifth F1 squad is “the biggest challenge” a driver can face, but added he is relishing it so far.

Carlos Sainz, Williams

Carlos Sainz, Williams

Photo by: Andy Hone / Motorsport Images

“From a driving perspective, the biggest challenge that you can have is to relearn a bit the way to approach a corner because you have a certain level of muscle memory, and especially under pressure in qualifying you tend to go back to the way you drive,” the Spaniard said.

“It’s something that takes time and lot of effort from a mental and driving perspective, but it’s a challenge that I’ve always enjoyed and managed to get on top of in all my career. I’ve driven five different cars, different sets of regulations, and probably two races are still not enough to understand that. The car has completely different strengths and weaknesses to the car that I used to be driving for three years.”

Sainz gave a rather philosophical answer when asked how long he believes it will take to get to 100%, but has set the target of getting fully up to speed well before the summer break. “It depends how far away it is from your natural driving style, and also what you consider as being 100%.

Read Also:

“If your 100% is to close your eyes and you’re just naturally quick, then it takes even more than a year to get to that point.

“If your 100% is just to perform at a very high level in Formula 1, which is where I want to get to as soon as possible, that for me should take less than half a year; five to 10 races. And that’s what I am expecting and targeting myself to be as soon as I get to different kinds of tracks, surfaces and grip levels.”

Additional reporting by Erwin Jaeggi

In this article

Filip Cleeren

Formula 1

Carlos Sainz

Williams

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Aero-elasticity continues to be a hot topic in Formula 1 in the wake of the FIA announcing more stringent tests on rear wings to detect if they are flexing under load. So naturally there has been an immediate presumption of guilt when the governing body circulated a report from technical delegate Jo Bauer that he was referring Williams to the stewards for failing to supply camera footage of its wings within an hour of practice ending in China.

The team has yet to explain this failure.

It’s easy to infer guilt from this, but impossible to prove it; there may be an innocent explanation. It’s also impossible to be certain that a wing is illegal simply by looking at video footage of it.

You don’t have to dig far on social media to see individuals sharing in-car footage of wings appearing to flex and claiming – often in hysterical tones – that this is a smoking gun which needs to be acted upon. In fact, it’s perfectly natural for wings to deflect under load, and impossible to prevent completely – the question is how much has been deliberately engineered and to what end.

The only practical way to measure the exact degree a wing flexes under load is to do it at rest, by applying weights. Even this isn’t quite like-for-like, hence the recent changing of the permitted tolerance in the rear-wing tests.

F1 teams have been exploiting static measurements for decades. In the previous ground-effect era the FIA tried to clamp down on it by imposing a minimum ride height, which could of course only be measured when the car was at rest.

Haas VF-24 rear wing detail

Haas VF-24 rear wing detail

Photo by: Andreas Beil

Brabham’s Gordon Murray was the first to circumvent this, fitting the bodywork of his car on pneumatic struts which kept the side skirts at the legal height when stationary, but compressed under load.

The FIA’s purpose in introducing new video checks at the Belgian Grand Prix last year was to find some way of indicating scientifically the degree to which a wing is flexing under real aerodynamic loads. High-definition cameras facing frontwards and rearwards were trained on the front and rear wings, which carried dots on the endplates so the FIA could examine the extent to which wing elements were rotating.

At the moment these cameras are only used during free practice sessions (which of course opens up the potential for teams to swap in components that are on the ragged edge of legality for qualifying and races). It’s understood that examination of various cars’ onboard footage during FP1 in Australia was the prompt for the latest change in the testing regime.

But Williams hasn’t been found to have broken any technical regulations. This is merely a procedural breach of a Technical Directive, and in any case there would have been no expectation to provide footage from sprint qualifying in China.

Also, the technical delegate’s report didn’t say that Williams hadn’t provided the footage at all, simply that it had failed to supply it within the given deadline of one hour after practice ends.

That’s likely to be why the stewards elected to delay the hearing until Saturday morning in Shanghai: this is not a case which needs to be heard urgently.

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But it does need to be heard, because if Williams is seen to go unpunished for such a breach, other teams would feel that they can fail to provide footage and escape sanction. That would undermine the entire philosophy of subjecting them to (almost) constant scrutiny.

So, even if there is an innocent explanation for failing to provide the footage by the specified deadline, and no technical regulations have been broken, some punishment is inevitable. The question, given the unprecedented nature of this affair, is the severity.

In this article

Stuart Codling

Formula 1

Carlos Sainz

Alex Albon

Williams

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Aero-elasticity continues to be a hot topic in Formula 1 in the wake of the FIA announcing more stringent tests on rear wings to detect if they are flexing under load. So naturally there has been an immediate presumption of guilt when the governing body circulated a report from technical delegate Jo Bauer that he was referring Williams to the stewards for failing to supply camera footage of its wings within an hour of practice ending in China.

The team has yet to explain this failure.

It’s easy to infer guilt from this, but impossible to prove it. There may be an innocent explanation.

It’s also impossible to be certain that a wing is illegal simply by looking at video footage of it.

You don’t have to dig far on social media to see individuals sharing in-car footage of wings appearing to flex and claiming – often in hysterical tones – that this is a smoking gun which needs to be acted upon. In fact, it’s perfectly natural for wings to deflect under load, and impossible to prevent completely – the question is how much has been deliberately engineered and to what end.

The only practical way to measure the exact degree a wing flexes under load is to do it at rest, by applying weights. Even this isn’t quite like-for-like, hence the recent changing of the permitted tolerance in the rear-wing tests.

F1 teams have been exploiting static measurements for decades. In the previous ground effect era the FIA tried to clamp down on it by imposing a minimum ride height, which could of course only be measured when the car was at rest.

Haas VF-24 rear wing detail

Haas VF-24 rear wing detail

Photo by: Andreas Beil

Brabham’s Gordon Murray was the first to circumvent this, fitting the bodywork of his car on pneumatic struts which kept the side skirts at the legal height when stationary, but compressed under load.

The FIA’s purpose in introducing new video checks at the Belgian Grand Prix last year was to find some way of indicating scientifically the degree to which a wing is flexing under real aerodynamic loads. High-definition cameras facing frontwards and rearwards were trained on the front and rear wings, which carried dots on the endplates so the FIA could examine the extent to which wing elements were rotating.

At the moment these cameras are only used during free practice sessions (which of course opens up the potential for teams to swap in components that are on the ragged edge of legality for qualifying and races). It’s understood that examination of various cars’ onboard footage during FP1 in Australia was the prompt for the latest change in the testing regime.

But Williams hasn’t been found to have broken any technical regulations. This is merely a procedural breach of a Technical Directive, and in any case there would have been no expectation to provide footage from sprint qualifying in China.

Also, the technical delegate’s report didn’t say that Williams hadn’t provided the footage at all, simply that it had failed to supply it within the given deadline of one hour after practice ends.

That’s likely to be why the stewards elected to delay the hearing until Saturday morning in Shanghai: this is not a case which needs to be heard urgently.

Read Also:

But it does need to be heard, because if Williams is seen to go unpunished for such a breach, other teams would feel that they can fail to provide footage and escape sanction. That would undermine the entire philosophy of subjecting them to (almost) constant scrutiny.

So, even if there is an innocent explanation for failing to provide the footage by the specified deadline, and no technical regulations have been broken, some punishment is inevitable. The question, given the unprecedented nature of this affair, is the severity.

In this article

Stuart Codling

Formula 1

Carlos Sainz

Alex Albon

Williams

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Carlos Sainz admits he still does not feel at home in the cockpit of his Williams Formula 1 car after a disappointing showing in Chinese Grand Prix sprint qualifying.

The Spaniard joined Williams from Ferrari over the winter and set the pace in pre-season testing before crashing behind the safety car during the Australian Grand Prix last weekend.

Sainz, with four grand prix victories to his name, could only manage 13th place on the grid for Saturday’s sprint race in Shanghai – in contrast to team-mate Alex Albon, who progressed into the top 10 – and conceded he is still learning his new surroundings.

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“I’ve struggled all day with the balance, and both sessions have been quite tough,” Sainz said.

“In sprint quali we had a few issues, including a weird feeling with the seat that we’ll look into, but overall it comes down to me still not feeling at home in the car.

“We were struggling with some balance problems and especially coming down to Q2, not knowing exactly where to find the lap time and a bit of overdriving.

Carlos Sainz, Williams

Carlos Sainz, Williams

Photo by: Sam Bloxham / Motorsport Images

“I still have to learn and understand many things about it and I know, with more mileage, it will come. Hopefully tomorrow we can put everything together and improve today’s result for Sunday.

“It’s been a difficult weekend up until now, we’re trying to find the balance of the car, it feels quite different here with the wind and, as I said, I’m struggling to find lap time when it comes to qualifying.”

Albon believes tyre degradation could play a pivotal role during the sprint race given that many teams seem to be struggling with temperatures.

“Tyres are not that easy to know what to do with them. I think the tyres have been – we’ve seen it this year so far – very sensitive, and long corners like they are in China tend to make the tyres work a bit harder,” he said.

“It’s hard to get them into a good place so we’ll do some work overnight and try and get back stronger tomorrow.

“I think graining is going to be a big talking point, the front especially, which is what’s been hard in low fuel as well but in high fuel it gets out of control.

“So I think it’s going to be a very managed race, unfortunately it might look a bit boring in the first few laps and then you’ll see a bit of a race towards the end.”

In this article

Mark Mann-Bryans

Formula 1

Carlos Sainz

Williams

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Carlos Sainz admits he still does not feel at home in the cockpit of his Williams Formula 1 car after a disappointing showing in Chinese Grand Prix sprint qualifying.

The Spaniard joined Williams from Ferrari over the winter and set the pace in pre-season testing before crashing behind the safety car during the Australian Grand Prix last weekend.

Sainz, with four grand prix victories to his name, could only manage 13th place on the grid for Saturday’s sprint race in Shanghai – in contrast to team-mate Alex Albon, who progressed into the top 10 – and conceded he is still learning his new surroundings.

“I’ve struggled all day with the balance and both sessions have been quite tough,” Sainz said.

“In sprint quali we had a few issues, including a weird feeling with the seat that we’ll look into, but overall it comes down to me still not feeling at home in the car.

“We were struggling with some balance problems and especially coming down to Q2, not knowing exactly where to find the lap time and a bit of over-driving.

Carlos Sainz, Williams

Carlos Sainz, Williams

Photo by: Sam Bloxham / Motorsport Images

“I still have to learn and understand many things about it and I know, with more mileage, it will come.

“Hopefully tomorrow we can put everything together and improve today’s result for Sunday.

“It’s been a difficult weekend up until now, we’re trying to find the balance of the car, it feels quite different here with the wind and, as I said, I’m struggling to find lap time when it comes to qualifying.”

Albon believes tyre degradation could play a pivotal role during the sprint race given that many teams seem to be struggling with temperatures.

“Tyres are not that easy to know what to do with them, I think the tyres have been, we’ve seen it this year so far, very sensitive and long corners like they are in China tend to make the tyres work a bit harder,” he said.

“It’s hard to get them into a good place so we’ll do some work overnight and try and get back stronger tomorrow.

“I think graining is going to be a big talking point, the front especially, which is what’s been hard in low fuel as well but in high fuel it gets out of control.

“So I think it’s going to be a very managed race, unfortunately it might look a bit boring in the first few laps and then you’ll see a bit of a race towards the end.”

In this article

Mark Mann-Bryans

Formula 1

Carlos Sainz

Williams

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Carlos Sainz might have only completed less than a lap of the Australian Grand Prix under green-flag conditions, but he helped Williams team-mate Alex Albon beat both Ferraris to the finish.

Sainz started from 10th but spun off at the final corner after the safety car was deployed in response to Jack Doohan spinning his Alpine into the barrier earlier on the opening lap.

Rather than head to the airport, though, Sainz joined the engineers in monitoring Albon’s progress. From sixth on the grid, Albon spent the early running on a drying track in seventh, behind the Racing Bulls car of Yuki Tsunoda but ahead of Lewis Hamilton’s Ferrari.

Albon pitted for slicks on lap 33, the same time as Tsunoda and Hamilton, and they emerged in the same order. When the rain returned on lap 44 of 57, all teams faced a difficult decision: whether or not to pit again for intermediates, given that the radar indicated the cloudburst would be short.

Albon was the third driver into the pits after race leader Lando Norris and Mercedes’ George Russell, and Sainz’s input was critical to that timing.

“The pitstops were absolutely on point, the strategy – well done to them,” Williams boss James Vowles told Sky Sports F1. “One point to note on the strategy is that we had an additional strategist today, which was Carlos.

Alex Albon, Williams

Alex Albon, Williams

Photo by: Sam Bloxham / Motorsport Images

“Carlos, his insight was incredibly useful on that transition to the inter. You saw a number of teams – ‘We’re not sure, do we try and hang it out?’ and Carlos was adamant: ‘You won’t survive on that in the last few corners’. And he was spot on. He helped drive us towards that.”

In contrast, Ferrari instructed both its drivers to stay out. Tsunoda also braved it out on slicks for another three laps.

Conditions quickly proved Sainz correct. Having gained a spot before his stop thanks to Oscar Piastri’s spin, Albon rose another two places at the expense of Charles Leclerc and Tsunoda when Ferrari and Racing Bulls capitulated to the conditions. 

Albon then held fourth until Mercedes rookie Andrea Kimi Antonelli overtook him with two laps to go.

But it still wasn’t the Williams debut that Sainz had hoped for, after joining from Ferrari over the winter. Vowles put his crash down to the characteristics of the gearbox mapping while running in safety car mode.

“It’s slightly odd, so we have to go through it more,” he added. “Effectively it was an upshift on part-throttle, but there was more torque than he would have expected at that point.”

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In this article

Stuart Codling

Formula 1

Carlos Sainz

Williams

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Carlos Sainz might only have completed less than a lap of the Australian Grand Prix under green-flag conditions, but he helped Williams team-mate Alexander Albon beat both Ferrari cars to the finish.

Sainz started from tenth place but spun off at the final corner after the safety car was deployed in response to Jack Doohan spinning his Alpine into the barrier earlier on in the opening lap. The team put it down to the characteristics of the gearbox mapping while running in safety car mode.

“It’s slightly odd, so we have to go through it more,” team principal James Vowles told Sky Sports F1. “Effectively it was an upshift on part-throttle, but there was more torque than he would have expected at that point.”

Carlos Sainz, Williams

Carlos Sainz, Williams

Photo by: Andy Hone / Motorsport Images

Rather than head to the airport, though, Sainz joined the engineers in monitoring Albon’s progress. From sixth on the grid, Albon spent the early running on a drying track in seventh place, behind the Racing Bulls car of Yuki Tsunoda but ahead of Lewis Hamilton’s Ferrari.

Albon pitted for slicks on lap 33, the same time as Tsunoda and Hamilton, and they emerged in the same order. When the rain returned on lap 44 of 57, all teams faced a difficult decision: whether or not to pit again for intermediates, given that the radar indicated the cloudburst would be short.

Albon was the third driver into the pits after race leader Lando Norris and Mercedes’ George Russell, and Sainz’s input was critical to that timing.

“The pitstops were absolutely on point, the strategy – well done to them,” said Vowles. “One point to note on the strategy is that we had an additional strategist today, which was Carlos.

“Carlos, his insight was incredibly useful on that transition to the inter.

“You saw a number of teams – ‘We’re not sure, do we try and hang it out?’ and Carlos was adamant: ‘You won’t survive on that in the last few corners’. And he was spot on. He helped drive us towards that.”

In contrast, Ferrari instructed both its drivers to stay out. Tsunoda also braved it out on slicks for another three laps.

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Conditions quickly proved Sainz correct. Having gained a place before his stop thanks to Oscar Piastri’s spin, Albon rose another two places at the expense of Charles Leclerc and Tsunoda when Ferrari and Racing Bulls capitulated to the conditions. 

Albon then held fourth until Mercedes’ Andrea Kimi Antonelli overtook him with two laps to go.

Photos from Australian GP – Race

In this article

Stuart Codling

Formula 1

Carlos Sainz

Williams

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Netflix’s “Drive to Survive” gets flack for creating drama — but sometimes, the drama is creating reality. As when, in episode four of the latest season (releasing March 7th), we see Carlos Sainz ghost James Vowles and Williams in June of last summer, prolonging what Vowles assumed was a done deal.

In an episode from the latest season of “Drive to Survive,” aptly titled “Carlos Signs,” cameras follow the 30-year-old Spaniard as he figures out where to go, having been ousted from his Ferrari seat by Lewis Hamilton.

“I honestly didn’t expect it. It leaves me bitter,” Sainz says of being replaced by the seven-time world champion. “I’m going to negotiate and get myself a good deal.” We see Williams’ Vowles, courting the Spaniard, tell the shows producers that Sainz could completely transform the team. “I wake up in the morning and I go to sleep at night thinking of nothing else,” Vowles says.

At the time, the paddock was abuzz with speculation that Sainz would put pen to paper in Barcelona at the Spanish Grand Prix after Vowles was spotted having a confidential meeting with Sainz’s manager, Carlos “Caco” Oñoro. “I really am confident this is a good contract and a good place. I know I’m going to get stronger over the next few races, I’m quite an honorable individual,” Vowles tells Oñoro during the closed-door conversation. “You want a relationship? I want a relationship. Let’s put a piece of paper together that covers it off.”

Carlos Sainz, James Vowles, and Alex Albon at the F1 75 event

Carlos Sainz, James Vowles, and Alex Albon at the F1 75 event

Photo by: Getty Images

In the episode, McLaren’s Zak Brown is seen telling Lando Norris that he “busted Caco and Vowles having breakfast.” Norris reveals that his friend and former teammate is still trying to decide between Williams and Sauber (set to become Audi in 2026). “I spoke to Carlos yesterday. In the short term it’s Williams, but longer term Audi,” Norris shares. Word of the deal had even made its way to Red Bull, where communications boss Paul Smith was heard telling Christian Horner that Williams had “pretty much confirmed Sainz.”

Vowles was so confident that the contract would be signed at his hotel that night, he’s seen in the episode telling Williams board member (and Pippa Middleton’s husband) James Matthews that they are “pretty much there.” He then quips to camera, “Signing a driver has some similarities to dating. You start with texts, then [there’s] dinner, then you end up in a hotel room.”

Cut to: Williams team members closing the blinds of a hotel conference room and putting champagne on ice next to Sainz’s soon-to-be-signed contract. More than 20 minutes go by without word from his Sainz’s team. Eventually, it’s revealed that the smooth operator won’t be coming. “You were going to sign for Williams but then changed your mind. What happened there?” a producer asks Sainz, to which he responds, “Flavio [Briatore] called me.” The controversial Italian businessman returned to Formula 1 last spring as an executive advisor to Alpine, and set out to complicate Sainz’s plans.

“Carlos has got doubts. I think he’s evaluating every single team available,” Oñoro is heard telling Vowles on the phone a few weeks later at the British Grand Prix.

Carlos Sainz during pre-season testing in Bahrain

Carlos Sainz during pre-season testing in Bahrain

Photo by: Simon Galloway / Motorsport Images

Meanwhile, we see Sainz probe Alpine driver Pierre Gasly for information about the car’s performance, while Jack Doohan jokes that the Spaniard is acting like “the paddock sl*t” for continuing to weigh up his options. Horner says that Briatore won’t give him the best deal. “Flavio will f**k him 100 per cent, and he’s expensive, which Flavio will hate,” the Red Bull boss is caught by “Drive to Survive” cameras telling colleagues.

As we know now, a few more weeks would pass before Sainz finally signed with Williams in late July, inking a two year deal.

“Congratulations,” Vowles says as his new driver walks into a hotel conference room to make the signing official.

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In this article

Emily Selleck

Formula 1

Culture

Carlos Sainz

James Vowles

Williams

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The FIA has made a raft of changes to Formula 1’s sporting rules for the 2025 season, with two loopholes concerning formation laps and damaged cars the most notable alterations.

Article 43.8 of F1’s sporting rules has been changed to state “all cars starting from the pitlane able to do so must leave the pitlane and join the formation lap”.

Previously, such cars would only leave their garages when the grid was finally forming up and not take part in the formation lap.

Now, once the formation lap has been completed including the pitlane starters, these will re-enter the pits and line up in qualifying order, unless they first form up after the five-minute signal pre-race start – in which case they must join the back of any queue that heads out for the formation lap at the back of the pack.

Motorsport.com understands that by changing this rule, the FIA has closed several possible loopholes the teams could have exploited under the old regulations.

The first is that, under the 2024 wording of this rule, pitlane starters could join an extra formation lap or formation laps held behind the safety car (say, in very wet conditions) if they desired, but in the case of multiple cars being in this scenario some could chose not to do so and therefore automatically gain places when the others returned to the pitlane for the start.

Valtteri Bottas, Stake F1 Team Kick Sauber C44, waits for the green light at the pit lane exit

Valtteri Bottas, Stake F1 Team Kick Sauber C44, waits for the green light at the pit lane exit

Photo by: Andrew Ferraro / Motorsport Images

Previously, in the event of an aborted start and an extra formation lap, cars starting from the pitlane could also automatically gain an extra lap of fuel to use even with the race distance reduced by one lap.

And in the event of a wet race starting with safety car laps, a pitlane starter could in theory wait for conditions to improve and then head straight out on intermediate tyres when racing commenced, while their already-circulating rivals would have to pit at the end of the first racing lap to switch off the extreme wets mandated in such situations.

With all three of these loopholes in mind, the FIA is understood to have taken the option to now require all pitlane starters to complete all formation laps before returning to the pitlane in every start circumstance.

Damaged cars ordered to stop

The other loophole the FIA has closed for 2025 concerns what happens when a driver tries to bring a damaged car back to the pitlane after an incident.

Although sources within the FIA insist the thrust behind this change does not come from any specific incident in 2024, and instead is the result of thinking going back several seasons, there is an illustrative example from last year involving ex-Red Bull driver Sergio Perez.

During last year’s Canadian GP, Perez crashed solo after switching for slicks and then brought his car back to the pitlane with a smashed rear wing – dropping debris onto the track as he did so.

Perez was subsequently given a three-place grid penalty for the 2024 Spanish GP, with Red Bull fined €25,000 for confirming his decision.

Esteban Ocon, Alpine A524, Sergio Perez, Red Bull Racing RB20

Esteban Ocon, Alpine A524, Sergio Perez, Red Bull Racing RB20

Photo by: Patrick Vinet / Motorsport Images

The Montreal stewards felt this was all done to avoid causing a safety car activation that might have hurt eventual race winner Max Verstappen in the other RB20.

Now, changes to Article 26.10 mean F1 race director Rui Marques will be able to order a team to stop their car immediately in such circumstances.

But it is not yet clear if Marques will communicate directly with a driver as occurs in some other categories or instead get the message relayed via their race engineer.

The rule now states: “Any driver whose car has significant and obvious damage to a structural component which results in it being in a condition presenting an immediate risk of endangering the driver or others, or whose car has a significant failure or fault which means it cannot reasonably return to the pitlane without unnecessarily impeding another competitor or otherwise hindering the competition, must leave the track as soon as it is safe to do so.

“At the sole discretion of the race director, should a car be deemed to have such significant and obvious damage to a structural component, or such significant failure or fault, the competitor may be instructed that the car must leave the track as soon as it is safe to do so.”

Essentially, this means a much quicker implementation of the black-flag-with-an-orange disc rule that usually requires damaged cars to return to the pits for repairs.

This has been contentious since the 2022 season following a series of incidents involving lightly damaged cars continuing racing – after which the FIA opted to reduce the warning flag’s use.

Motorsport.com understands that the reason for changing this rule for 2025 stems from the previous text being considered too generic and difficult for both teams and race event stewards to interpret.

In this article

Alex Kalinauckas

Formula 1

Carlos Sainz

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