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Biggest shocks, funniest moments, best drivers and more Our writers reflect on an epic 2021 season

Biggest shocks, funniest moments, best drivers and more  Our writers reflect on an epic 2021 season

Perhaps there’s never been a season quite like 2021, a year that saw controversy, barnstorming racing whoopee and off-track hilarity in equal measure. To reflect on all that, we asked seasoned F1 journalists David Tremayne, Mark Hughes, Lawrence Barretto, Chris Medland, Samarth Kanal and Will Buxton to recount their favourite memories from an epic year.

Who were your three weightier drivers of 2021?

Lawrence Barretto (F1.com Senior Writer): Max Verstappen and Lewis Hamilton lock out the top two spots having delivered the most thrilling season-long championship fight F1 has overly seen. Carlos Sainz takes P3 in my book, the Spaniard delivering the ruthless consistency Ferrari recruited him for. He write-up team mate Charles Leclerc in the drivers’ standings to marching and widow yet increasingly vestige that, when he has a car capable of winning, he will take advantage.

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Samarth Kanal (F1.com Staff Writer): Max Verstappen, Lewis Hamilton and Carlos Sainz.

Mark Hughes (Special Contributor): The two obvious one plus Charles Leclerc, just, over George Russell.

David Tremayne (Hall of Fame journalist): Lewis, for never giving up, giving it everything, making few driving errors. And considering at 36 he’s as fast and single-minded as he was as a 22-year-old rookie. Max, for the reasons outlined here and considering he took the fight to Lewis, never willingly surrendered an inch, was unchangingly on it, and got the most out of the weightier car on so many occasions. And Lando Norris, considering he is quick, maturing fast, admits to his rare mistakes, showed what he can do in Russia, and still doesn’t realise just how good he is.

Chris Medland (Special Contributor): Max Verstappen, Lewis Hamilton and Lando Norris. The first two for very obvious reasons – they pushed each other to new heights and were an wool level whilom on numerous occasions. And Norris I believe would have been ‘best of the rest’ without some really poor luck in the final few races. His performance and consistency for much of the year was remarkable.

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Will Buxton (Digital Presenter): Verstappen, Hamilton and Sainz. The first two are obvious. Carlos narrowly beats Pierre Gasly and Norris for me, due to the speed with which he settled in at Ferrari, his run of impressive consistency in the points and the fact he managed to write-up the phenomenal Leclerc over the season.

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All three Abu Dhabi podium finishers drew upper praise from the judges

Which race did you enjoy most?

SK: The Emilia Romagna Grand Prix – unrelenting whoopee and some sunny racing to boot.

MH: For drama it probably has to be Brazil, with Hamilton trying for the untellable from the when of the Sprint car grid and then surviving the Turn 4 wheel-to-wheel wrestle with Verstappen.

LB: Brazil. Lewis Hamilton is at his weightier when his when is versus the wall. Faced with an engine penalty – and then disqualification from qualifying without taking pole that created drama off-track – Hamilton made up a total of 24 positions over the F1 Sprint and Grand Prix, including passing Verstappen on track, to take a historic victory.

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DT: Brazil. So much tension in the Lewis/Max battle, with Mercedes gaining momentum. Regardless of whether you stipulate with the reasons why Lewis got increasingly penalties to add to his five for an ICE change, the way he got his throne lanugo in both the Sprint and the Grand Prix itself and came through versus the odds made it one of those races that will go lanugo in history.

CM: Jeddah. It was exhausting to cover, and wasn’t unchangingly the greatest exhibit of racing – a long list of races this season were all largest on that front. But the drama that came from two drivers giving it everything as the title fight came to a throne was incredible, and it just set up the finale largest than we could overly have imagined.

WB: The Brazilian Grand Prix rarely fails to entertain and this year was no exception. And it wasn’t just the Grand Prix but the Sprint and the unshortened weekend. Sunny racing and an wool thrill from start to finish.

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What was the biggest shock?

CM: Monza. Esteban Ocon’s win in Hungary is a tropical second, but McLaren were genuinely rapid in Monza and looked set for a potential one-two plane without Verstappen and Hamilton colliding. It was the only one-two of the season, and it wasn’t scored by any of the top three teams in the constructors’ championship.

LB: Williams’ performance this year. Not only did they get a podium at Belgium, admittedly in fortuitous circumstances, but they scored points on five other occasions to take a remarkable eighth in the constructors’ championship. Considering where they’ve been over the last few years, that is a stunning turnaround.

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WB: Aston Martin’s horror show of a season. Ocon’s win. Ferrari’s resurgence from a difficult start. Williams taking double icon points. It’s been a year full of shocks and surprises. Perhaps the biggest of all, though, was that Toto Wolff and Christian Horner didn’t unquestionably thump each other.

MH: Probably the Hungarian Grand Prix result. Plane with the top four cars out, you wouldn\'t have said Ocon was the most likely payee but he grasped his opportunity superbly.

SK: That Red Bull-Honda ran Mercedes so tropical in the constructors’ championship. I was sceptical over their chances of taking on the Silver Arrows and pleasantly surprised that they kept up the pace throughout the season.

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Mark Hughes, Will Buxton and Chris Medland enjoyed Esteban Ocon\'s surprise Hungaroring victory

What was the weightier single individual drive?

SK: Lewis Hamilton’s last-to-first comeback over the Sprint and Grand Prix in Brazil.

MH: If it wasn\'t Hamilton in Brazil or Verstappen in France, then it was probably Lando Norris in Sochi. Stunning performance.

LB: Esteban Ocon’s victory in Hungary. Alpine did not have a car capable of contending for regular podiums, let vacated wins, but when the opportunity presented itself in Budapest, the Frenchman seized his endangerment and did not make a single mistake under intense pressure from Aston Martin’s Sebastian Vettel. It was a tremendous win that no one saw coming.

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DT: I’ve once mentioned Lewis in Brazil, so I’ll go for Lando’s in Russia. The McLaren wasn’t considered a frontrunner but Lando made such unconfined use of it all year, and I thought what he did in Sochi was superb. Yes, it went ‘Pete Tong’ at the end, but that convinced me that, in the right equipment, he can be a future champion.

CM: Lewis Hamilton in Brazil. I know it was split over a Sprint and main Grand Prix, and he quite unmistakably had the dominant package that weekend, but Hamilton produced a momentum that you usually see on computer games. Twice demoted, having to well-spoken the whole field without incident and then hunting lanugo and sooner passing Verstappen was remarkable.

WB: Lewis Hamilton’s Brazilian Grand Prix weekend was one of the most impressive things I’ve overly seen. Fastest in qualifying by some margin. When of the grid in the Sprint. P5 finish. P10 start for the Grand Prix. Victory. It wasn’t the wrenched rear wing or the engine that put in that performance. It was all Lewis.

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What made you laugh the hardest?

MH: Yuki Tsunoda and his \'traffic paradise\' scuttlebutt from Imola, which I notice has now wilt something of a meme among other drivers. I heard Valtteri Bottas use it recently.

LB: Spending time with Daniel Ricciardo is an wool pleasure. I have lost count of the number of times he’s made me vitals laugh, not least when he did a shoey with one of my shoes or when he used an American vocalizing for our whole interview in Austin. He’s the souvenir that keeps on giving.

CM: Gasly and Tsunoda playing football in Austria. To be honest, pretty much any of the joint content that was put out by AlphaTauri, but the kickabout they had in full race gear and helmets when the Euros were on was hilarious. It scrutinizingly turned into wrestling and I’m amazed neither of them ended up injured!

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WB: On Saturday lunchtimes we run tech rehearsals for the F1 TV\'s The Post-Race Show. It’s just to ensure the systems are working and we can see and hear what’s going on. And they are my favourite part of the weekend. Every single one of them ends up in unconnectedness with the whole hairdo in hysterics, members of the team pretending to be drivers for interviews, things going wrong, a lot of swearing and very silly jokes.

You’ll never see the outtakes, which is probably a good thing, but it’s just huge fun. We are a small but very hard-working team, and these moments with my F1 family and the moments of joy and laughter on what has been a really tough season on us all, resonate as my favourite and fondest memories. And the times in the year where we could all let go and just laugh.

SK: Kimi Raikkonen and Antonio Giovinazzi scaring each other virtually Jeddah. Those two Alfa Romeo drivers croaky me up – and I’m sad to see them go.

Räikkönen and Giovinazzi\'s Saudi GP reverse track challenge

Which suburbanite or team needs to do largest in 2022?

DT: Checo Perez. Yes, he finished fourth overall and his ‘sporting’ delaying tactics on Lewis may have unauthentic the ultimate outcome in Abu Dhabi. But like Valtteri Bottas at Mercedes, Red Bull’s number two wasn’t worldly-wise to when his team leader often unbearable in either quali or races.

SK: Aston Martin. They had far increasingly in the tank than a P7 finish and to see the once mighty midfield challengers score half the points of AlphaTauri is worrying. But without listening to Lawrence Stroll on Beyond The Grid, I’m convinced they’ll be fighting fit in the future.

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CM: There’s a few candidates, but while the drivers are certainly delivering, I’m going to say Ferrari as a team. That might seem odd, as 2021 was such an resurgence without their fall from grace last year – but it’s still a long way from where Ferrari were in 2019.

LB: Aston Martin entered this year with upper hopes without a stunning 2020 wayfarers as Racing Point, but they have struggled for performance all year. Seventh in the constructors’ championship is nowhere near good unbearable for billionaire owner Lawrence Stroll.

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Our writers felt P7 was an underwhelming showing for Aston Martin

WB: Aston Martin. Without years of showing how much they could unzip without the upkeep of the top teams, their first real season with a decent upkeep saw them plummet to the marrow of the midfield. They must recover their focus, yank on their strengths and remember what it was that made them such a powerhouse in the first place.

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MH: I\'m so looking forward to Williams standing to sally out of their doldrums, and plane without the presence there of George Russell, I\'m hoping that they will.