Poll: Azerbaijan Grand Prix 2019, Baku - Race 4/21

Rate the 2019 Azerbaijan Grand Prix out of ten


  • Total voters
    98
  • Poll closed .
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Baku

When was the track built?
It wasn’t – Baku is the newest street circuit on the Formula 1 calendar, joining the ranks of Monaco, Melbourne and Singapore.
When was its first Grand Prix?
The first Grand Prix in Baku was held in 2016, as the European Grand Prix. That was followed by the inaugural Azerbaijan Grand Prix in 2017, which witnessed one of the biggest upsets of the season, with Daniel Ricciardo winning out from Valtteri Bottas and the Williams of Lance Stroll, while Lewis Hamilton and Sebastian Vettel engaged in some argy-bargy behind the Safety Car.
What’s the circuit like?
A mixture of wide and open and tight and twisty. The lonnnnng main straight along the Baku shoreline is a slipstreaming mecca, and with cars able to run three abreast into Turn 1, the action often looks more IndyCar than F1. However from there, the track loops around into the city’s narrow, winding Icheri Sheher old town, dramatically wending past Baku’s medieval city walls. As in Monaco, slightest mistakes are punished quickly and severely, while set-up wise, the teams are forced to choose between downforce for the twisty bits and less drag for the straight.
Why go?
As with all city tracks, spectating at the Azerbaijan Grand Prix means that you’re right in the middle of the action when the cars get put back in their boxes. Baku itself is a buzzing city, while food is a key part of Azerbaijan’s culture, incorporating elements of Turkish and Middle Eastern cuisine – so eat up!
Where is the best place to watch?
The principal Absheron grandstand at the end of the main straight should be high up on your viewing wish-list, as you’ll be watching the cars braking from around 350km/h into the 90-degree Turn 1 – and you’ll likely get to watch the lion’s share of overtaking too. Elsewhere, the Icheri Sheher grandstand provides a unique vantage point, as you watch the cars wriggle through the city gate section and power on down to the super-fast Turn 13-15 complex.

TV Times
Sky:
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C4:
Saturday - 6.30pm Qualifying Highlights
Sunday - 7pm Race Highlights

Track Diagram & Information
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Weather Forecast
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2018 Race Highlights
https://www.formula1.com/en/video/2018/4/HIGHLIGHTS__2018_Azerbaijan_Grand_Prix.html

WDC Standings
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Constructors' Championship Standings
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Practice 1
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Practice 2
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Practice 3
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Qualifying
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Race
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Last edited:
Thanks @Shimmy ! Baku has been throwing up some really interesting races lately, so let's hope for another one this year.

It goes without saying that this is another season defining race for Ferrari. At least Vettel has acknowledged that he made a huge, huge mistake for the first three races this year, and has now shaved off his moustache :D
 
Thanks @Shimmy ! Baku has been throwing up some really interesting races lately, so let's hope for another one this year.

It goes without saying that this is another season defining race for Ferrari. At least Vettel has acknowledged that he made a huge, huge mistake for the first three races this year, and has now shaved off his moustache :D

Ha ha has he, thank **** that moustache looked hellish.
Yeh hopefully be a good race, the last couple here were epic.
Surely with that long straight Ferrari wont fall back again even if they start on 2nd row.
 
Baku has delivered some great races since it got added. I’d much rather watch that than Monaco, China, Valencia, Paul Ricard or even Melbourne.

In fact, I really don’t care where they build tracks providing the circuit is decent and the races deliver some excitement.

I think a large part of the trouble for some of the older tracks is that teams know them inside out. Barcelona for instance... every team does thousands of kilometres of testing there pre season and we expect an unpredictable race there come the new season lolwut.

I’m not quite at the Bernie sprinkler level but any tracks that can give us a good race is only a good thing. Oh and no testing on a track scheduled to be used in a season....
 
Hoping for a good race and this one usually delivers.

Mercedes have been spouting their usual 'We are fearful of Ferrari's pace this weekend'.

Can Vettel succeed without team orders?

Can Bottas show some pace again?
 
Didn't this happen a few years ago at Baku? How were they not welded down and if they were then clearly a rubbish job. I imagine FP1 will be cancelled as they're doing track repairs.
 
Russell's floor is absolutely wrecked after that! RIP FP1..

This is what happens when politics drive the sport, and not common sense and solid engineering/technical solutions.
The government of Azerbaijan should be fined and their right to organise the event cancelled all together.

Politicians would kill the world.
 
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