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Five things we learned from MotoGP’s action-packed Dutch GP

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MotoGP
Dutch GP
Five things we learned from MotoGP’s action-packed Dutch GP

Austrian Grand Prix Driver Ratings 2026

Formula 1
Austrian GP
Austrian Grand Prix Driver Ratings 2026

Mercedes boss questions Ferrari's "limitless" F1 upgrades amid budget cap era

Formula 1
Austrian GP
Mercedes boss questions Ferrari's "limitless" F1 upgrades amid budget cap era

Marquez leads calls for Assen gravel trap changes after slew of Dutch GP crashes

MotoGP
Dutch GP
Marquez leads calls for Assen gravel trap changes after slew of Dutch GP crashes

Why F1's engine-upgrade picture is becoming ever more ludicrous

Feature
Formula 1
Austrian GP
Why F1's engine-upgrade picture is becoming ever more ludicrous

WRC Acropolis Rally Greece: Evans’ WRC lead grows after seatbelt penalties

WRC
Rally Greece
WRC Acropolis Rally Greece: Evans’ WRC lead grows after seatbelt penalties

Wolff: Verstappen factor behind Red Bull's Austrian GP fight against Mercedes

Formula 1
Austrian GP
Wolff: Verstappen factor behind Red Bull's Austrian GP fight against Mercedes

Hamilton and Leclerc confused by woeful Ferrari pace in Austrian GP

Formula 1
Austrian GP
Hamilton and Leclerc confused by woeful Ferrari pace in Austrian GP

Pirelli wants Mercedes' Hamilton and Rosberg for 2017 F1 tyre tests

Pirelli chairman Marco Tronchetti Provera hopes Mercedes will use race drivers Lewis Hamilton and Nico Rosberg at some stage in its 2017 Formula 1 tyre testing

Mercedes, Ferrari and Red Bull are working with Pirelli as it develops next year's wider tyres, using modified 2015 F1 cars, with Ferrari having already enlisted Sebastian Vettel and Kimi Raikkonen.

Reserve and Manor racer Pascal Wehrlein was in action for Mercedes for its first three days at Paul Ricard last week, while Red Bull turned to former Toro Rosso driver and Formula E champion Sebastien Buemi in August.

Pirelli made it clear from the outset it wanted to test with current race drivers, and while Wehrlein fits that bill, Tronchetti Provera hopes Mercedes moves on from Toto Wolff's view that "at the moment it's not planned they [Hamilton and Rosberg] make the test".

Suggested to Tronchetti Provera the teams agreed to provide race drivers, he replied: "It's wrong for them if they don't.

"Ferrari gave the best drivers and I think and hope all the rest will give them.

"The priority is to have the best pilot.

"The speed is changing, so the best pilots, they have to test it. They have the sensibility to understand the change [in the tyres]."

Mercedes has another five days of testing planned, along with six for Red Bull and four for Ferrari, and Rosberg says he wants "to wait until its really useful".

Tronchetti Provera acknowledged: "It's up to them, it's not yet in the agenda. I hope to see on the agenda, also their names."

Pirelli is at least relieved it has a proper test programme in place ahead of 2017's major changes, with the three teams running machinery modified to replicate the expected levels of downforce.

"[The tests] are key," Tronchetti Provera added.

"The kind of changes that are going on couldn't be reached without proper testing.

"We are talking about performances with cars improving four or five seconds per lap. It would be nonsense not to test it.

"Now we have the programme, we are doing it, and everything is fine."

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