F1 News, Reports and Race Results

Sainz happy to ‘try things’ despite compromising qualifying

Carlos Sainz says he doesn’t have any regrets about experimenting with his car’s set-up at Suzuka although the exercise ended up compromising his qualifying session.

After last week’s high at Singapore, the prospect of a difficult weekend on a track unsuited for Ferrari encouraged Sainz to explore less conventional solutions in a bid to find a good balance for his SF-23.

In the end, however, having lost his way, he opted to revert to a more basic set-up, but the process proved a distraction and a waste of time that eventually ended up setting him back rather than forward.

"We knew before coming here that this track would expose us a bit more," said the Spaniard who will line up sixth on Sunday’s grid.

"Probably with the high-speed characteristics, but also the long corners, high winds like we're having today, it was never going to be easy.

"I took the approach yesterday and this morning to try different things on the car, try to change the balance quite a bit, and try different things on set-up to try and put the car a bit in a different place.

"By the time of quali I saw that it was not quite working, and we had to go back to a more basic set-up, which in the end probably ended up compromising my quali preparation and my weekend in general.

"But I'm happy to try those things, and now focus on tomorrow, see if we can do a good race. I don't think we could have done much more because honestly the McLarens and the Red Bulls this weekend, they look one step quicker."

©Ferrari

Sainz recognized that his approach was a gamble, but one that is sometimes necessary to “challenge” the car and himself.

"Some weekends, where you know the car is weak, you need to challenge yourself, challenge the car a bit and try to put it outside its normal window to see if you can find something,” he argued.

“That's what I tried this weekend. It definitely didn't help, but I don't think it made my life too complicated.

“I also think Charles this weekend has been very quick and probably the unpredictability and the balance of the car being so tricky with the wind is not helping.

"Charles must have done a very good lap," he said. "I didn't get a clean sector one in my last lap, which probably accentuated a bit the difference. Let's say he's been a tenth or two quicker all weekend.

"And probably me being a bit distracted trying so many set-ups and never really getting into a rhythm didn't help. But it's an approach that I wanted to take to learn for the future circuits."

Keep up to date with all the F1 news via Facebook and Twitter

Michael Delaney

Recent Posts

Sebastian Montoya steps up to Formula 2 with Prema

Sebastian Montoya, the 19-year-old son of former Formula 1 star Juan Pablo Montoya, is set…

9 hours ago

Sauber finds its ‘Northern Star’ under Binotto’s leadership

When former Ferrari team principal Mattia Binotto took on the role of Chief Operating Officer…

10 hours ago

Leclerc hails a season ‘without missed opportunities' in 2024

Charles Leclerc concluded the 2024 F1 season with a sense of satisfaction, the Ferrari driver…

12 hours ago

Coulthard sounds alarm over FIA president’s rift with F1 drivers

Former Formula 1 driver David Coulthard has voiced his dismay at FIA president Mohammed Ben…

13 hours ago

The rapid rise and fall of Super Aguri in F1

Super Aguri's application to join Formula 1 became a reality on this day in 2005,…

14 hours ago

Ferrari's 2024 Season: Marked improvement and a fight to the finish

Ferrari roared back into contention in 2024 to deliver their strongest season in years, thanks…

15 hours ago