Every team lapped the Bahrain International Circuit slower than they did at last year’s grand prix – with one conspicuous exception.

Here’s the key lap time data from the first two days of running at the track.

Sector times

Lando Norris and Lewis Hamilton were two of the unhappiest drivers after qualifying in Bahrain. They had good reason to be, as both were soundly beaten by their team mates, but the sector times reveal somewhat different explanations for both.

In Norris’s case, he was quickest of all in Q1, second in round two, then third after the first runs in Q3. It all went awry on his final run, where he posted only a modest improvement and fell to sixth place as a result.

The sector times show he had the ingredients for a far better qualifying position. By combining his best sectors he could have taken a 1’30.060, good enough to join Oscar Piastri on the front row of the grid once George Russell’s penalty was applied.

A missed opportunity is one thing, but Hamilton’s sector times tell the tale of a driver who hasn’t mastered his car yet. He did string his quickest sector times together on one lap, but it still left him almost six tenths of a second down on his team mate.

P. # Driver S1 S2 S3 Ultimate lap (deficit)
1 81 Oscar Piastri 28.784 (2) 38.574 (1) 22.483 (1) 1’29.841
2 63 George Russell 28.771 (1) 38.710 (4) 22.528 (2) 1’30.009
3 4 Lando Norris 28.800 (3) 38.678 (2) 22.582 (5) 1’30.060 (+0.207)
4 16 Charles Leclerc 28.926 (8) 38.714 (5) 22.535 (3) 1’30.175
5 12 Andrea Kimi Antonelli 28.836 (4) 38.786 (6) 22.561 (4) 1’30.183 (+0.030)
6 10 Pierre Gasly 28.883 (6) 38.694 (3) 22.639 (6) 1’30.216
7 1 Max Verstappen 28.880 (5) 38.855 (7) 22.688 (7) 1’30.423
8 55 Carlos Sainz Jnr 28.894 (7) 38.929 (8) 22.723 (8) 1’30.546 (+0.134)
9 44 Lewis Hamilton 28.955 (9) 39.058 (9) 22.759 (10) 1’30.772
10 7 Jack Doohan 29.094 (13) 39.215 (11) 22.752 (9) 1’31.061 (+0.184)
11 22 Yuki Tsunoda 29.026 (10) 39.177 (10) 22.900 (13) 1’31.103 (+0.125)
12 6 Isack Hadjar 29.081 (12) 39.267 (12) 22.851 (12) 1’31.199 (+0.072)
13 27 Nico Hulkenberg 29.039 (11) 39.479 (13) 22.846 (11) 1’31.364 (+0.703)
14 31 Esteban Ocon 29.154 (14) 39.527 (15) 22.904 (15) 1’31.585 (+0.009)
15 14 Fernando Alonso 29.231 (16) 39.502 (14) 22.901 (14) 1’31.634
16 23 Alexander Albon 29.227 (15) 39.757 (17) 23.037 (19) 1’32.021 (+0.019)
17 87 Oliver Bearman 29.319 (18) 39.796 (18) 22.965 (17) 1’32.080 (+0.293)
18 30 Liam Lawson 29.327 (19) 39.808 (19) 22.958 (16) 1’32.093 (+0.072)
19 5 Gabriel Bortoleto 29.520 (20) 39.608 (16) 23.001 (18) 1’32.129 (+0.057)
20 18 Lance Stroll 29.282 (17) 39.858 (20) 23.106 (20) 1’32.246 (+0.037)

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Field performance

The Bahrain Grand Prix is taking place later in the season than last year, which means higher temperatures and generally slower lap times. This year’s lap times are some of the slowest seen this decade, even lagging behind those from 2016, when rules imposed narrower, less aerodynamically sophisticated cars.

Teams’ performance

But not every team is slower than last year. Alpine is the exception to the rule, thanks to Pierre Gasly’s superb qualifying run. The driver who started last on the grid for the team in 2024 will line up fourth on Sunday.

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With Russell rebounding from his Suzuka qualifying blip and Ferrari bringing a beneficial floor upgrade, Red Bull were under the cosh in qualifying. Gasly’s lap time relegated last week’s pole-winners to fifth overall.

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