F1 Q&A: Your 2024 season questions answered

Formula 1
Max Verstappen and his Red Bull team celebrate his third world titleGetty Images

The 2024 Formula 1 season starts in Bahrain this weekend – but what are the big talking points ahead of the new campaign?

BBC Sport’s chief F1 writer Andrew Benson answers your questions about what we can expect this year.

What is the point of watching this season if the winner of pretty much everything is already known?

Andrew: It’s easy to feel that way, especially after last season. But sometimes sport is like this. Fortunately, it is also unpredictable. That’s part of its beauty.

Yes, Max Verstappen and Red Bull look strong favourites and everyone believes they have the fastest car. But it’s the fastest car now.

Within Red Bull, there is a feeling that they will reach a plateau with development this season, where gains are harder to find. In theory, that should happen to them before it happens to other teams.

So there’s still hope they could be caught in what is after all the longest season ever. Whether that happens soon enough to affect the championship is a different question.

As Lando Norris has said: “Are they beatable? You have to say yes, because we were very close at certain times (last year) and at certain times we did. But the question is, are they beatable over a season? I think that will be very difficult.”

If Verstappen does win the title again, who is going to push him closest?

Andrew: If the Red Bull is as good as it looks, and it keeps that advantage all season, no-one will be pushing him.

His team-mate, Sergio Perez, doesn’t have Verstappen’s quality, and as yet it appears those who could rival him – Lewis Hamilton, Charles Leclerc, Fernando Alonso, George Russell, Norris – don’t have fast enough cars.

If the questioner is asking who will be the closest team to Red Bull, right now that looks like a toss up between Ferrari and Mercedes, with Aston Martin next in line.

But remember the huge progress McLaren made last year. They believe they can keep up that trajectory. If so, they, too, will be in the mix at the front.

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Who has impressed you the most in testing and why?

Andrew: The Red Bull looks awesome in every possible way – speed, design, aesthetics. That man Adrian Newey looks to have done it again.

But the Ferrari has shown strong pace, Mercedes have clearly made progress and are at the beginning of what should be a steep development curve with a new car, and the Aston Martin looks pliable and predictable.

And some think the RB, which contains many Red Bull parts, is a dark horse.

Drivers Daniel Ricciardo and Yuki Tsunoda have been playing down talk of a big step, but if they make one, the politics will get interesting – McLaren have been making concerned noises about the close ties between the two Red Bull teams for some time.

Ferrari's Carlos Sainz drives the SF-24 on track in Bahrain during pre-season testing

EPA

Will the longer season have any impact on who takes the title? Can anything make it closer?

Andrew: If it’s a season of dominance, the longer championship does at least push back the date by which the title can be won, just by fundamental mathematics. Whether that’s important in those circumstances is another matter.

The hope has to be that one or more of Ferrari, Mercedes, McLaren and Aston Martin can make the sort of big development step McLaren made last year and bridge the gap.

If they can, the start in Las Vegas last year, when he pulled a dubious move that forced Charles Leclerc off the track, proved Verstappen is still prone to going over the edge under pressure, just as he did in 2021 against Lewis Hamilton. Then it could get interesting.

Which races are you most looking forward to this year and why?

Andrew: All Grands Prix are special – and all individual races have value. This is another reason why just because one man might run away with the championship, it’s still worth watching.

Remember Alonso’s fantastic drives in Bahrain, Monaco, Zandvoort and Brazil last year, for example, or Leclerc’s in Las Vegas. Or the four-way battle for the win in Singapore.

But some F1 events are more special than others. As a whole package, my personal favourites are Australia, Japan, Singapore and Austin. Each very different, but all just that bit extra special.

And of course Monaco, Spa and Monza are all uniquely atmospheric, and the racing at Silverstone can’t be beaten. That track layout has some kind of special magic about it.

A fan poses with a hat made of mini driver helmets at the Japanese Grand Prix in Suzuka

Getty Images

Do we expect to see much change in the cars between testing and the start of the season?

Andrew: It’s very common for teams to bring new parts between testing and the first race – and there is already talk of a big step from Red Bull somewhere around race four to six.

No one outside Red Bull is happy about what they are doing at the moment, and the other top teams will be desperate to knock them off their perch. So the development war will be as intense as ever.

Since all the changes, why do they retain the Drag Reduction System (DRS)? Surely the reason it was brought in has gone away?

Andrew: This delves into a very interesting, much wider question, which essentially is, have the rules introduced in 2022 worked?

When they were being created, originators Ross Brawn and Pat Symonds hoped that they would improve racing to such an extent that the DRS overtaking aid would no longer be needed.

That has proved not to be the case. Because while it’s easier to follow in this new generation of cars, they also produce less drag, and therefore less slipstream, so it’s not necessarily any easier to overtake. So DRS is still needed.

Plus, the tyres still overheat when pushed hard, even though Pirelli keep being asked to stop that happening. The tyre supplier either won’t or can’t do anything to stop that, which will always be a problem for overtaking.

But the new rules were also intended to make the racing closer and prevent domination. Paradoxically, while the field spread last year was one of the smallest ever, it was also the sport’s most dominant season by a team.

It could be argued that the new rules, far from improving F1, have made it worse, at least at the front. I suspect this will become more of a discussion point this year – especially as these rules form the basis of the new ones being introduced in 2026 and which are still being worked on.

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