
Fresh off its first win of the season delivered with a 1-2 in Brazil, Mercedes again locked out the top two spots in the opening practice for the Formula 1 season finale in Abu Dhabi.
key moments:
> Hamilton heads Russell
> Verstappen sub Lawson leads stand-ins
> Heart-in-mouth moment for Sargeant
Lewis Hamilton headed team-mate George Russell in a session filled with stand-in rookie drivers, which meant a number of full-timer absentees – including world champion Max Verstappen.
Williams’ presumptive 2023 driver Logan Sargeant was among the stand-ins, and logged the sufficient laps to presumably bank a valuable extra superlicence points for his tally – but not without misadventure en route to it.
Hamilton took the lead with a soft tire run in the final stretch, jumping ahead of Charles Leclerc (Ferrari), who himself had usurped Red Bull’s Sergio Perez.
The other Mercedes, that of George Russell, then headed Hamilton in the first sector, but ultimately slipped 0.22s back, but remaining ahead of Leclerc.
Verstappen’s stand-in Liam Lawson, making a practice appearance with Red Bull after two sessions with AlphaTauri earlier this season, impressed – featuring in third place after his initial hard-tyre run and then ending up fifth, two tenths down on Perez.
The Kiwi did have a minor mishap, missing the entry to his pitbox in the middle of the session as by Formula 2 habit he hadn’t realized how early the Red Bull garage is.
“Can we push? Sorry, I’m used to driving further down”
Liam Lawson who’s in for Max Verstappen, forgets that he needs to pit at the Red Bull garage for this session
#AbuDhabiGP #F1 pic.twitter.com/0bWTaRTK2D
— Formula 1 (@F1) November 18, 2022
Sebastian Vettel kicked off his farewell Formula 1 weekend by placing sixth for Aston, ahead of Ferrari rookie Robert Shwartzman – standing in for Carlos Sainz and lapping half a second off Leclerc.
McLaren driver Daniel Ricciardo, for whom this likewise could be his final F1 weekend as he is replaced by Oscar Piastri in the Woking-based team next season, which was the last driver within a second of Hamilton in eighth.
Sargeant, who got into the Williams car after placing fourth in the sole practice session of the Formula 2 finale (pivotal to his superlicence hopes), was just a quarter of a second off regular Alex Albon.
But he also spun at Turn 1 and was lucky to avoid a big hit against the barriers. This could’ve been problematic as he stood to gain a superlicence point for completing 100km of penalty-free running in this session – but, had the crash been terminal, he would’ve come up well short.
The spin did ruin his set of softs, but with no damage to the FW44 he returned to the track and comfortably cleared the requisite 19-lap mark.
There’s a spin for Logan Sargeant at Turn 1
He just managed to avoid the barriers and is back on track#AbuDhabiGP #F1 pic.twitter.com/xOjL8DWlhg
— Formula 1 (@F1) November 18, 2022
Of the other stand-ins, Alfa Romeo reserve Robert Kubica was one place up on Sargeant in 14th, acknowledging to his team that he’d been “screwing up in a lot of places”.
Haas reserve Pietro Fittipaldi was 17th, within a tenth of regular driver Kevin Magnussen, but also had a near-miss with Pierre Gasly (AlphaTauri).
IndyCar standout Patricio O’Ward was 18th, logging 22 laps despite an early issue that gave off the appearance of being terminal. On his initial outlap, he reported an issue with his McLaren and spent over four minutes crawling back to the pits – but soon fortunately returned to the track.
Jack Doohan (Alpine) and F2 champion Felipe Drugovich completed the order.
Practice 1 Results
position | Surname | cars | best time | gap leader |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Lewis Hamilton | Mercedes | 1m26.633s | |
2 | George Russell | Mercedes | 1m26.853s | +0.22s |
3 | Charles Leclerc | Ferrari | 1m26.888s | +0.255s |
4 | Sergio Perez | red bull | 1m26.967s | +0.334s |
5 | Liam Lawson | AlphaTauri Red Bull | 1m27.201s | +0.568s |
6 | Sebastian Vettel | Aston Martin Mercedes | 1m27.268s | +0.635s |
7 | Robert Shwartzman | Ferrari | 1m27.429s | +0.796s |
8th | Daniel Ricciardo | McLaren Mercedes | 1m27.619s | +0.986s |
9 | Valtteri Bottas | Alfa Romeo Ferrari | 1m27.655s | +1.022s |
10 | Alex Albon | Williams Mercedes | 1m27.84s | +1.207s |
11 | Pierre Gasly | AlphaTauri Red Bull | 1m27.845s | +1.212s |
12 | Esteban Ocon | Alpine Renault | 1m27.891s | +1.258s |
13 | Yuki Tsunoda | AlphaTauri Red Bull | 1m27.991s | +1.358s |
14 | Robert Kubica | Alfa Romeo Ferrari | 1m28.064s | +1.431s |
15 | Logan Sargeant | Williams Mercedes | 1m28.098s | +1.465s |
16 | Kevin Magussen | Haas Ferrari | 1m28.142s | +1.509s |
17 | Pietro Fittipaldi | Haas Ferrari | 1m28.204s | +1.571s |
18 | Patricio O’Ward | McLaren Mercedes | 1m28.35s | +1.717s |
19 | Jack Doohan | Alpine Renault | 1m28.484s | +1.851s |
20 | Felipe Drugovich | Aston Martin Mercedes | 1m28.672s | +2.039s |
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