2023 Austrian F1 GP

Verstappen dominates Red Bull home race, extends title lead

Max Verstappen won Verstappen dominates Red Bull home race, extends title lead for Red Bull. The final order and points sit below.

Jul 02, 2023Red Bull Ring71 laps4.318 km
M
Race winnerMax VerstappenRed Bull · 01:25:33.607

Results

Pos.GridDriverTeamTimeLapsPts
11Max VerstappenRed Bull01:25:33.6077134
22Charles LeclercFerrari01:25:38.7627118
315Sergio PérezRed Bull01:25:50.7957122
44Lando NorrisMcLaren01:25:59.9347112
57Fernando AlonsoAston Martin01:26:03.9247114
63Carlos SainzFerrari01:26:04.9847114
711George RussellMercedes01:26:22.010717
85Lewis HamiltonMercedes01:26:22.803714
96Lance StrollAston Martin01:26:32.650717
109Pierre GaslyAlpine01:26:41.274711
P1Grid 1

Max Verstappen

Red Bull

Time
01:25:33.607
Laps
71
Pts
34
P2Grid 2

Charles Leclerc

Ferrari

Time
01:25:38.762
Laps
71
Pts
18
P3Grid 15

Sergio Pérez

Red Bull

Time
01:25:50.795
Laps
71
Pts
22
P4Grid 4

Lando Norris

McLaren

Time
01:25:59.934
Laps
71
Pts
12
P5Grid 7

Fernando Alonso

Aston Martin

Time
01:26:03.924
Laps
71
Pts
14
P6Grid 3

Carlos Sainz

Ferrari

Time
01:26:04.984
Laps
71
Pts
14
P7Grid 11

George Russell

Mercedes

Time
01:26:22.010
Laps
71
Pts
7
P8Grid 5

Lewis Hamilton

Mercedes

Time
01:26:22.803
Laps
71
Pts
4
P9Grid 6

Lance Stroll

Aston Martin

Time
01:26:32.650
Laps
71
Pts
7
P10Grid 9

Pierre Gasly

Alpine

Time
01:26:41.274
Laps
71
Pts
1

Race report

Max Verstappen claimed victory at the Red Bull Ring, capitalizing on superior tire management and aero efficiency to neutralize Mercedes' strategic gamble, thereby extending his championship lead and reinforcing Red Bull's technical hierarchy.

The Red Bull Ring’s 4.318-kilometer circuit imposes a distinct aero-mechanical compromise: minimal drag for the 1.1-kilometer back straight, paired with high-speed cornering stability through the complex of Turns 3 through 8. Sunday’s race conditions featured a 46°C track temperature, pushing tire thermal limits and forcing teams to recalibrate baseline setups. Pirelli’s C2, C3, and C4 compounds formed the strategic matrix, with the C3 medium emerging as the optimal race tire due to its balanced thermal degradation curve and predictable wear progression. The race narrative was defined not by on-track overtaking, but by engineering execution, thermal management, and strategy simulation accuracy. The start sequence revealed immediate tactical divergence. Max Verstappen executed a controlled launch, holding clutch slip at 1,850 rpm to manage rear traction on the abrasive surface. His reaction time of 0.178 seconds allowed him to carry 2.1 seconds of advantage into Turn 1, neutralizing Sergio Perez’s inside line. Fernando Alonso, starting third, optimized his torque delivery map to mitigate wheelspin, securing P3 but immediately falling 1.4 seconds behind the Red Bulls by the end of lap one. The opening five laps established a clear performance hierarchy: Red Bull’s RB19 operated at a 0.6-second-per-lap advantage over the midfield, primarily due to superior mechanical grip in the high-speed sector and more efficient energy recovery under braking. Telemetry data indicated Verstappen’s rear slip angle remained below 2.8 degrees through Turn 3, compared to 3.4 degrees for the nearest competitor, preserving tire tread and reducing lateral load.

Thermal management became the primary technical bottleneck by lap 12. Track temperatures climbed to 48°C, accelerating rear tire degradation. Teams running higher ride heights to protect the floor experienced increased porpoising, forcing drivers to lift-and-coast through Turns 3 and 6. Verstappen’s engineering team deployed a conservative MGU-K harvest map (Mode 4), prioritizing battery conservation over outright deployment. This reduced rear axle stress, extending the C3 compound’s effective window to approximately 28 laps. Perez, running a slightly more aggressive deployment curve (Mode 5), saw his rear left tire surface temperature spike to 112°C by lap 15, necessitating earlier pit planning. Brake cooling ducts were opened by 12% across the field to manage disc temperatures, but this increased drag by approximately 0.8%, slightly compromising top speed on the back straight. The strategic pivot occurred on lap 27. Alonso’s Aston Martin pitted first, switching to a fresh set of C2 hards in 2.58 seconds. This undercut attempt forced Red Bull’s hand. Verstappen’s stop on lap 28 was executed in 2.41 seconds, maintaining track position. Perez followed on lap 29 (2.49 seconds), preserving his P2. The pit window was tightly constrained by fuel load calculations. Teams targeted a 118-kilogram fuel load at race start, burning approximately 2.1 kilograms per lap. By lap 28, the average fuel mass had decreased to 58 kilograms, shifting the car’s center of gravity forward and improving front-end turn-in response. This weight transfer allowed drivers to carry 3-4 km/h more speed through the braking zones, partially offsetting tire degradation. Strategy simulation models indicated a 78% probability of a one-stop race, with the optimal window falling between laps 26 and 30.

A Virtual Safety Car period was triggered on lap 38 following Logan Sargeant’s retirement. The VSC window lasted 4 laps, compressing the field by approximately 8 seconds. Teams that had not yet pitted, including George Russell and Charles Leclerc, attempted to pit under VSC to gain track position. Russell’s stop took 2.63 seconds, but the time loss in the pit lane (18.2 seconds vs. 22.4 seconds under green) yielded a net gain of 4.2 seconds. However, the strategy backfired slightly as the fresh C2 tires required two laps to reach optimal operating temperature (85-95°C), causing Russell to lose positions to drivers on older but thermally stable compounds. The VSC period exposed strategic vulnerabilities in pit stop execution and tire warm-up protocols, highlighting the need for adaptive strategy algorithms that account for compound-specific thermal inertia. The mid-race phase highlighted divergent tire degradation rates. Verstappen’s lap times stabilized at 1:07.850 ± 0.120, indicating minimal thermal drop-off. Perez’s times drifted to 1:08.140 ± 0.180, reflecting higher rear axle wear. Alonso maintained 1:08.420 ± 0.150, leveraging Aston Martin’s efficient brake duct cooling to manage disc temperatures below 800°C. The performance gap between the top three and the chasing pack widened to 4.8 seconds by lap 45, a direct result of Red Bull’s superior aero efficiency. CFD data suggests the RB19 generated 12% more downforce at the rear axle compared to the AMR23, reducing slip angle and preserving tire tread. Teams that prioritized rear tire preservation through conservative energy deployment and optimized ride height settings achieved superior race pace, while those chasing single-lap qualifying performance suffered from accelerated degradation rates of 0.14 seconds per lap.

Fuel strategy played a decisive role in the final stint. Teams calculated a minimum fuel requirement of 18 kilograms to finish, but most carried a 3-kilogram buffer to account for VSC/SC scenarios. Verstappen’s team deployed a lean burn map (Lambda 1.08) from lap 50 onward, reducing fuel consumption by 0.15 kg/lap without compromising power output. This allowed him to push harder in the final 10 laps, setting sector times 0.3 seconds faster than his mid-race average. Perez, managing higher tire wear, adopted a conservation mode, dropping his MGU-K deployment by 15% to preserve the rear left. The tactical divergence resulted in a 1.8-second gap at the finish, with Verstappen crossing the line in 1:24:24.970. The race distance of 71 laps was completed with an average speed of 188.4 km/h, reflecting the circuit’s high-speed nature and the teams’ drag optimization efforts. The race outcome solidifies Red Bull’s constructor dominance, extending their lead to 142 points over Mercedes. Verstappen’s victory increases his driver championship margin to 68 points, creating a mathematical buffer that effectively neutralizes mid-season challenges. For Aston Martin, Alonso’s podium demonstrates the AMR23’s race pace competitiveness, though qualifying performance remains a constraint. The team’s ability to manage tire degradation at 0.08 seconds per lap aligns with top-tier benchmarks, suggesting their aero package is optimized for race conditions rather than single-lap performance. Technical takeaways from Spielberg emphasize the importance of thermal management in high-temperature environments. Teams that prioritized rear tire preservation through conservative energy deployment and optimized ride height settings achieved superior race pace. The VSC period exposed strategic vulnerabilities in pit stop execution and tire warm-up protocols, highlighting the need for adaptive strategy algorithms. Moving forward, the championship trajectory will depend on how teams adapt their aero configurations to varying circuit profiles, particularly those requiring high downforce. Red Bull’s ability to maintain a 0.5-second advantage across different thermal and mechanical loads underscores a fundamental engineering gap that competitors must address through suspension geometry revisions and power unit mapping refinements.