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McLarens dominate Bahrain practice, Verstappen rues 'too slow' Red Bull
McLaren were streets ahead of the pack in second practice at the Bahrain Grand Prix on Friday leaving Max Verstappen lamenting his "too slow" Red Bull.
Oscar Piastri posted a quickest lap of 1min 30.505s with his teammate Lando Norris only a tenth of a second adrift.
Mercedes' George Russell took third, albeit over five tenths of a second back in an ominous display of force by McLaren at a track where the Bahraini-backed team have yet to win in 21 visits.
Verstappen, who moved to within one point of championship leader Norris after his win in Japan last weekend, struggled to make any significant impact, the four-time world champion trailing in seventh, close to one second back.
"We're just too slow basically every lap, and it was honestly not a lot of fun out there in the long run," lamented the Dutchman.
"The gap was quite massive," he added.
To add insult to injury immediately in front of Verstappen were two rookies - Mercedes' Kimi Antonelli and RB's Isack Hadjar, who both did brilliantly to finish fifth and sixth.
Red Bull's plight was not helped by the sight of Yuki Tsunoda coming in 18th, six places behind RB's Liam Lawson, the driver he replaced at Red Bull last time out.
Norris was keeping his feet firmly on the ground, suggesting the bare results didn't tell the whole story.
"Everyone just looks at the timesheets," the Briton said.
"They have no idea on the information on who turns up (the engine)."
Russell though was in no doubt that McLaren had an edge, saying Piastri and Norris were "a big step ahead".
Second practice at the Bahrain International Circuit got underway as the sun set to make the session more meaningful than opening pracice held in the searing mid-afternoon heat.
With the floodlights illuminating the track to give like-for-like conditions with Saturday's qualifying and Sunday's race it placed extra importance on the 60 minutes evening run out.
Verstappen, Russell and Charles Leclerc were among six established drivers to lend their cars to rookies to gain valuable experience in FP1 as per the sporting guidelines.
- 'The car is jumping' -
Leclerc's teammate Lewis Hamilton, in the upgraded Ferrari kitted out with a new floor panel, put his foot down early to lead the timesheets.
Verstappen got his weekend up and running but was soon grumbling on the team radio: "The ride is very bad, the car is jumping a lot."
Things were worse over with Fernando Alonso, who told his Aston Martin engineer: "Change the steering wheel" as the veteran Spaniard headed back to the pits, the wheel literally coming off in his hands.
A human wall of Aston mechanics blocked any inquisitive competitors as they frantically worked to resolve the unusual and worrying issue.
Back on track Leclerc (who took fourth) pushed his teammate Hamilton (eighth) off the top of the time sheets to give early encouragement to the scuderia.
With plenty of action on track as teams tried to cram in effectively three practice sessions in one - Saturday's third session is also unrepresentative being held in daytime - the Ferrari duo dropped down the field as the Mclarens rose to the surface.
As Alonso, who will be having his 50th race for Aston on Sunday, rejoined the circuit, there was no change at the top as McLaren set out their stall for the business part of the weekend.
Earlier teams took the opportunity to use 'FP1' to give a half dozen rookies a shot as a 'Friday driver' as per the governing body's guidelines.
Verstappen had some down time with Ayumua Iwasa taking the wheel of his Red Bull.
Luke Browning stepped into Carlos Sainz's Williams, ut had scary moment with his temporary teammate Alex Albon, the pair coming close with a quarter of an hour left of the session.
The stewards investigated the incident, with Albon deemed guilty of impeding Browning and given a smack on the wrist with a four-figure fine.
H.Gonzales--AT