
Formula 1 is set for a record 23-race season in 2021 – pandemic permitting – as grands prix stretch from the Bahrain season opener on March 28 to the Abu Dhabi finale on December 12.
That means wall-to-wall racing through most of the spring, summer and autumn (with a short breather in August) which is great for TV viewers, but makes for a punishing schedule for the hard-working teams. Ex-F1 driver and top Sky F1 TV pundit Karun Chandhok will be at most of them and offers Autocar his expert view on each of the tracks, covering individual circuit characteristics, set-up tips, the best overtaking spots, the key corners to bank quick lap times and what we’ve called ‘The Talent Zone’ (in other words the hardest bits).
Paul Ricard | Red Bull Ring | Silverstone | Hungaroring | Spa-Francorchamps | Zandvoort | Monza | Sochi | Suzuka | Austin | Mexico | Interlagos | Melbourne | Jeddah | Yas Marina COMPLETED RACES Sakhir | Imola | Portimao | Catalunya | Monte-Carlo | Baku
7 Paul Ricard, French GP (Jun 27)
Character: Not the most exciting track layout. There’s talk about getting rid of the chicane on the back straight, which might help. There are several layouts at Paul Ricard and I’m not convinced they have chosen the best one for racing.
Set-up strategy: It’s a track that demands a very good front end because you have a lot of long-radius corners that tighten up. It puts a higher emphasis on front downforce than a lot of other circuits.
Best overtaking spot: Probably down the back straight.
Key corner for a quick lap: The double right-hander, De Beausset. There’s a lot of lap time to be lost there.
The Talent Zone: The whole final sector because the tyres will be struggling by that point.
Most wins: Michael Schumacher, 8 (1994, 1995, 1997, 1998, 2001, 2002, 2004, 2006). All at Magny-Cours
8/9 Red Bull Ring, Styrian Grand Prix/Austrian GP (Jun 27/Jul 4)
Character: Great for racing. We’ve seen some cracking races here. It’s a short layout, one of the shortest, so the time differences in qualifying are minute. There’s a lot of pressure on the drivers to get it right and it’s pretty unforgiving.
Set-up strategy: You need good braking and traction for the first half of the lap and a good front end for the second half. So you need a bit of everything.
Best overtaking spot: Into Turn 3 at the top of the hill.
Key corner for a quick lap: Probably Turn 1
The Talent Zone: The two left-handers in the middle sector are tricky, but I’d say the last two corners are the toughest.
Add your comment