Skip to main content

Sign up for free

  • Get quick access to your favorite articles

  • Manage alerts on breaking news and favorite drivers

  • Make your voice heard with article commenting.

Recommended for you

How Aston Martin and Honda's expectation management ties into Newey's F1 design

Formula 1
Aston Martin launch
How Aston Martin and Honda's expectation management ties into Newey's F1 design

How to watch the 2026 Daytona 500, full NASCAR Speedweek schedule

NASCAR Cup
NASCAR Cup
Daytona 500
How to watch the 2026 Daytona 500, full NASCAR Speedweek schedule

Mercedes announces 2026 F1 Academy driver to replace Doriane Pin

F1 Academy
F1 Academy
Shanghai
Mercedes announces 2026 F1 Academy driver to replace Doriane Pin

Ralf Schumacher announces engagement to partner Étienne Bousquet-Cassagne

Formula 1
Formula 1
McLaren launch
Ralf Schumacher announces engagement to partner Étienne Bousquet-Cassagne

Jacob Abel prioritizing IMSA effort but still desires IndyCar return

IndyCar
IndyCar
Jacob Abel prioritizing IMSA effort but still desires IndyCar return

Explained: Audi's unique approach to its movable F1 rear wing flaps

Formula 1
Formula 1
Explained: Audi's unique approach to its movable F1 rear wing flaps

Williams F1 announces new partnership with long-term Carlos Sainz sponsor

Formula 1
Formula 1
McLaren launch
Williams F1 announces new partnership with long-term Carlos Sainz sponsor

How Newey hopes to help Aston Martin party like it's 1998

Formula 1
How Newey hopes to help Aston Martin party like it's 1998

Perez: Low sun made final Melbourne F1 laps “dangerous”

Sergio Perez says that the closing stages of the Australian Grand Prix were “dangerous” as the low sun made visibility difficult for the Formula 1 drivers.

Sergio Perez, Red Bull Racing RB19

Red flag delays meant that the final restart took place a lot later than the race was expected to run, which may have contributed to the chain of first lap incidents that led to the final red flag, with Perez also citing cold tyres as another factor.

Perez was among those involved as he went across the grass and gravel at Turn 1 while avoiding Pierre Gasly, who was in turn edged wide by contact between Carlos Sainz and Fernando Alonso.

The Mexican, who started from the pitlane after encountering brake balance problems in qualifying, was eventually classified fifth.

“I had to avoid Gasly,” he said of the final restart. “And then there was no visibility really going into Turn 1.

"It was really dangerous, first of all the warm-up, but secondly, we could not see anything. We cannot race in these conditions any more. One day, it's going to be a big shunt.

"We cannot see anything. The last 30 laps we are just a passenger, we don't have any visibility.”

Sergio Perez, Red Bull Racing RB19

Sergio Perez, Red Bull Racing RB19

Photo by: Mark Sutton / Motorsport Images

Perez’s race was compromised when his strategy of starting on the hard tyres was negated by an early red flag that gave rivals a free change.

He admitted that he had to balance risk and reward as he tried to make his way through the field.

"It was a big mess with the DRS train early on,” he said. “I needed to take a lot more risk if I wanted to make some more progress, and probably I wouldn't have finished the race or probably I could have been a little bit higher.

“It’s a gamble, and I think the safety car did hurt us because everyone went for the hards, so there wasn't much of a strategy that we could do, and that put us a bit out of sync.”

Asked if P5 represented good damage limitation, he said: "I think that was really the maximum we could have done today. As I say, if we wanted more we would have needed to take much more risk.

“The restart, the first standing start I did, I mean it's a mess starting in those positions. It's people taking massive risks, and it was quite difficult for me.”

On the positive side, Perez acknowledged that the car’s problems had been fixed for the race.

He added: "We changed a lot of things in the car, on the engine side and on the brake balance, and the chassis.”

Red Bull team boss Christian Horner confirmed that the team had remedied the problem, although he downplayed its impact on qualifying.

“We changed a few components on the car that may have contributed to it," he said when asked about the issues by Motorsport.com. "And I think that it didn’t sound like there was any reoccurrence of it today, so that was good news.

“I think that he had a very difficult P3 which was by far from the best preparation, and then obviously he went out, was pushing hard on that first lap. 

"He was late and hard on the brakes into T3. All the bits and pieces together weren’t quite perfect, but often these cars aren’t.”

Asked to elaborate on the brake balance problem, Horner added: “It’s something that they control in the car. I think we had a bit of the engine running on in P3, but the levels that we saw in qualifying were nothing abnormal.”

Read Also:
Previous article How AlphaTauri F1 floor updates helped address a core weakness
Next article How Senna enraged an unknowing Schumacher in Brazil F1 race

Top Comments

Latest news