Key events
24 Mar 202404.11EDT
Jack Snape has taken a look at what the what Carlos Sainz’s victory in the Australian Grand Prix might mean for the Formula One championship – and in particular for Red Bull:
24 Mar 202402.05EDT
And with that, I think I’m done.
A remarkable day in Melbourne. Coming in, the predominant question was if anyone would be able to get close to stopping Max Verstappen from winning from pole for the fourth-straight time and taking out a tenth-successive race. Then, the defending champion was forced to retire on lap three and everything was blown wide open.
Starting from second, Carlos Sainz had overtaken the Dutchman before his retirement and used the clear air in front of him to surge to the win – not bad for a bloke looking for a drive next season and still recovering from having surgery for appendicitis. Indeed, it was a good day for fans of red horses rather than bulls, in general with Ferrari saluting with a one-two finish after Charles Leclerc crossed the line behind him in second.
Mclaren will likewise leave with a pep in their step after Charles Norris and home town boy Oscar Piastri took third and fourth. Lewis Hamilton, though, who joined Verstappen in being forced to retire with mechanical issues, will head to Japan with frustration with his Mercedes undoubtedly only growing.
My name’s been Joey Lynch, thank you ever so much for keeping up with the Australian GP with me. I’ll leave you with Giles Richards’ full report. Thanks and success.
24 Mar 202402.03EDT
Giles Richards has wrapped up all the action at the Australian F1 Grand Prix 2024 with a race report:
24 Mar 202401.55EDT
24 Mar 202401.50EDT
Sainz speaking on the coverage: “It was a really good race. I felt really good out there. Of course a bit stiff. Especially physically it wasn’t the easiest but I was lucky that I was more or less on my own and I could manage my pace, manage the tyres, manage everything. It wasn’t the toughest races of all.
“Very happy, very proud of the team. Happy to be in a one-two with Charles here. It shows that the hard work pays off. Life, sometimes it’s crazy. What happened at the beginning of the year then the podium in Bahrain, then the appendix, then the come back, and the win. It’s a rollercoaster but I love it and I’m extremely happy.”
24 Mar 202401.46EDT
Sainz salutes with the Australian GP trophy, the first time a driver other than Verstappen lifted the trophy since… well, Sainz did it back in Singapore last season. It’s the third win in the Spaniards career.
The Dutchman will have to wait to equal his record ten straight wins, with his first opportunity to start a new streak coming in Japan in two weeks’ time.
24 Mar 202401.44EDT
24 Mar 202401.43EDT
Time for the anthems and for the first time in a long time, it’s not the Dutch and Austrian ones ringing out over the track. First, the Spanish anthem for race-winner Sainz, then the Italian anthem for Ferrari.
24 Mar 202401.42EDT
Side note, Alex Albon’s eleventh-placed finish means that he’s finished outside the points today. A penny for Logan Sargeant’s thoughts.
24 Mar 202401.40EDT
They’ll be dancing on Lygon St tonight!
24 Mar 202401.37EDT
24 Mar 202401.37EDT
How it finished in Melbourne
1. Carlos Sainz (25pts)
2. Charles Leclerc (19)
3. Lando Norris (15)
4. Oscar Piastri (12)
5. Sergio Perez (10)
6. Fernando Alonso (8)
7. Lance Stroll (6)
8. Yuki Tsunoda (4)
9. Nico Hulkenberg (2)
10. Kevin Magnussen (1)
11. Alex Albon
12. Daniel Ricciardo
13. Pierre Gasly
14. Valtteri Bottas
15. Zhou Guanyu
16. Esteban Ocon
17. George Russell
DNF: Lewis Hamilton, Max Verstappen
24 Mar 202401.29EDT
A record crowd has been on hand in Melbourne across this week, nearly half a million punters heading though the gates. And what a way to end it.
24 Mar 202401.27EDT
“This is amazing,” says Sainz as he thanks his garage. The driver-for-hire goes from missing Saudi Arabia through illness to saluting as part of a historic Ferrari one-two in Melbourne. Who needs an appendix?
24 Mar 202401.25EDT
Carlos Sainz wins the Australian Grand Prix!
A virtual safety car is called for after Russell’s crash and that means Sainz can take it easy as he greets the chequered flag with his Ferrari!
It’s going to be a one-two for the Italian team – probably Melbourne’s favourite team – with Leclerc coming through behind him in second.
24 Mar 202401.23EDT
57/58: Russell has smashed into the wall! We’re going to finish under a virtual safety car as he gets on the radio to say he’s ok.
24 Mar 202401.21EDT
56/59: Sainz is on the radio raising some concerns about his tyres but he’s only got to get through a few more minutes. Leclerc has just set a fastest lap as he looks to protect second from Norris.
24 Mar 202401.20EDT
55/58: The most fraught battle for positioning remains the fight for sixth, with Russell all over the back of Alonso.
Sainz maintaines his lead from Leclerc, Norris, Piastri and Perez.
24 Mar 202401.19EDT
54/58: Russell continues to attack Alonso for sixth, with the Mercedes looking like it has the DRS-assisted speed to overhaul the Aston Martin.
24 Mar 202401.18EDT
53/58: Five laps to go and it remains a Ferrari one-two, with Sainz leading Leclerc. The Mclaren’s of Norris and Piastri come next, followed by Alonso, Russell, Stroll, Tsunoda and Hülkenberg
24 Mar 202401.16EDT
52/58: Down the grid, the two Haas are doing battle for tenth, with Hülkenberg doing his best to hold off Magnussen for a place in the points.
24 Mar 202401.15EDT
51/58: Short of disaster, we’re going to get a podium of Sainz, Leclerc, and Norris, with Piastri ten seconds back of his Mclaren teammate in fourth.
24 Mar 202401.14EDT
50/58: Russell continues to put the pressure on sixth-placed Alonso, who isn’t making much ground on fifth-placed Perez – 17 seconds back.
24 Mar 202401.12EDT
49/58: Norris has set another fastest lap as he tries to chase down second-placed Leclerc, with the gap now down to less than four seconds.
24 Mar 202401.11EDT
48/59: With ten laps to go, Sainz leads from Leclerc, Norris, Piastri, Perez, Alonso, Russell, Stroll, Tsunoda, and Hülkenberg.
24 Mar 202401.10EDT
47/58: Great stat from the broadcast, the last time we had a Ferrari one-two followed by Mclaren was when Kimi Räikkönen, Felipe Massa, Alonso, and Hamilton occupied the top four in Spa in 2007.
24 Mar 202401.08EDT
46/58: Norris has set a new fastest lap of the race as he tries to chase down the second-placed Ferrari of Leclerc, the gap now four seconds.
24 Mar 202401.07EDT
45/58: No one-stop strategy for Russell as he moves into the pit lane. Perez moves into fifth and Alonso into sixth, with the Mercedes now with some fresh tyres to chase down the former champion.
24 Mar 202401.06EDT
44/58: Sainz leads, Leclerc in second and Norris in third. Piastri fourth from Russell, Perez, Alonso, Stroll, Tsunoda, and Hülkenberg.
24 Mar 202401.04EDT
43/58: Email from Jonathan with one for the F1 historians/trivia heads.
“With Lewis and Max retiring in this race, Alonso is the only world champion still on track. Has there ever been a race with fewer world champions on track? Or fewer total championships than the 2 that Alonso has?”
24 Mar 202401.03EDT
42/58: So the top four has all pitted twice now, with Sainz leading from Leclerc, Norris, and Piastri. Russell and his crew, meanwhile, are contemplating a one-stop strategy, per the coverage.
24 Mar 202401.01EDT
41/58: Sainz moves into pit lane. It’s a good stop and he comes out seven seconds clear of Leclerc.