Red Bull's Max Verstappen drives his Red Bull up the Eau Rouge corner in wet conditions during practice for the 2024 Belgian Grand PrixImage source, Getty Images
Image caption,

Red Bull’s Max Verstappen coming out of the Eau Rouge left-right flick in wet conditions during practice for the 2024 Belgian Grand Prix

Spa-Francorchamps, host of this weekend’s Belgian Grand Prix, established its reputation as an all-time classic circuit through the challenge it creates for drivers.

Whether in its original eight-mile guise, or the shortened 4.3-mile version used since 1983, it has a combination of flowing, high and medium-speed corners matched by very few circuits in the world. On the F1 calendar, only Suzuka in Japan is a realistic rival, albeit Monaco is exceptional in a different way.

The most famous corner is Eau Rouge, a high-speed left-right flick into and out of a compression that launches the cars uphill into a left over a crest – technically known as Raidillon.

In the dry, on empty tanks on a qualifying lap, Eau Rouge is now what is known as ‘easy flat’ – ie, the challenge has been reduced because the car is not on the limit of grip through there. Easy flat is a relative term, however. It remains a 200mph corner and a daunting challenge.

In the wet, however, it is as fearsome as ever.

Nowadays, the ‘big’ corner at Spa is Pouhon, the high-speed downhill double left-hander midway around the lap, which was taken flat-out in the best cars in the last few years but is unlikely to be so this year.

As much as anything, though, it’s the way a series of challenging, long corners flow together that makes Spa what it is – in the same way as Suzuka.

Former F1 driver Mark Webber used to say that a lap of Spa “felt like you were going somewhere”. In that sense, it is a throwback to the old road courses that used to predominate on the calendar.

These flowed around the contours of a landscape, and evolved organically, by joining up public roads. Just as Spa originally did, even though the parts that used to be public – including Eau Rouge and the following Kemmel Straight up to Les Combes – are now fully closed off.

The other aspect of tracks such as this is the jeopardy factor. Spa is still very dangerous, even in its modern form, as the deaths of Antoine Hubert in Formula 2 in 2019 and Dilano Van ‘t Hoff in Formula 4 in July 2023 proved. These risks are heightened in the wet – and it often rains in the Ardennes forests.

The drivers are very well aware of this, and it’s all part of the tapestry that makes Spa such an intense experience for them. It’s Max Verstappen’s favourite circuit, for example, but he says: “It is amazing to drive in the dry, and when you then have a wet qualifying, it’s pretty…. I wouldn’t say scary but it’s really interesting and quite extreme.”

As Mercedes boss Toto Wolff puts it, Spa is a reminder that F1 is “still a gladiators’ sport”.

Belgian Grand Prix

17-19 July

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With the war between Iran and the US resuming, what arrangements, if any, is the FIA planning ahead of a possible abandoning of the last races in the season in Qatar and Abu Dhabi? It would be such a shame to lose two further races of the 2026 season. – Roger

The war in the Middle East leaves a degree of uncertainty over the rest of the season beyond September, but F1 remains relatively relaxed about the two season-ending races in Qatar and Abu Dhabi.

The situation between the US/Israel and Iran is fluctuating from week to week. There was a ceasefire agreed a while ago, but right now there has been an escalation in tensions between the two sides.

The reality is that F1 has until late September or early October before it reaches a pinch point in terms of the departure of freight for the Middle East, so there is no need worry too much about it at the moment.

Time is more pressing for the hope of rescheduling Bahrain in the gap that currently exists between Azerbaijan on 24-26 September and Singapore on 9-11 October.

For that to happen, F1 needs to be comfortable by the end of July that the situation in the Middle East is calm enough for them to consider scheduling a race then.

At the moment, it has to be mentioned that does not look that likely.

What actually broke on Kimi Antonelli’s car at Silverstone and how did it happen? – Alan

Kimi Antonelli’s hopes of victory at the British Grand Prix unravelled when the front left wheel shield failed and then became lodged in the wheel.

A wheel shield is a piece of carbon that is used to shape and direct airflow around the wheel for cooling and aerodynamic purposes.

When the problem occurred, the Mercedes mechanics sent Antonelli out again after his first pit stop without fully solving the problem.

At the second they were able to remove it and send him on his way again with the wheel unencumbered, the steering issues he was suffering before that eradicated.

However, the car had lost what the team described as “a good chunk” of downforce, and therefore performance.

Immediately after the race, the team were not sure exactly why the failure happened, but have now established that it was largely due to the amount of kerb cars take at Silverstone and the speed the cars are going when they are doing so.

The failure was bad luck for Antonelli, as he was on course to catch and pass Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc for a likely victory without the failure.

However, as George Russell pointed out, the problem did effectively level out the reliability issues suffered by both Mercedes drivers so far this season.

So it makes the championship positions – Antonelli leading Russell by 25 points – a pretty fair reflection of their seasons so far.

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