Red Bull were so dominant in Formula One’s Bahrain season-opener that Mercedes rival George Russell suggested they could win every race this year.
The Briton was not alone in pointing to such a scenario, even if such a sweep would be unprecedented in a championship that started in 1950 with far fewer rounds than the current record 23.
The mood in the paddock after Sunday’s race at Sakhir, and the airport talk among departing insiders, reflected a realization that Red Bull might have given only a glimpse of their real pace.
Photo: AFP
Double world champion Max Verstappen finished 11.987 seconds ahead of Mexican teammate Sergio Perez and 38.6 seconds clear of Aston Martin’s third-placed Fernando Alonso, who provided welcome thrills and emotion.
The Ferrari of Carlos Sainz was 48 seconds behind the winner and Verstappen was also racing without pressure, holding plenty in reserve.
“Red Bull have got this championship sewn up,” Russell told reporters after finishing seventh. “I don’t think anyone will be fighting with them this year. They should win every single race, that’s my bet.”
Red Bull team boss Christian Horner naturally played down such talk and said Sunday had still been a tense and nervous experience because so many things could go wrong.
“We’re not taking anything for granted,” he said. “Let’s see Jeddah in two weeks, Melbourne after that. Once we’ve got two or three circuits under our belt we’ll get a much better picture of strengths and weaknesses of our car and our opposition.”
“Twenty three races is a marathon ... we fully expect our rivals to come back hard in the future races,” he said.
Red Bull won 17 of 22 last year, and Verstappen all but two of those.
Mercedes in the past decade, McLaren with Ayrton Senna and Alain Prost in 1988, and Michael Schumacher with Ferrari in the early years of this century were all similarly dominant, but none managed to hog the top of the podium all year.
In 1988, McLaren won 16 of 17 races, but Gerhard Berger broke the run with an emotional victory for Ferrari at Monza less than a month after the death of team founder Enzo Ferrari.
Teams can turn things around, as Russell showed last year when he won in Brazil after wrestling earlier in the campaign with a bouncing car, but the budget cap and limited wind tunnel time makes things harder.
Red Bull have won 10 of the past 12 races, but reliability, crashes and errors can never be ruled out — even if Verstappen is getting better and better and makes few mistakes.
The Dutch driver retired in Bahrain last year while he was second and behind Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc, whose car broke down this time.
“It has been a great start for us, for the whole team, so this is not something we were used to,” Verstappen said. “We are very happy at the moment but we always keep working.”
“This is a great start, but we also know that throughout the season you have to keep on developing,” he said.
Freddie Freeman homered and drove in four runs, Shohei Ohtani also went deep and Roki Sasaki earned his first major league win as the Los Angeles Dodgers beat the Atlanta Braves 10-3 on Saturday night for their seventh straight victory. The Dodgers have won the first two games of the series to improve to 5-0 against Atlanta this year. Los Angeles’ three-game sweep at home early in the season left the Braves 0-7. Sasaki allowed three runs and six hits over five innings. The 23-year-old right-hander gave up a home run to Ozzie Albies, but received plenty of offensive support in his
INTER AWAIT: Superb saves by PSG ’keeper Gianluigi Donnarumma inspired the victory, as Arsenal were punished for misses, including one by Bukayo Saka Arsenal on Wednesday fell short on the big stage again as their painful UEFA Champions League semi-final exit against Paris Saint-Germain left Mikel Arteta to rue his club’s failure to provide him with enough attacking options. Arteta’s side were unable to reach the Champions League final for the first time in 19 years as PSG clinched a tense 2-1 win at Parc des Princes. Trailing 1-0 from last week’s first leg in London, the Gunners made a blistering start to the second leg, but could not convert their chances as Gianluigi Donnarumma’s superb saves inspired PSG’s 3-1 aggregate victory. Arsenal were punished for
Bayern Munich on Sunday were crowned German champions for the 34th time, giving striker Harry Kane his first major trophy, after second-placed Bayer 04 Leverkusen drew 2-2 at SC Freiburg. Bayern’s 3-3 draw at RB Leipzig on Saturday, when the Bavarians came from two goals down to take the lead before conceding a stoppage-time equalizer, meant defending Bundesliga champions Leverkusen needed to win at Freiburg to delay the title party. Leverkusen were two goals down before scoring twice in the final 10 minutes, but Xabi Alonso’s side could not find a third, as Bayern reclaimed the title at the first attempt after
THRILLER: Raphinha gave Barca a 3-2 lead with two minutes remaining of regular time, but Francesco Acerbi equalized the game in the second minute of added time Davide Frattesi on Tuesday fired Inter into the UEFA Champions League final with an extra-time winner that gave the Italians a stunning 4-3 triumph over Barcelona, 7-6 on aggregate. Italy midfielder Frattesi won a tie for the ages under a downpour in Milan when he lashed home in the 99th minute, sending a packed and rocking San Siro wild with joy. Simone Inzaghi’s team will face either Arsenal or Paris Saint-Germain at the end of this month in Munich, Germany, where they would feel they have a great chance to be crowned kings of Europe for a fourth time after