It was by no means a disaster, although a failed experiment with a new rear wing that was seen to flap about in the breeze in FP1 was a trifle embarrassing. As was a huge spin for Carlos Sainz when his car bottomed heavily on a bump, which suggested that the team had taken a wrong turn on the set-up of his SF-23.
“We were just testing some things in the car,” said Sainz. “Trying to finalise a few things that we wanted to try in FP1, scrubbing the medium tyres, which we wanted to get rid of enough in FP1 to use the softs in the night session. And yeah, it didn’t go to plan, clearly. It wasn’t intentional, it was a test that went wrong.
“Then I lost a bit of track time, I lost a bit of freedom and probably paid in FP2. The car doesn’t feel the same as it did in testing. So we’re putting an eye into what it could be, the track conditions have changed a bit. And it looks like performance things also have changed. So we will have a good look overnight and try to put it together tomorrow.
“The car is not exactly responding as I expect, or as it did in testing. And for that I’m struggling a bit more with the balance and it’s a bit more out of place compared to where it was, but we’re having a good look at it. And we expect to put it back together for tomorrow.”
Like the nine other teams Ferrari has had just the three days of testing during which to hone its car before being plunged into the race weekend. With changing temperatures and wind direction playing havoc with set-up choices that seemed ideal 24 hours earlier it’s not been easy for anyone.
“The timing of it, I don’t mind, it’s more than the amount of it that maybe all drivers we are struggling to understand why the system believes that one day and a half of preparation is enough,” said Sainz.
“Who decides this, why? I understand the cost associated with it. But running a car on track for a driver is fundamental for his fitness, for the car understanding, even for car safety, reliability, you need a bit more than that. Hopefully we will have more of it in the future.
“There’s always learnings, conclusions set-up tuning that you do in F1, if not, it wouldn’t be F1. We’re going to try to out the best possible package for this first race.