Business Day

Formula One has surprises in store

- Alan Baldwin London

Formula One has been criticised for being too predictabl­e in the past but not so far this season, even if Lewis Hamilton returned to the top of the podium in Bahrain on Sunday.

With two surprise winners in two races, and those cast in allegedly supporting roles acting more like leading men, it has been a case of buckle up and expect the unexpected.

Ferrari the fastest and favourites? Champions Mercedes on the back foot? Sebastian Vettel versus Hamilton in a battle of champions? Valtteri Bottas and Charles Leclerc playing second fiddles?

Those pre-season prediction­s are not necessaril­y wrong, there are 19 races still to go, and the same three top teams as ever have been the ones on the podium. But things have just not panned out according to the script so far.

Bottas, the Finn who could not win a race in 2018 and went away with “Hamilton’s wingman” ringing in his ears, is leading the championsh­ip after winning in Australia (plus fastest lap) for Mercedes and finishing second in Bahrain.

YOUNG GUN

Leclerc, the 21-year-old Ferrari newcomer, is ahead of fourtimes champion teammate Vettel in the standings and has beaten him to both a pole and a podium place.

There are already some, with decades of experience to back them up, who see the Monegasque as more of a threat to Hamilton’s hopes of a sixth world championsh­ip than old rival Vettel.

“There’ll be moments on rainy days or challengin­g days when Sebastian Vettel’s experience might just pay off but honestly it won’t be long before Leclerc is the main man there,” said Sky Sports commentato­r Martin Brundle.

Ferrari arrived in Australia as the fastest team in pre-season testing but Mercedes went away as one-two winners all the same. In Bahrain on Sunday, there was no question that Ferrari were fastest after dominating every practice session and all stages of qualifying.

Mercedes walked away as one-two winners again.

Pole position has yet to produce a win.

For Hamilton’s 74th career win to come as a surprise says much in itself, but even he was stunned to take the lead after a power unit problem in the closing laps denied Leclerc a welldeserv­ed first victory.

The arrival of a confident young contender, who is seemingly free to race his teammate, only adds depth to a championsh­ip yet to establish a clear pecking order both between teams and drivers.

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