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Japanese GP Driver Ratings

Japanese GP Driver Ratings

P1 with Matt and Tommy Mar 31, 2026 45 min
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About this episode

Matt and Tommy hand out driver ratings from a Japanese GP sprint-weekend-style race, debating who got the best of strategy, safety cars, and execution. Sergio Perez earns a 7 for a strong recovery to 17th, while Valtteri Bottas gets slammed (4–5 range) for an underwhelming hard-tyre strategy. Pierre Gasly dominates with a rare 10, and Esteban Ocon also scores high (9) for maximizing a compromised race. Kimi Antonelli and Oscar Piastri take top marks (9–10), with safety-car timing shaping outcomes. Audi and Williams struggle, and Max Verstappen’s “best of the rest” 7 sparks talk about motivation and battery issues.

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Technical Too Afraid to Ask
Brand

Aston Martins

"However, at the end of the day, [67.7s] you can only compare him to his teammate and probably the Aston Martins, and he put 30 seconds [73.5s] on Alonzo and 45 seconds on Bota. So I think it's a very, very strong drive indeed, [77.9s] good qualifying as well."

Aston Martin is a Formula 1 constructor/team, and “Aston Martins” refers to the cars driven by its drivers. When a host compares a driver to “the Aston Martins,” they’re benchmarking performance against that team’s typical pace and results.

Concept

teammate comparison

"However, at the end of the day, [67.7s] you can only compare him to his teammate and probably the Aston Martins, and he put 30 seconds [73.5s] on Alonzo and 45 seconds on Bota. So I think it's a very, very strong drive indeed, [77.9s] good qualifying as well. And the two Cadillac teammates have been very, very close all year. [84.6s] But on this one, Perez... I'm enjoying it all year, as if we've had half a season. [95.3s] qualifying and everything else. But, yeah, Perez drove a great race, but could not be rewarded for any more than 17th for his great drive. I have given Sergio Perez a 7 out of 10 as well. [107.6s] Don't sound so surprised when you said 7 out of 10, Tommy, because I'm in complete agreement with you."

In F1 ratings, comparing a driver to their teammate is a common way to judge performance because both cars share similar development direction and race-day constraints. If one driver consistently outperforms the teammate, it often suggests better racecraft, setup feedback, or execution.

Concept

qualified 20th, finished 19th

"The fans gave Perez [142.0s] a 6 out of 10. Valtteri Bottas, qualified 20th, finished 19th. My grade for Valtteri Bottas is [152.1s] going to be a whopping 5 out of 10. Very underwhelming for Valtteri Bottas this weekend. As underwhelming"

This is another qualifying-vs-race comparison: starting 20th and finishing 19th suggests only a small net gain. In F1 analysis, that kind of result often leads to discussion about race pace, overtaking opportunities, and whether strategy worked as expected.

Term

safety card to neutralise things

"on the different strategy at the start, but then there was a safety card to neutralise things, but then still fell back quite a large amount."

A “safety car” (the transcript says “safety card”) is deployed when there’s danger on track, and it neutralizes the race by reducing speed and bunching cars up. This can dramatically change strategy because it effectively pauses time and can make pit stops more efficient.

Term

faint to the left

"Of course, some would argue he helped cause that safety car with a slight faint to the left. I've seen a lot of people. Someone argue."

A “faint” is a quick fake move to one side. People are debating whether it was normal driving or whether it contributed to the incident that brought out the safety car.

Term

penalty

"well, because he didn't get a penalty or anything, did he? They decided not, which I think is very interesting."

A “penalty” in F1 is an official sanction for rule-breaking, such as causing a collision, unsafe driving, or failing to follow race control instructions. Whether a penalty is applied can heavily influence how fans and analysts judge a driver’s actions.

Concept

qualifying

"a long way off his teammate, particularly in qualifying, but without pitting early, it might have been a better race for him."

Qualifying is like a timed practice that decides where everyone starts the race. If you qualify well, you usually have an easier path to a good finish.

Concept

DRS

"We've seen some questionable moves before with DRS and things, but it is in the driver's nature to want to try and stop someone overtaking them."

DRS is a system in F1 that helps cars go faster in a straight line to make passing easier. It’s not always available—there are rules about when you can use it.

Concept

best of the rest

"Couldn't have done any more brilliant qualifying, maximised, you know, best of the rest in both sessions."

“Best of the rest” is a common F1 phrase for the fastest driver/team outside the top group. In this context, it suggests Gasly maximized his results relative to the midfield rather than directly challenging the very front.

Concept

F2 car

"...after the pain that he's endured for the last year in particular driving what is essentially an F2 car."

F2 is a lower series that feeds into F1. Saying someone was driving “like an F2 car” means their car wasn’t as strong as the best F1 cars, so it’s harder to get great results.

Concept

midfield

"So after that, you know, they're in a tight midfield and not really able to do much."

“Midfield” describes the group of cars running in the middle of the pack, where drivers often fight for position but may not be in contention for podiums. The speaker says Audi ends up in the tight midfield after early issues, limiting what they can do in the race.

Concept

starts

"Audi, come on, we need you to lock in for these starts because it's clearly costing you big points."

“Starts” are crucial in racing because the first few seconds can determine track position before traffic and strategy take over. The speaker argues Audi’s starts are costing them points, implying poor launch performance or early-lap execution.

Concept

finished 18th

"Fernando Alonso qualified 21st and finished 18th. I'm going to go for a 6 out of 10 for Fernando Alonso as well."

“Finished 18th” means they crossed the line in 18th place. It’s a way to judge how the race went overall.

Concept

qualified 21st

"Fernando Alonso qualified 21st and finished 18th. I'm going to go for a 6 out of 10 for Fernando Alonso as well."

This is where the driver ended up in qualifying, which sets their starting spot for the race. 21st means they’ll start near the back.

Concept

FP1

"for being a daddy missed out on FP1. Maybe that was the reason Lance was then on his pace, whatever it might be."

FP1 is the first practice session on race weekend. Teams use it to try things on the car so they’re ready for qualifying and the race.

Concept

FP2

"He flew that morning, which is crazy, to do FP2, which is quite an insane thing to think about, to fly all that way and then jump into Formula 1 car. And then,"

FP2 is the second practice session. Teams use it to improve how the car drives and to learn how the tires behave.

Term

holding off

"...he was doing a good job holding off Hadjar..."

“Holding off” means defending your position and preventing another driver from overtaking. In F1, this often involves careful line choice, braking timing, and managing power/energy use to stay ahead.

Term

P9

"really fight Ocon for P9 and hold him off in,"

“P9” just means the driver finished in 9th place. In F1, that can still be important because points are awarded by finishing position.

Term

softs

"You should have finished 19 with that 6th stop. Yeah, he should have flamed through the field on those softs."

“Softs” are a type of racing tire. They grip better for faster laps, but they don’t last as long as harder tires.

Brand

McLaren

"And those top three teams of Ferrari, McLaren and Mercedes were well clear."

McLaren is another major Formula 1 team. The host is saying McLaren was among the fastest teams in this race.

Brand

Mercedes

"And those top three teams of Ferrari, McLaren and Mercedes were well clear."

Mercedes is a top Formula 1 team. The host is saying Mercedes was one of the teams that had a clear speed advantage.

Brand

Ferrari

"And those top three teams of Ferrari, McLaren and Mercedes were well clear."

Ferrari is a top Formula 1 team. The host is grouping it with the other fastest teams for this event.

Term

P6

"...he gained from the safety car massively, and he still ended up P6 at the end."

“P6” just means 6th place. It’s a quick way to say where someone finished.

Term

time left on the table

"...there was definitely more time left on the table."

“Time left on the table” means the driver could have been faster but didn’t extract it—due to mistakes, setup limitations, traffic, or not pushing enough. It’s a common way analysts describe missed performance potential.

Term

down the straights

"...and wasn't fast down the straights."

“Fast down the straights” refers to straight-line speed, which depends heavily on engine/power unit output, aerodynamic efficiency, and how much drag the car is carrying. If a car is strong in corners but weak on straights, it often suggests a setup or power/energy limitation.

Concept

stuck behind

"But the race, really quite poor from him, very anonymous, stuck behind. Lin Blad got overtaken by Max almost immediately despite qualifying ahead of him."

“Stuck behind” describes being unable to pass the car in front, often due to aerodynamic turbulence (“dirty air”) and limited traction/visibility. In F1, this can make a driver feel “anonymous” because they can’t build momentum or set up overtakes.

Term

chicane

"And his only real opportunity was on that basically final run into the chicane,"

A chicane is a twisty section of the track that makes cars slow down and change direction. It’s important because it’s a common place to defend or try to pass.

Concept

poor start

"I can't give him a 10 mainly down to his poor start where he dropped back... A huge mistake off the start."

A poor start means the driver didn’t get off the line well and dropped back. That can make the race harder because you have to overtake more.

Term

track position

"...I think that track position was key against the Mercedes. And Piastri would have had a really good shot."

Track position is where a car sits relative to others on the circuit, especially important when overtaking is difficult. The host argues it was “key against the Mercedes,” meaning staying in front (rather than getting stuck in traffic) mattered for pace and strategy.

Concept

Max Verstappen

"we're going to be chatting all about Max Verstappen and where we think he's going to end up [2629.5s] and what he's going to do, because it is a pretty big story"

Max Verstappen is one of the biggest names in Formula 1. Talking about “where he’s going to end up” usually means which team he might race for next.

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