Le Castellet,
18
June
2021
|
17:19
Europe/Amsterdam

2021 French Grand Prix - Friday

TYRE GAP

FRIDAY TYRE SUMMARY

  • Red Bull’s Max Verstappen set the pace during today’s free practice for the French Grand Prix, followed by the two Mercedes of Valtteri Bottas and Lewis Hamilton. Bottas was fastest in the morning session, before Verstappen went even quicker in the afternoon. On both occasions, the P Zero Red soft tyre in C4 compound was used.
  • The teams used mainly the P Zero White hard compound and P Zero Red soft in the morning, with the P Zero Yellow medium used extensively in the first part of FP2, followed by the soft compound again as the teams focussed on qualifying simulations.
  • The track was reasonably ‘green’ and slippery in the morning, thanks also to some fresh asphalt on parts of the surface, but it rubbered in progressively during the course of the afternoon to provide good grip.
  • Weather conditions were dry and warm throughout the day, with FP2 getting underway in 31 degrees ambient and 49 degrees of asphalt temperature. Slightly cooler conditions are expected for qualifying, and there’s a chance of even lower temperatures for the race, with the possibility of rain on Sunday morning.
  • With the soft and medium compounds being run for several laps today, the gaps between them are roughly as expected: around 0.6 seconds between soft and medium, and an estimated 0.5 seconds between medium and hard. This means that both the medium and soft compounds could play an important role in qualifying tomorrow.

FORMULA 3: LATEST NEWS

ART Grand Prix’s Frederik Vesti claimed pole position in Formula 3 qualifying, with all the field running on the single P Zero White hard compound as per the regulations. The short free practice session allowed the 30 drivers to get to grips with this compound early in the morning: a new nomination for Paul Ricard this year, after the medium was used in 2019. Prema’s Dennis Hauger went quickest in free practice but was later beaten to pole by Vesti. However, Jenzer’s Calan Williams will start from first on the for tomorrow’s sprint race, under the reverse grid regulations. With the hard compound enabling drivers to push to the maximum and no mandatory pit stops in Formula 3, defending track position and racing hard will be key.

MARIO ISOLA – HEAD OF F1 AND CAR RACING

“Free practice went more or less as we expected it to. The FP2 time was slower than the equivalent session in 2019, mainly due to the stronger winds today, and partly because of some partial track resurfacing. We’ve seen that the medium and soft compounds are reasonably closely matched, which should bring them both into play for qualifying tomorrow and have a big effect on race strategy too. The teams were able to gather plenty of good data over the soft and medium compounds in particular with different fuel loads, while the hard was used less extensively and mainly in the morning. So it’s going to be interesting to see how all that translates into strategy calculation and different approaches to qualifying tomorrow, which should again be run in warm and dry conditions here”.

TOP 3 TIMES
FP1
Bottas 1m33.448s SOFT C4 NEW
Hamilton 1m33.783s SOFT C4 NEW
Verstappen 1m33.880s SOFT C4 NEW
FP2
Verstappen 1m32.872s SOFT C4 NEW
Bottas 1m32.880s MEDIUM C3 NEW
Hamilton 1m33.125s SOFT C4 NEW
BEST TIME BY COMPOUND
FP1
HARD C2 Verstappen 1m34.139s
MEDIUM C3 Leclerc 1m35.791s
SOFT C4 Bottas 1m33.448s
FP2
HARD C2 Alonso 1m34.328s
MEDIUM C3 Bottas 1m32.880s
SOFT C4 Verstappen 1m32.872s
MOST LAPS BY COMPOUND SO FAR
COMPOUND DRIVER LAPS
HARD C2 Sainz 22
MEDIUM C3 Schumacher 20
SOFT C4 Mazepin, Norris, Verstappen 15
TYRE STATISTICS OF THE DAY
  HARD MEDIUM SOFT
Kms driven* 1355 1606 2383
Sets used overall** 18 19 43

* The above number gives the total amount of kilometres driven in FP1 and FP2 today, all drivers combined.
** Per compound, all drivers combined.

MIN. STARTING PRESSURES (slicks) EOS CAMBER LIMIT
PRESSURE 21.0 psi (front) | 21.5 psi (rear) -3.50° (front) | -2.00° (rear) CAMBER