FP2: Ferrari’s Raikkonen and Vettel shine in the Bahrain night

FP2: Ferrari’s Raikkonen and Vettel shine in the Bahrain night

Ferrari was on top form in the second free practice session for the Bahrain Grand Prix. Kimi Raikkonen pipped his team mate Sebastian Vettel to Friday’s honours by just over a hundredths of a second.

The Mercedes pair of Valtteri Bottas and Lewis Hamilton were third and fourth fastest in the weekend’s first run under the floodlights.

Max Verstappen bounced back from missing out FP1 to finish fifth fastest ahead of his Red Bull team mate Daniel Ricciardo, completing the Noah’s Ark two-by-two team formation at the top of the timesheets.

Bahrain Grand Prix – Free Practice 2 results

Pos Driver Team Time Gap Laps

1
Kimi Räikkönen
Ferrari
1:29.817s

32

2
Sebastian Vettel
Ferrari
1:29.828s
+ 0.011s
37

3
Valtteri Bottas
Mercedes
1:30.380s
+ 0.563s
31

4
Lewis Hamilton
Mercedes
1:30.472s
+ 0.655s
32

5
Max Verstappen
Red Bull
1:30.745s
+ 0.928s
32

6
Daniel Ricciardo
Red Bull
1:30.751s
+ 0.934s
31

7
Nico Hülkenberg
Renault
1:31.220s
+ 1.403s
34

8
Pierre Gasly
Toro Rosso
1:31.232s
+ 1.415s
38

9
Fernando Alonso
McLaren
1:31.282s
+ 1.465s
29

10
Stoffel Vandoorne
McLaren
1:31.422s
+ 1.605s
35

11
Romain Grosjean
Haas
1:31.591s
+ 1.774s
33

12
Carlos Sainz
Renault
1:31.601s
+ 1.784s
34

13
Esteban Ocon
Force India
1:31.809s
+ 1.992s
31

14
Sergio Pérez
Force India
1:31.868s
+ 2.051s
34

15
Kevin Magnussen
Haas
1:31.969s
+ 2.152s
35

16
Charles Leclerc
Sauber
1:32.372s
+ 2.555s
37

17
Lance Stroll
Williams
1:32.382s
+ 2.565s
30

18
Sergey Sirotkin
Williams
1:32.474s
+ 2.657s
37

19
Marcus Ericsson
Sauber
1:32.733s
+ 2.916s
32

20
Brendon Hartley
Toro Rosso
1:32.908s
+ 3.091s
38

The glaring light of day had coloured to the deep orange of dusk by the time that Formula 1 got back on track for the second 90-minute session at Bahrain International Circuit. The cooler conditions under floodlights for FP2 were much closer to those that teams will face in Saturday’s qualifying and Sunday’s race.

The Haas pair of Kevin Magnussen and Romain Grosjean were the first drivers to set lap times. The rest of the teams gradually roused themselves from their pit lane slumber. Kimi Raikkonen predictably claimed the early honours with a time of 1:30.689s, almost three seconds faster than anyone else in the first ten minutes.

Force India’s Esteban Ocon soon shaved the gap to under two seconds, and the two Red Bulls then made further in-roads into the Finn’s early advantage. However it wasn’t until the Silver Arrows came out that Valtteri Bottas displaced his compatriot from the top spot with a lap of 1:30.447s.

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His time at the top only lasted a few seconds before Sebastian Vettel went faster by four tenths on soft tyres. By comparison, Lewis Hamilton’s opening effort was over a second slower than his title rival and only good enough for fifth. The Briton was still on the medium compound, and ended up running off at turn 1.

Max Verstappen also had a scrappy follow-up lap as he played catch-up having missed all of FP1 due to an electrical problem. While Hamilton immediately pitted, Verstappen asked his race engineer if he could stay out and run more laps to get used to the circuit.

  • FP1: Ricciardo puts Red Bull on top in Bahrain first practice

Once Verstappen was done for the time being, Raikkonen returned to action having made the switch to supersofts. He immediately reclaimed the high ground with a time of 1:29.817s, albeit only two tenths faster than his team mate. Vettel’s own supersoft run brought him back to within 0.011s of Raikkonen, while busier track conditions thwarted prospective fast runs from Bottas and Hamilton.

With their supersoft runs logged, teams settled into race distance simulations for the remainder of the session. Raikkonen’s day ended early after the front right wheel on his car was improperly attached during a pit stop 15 minutes from the end. He was ordered to pull over and park the car as a safety precaution.

The top six on the timing screens didn’t change. Renault’s Nico Hulkenberg was the best of the rest in seventh ahead of Toro Rosso’s Pierre Gasly. The top ten was rounded out by the McLaren pairing of Fernando Alonso and Stoffel Vandoorne.

There had been some excitement early in the session for Marcus Ericsson when the Sauber caught the kerb and was spun off into the gravel at turn 3. No harm was done and the Swede made his way back to pit lane to get the car checked out.

Midway through the session, Williams rookie Sergey Sirotkin went for a spin into the run-off at the end of the back straight. Once again, there were no serious consequences. His team mate Lance Stroll had a minor scare of his own a few minutes later when he ran wide and his FW41 straddled the kerb.

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