Sunday in Spielberg is where the Austrian Grand Prix stops being a practice story and becomes a direct race test. Formula 1's official timetable confirms the race start, and Saturday's qualifying has given the event a sharper competitive shape than Friday's pace picture suggested.
George Russell leads the field away after taking pole in dramatic fashion, with Charles Leclerc and Lewis Hamilton immediately behind him. That matters at the Red Bull Ring because the opening laps are rarely passive here. The lap is short, the braking zones are aggressive and small speed differences can turn into visible position changes quickly.
McLaren now enter the day from a different angle. Friday made them look like a clean front-running threat, but race-day context has shifted them into more of a recovery role. That does not remove them from the front-end conversation, yet it does put far more focus on launch, first-stint rhythm and pit timing.
For bettors, Austria is useful on exactly this type of Sunday. Russell has clean air, Ferrari have two cars close enough to pressure him and McLaren still carry enough underlying speed to disturb the whole order if the race opens up.