Podium Prophets
Round 9

Barcelona Grand Prix

4.657 km66 laps307.4 km total

Mercedes currently leads the predicted order here with a 7.76 weekend score, 7.84 qualifying outlook, and 7.70 race outlook.

Traditional testing venue that rewards all-round car balanceHigh-speed Turn 3 and final sector expose aero weaknessesNotoriously harsh on tyres, especially the front-left
catalunya circuit layout

Circuit Demands

High-Speed Demand
8.0
Surface Grip
7.5
Braking Demand
7.0
Downforce Demand
7.0
Active Aero Value
6.0
Tyre Degradation Severity
6.0
Traction Demand
5.5
Overtaking Difficulty
5.5
Straight-Line Importance
5.5
Kerb Severity
5.0
Low-Speed Demand
4.5
Energy Clipping Demand
4.5
Energy Recovery Opportunity
4.2
Altitude Effect
1.0

Circuit Analysis

Catalunya functions as the reference circuit because it demands competence across all performance axes simultaneously. High-speed sits at 8.0, led by the Turn 3-7 complex through the upper section of the circuit, while downforce requirement at 7.0 and braking demand at 7.0 ensure no single setup extreme can dominate. Teams use pre-season testing data from this circuit precisely because it exposes both high-speed stability weaknesses and mechanical grip deficits in a single lap.

Tyre degradation is embedded in the circuit's character. The abrasive asphalt surface consistently generates higher than expected rear deg rates, particularly in hot ambient conditions. The long Turn 9 right-hander degrades the right-rear tyre progressively through each stint, and teams that cannot manage this thermal load face a compromised one-stop strategy that surrenders track position. Qualifying pace at Catalunya translates more reliably into race pace than at most circuits because aerodynamic performance gaps persist throughout the race distance.

Team Outlook at This Circuit

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