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Is Red Bull better or worse off one year after Horner's sacking? Our writers have their say

Formula 1
British GP
Is Red Bull better or worse off one year after Horner's sacking? Our writers have their say

Vinales: 'KTM sent me a contract, I signed it, and two weeks later they cancelled it'

MotoGP
German GP
Vinales: 'KTM sent me a contract, I signed it, and two weeks later they cancelled it'

One year on: How Red Bull changed post-Horner

Formula 1
British GP
One year on: How Red Bull changed post-Horner

How technical issues have cost Bagnaia 40 points in the MotoGP title fight

MotoGP
German GP
How technical issues have cost Bagnaia 40 points in the MotoGP title fight

Why there are no quick fixes for all of Verstappen’s frustrations at Red Bull

Feature
Formula 1
British GP
Why there are no quick fixes for all of Verstappen’s frustrations at Red Bull

Top five roles on Motorsport Jobs this week

General
Top five roles on Motorsport Jobs this week

Injured Zarco hit with double long lap for Barcelona crash

MotoGP
German GP
Injured Zarco hit with double long lap for Barcelona crash

Toyota to enter hydrogen-powered car in 2027 Dakar Rally

Dakar
Toyota to enter hydrogen-powered car in 2027 Dakar Rally

Tyres stymie Ferrari domination

Ferrari's technical director Ross Brawn has admitted that the team was unable to use tyres that would have enabled them to go even faster

"There was a lot more grip with the extra soft tyre but we couldn't use it," claimed the Englishman.

Ferrari had opted to use the harder of the two available types of Bridgestone rubber, but couldn't find a set up to work with the softer, potentially quicker, variety.

"We think this may have put us at a disadvantage in qualifying," claimed Brawn, despite Schumacher taking pole by a slim margin.

He went on to explain that the team failed to make sense of the extra-soft compound tyres when working on race set up in the morning practice session, stating "we completed good race work this morning but at first settings were wrong because we had over compensated for the new tyres.

"We made a comparison between the two tyres, but we couldn't get the right balance and decided to stick with what we knew."

Rubens Barrichello may have been the worst hit by the set up problems, as the Brazilian claimed his car was difficult and set up problems had not been resolved.

"I did all I could in qualifying on a track I like a lot," said the Brazilian. "Yesterday we did some good work, but there are still some aspects of the set up to improve on as the car feels nervous."

Barrichello ended the session sixth, nearly a second behind Schumacher, who claimed his session was "almost perfect".

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