Skip to main content

Sign up for free

  • Get quick access to your favorite articles

  • Manage alerts on breaking news and favorite drivers

  • Make your voice heard with article commenting.

Autosport Plus

Discover premium content
Subscribe

Recommended for you

WRC Portugal: Organisers investigate major stage security breach

WRC
Rally Portugal
WRC Portugal: Organisers investigate major stage security breach

Ford in talks with Verstappen about WEC Hypercar opportunities

WEC
Spa
Ford in talks with Verstappen about WEC Hypercar opportunities

The factors behind Honda's pace-setting speed in French MotoGP practice

MotoGP
French GP
The factors behind Honda's pace-setting speed in French MotoGP practice

WRC Portugal: Fourmaux off hands Ogier rally lead

WRC
Rally Portugal
WRC Portugal: Fourmaux off hands Ogier rally lead

How the 2027 F1 rule changes will work

Feature
Formula 1
Miami GP
How the 2027 F1 rule changes will work

WEC Spa: Peugeot beats Cadillac for maiden pole as Toyota and Ferrari struggle

WEC
Spa
WEC Spa: Peugeot beats Cadillac for maiden pole as Toyota and Ferrari struggle

FIA announces 2027 F1 rule changes for combustion and electrical output

Formula 1
FIA announces 2027 F1 rule changes for combustion and electrical output

F1 working on contingency plans for Middle East races, as Q1 revenue surges

Formula 1
F1 working on contingency plans for Middle East races, as Q1 revenue surges

How wet weather in the desert left some teams temporarily stranded at Bahrain testing

Only two teams were able to run midway through the second morning session of the 2025 pre-season test, due to rare Bahrain rain combining with a lack of suitable wet tyres at other squads following their own selection choice

Liam Lawson, Red Bull Racing

Liam Lawson, Red Bull Racing

Photo by: Red Bull Content Pool

Formula 1’s 2025 pre-season test in Bahrain has been hit by a second logistics shambles in two days – as rain temporarily left only two teams able to run midway through Thursday’s first session.

This follows Wednesday’s power cut at the Sakhir track, which led to an hour’s delay ahead of the evening running on day one and an eventual extension to the action.

PLUS: How rare Bahrain testing weather is complicating the early F1 2025 pecking order

On Thursday morning, the paddock arrived back under the rare gloomy skies for the Bahrain region that had featured throughout the daylight running the day before.

This time, however, rain was already steadily falling – although not to the extent that the teams could not send cars out on slicks when the first session began at 1000 local time.

But, around 90 minutes later, the rain was falling heavily enough to require intermediate tyres for the cars to circulate safely, which only the Aston Martin and Haas squads possess for this event.

Unlike at regular F1 races, where each team is given seven sets of wet tyres (five intermediates and two extreme wets) in case of rain, for this test the teams were given the choice of how to fill 35 total sets, per squad, of Pirelli tyres across the company’s dry and wet weather ranges.

Aston has three sets of intermediates, while Haas has one set of inters and an extreme wet set, with the rest having to wait an hour before they could head back out on slicks - a significant hit to what is already heavily restricted testing time when the teams only have three days to get their new cars ready to run before the 2025 campaign commences.

For a time during the essentially lost hour, only Haas’s Esteban Ocon briefly circulated on the American team’s inters as the halfway point of the morning session approached amid a general lull in running.

Esteban Ocon, Haas F1 Team

Esteban Ocon, Haas F1 Team

Photo by: Zak Mauger / Motorsport Images

Pirelli boss Mario Isola explained exclusively to Autosport how the teams had made their test tyre choices, with the usual race sets unavailable even as a back up because the Bahrain Grand Prix is not the 2025 season opener.

“In the past, Bahrain was the first race of the year,” said the Italian. “And that means that we had also the wider [set of wet weather] tyres that we brought for the race, available here.

“But this year, the first race is Australia. And so, when we give the freedom to the teams to decide on their 35 sets of tyres are available for the test, they have the freedom to take any wet, intermediate, whatever they want.

“Knowing that, because the tyres for the race are in Australia and not in Bahrain, if they decided not to take an intermediate and wet, they knew already that in case of rain conditions they could not run.

“They took the decision and we respected the decision. I mean, it's their choice. They had the option to select anything, as Aston Martin and Haas did.”

Isola also suggested that “in the past, probably, they were relying on the fact that there is very little possibility in Bahrain to have rain”.

Previous article What to watch out for on Day 2 of Bahrain F1 pre-season testing
Next article Marko: More predictable RB21 has addressed Red Bull's F1 2024 problems

Top Comments