Daniel Ricciardo Speaks Texan, Y’all

Here’s Your Daniel Ricciardo Friday-In-Texas Update

“That accent cycled through so many different accents,” our own North Carolina native Collin Woodard messaged in Slack after watching the clip. Yes, Danny Ric’s Texan still needs some work, but damn if the guy doesn’t get an A+ for effort. And for dropping a “hell boogedy” in there — he’s definitely got the vocabulary down, at least to this Pennsylvanian who’s spent all of four days in Austin over the course of his life.

Anyway, Ricciardo is entering the weekend in the appropriate attire, too. Here’s the helmet he’ll be wearing, courtesy of Jens Munser Designs:

I need a windbreaker with “McLaren Service Plus” embroidered on the breast and the back, like, yesterday. Ricciardo will of course lap COTA in The Intimidator’s 1984 No. 3 Chevy before Sunday’s race — the culmination of his bet with McLaren boss Zak Brown for nabbing a podium (ahem, race win) this year — so it all checks out.

Oh, and yesterday, this happened:

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Ricciardo ended Friday’s Free Practice 1 session in 16th, 2.5 seconds off Valtteri Bottas’ lead time. His teammate Lando Norris fell eighth on the timing boards. The Aussie’s last race in Turkey was nothing to celebrate, as he finished 13th after stopping for new tires too early and lost two spots in the last two laps of the race.

I’d like to think his spiritual homefield advantage will work in his favor this weekend. After all, I’ve heard he draws his power from the clay under the track.

Spa-Francorchamps’ Overdue Safety Changes Are Finally In Progress

The chalet, which belongs to the East Belgian Racing Team, will return in a different spot, as The Drive’s Hazel Southwell reported. What will take its place is a grandstand, pushed back, while the left-hand wall on the inside of Turn 5 will now extend further down toward the Kemmel Straight rather than sharply cutting in at the crest of the hill.

The profile of those corners, or any corners at Spa, will not change — just the areas surrounding them. That’s important to note, because fans critical of renovation tend to erroneously conflate the call for increased safety with arguments to reprofile the track. While Eau Rouge and Raidillon are obviously very fast and will always carry with them an inherent degree of risk, the simple (in concept, at least) act of pushing the left-hand wall back to prevent crashing cars from spitting back out onto the racing line could go a long way toward mitigating serious injury and death. And that makes it worth trying.

An official video released by the circuit last week outlined other adjustments. Gravel traps will be added, at least partiallym to the runoff areas around five corners, including Raidillon, La Source, Blanchimont, Les Combes and Stavelot. These changes were partially necessary to ensure the track meets FIM Grade C protocol ahead of next year’s 24-hour FIM Endurance Championship event in June, according to Motorsport.com.

A track map of Spa-Francrochamps.

The use of gravel carries positive and negative connotations. Depending on who you ask, it either slows cars down prior to impact or makes it more difficult for drivers to apply braking when an accident is imminent due to the total lack of grip. Gravel works as a better deterrent to abusing track limits than asphalt, of course, but it also introduces the possibility of sending cars airborne.

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And that’s just for racing with four-wheeled vehicles. Gravel has unique benefits for motorcycle racing, as World Superbike rider Scott Redding mentioned in reference to the Red Bull Ring during his MotoGP tenure some years back:

“Up into Turn 1 [is a concern], because there’s not much run-off, no gravel either. And gravel’s the problem. When we don’t have gravel, it doesn’t slow us down. When we slide on asphalt, we take the same speed, more or less. The gravel kinda stops us.”

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Gravel may not be a perfect solution, but at least for Raidillon, the main improvement is the relocation of the outside wall, less so the surface in front of it. All in all, these renovations are estimated to cost 80 million euros — about $93,000,000.

Josef Newgarden Takes Pole At IndyCar Season Finale

Josef Newgarden Takes Pole At IndyCar Season Finale

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2021 IndyCar Grand Prix of Long Beach Qualifying Order

  1. Josef Newgarden
  2. Scott Dixon
  3. Helio Castroneves
  4. Simon Pagenaud
  5. Felix Rosenqvist
  6. Romain Grosjean
  7. James Hinchcliffe
  8. Pato O’Ward
  9. Ed Jones
  10. Alex Palou
  11. Ryan Hunter-Reay
  12. Will Power
  13. Scott McLaughlin
  14. Colton Herta
  15. Alexander Rossi
  16. Takuma Sato
  17. Marcus Ericsson
  18. Callum Ilott
  19. Graham Rahal
  20. Charlie Kimball
  21. Conor Daly
  22. Sebastien Bourdais
  23. Max Chilton
  24. Rinus Veekay
  25. Jack Harvey
  26. Dalton Kellett
  27. Jimmie Johnson
  28. Oliver Askew

How Good Was Valtteri Bottas, Really, At Mercedes?

How Good Was Valtteri Bottas, Really, At Mercedes?

To get the full picture, you’ll have to watch the video. Stuart compares qualifying results, which show that Hamilton has pretty consistently outclassed Bottas when it comes to securing a higher starting position. Stuart also compares stats from the Hamilton vs. Rosberg era, so we get a much clearer picture of what we’re talking about. And while Hamilton also consistently outclassed Rosberg, Rosberg also took pole position and the front row more frequently than Bottas. In fact, Rosberg’s average qualifying time was faster than Hamilton’s.

There’s more data to back things up, but the conclusion Stuart reaches is very much the one that many other fans have reached: Bottas has been a solidly good driver, but he was never destined to be a World Champion. And that’s exactly where Mercedes wanted him to be.

The Aston Martin Team Has The Best F1 Livery Of A Generation

Illustration for article titled The Aston Martin Team Has The Best F1 Livery Of A Generation

Image: Aston Martin F1 Team

I will always lament the loss of the BWT-sponsored pink Racing Point cars of the last few years, but if that excellent livery had to leave the sport, I can think of no car more fitting to replace it on the grid than the Aston Martin F1 Team AMR21. The blue-green take on BRG with just a kiss of BWT pink is the most exquisite thing I’ve seen grace the grid in my entire lifetime. It’s so good that I actually might have to cheer for Aston Martin this year, despite my well-known feelings about Sebastian Vettel. Even despite the team’s boneheaded move to ditch Sergio Perez.

It’s been over sixty years since Aston Martin was last in Formula One as a constructor. The team spent the off-season developing a new aero package to fit the 2021 rulebook (and presumably ditch the contentious Mercedes-copied brake ducts) and developing the car to work with Mercedes’ 2020-style rear suspension setup. Certain parts, like the rear suspension, can be taken wholesale from supplying manufacturers without using the team’s update tokens, so that was the plan all along.

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Image: Aston Martin F1 Team

The Racing Point team had a banner 2020 season, scoring enough points to finish third in the championship (were it not for the points stripped away due to the brake duct kerfuffle) and scored the team’s first win since it joined the sport. There’s potential for the Mercedes-powered renamed Aston Martin team to pick up where Racing Point left off. Despite my chiding, I’m sure Vettel has some fight left in him for the 2021 season, and Lance Stroll is a competent competitor, in spite of the nepotism at play here.

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Image: Aston Martin F1 Team

Will the team win the championship? No. Will it win a race or two? If it’s lucky. Will it outscore Red Bull in the manufacturer’s standings? Probably not. McLaren? That’ll be closer, but I’m going to say no. Will it beat every team on the grid in a beauty competition? You bet your sweet ass it will. This is a beautiful machine.

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Image: Aston Martin F1 Team

Think back to the best looking F1 livery of the last thirty years. Whatever it is, this is better.

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Image: Aston Martin F1 Team