The 2019 FIA Formula One World Championship was the motor racing championship for Formula One cars which marked the 70th running of the Formula One World Championship.It is recognised by the governing body of international motorsport, the Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile (FIA), as the highest class of competition for open-wheel racing cars. After Räikkönen's car was cleared and the session resumed, two of the remaining nine drivers had still not set a time; When he got to turn 1, Hülkenberg missed the turn and instead navigated through the run-off slip road past Turn 1. RACE HIGHLIGHTS: 2019 Brazilian Grand Prix Carlos Sainz celebrates first F1 podium with McLaren team Red Bull's team principal Hülkenberg, Sainz, and Stroll were called in by the race stewards to be investigated for "driving unnecessarily slowly" on their Q3 out laps. The drivers and teams entered were the same as those for the previous race with no additional stand-in drivers for the race or practice.The first practice session was affected by rain and saw The second practice session was dry for the first hour before it started raining and the session once again saw Leclerc set the fastest time but this time it was The first 18 minute qualifying session, Q1, was temporarily red-flagged with 4:34 remaining, when Q3, only 12 minutes long, was red-flagged at 6:35 left when Räikkönen lost control of his car and spun out wide into the tyre barriers at turn 11. That was set in Formula 1’s fourth-ever race at the PADDOCK PASS: All the reaction from the drivers after the Spanish Grand PrixVettel relieved to get lapped as race leaders help him convert a one-stop strategy into P7Verstappen ‘happy’ to split Mercedes drivers as he explains angry team radio messagesThe inner steel behind Ricciardo’s smile – and why McLaren wanted itRisky strategy calls ‘part of our DNA’ says Red Bull boss Horner© 2003-2020 Formula One World Championship Limited

The 2019 Brazilian Grand Prix witnessed a new record in F1 history, as Max Verstappen, Pierre Gasly and Carlos Sainz combined to create the youngest-ever podium. Raikkonen’s record average speed of 263.587kph, which he set when he took pole position at Monza 12 months ago, could have been beaten in today’s qualifying session.
Vettel, Kvyat and an angry Raikkonen star in the best of team radio from SpainThe Winners and Losers of the 2020 Spanish Grand PrixThe Ross Brawn column: It’s tough to watch Vettel and Ferrari going through the pain of divorceBeing stuck behind one-stoppers cost us seventh in Spain, says GaslyVettel and Binotto insist heated radio messages not evidence of tension between driver and teamThat beats the previous record, set when Sebastian Vettel enjoyed his breakthrough victory for Toro Rosso at the The 2008 record would have remained intact had the stewards not ruled in the Brazilian Grand Prix’s aftermath that The 2019 world champion’s subsequent five-second time penalty was enough to drop the 34-year-old from P3 to P7, allowing the 25-year-old Sainz to lower the average age of the rostrum to the requisite record-breaking level – even if Sainz was forced to mark his first F1 podium in his own mini celebration, with Hamilton having sprayed the champagne for finishing third before being penalised.Meanwhile, the 2019 season has also witnessed what’s now the third-youngest podium in F1, when Verstappen won from Charles Leclerc and Valtteri Bottas at the And F1’s oldest podium? The Lap Record for a particular circuit is the fastest time ever recorded in a Formula One … Monza is a racing venue in Italy with 318 lap times.This page represents the 5.8 kilometer (3.6 mile) configuration of this track.. Monza is a fast track, with overall average speed of 156 kph (97 mph). A battling performance from Charles Leclerc saw the Monegasque claim his second win in as many weekends, taking a brilliant Italian Grand Prix victory for Ferrari, the Scuderia’s first at Monza since 2010, as he saw off a late-race push from Mercedes’ Valtteri Bottas. 7th September 2019, 23:55 | Written by Keith Collantine The all-time record for the fastest lap of a circuit in a Formula 1 car was set by Kimi Raikkonen at the Italian Grand Prix last year.

WATCH: Say What? This action led to him being accused of deliberately taking the run-off in an effort to let other drivers past.There was strong criticism of what had happened in the final minutes of Q3.