Verstappen finishes Friday fastest ahead of Mercedes and Ferrari

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Max Verstappen put in the fastest lap of the day at Hockenheim ahead of this weekend’s German Grand Prix, to keep Red Bull at the top of the timesheets on Friday.

The Dutch driver posted a new track record time of 1:13.085s to put him narrowly ahead of the two Mercedes cars of Lewis Hamilton and Valtteri Bottas, followed by the Ferrari pair of Sebastian Vettel and Kimi Raikkonen.

Verstappen’s afternoon was subsequently interrupted after he reported a potential downshifting problem, but the team was able to swiftly effect repairs. His team mate Daniel Ricciardo is already heavily compromised with grid penalties this weekend.

German Grand Prix – Free Practice 2

Pos Driver Team Time Gap Laps

1
Max Verstappen
Red Bull
1:13.085s

18

2
Lewis Hamilton
Mercedes
1:13.111s
+ 0.026s

39

3
Valtteri Bottas
Mercedes
1:13.190s
+ 0.105s

39

4
Sebastian Vettel
Ferrari
1:13.310s
+ 0.225s

46

5
Kimi Räikkönen
Ferrari
1:13.427s
+ 0.342s

41

6
Romain Grosjean
Haas
1:13.973s
+ 0.888s

34

7
Kevin Magnussen
Haas
1:14.189s
+ 1.104s

36

8
Charles Leclerc
Sauber
1:14.374s
+ 1.289s

41

9
Nico Hülkenberg
Renault
1:14.496s
+ 1.411s

31

10
Esteban Ocon
Force India
1:14.508s
+ 1.423s

39

11
Sergio Pérez
Force India
1:14.552s
+ 1.467s

38

12
Carlos Sainz
Renault
1:14.592s
+ 1.507s

43

13
Daniel Ricciardo
Red Bull
1:14.682s
+ 1.597s

36

14
Marcus Ericsson
Sauber
1:14.783s
+ 1.698s

38

15
Pierre Gasly
Toro Rosso
1:14.793s
+ 1.708s

44

16
Brendon Hartley
Toro Rosso
1:14.830s
+ 1.745s

45

17
Fernando Alonso
McLaren
1:14.836s
+ 1.751s

38

18
Lance Stroll
Williams
1:15.269s
+ 2.184s

36

19
Sergey Sirotkin
Williams
1:15.408s
+ 2.323s

41

20
Stoffel Vandoorne
McLaren
1:15.454s
+ 2.369s

34

Temperatures were climbing nicely at Hockenheim, and the heat was definitely on as teams and drivers reconvened for the second Friday 90-minute session following a break for lunch.

After a brief pause, Carlos Sainz was the first man out on track on medium tyres when the pit lane lights went green. He had missed out on some running in the morning due to a water leak, and was eager to make up for lost time. Both he and his Renault team mate Nico Hulkenberg reported vibrations on the R.S.18 that the race engineers put down to a tyre balancing issue.

Haas’ Kevin Magnussen was the first driver to make a run on soft tyres, clocking in at 1:14.898s. That was soundly trumped by Sebastian Vettel by a full second despite the Ferrari sticking to the harder compound for its first post-lunch outing.

Kimi Raikkonen was also out for a flying lap, but he was 0.098s slower than his team mate despite being on the soft rubber. Shortly after, the Red Bull and Mercedes drivers started to get to work with Max Verstappen going top with a time of 1:13.356s which was three tenths faster than Valtteri Bottas and Lewis Hamilton.

Daniel Ricciardo was the last man to set a time just before the half hour mark. Already doomed to a back row start because of grid penalties, the Australian had no need to work on qualifying pace and could instead focus exclusively on distance runs. However he demonstrated how hard he was still pushing when he spun and briefly triggered local yellows after losing the back end of the RB14 in turn 8.

  • Ricciardo sets the pace in Hockenheim’s FP1 session

Once Ricciardo returned to pit lane and the yellow flags were withdrawn, Ferrari was able to make its first run on ultrasofts. Vettel duly went fastest with a run of 1:13.310s, but that was less than half a tenth faster than Verstappen’s earlier time on the soft compound.

The two Mercedes drivers were able to move things on, Hamilton going top with a time of 1:13.111s on the ultras which was 0.079s faster than Bottas and a new track record for the modern Hockenheimring. It didn’t stand for very long before Verstappen returned to the fray and punched in a lap of 1:13.085s

That proved to be effectively the final flying lap flourish before teams turned their attention to high fuel race simulations for the second half of the session. However Vettel and Hulkenberg in particular seemed to struggle to get their ultras to run long distances without suffering severe blistering in the high afternoon heat.

The session ran largely incident free, although there was a near-miss with half an hour to go when Sergey Sirotkin missed the apex into the hairpin turn 6. Ricciardo took that as an invitation to pass the Williams only to have the door slammed in his face. Contact was narrowly averted, with both cars going on their way.

Sirotkin subsequently had a solo run-off into the gravel at turn 13, from which he quickly recovered. He was by no means alone in that: both Hamilton and Verstappen also had routine run-offs during the afternoon.

Verstappen’s day was disrupted when he was recalled to the team garage with a downshifting problem with half an hour to go. After some intensive work by the Red Bull mechanics he was able to return to the track for the final three minutes. Verstappen subsequently revealed that they had found a minor oil leak that had needed addressing.

Best of the rest of the runners behind Red Bull, Mercedes and Ferrari was once again the Haas pairing of Romain Grosjean and Kevin Magnussen. They finished the session in sixth and seventh ahead of Sauber’s consistently impressive rookie driver Charles Leclerc.

Rounding out the top ten were Hulkenberg and Force India’s Esteban Ocon, the latter making up for lost time after sitting out FP1 in favour of Nicholas Latifi. He was just ahead of his team mate Sergio Perez, with Sainz 12th ahead of Ricciardo.

Slowest in the session was McLaren’s Stoffel Vandoorne, who after issues in FP1 had lost further time in the afternoon as mechanics checked the MCL33 for handling issues mid-session. He finished behind the Williams pair of Sirotkin and Lance Stroll.

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