Zhou Guanyu finished the second day of F1’s pre-season testing at the top of the timesheet after a late lap on the softest-compound C5 tyre.
The Alfa Romeo driver completed 133 laps as one of three drivers, alongside Fernando Alonso and Logan Sargeant, who spent both morning and afternoon sessions in the car. Other teams split the day between team-mates.
Max Verstappen and Alonso, who ended yesterday first and second fastest, followed Zhou in Friday’s classification, ahead of Nyck de Vries in the AlphaTauri.
George Russell, however, ended his afternoon session early when his Mercedes broke down with hydraulic issues. He lost the final 90min of the day and competed the fewest laps.
Scroll down for the fastest times from the second day of testing, and for more updates posted during the sessions.
Driver |
Team |
Lap time |
Gap |
Laps completed |
Zhou Guanyu |
Alfa Romeo |
1min 31.610sec |
|
133 |
Max Verstappen |
Red Bull |
1min 31.650sec |
+0.040sec |
47 |
Fernando Alonso |
Aston Martin |
1min 32.205sec |
+0.595sec |
130 |
Nyck De Vries |
AlphaTauri |
1min 32.222sec |
+0.612sec |
74 |
Nico Hulkenberg |
Haas |
1min 32.466sec |
+0.856sec |
68 |
Carlos Sainz |
Ferrari |
1min 32.486sec |
+0.876sec |
70 |
Logan Sargeant |
Williams |
1min 32.549sec |
+0.939sec |
154 |
Charles Leclerc |
Ferrari |
1min 32.725sec |
+1.115sec |
68 |
Oscar Piastri |
McLaren |
1min 33.175sec |
+1.565sec |
74 |
Pierre Gasly |
Alpine |
1min 33.186sec |
+1.576sec |
59 |
Kevin Magnussen |
Haas |
1min 33.442sec |
+1.832sec |
67 |
Esteban Ocon |
Alpine |
1min 33.490sec |
+1.880sec |
49 |
George Russell |
Mercedes |
1min 33.614sec |
+2.004sec |
26 |
Sergio Perez |
Red Bull |
1min 33.751sec |
+2.141sec |
76 |
Lewis Hamilton |
Mercedes |
1min 33.954sec |
+2.344sec |
72 |
Lando Norris |
McLaren |
1min 35.522sec |
+3.912sec |
65 |
Yuki Tsunoda |
AlphaTauri |
1min 34.708sec |
+4.098sec |
85 |
16:18 – Action in the pit-lane
Logan Sargeant has parked his car outside the Williams garage, with warning lights appearing on the rear wing – signalling an issue.
Simultaneously, Zhou Guanyu’s Alfa Romeo broke down at the end of the pit lane before heading out onto the circuit. China’s first F1 driver had parked his car in preparation for a practice start but had issues pulling away. A brief red flag was shown, whilst the Alfa Romeo was recovered.
15.30pm – An hour remains
Max Verstappen has continued to lead the field on the C3 tyre, followed by the AlphaTauri of Nyck de Vries on the C4 and the Aston Martin of Fernando Alonso on the C3 – both drivers trailing the Dutchman by over seven tenths.
Nico Hulkenberg Haas is close behind, the German only eight tenths behind the leader and almost a second quicker than his teammate Kevin Magnussen. Of course, this difference has little meaning due to the un-competitive nature of testing.
In similar fashion to his new teammate, Oscar Piastri has shown his ability to post competitive times despite the teams underwhelming performance so far. The Aussie currently sits ninth in the standings.
15:03pm – Mercedes brings out second red flag of pre-season testing
George Russell has ground to a halt with a suspected hydraulic failure with just 1hour and 30mins remaining in Friday’s afternoon session. In a critical period for the teams, where push runs become more frequent, the stranded Mercedes has caused the second red flag of this years pre-season testing – reducing the overall running time for the rest of the field.
It is currently unclear if Mercedes and Russell will be able to compete when testing resumes.
2.00pm – Verstappen goes fastest and McLaren struggle
Max Verstappen returned to add to his already impressive lap tally, setting the fastest lap of testing so far on the C3 tyre (1min 31.650sec) – eight tenths clear of Ferrari’s Carlos Sainz.
This afternoon will be the Dutchman’s final appearance during pre-season testing ahead of the Bahrain Grand Prix on March 3.
McLaren have continued to struggle after a limited first day of testing. CEO Zak Brown has admitted that the team have “missed targets”, with Lando Norris also appearing to be hesitant about the MCL60’s performance.
Oscar Piastri is currently leading the team on the timesheets – still 2.3sec slower than Verstappen.
11.30am – Day 2 morning classification
A red flag test concluded the second morning of F1 testing, with Carlos Sainz leading the way for Ferrari at the top of the timesheet.
Whilst Logan Sargeant was just 0.063 seconds off the pace on the softest tyre compound, it was Fernando Alonso that impressed once again in an Aston Martin that has up to now been widely regarded as a midfield contender. The Spaniard was four-tenths back on Sainz as the session drew to a close, followed by Zhou Guanyu and Kevin Magnussen.
Sergio Perez made his first appearance on-track for Red Bull and followed a similar path to his teammate, completing a solid 76 laps of the Sakhir circuit, with his fastest time 1.2sec behind the leader.
Yuki Tsunoda completed the most laps of the session with 85.
Driver |
Team |
Lap time |
Gap |
Laps completed |
Carlos Sainz |
Ferrari |
1min 32.486sec |
|
70 |
Logan Sargeant |
Williams |
1min 32.549sec |
+0.063sec |
74 |
Fernando Alonso |
Aston Martin |
1min 32.969sec |
+0.483sec |
64 |
Zhou Guanyu |
Alfa Romeo |
1min 33.170sec |
+0.684sec |
43 |
Kevin Magnussen |
Haas |
1min 33.442sec |
+0.956sec |
67 |
Esteban Ocon |
Alpine |
1min 33.490sec |
+1.004sec |
49 |
Sergio Perez |
Red Bull |
1min 33.751sec |
+1.265sec |
76 |
Lewis Hamilton |
Mercedes |
1min 33.954sec |
+1.468sec |
72 |
Lando Norris |
McLaren |
1min 35.522sec |
+3.036sec |
65 |
Yuki Tsunoda |
AlphaTauri |
1min 35.708sec |
+3.222sec |
85 |
8am – Magnussen tops timesheet as teams gather data
With an hour gone of the session, Kevin Magnussen finds himself at the top of the timesheet with the most laps completed – 15.
As the clock ticked over, Carlos Sainz then went a full second quicker with a 1min 32.653 lap, with both set on medium compound tyres.
But this session isn’t where you’ll find drivers out to set their fastest times. We’ve seen more cars go out with aero rakes to check the correlation between the real-world and simulation data. A few lock-ups for Logan Sargeant indicate that the US rookie is still coming to terms with his Williams, with no time set so far.
7am – Day 2 of testing begins
Day 2 of Formula 1 testing has begun, in what has so far been a metronomic display by the 2023 cars.
Felipe Drugovich has been the only driver to break down on track, with an electrical issue affecting his Aston Martin on Day 1, and teams have largely been running through their programmes, piling on the miles.
After topping the table yesterday after a full day of running, Max Verstappen hands over to Sergio Perez for today’s morning session before returning for the faster afternoon session which runs into the evening. That will be his last, wioth Perez due to drive throughout tomorrow