By Alan Baldwin
(Reuters) – Formula One championship leader Max Verstappen was fastest in Styrian Grand Prix practice at Red Bull’s home Austrian track on Friday while Mercedes’ Valtteri Bottas collected a three place grid drop for spinning in the pitlane.
Red Bull’s 23-year-old Dutchman led both sessions, setting a best lap of one minute 05.910 seconds in the morning and then 1:05.412 in the afternoon on the soft tyres.
McLaren’s Daniel Ricciardo was second fastest, on a cloudy but mostly dry afternoon at Spielberg’s scenic Red Bull Ring, and Alpine’s Esteban Ocon third.
Mercedes’ seven times world champion Lewis Hamilton, 12 points behind Verstappen after seven races in a tough title battle, ended up fourth on the timesheets and said it was “a work in progress”.
“Generally over the day the car felt relatively solid. We’re losing on the straight a considerable amount (of time) so we’ve got to keep working to try to rectify that,” added the 36-year-old.
“I think the Red Bulls definitely will be really hard to beat, I think they’ve just got the edge — maybe more. We don’t know what they’re going to do when they turn that engine up.”
The Briton went faster than Verstappen in the second stint but his lap time was wiped for exceeding the track limits at the last corner when he went wide.
“Lewis was faster but his lap time got deleted so it looks a bit different than what is shown at the moment,” said Verstappen, a two times winner in Austria.
“But overall it has been quite good for us. Of course a few things to look into but I’m quite happy where the car is at the moment.”
Bottas, fourth and 12th, was summoned to stewards after losing rear grip and skidding sideways as he left the Mercedes pits, coming to a halt blocking the pit lane but without hitting anybody.
“That’s absolutely ridiculous,” said McLaren in a radio message to race director Michael Masi. “He could have taken our guys out there.”
Bottas, who said he had tried “something different” in getting out of the box, was also given two penalty points for potentially dangerous driving.
Alpine’s Fernando Alonso was fifth in the afternoon, with Aston Martin’s Sebastian Vettel sixth and McLaren’s Lando Norris seventh.
Frenchman Pierre Gasly had been second for AlphaTauri in the first session but sat out the afternoon due to power unit problems.
Sunday’s race will be the first of two at Spielberg’s scenic Red Bull Ring, with fans in attendance after racing behind closed doors last year.
Red Bull are chasing their fourth successive victory after winning in Monaco, Azerbaijan and France. The team last won four in a row in 2013, before the V6 turbo hybrid era ushered in seven years of Mercedes domination from 2014.
Ferrari’s Carlos Sainz was one of several spinners in the morning.
Red Bull’s Sergio Perez, the winner in Baku, ended up ninth after a morning spin but can be expected to be fighting for the podium on Sunday.
(Reporting by Alan Baldwin, editing by Ken Ferris and Toby Davis and Christian Radnedge)