Subscribe

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

Seidl: McLaren "second strongest force" in F1 Italian GP

Andreas Seidl says McLaren was the second most competitive Formula 1 team behind Mercedes in the Italian Grand Prix and could have got a better result in a "normal" race

In a dramatic Monza event punctuated by a safety car and a red flag, Carlos Sainz Jr finished a close second to Pierre Gasly, while Lando Norris crossed the line in fourth place.

However in the early laps Sainz and Norris ran second and third behind the Mercedes of Lewis Hamilton, and McLaren team principal Seidl says that they would have finished in those positions without the dramatic race incidents which flipped the order at the front.

He added that even if Valtteri Bottas had not suffered problems with lost performance, McLaren had the pace to finish third and fourth.

"A very short period of disappointment," said Seidl when asked by Autosport if he had mixed feelings about losing out to Gasly and AlphaTauri.

"We go away from here with a lot of positives, because in the end today we scored some very important points for the constructors' championship.

"And I think the most important thing from today is that we actually had a very competitive car, and behind Mercedes I think we can say we have been the second strongest force today, which was great to see. And again, another great confirmation that we made a good step forward with the car in the winter.

"Then also when I look at the execution of the race today by the strategy team guys, it's clear to see that we also made big improvements on the team side.

"We obviously have again seen today that we have two heroes of the sport in our car, two sensational drivers that did everything right at the start, at the restarts, and put in a sensational performance.

"Great to see also how the race team here under the leadership of Andrea Stella, working together with James Key on the development side in order to keep pushing and steering the direction of the development.

"The guys back home under the leadership of Piers Thynne, and the production side. They give it all to make sure they deliver the parts as quickly as possible. Very happy, I have to say."

Regarding the car's pace he said: "I think what was simply good to see is that with a normal race, I think - if Valtteri wouldn't have had a problem - we were definitely in a position to get a P3-P4 today.

"Or after the problem from Valtteri, I think we would have or could have finished in P2-P3, which is obviously a very encouraging sign going away from here, and looking ahead now in the second half of the season.

"It's encouraging to see that our car seems to be competitive in all kinds of circuits. We're always able to get into Q3, we're always able to fight with the cars around us, which is good, and gives us a lot of optimism also now going to Mugello and to the races afterwards."

With Sainz hunting down Gasly in the fight for victory over the closing laps, Seidl felt running in the turbulent air behind the AlphaTauri became a key factor, while it is too early to judge if the engine mode rules may have also been an influence.

"In the end with what we have seen for example today it just makes a huge difference if you're running in free air or dirty air. Because I think we clearly had a quicker car than AlphaTauri all weekend. The gap is not huge," he said.

"And this is why we also could get closer to Pierre towards the end of the race, but then it's obviously a different story as soon as you are in the dirty air to get close enough to get into the DRS which we didn't manage until the last lap, despite Carlos putting everything in he had.

"Would it have been different with the old kind of engine modes where you can adjust settings, I don't know, difficult to say at the moment. But we also have to say congratulations to AlphaTauri and Pierre Gasly."

Be part of the Autosport community

Join the conversation
Previous article Vettel: No fans at Monza a good thing after Ferrari double DNF in Italian GP
Next article Hamilton: Gasly winning F1 Italian GP has "got to hurt" Red Bull

Top Comments

There are no comments at the moment. Would you like to write one?

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