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F1 2020: Tuscan Gp Review – Mugello Madness

For several months it seems unlikely that formula 1 would turn a wheel in anger. All indications were that it would be near impossible to get sort of calendar together for 2020. But behind the scenes F1, Liberty Media, and the circuit stakeholders were working overtime to put something together. The announcement that F1 would race at Mugello, more known for motorcycle racing, was met with excitement. But not in our wildest dreams could we have predicted the utter madness that Mugello delivered.

A yellow flag in the dying seconds of Saturday qualifying kept Valtteri Bottas from going for pole position. He made amends though on Sunday bad he surged into the lead of the race. But the racing pack had barely managed three corners before chaos descended.

Three cars next to each other on the narrow Mugello circuit just don’t go as Pierre Gasly, Kimi Raikkonen and Max Verstappen found out. For Verstappen and Gasly, last week’s race winner, it was he end of the race while Raikkonen escaped albeit with damage to the front wing, bargeboard, and floor. Verstappen had initially roared off the starting line and look for a moment to be challenging Hamilton for second. But the Red Bull suddenly lost power and the Dutchman was swallowed by the pack, which left him in the dreaded carbon fiber zone. The safety car, clad in red to celebrate Ferrari’s 1000 Gp, was deployed while the stricken cars were recovered.

The Mercedes of Bottas led the pack as the safer car pulled in but mere seconds later utter chaos erupted on the start/finish strait. Several drivers, bidding to get a run on one another, had misjudged the restart. It meant that they had to slam on the brakes but those following behind had zero time to react. It resulted in a scary pile up which involved Kevin Magnussen, Nicholas Latifi, Antonio Giovinazzi, and Carlos Sainz. Thankfully, all drivers escaped without injury. As carbon fiber and destroyed cars were scattered across the track the race was red flag to accommodate the cleanup process. Renault’s Esteban Ocon would retire from the race during the red flag period with rear brake failure.

2020 Tuscany GPThe cars lined up on the grid for the re-start as in Monza seven days ago. The drag down to the first corner meant that Bottas was always at a detriment and it proved to be exactly so as Hamilton leapt into the lead of the race as soon as the lights went out. Charles Leclerc valiantly held onto third place for several laps but was ultimately unable to hold off Lance Stroll who took third off the Ferrari driver on lap 18. Daniel Ricciardo, Sergio Perez, and Carlos Sainz too easily overtook Leclerc.

The race seemed to settle for a spell with Hamilton in the lead. Bottas kept his teammate mostly insight until running into trouble with his medium compound tyres. The Finn lost a handful of seconds in traffic before stopping for a set of hard tyres. Despite telling the Mercedes pitfall that he wanted the opposite tyre strategy to his teammate the team opted to fit hard tyres to Hamilton’s car too. Meanwhile, with Ricciardo, Renault opted to affect the undercut by bringing Ricciardo into the pits before the Racing Point. It worked a treat as the Australian secured third place over Stroll.

There was another lull in the race during which Stroll, now in 4th, and Albon, in 5th, were beginning to close the gap to Ricciardo in third. But just as Stroll was beginning to exert pressure on the Renault he appeared to suffer a tyre failure and crashed hard into the barriers at the second Arrabiatta. Though Stroll walked away without any injury his car was completely totaled. The barrier too had sustained some damage, which prompted the second red flag of the race.

At the second re-start the roles were now reversed and Bottas was in prime position to pick up Hamilton’s slipstream. However, he just couldn’t seize the opportunity and even briefly dropped behind Ricciardo as the lights went out. Albon too had a poor getaway but recovered brilliantly with a move around the outside of Perez for fourth. Next the Thai driver pulled off a brave move around the outside of turn 1 on Ricciardo to slot his Red Bull into third.

2020 Tuscany GPDaniel Ricciardo eventually finished an impressive fourth ahead of Perez in fifth. Lando Norris kept his nose clean and netted a solid sixth for McLaren while Daniil Kvyat was seventh for Alpha Tauri. On the track Kimi Raikkonen finished eighth ahead of Leclerc in ninth. However these positions were reversed on the timing sheets due to a five-second penalty for Raikkonen.

The penalty, for cutting across the pit entry line, was nearly negated by Kimi Raikkonen who drove a stunning final stint to ensure at least two points on the day. Seb Vettel, who announced this weekend that he would be an Aston Martin driver in 2021, finished tenth. George Russell was achingly close to scoring his first point in F1 but just didn’t have enough pace to overtake the Ferrari.

There was great uncertainty as to what modern F1 would produce when combined with the epically fast and flowing Mugello circuit. It’s an old school circuit with no asphalt run-off areas to be seen. It’s a great test of driver and car. It’s a track layout that is unbelievably fast and extremely challenging. And it’s a place that surely deserves a spot on the F1 calendar.

All images courtesy of Pirelli Motorsport

About Natalie Le Clue

Natalie Le Clue is an F1 aficionado of the most dedicated vein. And, true to form for any F1-enamoured junkie, she readily admits to crying the first time she saw a F1 car, calling it an ‘overwhelming moment’. Natalie has won the 2010 gSport Woman In Media award, the 2015 Woman In Media Print award, and has been named as one of the Top 100 Most Influential People in South African Sport by the Department of Sport and Recreation. Natalie is currently serving as SAfm's F1 correspondent. Follow Natalie on Twitter @nlc27

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