Hamilton and Sainz warn that Red Bull still has the advantage despite a dismal weekend in Singapore
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The Singapore Grand Prix had a dramatic finish as four cars from three teams fought for the podium. And there wasn't a Red Bull in sight. After winning every other race this season, Max Verstappen and Sergio Perez weren't in the podium fight in Singapore.
The Singapore Grand Prix had a dramatic finish as four cars from three teams fought for the podium. And there wasn't a Red Bull in sight.
After winning every other race this season, Max Verstappen and Sergio Perez weren't in the podium fight in Singapore. They weren't even in the top 10 in qualifying after struggling to find the right set-up.
So does this herald a shift to closer racing and a better show? Not just yet, rivals say.
"I still think their record is going to be up there in the remaining of the season and they're going to be very, very, very, very difficult to beat," said Singapore winner Carlos Sainz Jr. of Ferrari.
"I just think it's great for F1 if Ferrari, McLaren, Mercedes, Aston (Martin) would be that two, three-tenths quicker every race to challenge them in race pace. And I think the racing this year would be incredible and it would be eight drivers fighting for wins, a bit like we saw today with four or five guys out there fighting for a win."
Even if Red Bull's advantage over the rest of the pack has been cut, that isn't necessarily good news for other teams, warned Mercedes driver and seven-time champion Lewis Hamilton. Red Bull could be getting a head start on developing its car for 2024 as other teams try to improve their 2023 cars, he said.
"Probably, if you think about it, they haven't been developing. Obviously McLaren brought an upgrade here, others are bringing upgrades. They're working on next year's car," Hamilton said.