Five winners and five losers from F1’s Styrian Grand Prix

The Styrian GP will go down as a rare, unexciting race in what has otherwise been a thrilling 2021 F♌1 season, but it certainly had big implications for the title race.
Verstappe💮n🧸 dominated a relatively uneventful race to land his 14th career victory in F1 and stretch out his championship advantage as Red Bull asserted themselves as favourites.
Some drivers will be heading into the second of two races at the Red Bull Ring ful💖l of confidence, while others will be looking to right the wrongs of a disappointing day in the office.
Here are our winners and losers from the 20🐼21 Styri🃏an GP…
Winners
Max Verstappen

It was utter domination from Verstappen an🎉d Red Bull in Austria as he moved into a clear position of contrꦫol in the title race.
Verstappen aced his start and pulled clear of Hamilton in commanding fa🐭shion on his way to recording his fourth victory of the season that has launched him into an 18-point championship lead over ♍his main rival.
The Dutchman didn’t put a foot wrong all weekend and ജwould have finished around 15s clear of Hamilton on merit had Mercedesဣ not opted to make a second stop late on to snatch the fastest lap bonus point.
Verstappen and Red Bull are riding a crest of momentum and will be full of🍨 confidence returning to Spielberg for a second race at its home track next weekend.
Valtteri Bottas
It was a strong performance from Valtteri Bottas all weekend at a track he loves and barring his bizarre pitlane spin and subsequent penalty, it would have been the Finn starting on the front row alongside Verstappen instead of his teammate. ⛎;
Bottas was consistent throughout the first stint having made short work of passing Lando Norris’ McLareღn, before a brilliant undercut stra⛄tegy from Mercedes helped him jump Sergio Perez.
On a day Mercedes struggled to c🌱ompete with Red Bull’s superior performance, Bottas fending off Perez for the final spot on the podium acted as a small win.
Lando Norris

After qualifying an excellent third on the grid, Norris continued his outstanding start to 2021 with another faultless drive at the Red Bull Ring.
Having initially lost out to Perez on the run to Turn 3, Norris fought back to sweep around the outsi✨de of the Mexican at the f🍒ollowing corner.
Norris impressively held up Perez for l🐽onger than expected but offered no resistance when the faster Red Bull swooped by, aware that his battle was never really with Red Bull or Mercedes.
After falling behind Bottas, Norris came home in a s🦂trong, if lonely, fifth place that kept up his remarkable 13-race points streak.
Ferrari
Ferrari was left disappointed by its lacklustre qualifying dis𓄧play in Aus🥃tria but the team bounced back with some really strong race pace.
Carlos Sainz rose from 12th🔯 on the grid to take a solid sixth behind Norris, while teammate Charles Leclerc brilliantly recovered from his near-disaster start to claim a seventh place that looked unlikely when he ran 17th after a first lap pit stop. ꧂;

A brush with AlphaTauri’s Pierre Gasly on the run to Turn 3 damaged his front wing, while h🎀e nearly collided with Kimi Raikkonen later on, but Leclerc was still able to charge through to seal an important result that helped Ferrari outscore its chief rival McLaren.
Leclerc, who deservedly won the driver of the day accolade, described his recovery drive as being “one of my best p൩erformances in F1”.
Lance Stroll
A great drive from Lance ♛Stroll saw him equa꧃l his best result of the season in eighth.
Key to Stroll’s P8 finish was a sublime start and some🎶 incredibly composed car positioning that helped him make up positions at the start and avoid the Leclerc/Gasly melee.
The highlight of Stroll’s race came onꦉ the opening lap as he pulled off a stunning around-the-outside pass on Fernando Alonso’s Alpine at Turn 6 to move into the p🍰osition he eventually finished.
It was an important result for Aston Martin as Stroll beat the ꦬteam’s main midfield rivals Alpine and AlphaTauri.

Losers
Mercedes
It was an alarming day for Mercedes, who suffered its latest defeat at the hands of Red Bull. Team principal Toto Wolff conceded afterwards💎 that it marked the first time in eight years that Mercedes had been so convincingly out-paced.
Mercedes had never previously gone four races without a win in💛 the V6 hybrid era, but there🐬 is every chance it could become five with another race in Spielberg next weekend.
Now trailing Red Bull by 40 points, the German marꦦquee will be left scratching its head and faces a real dilemma regarding its development plans if it is to somehow prevent Red Bull from running away in the title race.

Sergio Perez
Sergio Perez will be left cursing a rare slow pit stop from Red Bull as he slipped behind the undercutting Bottas and missed out on a third straightꦡ podium.
The Mexican certainly looked to have the pace to finish on the rostrum, and rapidly caught Bottas in the final laps after Red Bull gambled by opting to make 🍌a second stop.
Perez ultimately ran out of laps in his pursuit of Bottas and eventually finish🍌ed just 0.5s behind the Mercedes driver at the fꦺlag.
Daniel Ricciardo
After b༺eing left mystified by his lack of pace in qualifying, Daniel Ricciardo bounced b🌜ack strongly on Sunday and made a fantastic start to launch himself into the top-10 early on.
But all of Ricciardo’s h🀅ard work was undone on Lap 7 when the Austral🐈ian lost four places in one lap as he dramatically slipped to 13th. Ricciardo reported he had “low power” and the temporary issue proved hugely costly, hampering his chances of scoring any points.
Ricciardo failed to make up any ground in the remainder of the race on his way to a disappointing result that capped off a frus🍰trating weekend.
George Russell

You really have to feel for George Russell.
The Briton looked on course to finally secure his mai💟den F1 points finish for Williams in Austria having been running comfortably in the points, only for a power unit issue💜 to force him into retirement at mid-distance.
It was nevertheless an impressive ꦚperformance from Russell all weekend as he turned in 🤪yet another starring display as he looks to convince Mercedes that he is worthy of a seat alongside Hamilton in 2022.
Pierre Gasly and AlphaTauri
Pierre Gasly’s impressive run of form came to a disappointing end in Styria as the AlphaTauri driver’s race was ended on t🌼he opening lap.
Starting sixth, Gasly clashed with Leclerc at Turn 1 and picked up a puncture when Leclerc rather clumsily moved across on the Frenchman on ඣthe run to Turn 3.&𝓀nbsp;
Struggling to control his heavily-da🔜maged car, Gasly also touched Nicholas Latifi’s Williams and sent Alfa Romeo’s Antonio Giovinazzi spinning as he headed back to the pits.
D🅷espite the promising pace AlphaTauri demonstratﷺed all weekend, the team came away from the race with just a solitary point courtesy of Yuki Tsunoda.


Lewis regulaꦆrly attends Grands Prix for mahbx.com around the world. Often reporting on the action from the ground, Lewis tells the stories of the people who🐻 matter in the sport.