Mother’s Day Or Father’s Day: Carlos Sainz and Christian Horner’s Contrasting Posts Leave Fans Confused
Carlos Sainz and Christian Horner’s contrasting social media posts on March 19 have left Formula 1 fans around the world perplexed. Sainz took to his Instagram and wished his father, Carlos Sainz Sr, a ‘Happy Father’s Day’.
Meanwhile, Horner wished his mother, Sarah, a ‘Happy Mother’s Day’ on the same day. Following their contrasting social media posts, several fans hilariously corrected Sainz and Horner.
However, little did they realize that it is both Father’s Day and Mother’s Day on March 19 this year, just in different parts of the world. The Spanish celebrate Father’s Day, while the British celebrate Mother’s Day.
View this post on Instagram
View this post on Instagram
Fans ask if it is ‘Father’s Day’ or ‘Mother’s Day’
Is it not Mother’s Day 🤦🏽😅
— blanny 🐝 (@svfive_) March 19, 2023
In spain its father s
— Carlos Saint 🏆 (@OyGhAm_F1) March 19, 2023
it’s mother’s day mate
— ✞ (@opendafan) March 19, 2023
Not in Spain…🤦♀️
— Amanda (@Amanda_kisses) March 19, 2023
Christian Horner and Carlos Sainz will now turn their focus to the Saudi Arabian GP
After the celebratory mood, both Red Bull Racing team principal Christian Horner and star Ferrari driver Carlos Sainz will now turn their attention to the Saudi Arabian Grand Prix. The Saudi Arabian GP will begin at 8:00 PM local time on Sunday.
Horner and his team have so far had a mixed weekend. On the one hand, Sergio Perez will start on the pole, while on the other, reigning champion Max Verstappen will start all the way down in the 15th. The Dutchman will start 15th after he failed to set a lap time in the second qualifying session due to a driveshaft issue.
As for Sainz’s struggles seem to continue from the Bahrain Grand Prix. While the Spaniard managed to finish the Bahrain GP in fourth, he was way off the pace of his teammate, Charles Leclerc.
A similar scenario seems to have followed in Saudi Arabia. While Leclerc registered the second-fastest time during qualifying on Saturday, Sainz only managed the fifth-fastest. And to add to Sainz’s woes, his lap time was more than 0.5 seconds slower than that of Leclerc’s.
Saudi Arabian Grand Prix starting grid after penalties applied
- Sergio Perez (Red Bull Racing)
- Fernando Alonso (Aston Martin)
- George Russell (Mercedes)
- Carlos Sainz (Ferrari)
- Lance Stroll (Aston Martin)
- Esteban Ocon (Alpine)
- Lewis Hamilton (Mercedes)
- Oscar Piastri (McLaren)
- Pierre Gasly (Alpine)
- Nico Hulkenberg (Haas)
- Zhou Guanyu (Alfa Romeo Racing)
- Charles Leclerc (Ferrari): 10-place grid penalty
- Kevin Magnussen (Haas)
- Valtteri Bottas (Alfa Romeo Racing)
- Max Verstappen (Red Bull Racing)
- Yuki Tsunoda (AlphaTauri)
- Alex Albon (Williams)
- d
- Lando Norris (McLaren)
- Logan Sargeant (Williams)
About the author
-
Subham Jindal •
“This sport changes incredibly quickly” – George Russell unsure of Mercedes future amid Sir Lewis Hamilton contract breakdown reports
-
Vidit Dhawan •
Charles Leclerc Spotify: How Many Songs Has He Released and Other FAQs About Them
-
Vidit Dhawan •
Lando Norris Shares a Peek Into McLaren’s “Huge Step Forward” That Should Have Red Bull Worried
-
Aishwary Gaonkar •
Red Bull Ends a 11-Race Dry Spell Against Rivals in Brazil, Thanks to Max Verstappen’s Dominance
-
Sabyasachi Biswas •
Drive to Survive Season 6 Records Abysmal Viewership; Is Netflix Docuseries in Diminishing Returns Phase?
-
Tanish Chachra •
“15km as part of a demo; then will do 100km at Barcelona”– Ferrari’s F1-75 to hit track at Fiorano only a day after its official release
