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Verstappen completes double, crashes, stays 'positive'

Red Bull's Max Verstappen in action during practice for the Azerbaijan Grand Prix in Baku on June 23, 2017

Max Verstappen delivered a practice double and a dramatic crash on Friday and then declared it as his and Red Bull’s ‘most positive’ day of the year. The 19-year-old Dutchman dominated the action in both sessions ahead of this weekend’s Azerbaijan Grand Prix before he ended up hitting the wall in the final minutes of the afternoon’s action. “Definitely the most positive Friday of the year so far," said Verstappen. “To be first with not an ideal lap! First of all, I went out of the garage with yellow flags and a Virtual Safety Car, so you cannot warm up the tyres as you want to, so still to be up there is very positive. “To stay there will be really difficult, but at least we have better pace than normal, but I felt really good in the car.” Verstappen clocked a best lap in one minute and 43.362 seconds to outpace Valtteri Bottas of Mercedes by 0.100, but ended the session ignominiously by hitting the wall at Turn One. On a day of heat and incident, including a red-flagged halt to the action in both sessions, Verstappen’s Red Bull team-mate Daniel Ricciardo was third fastest in second practice ahead of Kimi Raikkonen and his Ferrari team-mate championship leading four-time champion Sebastian Vettel. Canadian Lance Stroll, who scored his first F1 points for Williams at his home event earlier in June, was sixth ahead of Sergio Perez, who crashed in the morning session, Daniil Kvyat of Toro Rosso, Esteban Ocon in the second Force India and, unexpectedly, three-time champion Lewis Hamilton in the second Mercedes. The session was an unhappy one for the Englishman as he struggled to ‘hook up’ his car to the required set-up for the circuit, but at least he kept away from the walls. That was not a story shared by compatriot Jolyon Palmer whose miserable form continued when he crashed his Renault in the opening minutes, causing a red-flagged stoppage. Two-time champion Fernando Alonso’s ill luck also continued in the afternoon when after driving impressively he was forced into early retirement with an engine failure in his McLaren Honda car. Verstappen topped both sessions -– ahead of Ricciardo in the morning and Bottas in the afternoon, when the Australian was third. "The car was working straightaway so the correlation is good and I think from the engine side we had a little bit of an update, so that is always positive,” added Verstappen. He crashed in the final minutes at the first corner, damaging the right rear suspension. "It was very weird, to be honest," he said. "I locked up and I was still trying to make the corner -- and then I decided to play it safe and take the exit road. “But then, suddenly, I lost the rear and then I had a four wheel power slide into the barriers.” Hamilton conceded it had been a challenging day, but pointed to Bottas’s speed for encouragement. “This circuit is a tough one and we had a few challenges that we tried to work through. We've clearly still got lots of work to do ahead of qualifying, but Valtteri's time in FP2 looks promising so there is obviously pace in the car. “It's a case of getting our heads together tonight to work out exactly how to extract that pace across the entire weekend.” Bottas said: “We needed multiple laps in a row to generate the temperatures we want for a good balance. FP1 wasn't a happy session, but we made some changes ahead of FP2 -- and the car felt more comfortable. “We'll work hard and, if we can find those gains, we'll be right there fighting for pole.”