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Home » Ferrari: why Carlos Sainz – Charles Leclerc one-two finish at Albert Park is a huge boost in Maranello

Ferrari: why Carlos Sainz – Charles Leclerc one-two finish at Albert Park is a huge boost in Maranello. Why result in Australia is a huge boost for Ferrari F1 team.

For the second time, it’s Scuderia Ferrari’s Carlos Sainz who is breaking Max Verstappen’s streak of Formula 1 victories. The Spaniard secured the race win in the Australian Grand Prix at the 5.278-kilometre Albert Park Circuit in Melbourne with a comfortable margin over his Ferrari teammate Charles Leclerc and in full control of the race after the Dutchman’s retirement early in the race due to brake disk problems. The McLaren cars of Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri posed a threat to Charles Leclerc in the battle for second place, but couldn’t hope to fight for the victory. The SF-24 is a far cry from its predecessor; it can use the tires better than others, and there’s no Max Verstappen-like pace hindered in every way by a brake-by-wire issue, yet Carlos Sainz produced a high-level pace because he had the right settings to deal with graining.

Could Red Bull have paid a bit for the growing internal pressure?

Reliability issues are always the result of imperfect attention to detail. A few days ago, an experienced man like Helmut Marko pointed out that Red Bull needs to return to calm after the recent scandal that has put Christian Horner squarely at the forefront of Formula 1 and beyond. Winning helps maintain an armed peace, but in Melbourne, Ferrari put real pressure from the first lap on Friday for the first time. This forced their rivals to seek a different path to secure the front row at all costs, even with Sergio Perez.

The Mexican’s grid penalty left Ferrari with a more open window.

The Australian Grand Prix showed that, notwithstanding Max Verstappen’s retirement, on layouts that require a good front end, the SF-24 performs very well. At the same time, the Italian simulation team continues to prepare the car perfectly. Some commented in the paddock that luckily for Ferrari’s rivals, it was not a Sprint weekend, because no one would have caught the Maranello team. In summary, the more the SF-24 runs in the corners, the better it works in the race because it now uses less tire than others. On the other hand, even straight-line efficiency wasn’t penalizing despite the choice of downforce to protect pace in the last sector, the slowest one. Carlos Sainz and Charles Leclerc were only losing 3 or 4 kilometers per hour to Red Bull. If choice made by the Maranello technicians at the Jeddah circuit was a bit conservative, in Australia it was simply the most correct and the best option.

Carlos Sainz was in bed one week ago, but on Sunday he was euphoric. Life is indeed sometimes incredible. The Spaniard was confident he could win this race, as he did well at the Albert Park circuit last year too, while at the same time pointing out that this SF-24 is a completely different car. In fact, Carlos Sainz did what he wanted on Sunday. He was able to widen the gap easily on Lando Norris’s McLaren and extend the stint on the C4 compound. At that point, he just had to count the laps and manage his pace, the only opponent could be Charles Leclerc, who, from the qualifying session, wasn’t comfortable enough to worry him. The Monegasque driver admitted that his Maranello teammate did a better job than him this weekend, but was also happy that Ferrari overall got the maximum points in Australia, which is what matters most. The Monegasque was honest and acknowledged Carlos Sainz’s great work; nevertheless, he could smile looking at the standings. With the fastest lap, he overtook Sergio Perez by one point ahead of the Japanese Grand Prix.

Show your support for Scuderia Ferrari with official merchandise collection! Click here to enter the F1 online Store and shop securely! And also get your F1 tickets for every race with VIP hospitality and unparalleled insider access. Click here for the best offers to support Charles and Carlos from the track!

Show your support for Scuderia Ferrari with official merchandise collection! Click here to enter the F1 online Store and shop securely! And also get your F1 tickets for every race with VIP hospitality and unparalleled insider access. Click here for the best offers to support Charles and Lewis from the track!

Sergio Perez’s RB20 was never in contention; furthermore, there was a loss of around 20 points of downforce generated by some floor damage from lap 27, so his recovery was a bit limited in the second part of the race. However, his pace was far off, which was largely insufficient to reclaim the podium, let alone the fight for the race victory.

Scuderia Ferrari returns to Maranello with the total jackpot of 44 points available, while Max Verstappen stops after 44 races. McLaren was a solid second force, just two tenths behind Carlos Sainz, while Mercedes is in the worst moment of the Formula 1 hybrid era: the German side suffered as yet unidentified issue with Lewis Hamilton’s power unit and George Russell didn’t finish after an alarming level of performance. The Englishman was 50 seconds behind Ferrari at the time of his incident with Fernando Alonso.

The next round of the 2024 Formula 1 championship is Suzuka, just a few months after Max Verstappen’s overwhelming victory, an opportunity for Scuderia Ferrari to check the progress seen at the Melbourne circuit. The Italian side intends to push on developments; if all goes well next week in Japan, they will bring forward a small part of the first aerodynamic upgrade.

Carlos Sainz, Ferrari

Mar 25, 2024Scuderia Fans

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Red Bull interested in Carlos Sainz: how Christian Horner could respond to Ferrari's 2025 F1 dream teamCarlos Sainz: "Those who know this sport do not underestimate me and that's enough for me"
Comments: 12
  1. Aleks
    1 year ago

    Yes, John Elkan is building a brand with Lewis and Charles… Not a racing team!

    One of them is a singer and the other one is maintaining a brand among celebrities:)… what an idiotic leadership!

    They decide to get rid of the only consistent racer and person to truly disrupt Max winning strike.

    ReplyCancel
    • F1gilles
      1 year ago

      Mind to remind me who actually fought for the title when there was a fight? Oh right, it was the “singer”.

      Classic F1 fans, recency bias all the way.

      ReplyCancel
      • Fotisknt
        1 year ago

        Don’t waste your time with some stupid guys!

        ReplyCancel
        • Aleks
          1 year ago

          Give a better arrangement idiot! Or your shallow observation does not see the whole picture.
          Dont get me wrong I have been a Ferrari fan for 26 years and seeing the tram loosing strike is tough.

          ReplyCancel
      • Aleks
        1 year ago

        Consistency my friend, consistency is lacking our singing champion!
        You cant go and compete agains Max with an argument that your weekend was not good…
        Have you sèen his face expression after the race how he looked frustrated from himself?

        ReplyCancel
        • F1gilles
          1 year ago

          Mind showing me the qualifying positions of each Ferrari driver in their last 10 races?

          Let me spare you the trouble:
          Leclerc 4, 5, 1, 1, 2, 1, 2, 2, 2, 5 (average 2.5)
          Sainz 1, 6, 12, 4, 2, 8, 2, 16, 4, 2 (average 5.7)

          Shocking how the inconsistent “singing champion” is actually more consistent than the “only consistent racer” we supposedly have!

          ReplyCancel
          • Aleks
            1 year ago

            Hey “smart ass” winning a championship is not abaut who qualify better. It means nothing if you are quick over one lap when you race for 50-60 laps during grand prix.
            Charles is lacking consistency and that is a period.
            Do your research and than discus!

            ReplyCancel
          • F1gilles
            1 year ago

            Let’s see their last 10 race results too, no? (in races that both finished)

            Leclerc 9, 7, 4, 4, 4, 3, 2, 2, 4, 2 (average 4.1)
            Sainz 10, 8, 3, 1, 6, 4, 6, 18, 3, 1 (average 6.0)

            Do your research beforehand 😉

            ReplyCancel
  2. Anna
    1 year ago

    I like how Leclerc qualified on the front row for 7 races in a row (one of them resulted in a DNS, one in mechanical DSQ, and one in brake issues), but qualifies P5 once and it’s consistency issues.
    Meanwhile Carlos was over the place the end of last season, but now we’re back to “consistency is the key”.
    At the beginning of the season it was “Hamilton will bring winning mentality to Maranello”, etc, now Merc is struggling and it’a all about “Ferrari made a mistake”.
    Oh, and a week ago it as all about how Ferrari can find a seat for Bearman ASAP and let’s even put him on the main team, which now I guess everyone forgot about.

    I like Carlos a lot, I would love to see competitive Ferrari season with him as one of the drivers. He also had a great race and deserves all the praise and all TPs calling him with offers.

    The thing that pisses me off, somehow the media is not able to praise one of the drivers on its own merit, without putting down the other. This works both ways, when Leclerc is doing great and Sainz is blamed for not being at his pace or lacking in speed.

    ReplyCancel
    • F1gilles
      1 year ago

      F1 fans have a shocking amount of recency bias. Every race the opinions change. If Leclerc wins the next race in Japan with Hamilton on the podium, we will hear that Ferrari made the right choice and Hamilton outperformed the Mercedes tractor.

      I consider myself a neutral, I like both drivers and I think both are very capable and have their own strengths, and I celebrated the Melbourne 1-2 just like I celebrated the Bahrain 1-2 from 2 years ago. However, it is pretty clear that the media and most fans prefer Sainz and it is evident both in the articles that we see from F1 news outlets as well as the comments of fans in social media. For this reason we will always hear that “Leclerc is fast but not consistent, makes too many mistakes, very overrated” and “Sainz is just as fast and more consistent, very underrated”. I think I have already read 5 or 6 articles saying that Ferrari fired the wrong driver.

      There is, of course, the existing “hate” that some fans have for Leclerc because he beat fan favourite Vettel and forced him out of Ferrari, and now that he is going against another fan favourite in Sainz, it will be a repeat of it. Leclerc is considered the spoilt golden boy while Sainz is considered the underdog, so 2 good races by Sainz are enough to forget 10 good races by Leclerc. This is why I have stopped reading F1 content in social media, the amount of recency bias (and the immaturity of the comments) pisses me off.

      ReplyCancel
  3. Zee
    1 year ago

    I blame Elkann for everything that is happening at Ferrari. If that was Di Montezemolo he would have kept the current drivers, cos he knows how to build a winning formula.

    ReplyCancel
    • Aleks
      1 year ago

      Thank you, well said!

      ReplyCancel

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1 year ago 12 Comments Carlos Sainz, Charles Leclerc, NewsAustralian GP, Carlos Sainz, Charles Leclerc, Scuderia Ferrari524
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