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Williams: Double-points finish unexpected after qualifying woe

Claire Williams and Paddy Lowe admitted they didn't expect to score Williams's first double-points finish of the 2017 Formula 1 season in Austria after its worst qualifying in three years.

Felipe Massa, Williams FW40

Felipe Massa, Williams FW40

Sutton Images

Lance Stroll, Williams FW40
Felipe Massa, Williams FW40
Lance Stroll, Williams FW40
Felipe Massa, Williams FW40
Lance Stroll, Williams FW40 locks up in front of Kevin Magnussen, Haas F1 Team VF-17
Felipe Massa, Williams FW40
Lance Stroll, Williams FW40

Williams had no explanation for losing both cars in Q1 for the first time since the rain-hit session for the 2014 British Grand Prix, with Felipe Massa and Lance Stroll 17th and 18th respectively.

But a first-lap collision that involved Daniil Kvyat, Fernando Alonso and Max Verstappen, helped Massa and Stroll gain seven places apiece before the end of the opening lap.

Both showed strong race pace, with Massa finishing ninth and Stroll 10th, the latter scoring points for the third successive race.

"It's a surprising result," deputy team principal Williams told Motorsport.com. "I'm really pleased because the guys have had a really tough weekend from P1 onwards.

"It's not what we expected, to come away with our first double-points finish.

"The incident at the start of the race with Alonso, Kvyat and Max helped promote the guys but they both had a clean start, which isn't easy around here when you're starting from those positions.

"Then they both had a really clean race, and the engineers managed their races well for them."

Chief technical officer Lowe said the pace both cars showed in race trim proved the team's problems focused on single-lap pace with investigations set to continue into this week.

"Yes [it was a surprise], it was a great race for us," he told Motorsport.com. "We are very happy with that, considering we started from so far back, 17th and 18th.

"But we have got to go away and analyse our qualifying performance. The car pace in the race supports what we had suspected from Friday, which is we looked OK on long run pace on Friday, it's just the low fuel which is a problem.

"We need to spend some days looking at the data and trying to make sense of it. That particular effect of not being able to get the car working for qualifying - that's the first time we've had that this year."

Massa, who ended a run of two successive retirements with his fifth points finish of the season at the Red Bull Ring, was pleased with the recovery but insisted the team's qualifying woes were "not acceptable".

"The car behaved really well, I managed to do an amazing start and amazing first lap," he said. "The car behaved like expected in the race and not in qualifying, which is really a shame.

"We just need to understand the car because it's not acceptable the car behaves in the race and not in the qualifying so this is something we really need to fix and make it better."

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