

Photo by: Mark Sutton / Motorsport Imagesġ. Verstappen has taken a stranglehold on the 2022 F1 title fight with victory in Canada With those headlines and plenty more subplots generated from the 70 laps of the Circuit Gilles Villeneuve, here are 10 things we learned from the Canada weekend. Leclerc then stemmed the bleeding of points to Verstappen by recovering to fifth behind George Russell, despite his own complaints in the cockpit. Meanwhile, Mercedes was buoyed Barcelona-style after Lewis Hamilton completed the podium by finding an affinity with the troublesome W13. Sainz did fall short but proved he can take the fight to Verstappen after his underwhelming adaption to ground-effect. Despite the rain in qualifying having set up a tantalising front row, with Fernando Alonso alongside the RB18 for the sprint into Turn 1, it was his fellow Spaniard who welded himself within DRS range of Verstappen. That meant it was left mainly to Carlos Sainz - still in pursuit of his first top-flight triumph - to take the challenge to Verstappen.

Leclerc endured the latest consequences of the Scuderia’s fragility at Montreal as he took on new power unit components to be sent marching towards the back of the grid. That healthy championship advantage has been boosted by the recent Ferrari unreliability implosion.

Currently operating in white-hot form, Verstappen now sits some 46 points clear at the top of the standings over Red Bull team-mate Sergio Perez, while Ferrari rival Charles Leclerc is a further three points in arrears.
