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Ask Edd Straw about his Chinese GP driver rankings

After every grand prix, Edd Straw answers your questions and comments about his F1 driver rankings, exclusively for The Race Members' Club on Patreon.

Have a read of his full rankings below, then leave your message for Edd in the comments at the bottom of the post!

Started: 4th Finished: 4th

The RB21 is “still not where I want it to be” and lacks pace. Within that context to have qualified second and finished third in the sprint, then been 'profoundly fourth' in the race was a superb performance - in a car Lawson’s struggles show is not easy to get the best out of.

Other than a tiny moment in Turn 1 at the start, which ensured Verstappen ended up behind both Ferraris, this was an immaculate weekend.

Verdict: The only driver to maximise everything.

Started: 1st Finished: 1st

Only dragged down for his slight underachievement in the sprint element of the weekend, with small errors in SQ3 combined with McLaren’s runplan misjudgment costing him a shot at pole position.

Without that, he likely would have won the sprint from pole rather than battling through to second.

He was immaculate in the main event, bagging his first pole position thanks to time gained by attacking the hairpin and final corner, then controlling the race from the front.

Verdict: Missing sprint win in a tiny blemish on a great weekend.

Started: 2nd Finished: 3rd

Russell described his approach to the weekend as one of not “chasing miracles”, and he largely delivered on that. Perhaps he could have finished a place higher than fourth in the sprint given Verstappen's struggles, but he overachieved in qualifying proper by putting the car on the front row thanks to nailing the tyre prep on the final lap.

In the main race, he did everything he could and settled into third place after Norris got around him at Turn 1, the consequence of being pinned to a tight entry to Turn 1 by Piastri’s car positioning.

Verdict: Save for one place in the sprint, maximised the weekend.

Started: 10th Finished: 7th

After a solid sprint, albeit one in which he perhaps should have beaten the Aston Martins, Albon was completely on top of the car - and the tyres - in the main event.

With Sainz’s struggles revealing how tricky the Williams is, Albon executed a well-judged first stint and could even have finished higher had he been brought into the pits slightly earlier.

Verdict: Made light of car trickiness.

Started: 11th Finished: 5th

He didn’t get the best of the sprint, largely because of struggling in qualifying in a car that wasn’t right.

Having “changed three-quarters of the car”, he beat Antonelli courtesy of a bold on-the-grass pass, and kept the hobbled Mercedes behind. That meant seventh-on-the-road and midfield ‘victory’, which became fifth when the Ferraris were thrown out.

Verdict: At his superb best in the main event.

Started: 5th Finished: DSQ

Hamilton’s performance in the sprint was outstanding both in qualifying and the race, but couldn’t be repeated in the main event. The pace wasn’t in the car to do that, but despite outqualifying Leclerc by one tenth his race was more of a struggle as he was slower than his team-mate despite an undamaged car.

Sixth-on-the-road after dropping behind Verstappen by gambling on a second stop turned to dust when he was disqualified for skid wear.

Verdict: Sprint dominance elevates ranking.

Started: 9th Finished: 16th

Was again one of the standout midfield drivers, taking a fine sixth in the sprint ahead of Antonelli before over-reaching on his final Q3 lap and making a mistake.

That left him ninth, but he ran eighth in the first stint and was firmly on course for points until being derailed by Racing Bulls sticking with a two-stop strategy, and a front-wing failure.

There’s no evidence as yet that a driver error caused any damage he picked up, meaning it doesn’t count against him in the ranking.

Verdict: Drove superbly, but again unlucky.

Started: 17th Finished: 8th

Bearman fared better than Ocon in the sprint, and he might have done so again in the main event but for falling in Q1 after not reaching the line in time to start his final qualifying lap thanks to traffic.

But he drove an incisive race, executing his inverted hard/medium strategy well and making some important passes on his way to 10th on the road. That became eighth (thanks to the Ferraris being thrown out), a just reward for a strong weekend.

Verdict: Put his Melbourne nightmare firmly behind him.

Started: 14th Finished: 9th

Stroll seemed more in tune with the Aston Martin from the start of the weekend, making SQ3 and then hanging onto a points position ahead of Norris for much of the sprint before inevitably being passed.

Although he slipped behind Alonso in qualifying proper, he drove a decent race with a good stint on hards before struggling with graining on mediums after pitting with 20 laps to go, preventing him making progress in the second stint.

Given the lack of pace of the Aston Martin, 12th on the road was a good effort, rewarded with promotion to ninth place.

Verdict: Continued his decent start to the year.

Started: 3rd Finished: 2nd

Although the brake problem, caused by a leak in the system that required ever-reduced peak brake pressure to be applied in the closing stages of the race, denied him his chance to pressure Piastri, he was anyway half a step behind his team-mate all weekend.

The sprint component went badly, with errors both in qualifying and the race as he needlessly squandered points, although as the weekend progressed and the front-graining limitation reduced he got stronger. He then did a superb job in the race to manage the worsening brake issue by adapting his style to reduce peak brake pressure.

Verdict: Sprint struggles drag him down.

Started: 7th Finished: 11th

Hadjar failed to put together a lap in SQ2, meaning the sprint part of the weekend was a write-off, but he did superbly in qualifying not only to reach Q3 but also head the midfield.

While overall his underlying pace wasn’t as strong as Tsunoda’s, he converted seventh on the grid into ninth in the early stages after a tricky first lap, and was on target for points until strategy derailed him. Getting stuck behind Doohan, in part due to an overly-robust defence by the latter, meant any chance of returning to the points faded even with the help provided by three exclusions.

Verdict: Very promising in flashes.

Started: 6th Finished: DSQ

The longer the race weekend went on, the more comfortable Leclerc became. A step behind Hamilton in the sprint component, in which he finished fifth, he was more convincing in qualifying proper, then had a clear pace advantage over Hamilton in the grand prix.

On the downside, a small misjudgment on the first lap while battling with Verstappen meant he clipped his team-mate at Turn 2 and suffered wing damage. Despite the impression this didn’t impact his pace, it did and without that error he certainly would have been on the podium rather than losing fourth late on to Verstappen. But it was all in vain as he was excluded for being underweight.

Verdict: An untidy weekend.

Started: 8th Finished: 6th

Antonelli’s inexperience showed through a combination of pushing the corner-entries too hard at times and his struggle with getting the tyres in the right window for a qualifying lap. That’s to be expected, and meant he never showed Russell’s pace, but after a solid run to seventh in the sprint after losing out to Tsunoda in a first-lap battle, his subdued pace in the race was a result of floor damage sustained when he hit debris from the Leclerc/Hamilton contact on the first lap.

That meant rear tyres were a problem, which combined with being undercut by Ocon at the first stops added up to eighth on-the-road, which became sixth after the exclusions.

Verdict: A learning weekend.

Started: 16th Finished: DSQ

While there were flashes of form, notably with a decent drive to 12th in the sprint, the Alpine was not at the races in China. Combined with struggles with traffic compromising the qualifying sessions, it meant an anonymous weekend for Gasly.

He did what he could, albeit without ever appearing to have a significant underlying pace advantage over his team-mate, but missed out on the chance to inherit a couple of points when Ferrari was excluded after his own car was found to be 1kg underweight.

Verdict: A solid weekend in tricky circumstances.

Started: 13th Finished: DNF

Alonso was marginally the weaker Aston Martin driver in the sprint element of the weekend, proving slightly more untidy than his team-mate at times before following him home 10th. He shaded Stroll in qualifying for the main race, but retired from 12th place early on after the right-rear brake overheated - likely the consequence of picking up some debris on the first lap.

Verdict: Not at his best.

Started: 15th Finished: 10th

This was a tough weekend for Sainz, who never really got on top of the tricky Williams throughout the weekend. That meant he was unable to reach the final segment of qualifying on either occasion and spent the weekend toiling deep in the midfield.

Inheriting a point after finishing 13th on the road at least meant he got something from the weekend, but while there’s no doubt he’ll get there eventually his current struggles with the Williams were exposed in China.

Verdict: Puzzled by the Williams.

Started: 19th Finished: 14th

Performed well in the sprint, reaching SQ2 and then having a decent race before being hit by Doohan.

The main event went less well, although it was traffic at the end of his prep lap in the form of Hamilton passing him that meant he couldn’t keep up his 100% record of making the second phase of qualifying.

A rookie error came on the opening lap while battling with Bearman as the combination of dirty air and low track grip led to him spinning into the gravel, but after recovering he was on a hiding to nothing given the Sauber’s lack of pace.

Verdict: Race error overshadowed many positives.

Started: 18th Finished: 13th

Like all the rookies, Doohan struggled with the tyres but just as in Australia his pace relative to Gasly again caught the eye.

Unfortunately, on top of Alpine’s struggles the races didn’t go so well for him with clashes with Bortoleto in the sprint and Hadjar, who he forced off the track, in the main event compromising his results. Without the 10-second penalty for the latter, he would have finished 11th.

Verdict: Pace good, but race errors hurt.

Started: 12th Finished: 15th

Hulkenberg started the weekend with eye-catching FP1 pace, but it was an illusion for Sauber as it was set late in the session with the track having rubbered in more. He struggled with the tyres in sprint qualifying, starting from the pits after suspension changes and driving a conservative race.

His qualifying performance was outstanding, coming close to a Q3 spot, before an average launch combined with a trip through the gravel at Turn 3 while battling with Alonso dropped him to the back.

He also had car damage, which he really couldn’t afford given even a healthy Sauber was the slowest car in China.

Verdict: Rest of the weekend didn’t match up to his Saturday qualifying.

Started: 20th (pits) Finished: 12th

Lawson had a trip through the Turn 3 gravel on his first flying lap of practice, which set the tone for a weekend on which he never came to terms with the Red Bull.

He climbed to 15th in the sprint, but his pace was poor in the main race, with “getting the car in the right window” eluding him all weekend.

Red Bull is asking a lot, perhaps too much, of a driver in their first full season at tracks he’s unfamiliar with, but even taking that and the fact there was just one free practice session in China into account, the extent of Lawson’s struggles was a surprise.

Verdict: Must do better. 

Ask Edd Straw about his Chinese GP driver rankings

Comments

McLaren erred in their Sprint Q3 strategy. Can’t hold the drivers responsible for that. Oscar executed the weekend almost perfectly. Very harsh ranking.

Derek Bailey

As a Max fan, I love seeing him first, but feels a bit harsh on Piastri. I’m sure it was a close call for you, but is missing out on the sprint win that big a deal when he dominated the much more important outing on Sunday?

Andrew Narduzzi

Norris was ranked 10th in your rankings and only outscored Max by 1 point over the course of this weekend. Are his uneven performances in a dominant McLaren again going to ruin his chances at a WDC compared to Piastri and Verstappen?

Shrinkinator

The general narrative right now seems to be that Verstappen ist vastly outperforming his machinery, which you seem to subscribe to as well in these Rankings. But what do you actually base that on, given that his teammate is barely a relevant Benchmark? Which data and metrics Point you towards that conclusion over the other possible Interpretations? Basically, how w can we confidently say that the Red Bull ist bad and Max is great, when it might just be the second Driver(s) who makes the car Look terrible, while max ist performing in roughly the normal window?

David Trippler

A sooner pit stop wouldn‘t have changed that as well, he was overtaken off the start. His sprint was unrearkable too. Still a good weekend though

Rohmilchkäse

It felt like a hard one to rank, as many drivers did a good job over all. Verstappen and Russell though felt like the only ones that absolutely maximised it. And the VCARBs drivers good job went slightly underapreciated because of their dreadful pitwall. However no big disagreements from my side.

Rohmilchkäse

If anything, the fact Lawson is last should drag Verstappen down.

Harvey Smith

This is such a well reasoned argument, I think it’s so easy for the media to elevate Max and there’s so much pressure to do so since if he doesn’t feel praised they’ll just boycott.

Harvey Smith

Im intrigued Hamilton is so high after being out paced in the main event by a compromised Leclerc. It sounds like much of his struggles were due to setup, but surely a driver of his experience plays a significant role in setup decisions. How do you account for driver vs team culpability in the rankings when a driver extracts a lot from a poorly setup car?

Vin Narayan

Did Max really maximise his weekend? I'm shocked Max has been ranked 1st. For me, Max is behind Oscar and George this weekend. My thoughts are: - Max was beaten in Sprint Qualy by a car he was able to outqualify in main Qualy. - Max went backwards in the Sprint Race, although there is no shame dropping behind a McLaren its not exactly impressive. George by contrast did well to pull a rare overtake off in the Sprint against a Ferrari, whereas Max couldn't overtake his Ferrari that he was behind for much of the Sprint. - Max wasn't able to improve his Qualy time by much compared to Sprint Qualy and was bettered by a seemingly very impressive lap from George - Losing 2 positions at the start of the race gave Max an impossible job to make it up to the podium, which he might have otherwise achieved. Oscar ended up dropping just 1 point from the weekend maximum, and outperformed his highly rated team mate in all sessions. In the race review podcast you seemed impressed with Oscar's pole lap, start and ability to handle the pressure after sacrificing so many points in the first race. I would have thought these factors would have helped put Oscar clearly ahead of what felt like an unnotable weekend for Max.

Matt Tucker

As drivers only get one session to find a comfortable setup before SQ1, do you consider setup gains or losses between the sprint and qualifying in your rankings?

Harri Evans

I assume the DSQ did not have any impact on rankings as not driver induced. Would you ever do team rankings, where strategy, execution (and adhering to rules!!) would be factors ?

Chris Campbell

How difficult are you finding the ranking of the midfield? Especially over a sprint weekend where nearly every driver fluctuated between the Spint and main race. Personally I feel that Bearman should have been up with Ocon based on his race alone, has he lost positions due to qualifying or the sprint?

Tim Ursell

Has asking the audience for feedback in this way impacted how you are reaching your decisions?

Matthew Marvell

Considering Hamiltons results in the Ferrari over the last two weekends and how fast he's been able to catch up with Leclerc. How much has Russell's stock risen? His last two weekends have been quietly impressive and the only rookie teammate gap bigger is Max and Lawson.

Thorarinn Gunnarsson

How can you have Albon (in a much better car) ahead of Ocon (in a worse car)? Especially as Ocon did an on the grass pass. Who did Albon overtake? If you are talking about maximising a race, surely Ocon did a better job.

Tim

How often have you ranked teammates first and last? Can we deduce that and last week that the Red Bull car therefore ranks somewhere in the middle of the pecking order?

Chris Parrott

Do you ever take into account their previous race result? Obviously on Bearman your verdict is he put the nightmare behind him but would that maybe give him a slightly higher place as he's rebounding or do you start afresh every race?

Ed R Gaming

Do you give the sprint less weight for teams very unlikely to be fighting for sprint points, or is that not a factor? If you discounted the sprint would Ocon make your top three - or were Verstappen, Piastri and Russell still too strong for that?

OC

How hard was it to rank Norris’ weekend? Decisive in battle with Russel in the race and managed the brake issue well at the end. Even with sloppy sprint 10th feels a little low

Thomas Knights

I'm interested to know what was particularly bad or egregious about Hulkenberg's sprint and race drives that meant you placed him below Doohan? The Australian had run-ins with other drivers in both the sprint and Grand Prix, whereas I thought Hulkenberg's Saturday qualifying effort would have been enough to place him higher (with the caveat that you'll have been following each driver's race far closer than I would!)

Stuart Coulter

I wonder whether Liam Lawson needed his own category this weekend as he was so much worse than everyone! How do you reflect on the impact of graining on the drivers? This could be much worse due to car traits and the driver may be able to do nothing about it, whatever they try. Or - is the ability to manage it what marks out the best from the rest?

James Nicholson

Have you ever considered treating the Sprint and Grand Prix parts of the weekend as separate rankings? Then, for the overall rankings, you could award fewer points for the Sprint results.

Alex Hindley

How much impact - if any - did the 3 DSQs have on their overall ranking? And, in general, how much "out of their control" factors influence a driver's ranking?

Michael Holden


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