Much of the build-up to the Spanish Grand Prix focussed on the notion that, after a sequence of outliers, a visit to the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya represented a return to a ‘normal’ sort of track. If so, it’s an odd sort of ‘normal’. Recent tweaks have made it one of the fastest circuits on the calendar, overtaking can be difficult, and tyre performance here doesn’t really follow the established pattern.
What it means is that we have a strategic race where anything goes: multiple stops, wide pit windows and, if qualifying is to be trusted, the closest field we’ve seen in years. Buckle-up, this one’s going to be exciting…
Next Up
Related Articles
The next steps for Aston Martin after progress in Miami
UnlockedThe transformative upgrades behind Red Bull's turnaround
What we learned about the pecking order after Miami
Who has gained and lost the most places at race starts?
UnlockedTREMAYNE: Miami proved Colapinto has rediscovered his mojo
UnlockedWho holds the key to the 2026 driver market?

