Formula 1 race
Dutch Grand Prix: Tactical Analysis
Norris controlled this race through a pace advantage of 1.3 seconds per lap, while Verstappen's race was compromised by a pace deficit of 0.06 seconds per lap.
Formula 1 World Championship · June 13, 2026
Race Tactical Thesis
Norris controlled this race through a pace advantage of 1.3 seconds per lap, while Verstappen's race was compromised by a pace deficit of 0.06 seconds per lap.
Decisive Tactical Sequences
Albon's tyres reached their limit on lap 39, pace dropping by 3.6 seconds. The result was decisive: Albon drops position.
Magnussen's tyres reached their limit on lap 39, pace dropping by 3.2 seconds. The result was decisive: Magnussen drops position.
After 17 laps within DRS range, Norris completed the pass on lap 18. This contributed to p2 to p1.
Pit Strategy Evolution
The field split across strategy branches: Hamilton used S-H-S; 13 drivers used M-H; Russell, Zhou used M-H-S; Albon used M-H-M; Tsunoda used S-M-H; Magnussen used H-M; Bottas used S-H-M. Albon pitted on lap 12 and failed to jump Hulkenberg. Albon pitted on lap 12 and failed to jump Tsunoda. The winning strategy was M-H, averaging P8.2.
Tyre & Pace Story
Tyre degradation shaped the second half of this race, with the soft compound falling away at more than double the rate of the medium (16ms/lap vs -1ms/lap). Piastri kept degradation well below the field average across both stints, avoiding the degradation spikes that cost others track position. Albon suffered a 3628ms cliff on lap 39, exposing the tyre management gap to the field leader. While Piastri led in tyre conservation, Norris held the raw pace advantage (sustained pace 1.3s/lap faster than field median).
Track Position Battles
There were 129 on-track position changes during the race. Norris and Verstappen fought a 19-lap battle from lap 1 to 20 (closest gap: 139ms). Piastri and Russell fought a 13-lap battle from lap 1 to 14 (closest gap: 492ms). Leclerc and Piastri fought a 22-lap battle from lap 1 to 23 (closest gap: 267ms). The overtakes broke down as: 62 via committed racing move, 48 via DRS-assisted pass, 19 via pit undercut.
Race-Deciding Factors
Tyre Management was decisively a factor (35.1% contribution). Race Pace was clearly a factor (30.0% contribution). Pit Strategy was decisively a factor (20.0% contribution). Starting Position was clearly a factor (6.7% contribution).
What Could Have Changed
*If Sainz had not executed this strategy*: Would have finished approximately P2. This remains a hypothetical scenario. (Based on 1 piece(s) of evidence.)
*If Hamilton had not executed this strategy*: Would have finished approximately P3. This remains a hypothetical scenario. (Based on 1 piece(s) of evidence.)