2019 Australian F1 GP

Bottas capitalises on Hamilton's slow start for Australian win

Valtteri Bottas won Bottas capitalises on Hamilton's slow start for Australian win for Mercedes. The final order and points sit below.

Mar 17, 2019Melbourne Grand Prix Circuit58 laps5.303 km
V
Race winnerValtteri BottasMercedes · 01:25:27.325

Results

Pos.GridDriverTeamTimeLapsPts
12Valtteri BottasMercedes01:25:27.3255826
21Lewis HamiltonMercedes01:25:48.2115818
34Max VerstappenRed Bull01:25:49.8455815
43Sebastian VettelFerrari01:25:24.4345812
55Charles LeclercFerrari01:26:25.5555810
67Kevin MagnussenHaas01:26:24.481588
711Nico HülkenbergRenault01:25:32.524576
89Kimi RäikkönenAlfa Romeo01:25:33.709574
916Lance StrollRacing Point01:25:34.461572
1015Daniil KvyatToro Rosso01:25:35.160571
P1Grid 2

Valtteri Bottas

Mercedes

Time
01:25:27.325
Laps
58
Pts
26
P2Grid 1

Lewis Hamilton

Mercedes

Time
01:25:48.211
Laps
58
Pts
18
P3Grid 4

Max Verstappen

Red Bull

Time
01:25:49.845
Laps
58
Pts
15
P4Grid 3

Sebastian Vettel

Ferrari

Time
01:25:24.434
Laps
58
Pts
12
P5Grid 5

Charles Leclerc

Ferrari

Time
01:26:25.555
Laps
58
Pts
10
P6Grid 7

Kevin Magnussen

Haas

Time
01:26:24.481
Laps
58
Pts
8
P7Grid 11

Nico Hülkenberg

Renault

Time
01:25:32.524
Laps
57
Pts
6
P8Grid 9

Kimi Räikkönen

Alfa Romeo

Time
01:25:33.709
Laps
57
Pts
4
P9Grid 16

Lance Stroll

Racing Point

Time
01:25:34.461
Laps
57
Pts
2
P10Grid 15

Daniil Kvyat

Toro Rosso

Time
01:25:35.160
Laps
57
Pts
1

Race report

Valtteri Bottas secured a controlled season-opening victory, as Mercedes’ flawless pit-stop execution and superior thermal degradation control neutralised Ferrari’s undercut attempts and cemented the team’s early championship dominance.

Valtteri Bottas converted pole position into a controlled victory at the 2019 Australian Grand Prix, establishing Mercedes as the early benchmark for the new season. The Finn maintained a clean start and immediately built a gap to the Ferrari front row, managing his pace while preserving his soft-compound tyres. Charles Leclerc held second from the grid, while Sebastian Vettel dropped slightly behind after a conservative launch. The opening laps were largely processional at the front, with the top three cars settling into a rhythm that highlighted Mercedes’ superior straight-line speed and initial tyre stability. Behind them, Max Verstappen and Lewis Hamilton engaged in a quiet battle for fourth, both drivers navigating the Albert Park circuit with caution as track temperatures rose and rubber degradation began to factor into early race calculations. The race direction’s decision to keep the field on track during the opening phase allowed the leaders to establish clear gaps, setting the stage for a strategic contest rather than a wheel-to-wheel duel. Bottas’s ability to manage his delta to the car ahead while monitoring his tyre wear demonstrated a mature racecraft that would prove essential over the remaining laps.

Ferrari’s race unfolded as a study in contrasting fortunes. Leclerc executed a disciplined drive, matching Bottas’s pace during the opening stint and keeping the Mercedes under pressure without overextending his tyres. Vettel, meanwhile, faced a more complicated afternoon. The four-time world champion struggled with rear tyre wear after the first lap, which forced Ferrari to adjust his pit window. The team opted for a slightly later stop than Leclerc, hoping to leverage fresher rubber in the closing stages, but the strategy failed to recover the lost track position. Leclerc’s early pit stop around the twenty-lap mark allowed him to rejoin ahead of Vettel, and the younger driver managed the remainder of the race with measured consistency. Ferrari’s inability to extract equal performance from both cars underscored ongoing setup challenges that would require attention before the next round, particularly in managing thermal degradation on the rear axle during high-speed cornering sequences. The team’s radio communications revealed a clear divergence in car behaviour, with Leclerc reporting stable balance while Vettel fought to maintain traction under acceleration.

A brief neutralisation period early in the race bunched the field and introduced a tactical variable that several teams attempted to exploit. The safety car deployment allowed a handful of drivers to pit under reduced time loss, though the front runners largely stuck to their original one-stop plans. Tyre management proved decisive across the grid, with the soft compound showing significant wear after twenty laps and the medium offering a more sustainable alternative for the closing stint. Drivers who managed their sliding and avoided excessive wheel spin maintained more consistent lap times, while those who pushed early found their pace drop sharply in the final third of the race. The midfield battle saw Alfa Romeo’s Kimi Raikkonen secure a solid points finish, capitalising on a clean race and effective tyre preservation to finish sixth, while several teams struggled to find the optimal balance between qualifying performance and race durability. The neutralisation also disrupted the rhythm of drivers attempting to build gaps, forcing a recalibration of fuel loads and pit stop timing that ultimately favoured the teams with the most adaptable race engineers. Those who pitted under the neutralisation gained track position but often sacrificed long-run pace, a trade-off that became apparent in the closing laps.

Red Bull’s race highlighted the gap to the top two teams, as Verstappen finished fourth despite starting third. The Dutch driver reported a lack of rear grip and struggled to match the pace of the Mercedes and Ferrari cars, particularly in the medium-speed corners where mechanical grip proved essential. Hamilton, starting fifth, faced a similar challenge with tyre wear and could not close the gap to the podium contenders. Mercedes executed a flawless pit stop for Bottas, reinforcing their operational advantage, while Hamilton’s race was largely about damage limitation after a qualifying session that left him off the front row. The final laps saw no major position changes among the leaders, as the top five settled into a steady procession. Bottas crossed the line with a comfortable margin, securing his first win of the season and demonstrating that Mercedes had addressed the reliability concerns that had plagued their pre-season testing. The team’s ability to manage both cars effectively, despite Hamilton’s fifth-place finish, underscored their depth in race preparation and data analysis. Hamilton’s post-race assessment pointed to a lack of rear mechanical grip, a recurring theme that would require aerodynamic and suspension adjustments before the next event.

The result reshaped the early championship standings, with Bottas taking the drivers’ lead and Mercedes establishing a strong foundation in the constructors’ classification. Leclerc’s podium finish signalled Ferrari’s competitive potential, though the team’s strategic execution and tyre management will require refinement. Vettel’s third place kept him in contention, but the performance gap between the two Ferrari cars raised questions about car balance and driver feedback. As the paddock turned its attention to Bahrain, the Australian Grand Prix provided a clear indication that Mercedes remained the team to beat, while Ferrari and Red Bull faced the task of closing the pace deficit without compromising race durability. The opening round set a measured tone for the season, emphasising consistency and strategic precision over outright aggression, and established a hierarchy that would likely define the early stages of the championship. With tyre degradation and pit stop efficiency proving decisive, the focus now shifts to how quickly the chasing teams can adapt their setups to the new technical regulations. The race confirmed that while raw speed remains important, the ability to manage resources over a grand distance will separate the contenders from the rest of the field.