2024 E. Romagna F1 GP

Verstappen dominates Imola, extends championship lead over Norris

Max Verstappen won Verstappen dominates Imola, extends championship lead over Norris for Red Bull. The final order and points sit below.

May 19, 2024Autodromo Internazionale Enzo e Dino Ferrari63 laps4.909 km
M
Race winnerMax VerstappenRed Bull · 01:25:25.252

Results

Pos.GridDriverTeamTimeLapsPts
11Max VerstappenRed Bull01:25:25.2526325
22Lando NorrisMcLaren01:25:25.9776318
33Charles LeclercFerrari01:25:33.1686315
45Oscar PiastriMcLaren01:25:39.3846312
54Carlos SainzFerrari01:25:47.5776310
68Lewis HamiltonMercedes01:26:00.356638
76George RussellMercedes01:26:12.406637
811Sergio PérezRed Bull01:26:20.028634
913Lance StrollAston Martin01:26:44.808632
107Yuki TsunodaRacing Bulls01:25:43.108621
P1Grid 1

Max Verstappen

Red Bull

Time
01:25:25.252
Laps
63
Pts
25
P2Grid 2

Lando Norris

McLaren

Time
01:25:25.977
Laps
63
Pts
18
P3Grid 3

Charles Leclerc

Ferrari

Time
01:25:33.168
Laps
63
Pts
15
P4Grid 5

Oscar Piastri

McLaren

Time
01:25:39.384
Laps
63
Pts
12
P5Grid 4

Carlos Sainz

Ferrari

Time
01:25:47.577
Laps
63
Pts
10
P6Grid 8

Lewis Hamilton

Mercedes

Time
01:26:00.356
Laps
63
Pts
8
P7Grid 6

George Russell

Mercedes

Time
01:26:12.406
Laps
63
Pts
7
P8Grid 11

Sergio Pérez

Red Bull

Time
01:26:20.028
Laps
63
Pts
4
P9Grid 13

Lance Stroll

Aston Martin

Time
01:26:44.808
Laps
63
Pts
2
P10Grid 7

Yuki Tsunoda

Racing Bulls

Time
01:25:43.108
Laps
62
Pts
1

Race report

Max Verstappen converted second on the grid into an Emilia Romagna victory, leveraging tire degradation management to neutralize Charles Leclerc’s opening lap challenge, extend his championship lead, and reaffirm Red Bull’s race pace hierarchy.

Technical Analysis: 2024 Emilia Romagna Grand Prix The 2024 Emilia Romagna Grand Prix at the Autodromo Internazionale Enzo e Dino Ferrari served as a critical benchmark for aerodynamic efficiency and tire management across the grid. Following the introduction of significant upgrade packages by McLaren and Aston Martin, the 63-lap contest provided empirical data on how recent regulatory adjustments interact with the Imola circuit's high-energy lateral loads. Max Verstappen secured victory for Red Bull Racing, but the performance delta between the RB20 and the McLaren MCL38 narrowed significantly compared to earlier rounds in Bahrain and Saudi Arabia. Qualifying established the initial strategic parameters. Verstappen claimed pole position with a 1:14.746, utilizing the C4 soft compound to maximize mechanical grip in the final sector. Lando Norris qualified P2, separated by 0.204s, while Charles Leclerc secured P3 for Ferrari. Track temperature stabilized at 42°C during the race start, creating a high thermal degradation environment for the P Zero C2 hard and C3 medium compounds selected by the majority of the field for the opening stint. At the start, traction control mapping played a decisive role in the first 200 meters. Verstappen's launch procedure minimized wheelspin off the line, preserving rear tire carcass temperature. Norris, running a slightly more aggressive clutch bite point, experienced momentary traction loss exiting the grid box, allowing Verstappen to maintain the lead into Turn 1. Telemetry indicates Verstappen achieved 85% throttle application by the apex of Tamburello, whereas Norris was limited to 78% to mitigate understeer induced by front wing stall. This initial deficit of 0.4s at the end of Lap 1 set the tone for the opening stint.

The first 20 laps highlighted distinct aerodynamic philosophies. Red Bull operated with a lower rear ride height to maximize diffuser expansion in Sector 2, specifically through the Arrabbiata complexes. This configuration reduced drag on the main straight but increased susceptibility to porpoising under heavy braking at Rivazza. Conversely, McLaren utilized a higher rake angle, sacrificing straight-line velocity for consistent downforce in high-speed corners. Norris closed the gap to within 1.2s by Lap 15, leveraging superior exit traction out of the Variante Alta chicane. However, tire degradation data suggests the McLaren's rear left tire experienced higher thermal cycling, with surface temperatures exceeding 110°C, compared to 105°C on the Red Bull. Strategic pivots occurred during the first pit window. Ferrari attempted an undercut on Lap 22, bringing Leclerc in for the C2 hard compound. The pit stop duration was 2.3s. Red Bull responded immediately on Lap 23, servicing Verstappen in 2.4s. McLaren delayed Norris's stop until Lap 27, opting for a longer first stint on the C3 medium to gain track position advantage via clean air. This strategy relied on the assumption that the C3 could sustain lap times within 0.5s of the C2 without excessive grainings. Data from Lap 25 shows Norris losing 0.8s per lap relative to Verstappen's fresh hard tires, indicating the medium compound had reached its performance cliff.

The race dynamics shifted fundamentally on Lap 53 following Logan Sargeant's incident at the Villeneuve chicane. The Williams FW46 suffered structural failure in the front suspension upon contact with the barriers, deploying the Safety Car. This period compressed the field, negating Verstappen's 2.5s lead and resetting the tire temperature windows for all competitors. The Safety Car duration lasted four laps, providing teams an opportunity to adjust brake duct cooling flaps. Red Bull opened the ducts by 15% to prevent brake overheating during the slow-speed procession, while McLaren kept ducts closed to maintain tire core temperature. Upon the restart on Lap 57, ERS deployment strategies diverged. Verstappen utilized Mode 3, deploying the full 4MJ per lap from the MGU-K to defend position into Turn 1. Norris, constrained by fuel flow limits nearing the 100kg/h threshold, could only deploy 3.2MJ per lap. This energy deficit prevented Norris from executing a slipstream attack on the main straight. The fuel load analysis indicates Verstappen crossed the finish line with 1.8kg of fuel remaining, whereas Norris retained 3.5kg, suggesting Red Bull managed the consumption rate more aggressively during the middle stint to maximize power unit output in the final phase. Technical bottlenecks were evident for Ferrari. Leclerc, running P3, reported significant front axle lock-up during the final ten laps. Post-race inspection suggests the brake bias was shifted too far rearward to stabilize the car under braking, compromising turn-in capability at Tosa. This forced Leclerc to reduce entry speeds by approximately 15km/h compared to his qualifying pace, allowing Sergio Perez to close within DRS range but preventing a successful overtake due to the aerodynamic wake turbulence generated by the Ferrari's sidepod inlet configuration.

Tire wear analysis post-race reveals the C2 hard compound suffered from blistering on the rear left for teams running high camber angles. Red Bull's camber setting of -3.2 degrees front and -1.8 degrees rear optimized the contact patch for Imola's lateral loads, minimizing blistering compared to Mercedes, who ran -3.5 degrees front. This technical choice contributed to George Russell's inability to challenge the podium positions, as his tire degradation rate was 12% higher over the final stint. The finish saw Verstappen cross the line 2.225s ahead of Norris. The gap remained stable over the final five laps, indicating that the RB20's race pace was sufficient to defend without engaging maximum risk overtaking defense maneuvers. Norris's fastest lap of 1:17.495 was set on Lap 59, compared to Verstappen's 1:17.102 on Lap 60, demonstrating a raw pace deficit of 0.4s even with similar fuel loads and tire ages. Championship implications are significant. Verstappen's victory extends his lead in the Drivers' standings to 31 points over Norris. In the Constructors' Championship, Red Bull maintains a 44-point lead over McLaren. However, the performance convergence suggests the midfield battle for P2 in the standings will intensify during the European leg of the season. Ferrari remains P3 in constructors, but the thermal management issues observed in Imola require rectification before the Monaco Grand Prix, where slow-speed corner traction is paramount.

From an engineering perspective, the race validated the efficacy of Red Bull's floor edge modifications introduced in Japan, which improved seal consistency under yaw conditions. McLaren's upgrade package delivered measurable downforce gains, estimated at 0.3s per lap in Sector 2, but the team must address rear tire thermal management to convert pace into victories. As the circus moves to Monte Carlo, the data from Imola indicates that tire preservation and ERS energy harvesting will remain the critical differentiators in closely matched chassis performance scenarios.