Skip to main content

Recommended for you

Fernando Alonso jokes watching Barcelona GP is “better than in the car”

Formula 1
Barcelona-Catalunya GP
Fernando Alonso jokes watching Barcelona GP is “better than in the car”

LIVE: F1 Barcelona Grand Prix updates - George Russell leads Lewis Hamilton after early stops

Formula 1
Barcelona-Catalunya GP
LIVE: F1 Barcelona Grand Prix updates - George Russell leads Lewis Hamilton after early stops

Le Mans race-ending Cadillac failure is a “dagger in the heart” – Sebastien Bourdais

WEC
24 Hours of Le Mans
Le Mans race-ending Cadillac failure is a “dagger in the heart” – Sebastien Bourdais

Oliver Bearman surprised by Q2 Barcelona result after "worst" F1 car in FP3

Formula 1
Barcelona-Catalunya GP
Oliver Bearman surprised by Q2 Barcelona result after "worst" F1 car in FP3

What does Kimi Antonelli still need to improve to become F1 world champion?

Feature
Formula 1
Feature
What does Kimi Antonelli still need to improve to become F1 world champion?

Two hidden factors that could decide the F1 Barcelona GP

Formula 1
Barcelona-Catalunya GP
Two hidden factors that could decide the F1 Barcelona GP

Le Mans 24h, H18: BMW in lead as Porsche crash triggers safety car

WEC
24 Hours of Le Mans
Le Mans 24h, H18: BMW in lead as Porsche crash triggers safety car

Oscar Piastri "could not believe" Pierre Gasly’s Monaco reinstatement

Formula 1
Barcelona-Catalunya GP
Oscar Piastri "could not believe" Pierre Gasly’s Monaco reinstatement

F1's braking focus behind Baku crash fest, says Ocon

Formula 1’s spate of crashes over the Baku weekend are a consequence of a recent trend of teams and drivers chasing laptime gains under braking, reckons Alpine’s Esteban Ocon.

Esteban Ocon, Alpine A521

With the Azerbaijan Grand Prix practice sessions having been hit by a few incidents, Saturday’s qualifying session was stopped four times with red flags as a number of drivers hit trouble.

Lance Stroll and Antonio Giovinazzi both crashed at Turn 15, while Daniel Ricciardo and Yuki Tsunoda nosed their cars into the barriers at Turn 3, before Carlos Sainz spun down that escape road.

The vast majority of the incidents in Azerbaijan have been of drivers misjudging their braking and carrying too much speed into the apex.

The close proximity of the barriers means that any mistakes are punished heavily, and there is no way to back out if drivers are committed to going through the bend rather than taking the escape road.

Ocon thinks there is a pattern to the spate of crashes, and that the way that braking has become a key focus of car performance means that there is little room for error.

“I think the way the cars have evolved, all the time that you can make, it is all in braking,” he said. “I guess everyone was pushing the limits at that time, and there was a bit more wind as well in qualifying.

“To that extent, there's been many, many drivers going over that limit, and we haven't seen that often in qualifying. So it was very surprising that so many things were happening in quali.”

Read Also:

Ocon says the focus on seeking lap time gains under braking is something he has noticed since returning to F1 with Renault last year.

“I think it's just a characteristic of how the cars are,” he said. “I didn't drive in 2019, but I drove in 2018 and my feeling comes from that. Yeah, I mean, looking at it, if you are on the limit of the brakes and just making the corner, that is the fastest way.”

Former F1 driver and Sky pundit Martin Brundle also suggested that characteristics of current braking systems could have been behind some of the incidents.

He tweeted: “Appears to me there are too many clever controls and algorithms going on inside F1 braking systems which are not under the direct control of the drivers. So many world class drivers having ‘amateur’ accidents in Baku, some of whom seemed unaware they were about to crash.”

Previous article McLaren F1 shareholder Mansour Ojjeh dies aged 68
Next article The Azerbaijan GP as it happened

Top Comments

Latest news