Max Verstappen on another level in 2022 Belgian Grand Prix win: race report

F1

Starting the 2022 Belgian Grand Prix 14th was no obstacle for Max Verstappen who made it look easy as he powered into the lead and disappeared into the distance at Spa-Francorchamps

Max Verstappen raises his trophy after winning the 2022 Belgian Grand Prix

Verstappen has driven beautifully this year, as challengers have dropped away

Remko de Waal/ANP via Getty Images

Formula 1 isn’t easy, and shouldn’t ever be considered it, but every now and then a driver and team combination make it look like a stroll in the park.

That Max Verstappen and Red Bull were able to do that from 14th on the grid in Belgium was quite remarkable given the season that had gone before, even if the defending champion won from 10th in the final race before the summer break.

It was a weekend that had been dominated by driver market developments – with a sprinkle of Audi’s arrival – before track action kicked off and power unit penalties became the focus. In many ways, what went before the race itself was of little value, as long runs took place in grey and cold conditions and the fastest car started on the seventh row.

But it was the scale of the advantage the fastest car had that was worth reading into, as Verstappen started 14th but was legitimately seen as the favourite for victory by many before the lights went out.

What nobody had predicted, was contact between two of the most experienced drivers on the grid.

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Sainz leads as Perez drops back at the start

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Carlos Sainz got a strong start from pole position but Sergio Perez slipped back to fifth place, with Fernando Alonso, Lewis Hamilton and George Russell getting ahead of him.

Hamilton picked up a good tow from Alonso and tried to overtake around the outside of Les Combes but then cut too close towards the apex of the right-hander, squeezing Alonso who could go no further across before contact was made. The Mercedes was pitched into the air and landed heavily, and although Hamilton tried to limp on he was told to stop before the lap was complete.

“What an idiot!” Alonso fumed. “Closing the door from the outside. We had a mega start but this guy only knows how to drive and start in first.”

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Moment of impact for Alonso and Hamilton

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Although the Spaniard was able to continue, the contact had opened the door for Perez to retake second place after clearing Russell, demoting Alonso to fourth behind the other Mercedes.

“I had a really good tow on Fernando and did a move down the outside,” Hamilton said. “I got up alongside him and a little bit ahead of him, thought I left enough room for him and I didn’t, and I paid the price for it. So it’s my fault, and just sorry to my team really.

“You always want to see it through to the end of the race, so to lose a race through something that happened so quickly and also unintentionally – this sort of stuff happens, it’s motor racing, when you’re traveling at these speeds. But it’s painful as always.”

With Hamilton on the side of the road, the safety car was likely to be needed anyway but that was cemented at Les Combes on the second lap when Nicholas Latifi ran wide and spun, forcing Valtteri Bottas into evasive action. While Latifi could return to the track, Bottas was beached and joined his former team mate in retirement.

Valtteri Bottas walks away from his stranded Alfa Romeo at the 2022 Belgian Grand Prix

A weekend to forget for Bottas, who was also knocked out in Q1 for the first time since 2015

Florent Gooden / DPPI

The upshot was that Verstappen was already running in eighth place by the time the safety car was deployed to recover both cars, having made up four positions on his own and benefitted from Pierre Gasly starting from the pit lane as well as Hamilton’s early exit. Any threat from behind was also reduced as Charles Leclerc – up to ninth – was forced to pit as a tear-off from Verstappen had got stuck in his brake duct.

Things went from good to even better for the Dutchman when the race restarted on lap 5, as he cleared both Alex Albon and Daniel Ricciardo before he’d exited the chicane to start the next lap, and his chances of victory were rapidly increasing.

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Verstappen blasts past Russell

DPPI

Sebastian Vettel and Alonso were next to be dispatched, and as he started his eighth lap – and only fifth racing lap – Verstappen overtook Russell using DRS to run third. Even at such an early stage, the race felt like a foregone conclusion.

At the end of lap 11, Sainz came into the pits to get rid of his soft tyres, leaving only Verstappen on them as he swept past his team-mate to take the lead. The raw pace was clear to see as the Dutchman could extend his stint by a further four laps.

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“We knew we had our difficulties for the race when you start P14,” Verstappen said. “But we stayed out of trouble on lap 1, which wasn’t easy. It was very hectic in front of me. But once everything calmed down with the safety car, it was literally just overtaking one car every lap. And once I was back into P3, and I saw that my tyres were actually holding on quite nicely with the soft compound, I knew that there was a good possibility we could win the race.”

Three laps after his stop, on the same tyre compound, Verstappen overtook Sainz for the lead once again having taken 2.4 seconds out of the Ferrari on the previous lap. It was different category stuff, and the Spaniard had no answer.

“The first two laps were strong, but then we immediately went into high degradation and then I realised that that we were degrading more than what we should,” Sainz said. “Red Bull, Max and Checo, they were a league of their own today and unfortunately we couldn’t put a stronger fight and we had to survive. We will have to learn why at this track we were not so competitive.”

Carlos Sainz at Spa in the 2022 Belgian Grand Prix

Tyre degradation hampered Sainz for most of the race

Ferrari

Three laps after Verstappen had taken the lead, Perez followed him through, and from there the Red Bull pair could cruise home.

But the race was far from done. As Russell closed in on Sainz, the battle for the lower points still had some high quality action.

With ten laps remaining, Esteban Ocon — who had started 16th due to his own power unit penalty – pulled off a brilliant double move. Vettel passed Gasly out of La Source but Gasly and Ocon, both with DRS, caught the Aston Martin and went either side of him. Think Mika Hakkinen v Michael Schumacher with Vettel in the role of Ricardo Zonta, but all three for position.

What made it harder for Ocon was that he was third in line and took to the outside, but he earned both places at once as he cut across to the apex to secure seventh, while Vettel re-passed Gasly three corners later for eighth.

Alex Albon leads a train of cars at the 2022 Belgian Grand Prix

Albon train frustrated the followers but earned the Williams driver a championship point

Peter J Fox/Getty Images

With Albon using the immense Williams straightline speed to hold onto tenth place ahead of a train of cars including Lance Stroll, Lando Norris, Zhou Guanyu and Yuki Tsunoda, that should have been that. But Ferrari had other ideas.

To start the penultimate lap, Leclerc was called into the pits for soft tyres to try and chase the fastest lap, but didn’t quite have the margin to Alonso and was overtaken on the Kemmel Straight on the exit. To make matters worse, Leclerc didn’t have a new set of soft tyres for the attempt after a strategic error on Saturday, and even though he regained the spot from Alonso using DRS on the final lap he still fell 0.6sec short of Verstappen’s benchmark for the extra point.

It then transpired Leclerc had been over the pit lane speed limit and he was hit with a five-second time penalty, demoting him to sixth behind Alonso in the finishing order.

“Yeah I was surprised,” Alonso said. “But Ferrari always does some strange strategy, so that was one of those!”

Charles Leclerc passes Fernando Alonso in the 2022 Belgian Grand Prix

Late Leclerc pitstop was a tactical disaster after falling behind Alonso, re-passing him, failing to get the fastest lap, then being penalised for pitlane speeding

Florent Gooden / DPPI

Leclerc, less surprisingly, was not happy after the race.

“Other than all of this, there’s also the pace. The pace, Carlos and I… The thing that is strange is the feeling is quite OK inside the car but then you look at the pace compared to Red Bull and they are on another planet completely. So we need to understand and hopefully by Zandvoort we understand and we come back to as close to Red Bull as we were in the first part of the season.”

That would be welcomed by many for more competitive races than Spa offered up, but both titles are firmly – and deservedly – heading Red Bull’s way. And at an ever-increasing pace.

Max Verstappen drives up the hill from Eau Rouge and Raidillon in the 2022 Belgian Grand Prix

2022 Belgian Grand Prix race results

Position Driver Team Time
1 Max Verstappen Red Bull 44 laps
2 Sergio Perez Red Bull +17.8sec
3 Carlos Sainz Ferrari +26.8sec
4 George Russell Mercedes +29.1sec
5 Fernando Alonso Alpine +1min 13.2sec
6 Charles Leclerc Ferrari +1min 14.9sec
7 Esteban Ocon Alpine +1min 15.6sec
8 Sebastian Vettel Aston Martin +1min 18.1sec
9 Pierre Gasly AlphaTauri +1min 32.1sec
10 Alex Albon Williams +1min 41.9sec
11 Lance Stroll Aston Martin +1min 43.0sec
12 Lando Norris McLaren +1min 44.7sec
13 Zhou Guanyu Alfa Romeo +1min 45.2sec
14 Yuki Tsunoda AlphaTauri +1min 46.2sec
15 Daniel Ricciardo McLaren +1min 47.1sec
16 Kevin Magnussen Haas +1 lap
17 Mick Schumacher Haas +1 lap
18 Nicholas Latifi Williams +1 lap
19 Valtteri Bottas Alfa Romeo DNF
20 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes DNF