Lawson says Safety Car ended all hope of points at F1 Imola GP

SUZUKA, JAPAN - APRIL 04: Liam Lawson of New Zealand and Visa Cash App Racing Bulls in the garage with team members during practice ahead of the F1 Grand Prix of Japan at Suzuka Circuit on April 04, 2025 in Suzuka, Japan.
Photo Credit: Red Bull Content Pool
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Liam Lawson was one of the many unlucky drivers who could not perform satisfactorily at the 2025 F1 Imola GP due to the poorly timed Safety Car interruptions.

Before the Virtual Safety Car

After failing to make it past Q1 during qualifying, the Racing Bulls driver started the race from P16,.

During the opening lap, Lawson gained a position after overtaking Franco Colapinto. He was P17 before the first Virtual Safety Car (VSC) was deployed.

Before his first pit stop on lap 10, Lawson was on the C5 yellow medium tyres.

After the Virtual Safety Car

After the VSC, he switched to the C4 white hard tyres in an attempt to stretch the stint and gain time — but the strategy ultimately failed due to the timing of the VSC.

“It just didn’t work for us, It ended our race,” Lawson admitted in the print media pen.

After his shock demotion to Racing Bulls following two subdued performances in Red Bull’s main team on the opening two rounds of the season, Liam Lawson managed to get his best qualifying result of the season so far at Suzuka for the F1 Japanese GP, with 14th place on the grid – and crucially, ahead of Yuki Tsunoda in the second Red Bull.
Photo Credit: Red Bull Content Pool

Despite the early stop strategy not paying off, the driver remained confident in the car’s potential.

“The car has been fast all weekend. I didn’t get to show it yesterday or today.”

Eliminating any chances of trying to make up positions and scoring points.

After the Safety Car, Lawson ran in P13. The two DNFs — Kimi Antonelli and Esteban Ocon — briefly gave the Kiwi an upper hand.

Lawson eventually finished his race at P14, +32.511 seconds behind winner, Max Verstappen. Fernando Alonso overtook him following the restart.

Looking forward to Monaco

After what he called a “bad weekend”, Lawson is determined to bounce back, and looks forward to his Formula 1 debut at Monaco.

“I just want to go there and get into it again.”

With Monaco expected to be less demanding on tyre degradation and a new two-stop rule in place, strategy may play a bigger role — but Lawson emphasized one thing remains unchanged:

“It’s about car speed and about being fast.”

Looking ahead, he hopes for a straightforward race and a strong qualifying performance in his pursuit of points.