Red Bull's Max Verstappen Starts Off Dutch Grand Prix's First Practice Session With Fastest Lap
Red Bull's Max Verstappen Starts Off Dutch Grand Prix's First Practice Session With Fastest Lap
Verstappen will have an added incentive to secure a win in the Dutch Grand Prix as he looks to level Vettel's record of 9 straight wins.

Red Bull’s Max Verstappen started his home, Dutch Grand Prix in dominant fashion as usual as he topped the times in the first day’s practice at Zandvoort.

The two-time world champion and current series leader is on a mission to level Sebastian Vettel’s record of nine consecutive wins and recorded the fastest time by almost three hundredths of a second from the newly upgraded, Aston Martin driven by Fernando Alonso.

The Mercedes of Lewis Hamilton came next as a trio of champions dominated at the tricky, twisty circuit carved out of coastal dunes near Amsterdam.

The old-school track punishes the slightest error and caught out Nico Hulkenberg, 24 hours after the German had signed a new deal to keep him at Haas in 2024.

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His accident triggered the first red flag of the weekend as Formula One returned after its summer break for this 13th round of a championship utterly dominated by Red Bull and Verstappen.

Kevin Magnussen, also celebrating a contract extension with Haas for next season, was first to set a time.

But the Dane was soon bettered by Verstappen, the home hero reeling off a series of quickest laps.

The last one to venture out on the track was Lance Stroll, who missed Thursday’s media day with an infection.

But his spin didn’t last long with his Aston Martin engineer telling him to “abort, box” on the team radio – his session over before it had even begun.

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“I heard a funny noise,” came back the down-to-earth reply from the Canadian in the cockpit.

Stroll’s teammate and elder, Spanish veteran Alonso, found himself in the gravel after a minor lockup.

At the midway stage of the hour-long session, American rookie Logan Sargeant lifted his Williams to the top of the timesheets briefly.

His more experienced teammate, Alex Albon, then put in a smart lap to go only eight thousand of a second behind new leader Sergio Perez, both having switched to soft tyres.

Perez needs a strong second half to the season after struggling to keep up with his runaway Red Bull teammate.

McLaren approached the second half of the season full of optimism after upgrades lifted Lando Norris to back-to-back runners-up spots at Silverstone and Hungary and rookie Oscar Piastri to a fine second in the sprint at Spa last time out.

Norris though spent a lot of this return from holiday in the pits.

The yellow and then red flag came out with 18 minutes left on the clock when Hulkenberg crashed on the penultimate turn 13.

The German came to a stop facing the wrong way, his car craned away.

Haas boss Gunther Steiner reported: “It looks like the front wing was damaged, and it was the new front wing and we don’t have many of them.

“We’ve got another one, but only one so we need to decide if we risk it and put it on, or save it for tomorrow.”

Action resumed with 10 minutes left for teams to try out different strategies ahead of the second practice and Saturday’s qualifying.

Verstappen took command again, Alonso nipping into second past Hamilton after a session that left Verstappen’s legion of fans expectant that he could win for the third straight time at home on Sunday.

Perez ended up fourth ahead of Albon, Norris, Sargeant, and Piastri, with Yuki Tsunoda (Alpha Tauri) and Esteban Ocon (Alpine) rounding out the top 10.

Ferrari reserve driver Robert Shwartzman replaced Carlos Sainz for the first practice staged in muggy overcast conditions, posting the slowest time.

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