Five talking points from the Italian Grand Prix

By Ben Waterworth / Roar Guru

Wow. Have we all recovered from that? I don’t know if I have.

Potentially the most unexpected result since the 1999 European Grand Prix, that Italian Grand Prix had it all. And today, I bring you five talking points from an instant classic.

What. A. Race
So be honest, who predicted this podium? If you did, I’ll gladly call you wrong, because this might be the most unpredictable top three we’ve ever seen in the sport.

I mean, Pierre Gasly just won a grand prix in an Alpha Tauri. Let that sink in for a while. Because it’s probably not going to sink in ever.

Also the fact that Carlos Sainz finished second and came away disappointed not to win, and the same for Lance Stroll in third in a Racing Point (more of course on him soon) and you really couldn’t have predicted just how this would’ve turned out.

Those opening laps really looked like we were in for the same old same old, and sure, it took a Mercedes blunder to give us a result like this, but we needed it.

Boy oh boy did we need it. And yes, this is an anomaly. This won’t happen every single race. Next weekend we will be back to our status quo snoozefest and this weekend will long be forgotten. But for now, I’ll take it. All of us will take it.

It’s races like this that remind all of us Formula One fans why we love this sport, especially for those who have been watching for longer than two silver cars have been dominating. We remember back to the days when there were far more unpredictable races than predictable races.

Races that saw us coming back each week with excitement wondering who was going to finish in the top three each race, rather than all but know what the podium would look like at the end of every second Sunday. It’s a fantastic feeling isn’t it kids? Fingers crossed these become more common place soon.

Carlos Sainz (William West/AFP via Getty Images)

Lance Stroll and the race that could’ve been
Argh! How on earth can I sit here and type the words “Lance Stroll got a podium” and somehow feel slightly disappointed that it wasn’t more?! Because as the self-appointed biggest Lance Stroll fan on the planet, that’s how I’m feeling right now.

Somehow my man found himself on net pole after the restart due to Lewis Hamilton’s penalty, and there was every chance he could race away to take his maiden win. A clean start and maintaining his consistent pace he had before the red flag and it was easy days for a win.

Given Lance is by far the best starter on the grid, there is no doubt that he could do it right? Well…

Of all the times for Lance to have a bad start it was today. A standing start without the benefit of a full grid process with tyre blankets and the like just worked against him, and unfortunately he slipped back behind Gasly, Raikkonen and Sainz at the restart.

Luckily he was able to get ahead of Raikkonen and come home for his second career podium which of course is fantastic, but man, you can’t help but feel his maiden win was there for the taking today. If the race had have been a rolling start, then perhaps things could’ve turned out differently.

But oh well. On an even bigger positive note however, Stroll is officially fourth in the Championship right now. Now who saw that coming?!

On the Nicholas Latifi front, a very solid race by the other Canadian. His early pit-stop benefited him incredibly and saw him run in the points for several laps, and with Stroll also in the points created history as the first ever time two Canadian drivers had both run in the points at the same time.

Unfortunately a charging Hamilton made his way up into the points and Latifi wasn’t able to secure a romantic points finish as a farewell to the Williams families involvement in F1, but 11th is still a great result for him.

It’s time for Red Bull to switch back drivers
Last week I said it was time for Alexander Albon to go from Red Bull and this week I once again make the same call, this time around with the simple case of swapping back the move that happened year ago: putting Gasly in the senior team and Albon back in the junior team. How can they not?

Gasly just became a grand prix winner and Albon finished 15th.

Pierre Gasly. (Samo Vidic/Red Bull Content Pool)

Circumstantial or not, Gasly displayed a level of maturity and calm leading a grand prix for the first time that Albon hasn’t sadly shown since he got promoted. Added to that it’s the second podium Gasly has scored since being demoted.

Albon hasn’t finished on the podium once in a car that in the hands of Max Verstappen has won two grands prix and ten podiums. So it really is a no-brainer.

Even when Hamilton is unlucky, he is lucky
I made the call earlier this season that Lewis Hamilton is perhaps the luckiest driver in the history of Formula One, and after this race some people might question that given it was only him and Antonio Giovinazzi who fell foul to the pit lane being closed and suffered a penalty for it.

This mistake of course cost him the win, and Hamilton was only able to finish in seventh place, so, bad luck right?

For this race, yes. But for the Championship? Not in the slightest.

In a race that should’ve had Valtteri Bottas and Max Verstappen salivating, neither capitalised on Hamilton’s misfortune. Verstappen retired with an engine issue, while Bottas struggled for pace all race and finished fifth, gaining only four points on his title rival.

So at the end of the day despite his worst race in quite some time, Lewis Hamilton still leaves Monza with a nearly two-win lead in the title fight.

People need to stop selling rabbits feet and start selling Lewis Hamilton feet, because I guarantee you they would bring more luck than any limb off a bunny would.

A statistics fan wet dream
I love a good stat, and this race brought some great stats with it:
– The youngest ever podium in the history of the sport, eclipsing the Brazilian Grand Prix from last year.
– The first time since Monaco 1996 that a French driver has won a race.
– The first grand prix win for Alpha Tauri (yes, I know Toro Rosso won in 2008 in Italy but technically Alpha Tauri is a new team by statistical reasoning).
– The first time two Canadian drivers have run in the points at the same time (I know I said this before but I really like this stat).
– The first time since Australian 2013 that a team other than Red Bull, Ferrari or Mercedes have won a Grand Prix.
– The first time since Hungary 2012 that a podium hasn’t featured either Red Bull, Ferrari or Mercedes.
– And a somewhat sad one for a Ferrari fan like me, but the first time since Australia and Malaysia 2009 that Ferrari have gone two consecutive races outside of the points.
When a race like this gives me good stats like this, I leave a very happy man.

Another race next weekend and we’re staying Italy for the first ever (and probably last ever) Tuscan Grand Prix at the Mugello Circuit, a race that will be Ferrari’s 1000th race.

I think I speak on behalf of every Ferrari fan that I swear to Enzo almighty that it turns out a lot better than the last two races for the Scuderia.

I’ll be crossing myself and touching red all week to have that hope. Bring it on!

The Crowd Says:

2020-09-10T10:22:02+00:00

Joshua Kerr

Roar Guru


Ooh, I haven't seen that yet but it sounds good!

2020-09-10T10:13:07+00:00

Micko

Roar Rookie


They just put out a new video with multiple onboards at once (split screen). Never seen that type of thing from them before. Was quite interesting.

2020-09-10T10:05:32+00:00

Joshua Kerr

Roar Guru


Do you mean the little highlights clips you get for each race? Because, yeah, that's greatly improved. It's what people wanted.

2020-09-10T09:42:36+00:00

Micko

Roar Rookie


I just noticed supercars have improved their youtube video production, and learnt off F1 with a good video with multiple onboard footage.

2020-09-10T09:39:33+00:00

Micko

Roar Rookie


A nice coincidence to be sure, but let’s face it: Stroll getting last place at Monza would’ve been enough to secure him a seat alongside Vettel at Aston Martin in 2021. :silly:

2020-09-10T09:24:30+00:00

Joshua Kerr

Roar Guru


No worries :thumbup: Just coincidental you could say.

2020-09-10T09:17:42+00:00

Micko

Roar Rookie


Yeah, I wasn't being completely serious about the podium thing. I was never convinced Stroll getting a podium was going to change anything regarding which driver was losing their seat for Vettel.

2020-09-10T09:10:12+00:00

Joshua Kerr

Roar Guru


I don't think Stroll's podium at Monza has anything to do with it. The announcement had been delayed because Perez tested positive for Covid. It's bittersweet if you ask me because Vettel is a) going to a team that is going to respect him more than Ferrari have done recently and b) still going to be in Formula One :stoked: Shame about Perez but he knew it was coming. He even said himself that if he owned the team, he wouldn't get rid of his son.

2020-09-10T08:49:48+00:00

Micko

Roar Rookie


We finally got the bad news today. Goodbye Checo. :sick: :crying: Daddy's special boy getting that podium was all she wrote. :thumbdown:

2020-09-09T17:35:44+00:00

Joshua Kerr

Roar Guru


You've hit the nail on the head there HR - exactly why I self censored.

2020-09-09T17:29:55+00:00

HR

Roar Rookie


If you can't say something nice...

2020-09-09T17:27:34+00:00

HR

Roar Rookie


He'll be doing well to get that seat - I suspect that Russell is in prime position for that one, and he has a couple of years on Gasly. I suspect that Renault would like the synergy of a French pairing in a French team, even though it's based in Enstone. It would be great to see reasonable parity between the teams in the next five years or so, and the young guns (Verstappen, Leclerc, Russell, Norris and Gasly) each in one of the five big teams - Gasly to Alpine, Russell to Mercedes, and the three others leading the teams they're with now.

2020-09-09T11:19:04+00:00

Joshua Kerr

Roar Guru


What if I don’t want to?! :laughing:

2020-09-09T11:18:24+00:00

Joshua Kerr

Roar Guru


Appreciated Micko but I don’t think that was it. To me, what Dexter was trying to hide in his sarcasm was his displeasure at me sharing my opinion. He’s not the first person to do so and he will more than likely not be the last. (I welcome Dexter’s input if he thinks I’ve got things wrong) I don’t get why people have a problem with me airing my views. I read many comments and articles that take a different opinion to my own. Sometimes I add my own comments to express my side of the argument, but I always try to be respectful. Sure, I’ve made a few slip ups – nobody’s perfect – but I’m always more than happy to admit that my wrongs, take responsibility for them, and apologise. You see, when you and I talk to each other and debate on here Micko, there’s always a level of respect. I don’t agree with everything you say, but you are free to say whatever you want, just as much as I’m free to tell you that you’re talking absolute rubbish! :laughing: But, at the end of the day, it’s a hard but fair debate. That’s what I enjoy. Yeah, some people may not like the tone I take with them but that’s coming out of my passion. I’m not being intentionally aggressive, it’s just hard debating. I don’t want things to become soft around here, but there’s a little problem of some people not allowing others to say what they want to say, or dismissing comments simply because you don’t agree with them. The world would be boring if we all agreed with each other, but things don’t need to turn nasty over a sporting debate (or any debate for that matter). I’ll get off my soapbox now.

2020-09-09T07:58:46+00:00

Micko

Roar Rookie


I think that was directed at spruce.

2020-09-09T07:55:49+00:00

Micko

Roar Rookie


Come on, tell us what you're thinking Josh! :silly:

2020-09-08T20:37:28+00:00

Joshua Kerr

Roar Guru


A lazy excuse?! It's bloody oath, mate!

2020-09-08T20:35:08+00:00

Joshua Kerr

Roar Guru


2020-09-08T15:45:26+00:00

Joshua Kerr

Roar Guru


He'll stay until 2022 at least and go from there. There's no certainty that Mercedes are suddenly going to fall from their pedestal. Anyway, Hamilton has said he'd like a bit of competition. Yes, Lewis has projects outside of F1 that he will switch focus onto when he retires, but he will carry on in this sport for as long as his body and mind allows. And, for me, that won't be any time soon.

2020-09-08T14:44:11+00:00

Nick

Roar Guru


Definitely didn't want daddy's boy Lance stroll winning. The ultimate pay driver.

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