
Britain's Lando Norris was fastest in the first practice session for the Dutch Grand Prix Friday, pipping home favourite Max Verstappen in wildly unpredictable weather conditions on the Zandvoort circuit.
In classic Dutch seaside fashion, the weather veered from torrential rain to bright sunshine and back again in a matter of minutes, making tyre and racing strategy a real headache.
On a thrilling last lap of practice, Verstappen briefly took the fastest lap time in his Red Bull before McLaren's Norris seized back the advantage with a 1:12.322 lap.
Verstappen was just 0.201 seconds behind, with the Mercedes of Lewis Hamilton third, a further 0.483 seconds behind the Dutchman.
On the wet track, even Verstappen locked up his wheels and spun out of control just as he looked to be delivering the fastest lap.
Then the clouds parted, the sun emerged, and the lap times quickened appreciably, the lead changing hands several times over the hour of practice.
Local hero Verstappen has never lost at his "home" Grand Prix since it was reintroduced to the circuit in 2021.
The three-time champion had a blistering start to the season, picking up from where he left off in 2023 with seven wins out of the first 10.
But he has endured a lean spell by his high standards, failing to take the chequered flag in any of the last four Grands Prix -- his most barren period since 2020.
This has given the chasing pack, led by Norris, some hope they can somehow prevent Verstappen cruising to a fourth world championship.
Norris sits 78 points behind Verstappen in the drivers' championship and while he hopes to overhaul the Dutchman, he was realistic about his chances before the race.
"It's a lot of points and it's against Max, so I want to be optimistic and say there's still chances, I know it's a lot and it's going to be a very difficult challenge."
F1 stars have whale of a time in season break
Usually found jetting off to swanky locations, driving the world's fastest cars and lapping up adulation from adoring fans, what do Formula One drivers do when they have time off?
Quite the variety, it seems. From taking in a Taylor Swift show to drinking with student pals or, more seriously, touring a refugee camp in Africa, F1 drivers have been revealing their holiday secrets ahead of Sunday's Dutch Grand Prix.
Japanese driver Yuki Tsunoda might have raised a few eyebrows in the paddock when asked what he got up to in the more than three weeks since the last Grand Prix in Belgium.
The 24-year-old said he went back to meet up with friends at home in Japan and then travelled to Italy "to get back into shape... especially after drinking a lot in Japan."
"That's very, very fun," he said to chuckles from the media. "I missed the time that you want to spend with friends from about 18 years old until 22. It's the best time you can spend around summer. So I finally got to do, you know, err, summer things with my friends."
Fifteen years Tsunoda's senior and a veteran of the grid, Lewis Hamilton had a much more sobering time off on an "amazing" trip to Africa. "I maximised my time straight from the airport into activities, history, museums, cultural experiences in each of the different countries I went to," he told reporters.
"There's so much to take from it, I'm still digesting the trip if I'm being honest," he added.
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