
Hadjar secures best F1 result but faces penalties and pace mystery in Canada
Isack Hadjar achieved his best F1 result with P5 in Canada, but penalties for harsh defending against Leclerc and a yellow flag infringement marred his race. Hadjar was also left baffled by a mysterious loss of pace compared to Saturday.
Isack Hadjar secured his best Formula 1 result with fifth in Canada, but his race was marred by penalties and a mysterious pace deficit. A battle with Charles Leclerc earned a 10-second penalty for harsh defending, and a yellow flag infringement added a stop-and-go penalty—neither affected his final position.
Why it matters:
While P5 is a milestone for Hadjar, the weekend highlighted the steep learning curve for rookies balancing aggression with race craft. Leclerc salvaging fourth despite a compromised car underscores Ferrari's fluctuating form.
The details:
- Leclerc battle: Hadjar pushed Leclerc toward the grass on the back straight. He quickly apologized, calling the move unintentional and citing confusion over Leclerc's positioning.
- Mutual respect: Leclerc accepted the apology, noting the difficulty of judging closing speeds in modern F1 cars' mirrors. He agreed the penalty was deserved and shifted focus to his own struggles.
- Double penalties: Hadjar also received a stop-and-go penalty for failing to slow under yellow flags, though his P5 result remained intact.
- Pace mystery: Beyond penalties, Hadjar was puzzled by his car's performance. After feeling strong on Saturday, he struggled on Sunday despite zero tire degradation.
What's next:
Hadjar must uncover why his Saturday pace vanished. Leclerc will push Ferrari to resolve his chronic tire temperature issues to avoid another weekend of merely surviving.
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