Mick Schumacher (P12): 6.5/10
A solid race on Sunday afternoon can't make up for that costly error on Saturday morning when he oversteered off the track and thumped the Haas into the barrier, causing so much damage that it was impossible for him to take part in qualifying. Not that it mattered, since a replacement for the wrecked gearbox meant he was starting from the back anyway. At least it kept him out of harm's way at the start of the race, and with Nikita Mazepin retiring from the race after a pit lane clash with Kimi Raikkonen it meant a quiet afternoon for the young German. He did well to keep Max Verstappen behind him for as long as hs did, regardless of the damage to the Red Bull. Antonio Giovinazzi closed up in the final laps but Schumacher was able to keep hold of 12th position to the line, the rookie's best result to date even if that was in large part due to the high number of retirements ahead of him.
Daniel Ricciardo (P11): 6.5/10
You have to look hard for any silver lining to Daniel Ricciardo's weekend in Hungary, which somehow never seemed to click into place. He was outside the top ten and lacked the pace of his McLaren team mate on Friday, before eighth in final practice gave him a brief flicker of hope going into qualifying. But once again the Aussie underperformed and narrowly missed the cut at the end of Q2 to line up in 11th place: "I thought the lap was decent but it's still quite a long way off." In the race itself, he was caught up in the turn 1 clash between Lance stroll and Charles Leclerc leaving his MCL35M carrying damage that meant he was unable to fight his way into a depleted top ten. "There wasn't much more we could do after that, despite us trying," he said later. "With the car damage we had, and the difficulty overtaking here, it really just limited our race."