
Whilst hardly a thriller, this year’s Formula One race in Barcelona gave us an interesting strategic battle between Max Verstappen and Lando Norris. Norris and McLaren demonstrated the many ways to lose a race with the fastest car, whilst varying tyre choices across the field kept the race intriguing.
It looked promising on Saturday for Lando to take his second win, after he achieved his first pole position since 2021. Whilst the Red Bull was close in qualifying trim, the McLaren would prove to be faster during the race. However, the race start can be vital at Barcelona and Lando failed to capitalize. Whilst he was busy pushing Verstappen onto the grass, George Russell utilized the outside line to sweep past the pair of them. Stuck in the middle of the situation, Lando was squeezed from first into third. Verstappen then swiftly utilized his Red Bull’s superior top speed to overtake Russell’s Mercedes on lap three. Lando, on the other hand, did not have the top speed advantage to overtake a Mercedes on equal tyres, so found himself stuck behind the slower Russell for the entire first stint. This allowed Verstappen to build a healthy lead over Norris by the end of the stint and forced McLaren onto an alternative strategy to have any hope of catching the Red Bull.
In response to being stuck in the George Russell train, McLaren decided to pit Norris much later than the other front runners, to give him a tyre advantage over Verstappen. However, whilst Norris was significantly faster than Verstappen, he was forced to pass Carlos Sainz, Lewis Hamilton and George Russell on track. All the time Norris spent following and passing other cars would be a detriment upon his advantage. Whilst Sainz and Hamilton proved easy pickings for Lando, George showed his prowess by forcing Lando into a duel. Whilst Lando eventually won the battle, he lost vital time to Verstappen through this sequence. To avoid the necessity of passing slower cars again, McLaren pitted Lando for his third stint slightly earlier than they would have desired. So, he had less of an advantage over Verstappen and whilst he closed up, Lando ran out of time to catch Max, finishing two seconds behind. With a better start, quicker stops, more decisive passes and an uncompromised strategy, McLaren could have won this race. In contrast, bottling all these things left Norris unhappy with second place.
Further down the field the uncertainty in tyre strategies proved to the detriment of some drivers. Whilst Russell and Sainz took the early leads in their respective inter-team battles, they were both put onto the hard tyres for the last stint. With their teammates proving faster on new soft tyres, both drivers were forced to cede position. By the end of the race, both were also not far from losing positions to Leclerc and Piastri respectively. This showed the uncertainty that a hot day on an abrasive circuit can bring, as teams become less sure what tyres to put their drivers on. It was unlikely that Mercedes and Ferrari intended to put their leading drivers on a compromised strategy, but it would certainly prove to the disappointment of Russell and Sainz. But sometimes, strategy is key and strategy in Spain won Lewis Hamilton his first podium of the year, bringing some happiness to a season that he has so far found lacking.
In conclusion, Spain was interesting throughout, if not outstanding. When a race circuit is slightly more difficult to overtake, it pays to have differing tyre strategies. Barcelona is not a bad circuit by any means and there were some amazing turn one overtakes by Russell, Norris and Hamilton throughout the race. But, seeing this race makes me want tyres with higher degradation, to throw more strategic upsets into the mix.

















