“When the conditions are such that we have low grip, you really need to challenge the car,” observed Andrea Stella after the race. “You need to lean on this understeer, oversteer, locking – and this is an area of his driving that Oscar has an opportunity to improve.”
It was a peculiarity of the track and it caught Piastri out. But it came at a bad time in the sequencing of events for him as he defends his lead in the world championship. Just a few races ago he dominated at Zandvoort, his seventh victory of the season extending his points lead in the world championship to 34.
Since then his campaign has faltered: surrendering his position to Norris at Monza, a complete debacle at Baku with crashes in Q3 and on the first lap of the race, Norris bumping him aside in Singapore and now this. While he’s faltered Verstappen has been on the rampage. Since finishing second behind Piastri at Zandvoort he’s scored three wins in four races and finished second (to George Russell) in the other. Piastri’s lead is down to 14 points over Norris and 40 over Verstappen with five grands prix and two sprints to go.
The numbers still favour Piastri but the momentum is definitely with Red Bull and Verstappen. This has something of the feeling of Jenson Button’s 2009 campaign. After winning six of the first seven races in his Brawn he didn’t win another all year and meanwhile Sebastian Vettel’s Red Bull was hitting form. Button too could occasionally be caught out by tyre behaviour and that definitely played into the awkward sequencing of events for him in the latter half of that season.