2019 Spanish Grand Prix

The struggle for race performance has found the Rich Energy Haas F1 Team with only 8 points in the 2019 Formula 1 constructors championship. Kevin Magnussen has been the teams sole points winner while their star, Romain Grosjean, has languished with three retirements and an 11 point finish in China. The team has been strong in qualifying but find themselves down a position or two after the first few laps. The team has failed to maintain race pace.

The Spanish Grand Prix begins the European leg of the F1 season. And with the new continent comes new upgrades to the cars.

From the beginning of the weekend both cars were strong. Haas brought a slew of new upgrades, and the results on track were impressive. They were high on the leader boards throughout the practice sessions, within the top 10, and they locked out the fourth row of qualifying. Romain Grosjean will start the Spanish Grand Prix in 7th position while his teammate Kevin Magnussen will line up next to him in 8th. The two Haas drivers were separated by just .011 seconds in their final qualifying session. The cars are fast and the drivers continue to prove evenly matched.

By lap 17 of 66, the two Haas Cars maintained 7th and 8th position. Grosjean lead his teammate. The Haas duo were about 10 seconds behind Gasley’s Red Bull, who lagged Vettel’s failing Ferrari by 3 seconds.

After the cycle of pits, and a lap 52 safety car Kevin Magnussen was able to defend his starting position and finish in 7th place. Romain Grosjean was not able to maintain position throughout the pit cycles, but still finished 10th. This is Grosjean’s first point for the 2019 season.

The Haas F1 Team entered the Spanish Grand Prix with just 8 points, and have nearly doubled their total to 15. More importantly, they have leaf frogged both Alfa Romeo and Renault to move from 8th to 6th in the constructors world championship.

Next we are off to Monaco. It is difficult to predict how the Haas cars will perform, so we are keeping our expectations low, but our hopes hi!!!

Bon jour!

2016 Spanish Grand Prix – Some Pre-race Sangria

It is Saturday night on the East Coast of the United States. The Spanish Grand prix is tomorrow morning at 8:00 AM.  Europe means 8 AM sunday races… yes!

If the F1 season was a football game we’d be starting the second quarter. The team has established a 4 race baseline and are starting to up their expectations. Grosjean and Gutierrez qualified 14thand 16th.  Both cars made it out of the first qualifying session and were eliminated in the second. Yes it is racing and second place is the first looser.  Getting both cars into Q2 is a reasonable expectation or target for success.

Coming into Spain our hopes were raised just slightly because Catalunya Madrid is the only track on the schedule that the team had performance data on.  Grosjean complained that the car was undrivable during practice. They dialed the car back to the Sochi setup and started over. Romain seemed happier with his performance. Or perhaps he was just in a more guarded mindset during the post qualifying media scrum.

The Haas F1 team seems to be consistently qualifying into the area of 12th to 16th positions. Their consistency and reliability have been the hall marks for the team so far. Gains by Mclaren and Renault will keep the mid-pack pressure on the team.

But for the Spanish Grand Prix… again I expect at least 1 car in the points. My target for the team is to have one car in points per race. To maintain that goal we’ll need to see both drivers in points at some point since they have only 1 race so far without a driver in the points.

I expect Grosjean to be in points. He is going to extend the range of his tires and maximize those mediums. He has 2 sets of Hard Compound Pirelli’s. Will we see hard compounds in the race?

prediction: Grosjean in the points.

Not a very exciting journal entry. all of the excitement this race was about Max Verstappen replacing Dany Kvyat at Redbull. I predict a critical mistake by the over zealous Belgian.