F1 makes its second trip to North America for the 2023 season this weekend with the Canadian Grand Prix in Montreal. While both Red Bull cars — especially two-time defending champion Max Verstappen — have shown imperious pace this season, Mercedes’ recent upgrades have made the Silver Arrows more formidable and the infamous Montreal weather could set the stage for more competitive racing.
Here’s everything you need to know ahead of the Canadian Grand Prix:
Canadian Grand Prix TV/streaming schedule
All times Eastern
Sunday
12:30 – 1:55 p.m.: Pre-race show (ABC, ESPN app)
1:55 – 4 p.m.: Canadian Grand Prix (ABC, ESPN app, F1 TV Pro)
1:55 – 4 p.m.: The Grandstand with Daniel Ricciardo and Will Arnett (ESPN2, ESPN app)
Hülkenberg, Sainz, Stroll and Tsunoda get grid drops
Nico Hülkenberg’s second career front-row qualifying effort was short-lived. After clocking the second-fastest time in Q3 on Saturday, stewards deemed that he had not slowed sufficiently under a red flag and was given a three-place grid drop. Ferrari’s Carlos Sainz, who had originally qualified P8 will start P11 after stewards determined he impeded Alpine’s Pierre Gasly in Q1, ruining the Frenchman’s final flying lap.
Hometown hero Lance Stroll lost his P13 starting spot for impeding Alpine’s Esteban Ocon and will now begin the Grand Prix from P16. Alpha Tauri’s Yuki Tsunoda was demoted from P16 to P19 on the grid after it was determined he impeded Hülkenberg.
Canadian Grand Prix starting grid
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Max Verstappen (1), Red Bull-Honda RBPT
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Fernando Alonso (14), Aston Martin-Mercedes
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Lewis Hamilton (44), Mercedes
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George Russell (63), Mercedes
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Nico Hülkenberg, (27), Haas-Ferrari
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Esteban Ocon (31), Alpine-Renault
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Lando Norris (4), McLaren-Mercedes
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Oscar Piastri (81), McLaren-Mercedes
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Alexander Albon (23), Williams-Mercedes
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Charles Leclerc (16), Ferrari
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Carlos Sainz (55), Ferrari
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Sergio Perez (11), Red Bull-Honda RBPT
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Kevin Magnussen (20), Haas-Ferrari
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Valtteri Bottas (77), Alfa Romeo-Ferrari
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Lance Stroll (18), Aston Martin-Mercedes
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Pierre Gasly (10), Alpine-Renault
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Nyck De Vries (21), AlphaTauri-Honda RBPT
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Logan Sargeant (2), Williams-Mercedes
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Yuki Tsunoda (22), AlphaTauri-Honda RBPT
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Zhou Guanyu (24), Alfa Romeo-Ferrari
Verstappen fastest in damp FP3
Free Practice 3 started wet and got wetter. By the end of the session it was Max Verstappen topping the time sheets with a 1:23.106 on the intermediate tire. Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc was second-fastest, two tenths off the Dutchman and Aston Martin’s Fernando Alonso was third, more than a second behind.
Leclerc’s teammate Carlos Sainz briefly brought out the red flag with a spin and contact with the barriers in Turn 1 midway through the session.
Mercedes tops wet-dry FP2
After Free Practice 1 was mostly wiped out due to a CCTV failure, there was plenty of action in an extended FP2. Alpine continued to have problems as Esteban Ocon was ordered to stop his car early in the session with a suspected water pressure issue — different from the transmission problem his teammate Pierre Gasly suffered on his install lap in FP1.
With about 30 minutes remaining in the session, George Russell posted the quickest lap of 1:13.745 before his Mercedes teammate Lewis Hamilton immediately bested him with a 1:13.718. Then, the rain came pouring down with 10 minutes to go but some adventurous souls — both Aston Martins and Carlos Sainz among them — bolted on intermediate tires to get a jump on what promises to be a wet qualifying session tomorrow.
Multiple issues wipe out FP1
After Pierre Gasly brought out a red flag when he stopped near Turn 8 on an install lap with a gearbox issue, it was discovered that the closed circuit television system was not synched properly. That is a big safety issue as the CCTV enables race control to monitor the whole track, even where marshals can’t be, to deploy local or full-course yellow flags.
The result was a frustrating 50-minute red flag. The FIA made the determination that Free Practice 2 will start 30 minutes earlier — at 4:30 p.m. ET — and run for 90 minutes rather than the usual hour.
Canadian Grand Prix details
Track: Circuit Gilles Villeneuve (Montreal), 2.17-mile, 14-turn road course
Race length: 70 laps for 190 miles
Lap record: 1:13.078 (Valtteri Bottas, Mercedes, 2019)
Tire compounds: C3 (Hard), C4 (Medium), C5 (Soft)
Last year’s winner: Max Verstappen, Red Bull
Canadian Grand Prix entry list
Max Verstappen (1), Red Bull-Honda RBPT
Sergio Perez (11), Red Bull-Honda RBPT
Charles Leclerc (16), Ferrari
Carlos Sainz (55), Ferrari
Lewis Hamilton (44), Mercedes
George Russell (63), Mercedes
Pierre Gasly (10), Alpine-Renault
Esteban Ocon (31), Alpine-Renault
Lando Norris (4), McLaren-Mercedes
Oscar Piastri (81), McLaren-Mercedes
Zhou Guanyu (24), Alfa Romeo-Ferrari
Valtteri Bottas (77), Alfa Romeo-Ferrari
Fernando Alonso (14), Aston Martin-Mercedes
Lance Stroll (18), Aston Martin-Mercedes
Kevin Magnussen (20), Haas-Ferrari
Nico Hulkenberg, (27), Haas-Ferrari
Nyck De Vries (21), AlphaTauri-Honda RBPT
Yuki Tsunoda (22), AlphaTauri-Honda RBPT
Logan Sargeant (2), Williams-Mercedes
Alexander Albon (23), Williams-Mercedes
Top drivers and best bets for the Canadian Grand Prix
Max Verstappen (-275), who won last year’s Canadian Grand Prix from pole en route to his second straight championship, once again enters the weekend as the overwhelming favorite with a negative moneyline at BetMGM. Verstappen’s Red Bull teammate enters the weekend at 5-to-1 after finishing last in 2022 due to a gearbox issue. Lewis Hamilton (+800), who has won seven times on the Circuit Gilles Villeneuve, is the only other driver that enters the weekend with better than 10-to-1 odds.
Best odds to win
Max Verstappen -275
Sergio Perez +500
Lewis Hamilton +800
Earlier in the week, Yahoo Sports’ Nick Bromberg wrote on some attractive prop bets for the weekend. Bromberg likes Lando Norris to finish in the points (-140), citing the McLaren driver’s strong qualifying effort two weeks ago in Spain. Bromberg is also bullish on Alpine’s Esteban Ocon to finish ahead of teammate Pierre Gasly (-125), something he’s done in the past two races.
Weather for the Canadian Grand Prix
It wouldn’t be a Canadian Grand Prix weekend without at least the threat of rain. The forecast calls for precipitation Friday and Saturday with temperatures in the low 70s. It should be significantly cooler on race day with cloud cover and a 55% chance of rain. Mixed conditions can be the great equalizer, as some areas of the track get more slippery than others and teams weigh how much lap time can be saved on grooved tires vs. slicks.
On the other hand, the two known masters of the rain in Verstappen and Hamilton also enter with the best equipment and would appear likely to start at the front of the grid.