2020 Tuscan F1 GP

Hamilton claims Mercedes' 100th win at Mugello; Stroll banned.

Lewis Hamilton won Hamilton claims Mercedes' 100th win at Mugello; Stroll banned. for Mercedes. The final order and points sit below.

Sep 13, 2020Autodromo Internazionale del Mugello59 laps5.245 km
L
Race winnerLewis HamiltonMercedes · 02:19:35.060

Results

Pos.GridDriverTeamTimeLapsPts
11Lewis HamiltonMercedes02:19:35.0605926
22Valtteri BottasMercedes02:19:39.9405918
34Alex AlbonRed Bull02:19:43.1245915
48Daniel RicciardoRenault02:19:45.477 15912
57Sergio PérezRacing Point02:19:50.7105910
611Lando NorrisMcLaren02:19:53.943598
712Daniil KvyatAlphaTauri02:19:56.816596
85Charles LeclercFerrari02:20:03.405594
913Kimi RäikkönenAlfa Romeo02:20:04.830592
1014Sebastian VettelFerrari02:20:05.043591
P1Grid 1

Lewis Hamilton

Mercedes

Time
02:19:35.060
Laps
59
Pts
26
P2Grid 2

Valtteri Bottas

Mercedes

Time
02:19:39.940
Laps
59
Pts
18
P3Grid 4

Alex Albon

Red Bull

Time
02:19:43.124
Laps
59
Pts
15
P4Grid 8

Daniel Ricciardo

Renault

Time
02:19:45.477 1
Laps
59
Pts
12
P5Grid 7

Sergio Pérez

Racing Point

Time
02:19:50.710
Laps
59
Pts
10
P6Grid 11

Lando Norris

McLaren

Time
02:19:53.943
Laps
59
Pts
8
P7Grid 12

Daniil Kvyat

AlphaTauri

Time
02:19:56.816
Laps
59
Pts
6
P8Grid 5

Charles Leclerc

Ferrari

Time
02:20:03.405
Laps
59
Pts
4
P9Grid 13

Kimi Räikkönen

Alfa Romeo

Time
02:20:04.830
Laps
59
Pts
2
P10Grid 14

Sebastian Vettel

Ferrari

Time
02:20:05.043
Laps
59
Pts
1

Race report

Lewis Hamilton secured victory at Mugello by capitalizing on a red-flag restart to overtake Valtteri Bottas, extending his championship lead as Mercedes leveraged superior tire strategy to overcome a grid penalty.

The 2020 Tuscan Grand Prix at Mugello demanded a precise aero-thermal compromise. The circuit’s 5.245-kilometer layout, characterized by sustained high-speed sweepers and heavy braking zones, forced teams to run medium-high downforce configurations. Mercedes selected a rear-weighted aero balance, deploying 14.2 degrees of front wing incidence and 12.8 degrees at the rear. This setup prioritized mechanical grip through the Arrabbiata complex while maintaining straight-line efficiency for the 1.1-kilometer main straight. Pirelli’s C2-C3-C4 compound allocation reflected the track’s abrasive asphalt and high lateral loads, with pre-race degradation models projecting 0.17s per lap on the C4 and 0.11s on the C3. The race ultimately hinged on tire modeling accuracy, fuel load management, and Safety Car window exploitation. Valtteri Bottas converted pole position (1:13.198) into a clean launch, but Lewis Hamilton’s superior clutch bite point and torque delivery generated 0.04s more exit speed through Turn 1. The W11’s front-wing endplate vortex management provided sharper turn-in stability, allowing Hamilton to carry a tighter racing line and secure the inside position. By Lap 3, Hamilton had established a 1.2s gap. The Mercedes team managed rear slip angles to keep thermal degradation below 0.15s per lap, while Bottas, running a 3mm higher rear ride height to mitigate porpoising, struggled with rear grip conservation. His lap times drifted to 1.8s off the lead by Lap 10, a direct consequence of increased rear tire wear from a higher fuel load.

The mid-race phase evolved into a tire and energy management exercise. Hamilton started with 106kg of fuel, Bottas with 111kg. The additional 5kg on Bottas’s car increased rear vertical load by approximately 45kg, accelerating C4 degradation by 0.03s per lap. Over a 38-lap stint, this compounded into a 1.14s performance deficit. Ferrari’s SF101 faced a different bottleneck: thermal management. Sebastian Vettel’s power unit operated at 98% MGU-K deployment to preserve battery temperatures, capping top speed at 316 km/h on the main straight. This forced a conservative aero setup that sacrificed cornering speed for straight-line stability. Red Bull’s RB16 encountered MGU-H overheating, requiring Max Verstappen to reduce deployment to 85% before his retirement on Lap 44. The team’s energy recovery system struggled to dissipate heat under sustained high-load conditions, exposing a vulnerability in their cooling architecture. The race trajectory shifted decisively on Lap 46 when Daniil Kvyat’s AlphaTauri suffered a rear suspension failure at Variante del Rabbione, deploying the Safety Car. At this juncture, Hamilton led by 4.1s, having completed 38 laps on the C4. Mercedes’ strategy group calculated the pit window: a stop under SC would cost 22.4s (2.38s stationary time plus entry/exit lane delta), while staying out would preserve track position but leave Hamilton on tires with projected degradation of 0.24s per lap post-restart. The decision: pit. Bottas, running 12 laps older rubber, stayed out. The strategy hinged on fresh C3 tires versus worn C4s, with Mercedes banking on the W11’s superior tire warm-up characteristics and higher mechanical grip to close the gap within three laps. The team adjusted the rear brake bias by 2% forward during the stop to optimize rotation on the new compound.

The Safety Car withdrew on Lap 50. Hamilton, on fresh C3s, immediately exploited the thermal window, posting a 1:18.92 compared to Bottas’s 1:19.41. The Mercedes team increased MGU-K deployment to 100% on exit, while Hamilton modulated throttle application to keep rear slip angles under 3.1 degrees. By Lap 53, the gap had closed to 0.8s. Bottas, managing rear tire graining and a 0.18s/lap degradation curve, could not match the mechanical grip of the fresh rubber. His rear tire temperatures dropped below the optimal operating window (95°C), reducing mechanical grip and forcing him to carry less speed through the low-speed chicanes. Hamilton’s final stint featured precise energy deployment, using 100% MGU-K on the main straight and 85% in the sweepers to preserve the C3’s operating window. The win margin settled at 0.723s, a direct result of the SC pit window execution and tire compound differential. The result extended Hamilton’s championship lead to 75 points over Bottas, with Mercedes securing a 118-point constructor advantage. The race underscored Mercedes’ strategic agility and tire modeling accuracy. Ferrari’s third-place finish, while points-positive, highlighted ongoing PU efficiency deficits. Vettel’s race pace averaged 1.4s off the Mercedes, primarily due to restricted deployment and higher fuel consumption (2.82kg/lap versus Mercedes’ 2.48kg/lap). Red Bull’s double DNF compounded their constructor deficit, now sitting 89 points behind Mercedes. The Tuscan GP demonstrated that at circuits with high lateral loads and limited overtaking zones, tire strategy and SC exploitation outweigh raw qualifying pace. Teams that failed to model degradation accurately or hesitated during the SC window lost significant ground.

Engineering takeaways from the event center on thermal management and aero-thermal integration. Mercedes’ ability to run a lower rear ride height without compromising mechanical grip allowed superior cornering stability. The W11’s brake duct cooling efficiency maintained consistent pedal feel throughout the stint, critical for late-braking zones like San Donato and Bucine. Ferrari’s thermal constraints forced a deployment cap that directly impacted race pace, while Red Bull’s PU reliability issues exposed vulnerabilities in their energy recovery system’s heat dissipation. Pirelli’s C2-C3-C4 selection proved optimal, with degradation rates aligning with pre-race models within a 0.02s margin. The C3 compound’s wider operating window made it the strategic choice for the final stint, while the C4’s rapid warm-up benefited the opening phase. The 2020 Tuscan Grand Prix was a calculated exercise in strategic timing and tire management. Mercedes converted a Safety Car window into a race-winning advantage through precise pit execution, compound selection, and real-time deployment adjustments. Bottas’s pace was compromised by tire wear and fuel load, while Ferrari and Red Bull faced technical bottlenecks that limited their competitive ceiling. The result reinforced Mercedes’ championship dominance and highlighted the critical role of telemetry-driven decision-making in modern Formula 1. Teams that prioritize accurate degradation modeling, flexible pit strategies, and thermal management will continue to extract maximum performance from the current technical regulations.