Daniel Ricciardo was a revelation in the AlphaTauri in Mexico - but whether he can thrive in a modern Red Bull remains an open question. And, for now, he may be a more useful asset for AlphaTauri anyway
Red Bull’s stated “intention” of keeping Sergio Perez in 2024 leaves some wiggle room that is familiar in the context of recent Formula 1 driver decisions
Jorge Martin clearly feels his Thailand GP victory was something of a statement win. And Martin certainly has a point, but a post-race revelation about the parameters his race was run in is something that should be at the back of his mind, too.
The best win of Jorge Martin's career versus the best weekend of Marc Marquez's season and Brad Binder elevating KTM - who topped our Thai GP rider rankings?
Though winner Max Verstappen was at his reliably high level, he was just one of a handful of drivers with a legitimate case for being named Mexican GP's most impressive performer
Do Sergio Perez's Mexican GP misjudgment and Daniel Ricciardo's ace weekend give Red Bull something to think about for 2024 - or was Perez's pace too solid for that?
Red Bull called Daniel Ricciardo's Mexican Grand Prix performance "remarkable". And all the evidence suggests it won't be a one-off. Scott Mitchell-Malm explains why the AlphaTauri lets Ricciardo perform how he couldn't at McLaren
What if Sergio Perez had completed his fifth-to-first move at the start? What if the red flag hadn't reset the Ferrari/Red Bull strategy battle? What if Lando Norris hadn't started at the back?
The 2023 Mexican Grand Prix went immediately wrong for the man most in the crowd were hoping was going to win it, so it'll be no surprise where Sergio Perez ends up in our list of winners and losers this week. But who else was a big disappointment and who impressed us most?