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Japanese GP, Practice Two: Max Verstappen fastest from Charles Leclerc as Lewis Hamilton struggles in Mercedes

Max Verstappen fastest by 0.320s to Charles Leclerc in Practice Two; Lewis Hamilton only 14th; Pierre Gasly crashes out; Verstappen tops Practice One by 0.626s from Carlos Sainz; Japanese GP Qualifying at 7am Saturday; Grand Prix at 6am Sunday, live on Sky Sports F1

Last Updated: 22/09/23 9:05am


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David Croft and Karun Chandhok take us through the events of Practice One and Two at the Japanese Grand Prix.

David Croft and Karun Chandhok take us through the events of Practice One and Two at the Japanese Grand Prix.

Max Verstappen proved his and Red Bull’s Singapore slump was a one-off blip by dominantly topping both Friday practice sessions at the Japanese GP.

Comfortably fastest in first practice by six tenths of a second on Friday morning, Verstappen again topped the timesheet in Practice Two with a 1:30.688.

But Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc halved the world champion’s advantage in the afternoon, ending up 0.320s off the Red Bull.

Red Bull driver Max Verstappen dashes to the top of the timesheet with 1:30.688 in practice at the Suzuka Circuit

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Red Bull driver Max Verstappen dashes to the top of the timesheet with 1:30.688 in practice at the Suzuka Circuit

Red Bull driver Max Verstappen dashes to the top of the timesheet with 1:30.688 in practice at the Suzuka Circuit

Lando Norris had been tipped on Thursday to be Red Bull’s nearest challenger, and the British driver is firmly in the mix after finishing third in both sessions. The McLaren was 0.464s off the pace in Practice Two.

“It’s not insignificant, but the gap is not as big as I was fearing it would be and the competition as well,” Sky Sports F1’s Anthony Davidson said, looking ahead to qualifying which takes place at 7am on Saturday, with build-up from 6am on Sky Sports F1.

“My goodness, Max looks like he’s in his element around here.”

The session was brought to a premature end two minutes earlier after Pierre Gasly crashed out at the second Degner corner. The Alpine was 19th, with only Logan Sargeant’s Williams behind him.

Alpine driver Pierre Gasly brings up the red flag, ending Practice Two after a lock up sends him straight into the barriers

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Alpine driver Pierre Gasly brings up the red flag, ending Practice Two after a lock up sends him straight into the barriers

Alpine driver Pierre Gasly brings up the red flag, ending Practice Two after a lock up sends him straight into the barriers

Back at the front, Singapore GP race winner Carlos Sainz was half a second down on Verstappen’s benchmark in fourth, narrowly ahead of George Russell in fifth.

But Lewis Hamilton struggled in the second Mercedes and ended up 14th on the timesheet with his second flying lap on the soft tyre, having made an error on his initial attempt.

Two-time Japanese GP winner and 1996 world champion Damon Hill said: “It could be a closer race than it is in qualifying, from what it appears at the moment.

“Lewis generally comes strong on Saturdays and during the race. He’s out of it at the moment but he’ll be back.”

Kevin Magnussen was starting to come through Turns One and Two when he encountered a trundling Ferrari of Carlos Sainz and had to back off

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Kevin Magnussen was starting to come through Turns One and Two when he encountered a trundling Ferrari of Carlos Sainz and had to back off

Kevin Magnussen was starting to come through Turns One and Two when he encountered a trundling Ferrari of Carlos Sainz and had to back off

Sergio Perez also remained well adrift of Verstappen in the second Red Bull, once again over a second behind his team-mate down in ninth.

The Mexican ended up behind Fernando Alonso’s Aston Martin, Alex Albon’s Williams and Oscar Piastri’s McLaren, with 0.17s covering those three drivers.

Valtteri Bottas rounded out the top 10 for Alfa Romeo, edging out Lance Stroll who was back in the Aston Martin on Friday after missing the Singapore GP race.

Just three tenths of a second covered Alonso in sixth and Hamilton in 14th, to suggest Saturday’s qualifying will feature a tightly-contested battle to reach Q3.

Japanese GP Practice Two Timesheet

Driver Team Time
1. Max Verstappen Red Bull 1:30.688
2. Charles Leclerc Ferrari +0.320s
3. Lando Norris McLaren +0.464s
4. Carlos Sainz Ferrari +0.549s
5. George Russell Mercedes +0.640s
6. Fernando Alonso Aston Martin +0.804s
7. Alex Albon Williams +0.867s
8. Oscar Piastri McLaren +0.974s
9. Sergio Perez Red Bull +1.022s
10. Valtteri Bottas Alfa Romeo +1.051s
11. Lance Stroll Aston Martin +1.083s
12. Esteban Ocon Alpine +1.106s
13. Nico Hulkenberg Haas +1.109s
14. Lewis Hamilton Mercedes +1.141s
15. Liam Lawson AlphaTauri +1.453s
16. Zhou Guanyu Alfa Romeo +1.477s
17. Kevin Magnussen Haas +1.481s
18. Yuki Tsunoda AlphaTauri +1.490s
19. Pierre Gasly Alpine +1.491s
20. Logan Sargeant Williams +1.632s

What happened in Practice One?

Max Verstappen never vacated the top of the timesheet in Practice One

Max Verstappen never vacated the top of the timesheet in Practice One

In Friday morning’s opening hour, Verstappen and Red Bull had quickly set down an ominous marker to show they would be back at the front at Suzuka.

Verstappen made his intentions for this weekend clear from the off by being the first man out on track when the green light came on and never vacating the top of the timesheet. He was 1.7 seconds faster than anyone else with his opening effort of the day.

His 1:31.647 on soft tyres midway through the session proved to be the best of the opening hour, and was six tenths of a second clear of the rest of the field.

Singapore race winner Sainz was the driver to get closest to Verstappen, but the Ferrari was 0.626s back in second.

McLaren waited until the very end of the session to run the soft tyre, with Norris slotting into third – seven tenths down on Verstappen and narrowly ahead of the other Ferrari of Leclerc.

Ted Kravitz and Bernie Collins take a closer look at the changes to Red Bull and Ferrari's floors coming into the Japanese Grand Prix

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Ted Kravitz and Bernie Collins take a closer look at the changes to Red Bull and Ferrari’s floors coming into the Japanese Grand Prix

Ted Kravitz and Bernie Collins take a closer look at the changes to Red Bull and Ferrari’s floors coming into the Japanese Grand Prix

Perez could not get close to Red Bull team-mate Verstappen despite conducting his soft tyre efforts at a similar time and was 1.396s slower down in 11th. However the Mexican was running Red Bull’s old floor while Verstappen had an updated edition first tested in Singapore.

Neither Hamilton nor Russell put on the soft tyre in the opening hour and the two Mercedes drivers ended up 16th and 13th respectively.

Yuki Tsunoda gave his home fans something to cheer by slotting his AlphaTauri into fifth place and within a second of Verstappen’s benchmark.

Japanese GP Practice One Timesheet

Driver Team Time
1. Max Verstappen Red Bull 1:31.647
2. Carlos Sainz Ferrari +0.626s
3. Lando Norris McLaren +0.745s
4. Charles Leclerc Ferrari +0.927s
5. Yuki Tsunoda AlphaTauri +0.950s
6. Fernando Alonso Aston Martin +1.003s
7. Oscar Piastri McLaren +1.066s
8. Alex Albon Williams +1.344s
9. Liam Lawson AlphaTauri +1.358s
10. Lance Stroll Aston Martin +1.393s
11. Sergio Perez Red Bull +1.396s
12. Pierre Gasly Alpine +1.482s
13. George Russell Mercedes +1.663s
14. Nico Hulkenberg Haas +1.801s
15. Esteban Ocon Alpine +1.869s
16. Lewis Hamilton Mercedes +2.052s
17. Valtteri Bottas Alfa Romeo +2.213s
18. Kevin Magnussen Haas +2.328s
19. Logan Sargeant Williams +2.565s
20. Zhou Guanyu Alfa Romeo +3.184s


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