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

NASCAR official says not enough evidence to penalize Shane Van Gisbergen at Chicagoland

NASCAR Cup
Chicago
NASCAR official says not enough evidence to penalize Shane Van Gisbergen at Chicagoland

Chase Elliott to make rare NASCAR Truck start at North Wilkesboro

NASCAR Truck
Lime Rock
Chase Elliott to make rare NASCAR Truck start at North Wilkesboro

Why Fred Vasseur's steady hand is exactly what fervent Ferrari needs right now

Feature
Formula 1
Feature
British GP
Why Fred Vasseur's steady hand is exactly what fervent Ferrari needs right now

Why Red Bull and Max Verstappen struggled at Silverstone – and expect the same at Spa

Formula 1
British GP
Why Red Bull and Max Verstappen struggled at Silverstone – and expect the same at Spa

Guenther Steiner explains why teams are forgoing a profit share with MotoGP

MotoGP
German GP
Guenther Steiner explains why teams are forgoing a profit share with MotoGP

NASCAR payback gone wrong: When vengeful drivers wrecked themselves

NASCAR Cup
Chicago
NASCAR payback gone wrong: When vengeful drivers wrecked themselves

How Charles Leclerc has changed his steering wheel software for the first time since joining Ferrari

Formula 1
British GP
How Charles Leclerc has changed his steering wheel software for the first time since joining Ferrari

George Russell explains mindset after tough start to 2026 F1 campaign

Formula 1
British GP
George Russell explains mindset after tough start to 2026 F1 campaign
Breaking news

Ricciardo believes "set-up misdirection" caused Austria slump

Daniel Ricciardo thinks a wrong direction with set-up was to blame for Renault's woes at the Austrian Grand Prix, with the team having failed to find anything "crazy" wrong with its car.

Daniel Ricciardo, Renault F1 Team R.S.19, leaves the garage

The Australian and teammate Nico Hulkenberg endured a disappointing time at the Red Bull Ring, amid fears that the weekend had exposed a fundamental flaw with Renault's 2019 challenger.

Read Also:

But having gone through in detail what happened, Ricciardo says that the team suspects a new direction that was taken with setting up the car may have taken it out of a good operating window – which is why it is reverting to previous settings for this weekend at Silverstone.

"It wasn't a fun one for us really," said Ricciardo, reflecting on why neither Renault car had been able to finish in the points in Austria.

"We obviously got pretty deep into it after and tried to figure out why we were off the pace all weekend.

"Definitely I feel we learned some things with set-up and we kind of started in a direction which we kept pursuing from Friday thinking it was the right way to go, but in hindsight it wasn't.

"So it is probably more just a set-up misdirection we went for, as opposed to anything crazy we found on the car. I was hoping to find a cracked chassis, or something like that."

Ricciardo said that the changing fortunes of Renault – which had been at the head of the midfield pack in Canada before slipping back at subsequent races – can most likely be explained by its car having a small window in which it operates at its best

"The car does have a little bit of a sweet spot and we have worked towards that the last few weekends, getting those Q3s and building that confidence for myself and that momentum," he explained.

"But we kind of shifted a little bit away from that in Austria and, for reasons which seem to make sense at the time, from a setup point of view. I think that we kind of moved away from something that we got to know, so will try to bring it back for Silverstone and go back to kind of what we know."

Previous article Williams closing in on new Mercedes engine deal
Next article Rich Energy shareholders blame “rogue individual” for Haas tweet

Top Comments

Latest news