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“It’s just bad luck” - Juncadella reacts to Verstappen team retirement at Nurburgring 24 Hours

GT
“It’s just bad luck” - Juncadella reacts to Verstappen team retirement at Nurburgring 24 Hours

Live: MotoGP Catalan GP - follow the action as it happens

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Catalan GP
Live: MotoGP Catalan GP - follow the action as it happens

How Colton Herta is chasing his F1 dream

Feature
Formula 1
How Colton Herta is chasing his F1 dream

Nurburgring 24 Hours: Heartache for Verstappen Racing as mechanical problem hits late on

Endurance
Nurburgring 24 Hours: Heartache for Verstappen Racing as mechanical problem hits late on

Can Russell take inspiration from Norris in bid for F1 title?

Formula 1
Canadian GP
Can Russell take inspiration from Norris in bid for F1 title?

Nurburgring 24 Hours: Verstappen Racing leads dominant Mercedes 1-2

Endurance
Nurburgring 24 Hours: Verstappen Racing leads dominant Mercedes 1-2

Nurburgring 24 Hours: Faultless Verstappen helps team lead Mercedes 1-2

Endurance
Nurburgring 24 Hours: Faultless Verstappen helps team lead Mercedes 1-2

DS Penske on the pace in Monaco Formula E opener

Formula E
Monaco ePrix I
DS Penske on the pace in Monaco Formula E opener

Haas F1 team knows where its inexperience is proving costly

Haas team principal Gunther Steiner feels recent grand prix struggles show where the squad's inexperience has hurt its Formula 1 chances

Following a superb start to its debut season in F1, with Romain Grosjean sixth in Australia and fifth in Bahrain, it was back down to earth in China with both cars a considerable distance outside the points.

In Russia another problematic weekend was salvaged by Grosjean's eighth place in the race, leaving Steiner to recognise that with the team still in its infancy there is ample room for improvement.

While citing Grosjean's result as "fantastic", Steiner said Haas's difficult start to weekend showed where its lack of experience and data relative to the competition was having an impact

"Again it shows if we get it right the car can do it and the driver can do it," he said.

"The main thing is now we need to get more data to get better and better. We need to be better as a team to react to special situations.

"In Russia the track is special as it's very slippery and low grip. Once you have the experience you know how to react.

"At the moment we don't have the experience to put it together, but once we have that we should be able to react quicker and to get a better set-up for qualifying.

"It will take a little bit of time to have that all ready. The youngest team [ahead of Haas] is five years old; we are four races old, so I think they have got a little bit of an advantage over us which we can never make up.

"But we work hard, everybody works hard and tries to do their best and that's what gets you the points."

At present all of the team's 22 points have come from Grosjean, with team-mate Esteban Gutierrez still to get off the mark on his return to F1.

Steiner feels the Mexican has so far been unfortunate.

"I think he has had quite a few unlucky circumstances, but it's getting better," he said.

"At the start [in Russia] he had a little bit too much wheelspin and then ran into [Nico] Hulkenberg. What can you do?

"In qualifying he was just a little bit behind Romain, and he's doing a good job for the team."

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