How Sergio Perez passed the Red Bull F1 test those before him failed 

Before the 2021 Formula 1 season began, Sergio Perez suggested he would need five races to get fully up to speed at Red Bull. In his sixth race with the team, he won. 
How Perez passed the Red Bull F1 test those before him failed

It has not been a straightforward transition at Red Bull for the Mexican, who was announced as Max 🦄Verstappen’s teammatᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚ⁤⁤⁤⁤ᩚ⁤⁤⁤⁤ᩚ⁤⁤⁤⁤ᩚ𒀱ᩚᩚᩚe late last year having been unceremoniously dropped by Racing Point despite taking the team’s first-ever F1 victory. 

Drivers swapping teams over th𒅌e winter have faced a significant challenge to get up to speed, with a brief winter break followed by F1’s shortest-ever winter test, comprising ju𒅌st three days. 

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Arriving into Red Bull as a race-winner with 10 years’ worth of F1 experience🍬, Perez had huge expectations on his shoulders to help strengthen the team’s quest to end Mercedes' long-running supremacy this year. 

There have been flashes of promise early on, with Perez outpacing Verstappen on his way to sealing second place in qualifying at Imola, only 𓃲for a mistake-riꩵdden race to let him down. 

Heading into the Azerbaijan Grand Prix weekend, Perez was yet to find himself in the picture for a podium, largely due to his struggles to get to grips with the RB16𒀰B over one lap in qualifying - a similar problem that the likes of Alex Albon and Pierre Gasly before him also experienced. 

Perez’s early struggles meant Mercedes enjoyed a strategic advantage over Red Bull in the open♈ing rounds of the season, with team principal Christian Horner admitting after the Spanish Grand Prix - in which Pere♑z finished a distant P5 - it “desperately” needs him to be mixing it up at the front if it is to successfully take the fight to Mercedes. 

After a stronger weekend in Monaco, Perez looked to be on course for a qualifying breakthrough in Baku having been competitive throughout practice, but he was ♏left to rue an error in Q3 that left him only sixth on the grid while Verstappen took third. 

How Perez passed the Red Bull F1 test those before him failed

But Perez demonstra🐠ted exceptional race pace to put himself in contention on Sunday as he superbly fend൲ed off Lewis Hamilton in the battle for second place as Red Bull sat on the verge of achieving its first 1-2 finish since 2016. 

Had it not been for Verstappen’s dr🐈amatic tyre failur𒆙e five laps from the end, that’s exactly what would have happened.  

Perez ult🎉imately kept his composure as Hamilton uncharacteristically lost his at the late restart t⭕o come out on top in a two-lap sprint to finish and seal his maiden win for Red Bull. 

While Perez was handed a slice of good luck en route to victory due to the misfortune of his teammate, he had crucially ensured 🍃he was in the right place at the right time to capitalise. Such w🌱as his speed that without a slow pit stop he might have even threatened over-cutting Verstappen. 

Thanks to Perez’s renowned race pace - something which 🌟persuaded Red Bull to gamble on him in the first place - the team found itself with the strategic high ground over Me🍸rcedes for the first time this year with an off-the-pace Valtteri Bottas out of contention.

In doing so, Perez emphatically answered Horner’s rallying cry in Barcelona and achieved som♈ething the likes of Albon and Gasly before him failed to do by ending a three-year-long streak of Verstappen-only victor🌠ies at Red Bull. 

How Perez passed the Red Bull F1 test those before him failed

“We knew he was good around here but we didn’t know he was that good,” said Horner. “He’s been quick all weekend. He’s𓂃 been bang on the pace and the only mistake he made was in Q3 run one. 

“His race pace was phenomenal. Had he not been longer in the first stop, he would have been right on top of Max🌌 with the overcut, such was his pace in clean air. So phenomenaℱl for him. 

“The way he was defending from Lewis [Hamilton] and controlling that was a class act༒. To see him get that victory will be great for his confidence. It puts him up to third in the drivers’ championship now. So I think he’s ahead of expectations.”

Perez’s Baku performance will act as a huge confidence boost and mot🍨ivation for a Red Bull team already riding the crest of a wave ౠoff the back of two successive victories. 

The result, coupled with a disastrous couple of weekends for Mercedes, has exte🌱nded Red Bull’s advantage overꦕ Mercedes in the constructors’ championship to 26 points, while Perez has moved himself up to third in the drivers’ standings. 

Perez’s upturn in form has coincided with a difficult spell for Bottas,𒐪 who retired from second place in Monaco due to a botched pit stop and was nowhere all weekend in Baku as he slumped to a woeful 12th-placed finish. 

The Finn has slipped to sixth in the championship and it is his lack of consistent performances so far this season, along with a rare error from Hamilton in Baku, that have played a role in Mercedes losing the lead of both world championships for the fir♔st time in the hybrid era.&nbꦡsp;

The fact that Perez said he believes he “finally understands” Red Bull’s 2021 car in Baku will be music to the team’s ears as ♋F1 heads into the first triple-header of the season and a crucial phase in the title race. 

How Perez passed the Red Bull F1 test those before him failed

“I found my adaptation꧑ harder than expected but we have been working extremely hard since day one with 🌠the engineers back at the factory and finally we got a very good result for the team,” he explained. 

“We have been showing flashes of speed here and there. But I think this weekend everything was looking great▨ until Q3 run one when we got it wrong. But we didn’t let ourselves [get] down. We looked forward and we had a tremendous race, so I’m extremely pleased with the result today. 

“This definitely gives a big boost of confidence to m♓yself and also to my team, to my side of the garage.”

If he can replicate his Baku showing in the intense forthcoming run of European rounds, Perez will h⛄elp Red Bull really apply the pressure to a Mercedes team hurting badly following a pair of performances that Toto Wolff lambasted as “unacceptable”.

“It certainly feels that I’ve made good♒ progress, not just this we🥀ekend, also in Monaco,” Perez added. 

“Every weekend the understanding grows♈ and after each weekend we d🌌o a very deep analysis, we do a lot of work back in the factory to try to figure out what we can do better as a team. 

“𓄧Certainly I think we are getting there, we are improving and I see no reason why going to a different track we cannot 🐼be able to have a similar kind of performance. 

“It’s only race number s🔜ix of the season, t💧here’s still plenty to go but it’s important to keep this momentum and to keep improving, race after race.”

While a case can be made for Perez enjoying the luxury of more competitive machinery compared to either Albon or Gasly, he has taken half the timeও to make an impression and deliver the kind of results Red Bull has been seeking ever since Daniel Ricciardo left at thꦍe end of 2018.

It is also true that Perez is something of a🍷 Baku specialist and his impressive performance last weekend could have been flattered slightly by it being one of his stronger tracks. Nonetheless, Perez finally demonstrated that he can be a thorn in Mercedes’ side.

If Perez can continue to be a mena♐ce to Mercedes, keeping him for 2022 will be a no-brainer for Red Bull.

How Perez passed the Red Bull F1 test those before him failed

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