Podium Prophets
Round 14

Dutch Grand Prix

4.259 km72 laps306.6 km total

Mercedes currently leads the predicted order here with a 7.80 weekend score, 7.87 qualifying outlook, and 7.73 race outlook.

Banked final turn (Arie Luyendijkbocht) is unique on the F1 calendarNarrow circuit makes overtaking extremely difficultHigh-downforce setup required for the fast sweeping corners
zandvoort circuit layout

Circuit Demands

Downforce Demand
8.0
High-Speed Demand
8.0
Tyre Degradation Severity
8.0
Overtaking Difficulty
8.0
Surface Grip
7.5
Traction Demand
6.0
Kerb Severity
5.5
Braking Demand
5.5
Low-Speed Demand
5.0
Energy Recovery Opportunity
4.5
Energy Clipping Demand
3.7
Active Aero Value
3.5
Straight-Line Importance
3.5
Altitude Effect
0.5

Circuit Analysis

Zandvoort presents a uniquely balanced technical challenge, with high-speed demand (8.0), downforce demand (8.0), and tyre degradation (8.0) all at the same extreme level, a combination that exists nowhere else on the calendar. The banked Aapioch corner at the final turn allows cars to carry significantly higher speeds than a conventional flat hairpin, placing unusual lateral load on the rear tyres. This banking geometry also generates a specific ride-height sensitivity that exposes differences in car floor philosophy.

The circuit's narrow layout makes circuit position almost determinative of race outcome. Pass attempts are restricted to the heavily contested Turn 1 braking zone, and DRS effectiveness is reduced by the track's compressed length. Qualifying pace is therefore a stronger-than-average predictor here. Cars that generate consistent high-speed downforce without overheating rear tyres have a structural advantage across the race distance.

Team Outlook at This Circuit

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