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‘There’s lot of work ahead of us,’ says Leclerc after mixed day for Ferrari
Ferrari endured a bittersweet Hungarian Grand Prix weekend, enjoying their best qualifying of the year so far but something of a mixed bag in the race, as Sebastian Vettel finished sixth, with Charles Leclerc out of the points in 11th.
Amazingly, Saturday marked Ferrari’s first double Q3 appearance of the year, as Vettel and Leclerc used their upgraded cars to lock out the third row of the grid in P5 and P6, a week on from their Styrian Grand Prix collision.
But the drivers had a harder time of it in the race, Vettel losing precious seconds in his early first stop for slicks, before getting pipped to fifth place by Red Bull’s Alex Albon in the latter stages of the Grand Prix – while Leclerc was left nonplussed by his SF1000’s performance as he fell down the order to 11th at the flag.
READ MORE: Hamilton romps to eighth Hungarian Grand Prix win, as Verstappen recovers to second
Hungarian GP: Albon passes Vettel for P5
“This was a better performance compared to my first race in Austria,” said Vettel on Sunday evening in Budapest, referring to his 10th place finish in the season opener. “It was back to normal. Obviously Austria 1 was the outlier. Austria 2 didn’t happen and now we’re here. I think probably today, this was where we could finish, arguably fifth or sixth but probably not further up.
“Towards the end, I was struggling with the tyres, and even if I would have loved to have put up more of a fight, there wasn’t much I could do to keep Alex behind me. We are not where we want to be just now, but at least we did everything we could today.”
READ MORE: ‘Second feels like a win’ says Verstappen as he recovers from pre-race crash to podium
Having been cheered by his qualifying performance on Saturday, meanwhile, Leclerc was left wondering whether a fundamental issue had left him unable to finish higher than 11th on race day, as the Monegasque spent much of the Grand Prix lamenting a lack of balance on his car, before getting passed and pushed out of the points by McLaren’s Carlos Sainz in the final 10 laps.
Hungarian GP: Sainz sails past Leclerc for P10
“To be honest I think there was something wrong in the race,” said Leclerc. “It just doesn’t match with the car I had in qualifying, but also the day before on Friday, and we haven’t changed much, so we’ll be looking at the data to see what went wrong, because the car was extremely hard to drive on my side today.
“It was a very complicated race,” he added. “The balance was so much worse than Friday and Saturday, when it was actually better than expected. It just didn’t feel like the same car. We need to look further into that to try and understand, as I was struggling a lot… There’s lot of work ahead of us.”
Ferrari’s difficult start to the season has seen them score just 27 points to Mercedes’ 121, as they sit fifth in the constructors’ standings, behind the Silver Arrows, Red Bull, McLaren and Racing Point.
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