Andrew Shovlin, Trackside Engineering Director
Track evolution is a major factor of any first day on a street circuit, and that is particularly true here in Las Vegas with a track that is only used once a year combined with the cold temperatures. FP1 is therefore about getting as much consecutive running as possible, enabling the drivers to build their confidence and to get the tyres into a good working window. That was particularly important for Kimi given it’s his first visit here. Both he and George acquitted themselves well, completing useful single lap and high fuel work. Our long runs looked competitive, and we weren’t far off on low fuel but, given how much the circuit will change heading into Friday and then Saturday, we can’t read too much into that.
FP2 was still a useful session despite the two red flag interruptions. We didn’t get to add to our long run data from earlier in the day, but we gathered more information on the single lap on both the Medium and Soft tyre. Kimi was in the minority of drivers who managed to put together a good lap on the Soft before the interruptions, leaving him P2. George’s lap didn't appear on the time sheets as the red flag came out just before he crossed the line, but he was on course for a time that would have put him P3, despite losing a bit of time into turn 12 with a lock-up. We had quite different setups across the cars in the second session, so we'll do some work overnight to pick through those differences to understand what we want to carry into FP3. Overall, it has been a solid start to the weekend.