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Australia

Chinese GP: Vettel beats Hamilton and Leclerc in FP1

Ferrari’s Sebastian Vettel topped the first practice session for the 1000th Formula 1 World Championship race in China on Friday morning.

Sebastian Vettel, Ferrari SF90

Sebastian Vettel, Ferrari SF90

Mark Sutton / Motorsport Images

Having established clear superiority in straightline speed at the preceding race in Bahrain, Ferrari was expected to build on that advantage on the long straights of the Shanghai International Circuit. And it proceeded to do so as Vettel surged ahead while running a harder compound of tyre than Hamilton, who closed out the session fractionally faster than Vettel’s teammate Charles Leclerc.

Red Bull arrived in China hoping to be closer to Mercedes and Ferrari after identifying a set-up issue that hindered Max Verstappen and Pierre Gasly in Bahrain. But while fourth-placed Verstappen’s fastest time of 1m34.334s on soft tyres was only two tenths off Hamilton’s best on similar rubber, it was nearly half a second slower than the benchmark Vettel set on mediums. Gasly only ran on the medium and hard Pirellis and was therefore more representative of comparative pace – and he ended the session seventh fastest with a 1m35.428s, 1.5s adrift of Vettel.

Hamilton’s teammate Valtteri Bottas, the championship leader, was fifth with a 1m34.653s he set on the soft tyres, while Renault’s Daniel Ricciardo also employed the softer rubber and sneaked ahead of Gasly to post the sixth quickest time.

More on the Chinese GP:

A number of teams elected to replace engine components ahead of practice: Renault gave Nico Hulkenberg an entirely new power unit package (ICE, MGU-H, MGU-K and turbocharger) and Ricciardo a new MGU-K, while McLaren’s Lando Norris also took on a new MGU-K. Norris’s team-mate Carlos Sainz got the revised component in Bahrain after his failure in Australia.

Ferrari took the unusual step of replacing the control electronics in both its own cars as well as the Haas entries, but not the Alfa Romeos.

Since Shanghai is a seldom-used track as well as being front-limited, it evolves greatly over the course of the weekend and teams seldom go for glory runs in first practice. The session was 20 minutes old before any drivers actually set a timed lap and it was the two Mercedes who were fastest in the initial running, largely by dint of lapping on soft tyres while most other team sent their drivers out on harder rubber. 

Hamilton set an early benchmark of 1m35.102s on the softs, but since this was only a little over two tenths faster than Max Verstappen wrung out of his Red Bull on a set of hard tyres - one of only two sets he’s allocated this weekend - it was only a matter of time before the laptimes began to tumble as the track evolved.

After a further brief lull in activity the majority of the drivers headed out again with 30 minutes to go, and it was here that Ferrari began to show its hand properly as first Leclerc and then Vettel overhauled Hamilton with a 1m34.167s and a 1m33.167s respectively, on the medium tyres. Hamilton then split the Ferraris with a 1m34.118s on softs, set at the beginning of a five-lap run.

Verstappen then beat his earlier time during a three-lap run on soft rubber, but none of the other frontrunners subsequently improved.

In Gasly’s immediate wake, Daniil Kvyat was eighth for Toro Rosso and Lance Stroll ninth for Racing Point despite a spin at the final corner early in the session. Both ran on medium tyres throughout, while Romain Grosjean closed out the top 10 for Haas with a 1m35.507s set on softs. Just over a tenth of a second separated seventh-placed Gasly from 11th-placed Kevin Magnussen.

Of the regular front-midfield runners, Alfa Romeo had a relatively disappointing showing as Kimi Raikkonen finished 15th and Antonio Giovinazzi completed just two installation laps, spending the rest of the session in the garage.

Session results

Pos Driver Chassis Engine Laps Time Gap
1 Germany Sebastian Vettel Ferrari Ferrari 19 1'33.911  
2 United Kingdom Lewis Hamilton Mercedes Mercedes 21 1'34.118 0.207
3 Monaco Charles Leclerc Ferrari Ferrari 21 1'34.167 0.256
4 Netherlands Max Verstappen Red Bull Honda 20 1'34.334 0.423
5 Finland Valtteri Bottas Mercedes Mercedes 23 1'34.653 0.742
6 Australia Daniel Ricciardo Renault Renault 23 1'35.239 1.328
7 France Pierre Gasly Red Bull Honda 23 1'35.428 1.517
8 Russian Federation Daniil Kvyat Toro Rosso Honda 24 1'35.447 1.536
9 Canada Lance Stroll Racing Point Mercedes 25 1'35.466 1.555
10 France Romain Grosjean Haas Ferrari 24 1'35.507 1.596
11 Denmark Kevin Magnussen Haas Ferrari 25 1'35.517 1.606
12 Germany Nico Hulkenberg Renault Renault 22 1'35.591 1.680
13 United Kingdom Lando Norris McLaren Renault 24 1'35.631 1.720
14 Thailand Alex Albon Toro Rosso Honda 26 1'35.695 1.784
15 Finland Kimi Raikkonen Alfa Romeo Ferrari 23 1'35.729 1.818
16 Spain Carlos Sainz Jr. McLaren Renault 24 1'35.756 1.845
17 Mexico Sergio Perez Racing Point Mercedes 24 1'35.820 1.909
18 Poland Robert Kubica Williams Mercedes 27 1'36.847 2.936
19 United Kingdom George Russell Williams Mercedes 29 1'37.619 3.708
20 Italy Antonio Giovinazzi Alfa Romeo Ferrari 2    

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Edition

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