Abu Dhabi Grand Prix: F1 – live

Key events

“I’m working really hard for it. Hopefully I will get there one day,” Felipe Drugovich, the 2022 Formula 2 champion, tells Brundle of his F1 dream.

The actor Terry Crews, smiling, speaks to Brundle on the grid: “F1 is amazing. This is my fourth race. It won’t be my last.”

“Your energy is amazing,” counters Brundle.

Red Bull’s Christian Horner speaks: “It’s a bit like a cup final for us. We’ve got nothing to lose. Go for it, try to finish the season on a high note.

They’ve got their own races to run. They may need to be a bit conservative … There will be opportunities and Max isn’t shy of having a go.”

GRID WALK TIME! Let’s go, Martin.

Brad Pitt is having a chat with Ted Kravitz about the F1 film he’s been working on for the past 18 months.

“I’ve got so much respect for these guys,” Pitt says. “What the drivers can do, what the cars can do. It’s off the charts. I’ve been having the time of my life. I wish I was going another year [of filming] … I might even shed a tear, you might see a grown man cry [when it ends after the race].”

At the end of the live segment Pitt jokingly offers Kravitz a cameo in the film.

“Do you want in?” asks Pitt.

“No, I’m happy doing what I’m doing,” a bashful-looking Kravitz replies. Awkward.

Fun fact: I rode one of Lotto Soudal’s bicycles around the Yas Marina Circuit a few years ago. So I know the racing line.

Well done if you spotted me mixing up Mercedes and McLaren down there. Silly me.

I didn’t get any emails about it yet, but it’s not too late.

All F1-related emails will be considered for publication.

Those cars are so fast today. You don’t see it on telly,” Mercedes’s Toto Wolff tells Brundle, in a live interview from the pit lane in Abu Dhabi.

“Lewis was super quick [in qualifying]. We got it wrong. We should have sent him out earlier … and then the bollard. He was quick in P3, he could have been on the front.”

On this being Hamilton’s final race with Mercedes: “It’s high emotions. It’s compartmentalised now. But in two hours, it will be hard.

“If we can’t win, we will cheer for him.”

And on the relative lack of success in recent seasons: “You need to see all the great successes we had … there is no longer, more successful team and driver relationship. This is what we need to celebrate and look back to.

“I would love it if he came through the pack today. That is why I was so upset yesterday [with the qualifying], I wanted to give him a send-off with a podium.”

This is a cool feature from Sky. Brundle chasing Hamilton around Silverstone, both driving Mercedes.

“Look at the speed! Look at the confidence,” Brundle says of the way Hamilton is handling his car.

“I really didn’t want to come in. That was mega,” says Hamilton.

To mark Hamilton’s departure, Martin Brundle has been out driving the Mercedes, with Lewis on hand to give him some tips. Apparently Brundle has driven 70 different cars across his own racing career plus 28 years in broadcasting.

Max Verstappen has already wrapped up his fourth title, the drivers are falling out with each other, and the teams are annoyed with the FIA. Business as usual in Formula One, but today’s season-concluding race still comes loaded with potential drama.

McLaren are well placed to seal their first constructor’s championship since 1998, with Lando Norris in pole position, and his teammate Oscar Piastri second. Ferrari are second in the standings, 21 points down, but Charles Leclerc languishes in 19th on the Yas Marina grid after a 10-place penalty for taking a new battery unit, plus the deletion of his final quick lap in qualifying for exceeding track limits. Ferrari’s Carlos Sainz tucks in behind the McLarens in third on the grid, but the Scuderia face what looks an almost impossible task.

In addition to the constructor’s title denouement this will be a poignant occasion for British fans, it being Lewis Hamilton’s final race for Mercedes. The singularly talented seven-times world champion will join Ferrari next year, but after what Toto Wolff called an ‘idiotic’ mistake by the team in qualifying, he starts in 18th place. It will be an emotional day for Hamilton and his team as they rightfully honour their past glories, while McLaren attempt to wrap up that constructors’ crown.

Lights out: 1pm UK time.