Abu Dhabi F1 review: The last dance

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Abu Dhabi Grand Prix 2022. It was the last dance for F1 in 2022. Seb retires, Daniel Ricciardo’s final race with McLaren and possibly F1, and a few seat changes. Oscar Piastri joins McLaren, Logan Sargeant lands at Williams, replacing Nicholas Latifi, Fernando Alonso waves goodbye to Alpine, taking Seb’s old seat at Aston Martin, and Pierre Gasly moves to Alpine. 

Haas finally made its move, confirming that Nico Hulkenberg is replacing Mick Schumacher. There were many goodbyes. Some are sadder than others, but Vettel’s departure leaves the biggest hole. He is arguably one of the most liked drivers of all time and still cut from that old school cloth that, when compared to the corporate-friendly version of drivers today, one can appreciate what he brought to the sport. He will be sorely missed. 

All eyes would be on the battle for second place in the championship between Sergio Perez and Charles Leclerc. Verstappen’s betrayal of team Sergio Perez in Brazil still carried a sour taste leading up to the last round. He clarified his reasons, even though we don’t know them. And even with the Dutchman’s face-saving comments about wanting to help if given a chance in the final round, it would only be lip service to many. Verstappen proved once more that he was going for the win. 

That sort of championship mentality is a difficult pill for many to swallow. Qualifying saw business as usual returning after Brazil’s shock pole from Haas. Verstappen secured pole position with Sergio Perez in second, and dare I point out that there was a consequential tow provided by Verstappen, which benefited Perez. Charles Leclerc took third, 0.268 seconds behind. The race was set to be the thrilling end to the season we so deserved.

Lights out, and Max Verstappen checked out from the start shooting off into the distance, clearly setting his intentions. Lap-one drama was not in short supply as Hamilton had a carbon copy of last year’s incident with Verstappen on Carlos Sainz after Sainz made the pass, forcing Hamilton off and reclaiming the position and not handing it back to the Spaniard. Lewis was then asked to give the place back, which he did. How genuine… Only then to take it back, this time fair and square. Classic, Lewis. The two would battle it out for the next few laps. Perhaps a glimpse into what we can expect next year? 

Down the field, we had retiree Sebastian Vettel fighting it out with Esteban Ocon. The Frenchman was not willing to give any farewell gifts in this exchange. Alonso was also on the receiving end of more bad luck needing to retire the Alpine on lap 28 thanks to a mechanical failure, his sixth for the year. It may well be the final affirmation that leaving the team may have been the best thing he’s done. Speaking of bad luck, Mick Schumacher did his ambitions little favour when he lunged into a gap that never existed between him and Nicholas Latifi on lap 39.

Lewis Hamilton, another retiree though for different reasons, suffered from hydraulic issues and needed to park the Mercedes on Lap 55. A first for Mercedes, who showed such good reliability all season long and not quite how you’d like to end the season, but that’s motorsport for you.

Despite Red Bull’s dominance throughout the year, for a change, their strategy was outdone by Ferrari and Charles Leclerc would finish in second, securing second place in the championship battle and, with that, denying Red Bull of a first and second in the championship. A historical first that was not to be. Perez had too much to do with too little time. Better luck next time. With that P2, Charles Leclerc secured P2 in the constructor’s championship battle for Ferrari. Valuable prize money is coming Maranello’s way to help its 2023 championship efforts under the new Concorde Agreement

It is critical to understand that despite earning extra, all teams will still be subject to the limitations of the cost cap on spending when it comes to performance. Rounding-off the final points scoring were Daniel Ricciardo and Sebastian Vettel. A fitting farewell to both.

With 15 victories in one season for Max Verstappen comes a 15-week break before any wheels are rolled in anger and before we reconvene and check in for pre-season testing at Sakhir, Bahrain, on 23 February. It has been an enjoyable first season of the rule changes from 2021 with the initial pace of Ferrari, the shake-up in the mid-field pack and more dicing than we’ve seen before. 2023 has been set up to be every bit the spectacle.

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