Who has impressed the most in F1 2021? The drivers of the season so far

With 11 of 23 planned races of the 2021 season now complete, mahbx.com's F1 Digital Lewis Larkam considers which drivers have made the biggest impression at the mid-season mark. 
The podium (L to R): Lewis
The podium (L to R): Lewis
© FIA Pool Image for Editorial Use

Max Verstappen 

Max Verstappen has reached a new level in his ultra-✨close battle with Mercedes’ Lewౠis Hamilton for the 2021 F1 world title.

Aside from a track limits error that cost him victory in Bahrain and pole in Portimao, Verstappen has been superb and shown remarkable consistency. Across the Austrian doubl𝔍e-header, he was simply untouchable. 

Verstappen appears unfazed despite finding himself in an intense 🤡title fight for the first time in his career, while he has demonstrated how much he ꧟has matured since he made his F1 debut at 17. 

Were it not for a tyre failure in Baku, being wiped out in a c♏ollision at Silverstone and suffering significant damage to his car in Hungary, Verstappen would have taken a huge lead into the summer break. 

The 23-year-old has five wins and five poles from the opening 11 races and with a ൲competitive Red Bull underneath him, he will be looking to ensure momentum swings back in his favour whenಞ the season resumes. 

Max Verstappen (NLD), Red Bull Racing
Max Verstappen (NLD), Red Bull Racing
© xpbimages.com

Lewis Hamilton 

Like his main rival, Hamilton has also been excellent, turning in a number of stunning displays - including his fightback wins in Barcelona and Silverstone - that have ultimately moved ✅him into the lead of the world championship. 

Verstappen and a revitalised Red Bull have provided the biggest threat to Hamilton’s superiority at the top of F1 for some years, and the seven-time world champion has made some high-profi꧟le, uncharacteristic mistakes amid their raging battle. 

After dropping his car into the gravel at Imola, Hamilton was fortunate that a red flag enabled him to g🤡et back on the lead lap, while he threw away a big haul of points by blundering the Baku restart. The Briton was also off-form in Monaco, where Verstappen took full advantage❀. 

However, Hamilton has 🦄also𝓰 shown why he remains at the top of his game by overcoming Verstappen and Red Bull on days he had the slower car. 

Both Verstappen and Hamilton have been iꦬn a league of their own and the class of the field so 𓃲far in 2021. 

Race winner Lewis Hamilton (GBR) Mercedes AMG F1 W12 celebrates in parc ferme.
Race winner Lewis Hamilton (GBR) Mercedes AMG F1 W12 celebrates in parc ferme.
© xpbimages.com

Lando Norris 

2021 has been the coming o💙f age for McLaren’s rising supeꦚrstar Lando Norris. 

The young Briton has taken yet another step forward in his continued upward trajectory 𒅌and produced some exceptional performances across the opening 11 rounds of the season. 

There is a case for Norris being the most consistent driver of the year, and that is backed up by his staggering 10-race streak of points-scoring finishes, as well as his impressive ꧒qualifying displays. 

Podiums at Imola, Monaco and Austria have capped off an outstanding first half of the campaign that sees Norris sit third in the drivers’ championship, ahead of Mercedes’ 𒉰Valtteri Bottas and Red Bull’s Sergio Perez. 

Nor🃏ris has also flourished ⛄against his new teammate Daniel Ricciardo, comprehensively outclassing the seven-time grand prix winner so far.

Who has impressed the most in F1 2021? The drivers of the season so far

Charles Leclerc 

He may have been restricted to playing a𝓀 supporting role behind the Hamilton-Verstappen showdown for a recovering Ferrari, but Charles Leclerc has nevertheless been outstanding this season. 

Leclerc has lead Ferrari’s turnaround following its dire 2020 season with the Italian outfit launching itself to 🌺the🤡 front of F1’s tightly-packed midfield alongside McLaren this year. 

The 23-year-old Monegasque has continued to underline why Ferrari believes he can be the driver to deliver its elusive world title with his fantastic displays in 🔜qualifying and on race days. 

Leclerc was at his best as he excelled to back-to-back poles in Monaco and Baku, though realistically he did not have a car quick enough to challenge for victory on either occasion. A shock home win could𓆉 have been on the cards had damage discovered following his late shunt in qualifying not prevented him from taking the start. 

He starred again at Silverstone. Having capitalised on Verstappen and Hamilton’s first-lap collision, Leclerc remarkably led every lap of the✨ British GP despite encountering engine gremlins until three laps from the end, when a deserved victory was snatched away by tဣhe recovering Hamilton. 

Leclerc’s consistency has been reflected in his regular appearances inಞside the top six. The only time Leclerc has finished outside the points when he has completed a race came in ♌France as Ferrari suffered tyre woes, while he was also an unfortunate victim of the Turn 1 carnage in Hungary.

1st place Lewis Hamilton (GBR) Mercedes AMG F1 with Charles Leclerc (MON) Ferrari..
1st place Lewis Hamilton (GBR) Mercedes AMG F1 with Charles Leclerc (MON) Ferrari..
© xpbimages.com

Pierre Gasly 

Pierr𓂃e Gasly continues to do wonders at AlphaTauri. It was always going to be tricky to build on a stellar 2020 campaign that featured a maiden victory at Monza, but the Frenchman has had no trouble carrying hi▨s momentum into 2021. 

Regular starring displays in Q3 have set up Gasly to score points at all but three of t🐲he 11 races to have taken place. Silverstone marked the only round where he has failed to score on performance alone, with a mechanical failure and collision forcing him into retirement in Bahrain and the first Red Bull Ring race. 

A stunning drive to third place in Baku and fifth in a chaotic Hungarian GP have acted as the standout highlights of what is shaping into another brilliant season for Gasly, whose form has led to him being in the discussion for a seemingly unlikely return to 🍌Red Bull.

Gasly has flouღrished in the role of team leader alongside his fast but erratic rookie teammate Yuki Tsunoda. As a result, he has almost single-handedly carried AlphaTauri in the fight for fifth pla🌼ce in the constructors’ championship, notching up 50 of the team’s 68 points. 

Pierre Gasly (FRA) AlphaTauri AT02.
Pierre Gasly (FRA) AlphaTauri AT02.
© xpbimages.com

Carlos Sainz 

It has been an impressive start to life at Ferrari for Carlos Sainz ꧟after making the switch from McLaren over the winter. The Spaniard has arguably made the quickest and most convincing transition of the drivers who changed teams at the 🃏end of 2020.

Sainz has carried over the consistency that served him so well🌞 at McLaren into his first campaign w🙈ith Ferrari and already racked up two podium finishes in what has been a mighty opening 11 races.

Missing out on the top-10 on only two occasions this year means Sainz currently sits three points ahead of Leclerc in the championship, though his te♌ammate failed to start at Monaco and was taken out in the first-lap carnage in Hungary. Both events have slightly skewed the standings in Sainz’s favour.

Qualifying has been the one area that has let🧸 Sainz down, while he has not been error-free. Despite being unable to replicate Leclerc’s stunning turn of one-lap pace at times, Sain🍸z has made up for that deficit on Sundays more often than not.

If he🍷 can start stringing complete weekends together in the second half of the season, he will only contin🐓ue to strengthen Ferrari’s bid to beat McLaren to third place in the constructors’.

Notable mentions must also go out to Alpine’s Fernando Alonso, whose swashbuckling return has reminded F1 fans what they were missing during his absence from the sport. Hungarian GP winner Esteban Ocon has impressed alongside the two-time world champion, while George Russell has turned in a number of outstanding performances for Williams - especially on Saturdays. 

Who has impressed the most in F1 2021? The drivers of the season so far

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