Liam Lawson said his qualifying run was spoiled when his DRS flap unexpectedly closed as he accelerated towards the finishing line.
The Racing Bulls driver missed the cut to get into Q2 by 0.125 seconds and was over half a second slower than team mate Isack Hadjar.
“Q1 was alright up until that point,” Lawson told the official F1 channel afterwards. “I don’t really know what happened but I know I had a wheelspin out of the corner and then opened DRS and then it closed again basically. So it’s pretty frustrating, obviously, but it just sucks.”
However his team confirmed it was Lawson’s reaction to the wheelspin which caused his DRS to close. “In the tricky conditions, Liam picked up a little wheelspin on exit from turn 10,” the team’s chief technical officer Tim Goss explained, “resulting in a small throttle lift to keep the car under control causing DRS to automatically close which caused him to lose vital speed on the straight, and cost [him] the place in Q2.”
While Hadjar went on to reach Q2, he admitted he was too cautious on his final run, where he fell short of reaching Q3 by less than five hundredths of a second.
“I had a really tricky session,” he explained. “The first run of Q2 had to be aborted [because] the feeling was not great.
“I felt like I had a strong start to the lap on my last attempt. To be fair, I thought that would be enough and I went a bit too conservative towards the end of the lap and it’s not the right approach and it was not good enough.”
Hadjar will start Sunday’s race from 12th on the grid, five places ahead of Lawson.
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Isack Hadjar has not been put off by the struggles of Max Verstappen’s Red Bull team-mates, insisting he wants to end up in a seat next to the reigning Formula 1 world champion even more as a result.
After Sergio Perez’s struggles last year, Liam Lawson was demoted from Red Bull back to Racing Bulls after just two grands prix for the ‘A’ team, with Yuki Tsunoda swapping places.
Hadjar has meanwhile quietly gone about his business at the past two rounds. The French rookie crashed out on his F1 debut before the Australian Grand Prix had even started, but put in a strong showing at the Chinese Grand Prix and scored his first points for Racing Bulls by finishing eighth in Japan last time out.
His upturn in performance has largely played out in the background of the Red Bull drivers’ switch, but witnessing the situation from close quarters has not deterred Hadjar from aiming for a promotion of his own in the future.
“Honestly, now that it seems like it’s really hard to be next to Max, it makes me want to go even more, to find out why, what’s going on. That’s still the main target,” he said.
“It’s not like I don’t need to work anymore. Still, I always put the pressure on me to keep delivering. So now the expectations from people are maybe a bit higher, but I keep doing what I do.
Isack Hadjar, Racing Bulls
Photo by: Zak Mauger / Motorsport Images
“Like I said before the season, my target would be to keep… If the car can finish in P9 or P8, I want to be there, maximise it, not being outside the top 10. If the car deserves the top 10, then I need to be on it.”
Indeed, behind Verstappen, Hadjar is the highest-scoring driver in the Red Bull stable across the three races and one sprint so far this season – although he admits results for Tsunoda at Racing Bulls were “not fair”.
Tsunoda’s task – starting at this weekend’s Bahrain Grand Prix – is to now get more out of the Red Bull than Lawson managed in his two races for the senior squad before returning to the team he raced for at the back end of last season.
It has been widely accepted that the Racing Bulls is a much easier car to drive with a bigger operating window when compared to the somewhat uncompromising Red Bull which Verstappen led to victory at Suzuka.
“I think it’s probably a fair thing to say. It’s definitely a bigger window, easier to drive, but I think that doesn’t necessarily mean that the Red Bull is just undriveable. It just maybe takes a bit more time to get that comfort in it,” explained Lawson.
“[The Racing Bulls car] is not crazy different from last year, so it was more of just an adjustment back from what I’d been driving at the start of this year, and it’s quite different, but I feel good.
“I think the weekend [in Japan] as well didn’t really show properly what I think we were capable of. Unfortunately we just missed out in quality, but in general I think I felt pretty comfortable.”
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Mark Mann-Bryans
Formula 1
Max Verstappen
Yuki Tsunoda
Liam Lawson
Isack Hadjar
Red Bull Racing
RB
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Isack Hadjar has not been put off by the struggles of Max Verstappen’s Red Bull team-mates, insisting he wants to end up in a seat next to the reigning Formula 1 world champion even more as a result.
After Sergio Perez’s struggles last year, Liam Lawson was demoted from Red Bull back to Racing Bulls after just two races for the senior team, with Yuki Tsunoda swapping places.
Meanwhile, Hadjar has quietly gone about his business at the past two grands prix. The French rookie crashed out on his F1 debut before the Australian Grand Prix had even started but put in a strong showing at the Chinese Grand Prix and scored his first points for Racing Bulls by finishing eighth in Japan last time out.
Isack Hadjar, Racing Bulls
Photo by: Clive Mason/Getty Images
His upturn in performance has largely played out in the background of the Red Bull drivers’ switch, but witnessing the situation from close quarters has not deterred Hadjar from aiming for a promotion of his own in the future.
“Honestly, now that it seems like it’s really hard to be next to Max, it makes me want to go even more, to find out why, what’s going on. That’s still the main target,” he said.
“It’s not like I don’t need to work anymore, you know. Still, I always put the pressure on me to keep delivering. So now the expectations from people are maybe a bit higher, but I keep doing what I do.
“Like I said before the season, my target would be to keep… If the car can finish in P9 or P8, I want to be there, maximise it, not being outside the top 10. If the car deserves the top 10, then I need to be on it.”
Indeed, behind Verstappen, Hadjar is the highest-scoring driver in the Red Bull stable across the three races and one sprint so far this season – although he admits results for Tsunoda at Racing Bulls were “not fair”.
Tsunoda’s task – starting at this weekend’s Bahrain Grand Prix – is to now get more out of the Red Bull than Lawson managed in his two races for the senior squad before returning to the team he raced for at the back end of last season.
Liam Lawson, Racing Bulls Team
Photo by: Sam Bloxham / Motorsport Images
It has been widely accepted that the Racing Bulls is a much easier car to drive with a bigger operating window when compared to the somewhat uncompromising Red Bull which Verstappen led to victory at Suzuka.
“I think it’s probably a fair thing to say. It’s definitely a bigger window, easier to drive, but I think that doesn’t necessarily mean that the Red Bull is just undriveable. It just maybe takes a bit more time to get that comfort in it,” explained Lawson.
“[The Racing Bulls car] is not crazy different from last year, so it was more of just an adjustment back from what I’d been driving at the start of this year, and it’s quite different, but I feel good.
“I think the weekend [in Japan] as well didn’t really show properly what I think we were capable of. Unfortunately we just missed out in quality, but in general I think I felt pretty comfortable.”
Photos from Bahrain – Thursday
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Mark Mann-Bryans
Formula 1
Max Verstappen
Liam Lawson
Isack Hadjar
Yuki Tsunoda
Red Bull Racing
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Liam Lawson’s nightmare dismissal from Red Bull following just two appearances for him handed a dream debut to the man who replaced him.
An abundance of goodwill greeted Yuki Tsunoda as Red Bull finally handed him an opportunity many felt he should have had in the first place. Plus, the timing could hardly have been better: Japan’s only Formula 1 driver made his debut for the top team at his home race in a car carrying a tribute livery in honour of their engine supplier and his long-term backer, Honda.
On Sunday, Max Verstappen carried the car to a superb victory, one of his best, as he kept the clearly faster McLarens behind all day. Tsunoda came in 58 seconds behind, out of the points.
There was little to shout about this result, on the face of it. Tsunoda only finished six seconds closer to Verstappen than Lawson did on his last outing for Red Bull. Had Tsunoda really done well enough to justify Red Bull showing Lawson the door so soon?
Tsunoda’s Q1 performance was encouraging
Taking the weekend as a whole, there is more cause to be encouraged about Tsunoda’s performance. He got off to a good start in first practice, lapping little more than a tenth of a second off Verstappen.
Although he was almost two seconds behind in Friday’s later session, this was no cause for alarm, as a series of disruptions had prevented Tsunoda from completing a representative qualifying simulation lap. However that lost time hurt him when crunch time came on Saturday.
In Q1 he matched Verstappen’s best time to within three-hundredths of a second after a similar number of runs. But while Verstappen found nearly half a second in Q2, Tsunoda was unable to improve his time, which he blamed on failing to prepare his tyres properly beforehand. He dropped out in the second round, almost half a second off Verstappen, and beaten by both drivers from his former team, including Lawson.
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This left Tsunoda at a serious disadvantage for a race in which overtaking proved far more difficult than it had been in China two weeks earlier. Although he pounced on a mistake by Lawson on the first lap, Tsunoda only gained one further place, thanks to a slow pit stop for Pierre Gasly.
Team radio transcript: “I can’t turn the car at all”: Full radio from Lawson’s alarming Chinese GP slog to 16th
In China, Lawson started from the pit lane having made drastic set-up changes in a bid to master the tyre problems he was suffering. It was to no avail, and even when he ran in free air his lap times dropped off quickly.
In contrast, Tsunoda never had the benefit of free air during yesterday’s race. He spent the first stint stuck behind Gasly and the second in Fernando Alonso’s wheeltracks. In common with virtually every other driver on the grid, he simply couldn’t get close enough in the wake of either driver to mount an attack.
The raw numbers of Tsunoda’s first result alongside Verstappen do not make for encouraging reading. But there’s plenty of cause to believe he’s started off at a higher level than Lawson. As Tsunoda acknowledged after the race, the crucial factor this weekend will be whether he can qualify closer to Verstappen.
Tsunoda’s Japanese Grand Prix radio messages
Stint 1: Medium Stint 2: Hard Finish
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Stint 1: Medium
Tsunoda picked up one place immediately after the start then set about trying to attack Gasly. He had difficulty getting within DRS range, however, and asked his race engineer Richard Wood to clarify where the detection point was in the final chicane.
Lap: 2/53 TSU: 1’36.076
Wood
DRS is enabled. Gasly the car ahead, 0.6. Lawson behind, 0.8.
Tsunoda
Yeah, I don’t need the information for the car in front.
Lap: 4/53 TSU: 1’34.771
Tsunoda
Where was the DRS detection point for last corner?
Wood
Detection in turn 15.
Tsunoda
Apex?
Wood
Apex.
Lap: 7/53 TSU: 1’34.655
Wood
Recommendation, no push, turn 11. No push toggle, turn eleven.
Lap: 8/53 TSU: 1’34.818
Wood
Okay, so Gasly’s dropped out of DRS from Alonso.
Lap: 9/53 TSU: 1’34.552
Tsunoda
Yeah, a bit more rear-limited.
Wood
Copy.
Wood
Think about torque eight, torque eight. I’ll have a flap update for the next stint when you can.
As he prepared to switch from the medium rubber to hards at his pit stop, Tsunoda told his team he would potentially like more front wing angle, but only if he was likely to emerge in clear air. That was a luxury few drivers enjoyed at Suzuka.
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Lap: 11/53 TSU: 1’34.668
Tsunoda
Tyres okay, but it’s hard to overtake.
Wood
Yeah, copy that.
Lap: 13/53 TSU: 1’34.357
Tsunoda
Tyre is good.
Wood
Copy, good info.
Lap: 15/53 TSU: 1’34.020
Tsunoda
Are we sticking still to the plan A? I think maybe… We’re improving lap times, so I don’t know
Wood
Copy Yuki, we are looking at the options just now. Continue with plan A for now.
Lap: 17/53 TSU: 1’34.595
Tsunoda
Tsunoda describes his preference for front wing flap change at his pit stop If it’s by myself maybe stick to this or maybe a step more flap. If traffic, similar.
Wood
Copy.
Lap: 20/53 TSU: 1’34.326
Wood
Okay, could be racing Russell at pit exit. Russell pit exit now.
Wood
Okay, so car behind Russell. Russell on new hard tyres.
Tsunoda
Copy.
Lap: 21/53 TSU: 1’34.975
Wood
Gap behind, 0.5. Russell passes him on the inside at the chicane
Stint 2: Hard
Tsunoda got a late call to “box opposite” Gasly – i.e. only pit if he did not – and came in. Gasly pitted on the following lap and a slow tyre meant Tsunoda easily gained the place. Now he was stuck behind Alonso.
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Lap: 23/53 TSU: 1’36.396
Wood
Battery’s good. How are the tyres?
Tsunoda
The tyre is at least consistent, but the grip is low I guess.
Wood
And box opposite Gasly. Box opposite Gasly, this lap. Gasly stays out and Tsunoda comes in
Lap: 24/53 TSU: 1’54.579
Wood
Okay, we can push. Everything you’ve got here.
Lap: 25/53 TSU: 1’33.618
Wood
Tsunoda arrives at the pit straight, Gasly is in the pits Okay, press and hold here. Press and hold. Gasly pit exit and Fernando as well.
Wood
Car ahead Fernando on new hard, let’s get him.
Wood
Battery remains good.
Lap: 28/53 TSU: 1’33.036
Tsunoda
Mode six?
Wood
Yeah, mode six.
Lap: 29/53 TSU: 1’32.955
Wood
We’ve got display 10 position eight, display 10, position eight.
Tsunoda
It is already done. It’s already selected.
Wood
Yep, copy. Strap five. Strat five.
Lap: 31/53 TSU: 1’33.125
Wood
Display 10, position 10 when you can. Display 1-0, position 1-0.
Red Bull suggested various settings changes for Tsunoda as he tried to attack Alonso. But he told his team the turbulence from the Aston Martin made it too difficult to get close.
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Lap: 35/53 TSU: 1’32.424
Wood
Yuki so we are happy with this tyre so you can push, use all the tyre.
Tsunoda
Copy.
Wood
That will improve performance. Engine 11, position 2. Engine 1-1, position 1. How’s the balance? Can we help you anywhere with tools?
Lap: 39/53 TSU: 1’32.598
Tsunoda
Yeah, it’s just that the dirty air is hard.
Wood
Copy.
Lap: 40/53 TSU: 1’32.319
Wood
You’re doing a great job, keep on concentrating, you were just outside DRS that time. Keep it clean.
Lap: 41/53 TSU: 1’32.522
Wood
Engine 13 position six for performance, engine 1-3 position six.
Lap: 43/53 TSU: 1’32.131
Wood
For info car behind, Gasly, three seconds.
Lap: 46/53 TSU: 1’31.940
Wood
Gap behind 2.5.
Lap: 47/53 TSU: 1’32.381
Wood
Display five, position six for more low speed locking at exit.
Lap: 48/53 TSU: 1’31.907
Wood
Think about third toggle for turn 16.
Finish
Over the final laps Red Bull gave Tsunoda the benefit of a more powerful engine mode for periods during the final laps. But it was all for naught.
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Lap: 49/53 TSU: 1’31.929
Wood
Okay, that’s five laps to go. Gap at DRS 1.1. Mode nine when you can.
Lap: 51/53 TSU: 1’31.871
Wood
Okay, three laps to go. Gap at DRS 1.1. Keep it clean.
Wood
On the straight exiting Spoon Three seconds, press and hold here. Three seconds.
Lap: 52/53 TSU: 1’32.141
Wood
Exit of hairpin Okay we want one more three-second press hold out of 14, do it immediately at full throttle, immediately at full throttle.
Chequered flag
Wood
Okay mate recharge on, recharge, that was a tough day today. Overtaking was very difficult. Fail 84 fail please, fail 84 fail.
Tsunoda
Yeah, sorry guys. Yeah I think the pace was there but just the traffic, it’s quite hard to close the gap more than one sec.
Wood
Sorry we couldn’t get you in the points for your home race.
Tsunoda
Nah, I just have to be better in the qualifying, that’s it.
Wood
So pick up rubber on the way in, pick up the rubber.
Wood
So finishing order, Max P1, Norris, Piastri. So a Honda on the podium for their home race.
Tsunoda
Yeah, congrats, congrats, guys. Impressive.
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Which Formula 1 driver made the most of the Japanese Grand Prix weekend?
It’s time to give your verdict on which driver did the best with the equipment at their disposal over the last three days.
Review how each driver got on below and vote for who impressed you the most at Suzuka.
Driver performance summary
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Vote for your driver of the weekend
Which driver do you think did the best job throughout the race weekend?
Who got the most out of their car in qualifying and the race? Who put their team mate in the shade?
Cast your vote below and explain why you chose the driver you picked in the comments.
Who was the best driver of the 2025 Japanese Grand Prix weekend?
No opinion (0%)
Gabriel Bortoleto (0%)
Nico Hulkenberg (0%)
Carlos Sainz Jnr (0%)
Alexander Albon (0%)
Yuki Tsunoda (6%)
Isack Hadjar (11%)
Oliver Bearman (0%)
Esteban Ocon (0%)
Pierre Gasly (0%)
Jack Doohan (0%)
Fernando Alonso (0%)
Lance Stroll (0%)
George Russell (0%)
Andrea Kimi Antonelli (17%)
Liam Lawson (0%)
Max Verstappen (67%)
Lewis Hamilton (0%)
Charles Leclerc (0%)
Oscar Piastri (0%)
Lando Norris (0%)
Total Voters: 18
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Despite returning to the slower Racing Bulls car, Liam Lawson outqualified his Red Bull replacement Yuki Tsunoda for Formula 1’s Japanese Grand Prix. But there are signs Red Bull’s merciless switch may actually be working already.
Leaving aside the ruthlessness of Red Bull’s decision to demote Lawson after two difficult races on circuits he didn’t know, what ultimately mattered to the team is having someone in the second car who could be a regular scorer of big points to boost its constructors’ hopes, and ideally as soon as possible.
If you take Saturday’s qualifying session in isolation – in which Tsunoda placed 15th in Q2 behind both Racing Bulls, including the driver he replaced – you would have to say the jury is still out on the Japanese driver. Tsunoda had a poor start to his final lap, drifting out of the final chicane with the unstable Red Bull, which left him starting his flyer on the back foot, and then getting out of shape in Turn 1. Afterwards he said not nailing the warm-up of the tyres cost him dearly.
“In Q1 I felt pretty good – I just missed the window, I guess,” Tsunoda explained. “I think the window that this car can operate [in] is very narrow – most of the things have to almost be perfect, especially warm-up.
“And, especially in Q2 run two, I wasn’t able to do the warm-up I wanted as the previous run, so that makes a big difference in the end. I kind of recognised it but it was a bit too late, and I wasn’t able to put it all together when it mattered.”
Tsunoda said it was ‘a big shame’ not getting into Q3, which had been his baseline pre-weekend target. But what he shouldn’t feel any shame about is how he has acquitted himself across the weekend as a whole.
Having been dropped into the car with no prior mileage in front of his home fans and Honda’s watchful eye – on one of F1’s most difficult circuits – the pressure on Tsunoda was immense. However, if he was feeling any of it, he didn’t show it throughout the weekend. He ran team-mate Verstappen close in first free practice – with the usual caveat of unknown engine modes – and like others was derailed by FP2’s four red flags, which limited his running.
Having felt no weird behaviour from the RB21 in the Milton Keynes simulator last week, the on-the-knife-edge behaviour of Red Bull’s 2025 machine did dawn on him once he was afforded first-hand experience. But, while Lawson felt he needed much more time to adjust, which he cruelly wasn’t afforded, Tsunoda seemed to cope relatively well already, setting the ninth-fastest time in FP3 and seventh in Q1 before his messier Q2 performance.
Liam Lawson, Racing Bulls
Photo by: Clive Mason/Getty Images
The Red Bull not only has a narrower set-up window than the Racing Bulls lineage of cars the 24-year-old is accustomed to, but its on-the-nose behaviour also means it is much more unstable, something Verstappen has also complained about in spite of his stunning, heart-in-mouth pole position.
“This car is on the edge with the rear but at least for now, I feel pretty OK with the stability,” Tsunoda said. “I would say in terms of the rear sliding, I’m feeling it but, at the same time, this kind of direction is the set-up that I have to drive to perform well in the car. I started recognising it throughout the three practices, it just wasn’t enough in the end to put it all together.”
Team principal Christian Horner, who had long been reluctant to promote Tsunoda, also sounded more impressed than he had previously been. “It was a great shame for Yuki today because actually his Q1 was very competitive, he was within a tenth,” Horner told F1 TV. “It was building nicely [but] in Q2 he actually didn’t go quicker than Q1 and he had a big moment at the start of his lap.
“By the time you’ve given away three, four tenths, you’re never going to get that back around here, so it was a shame because the qualifying doesn’t represent the job that he’s done up until this point.”
He then expanded to Sky: “I think he would have comfortably made the top 10 today. Up to that point I think he’s actually done very well, and I was pleased to see Liam settling in well as well at Racing Bulls.”
Lawson was disappointed as well, claiming 14th on the grid while team-mate Isack Hadjar took a superb seventh. But Lawson also demonstrated much more promise in his first competitive outing in the Racing Bulls than the Q2 result showed, and most certainly felt much more at ease than on his two disastrous weekends with Red Bull.
“It’s been a tricky day – I felt really good, even stronger than yesterday in terms of comfort in the car,” he said. “It was alright in Q1 and then through Q2 the balance sort of got away from us and I just couldn’t get much more out of it.”
Yuki Tsunoda, Red Bull Racing
Photo by: Mark Thompson – Getty Images
Poetically, Lawson and Tsunoda will encounter each other on the grid on Sunday, starting from 14th and 15th respectively. But Lawson shrugged off any extra significance to having ‘his’ Red Bull starting behind him with Tsunoda at the wheel: “No, it’s just another car. I mean, with tomorrow’s weather it’s going to be an exciting enough race probably, so I’ll just be focused on trying to get a good start and moving forward.”
In the past, Tsunoda repeatedly wondered why he hadn’t been promoted to Red Bull. And, while he has belatedly been handed his dream move in difficult circumstances, he has now also woken up to the harsh reality of just how hard the Red Bull is to drive and set up, and perhaps how easy Verstappen has made it look despite the Dutchman’s own gripes.
But from day one – and it admittedly is a very small sample size – it doesn’t seem like Tsunoda is wrestling with the Red Bull’s typical weaknesses to the same extent that Lawson or other drivers in that seat have.
“The positive thing is I started to understand the car,” he concluded after setting aside his initial disappointment. “It’s quite difficult to operate this car properly, it’s quite narrow but at least I feel confidence in the car, and I know what to do for the future. I finished the Q2 with finally reading the whole textbook about the Red Bull, you know what I mean?”
Make no mistake, Tsunoda still has his work cut out to make his dream move work and really make the seat his own. But if you look past Q2 alone, his baseline pace has already been stronger than his predecessor, and so has his confidence in the car.
In this article
Filip Cleeren
Formula 1
Liam Lawson
Yuki Tsunoda
Red Bull Racing
Racing Bulls
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Red Bull’s latest driver swap dominated the news as the Japanese Grand Prix weekend began.
As a result, Yuki Tsunoda and Liam Lawson have new cars to get used to. While Lawson may rue losing his place at the top team, the good news for him is the Racing Bulls 02 appears to be a very tidy chassis.
Indeed, the first day of running ended with both Racing Bulls drivers ahead of their Red Bull counterparts. This needs to be qualified with the point that Tsunoda’s qualifying simulation run was compromised by one of the many red flags in second practice, while the Racing Bulls pair got largely clean laps in.
Even so, Racing Bulls’ performance bears out what we’ve seen so far this year. Tsunoda put his car fifth on the grid at Melbourne: Could Lawson or Isack Hadjar do even better on Saturday? What an outcome it would be if Lawson, fresh from his demotion from the top team, out-qualified his fellow three Red Bull-backed drivers – or even just the one who replaced him.
But Racing Bulls are potentially as much of a threat to Mercedes and Ferrari, at least over a single flying lap.
Teams’ 2024 performance in context
At this track last year F1 still seemed to be a Red Bull benefit. Max Verstappen and Sergio Perez locked out the front row of the grid and romped to an unchallenged one-two.
But Suzuka has tended to be a strong circuit for McLaren in recent years. Even at this stage last year, before the Miami Grand Prix upgrade which transformed their car, they were quick over a single lap.
Teams’ progress vs 2024
On the partially-resurfaced Suzuka track, only three teams are yet to beat their best times from last year. Of them, Aston Martin probably would have done had Fernando Alonso completed the lap he was on when he spun off at Degner One.
Tsunoda’s second practice session was compromised after he made a strong start in the opening hour. So far Verstappen’s weekend appears to be following its usual pattern, in that he spent Friday attempting different set-up solutions and not appearing particularly happy with them. He’s rebounded from deeper dips than this on a Saturday, however.
Teams’ 2024 and 2025 times
McLaren will head into Saturday as overwhelming favourites for pole position, and another front row lock-out is on the cards. However as we saw in Shanghai, the MCL39 is a tricky beast at the limit, and has caught its drivers out.
One further factor could disrupt the competitive order in qualifying: the wind direction is due to reverse, turning headwinds into tailwinds and vice-versa, which will have a significant effect upon the cars’ handling at a track where aerodynamic performance is critical. With the field so close, whoever can master that added challenge stands to claim a better qualifying position at a track where overtaking is often difficult.
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Liam Lawson said he has enjoyed his return to Racing Bulls at Suzuka despite his harsh demotion from Red Bull, feeling at ease in the team’s vastly different Formula 1 car.
After two difficult race weekends Lawson’s Red Bull stint was cut short by the team’s management, which opted to try his former Racing Bulls team-mate Yuki Tsunoda instead.
Having felt he needed more time to get used to Red Bull’s tricky to drive RB21, which he ultimately wasn’t afforded, Lawson got up to speed much quicker in the VCARB 02, taking fifth in an admittedly disjointed Suzuka FP2, less than half a tenth behind new team-mate Isack Hadjar.
“It felt good. It is definitely a different feeling to drive,” Lawson said about his first day in his new car. “I think the window that the guys have at the moment is very, very good. And the car has been fast so far this season, so hopefully we can replicate that tomorrow as well.
“It’s a very cool track. With the resurfacing sector one is even faster now, so it just feels like it’s tearing your head off, which is quite exciting.”
At Racing Bulls Lawson has found a warmer environment to regain his confidence, with team principal Laurent Mekies adamant that his priority was to help the 23-year-old New Zealander find his feet again.
Liam Lawson, Racing Bulls, Laurent Mekies, Racing Bulls
Photo by: Rudy Carezzevoli / Motorsport Images
“He knows he has an important role to play with us in the battle we have in the midfield,” Mekies said. “He knows he has a point to prove out there, so we are all very conscious that his talent is there and it’s about finding the right conditions to extract it back out of him.”
Lawson said he had received the right support from the Anglo-Italian team to make the transition as smooth as possible: “Yeah, it’s been nice. Everybody’s been very, very positive, even from last week.
“Laurent was straight on the phone and very, very positive and saying all the things I needed to hear, going to see everyone at the factory, and obviously yesterday coming to the paddock as well.
“I’ve spent a lot of time with this team, they’re a great bunch of people. It is nice to feel that welcome back again, so hopefully we can go and have some good races together.”
Photos from Japanese GP – Practice
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Filip Cleeren
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Racing Bulls
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Liam Lawson says he has enjoyed his return to Racing Bulls at Suzuka despite his harsh demotion from Red Bull, feeling at ease in the team’s vastly different Formula 1 car.
After two difficult race weekends Lawson’s Red Bull stint was cut short by the team’s management, which opted to try his former Racing Bulls team-mate Yuki Tsunoda instead.
Having felt he needed more time to get used to Red Bull’s tricky to drive RB21 car, which he ultimately wasn’t afforded, Lawson got up to speed much quicker in the VCARB 02, taking fifth in an admittedly disjointed Suzuka FP2, less than half a tenth behind new team-mate Isack Hadjar.
“It felt good. It is definitely a different feeling to drive,” Lawson said about his first day in his new car. “I think the window that the guys have at the moment is very, very good. And the car has been fast so far this season, so hopefully we can replicate that tomorrow as well.
“It’s a very cool track. With the resurfacing sector one is even faster now, so it just feels like it’s tearing your head off, which is quite exciting.”
At Racing Bulls Lawson has found a warmer environment to regain his confidence, with team principal Laurent Mekies adamant that his priority was to help the 23-year-old New Zealander find his feet again.
Liam Lawson, Racing Bulls, Laurent Mekies, Racing Bulls
Photo by: Rudy Carezzevoli / Motorsport Images
“He knows he has an important role to play with us in the battle we have in the midfield,” Mekies said. “He knows he has a point to prove out there, so we are all very conscious that his talent is there and it’s about finding the right conditions to extract it back out of him.”
Lawson said he had received the right support from the Anglo-Italian team to make the transition as smooth as possible: “Yeah, it’s been nice. Everybody’s been very, very positive, even from last week.
“Laurent was straight on the phone and very, very positive and saying all the things I needed to hear, going to see everyone at the factory, and obviously yesterday coming to the paddock as well.
“I’ve spent a lot of time with this team, they’re a great bunch of people. It is nice to feel that welcome back again, so hopefully we can go and have some good races together.”
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Former Racing Bulls team principal Franz Tost has said Liam Lawson could have been given “100 years and he still wouldn’t be as fast” as Yuki Tsunoda, as he backed the decision to swap the pair by Red Bull.
The Milton Keynes outfit assessed the two drivers towards the end of 2024 as it became clear that they were going to replace Mexican driver Sergio Perez for the 2025 season. The team ultimately decided to promote rookie Lawson to the seat alongside Max Verstappen, but have now reversed this decision after two race weekends of the year.
Now, Tsunoda takes the seat alongside the four-time champion in front of his home crowd in Japan.
Tost, who held the role of team principal at Racing Bulls (previously Toro Rosso, AlphaTauri, and RB) from 2006 until the end of 2023, has given his thoughts on the driver moves during an interview on the Austrian ORF broadcast.
“I would have gone with Yuki Tsunoda from the start. I said that already – I made it clear last autumn. Why? Yuki is much faster than Lawson. You could give Lawson 100 years, and he still wouldn’t be as fast as Yuki. And Yuki is more experienced, so what’s the issue? It’s a very simple decision,” he explained.
“It’s definitely a confirmation that the right call was made. Yuki has incredible natural speed – I’ve been saying that for years. Now, he just needs to put it all together properly. He’s still too emotional in the car at times, and maybe that was one of the reasons they didn’t pick him over Lawson in the first place.
Franz Tost, Team Principal, Scuderia AlphaTauri
Photo by: Michael Potts / Motorsport Images
“But in terms of raw pace, Yuki absolutely belongs among the best Formula 1 drivers. And if he can now translate that into consistency, perform in the races, and keep his emotions more or less in check, then it’s going to be a very, very good season for Red Bull Racing and for Yuki Tsunoda.”
Lawson said Red Bull’s switch decision came as a surprise and he had hoped to show what he could do at a more familiar track in Suzuka, having raced their during his Super Formula days.
Tost concluded: “Knowing the track is one thing. Being fast is another. The decision to put Yuki in the car now was absolutely right, because Liam is simply too slow.”
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