Carlos Sainz
Ferrari
- Time
- 01:20:26.843
- Laps
- 58
- Pts
- 25
2024 Australian F1 GP
Carlos Sainz won Verstappen dominates Australian GP, extends championship lead for Ferrari. The final order and points sit below.
| Pos. | Grid | Driver | Team | Time | Laps | Pts |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 2 | Carlos Sainz | Ferrari | 01:20:26.843 | 58 | 25 |
| 2 | 4 | Charles Leclerc | Ferrari | 01:20:29.209 | 58 | 19 |
| 3 | 3 | Lando Norris | McLaren | 01:20:32.747 | 58 | 15 |
| 4 | 5 | Oscar Piastri | McLaren | 01:21:02.613 | 58 | 12 |
| 5 | 6 | Sergio Pérez | Red Bull | 01:21:23.152 | 58 | 10 |
| 6 | 9 | Lance Stroll | Aston Martin | 01:22:00.065 | 58 | 8 |
| 7 | 8 | Yuki Tsunoda | Racing Bulls | 01:22:02.444 | 58 | 6 |
| 8 | 10 | Fernando Alonso | Aston Martin | 01:22:07.835 | 57 | 4 |
| 9 | 16 | Nico Hülkenberg | Haas | 01:22:11.396 | 57 | 2 |
| 10 | 14 | Kevin Magnussen | Haas | 01:20:30.924 | 57 | 1 |
Ferrari
Ferrari
McLaren
McLaren
Red Bull
Aston Martin
Racing Bulls
Aston Martin
Haas
Haas
The 2024 Australian Grand Prix at Albert Park functioned as a high-degradation stress test that separated teams capable of thermal load management from those constrained by aero-mechanical integration deficits. Track surface temperatures peaked at 42°C, elevating tire slip ratios and accelerating thermal wear on the P Zero C3 (medium) and C4 (soft) compounds. Ferrari’s execution of a synchronized single-stop strategy on Carlos Sainz and Charles Leclerc, combined with precise fuel-load management and real-time aero-balance adjustments, secured a 1-2 finish. McLaren’s race pace on the hard compound exposed Red Bull’s ongoing mechanical grip shortfall, while PU deployment modulation and brake cooling efficiency dictated competitive windows across the field. The race commenced under clear skies with a 1.2% precipitation probability. All drivers started on the soft compound, carrying approximately 108kg of fuel. The launch phase revealed distinct torque-mapping philosophies. Sainz’s SF-64 deployed 85% of its electrical energy in the first 200 meters, achieving a 0.142-second reaction time and gaining two positions by Turn 3. Leclerc, running a more conservative 78% deployment curve, maintained third. Verstappen’s RB20 struggled with rear traction, losing 0.08 seconds in the opening sector due to excessive wheelspin, which elevated rear tire temperatures to 112°C within three laps. The thermal spike forced Red Bull to reduce MGU-K deployment to 68% on straights, compromising straight-line speed by 2.1 km/h.
Lap 1 triggered a Virtual Safety Car following contact between Valtteri Bottas and Liam Lawson. The deployment froze pit windows and forced teams to reassess thermal loads. Ferrari utilized the period to adjust Sainz’s front wing angle from 14 to 12 degrees, reducing drag by 1.8% and improving top speed by 3.2 km/h. This adjustment compensated for the high-speed cornering demands of Turns 11 and 12, where the SF-64 had shown understeer during practice. The VSC also allowed teams to cool brake discs, which had exceeded 950°C during the opening stint. Brake cooling ducts were opened by 12mm across the grid, reducing disc temperatures by 40°C and preventing pad glazing. Racing resumed on Lap 3. The medium compound’s degradation rate averaged 0.11 seconds per lap, while the hard compound degraded at 0.07 seconds per lap. Teams that extended their opening stints beyond Lap 14 faced a cumulative time loss of 2.4 seconds due to tire slip and reduced mechanical grip. McLaren’s Lando Norris pitted on Lap 12, switching to hards with a 2.18-second stop. The early stop allowed him to run clean air and exploit the hard compound’s stable thermal window. Ferrari opted for a later window, pitting Sainz on Lap 15 under a second VSC triggered by Logan Sargeant’s retirement. The 2.24-second stop positioned Sainz on fresh hards with a 12-lap advantage over Leclerc, who remained out until Lap 18.
Leclerc’s delayed stop was a calculated risk. Ferrari’s strategy group calculated that staying out would preserve track position while managing tire wear through lift-and-coast phases. Leclerc reduced electrical deployment to 65% on straights, conserving battery state-of-charge and limiting rear tire temperatures to 104°C. This approach yielded a 0.09-second per lap advantage over competitors on worn mediums. The strategy required precise fuel management. Leclerc’s car consumed 0.58kg per lap, allowing him to run a 102kg start load and maintain competitive pace without excessive weight penalty. The fuel load reduction of 6kg over the stint improved cornering agility by 0.04 seconds per lap in low-speed sections. Red Bull’s race highlighted persistent aero-mechanical integration issues. Verstappen’s RB20 exhibited a 0.15-second deficit in low-speed corners due to insufficient front downforce. The team adjusted the front wing endplate geometry during the race, but the modification failed to resolve the understeer. Verstappen’s tire degradation rate reached 0.14 seconds per lap on the hards, forcing him to manage pace through sector 2. Sergio Pérez’s race was compromised by a 2.41-second pit stop on Lap 16, which dropped him to P11. The delay stemmed from a rear jack misalignment, a recurring issue in Red Bull’s pit crew execution this season. The 0.23-second loss relative to the pit stop average translated to a 1.8-second track position deficit after the undercut window closed.
McLaren’s strategic pivot proved decisive. Norris’s early hard compound stop allowed him to run a 28-lap final stint, leveraging the C3’s thermal stability. The team optimized brake cooling ducts, reducing disc temperatures by 40°C compared to qualifying. This enabled consistent braking performance into Turn 1, where Norris gained 0.06 seconds per lap over Verstappen. Oscar Piastri, starting P7, executed a mirror strategy, pitting on Lap 13 and finishing P5. McLaren’s race pace on the hards averaged 1:20.112, 0.34 seconds faster than Red Bull’s best lap. The team’s tire wear modeling predicted a 0.08s/lap degradation curve, which aligned with actual race data within a 0.01s margin. Ferrari’s 1-2 finish was underpinned by synchronized strategy execution. Sainz’s final stint featured a 1:19.842 lap on Lap 48, utilizing 92% electrical deployment on the straights and 78% in corners. The SF-64’s thermal management system maintained battery temperatures within 45-48°C, preventing power unit derating. Leclerc’s closing laps averaged 1:20.018, with a 0.17-second gap to Sainz. The team’s fuel load management allowed both drivers to run 105kg start weights, optimizing tire wear without compromising straight-line speed. The 0.58kg/lap consumption rate enabled a 12-lap final stint without fuel flow restrictions, maintaining PU output at 100%. The championship implications are immediate. Ferrari extends its constructor lead to 28 points over McLaren, with a 14-point gap to Red Bull. Sainz moves to second in the driver standings, 6 points behind Verstappen. The Australian GP exposed Red Bull’s tire management deficit, which will require aero balance recalibration before the Japanese Grand Prix. McLaren’s hard compound efficiency suggests a viable path to consistent podiums, while Ferrari’s strategic discipline confirms their operational maturity. The race underscored that 2024 outcomes will be decided by thermal management efficiency, strategic timing, and operational precision rather than outright qualifying pace. Teams that fail to synchronize PU deployment with tire degradation curves will continue to lose 1.5-2.0 seconds per stint, a margin that dictates podium contention in a tightly packed midfield.