November 19, 2025, 3:56 pm

F1 | 2023 F1 Sprint Race Results Summary & Stats Review

The 2023 F1 season still has two grands prix to go, but the six Sprint races have been run and won (mostly by Max Verstappen) and why not stop and smell the shortened roses of the cut-down F1 spectacle with our 2023 F1 Sprint Race Results Summary & Stats Review.

Full of opinion. stats and results, our 2023 F1 Sprint Race Results Summary & Stats Review should cover a lot of the six Sprint Races held in the 2023 F1 season.

Was it all worth it?

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Short answer is no. The long answer is no too, with an explanation below.

Aside from a first victory for Oscar Piastri, who looked as underwhelmed about sprint race as the F1 fans despite winning, who can remember a memorable moment from the sprint races. 

The racing after the first few corners is usually stale, and who could blame the drivers and teams to risk their cars for under half the points. 

And when Max Verstappen won the World Championship after a sprint race, with an already low-key presentation post-race, it made an underwhelming championship that little bit more meh. A championship should be won with all the podium trimmings. Not jsut just hanging around and getting a metal block.

What has improved the show is qualifying becoming closer, with McLaren zooming up the performance ladder and genuinely challenging for the front row and better. Ferrari and Mercedes have improved too, making sure Max Verstappen is not getting his own way in qualifying. Since Round 10, there have been six drivers from three teams sharing the front row with Max Verstappen, and occasionally taking pole position. None of those six drivers are Sergio Perez for the record.

So if we just leave F1 alone, the gap will close, and qualifying will continue the great progress seen in the latter half of 2023 then that may give F1 a chance to improve the show for the main race and maybe Sprint Races won’t be needed at all.

What’s the future of Sprint Races?

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There’s been lots of talk about what to do with Sprint Races, and the consensus is that nothing is not a great idea. 

First of all, less is more. We don’t need six, and certainly don’t need more. Look at the Moto GP, if you have non stop sprint races you dilute the main race day and potentially divide the interest. Three to four – evenly spaced is the right idea. No back to back or three in four races.

Next up, get the tracks right. The Belgian Grand Prix is a masterpiece of F1 circuitry, which should be enjoyed in full on the Sunday. It is not a sprint race venue. Get tracks where action always happen. The F1 bosses do actually have a bundle of the right tracks – Brazil, Austria and Azerbaijan – tracks where stuff usually happens and overtaking is easier than usual. And maybe that’s all we need just those three, spread nicely across the season. No point having a track where there’s very little overtaking then have a format where drivers take fewer risks for fewer points.

Talk of reverse grid isn’t the answer. Those gimmicks belong in lower formula, not the leading motor sport category in the world. F1 can’t let mediocrity be rewarded or have anything too artificial.

So what would we do? Thanks for asking, we have a few ideas.

First of all, given all the new investment partners, and the greedy F1 bosses love money (refer Andretti F1 application), get someone to put up $10M/$20M prizemoney for the Sprint Race Championship. And maybe the FIA could throw in a 5% allowance for the cost cap to make it really worth the team’s effort. Money makes the F1 teams go round, so give them what they want, with a little prestige of a trophy.

A second thought, is why have a sprint race? Why not a double header instead. Two full races, worth full World Championship points. Maybe that will be too big a stress on the drivers and teams, so maybe reduce the races to 60-75%, but make them even, and make them full points. With the Saturday result flowing on to the Sunday race starting order.

A final idea that may mix up the grid but keeps the Sprint Races in the current format is to make the Sprint Shoot Out a one lap blast. Qualifying order is set by the Free Practice session on the Friday to make that session mean something too. So rather than same old, same old qualifying, a one lap blast opens up potential mixing of grid by punishing mistakes while still rewarding the best. And even M<ax Verstappen hasn’t been perfect over every qualifying lap this season.

 

2023 F1 Sprint Race Results Summary

SPRINT CHAMPIONSHIP (Based on Points awarded)

AZERBAIJAN GRAND PRIX

Pos Driver Time
1 Sergio PEREZ 17 Laps
2 Charles LECLERC 4.463 behind
3 Max VERSTAPPEN 5.065 behind
4 George RUSSELL 8.532 behind
5 Carlos SAINZ 10.388 behind
6 Fernando ALONSO 11.613 behind
7 Lewis HAMILTON 16.503 behind
8 Lance STROLL 18.417 behind
9 Alexander Albon 21.757 behind
10 Oscar Piastri 22.851 behind
11 Kevin Magnussen 27.990 behind
12 Guanyu Zhou 34.602 behind
13 Pierre GASLY 36.918 behind
14 Nyck de Vries 41.626 behind
15 Nico Hulkenberg 48.587 behind
16 Valtteri BOTTAS 49.917 behind
17 Lando NORRIS 51.104 behind
18 Esteban OCON 1:00.621 behind
DNF Yuki TSUNODA DNF Lap 6
DNF Logan Sargeant DNS

 

AUSTRIA GRAND PRIX

Pos Drivers Time
1 Max VERSTAPPEN 24 Laps
2 Sergio PEREZ 21.048 behind
3 Carlos SAINZ 23.088 behind
4 Lance STROLL 29.703 behind
5 Fernando ALONSO 30.109 behind
6 Nico Hulkenberg 31.297 behind
7 Esteban OCON 36.602 behind
8 George RUSSELL 36.611 behind
9 Lando NORRIS 38.608 behind
10 Lewis HAMILTON 46.375 behind
11 Oscar Piastri 49.807 behind
12 Charles LECLERC 50.789 behind
13 Alexander Albon 52.848 behind
14 Kevin Magnussen 56.593 behind
15 Pierre GASLY 57.652 behind
16 Yuki TSUNODA 64.822 behind
17 Nyck de Vries 65.617 behind
18 Logan Sargeant 66.059 behind
19 Guanyu Zhou 70.825 behind
20 Valtteri BOTTAS 76.435 behind

 

BELGIAN GRAND PRI

 

Pos Driver Time
1 Max VERSTAPPEN 11 Laps
2 Oscar Piastri + 6.677 behind
3 Pierre GASLY + 10.733 behind
4 Carlos SAINZ + 12.648 behind
5 Charles LECLERC + 15.016 behind
6 Lando NORRIS + 16.052 behind
7 Lewis HAMILTON + 16.757 behind
8 George RUSSELL + 16.822 behind
9 Esteban OCON + 22.41 behind
10 Daniel RICCIARDO + 22.806 behind
11 Lance STROLL + 25.007 behind
12 Alexander Albon + 26.303 behind
13 Valtteri BOTTAS + 27.006 behind
14 Kevin Magnussen + 32.986 behind
15 Guanyu Zhou + 36.342 behind
16 Logan Sargeant + 37.571 behind
17 Nico Hulkenberg + 37.827 behind
18 Yuki TSUNODA + 39.267 behind
DNF Sergio PEREZ DNF Lap 8
DNF Fernando ALONSO DNF Lap 2

 

QATAR GRAND PRIX

Pos Driver Result / Gap
1 Oscar Piastri 19 Laps
2 Max VERSTAPPEN 1.871 behind
3 Lando NORRIS 8.497 behind
4 George RUSSELL 11.036 behind
5 Lewis HAMILTON 17.314 behind
6 Carlos SAINZ 18.806 behind
7 Alexander Albon 19.864 behind
8 Fernando ALONSO 21.18 behind
9 Pierre GASLY 21.742 behind
10 Valtteri BOTTAS 22.208 behind
11 Yuki TSUNODA 22.863 behind
12 Charles LECLERC 24.86 behind
13 Kevin Magnussen 24.97 behind
14 Guanyu Zhou 26.868 behind
15 Lance STROLL 29.523 behind
DNF Nico Hulkenberg DNF Lap 11
DNF Esteban OCON DNF Lap 10
DNF Sergio PEREZ DNF Lap 10
DNF Logan Sargeant DNF Lap 2
DNF Liam Lawson DNF Lap 1

 

US GRAND PRIX

Pos Driver Car Result / Gap
1 Max VERSTAPPEN Red Bull 31:30:00
2 Lewis HAMILTON Mercedes 9.465 behind
3 Charles LECLERC Ferrari 17.987 behind
4 Lando NORRIS McLaren 18.863 behind
5 Sergio PEREZ Red Bull 22.928 behind
6 Carlos SAINZ Ferrari 28.307 behind
7 Pierre GASLY Alpine 32.403 behind
8 George RUSSELL Mercedes 34.250 behind
9 Alexander Albon Williams 34.567 behind
10 Oscar Piastri McLaren 42.403 behind
11 Esteban OCON Alpine 44.986 behind
12 Daniel RICCIARDO AlphaTauri 45.509 behind
13 Fernando ALONSO Aston Martin 49.086 behind
14 Yuki TSUNODA AlphaTauri 49.733 behind
15 Nico Hulkenberg Haas 56.650 behind
16 Valtteri BOTTAS Alfa Romeo 1:04.401 behind
17 Guanyu Zhou Alfa Romeo 1:07.972 behind
18 Kevin Magnussen Haas 1:11.122 behind
19 Logan Sargeant Williams 1:11.449 behind
DNF Lance STROLL Aston Martin DNF Lap 16

 

BRAZIL GRAND PRIX

Pos Driver Car Result / Gap
1 Max VERSTAPPEN Red Bull 0:30:07
2 Lando NORRIS McLaren 4.287 behind
3 Sergio PEREZ Red Bull 13.617 behind
4 George RUSSELL Mercedes 25.879 behind
5 Charles LECLERC Ferrari 28.560 behind
6 Yuki TSUNODA AlphaTauri 29.210 behind
7 Lewis HAMILTON Mercedes 34.726 behind
8 Carlos SAINZ Ferrari 35.106 behind
9 Daniel RICCIARDO AlphaTauri 35.303 behind
10 Oscar Piastri McLaren 38.219 behind
11 Fernando ALONSO Aston Martin 39.061 behind
12 Lance STROLL Aston Martin 39.478 behind
13 Pierre GASLY Alpine 40.621 behind
14 Esteban OCON Alpine 42.848 behind
15 Alexander Albon Williams 43.394 behind
16 Kevin Magnussen Haas 56.507 behind
17 Guanyu Zhou Alfa Romeo 58.723 behind
18 Nico Hulkenberg Haas 1:00.330 behind
19 Valtteri BOTTAS Alfa Romeo 1:00.749 behind
20 Logan Sargeant Williams 1:00.945 behind

 

 

 

2023 F1 Sprint Race Stats

Here are the most interesting stats we could find from the 2023 F1 Sprint Races this season.

SPRINT RACE QUALIFYING x SPRINT RACE FINISHING POSITION

2023 Brazilian F1 Grand Prix Ratings - Sprint Race v Qual

SPRINT QUALIFYING AVERAGE POSITION

AVERAGE SPRINT RACE FINISHING POSITION

SPRINT RACE RESULT GAIN/LOSS FROM SPRINT QUALIFYING POSITION

2023 Brazilian F1 Grand Prix Ratings - Sprint Race Gains

SPRINT QUALIFYING VS REGULAR QUALIFYING

  

OUR DRIVER OF THE YEAR RANKING – SPRINT RACES ONLY

If you haven’t read one of our Race Ratings reviews, then we assign points for various things during an F1 weekends, and below is the total of those points from the Sprint Races.

2023 Brazilian F1 Grand Prix Ratings - Driver of the Season Total Sprint Races

 

Perry Thrusthttps://www.thegurgler.com
Perry Thrust doesn't know boats. He knows F1 and plenty of it. Get your 107% rundown of each GP and more.

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