2016 European Grand Prix team-by-team preview

2016 European Grand Prix

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Formula One is heading into uncharted territory this weekend. Which teams are in the best shape for the first race in Baku?

Mercedes

While many would have expected Lewis Hamilton to make inroads into the 43-point lead Nico Rosberg built up over the first four races, few would have expected Rosberg to throw away almost all of his advantage in just two rounds. In a straight fight this year Hamilton has usually been the quicker of the two, so it’s down to Rosberg to raise his game.

Williams

Montreal began a series of races at tracks with high-speed sections which should play into the hands of Williams. Valtteri Bottas duly delivered the team’s first podium finish at the Circuit Gilles Villeneuve. However Baku may have a few too many slow corners for the FW38’s liking.

Ferrari

Raikkonen has had two poor races
Following their turbo upgrade in Canada Sebastian Vettel’s performance reinvigorated the team’s prospects for the year ahead. Though they are not yet on level terms with Mercedes performance-wise, they are quick enough to put their silver rivals under pressure.

Vettel has been very positive about the Baku circuit and first impressions indicate some similarities with Singapore, a track where he usually goes very well and scored his most recent victory. If he can split the Mercedes drivers in qualifying it will make his job on Sunday much easier.

Kimi Raikkonen, however, badly needs to rebound from two poor weekends. His run in Canada was hampered by a poor strategy call by Ferrari, but he also qualified well off Vettel’s pace. This what not what he needed two weeks after crashing out in Monaco.

Red Bull

After the high of Monaco the Canadian circuit revealed the limits of what Red Bull can achieve following their power unit upgrade. That will make the two-kilometre drag from the final corner a pain for them. But their car’s abundance of downforce will give the drivers extra confidence on a track which is expected to lack grip.

Force India

Sergio Perez, who took a podium on the streets of Monaco, is relishing the prospect of Baku. “The first impression is that the track is going to be really challenging,” he said. “There are a lot of tight sections, as you would expect from a street track, but it looks more high-speed than Monaco. It’s the kind of circuit I enjoy driving.”

Renault

After chassis-damaging crashes for Kevin Magnussen in Canada and Jolyon Palmer’s in Monaco the team is finding itself increasingly short of parts. Magnussen’s tub from Canada will serve as the spare this weekend.

Toro Rosso

On paper the Baku track doesn’t seem to offer much for Toro Rosso whose car excels in mediums-to-high speed corners. Carlos Sainz Jnr and Daniil Kvyat may find it difficult to reach Q3.

Sauber

Felipe Nasr was hit for the second race running in Canada, but at least this time the culprit wasn’t his team mate. He was struggling for pace again, however, in a season which hasn’t gone well for him so far.

McLaren

Although Fernando Alonso is an ambassador for the Baku circuit he revealed he hasn’t actually driven the configuration in the team’s simulation. Meanwhile Jenson Button expects the track to be a difficult one for McLaren. “It’ll be tough on the car with its long, fast straight, strong loads on the ERS and high fuel consumption,” he said.

Manor

Manor’s two rookie drivers will be at less of a disadvantage this weekend as for once all of their rivals are also driving on a new track for the first time. Pascal Wehrlein expects the high-speed sections of the Baku circuit to work well for the team.

Haas

Worryingly Romain Grosjean had another front wing failure in Canada, a problem Haas don’t seem to have got fully on top of since pre-season testing. It’s the last thing either of their drivers would wish to experience at a circuit which in places is very quick and offers minimal run-off.

2016 driver form

DriverGrid averageRace averageRace bestRace worstClassified
Lewis Hamilton5.572.67176/7
Nico Rosberg1.712.67176/7
Sebastian Vettel4.292.80245/6
Kimi Raikkonen5.143.60265/7
Felipe Massa9.577.005106/7
Valtteri Bottas7.577.293127/7
Daniel Ricciardo4.005.142117/7
Daniil Kvyat11.869.403155/7
Nico Hulkenberg9.8610.206155/7
Sergio Perez9.579.863167/7
Kevin Magnussen17.5713.007176/7
Jolyon Palmer17.1414.7511224/6
Max Verstappen9.145.801105/7
Carlos Sainz Jnr10.148.836126/7
Marcus Ericsson18.0013.8012165/7
Felipe Nasr18.8616.1714206/7
Fernando Alonso10.838.505124/6
Jenson Button12.4311.009145/7
Pascal Wehrlein19.4316.0013187/7
Rio Haryanto20.4317.8015215/7
Romain Grosjean14.2910.835196/7
Esteban Gutierrez15.4313.2011175/7
Stoffel Vandoorne12.0010.0010101/1

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2016 European Grand Prix

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Author information

Keith Collantine
Lifelong motor sport fan Keith set up RaceFans in 2005 - when it was originally called F1 Fanatic. Having previously worked as a motoring...

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5 comments on “2016 European Grand Prix team-by-team preview”

  1. Grosjean’s front wing failed because of first lap damage. For once, it was not a structural problem.

  2. Keith, where you list drivers next to their team mates, I think it would be appropriate to swap positions between Verstappen and Kvyat.

  3. I am really surprised to see that Alonso hasn’t driven this circuit on the simulator. Is there a moral problem at McLaren? I must concede that since this track has a long straight then it is likely the Honda engine could easily struggle, and that Manor cars might not be last, but that isn’t a reason to not familiarise yourself with this track, especially since it looks like the sort of track that will punish a driver who makes a mistake.

    1. Is there a moral problem at McLaren? I’m not sure if there is, but certain events suggest there may have been at one time.

      I’m told it went away, but it may have come back.

    2. My apologies, I meant “morale”, not “moral”.

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