
Franco Colapinto, Alpine (P18) 2/10
Simply put, young Colapinto looked lost at sea behind the wheel of his A524 around the Hungaroring. He lost more positions than anyone else on the first lap of the race (four) and followed this up with poor lap times compared to his teammate and a slow 7.2-second pitstop that pretty much cemented the Argentine’s place near the foot of the field for the Grand Prix’s remainder.

Yuki Tsunoda, Red Bull (P17) 2/10
Tsunoda started the Hungarian Grand Prix from the pitlane as he swapped the power unit in his RB21 for a fresh one under parc ferme conditions. You’d think this would help the Japanese driver to climb up the order, but nope. After a brief glimpse of hope with a Q3 appearance in Belgium, the Red Bull driver has been back to his usual ways, languishing in the bottom half of the running order, and this continued with another disappointing result in Hungary.







