Mercedes and Ferrari agree Chinese GP shaping up to be closer than first two races; See Qualifying on Saturday at 7am - Sky F1, Sky One
Saturday 13 April 2019 00:53, UK
Lewis Hamilton admits he struggled with Mercedes' car during Friday practice at the Chinese GP - but believes F1's landmark 1000 weekend is set to provide a "very close" battle for supremacy.
After Mercedes in Australia, and Ferrari in Bahrain, each dominated the other for pace during 2019's opening two races, the first day in Shanghai suggested round three will prove an altogether tougher weekend to predict.
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P2: Bottas pips Vettel, Verstappen
Ferrari and Mercedes each topped one session apiece, with the final gap in Practice Two less than a tenth of a second in Valtteri Bottas' favour over Sebastian Vettel. Red Bull, back on form after a set-up miscue in Bahrain, finished just two tenths back to suggest they could also have a say in proceedings, particularly in the race.
Hamilton is likely to be in that mix come Sunday himself yet left Friday with ground to make up after trailing team-mate Bottas by 0.7 seconds.
"I was struggling with the car today, so we've got work to do, particularly on my side as Valtteri looked much more comfortable in the car," said the world champion, who spun on cold tyres at the start of P2.
"We're going to work hard tonight to find some tweaks and hopefully come back stronger tomorrow; the car has the pace in it to compete at the front, we just need to find the right set-up."
Provided Hamilton finds the improvements he is looking for ahead of qualifying on Saturday, then he is relishing the prospect of F1 2019 providing its first true multi-team contest at the front.
"It is nice to see how close it is between us, Red Bull and Ferrari," added Hamilton.
"As we expected, the Ferraris still look quicker on the straights, but overall it's very close between the top cars and I anticipate that it is going to be the same tomorrow."
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Ferrari fast but not out of sight
The strength of Ferrari's car in a straight line has been the talk of the sport in the build-up to the Chinese GP.
After opening practice, Toto Wolff described it as "frightening", while Red Bull counterpart Christian Horner told Sky F1: "They're ballistically fast on the straights and they are carrying a lot of wing as well. It's down to us to try and catch them. They are the gold standard at the moment and it's impressive even compared to a Mercedes."
But Mercedes' cornering strengths on a circuit that features 16 turns of varying speeds means the world champions cannot be counted out.
"I expected them to be very strong here so if we can be close to them then that's a good sign," said Vettel.
Indeed, both Vettel and Charles Leclerc, who was seventh fastest after a problematic qualifying practice, felt there were also improvements to make to the Ferrari.
"Overall happy but I can feel there's a lot more in the car. So not entirely happy," Vettel told Sky Sports. "There was also more in myself getting everything together so tomorrow will be key to have a better feeling than today and making sure you striong everything together.
Leclerc missed the later race runs as Ferrari checked over a cooling system issue on his car and the youngster said: "Mercedes and also Red Bull are actually quite close so it will be an interesting battle.
"We definitely did not expect Red Bull to be so close, but it's s nice surprise."
For their part, Red Bull believe they have returned to more recongisable form in China after problems with car balance and tyres in Bahrain.
"It looks a lot better than in Bahrain, so very happy with that," said Verstappen, who was third fastest.
"We found a problem over there so we naturally expected it to be a lot better today and we had a good balance on the car."
Watch the Chinese GP, F1's 1,000th race, live on Sky Sports F1 this weekend. Sky Sports is the home of live and exclusive F1. Find out more here to watch the 2019 season live