Monza,
10
September
2021
|
20:29
Europe/Amsterdam

2021 Italian Grand Prix - Friday

TYRE GAP

FRIDAY TYRE SUMMARY

  • Mercedes driver Valtteri Bottas went fastest in Friday qualifying – which will put him on pole for tomorrow’s sprint qualifying race that determines the grid for Sunday’s Italian Grand Prix. All the drivers had to use the P Zero Red soft C4 tyre for qualifying today, as per the regulations.
  • The fastest driver in Friday qualifying during sprint rounds is given the Pirelli ‘Speed King’ award, which replaces the Pirelli Pole Position Award on events with sprint qualifying. The name of the award is particularly apt this weekend, as Monza is popularly known as the ‘Temple of Speed’.
  • Just one hour of free practice on Friday afternoon preceded qualifying, with the teams condensing their usual data collection programmes into just one hour and running all three nominated compounds. The other Mercedes of Lewis Hamilton was fastest in free practice, this time on the P Zero Yellow medium C3 tyre. Hamilton qualified second on the grid, just behind his team mate but ahead of Red Bull’s Max Verstappen.
  • Qualifying today took place at 18:00 – later than the usual slot – with 27 degrees ambient and 33 degrees of track temperature at the start of the session.
  • With limited running, it’s harder than normal to work out the performance gap between the three compounds. The indications so far suggest around 0.4 seconds between medium C3 and soft C4, and 0.3 seconds between medium C3 and P Zero White hard C2.

FORMULA 2: LATEST NEWS

Prema driver Oscar Piastri claimed pole position for the second consecutive time in Formula 2 (following the last round at Silverstone) right at the end of the session, taking advantage of an evolving track and an optimal tow. The championship leader used the P Zero Red soft to set his time, nominated together with the P Zero Yellow medium this weekend for Formula 2. Just 0.057 seconds separated the top three on the grid, while Campos Racing’s David Beckmann will start first for tomorrow’s opening race, having qualified 10th.

MARIO ISOLA – HEAD OF F1 AND CAR RACING

“As we’ve seen before at Monza, qualifying was a very strategic session, with cars trying to benefit from a valuable tow on the long straights in order to improve their overall lap times. The overall strategy was made more complex by the fact that the teams also had to consider sprint qualifying for the first time at Monza, as they are free to run whichever tyre they like tomorrow – as well as start the grand prix on whichever compound they like. We saw different strategic approaches in FP1, with the majority of teams using three sets of tyres and all the compounds in just one hour to maximise data collection, while Mercedes, for example, focused only on the medium tyre: which might be a good option for tomorrow’s sprint qualifying. Today’s qualifying was instead more straightforward than usual as the teams could only run the soft tyre. This coped well with the heavy traction and braking demands of Monza, also providing the mechanical grip needed in the absence of high levels of downforce.”

FREE PRACTICE 1 – TOP 3 TIMES
DRIVER TIME COMPOUND
Hamilton 1m20.926s MEDIUM C3 NEW
Verstappen 1m21.378s SOFT C4 NEW
Bottas 1m21.451s MEDIUM C3 NEW
QUALIFYING TOP 10
DRIVER TIME COMPOUND
Bottas 1m19.555s SOFT C4 NEW
Hamilton 1m19.651s SOFT C4 NEW
Verstappen 1m19.966s SOFT C4 NEW
Norris 1m19.989s SOFT C4 NEW
Ricciardo 1m19.995s SOFT C4 NEW
Gasly 1m20.260s SOFT C4 NEW
Sainz 1m20.462s SOFT C4 NEW
Leclerc 1m20.510s SOFT C4 NEW
Pérez 1m20.611s SOFT C4 NEW
Giovinazzi 1m20.808s SOFT C4 NEW
BEST TIME BY COMPOUND SO FAR
COMPOUND DRIVER TIME
HARD C2 Alonso 1m23.319s
MEDIUM C3 Hamilton 1m20.926s
SOFT C4 Bottas 1m19.555s
MIN. STARTING PRESSURES (slicks) EOS CAMBER LIMIT
PRESSURE 24.0 psi (front) | 21.5 psi (rear) -3.00° (front) | -2.00° (rear) CAMBER