Five talking points from the Hungarian Grand Prix

By Ben Waterworth / Roar Guru

Three weeks of F1 racing to get the halted 2020 season back underway have come and gone as quickly as the cars themselves.

And with a semi-average Hungarian Grand Prix out of the way, it’s time to get into the talking points once more.

2022 can’t come soon enough
Remember 2003 and 2005? The two seasons in which the FIA brought in sweeping rule changes to halt the dominance of Ferrari? So worried were they for the state of the sport, that they had to bring in rules to change the dominance of one team.

It failed to work the first time, but worked well the second time. That goes to show that the sport, in what is arguably the most changeable sport when it comes to rules and regulations in the world, is capable of attempting to change things up to stop the dominance of one team.

Fast forward two decades later, and we are sitting in our seventh consecutive season of seeing the same team and same driver winning again and again. Three races in, and they haven’t even been challenged.

I hate to sound like a broken down record each week but for anyone who isn’t a Mercedes fan, it’s tedious and frustrating. We just exited by far the least exciting decade in the history of F1, and right now nothing feels different. And nothing will be different until 2022.

So once again we have to sit through the same result week in and week out, especially at a time when Mercedes seemingly have extended the gap even further.

If we are to say the 2022 season will start as planned on March 13th, we have 603 days to wait until hopefully we see the sport return to what it should be: exciting and competitive.

(Photo by Mario Renzi – Formula 1/Formula 1 via Getty Images)

Red Bull show they’re geniuses and idiots at the same time
Wow. Red Bull. What can be said. Somehow they pull off the impossible in repairing a car that had no right to race and then get that car fixed enough that Max Verstappen can recover and finish in second place. An incredible achievement.

But somehow, on the other end of the spectrum, they do the ridiculous by seemingly drying Alex Albon’s grid slot, something clearly against the rules, which looks to see him face some form of punishment. As if Albon hasn’t had enough bad luck already.

I can’t recall a team having such a discrepancy between calls in a race in all my years watching F1. And it’s a shame for them, given their struggles all weekend, Albon’s fifth place mixed with Verstappen’s second are vital for them should at any point they capatilise on any mistakes Mercedes may make in the future.

It’s time for Stroll to start getting more credit
Bumping up my usual Lance Stroll/Nicholas Latifi watch up a few slots, because as the headline says, it’s really time for people to start noticing and appreciating Lance Stroll.

I’ve been championing him for years as far more than that rich kid who happens to have a rich daddy who bought a team and now he has a slot. And look at this weekend as proof of that.

In a week in which people have bemoaned the seemingly unfair future firing of Sergio Perez if Sebastian Vettel ends up at the team next year, Stroll dominated his teammate in all the sessions that counted and finished with an incredibly strong fourth place.

And after putting in a stonking lap to qualify third on Saturday and pulling off some more great overtaking moves on Sunday, Stroll once again proved his mentality and ability that needs to be taken more seriously.

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Nicholas Latifi on the other hand showed some real promise over the weekend but had a disastrous race to finish in last spot. The Williams driver joined teammate George Russel into Q2 in an incredible performance by the team and then vaulted up as high as tenth place in the early parts of the race.

However a coming together with Carlos Sainz in the pit lane as well as a puncture hampered his race and there was no recovering for him. Despite this, he was announced as being signed on for 2021 alongside Russell, so it’s great to see he is been given more of a chance in what hopefully can turn into a long career.

Russell deserves to be in a better team
I’ve never really been on the hype train of George Russell but this year his performances have proven me wrong.

Two weekends in a row he has dragged his Williams deep into Q2. The Brit is definitely a driver to watch for the future. Having Mercedes’ backing could line him up as a possible replacement to Valtteri Bottas should the team decide to get rid of the Finn, or maybe even a staggered climb up the F1 ladder through some other midfield teams to reach that target.

I mentioned last race about Lando Norris being the most exciting driver on the grid, well Russell might just be the most promising consistent driver who lets his driving do the talking on track. It just adds to the fact that the young talent in the sport right now is putting the sport in a good position for the future.

Rock solid Ricciardo
Ricciardo might be nowhere near fighting for a win, or even for a podium. But there is no doubting his skill level when he can consistently get a car that is around the sixth best in the field to come home with consistent points finishes.

(Stephen Blackberry/Action Plus via Getty Images)

An eighth place doesn’t sound incredible, but excellent car management and great strategy calls during the race really added to another very strong and solid race for the West Australian.

There will forever be a ‘what if’ hanging around his career about his decision to leave Red Bull and go to Renault, in what will always be remembered as a failed move. But it’s a move that despite not having the results on paper, really shows the true skill level of the driver.

The ability to make a midfield team look better than they are can often be a better outcome than being a driver in a front-running car that has no challenges for years upon years upon years and never has the experience of being in a car that can’t challenge for wins.

And so while in hindsight it wasn’t the best move for Ricciardo in terms of results, it was a great move for him to show his worth as a driver. Perhaps it’s time for Lewis Hamilton to do something similar to prove his numerous doubters in the ‘GOAT’ category wrong.

It’s going to feel weird having no race next weekend, but everyone deserves a break some time. Bring on the next fortnight as we head off now to Silverstone.

The Crowd Says:

2020-07-21T07:22:50+00:00

Simoc

Guest


There's nothing wrong with Albon. I'm expecting him to be in front soon enough. His history suggests he is as good as anyone out there. Max is faster like Seb was faster than Webber. He is picking up the crumbs currently as Webber did. At that time of course Red Bull was dominant though not as much as Mercedes is now.

2020-07-20T15:01:52+00:00

HR

Roar Rookie


Replacing either of the drivers at Alfa seems the most likely - I can't see Kimi going around again in 2021, Giovinazzi is nothing special, and he would be rejoining a team that he had some success with early in his career.

2020-07-20T06:39:06+00:00

Dexter The Hamster

Roar Rookie


Fair deuce Ben. I had a few beers watching footy yesterday so ended up having an early night, up early to watch the replay, so had the advantage of seeing all the penalties. I think Mercedes see what happens with young talent coming through and getting promoted perhaps too soon, either spat back out or inconsistent (Lando, Albon, Kyvat, Gasly etc) so are happy to let Russell learn the craft a bit more. But I'm pretty sure he is on the line for that seat.

2020-07-20T06:33:23+00:00

Dexter The Hamster

Roar Rookie


One issue is that Danny Ric left RB, otherwise he would still be there while the likes of Gasly, Kyvat and Albon all tussled and learned in the Toro Rosso (or Alpha thingy), and we might be saying they have some good talent coming through waiting in the "wings"....

AUTHOR

2020-07-20T05:55:29+00:00

Ben Waterworth

Roar Guru


Agreed. While I get they invest a lot of money into their young talent, they don't always come through as successfully as they like. And right now they have a very thin talent pool to choose from. Vettel going back wouldn't be the worst idea either. I think it would be good for him to get a refresh and then feel comfortable back in the place where he proved to be so successful. But yes, Hulkenberg and Perez would also be great fits. They need someone in that car next to Verstappen to actually score points and race with him and not be so far back

2020-07-20T05:23:09+00:00

Micko

Roar Rookie


I almost feel like it's time RB took a punt on an experienced outsider again if Albon doesn't work out. It worked well with Webber and the young prodigy Vettel, so maybe Perez, Hulkenberg or Bottas might be a good fit with the young prodigy Verstappen.

AUTHOR

2020-07-20T05:22:17+00:00

Ben Waterworth

Roar Guru


Agreed re your point on people screaming against rules. I mean as I mentioned Ferrari literally had two major overhauls introduced to stop their dominance. 2017 was the last big change for F1 and that wasn't done to curtail the dominance of Mercedes. When you have engine freezes and limited ability to change on an engine dominated formula since 2014, there ain't nothing that will change

2020-07-20T05:21:02+00:00

Simoc

Guest


For me it was strange that the McLaren wasn't fast all weekend and the Racing Point cars were. Lance Stroll has a third placed GP finish to his credit and obviously his critics mostly are taking jealous snipes. He has made a few errors as they all do while learning but now has a faster car and experience. I think Perez was crook on the weekend. Ricciardo has put in two strong drives and with a bit of luck could have had two 6ths instead of 8ths. If the RP cars get disqualified it will help Dans cause. The midfield battle is excellent.

AUTHOR

2020-07-20T05:20:23+00:00

Ben Waterworth

Roar Guru


Hungary is generally always a dull affair, but it was a tad interesting with the rain and the midfield race. But you know the sport is in trouble when the most common talk in modern F1 is the midfield battle as everybody knows who is going to win

AUTHOR

2020-07-20T05:19:08+00:00

Ben Waterworth

Roar Guru


I have to say right now I might agree with you about Russell. Norris is exciting but can be a tad inconsistent. Albon too needs more time to develop but has skill. The thing about Russell is he is outperforming his car more than anyone else on the grid. And that's what is great to see. The penalties were interesting. Bottas to me was 50/50. I've seen jump start penalties been given for less than that in the past, but yeah he was behind enough so again, line ball. I wrote this directly after the chequered flag so didn't get to digest all the penalties, but Red Bull getting away with that was very surprising. The inconsistency sometimes in the sport is baffling. Perez will get a seat somewhere. He is liked by many, has an entire nation of supporters behind him and there's no way he'll miss out on a seat. Haas seems likely, or even maybe Alfa, but imagine if Red Bull took a punt on him? That would be great to see. He was promoted way too early to McLaren and it was a shame to see him miss his opportunity by being rushed into a top team. He comes with so much talent and experience that any team that was available would be silly not to offer him something.

2020-07-20T04:15:10+00:00

Dexter The Hamster

Roar Rookie


Yep, lost a place and a point.

2020-07-20T03:40:21+00:00

Micko

Roar Rookie


Does that mean Haas lose their ninth position for MAG with the two points?

2020-07-20T03:38:39+00:00

Micko

Roar Rookie


Bottas didn't leave his box though. He started behind sufficiently enough to not creep over the line.

2020-07-20T01:52:51+00:00

Damo

Guest


Couple really good points there Dexter. Remember people screaming for F1 to change things when Ferrari, then Red Bull dominated; or even that year when Brawn came out of nowhere and introduced the double-diffuser that had the paddock in an uproar. Yet, there doesn't seem to be the urgency to curtail Mercedes dominance. And the Race penalties (or lack of) is a joke here. Bottas got away with it because the sensor apparently didn't pick it up. WTF???? So the naked eye evidence doesn't count? And Red Bull got away with drying the pit box when there was clear footage of the 'leaf blowers' pointing directly behind/under the front tyres. I still love my F1 but stuff like this doesn't shake the perception of how the money in big teams drives the agenda.

2020-07-20T00:44:08+00:00

JGK

Roar Guru


While the winner of the GPs is largely a forgone conclusion – yesterday’s race was effectively over at the first corner – there is a lot of interest in the scrap for minor points. It’s small wonder that Lewis barely got on TV yesterday.

2020-07-20T00:17:19+00:00

Dexter The Hamster

Roar Rookie


Thanks Ben. I might add my own comment to each of yours if you don't mind. 1) Agreed. People talk about other dominating periods (Williams, McLaren, Ferrari and RB all had good runs since the late 80's), but none of those are remotely close to the Mercs this last 7 years. Hamilton nearly lapped everyone. 2)RB lucky in the end, but they do good things, always seem to make the right call, something Ferrari could learn from. 2nd and 5th is a good result. 3) Agreed. Still miffed that Checo might get the heave-ho from that team, but that doesn't reflect on Lance. 4) Personally I think Russell is a better prospect than Alex and Lando, but time will tell. Pretty sure Mercs have him lined up to replace Valterri, but they just getting the timing right. 5) Danny Ric, solid as a rock. Was unlucky that Lewis lapped him just when he was a chance of having a crack at Perez, but in reality probably wouldn't have had the pace anyway. 6) Adding a point. Race penalties. Bottas jumped the start, Albon had the track dried for him, all good, no issues. The Haas team told their drivers to pit, 10s penalties all round. Kimi at the back, in wrong grid (should it matter when you are last), 5 sec penalty. Its easy to see the stewards are keen to stay out of it at the front end of the grid. Not good to see, should be equality in my view.

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