Sochi,
29
September
2019
|
16:11
Europe/Amsterdam

2019 Russian Grand Prix - Race

Sochi, September 29

Mercedes driver Lewis Hamilton won the Russian Grand Prix from second on the grid with one pit stop, moving from the medium to the soft tyre under a virtual safety car. His team mate Valtteri Bottas, who finished second, adopted the same strategy. Behind them there was a wide variety of tactics seen throughout the 53-lap race, which featured two safety cars: one straight after the start, and one just over the halfway point.

KEY MOMENTS

  • Mercedes was the only team in the top 10 of the grid to start on the medium tyres. Ferrari adopted a different tactic, starting on the soft.
  • Both Mercedes drivers ran a longer first stint than Ferrari, and made their sole pit stops consecutively under a virtual safety car, switching to the soft tyres.
  • With Charles Leclerc ending up behind the two Mercedes following their stops, Ferrari switched strategy to bring him in for a second stop to soft tyres under a full safety car, two laps after the Mercedes drivers had pitted.
  • The driver to make up most places was Red Bull’s Alex Albon, who started from the pit lane and made a single stop from medium to soft tyres on his way to fifth at the finish.
  • There was an equal mixture of soft and medium tyres seen at the start with only Toro Rosso’s Daniil Kvyat starting his home race on the hard tyre from the back of the grid.
  • Although a one-stopper was predicted as being the fastest strategy, four of the 15 classified finishers ended up stopping twice: including Leclerc, on the podium. This was heavily influenced by the safety cars.

HOW EACH TYRE PERFORMED

  • HARD C2: This was predicted as a workable option for the second stint, but in the end only three drivers used it, with the medium and soft resisting well.
  • MEDIUM C3: A key element to Hamilton’s win. With low degradation, the drivers using this at the start were able to maximise their stint and keep their options open.
  • SOFT C4: Also used for some long stints, notably by Red Bull’s Max Verstappen, who completed a long first run to move from ninth on the grid to fourth at the finish. Hamilton used the soft to set the fastest lap towards the end of the race.

MARIO ISOLA - HEAD OF F1 AND CAR RACING

“Tactics were an important element to the race, with opposite strategies being selected by Mercedes and Ferrari that resulted in an exciting finish, as Charles Leclerc tried to get past his rivals. The medium tyres selected by Mercedes gave them an advantage in terms of flexibility, but what was perhaps more of a surprise was the life of the soft. This worked better in today’s warmer conditions, being less susceptible to graining at higher temperatures. The two safety car periods were a key factor in the grand prix, minimising wear and degradation during important phases in the race, as well as providing opportunities to make pit stops at the right moment to minimise time loss. We came to Russia with a harder tyre choice than last year: this enabled drivers to push hard from the start to finish of each stint, rather than manage their pace.”

BEST TIME BY COMPOUND

HARD MEDIUM SOFT
Kvyat
1m40.583s
Verstappen
1m36.937s
Hamilton
1m35.761s
Giovinazzi
1m41.248s
Leclerc
1m37.321s
Leclerc
1m36.193s
- Sainz
1m38.020s
Bottas
1m36.316s

LONGEST STINT OF THE RACE

COMPOUND DRIVER LAPS
HARD C2 Kvyat 27
MEDIUM C3 Norris 33
SOFT C4 Verstappen 28

PIT STOP SUMMARY

CAR DRIVER START PIT 1 PIT 2
44 HAM C3u C4u (28)  
77 BOT C3u C4u (28)  
16 LEC C4u C3n (22) C4u (30)
33 VER C4u C3n (28)  
23 ALB C3n C4n (29)  
55 SAI C4u C3n (21)  
11 PER C4n C3n (23)  
4 NOR C4u C3n (20)  
20 MAG C4n C3n (27)  
27 HUL C4u C3n (16) C4u (29)
18 STR C3n C4n (27)  
26 KVY C2n C4n (27) C4n (29)
7 RAI C3n C4n (27)  
10 GAS C3n C4n (26)  
99 GIO C4n C2n (2) C3n (27)
88 KUB C3n C2n (1) C3n (2)
63 RUS C3n    
5 VET C4u C3n (26)  
3 RIC C4u C3n (1)  
8 GRO C4u    

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