F1 Canadian Grand Prix: TV, Time, Results

18 Jun 2023
Credit...Timothy A. Clary/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Not So Fast: Penalties Shuffle Grid at Canadian Grand Prix

F1 qualifying - Figure 1
Photo The New York Times

A surprise second place for Nico Hulkenberg in qualifying disappeared with a three-place penalty. Max Verstappen? He’s on pole again.

June 18, 2023Updated 10:11 a.m. ET

It was fun while it lasted for Nico Hulkenberg. On Saturday afternoon, Hulkenberg was beaming after a surprise second-place finish in qualifying for the Canadian Grand Prix on Sunday.

Hulkenberg’s team, Haas, doesn’t get a lot of days like that. So Hulkenberg could not stop smiling and waving, as he stood next to Max Verstappen and Fernando Alonso in an improbable top three.

Alas, his joy was short-lived. Hours later, race stewards penalized Hulkenberg for speeding during a red flag in one of the qualifying sessions. His second place was now fifth on the grid, and the front row suddenly looked a lot more familiar: Verstappen on pole for Red Bull, with Alonso, in an Aston Martin, right next to him.

How to Watch

Time: The Canadian Grand Prix starts at 2 p.m. Eastern time. (Global start times are here.)

TV: The race will air on ABC in the United States. Streaming is available on ESPN+. Prerace coverage starts at 12:30 p.m. Not in the United States? A full list of Formula 1 broadcasters, wherever you are, can be found here.

Sunday’s Starting Grid

Verstappen is on pole position — try to act surprised — and Hulkenberg’s penalty bumped Alonso up to second, one week after he vowed that he would not finish off the podium again this season.

Lewis Hamilton and George Russell will start third and fourth, which should be heartening for Mercedes after both finished on the podium last time out. But Ferrari’s struggles continued. Carlos Sainz fell out of the top 10 after he was handed a three-place penalty for impeding Pierre Gasly in qualifying, and Charles Leclerc blew up at the team after he believed it had botched a change of tires. “We need to improve now,” Leclerc fumed.

F1 qualifying - Figure 2
Photo The New York Times

Race Week in Photos

Image

Credit...Jared C. Tilton/Getty Images

Image

Ferrari preparing some automotive rhinoplasty.Credit...Paul Chiasson/The Canadian Press, via Associated Press

Image

Trust, Formula 1 style, in the Red Bull pit.Credit...Dan Mullan/Getty Images

Image

George Russell, and everyone else, got to roll out the wet tires for a change. Credit...Clive Mason/Getty Images

Image

Credit...Alex Bierens De Haan/Getty Images

Image

Fernando Alonso called his team owner’s prediction that Aston Martin could put both of its cars on the podium Sunday an “aggressive target.”Credit...Rudy Carezzevoli/Getty Images
Sunday’s Story Lines

Momentum: Red Bull has won all seven races this season — and 17 of the past 18 overall. There is no reason to think that such dominance will take the day off on Sunday, and especially not with a chance to earn the team’s 100th Formula 1 victory.

Upgrades: Lewis Hamilton likes the feel of what he is seeing from the Mercedes technicians. (Interesting.) Leclerc implied that his Ferrari team was still groping around in the dark, unable to figure out what’s wrong. (Not good.) Still, if some of these teams don’t start getting faster with their upgrades soon, Verstappen and Red Bull could have new trophies in their garage before you’ve finished your summer vacation.

Weather: Heavy rain in Saturday’s sessions made it hard for drivers to see and hold the track and may have played a role in several penalties. The weather is expected to be marginally better on Sunday — cloudy, not rainy — but if there is even a hint of showers, tire choice will be critical.

What They’re Saying

“The ending of the day is not quite as good as it was earlier. That’s obviously a pity, and it’s a shame not to be staring on the front row. We have to face the consequences with that.” — Hulkenberg, who drove his Haas into second (briefly) before a penalty dropped him down the grid.

“Those are exactly the plans: Get two cars on the podium. I’m extremely confident.” — Lawrence Stroll, the Aston Martin team owner (and a proud Canadian), predicting a big weekend in Montreal. Alonso has positioned himself to deliver on that boast; Stroll’s son, Lance, has not. He will start 16th.

“The whole team has this new energy and kind of feels like we’ve got a North Star. We know where we’re going; we know how to get there.” — Hamilton, who was loving the Mercedes upgrades entering the weekend.

“I basically want a restart, to go again.” — Sergio Pérez of Red Bull, whose disappointing performances in his past two races have made his two early-season victories a distant memory. His 12th-place finish in qualifying on Saturday won’t help turn things around.

“He needs to stop thinking about the championship and just drive.” — Red Bull’s team principal, Christian Horner, after hearing Pérez’s comments — and before his latest dismal qualifying effort.

Last Time Out

Verstappen led from wire to wire at the Spanish Grand Prix two weeks ago, winning by 24 seconds.

Drivers’ Championship Standings

With his fifth win in seven races — he was second in the other two — Verstappen widened his points lead to 53 over his teammate, Pérez.

Andrew Das joined The Times in 2006. An assistant editor in Sports, he helps direct coverage of soccer, the Olympics and international sports. @AndrewDasNYT

Josh Katz is a graphics editor for The Upshot, where he covers a range of topics involving politics, policy and culture. He is the author of “Speaking American: How Y’all, Youse, and You Guys Talk,” a visual exploration of American regional dialects. @jshkatz

Read more
Similar news
This week's most popular news