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  1. #601
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    "A great result and a fantastic reward", claims Colapinto as he scores career best result in Montreal.
    Alpine enjoyed their most successful weekend of the 2026 season at the Canadian Grand Prix, with Franco Colapinto finishing a career best sixth and Pierre Gasly climbing from 14th on the grid to eighth.
    26 May 2026
    Balazs Szabo
    F1 Technical

    Franco Colapinto was thrilled with both his own performance and the team’s progress. He said: “From where we started the weekend to having a double points finish for the team, is a great result and a fantastic reward for everyone at the team who has been working so hard. I'm very proud of the work we've collectively been doing and it's a great team result today.” He celebrated his best F1 finish: “It's also my best result in Formula One, which makes me very happy and builds on the performance we showed in Miami.”

    Colapinto acknowledged that Alpine benefitted from others’ misfortune but maximised their own opportunities: “We know we benefitted from others' misfortune, and it's never a nice feeling to benefit from their issues, but we maximised everything we could and brought the car home.” He also described his near miss with the wall: “It was extremely low grip out there and slippery, especially at the start in the opening laps on a harder compound tyre to those around us.

    "I also had a scary moment exiting the pits after my stop, where I hit a wet patch, then went on the white line and drifted towards the wall. Thankfully I hit the wall side on and got away with a small amount of damage, which didn't require repairs or impact the performance.” Looking ahead, he added: “As we know, there's still more we need to do to be more competitive, bring more performance to the car and get closer to those ahead of us on merit.”

    "A great result and a fantastic reward";

    https://www.f1technical.net/news/28581


    ‘Damage limitation’ pleases P8 Gasly in Canada
    Pierre Gasly knows Alpine have work to do, despite coming home in the points in Montreal.
    May 25, 2026
    Formula One - Official Site

    After qualifying 14th for the Canadian Grand Prix, Pierre Gasly looked in for a difficult afternoon at the Circuit Gilles Villeneuve. But the Frenchman put in a strong drive to climb into the points on Sunday and finish eighth, which he was quick to call “damage limitation.”

    "I must say I’m happy with the… I’ll call it damage limitation. The whole weekend, with all the struggles yeah, I'll take these four points definitely,” Gasly said after the race. Pretty pleased with that, a very good weekend for the team as well, sixth and eighth so 12 points, it’s been a while since we scored that.”

    “A lot of positives and I’m looking forward to the next coming days and I really like working with the team and digging a bit deeper into the performance and why there were the limitations on my car have been what they have been. We will work with the guys, and it will be important for Monaco with all the traction issues we have.”

    ‘Damage limitation’;

    https://www.formula1.com/en/latest/a...02eLQhdq0e2100


    Gasly in the points, but still puzzled by Alpine performance loss
    27/05/2026
    Phillip van Osten
    F1i.com

    Pierre Gasly left Montreal with another solid haul of points for Alpine, but the Frenchman’s smile barely concealed a growing concern simmering underneath the Frenchman’s season. Yet behind the result lies a conundrum neither Gasly nor the Enstone squad can fully explain: somewhere inside the upgraded A526, performance has quietly slipped away. And the more Alpine searches for answers, the stranger the problem appears to become.

    “It’s [been] the same thing since the first lap in practice in Miami,” Gasly said after last Sunday’s race. We see it on data, we're pretty clear on what's happening and we've just got to understand exactly where it comes from, and it's going to be part of the work we'll have to do ahead of Monaco.”

    “As a team, we've got a good understanding coming out of the weekend and we can exclude the parts, but they still will be important to analyse deeper and understand, once the car gets back at the factory, how to get that performance back.”

    ‘The stranger the problem appears to become’;

    https://f1i.com/news/565245-gasly-in...ance-loss.html


    Pierre Gasly puzzled by sudden 'fundamental' Alpine mystery
    Pierre Gasly has started the season strongly, but a sudden slump has left him scratching his head.
    30 May 2026
    Jake Nichol & Sàndor Mészáros
    RacingNews365

    Pierre Gasly has explained the sudden "fundamental" issues he is facing with his Alpine F1 car, despite a strong start to the season. "I don't really know what's going on since Miami, but at the moment on my side we're absolutely nowhere," a downbeat Gasly reflected after qualifying in Montreal. It was an easy top 10, the car was quite consistent, but I couldn't brake, couldn't turn in, couldn't accelerate. There was no grip. Hopefully, the team can help to find these answers.”

    "You can ask the team, but I am not going to comment [on taking upgrades off], but there is just more to it, because it's a case of fundamentally, something not clicking since Miami, and there is a lot of work to do. I think it is something more fundamental [than upgrades], which we're trying to understand, and on the data, there is quite clearly stuff which does not make sense, but we haven't found the fixes yet. It was the same thing, and we saw it from the first lap of practice in Miami," he said.

    "We see it on the data, it is pretty clear on what is happening, and we've just got to understand where it comes from, and that'll be part of the work for Monaco. That's why I'm happy finishing P8 from 14th. I can just feel what I feel, and you can see on the data the difference, but I don't think it is set-up related. We just need to get back to the factory, understand a bit more because there is performance, but since Miami, clearly something has changed in terms of extracting potential, and I need to get it back."

    “I couldn't brake, couldn't turn in, couldn't accelerate”;

    https://racingnews365.com/pierre-gas...alpine-mystery


    Mercedes walks away from ‘overpriced’ Alpine F1 share purchase
    Mercedes has reportedly backed away from buying a stake in Alpine over cost
    30 May 2026
    Lewis Duncan
    Crash.Net

    Mercedes has reportedly backed out of negotiations over buying Otro Capital’s minority share in the Alpine Formula 1 team over cost. Mercedes has been linked to buying a 24% share in Alpine since the early months of the year, with plans progressing to the point of an agreement in principle with Renault.

    The report claims that Otro was looking for £536m for its share in Alpine it purchased for £171m three years ago. Mercedes is reported to have considered Otro’s asking price for its share in Alpine, which values the team at £2.2 billion, too high for an outfit that isn’t profitable right now. Mercedes is thought to have considered Alpine’s value to be somewhere in the region of £1.6-£1.8 billion.

    At one stage, this looked like Horner’s most likely route back into the F1 paddock, before Mercedes became involved. However, even with Mercedes backing away, Renault is thought to have elected not to continue talks with Horner. In recent weeks, Horner, who lost his role with Red Bull midway through the 2025 season, has been linked to leading a potential BYD entry into F1.

    ‘Mercedes has reportedly backed away’;

    https://www.crash.net/f1/news/109641...share-purchase


    Mercedes end Alpine share pursuit as key difference arises
    Mercedes will no longer pursue a share of the Alpine F1 Team.
    30 May 2026
    Nick Golding
    RacingNews365

    Mercedes has pulled out of its discussions to purchase a minority share in Alpine after a key difference in valuation arose. Otro Capital's 24 per cent share in the Enstone-based F1 operation. However, Otro was demanding too much for its stake, prompting Mercedes to pull out of the deal after concluding that the asking price was too high.

    In Mercedes' view, the French team is worth between £1.6 billion and £1.8 billion, making its valuation of Otro's 24 per cent share significantly lower than the asking price. There has been significant interest in Otro's share in Alpine, according to former Red Bull team principal Christian Horner.

    However, it is believed that Renault, which can veto Otro selling its share until September, has ended any talks for now. The F1 outfit also announced this week a new major partnership with luxury fashion brand Gucci from 2027, in a long-term deal worth a significant fee.

    ‘Mercedes end Alpine share pursuit’;

    https://racingnews365.com/mercedes-e...ference-arises

  2. #602
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    ‘Couldn’t handle the pressure’: F1 champ’s blunt Piastri assessment.
    Kimi Raikkonen believes Oscar Piastri "couldn't handle the pressure"… …backing championship leader Kimi Antonelli to avoid the same fate.
    1 Jun 2026
    Ben Waterworth
    Speedcafe

    “Antonelli won’t lose focus; he’s showing maturity,” Kimi Raikkonen said. “He’ll have to avoid imitating Piastri in 2025. At one point, the Australian McLaren driver seemed to have the title in his pocket, but he couldn’t handle the pressure. The Italian won’t fall into the same trap.” Raikkonen believes the Italian’s approach behind the scenes is a key reason why he is capable of sustaining a championship challenge across the remainder of the season.

    “Yes, and he believes in it. You can see it in the way he approaches the races, in the spirit he puts into it,” he added. The Finn also suggested Antonelli’s recent results are not possible without possessing exceptional ability, highlighting the teenager’s run of four straight victories. “Obviously, in Formula 1, you don’t win four consecutive Grands Prix unless you have special talent,” Raikkonen said. “Antonelli’s numbers are a feat. Having the right car is crucial, but it’s always been that way, throughout history.”

    Although Raikkonen has rarely spoken publicly since ending his Formula 1 career in 2021, he admitted he has followed Antonelli’s rise with particular interest. “Naturally, I follow Antonelli’s exploits with great sympathy,” he explained. “I’m amused that he shares my name (Kimi), even though I think it’s just a coincidence. He’s certainly very talented.”

    ‘Capable of sustaining a championship challenge’;

    https://speedcafe.com/f1-news-2026-k...nterview-rare/


    'Mercedes encouraged to let Russell and Antonelli battle it out for the title'
    31 May 2026
    Kada Sarkozi
    GPblog.com

    Mercedes let Kimi Antonelli and George Russell battle it out at the Canadian Grand Prix for victory. With the two drivers putting on a strong show, fans back Mercedes to allow the teammates to race without any restrictions. Former Haas F1 team boss Guenther Steiner was also pleased to see the two drivers battle it out, as he hailed the Mercedes CEO and team principal as last weekend's rockstar.

    In The Red Flags podcast, he commented: "He didn't interfere, didn't say anything. Just let them out there. And you have no idea. The Rockstar should be the person who is cleaning his pants. And but fair play to him. When he has such a position, he's just like, ‘Hey, guys, what is happening here? You know, no, he let them go, let them race.”

    “That's why I say for Toto, not to put an end to it, what was remarkable, good in my opinion. That was, we can, I can be joking about the smell of Toto's pants, but in the end, he deserves that in my opinion, because that is what made this interesting."

    ‘Last weekend's rockstar’;

    https://www.gpblog.com/en/news/merce...-for-the-title


    Mercedes make 'too close for comfort' acknowledgement after George Russell-Kimi Antonelli fight
    Mercedes will allow its drivers to fight each other this season, but under one crucial condition.
    31 May 2026
    Nick Golding
    RacingNews365

    Mercedes trackside engineering director Andrew Shovlin has acknowledged that George Russell and Kimi Antonelli's battles during the Canadian Grand Prix were "too close for comfort". Asked on the Nu Silver Arrows radio show what it feels like to watch Russell and Antonelli battle, Shovlin explained:

    "It (your heart rate) does go up a bit, but when you look at most of it, it is absolutely fine and you always want to let the drivers race. If the team is doing a good job, you've had the right conversations beforehand and you don't have to interfere. There were a couple of points in Canada where it got too close for comfort.”

    "There was one point where it looked like one car could have ended up going into the back of the other and we will do everything to avoid that, but the two of them want to be allowed to race. They know that they need to deliver on their end of the bargain, which is race fairly without risking DNFs and don't hit each other. We had good discussions over the weekend and we'll have good discussions ahead of the next race."

    'Too close for comfort';

    https://racingnews365.com/mercedes-m...ntonelli-fight


    Antonelli: 'Mercedes knows, they can't put a leash on us with Russell'
    31 May 2026
    Kada Sarkozi
    GPblog.com

    Kimi Antonelli wants to avoid a repeat of the 2016 scenario with George Russell as the Mercedes teammates battle for the 2026 World Drivers' Championship. However, he stressed that Mercedes cannot put them on a leash either. The current Formula 1 championship leader did not switch off from motorsport despite not competing this weekend. He received the prestigious Trofeo Bandini award in Italy and also waved the chequered flag at the MotoGP race in Mugello.

    At the media conference ahead of receiving his award, he said that the German team wants to let its drivers compete freely against each other, as it trusts them to race fairly. "They know very well, especially in the position that we are now, you cannot put the leash on us. But they also want to make sure that there's not an unpleasant situation. If they feel like it, in the next few races, they will tell us to race a bit easier."

    The Mercedes squad has experienced a tough teammate battle in the past, when Lewis Hamilton and Nico Rosberg went head-to-head to achieve the biggest prize. Antonelli highlighted that he wants to avoid a similar situation. "Of course we're going to race each other hard, but we'll try to be as fair as possible, avoiding any crashes or contacts because we want the best as well for the team. We want Mercedes to win, as well. We're gonna go at each other, for sure, but in a fair manner."

    “You cannot put the leash on us”;

    https://www.gpblog.com/en/news/anton...s-with-russell


    Wolff concedes W17 upgrades 'didn't bring the performance gains we had expected'
    31 May 2026
    Tobia Elia
    GPblog.com

    Speaking to GPblog and other media outlets after the race, Mercedes team principal and CEO Toto Wolff acknowledged that the upgrade package introduced in Canada had fallen short of Mercedes' expectations. "It didn't bring the performance gains that we had expected on paper, but it's very difficult to assess. We didn't see the McLarens today at all. We had the pace, we had the gap, but how much that is, is it what we have anticipated, I think it's very difficult to judge yet."

    Toto Wolff also suggested that Monaco may not provide a clear answer either, with the team instead planning to continue gathering data over the coming races before reaching any firm conclusions about the effectiveness of the package. "Montreal was a sweet circuit for us last year. Is that shining a better light on our performance than it would be on any other circuit? Probably Monaco, we won't know it either, so we need to continue to monitor and to analyze."

    ‘Performance gains were not as expected on paper’;

    https://www.gpblog.com/en/news/wolff...e-had-expected


    Gary Anderson's take on the upgrade Mercedes seems unsure of
    31 May 2026
    GARY ANDERSON
    The Race

    It was a brave decision for Mercedes to introduce its first major upgrade package of the 2026 Formula 1 season in Montreal given how competitive it was in Canada last year, it being a sprint weekend and its early-season dominance. Amid all that, Mercedes could easily have tripped itself up when striving to improve performance. Even though it locked out the front row of the grid for both races and won twice, this was not straightforward.

    Looking in detail at the upgrade and starting from the front, Mercedes introduced a completely new front wing assembly and profile. Like the front wing, the bargeboard area is subject to some fairly serious developments. When you get a change in the flow direction coming around the front tyre, everything else needs to be optimised around it. To go with those bargeboard developments, the edge detail of the rear part of the floor has also been revised fairly dramatically.

    This area (bargeboard developments ) is where you need to create some form of aerodynamic sealing, otherwise the low pressure underneath the floor giving you the underfloor downforce won’t be as low as it could be, which would mean less downforce and with that less grip. The changes make sense from the outside, and the performance in Canada suggests they have at least been reasonably successful, but let’s see how the car goes in Monaco and, more importantly, Barcelona before making a definitive judgement.

    ‘The upgrade Mercedes seems unsure of’;

    https://www.the-race.com/formula-1/g...ems-unsure-of/

  3. #603
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    ‘Fundamental problem’ – Fernando Alonso sets timeline for Aston Martin fix.
    …team will only close the three-second deficit to the front by extracting more power from the Honda engine and adding more downforce to the AMR26 car.
    1 Jun 2026
    Henry Valantine
    PlanetF1.com

    Fernando Alonso has accepted that Aston Martin will likely be hamstrung by its “fundamental problem” until after the F1 2026 summer break. The team has hinted previously that it will likely look to bring a significant upgrade package later in the season in the hope of combatting its early issues, alongside smaller incremental updates.

    Honda’s trackside general manager, Shintaro Orihara, revealed that is when it is targeting gains on Aston Martin’s power unit and Alonso admitted he is “relaxed” about the prospect of at least another six races running towards the back. Asked about his weekend in Montréal, Fernando Alonso replied: “The same as has been always.”

    “We do good starts sometimes, we’re completely out of position and then we slowly fall behind. We lose one position each lap and then you arrive to your natural position at the back. This is the situation and it will be like this until after summer. So we accept it and we answer the same questions every weekend, but we are relaxed with this.”

    ‘Fundamental problem’;

    https://www.planetf1.com/news/aston-...oblem-timeline


    Lance Stroll reveals staggering Aston Martin upgrades timeline
    Aston Martin are making progress, but upgrades are not arriving for a long time!
    1 June 2026
    Nick Golding
    RacingNews365

    Discussing if progress is being made, Stroll explained: "Yeah, we fixed the vibrations in Miami, so that was good. "We finished the race [in Miami], both cars got to the chequered flag for the first time this season, which I think is a step forward. And now we just need to find a lot more downforce and power. So, when we do that, we’ll be in better shape. So that’s what we’re focused on."

    Asked when an upgrade will be introduced, Stroll revealed: "We have an upgrade for Spa or the one after Spa. I don’t know which one… Zandvoort, yeah. Is it going to be enough to fight for the front? No. But yeah, these things don’t happen overnight, so everyone’s pushing as hard as possible and we’re doing everything we can to bring as much lap time to the car as quickly as we can."

    ‘Staggering Aston Martin upgrades timeline’;

    https://racingnews365.com/lance-stro...rades-timeline


    Fernando Alonso rues ‘fundamental problem’ hindering Aston Martin recovery efforts
    1 Jun 2026
    James Phillips
    Motorsport Week

    Alonso also confirmed progress is coming slowly for Aston Martin, but highlighted the Honda power unit deficit as the issue continuing to hinder Aston Martin. Whilst an exact number has not been released, Honda could be as much as 100 horsepower down on its rivals “There is progress, always,” Alonso said.

    “Every time we hit the track, there are some new things on the car, and on the engine, on the settings, on the gearbox. From Miami to [Canada], we improved a lot, the gearbox, the gear sync, the downshifting. So how that translates into lap time is difficult to quantify, but definitely we were faster here than Miami with exactly the same car, just because we finetuned things.”

    “I expect a lot of small things happening between here and Monaco and hopefully another step forward. But the fundamental problem and the three seconds off the pace will have to come from the power of the engine and from the aero package and that will only come in the second part of the year.”

    “There is progress, always”;

    https://www.motorsportweek.com/2026/...overy-efforts/


    Tost raises Newey health concern amid Aston-Honda struggle
    Former Formula 1 team boss Franz Tost has suggested Adrian Newey's health may be a factor as Aston Martin battles through a disastrous start to its new Honda era.
    29 May 2026
    GrandPrix.com

    Speaking on the 15 Love - Der Business podcast, the former Toro Rosso chief said several factors are behind Aston Martin's disappointing 2026 campaign so far. “Firstly, unfortunately Honda has made a mess of this new engine. They've constructed something that doesn't work as they perhaps expected.”

    However, based on personal experience, Tost backed the Japanese manufacturer to recover. “I know the Japanese and I'm convinced they will solve the problem by next year at the latest”, he said. Tost also pointed to Adrian Newey's late arrival at the team. “Adrian Newey joined Aston Martin very late”, he said. “I think he only started last April, and for such a massive project that's an extremely small window. There's still plenty to put right.”

    The comments are particularly noteworthy given recent speculation about Newey's suddenly low profile within the team and rumours of possible health concerns. “I think, health permitting, he'll manage to put together a decent car for 2027”, Tost said. “I'm actually fairly convinced of that.”

    “They will solve the problem by next year at the latest”;

    https://www.grandprix.com/news/tost-...-struggle.html


    Aston Martin offer theory for pain-hit Fernando Alonso 'pressure point'
    Aston Martin is slowly working through its problems, but now has another surrounding the seat in the AMR26.
    29 May 2026
    Nick Golding & Sàndor Mészáros
    RacingNews365

    Asked what the issue was with Alonso's seat, Krack told select media including RacingNews365: "He has been uncomfortable for a while, and never to the point where it was really a showstopper, but it's like a pressure point where you feel it gets worse and worse.”

    "I think we need to reconsider a little bit the positioning of the seat. You try with these cars to be as low as you can. When you look at how the drivers used to sit over the last few years, it goes more and more into a lying position, and we need to check whether we may have gone a step too far. But it's something we need to check."

    ‘Pain-hit Fernando Alonso 'pressure point';

    https://racingnews365.com/aston-mart...nso-retirement


    Why Fernando Alonso is convinced he’s ‘the best’ in F1 despite Aston Martin woes
    Fernando Alonso opens up on his mindset amid Aston Martin's ongoing F1 struggles.
    31 May 2026
    Lewis Larkam
    Crash.Net

    When asked how he measures his own performance this year when his car is so badly off the pace, Alonso replied: "I don't measure anything, I'm the best. I don't need to prove anything, I don't need to feel anything to believe that I'm at the right level.”

    Alonso was also asked what keeps him motivated during such a difficult time, to which he responded: “Waiting for the opportunity, and meanwhile trying to help the team, so we don't lose the competitive edge that you need to have in Formula 1. Driving different categories, different cars, testing yourself in different series and different cars, and feel yourself competitive.”

    "If I go to a go-kart track and I'm not the fastest, then I will be worried. If I go to a GT car and I'm not the fastest, I will be worried, and these kind of things. Meanwhile I'm doing that, I'm still the fastest, so when I come to the Formula 1 weekend, it's just a matter of time that I have a better car.”

    “I don't need to prove anything”;

    https://www.crash.net/f1/news/109635...on-martin-woes

  4. #604
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    Cadillac confirms findings after investigation into Sergio Perez suspension failure.
    Cadillac team principal Graeme Lowdon has confirmed that the team “fully understands” the cause of Sergio Perez’s spectacular suspension failure after a post-Canadian Grand Prix investigation.
    31 May 2026
    Oliver Harden
    PlanetF1.com

    Lowdon has confirmed that Cadillac has “already addressed” the issue that resulted in Perez’s incident, insisting that it was nothing “out of the ordinary.” Asked if the team had found the reason behind Perez’s suspension failure, and invited to outline his hopes ahead of next weekend’s Monaco Grand Prix, he told PlanetF1.com and other select media:

    “In terms of the issue that Checo had in Montreal, we fully understand what happened there. It looked significantly more dramatic because there was that onboard picture where there was quite a bit of stuff flying around – that’s primarily the brakes. There was already a failure ahead of that and then as soon as the brakes get applied, there’s nothing securing the brakes to the level that they need to be, so you then end up with something that looks quite dramatic at the end of it.”

    “But the root cause we understand [and] it’s something that has already been addressed. So if the question was ‘are we concerned about Monaco after that’, no. I think pretty much every team’s seen something similar in the past, so I don’t think it was anything too out of the ordinary.”

    ‘“Already addressed” the issue’;

    https://www.planetf1.com/news/sergio...026-suspension


    Sergio Perez delivers ‘one of the best’ F1 drivers verdict amid Cadillac ‘impatience’
    28 May 2026
    Jack Oliver Smith
    Motorsport Week

    Sergio Perez has indicated happiness with his performances in the first five Grands Prix of the Formula 1 season, saying he is happy to “prove it to myself that I’m one of the best out there.”

    “I’m very happy with my performances, with my level of driving,” he told media, including Motorsport Week, at the Canadian Grand Prix. “I’m happy I came back and prove it to myself that I’m one of the best out there. So that to me is really nice, and I’m very happy with the level of driving I’m doing.”

    “I’m impatient at the moment with the operational side,” he said. “I think it’s something that we have to improve and we are in a massive hurry because we are not maximising the results. Today [in the race], for example. Yesterday in qualifying, we had issues again, operationally.”

    ‘Happiness with his performances’;

    https://www.motorsportweek.com/2026/...ac-impatience/


    Sergio Perez ‘impatient’ with area Cadillac are ‘lacking tremendously’ in
    28 May 2026
    Sam Cooper
    PlanetF1.com

    Sergio Perez said Cadillac is ‘lacking tremendously’ on the operational side and called on the team to improve ahead of the European stretch. “I’m impatient at the moment with the operational side,” he said in Canada. “I think it’s something that we have to improve, and we are in a massive hurry, you know, because we are not maximising the results.”

    “Today [in the race], for example. Yesterday in qualifying, we had issues again operationally. I think we are making progress on performance, which is very positive, but on the operational side, is something that we are lacking tremendously, and we have to really find our way for the European season. Even challenging races can yield useful learnings, and that’s what we can take away from this weekend,” he said.

    “Overall, it’s been our most competitive weekend to date. We introduced some further upgrades, which have given us another step up in performance and we were able to race on pace in the midfield. Operationally, we know where we need to improve, but everything we do is being done for the first time. We’ll address as we go into the European season.”

    “We are not maximising the results”’

    https://www.planetf1.com/news/sergio...remendously-in


    Why Perez is convinced he is one of F1's best drivers again
    3 Jun 2026
    SCOTT MITCHELL-MALM
    The Race

    "I have to be realistic, and honest - I had doubts on coming back," Sergio Perez told The Race in an exclusive interview. "The main reason was my family. I felt like I've had a great career. I knew my circumstances. I gave it everything and I was very happy with the career I've had. I'm in a very fortunate spot in my career because I didn't need to be back in F1. But I felt like at the same time I didn't want to leave the sport the way I left it. Because I believe myself that I'm one of the top drivers here. And coming back makes me realise that I'm one of the top drivers."

    "People that understand the sport, they can easily see the level that I'm driving at, the pace I'm having and the performance I'm having," Perez said. "More than proving to everyone else, it's about proving it to myself again. The last six months at Red Bull were very tricky. And there were some circumstances that I had there that prevented me from performing the way I should have been performing. I'm very happy that I came back to prove it to myself. And that was the main thing. I know that I don't have all the time in the world," he said.

    "I came here to make a successful project. And I know that every single weekend is crucial, in making sure that we make progress. For me, that's the main driving factor, I want to see more progress. I want to see progress quickly because unfortunately Formula 1 doesn't give you time. Everyone is impatient here. So for me, the next couple of races are very important, because they will determine how much progress we are making as a team. And for me, as long as we are making good progress, good steps in the right direction, it will give me enough motivation to carry on."

    ‘One of F1's best drivers again’;

    https://www.the-race.com/formula-1/w...drivers-again/


    Valtteri Bottas points finger at Cadillac car: 'It's not 100%'
    Valtteri Bottas has revealed that issues with his Cadillac go some way to explaining his lack of performance at the Canadian Grand Prix.
    28 May 2026
    Samuel Coop & Sàndor Mészáros
    RacingNews365

    Valtteri Bottas has revealed his Cadillac was not "100 per cent" at the Canadian Grand Prix, explaining that some of the issues could not be remedied over the weekend. "We had a few issues [in Montreal] with the setup, the car was very different in each session, and even [in the grand prix], there were some things that we couldn't fix, so the car is not 100%," Bottas told media, including RacingNews365.

    "For sure, it's not yet in a place where I can gain good confidence with the car, but also we know that my power wasn't 100%. Performance," the former Williams, Mercedes and Alfa Romeo/Sauber driver promptly responded when asked what the main thing he and the fledgling team are working on. Elaborating, he added: "Both mechanically and aero-wise equally, we've got to improve and find new parts, but there are parts coming for pretty much each race, and that's a good thing."

    'It's not 100%';

    https://racingnews365.com/valtteri-b...ar-its-not-100


    Cadillac issues Valtteri Bottas F1 rumours response with Colton Herta reality check
    30 May 2026
    Anirban Aly Mandal
    Motorsport Week

    Cadillac Team Principal Graeme Lowdon has refuted rumors suggesting Valtteri Bottas is facing the axe only five races into the 2026 Formula 1 season. “There is no foundation, no truth in any of the rumours at all. I can categorically say that,” he told Racing News 365. “Where do I start on the rumours themselves? I’ll make it really, really clear: factually, they’re completely incorrect. There’s no basis of truth whatsoever in any of them.”

    “Secondly, if we look at the job that both drivers are doing, they’re doing way more than drivers in some of the teams are having to do, because we’re constructing the team while we’re racing at the same time, and that’s a very unusual task,” he added. “So, with all due respect, the outside world doesn’t know what we’re asking these drivers to do, either session to session or race to race, and also, what we’re asking them to do in terms of developing the car.”

    “It’s clear that we’re trying to get more pace into the car, although I have to say that, similar rumours before we even started racing suggested that we’d struggle to get within 107 per cent of qualifying. It was just a few fractions of a per cent in Montreal where we missed out on advancing in sprint race qualifying again, so there’s no foundation of truth, but there’s no logic either to what anybody’s saying.”

    “There is no foundation, no truth in any of the rumours at all”;

    https://www.motorsportweek.com/2026/...1-axe-rumours/

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