Melbourne,
17
March
2019
|
09:17
Europe/Amsterdam

2019 AUSTRALIAN GRAND PRIX – RACE

Melbourne, March 17, 2019 - Mercedes driver Valtteri Bottas commandingly won the Australian Grand Prix, with a one-stop strategy that was in line with our prediction: going from the soft tyre to the medium on lap 23. This same basic idea was used by the top four, however the timing of the pit stops varied, with Lewis Hamilton (Mercedes) and Sebastian Vettel (Ferrari) both stopping much earlier than their team mates in a strategic battle.

KEY POINTS

  • The first major player to make a pit stop was Vettel, trying an undercut. This prompted Mercedes to cover him by pitting Hamilton a lap later.
  • Bottas then stayed out longer, stretching his lead over his team mate.
  • The final driver of the top four to make a stop was Red Bull’s Max Verstappen on lap 26: a strategy that helped him to a podium from fourth on the grid.
  • The first driver to claim an extra point for fastest lap was Valtteri Bottas, who went fastest with the medium on the penultimate lap, also beating last year’s fastest lap.
  • All the drivers made just one stop apart from Williams: George Russell made two and Robert Kubica made three.

HOW EACH TYRE PERFORMED

  • HARD C2: With a track that was more rubbered-in and warmer temperatures today (44 degrees centigrade on track, 24 degrees ambient) this turned out to be a very effective race tyre, especially for long stints, with low degradation.
  • MEDIUM C3: Although Friday’s data suggested that this was the best tyre for the second stint, it was hard to choose between the medium and the hard on race day (Ferrari, for example, put one car on each during the second stint). Many drivers completed stints of more than 40 laps on this compound.
  • SOFT C4: Most drivers started the race on this compound. However the stint lengths varied quite widely. This extra potential for tactical variation is one of the advantages of this year’s more durable tyres.

MARIO ISOLA - HEAD OF F1 AND CAR RACING

“All three compounds stood up well to the particular demands of Albert Park and they were all used extensively. We saw an interesting variation in strategy, with drivers using different tyres for different stint lengths, and – for those further down the grid – alternative strategies to make their way up the field. Our aim this year was to provide compounds that enabled drivers to push from start to finish of every stint. The fact that Bottas set the fastest race lap of Albert Park right at the end of the grand prix, in a close fight for the extra point with Verstappen, highlights how this objective has been achieved.”

BEST TIME BY COMPOUND

HARD MEDIUM SOFT
Leclerc
1m26.926s
Bottas
1m25.580s
Gasly
1m27.229s
Kvyat
1m27.448s
Hamilton
1m26.057s
Bottas
1m27.815s
Stroll
1m27.568s
Verstappen
1m26.256s
Giovinazzi
1m28.479s

LONGEST STINT OF THE RACE

COMPOUND DRIVER LAPS
HARD C2 Perez, Hulkenberg 44
MEDIUM C3 Raikkonen 45
SOFT C4 Giovinazzi 30

PIT STOP SUMMARY

CAR DRIVER START PIT 1 PIT 2 PIT 3
77 BOT C4u C3n (23)    
44 HAM C4u C3n (15)    
33 VER C4u C3n (25)    
5 VET C4u C3n (14)    
16  LEC C4u C2n (28)    
20  MAG C4u C3n (14)    
27  HUL C4n C2n (13)    
RAI C4u C3n (12)    
18  STR C3n C2n (27)    
26  KVY C3n C2u (26)    
10  GAS C3n C4n (37)    
NOR C4u C2n (15)    
11  PER C4u C2n (13)    
23  ALB C4n C3n (14)    
99 GIO C3n C4n (27)    
63 RUS C3n C4n (26) C2n (42)  
88 KUB C2n C3n (1) C4n (28) C4u (44)
GRO C4u C3n (15)    
3 RIC C4n C2n (1)    
55  SAI C4n      

C2 = Hard C2  |  C3 = Medium C3  |  C4 = Soft C4
n = new  |  u = used