Max accepted P3 was ‘maximum’ before Sainz DNF
Ocon thriving in Alonso's shadow
Pierre Gasly given 4.5/10 on worst weekend for AlphaTauri
A much-needed Ferrari victory
Highlights from the Austrian Grand Prix
The evolution of Max Verstappen
Torquing Point: Leclerc back on track at Austrian GP
Max Verstappen had prepared himself for a P3 finish at best in Austria before the pursuing Carlos Sainz suffered an engine blowout.
Despite taking pole and a comfortable sprint qualifying victory in Austria, the Grand Prix saw Ferrari shine, Verstappen powerless to stop Charles Leclerc from taking his first win since April’s Australian GP.
Verstappen limited the damage with a P2 finish, his lead over Leclerc in the standings still a healthy 38 points, though Verstappen was expecting a Ferrari one-two.
After Leclerc had passed Verstappen for the lead for the final time, Sainz was shaping up Verstappen to demote him another position, only for his Ferrari power unit to call it quits.
Until that moment, Verstappen had already come to terms with the fact that P3 was the best he was going to achieve in the race.
“I think second place is okay, because the whole race we were too slow,” he told ServusTV, quoted by RacingNews365.com.
“Ferrari was simply faster. Normally we are good with the tyres, but here we had problems.
“After two laps, we were slower than expected and Ferrari was faster than expected. The last eight laps in the sprint they were also fast.
“I thought after the sprint that we could still improve the car, but that didn’t work out.
“Until the lap he [Sainz] dropped out I thought third place was the maximum, because both Ferraris were faster.
“At the end [of the race], Charles even had a problem with his accelerator, but then we were only two or three-tenths faster per lap.


