F1 News, Reports and Race Results

Sainz: Soft tyre choice for sprint based on data not gamble

Carlos Sainz says Ferrari’s decision to have him race on the soft tyre in Saturday’s sprint in Austin was dictated by the Scuderia’s hard data and not the result of a aggressive gamble.

As the only driver to line up on the grid with Pirelli’s red-walled rubber, Sainz quickly realized that he would likely be facing an uphill struggle in the 19-lap mad dash.

But all things considered, the Spaniard acquitted himself well, initially moving up from sixth to fourth before falling back to P6 where he would end his race, just ahead of the Mercedes of George Russell.

“Being the only one on softs doesn’t give you a lot of confidence,” Sainz admitted.

“We thought there were going to be more cars out there with softs and then obviously mid-race once Lando and Perez passed me and George was attacking me, I thought we were just going to go backwards.

“I managed to recover the tyre well and did some good defending in order to keep him [Russell] behind and we brought home a P6 that at one point it didn’t look like it was going to be possible.”

While an outlier in the race given his tyre choice, Sainz insisted that Ferrari’s decision to run the soft compound was suggested by its tyre modelling data. He admitted however that the strategy wasn’t worth the risk.

“First of all, if we go for softs it means that our tyre model suggests that it’s not a bad tyre to go,” he explained. “If not, we simply wouldn’t even consider it.

“It suggested that it could be a decent tyre for this race as in previous years the soft has been a decent tyre here.

©Ferrari

“This time around, clearly we need to analyse if we can do something because was it worth the risk? Maybe it wasn’t.

“But we need to analyse how we can maybe do a bit better there. In the end it paid off at the start, but at one point it did look like it was going to be very tricky.”

Sainz felt that the stratagem had at least yielded some useful information for his team compared to teammate Charles Leclerc’s run on the medium tyre.

“We learned some valuable information for my team,” Sainz said. “Tomorrow, there’s plenty of strategies available out there and now that we know how the soft behaves we can map it and compare it to the medium.”

Sainz will start his US Grand Prix on Sunday from fourth on the grid, while Leclerc will launch his race from pole.

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

Michael Delaney

Recent Posts

Horner breaks silence: ‘I have unfinished business in F1’

Christian Horner has finally stepped back into the spotlight – and he didn’t tiptoe in…

1 hour ago

Jaguar's Evans charges from zero to hero in in Miami E-Prix

Mitch Evans arrived at Round 3 of the Formula E season with zero points on…

2 hours ago

Mercedes ‘aced it’ in Barcelona, but Brundle downplays the hype

Mercedes may have just dropped the first thunderclap of the 2026 Formula 1 era –…

3 hours ago

Team Talk: F1's shakedown week in Barcelona

Cadillac Valtteri Bottas “It’s great, but it is the problem-solving phase of the team. It’s…

4 hours ago

Russell impressed by Mercedes rivals’ power unit strength

While Mercedes spent the first week of the 2026 shakedown in Barcelona looking like a…

5 hours ago

Gasly invests in MotoGP team Tech3 as Steiner-led era begins

Pierre Gasly is adding a new kind of horsepower to his career. The Alpine F1…

22 hours ago