Motorsports
Christopher Bell, NASCAR’s quiet contender, knows he’s “as big a threat as anyone”
Last year, Netflix released its first season of “NASCAR: Full Speed,” a docuseries following the 2023 Cup Series. The film crew zeroed in on potential championship contenders, planning to shadow the eight drivers they expected to make it to the end. When Christopher Bell made the top eight, they brought him on screen almost randomly.
“I wasn’t in that plan, was I?” Bell asked.
“You were never in that plan,” they responded.
“Imagine that.”
Bell made NASCAR’s final four (formally called the Championship Four) in 2022, the year before Netflix filmed that scene. He made it again last year. This year, with one race left to qualify, Bell has a big cushion over the fifth-place elimination line. He’s led 1,002 laps so far this season, second only to one of the Cup Series’ biggest title threats, Kyle Larson.
The Netflix crew gave Bell the “quiet contender” storyline, and they weren’t wrong. But as he knows well, people notice the “quiet” part — but don’t pay enough attention to the “contender” half.
Christopher Bell in the No. 20 Toyota Camry
Photo by: Matthew T. Thacker / NKP / Motorsport Images
“I’m definitely quiet,” Bell told Motorsport.com. “I’m quiet and reserved, and people will kind of take that as a weakness. I’m not one of the guys that’s going to be out there hooting and hollering, but I know that I’m every bit as capable as anyone else out there.
“It was interesting to me how the Netflix deal played out last year. They have to pick guys to follow throughout the year, and coming off of 2022, I was a championship contender. We made the final four, then they specifically chose not to follow me because they didn’t expect me to perform well. It made me happy that I proved them wrong and crashed their party.”
Bell, 29, drives the No. 20 car for Joe Gibbs Racing, one of the longtime powerhouse teams in the Cup Series. Modern NASCAR no longer tallies season-long points to decide the champion; these days, the title trophy shows up after a 10-race, 16-driver playoff format. Those drivers get eliminated in sets of four throughout the playoffs, until only four remain. When they get to the last race of the season, points no longer matter — whicheverChampionship Four driver finishes highest wins the title (even if a non-playoff driver wins the race).
This weekend, Bell enters the final race of the eight-driver round, which happens at Martinsville Speedway, in the third seed. The only two drivers above him are Joey Logano and Tyler Reddick, who both automatically qualified for the Championship Four by winning races earlier in this round.
“I know I can be as big of a threat
as anyone.”
“I feel cautiously optimistic,” Bell said. “That’s the words that I’ve been using this week, because while we do have a pretty good buffer, our competition is going to be fierce. They’re going to be fast, and they’re going to be racing for the win. It’s going to be very important for the 20 team to be right there with them, and if we do that, we could be staring at another Championship Four berth.”
Bell is 29 points above the elimination line. His next closest competitor, William Byron, is only seven above. Bell can either make the Championship Four this weekend on points or by winning the race, and the points look good: The fewest points a driver can score in a race is one, and the most is 60.
Bell has a cushion of nearly half that, but the standings change drastically throughout a playoff weekend as drivers accumulate mid-race stage points and climb or fall through the field. Bell will be calculating points in his head — and with his team — all race long.
“Going into Martinsville, we’re racing two cars: the 24 [of Byron] and the 5 [of Larson],” Bell said. “I’m sure I’m going to be asking where they’re at and what the points look like, but I’ll be keeping track of it pretty well. You just do the math in your head: where they’re running at the end of the stages, what points get scored, and how it’s playing out.”
The chop from eight drivers to four is cutthroat, and no one is eliminated until they turn their last lap at Martinsville. If there’s a race winner from below the cut line, they’ll automatically advance to Phoenix, taking a spot away from a driver who would’ve advanced on points. Bell did it from the seventh seed at Martinsville in 2022.
Christopher Bell hoisting his lobster prize after winning in New Hampshire in June
Photo by: None
“This is certainly unique for us,” Bell said. “I look back at my previous Championship Four appearances, and last year, I was able to win at Homestead, lock myself in, and not have to worry about Martinsville. The year before, we went into Martinsville knowing the only thing that mattered was winning the race. We didn’t have to worry about getting stage points, or even really qualifying. We just had to worry about having the best race car possible.
“This time around, we have a ton of importance on qualifying, pit-box selection, and the stage points we accumulate throughout the race. Then, even after all of that, we still have to be performing at the end of the race and get points. We have to execute on all fronts.”
The NASCAR playoffs move quickly. If Bell qualifies for the Championship Four this weekend at Martinsville, he’ll have one week to prepare for the title race in Phoenix. Bell’s never won the Cup title; in 2022, he finished 10th in the race and third of the four championship drivers. In 2023, a blown brake rotor took him out of the race early.
This week, Bell told Motorsport he’s not even thinking about the title race until after Martinsville.
“We’ve definitely got to get there first,” Bell said. “That’s the advantage that Joey Logano has, and now Tyler Reddick. They can do that. But for us, we cannot turn that page yet.
“There’s a lot of stress that comes from [the playoff format], but I love it. I wouldn’t have it any other way. You dream of being a part of these moments and fighting for a championship. I’m sure Saturday night at Martinsville I’m not going to be sleeping very well, but the job’s going to be on.”
Bell has proven he’s more than just Netflix’s quiet contender — he’s also a playoff specialist. And not shy about it, either.
“I’m super confident in my abilities,” Bell said. “I think other people kind of take me as not much of a threat, but I know I can be as big of a threat as anyone.”
Motorsports
Verstappen knows “deep down” that Mexico GP manoeuvre was wrong
Lando Norris believes that Max Verstappen knows “deep down” that he was in the wrong during the Mexican Grand Prix, and that the three-time Formula 1 champion should know what to change in future.
Verstappen collected two 10-second penalties for a pair of 10th-lap incidents with Norris in Mexico, one for running Norris out of road at Turn 4 and another for leaving the track at Turn 7 and gaining an advantage by passing the McLaren driver.
In the aftermath, Norris reiterated his respect for Verstappen but was dismayed by the championship leader’s approach during the race – having noted that his only job was to stop his rival from outscoring him in races.
Norris said that he still hadn’t spoken to Verstappen about the race, and that it was not up to him to encourage the Dutchman to change his ways.
“We’ve not spoken and I don’t think we need to,” Norris said. “I’ve got nothing to say.
“I still have a lot of respect for Max and everything he does – not respect for what he did last weekend, but respect for him as a person, and also what he’s achieved.
“But it’s not for me to speak to him. I’m not his teacher, I’m not his mentor or anything like that.
“Max knows what he has to do. He knows that he did wrong, deep down he does. And it’s for him to change, not for me.”
Max Verstappen, Red Bull Racing RB20, Lando Norris, McLaren MCL38
Photo by: Red Bull Content Pool
He added: “Max is probably one of the most capable drivers on the grid, if not the most. He knows what he can and can’t do and where the limits are. So, he knows the changes he has to make.”
Norris explained that he was not going to change his approach when it came to racing Verstappen, and felt that he was good at keeping his nose clean during contentious moments on track.
He admitted that he might have “paid the price” for lacking aggression in certain scenarios, but that the points from keeping it clean in races have nonetheless added up.
“I think something I’ve done well in my whole career is staying out of trouble and keep the car in one piece. All those little things add up over a championship and over a season, especially in a cost cap season as well,” Norris contended.
“I’ve always had the mentality to want to race fair and clean. I think I probably said it last weekend, I’ve been maybe too kind, whether I was attacking or defending. But I think I’ve always made good decisions from that side.
“Sometimes I’ve paid the price for not being aggressive enough, but the rest of it is not up to me. Even when you don’t realise it, there are times when you have to avoid a potential crash and maybe you don’t see it on the TV.
“There are more times that people realise that you go through those certain scenarios. And I think those are some of the challenges we have every now and then.
“But I’ll come into this weekend with a new expectation of hopefully having clean, fair racing. And I think that’s what we should expect.”
Motorsports
I have the wrong passport for the F1 paddock
Max Verstappen says he “has the wrong passport” for the Formula 1 paddock amid fierce criticism over his driving tactics in last week’s Mexican Grand Prix.
In Mexico City, Verstappen was handed a double 10-second penalty for two incidents in which he forced McLaren title rival Lando Norris off the track, which caused unease from various colleagues over his aggressive driving style in the title run-in.
Verstappen particularly copped heavy criticism from British pundits, with former F1 world champion and Sky analyst Damon Hill wondering if the three-time champion is even capable of racing fairly.
Meanwhile, Johnny Herbert, who was the FIA driver steward in Mexico, suggested Verstappen drove Norris off on purpose in Turn 7 to ensure Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc would make it past, hindering Norris’ title bid by reducing the number of points left on the table for the Briton.
Verstappen initially shrugged off Hill’s comments in the Brazilian Grand Prix’s FIA press conference, but speaking later on to Dutch-language journalists, he was amused by how he seemed to have the wrong nationality to be treated fairly by the media and the stewards.
“I know what most people are like, it’s nothing new,” he said. “Last year was perfect, so it must have hurt a lot for many people that they couldn’t say anything negative.
“Now they’ve got the chance to say something, so they’re all coming out of the woodwork. At the end of the day, I’ve got the wrong passport for this paddock.”
Max Verstappen, Red Bull Racing
Photo by: Sam Bloxham / Motorsport Images
Verstappen called Herbert’s theory “a pretty extreme accusation” and insisted he didn’t drive Norris off on purpose in Turn 8.
“I didn’t do anything on purpose. They can’t look inside my head,” he said. “It’s a pretty extreme accusation. We just raced hard.”
While questioning the size of the penalty for his Turn 4 incident with Norris, Verstappen did acknowledge the second 10-second penalty for his Turn 8 manoeuvre was fair. But he didn’t feel there was any reason to do things differently from now on.
“You win some, you lose some,” he said about the outcome of his Turn 8 lunge. “It depends. Every situation is different and in hindsight, it’s always easy to have another look at it.
“It happened, we just have to make sure we have a more competitive car so we don’t end up in that situation again, because that’s where it starts.”
What is also behind Verstappen’s suggestion of bias is his community service penalty for swearing in Baku’s press conference, while Leclerc hasn’t been slapped on the wrists yet for a similar offence in Mexico.
“[Herbert] had big opinions about what I said in the press conference [in Baku], but I didn’t hear him after the press conference in Mexico.
“Actually, what [Leclerc] said is worse than what I said in its context, and it was a much more important press conference with more people watching. But you know, I’m not going to spend time on that. It is what it is.”
Motorsport.com understands the FIA is still considering whether or not Leclerc’s swearing in Mexico’s post-race press conference needs to be investigated further, with a call expected over the Brazilian GP weekend.
Motorsports
Mercedes car the “most inconsistent” the team has ever had, says Russell
George Russell believes the current Mercedes Formula 1 car is the “most inconsistent” the team has ever had, as it continues experiments on its upgrade package in Brazil.
With Russell and Lewis Hamilton having both endured crashes with the latest version of the W15 since the United States Grand Prix, Mercedes is trying to get to the bottom of why there seems to be some quirkiness with its handling.
Both Mercedes drivers are committed to running with the latest floor in Brazil, which features some minor revisions compared to what Hamilton had in Mexico as the team works on improving its stability.
It is understood that there will also be minor differences between the versions that both drivers use in first practice to further help the team get a better understanding of what it needs.
While Mercedes has had some good times with its car this season, winning three out of four races before the summer break, Russell said there remains a lot of confusion over the fact that it does not seem to offer a predictable platform.
“I think in 2022, in the sort of porpoising era, without doubt that was far more unpleasant,” said Russell, reflecting on Mercedes’ progress during the recent ground effect era.
George Russell, Mercedes F1 W15
Photo by: Andy Hone / Motorsport Images
“But because of the nature of those cars, it was far harder to get close to the limit because you’re literally jumping around every single corner, and you knew that it was going to bite you.
“The problem we’ve got with this car at the moment is you think it’s not going to bite you, and you can achieve a really great lap. And then suddenly nothing changes, or you feel nothing changes, and the following lap you lose all of that performance.
“So without a doubt this is probably the most inconsistent our performance has been as a team in probably forever.”
Russell explained that the differences in floors, with the Briton getting his new version back on the car after it was repaired following his Austin qualifying crash, across the two cars were very small.
“We’re both going to be on the updated floor,” he said. “We’ve got a small difference in specification as a bit of a trial, but it’s not an update as such. It’s just in the realms of normal aerodynamical testing.”
Track surface impact
One critical factor to Mercedes’ hopes this weekend will be how much the new Interlagos track surface impacts the heat of the tyres.
Circuit detail
Photo by: Steven Tee / Motorsport Images
The team’s car is known to be very sensitive to track temperatures, and the hotter it gets the worse its performance can be.
With early predictions pointing to the newly-resurfaced dark asphalt being hotter than it was before, Russell thinks it is an element that Mercedes needs to be mindful of.
“The colour of the tarmac has an impact, so the darker the colour, the hotter the temperature,” he said.
“On the flip side, it’s a very smooth surface, so the tyres will be able to probably run hotter and be penalised less because it’s so smooth. That’s the theory.
“But we don’t know if it’s going to be good for us or bad for us. Austin was the best example: Friday qualifying, we’re both fighting for pole. Saturday qualifying, Lewis is out in Q1, I end up in the wall and nothing has changed.”
Motorsports
F1 needs permanent stewards with “real salaries”
George Russell reckons it is time the FIA has full-time employed, professional race stewards to improve consistency and help drivers interpret the guidelines.
It comes after explosive races at the US GP in Austin and especially the Mexican Grand Prix, where Max Verstappen was issued with two 10-second time penalties.
Verstappen was penalised for forcing title rival Lando Norris wide at Turn 4 and leaving the track and gaining an advantage at Turn 7 in Mexico City.
The world champion contested both decisions while, ahead of this weekend’s Brazil Grand Prix, Norris said he felt that “deep down” Verstappen knew the manoeuvre was wrong.
It has reopened the interpretations of F1’s loosely-worded rulebook and Russell, who is a director of the Grand Prix Drivers’ Association, says that while he does not believe the rulebook needs ripping up, it does now require a stable body of race officials to improve the consistency of the penalties being dished out.
Russell said: “On a personal view, not a view of the collective, I don’t think it [the rulebook] needs ripping up at all. It just needs some fine adjustments or a small addition. It’s all pretty clear.
“The guidelines need to be in place but it also needs to be remembered they are guidelines. There’s not a written regulation and it’s down to the stewards to take the best judgement.
“When things come down to interpretation, and when things are about consistency, you can argue if you were to have the same stewards week in, week out, the consistency will be better because they’re interpreting things in the same manner and the drivers understand exactly what they expect in a given circumstance.
Max Verstappen, Red Bull Racing RB20, Lando Norris, McLaren MCL38
Photo by: Steven Tee / Motorsport Images
“So I do feel, again a personal view, not one of on behalf of the drivers, but personal view, I do think we’re at a point now in this sport that we do need a full-time professional steward in where they earn a real salary.
“They’re not effectively volunteers and I do think within the pool of stewards we’ve got now, they are definitely up to standard. So it’s not saying anything bad about the current stewards, it’s just saying I feel we should be having system stewarding a week in, week out.”
The FIA wishes to speak to drivers about the racing rules to provide clearer guidelines in the future. However, Verstappen – who has made several references to falling out of love with F1 – says the series has become over-regulated.
Speaking in Sao Paulo ahead of the race, he said: “It’s never going to be perfect because even if you remove rules, then you get into a battle, then you want more rules because it’s not clear what is allowed or not.
“Then when you have too many rules, you want less rules. It just keeps on going left and right all the time. Do I think it’s over-regulated? Probably yes. I mean, in general, the rulebook is only getting bigger and bigger every single year, I don’t think that’s always the right way forward.”
Russell however says that along with professional stewards, the guidelines do need further clarification but they only become highlighted when the wording is tested.
He added: “If you read the rules, there are lines that say if you’re driving erratically or dangerous, you’ll be punished and you can argue if a driver outbreaks himself and doesn’t make the corner on the exit that is erratic because you’re driving off the racetrack.
“So there is an element of interpretation there, for sure it does need to be cleaned up a little bit.
“At the end of the day, every incident is different. For sure, now things are evolving… it’s like the safety of the cars, you need a bad accident to happen before you make this real progress.
“It’s the same with the driving regulations. You need something or decisions to be incorrect or things to be pushed beyond its limit before you realise change needs to happen.”
Motorsports
Formula E moves pre-season test to Jarama after Valencia flooding
Formula E organisers have cancelled the upcoming pre-season test in Valencia following torrential flooding in the area which has left at least 158 people dead and will instead hold the event in Jarama.
The all-electric championship was due to hold four days of running for all 11 teams and the new Gen3 Evo machines between 4-7 November at the Ricardo Tormo Circuit.
But the Valencia region in eastern Spain was hit by a year’s worth of rainfall in the space of just eight hours on Tuesday, causing widespread devastation that has killed well over 100 people with many still missing.
The access roads in and out of the circuit have been completely swept away in the flash flooding, with Formula E organisers announcing on Wednesday that it was inaccessible by vehicle.
Although the Ricardo Tormo Circuit itself was undamaged, problems gaining access to the site as well as the wider logistical problems in the area have meant Formula E has cancelled the test.
Circuit Ricardo Tormo after flooding
Photo by: Paco Alcobendas
“We have all been monitoring the tragic situation in Valencia, where flash floods have devastated the region and claimed many lives,” said a Formula E statement released on Thursday.
“Our thoughts are with everyone affected by these terrible events and we at Formula E are looking at how we can practically support the region during this awful time.
“Following consultation with local authorities, the FIA and our colleagues at Circuit Ricardo Tormo, we have decided not to proceed with our pre-season test in Valencia, planned for 4-7 November.
“While it may have been possible to go ahead logistically, it is important not to create any distraction or use valuable resources that are much better served supporting the local community.
“We have a number of Formula E team members who have been working on the ground in Valencia over the past week, and we want to personally thank them for everything they’ve done, and continue to do, to support the area.”
The statement went on to add that a new venue in the form of the Circuito del Jarama would host the scheduled event – as well as the all-female test – which will run from 5-8 November.
It added: “The full event schedule will be confirmed in due course, as we navigate a number of logistical and operational challenges which will determine if it’s possible to move our test operations to Madrid within this timeframe.”
The Ricardo Tormo Circuit is currently due to host the conclusion of the 2024 MotoGP season the following week on 15-17 November, with organisers stating on Wednesday that the championship is “committed” to running the race but that its focus is on supporting those in the community.
Ahead of the Malaysian Grand Prix this weekend, Marc Marquez claimed that “ethically speaking, I don’t think the Valencia Grand Prix should be held”, adding that it should only take place if all the proceeds are given to the families of victims.
Most recently, the 2023 Emilia Romagna Grand Prix was cancelled by Formula 1 organisers after flooding in the area that resulted in two deaths.
Motorsports
“I’m a three-time champion, I know what I’m doing”
Max Verstappen says he doesn’t listen to criticism about his Formula 1 racing conduct at the Mexican Grand Prix, asserting that “I know what I’m doing”.
The Red Bull driver faced numerous questions in the aftermath of the Mexico race, in which he was penalised twice for incidents involving title rival Lando Norris – ultimately adding up to a 20-second drop at his first pitstop.
Verstappen was accused of “Dick Dastardly stuff” by 1996 F1 champion Damon Hill on the Sky Sports F1 podcast, Hill adding that the Dutchman had “let himself down” with his Mexico manoeuvres.
Asked if had any response to Hill’s comments, Verstappen tersely responded: “I don’t listen to those individuals. I just do my thing. I’m a three-time world champion, I think I know what I’m doing. I have my opinions, but I don’t need to share them.”
Explaining the situation from his perspective, Verstappen stated that it was simply a ‘win some, lose some’ incident and that he was simply attempting to ensure he kept hold of a good result.
“I think it’s just you win some, you lose some. That’s how it is in racing in general,” he said.
“I like to win. I don’t like to lose. I think not many people like to lose. I just tried to maximize the result and, like I said, some you win, some you lose.”
Max Verstappen, Red Bull Racing RB20
Photo by: Andy Hone / Motorsport Images
Speaking on the subject of those whom he was willing to take advice from, Verstappen said that he had no problems with objectivity and people in the paddock who were not simply willing to stir things up.
He also elaborated on his feeling about the current racing rules situation, reiterating his standpoint that it was probably overregulated and that there would never be the perfect quantity of rules governing drivers’ etiquette on track.
“I think it’s not that straightforward, clearly even between how many seconds [of time penalties] that you get. Like I said before, sometimes they work for you, sometimes they work against you.
“I think it’s never going to be perfect because even if you remove rules, then you get into a battle, then you want more rules because it’s not clear what is allowed or not. Then when you have too many rules, you want less rules. It just keeps on going left and right all the time.
“Do I think it’s overregulated? Probably yes. In general, the rulebook is only getting bigger and bigger every single year. I don’t think that’s always the right way forward.
“[I listen to] people that are objective and close to me and not just there to stir [things up]. Some people are just being very annoying. I know who these people are, although I don’t really pay a lot of attention to them anyway.
“I think I’ve got to this stage in my career with the right people supporting me and making my own decisions.
“[These are] good people with a good heart from the outside. The most important thing is that I know [who they are]. Some people are just a bit biased and I mean, I get it, it’s fine.
“But it’s not my problem at the end of the day. I just continue with my life and I keep performing.”
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