Find the highest-scoring F1 Fantasy team combinations for the upcoming race. The optimizer runs every valid lineup within your budget and ranks by predicted points — set your race, stage, and budget to see the top picks instantly.
Pace-driven predictions anchored to live session data. Adapts to current weekend performance with AI-tuned driver corrections.
Apex Team
Find the highest-scoring F1 Fantasy team combinations for the upcoming race. The optimizer runs every valid lineup within your budget and ranks by predicted points — set your race, stage, and budget to see the top picks instantly.
Pace-driven predictions anchored to live session data. Adapts to current weekend performance with AI-tuned driver corrections.
Tap any slot to pin a driver or constructor — pinned picks filter the rankings below.
Drivers
Constructors
How the Apex Team optimizer works
Apex Team searches every one of the 697,680 valid lineups — every way to combine 5 drivers and 2 constructors from the grid — and runs a Monte Carlo simulation for each driver to project their points. It respects your budget cap and any picks you lock in, then ranks the surviving lineups by expected points so you see the strongest options first, not just one guess.
Run it more than once during a race week. Early in the weekend, predictions lean on season history; once FP and qualifying data come in, the model has more to work with and the rankings sharpen. The version that matters most is the one you check right before your team locks — before qualifying on a normal weekend, or before the sprint on a sprint weekend — since nothing changes after that.
These are expected values from simulations, not certainties. A DNF, a crash, or a wet qualifying session adds variance no model fully captures, so a lower-ranked lineup can still outscore the top pick on a given weekend. Treat Apex Team as a way to narrow hundreds of thousands of options down to a shortlist — the final call is still yours.
- How accurate are the predictions?
- Apex Team's numbers are expected points from simulations, not certainties — they're strongest at ranking lineups relative to each other, not at predicting an exact score. Treat the top-ranked lineup as the best bet given what's known right now, not a guarantee. Variance from crashes, DNFs, and weather means any single race can land outside the projection.
- Can I lock in drivers I already own?
- Yes. Locking a driver or constructor tells Apex Team to build every candidate lineup around that pick instead of searching all 697,680 combinations freely. The optimizer then fills the remaining budget with whichever drivers and constructors produce the highest projected points alongside your locks.
- When should I run the optimizer?
- Run it after each session that changes the picture — FP1 through qualifying — since new data sharpens the projections each time. The result that counts most is the last one you check before your team locks, before qualifying on a normal weekend or before the sprint on a sprint weekend, because no changes are possible after that.
- Why does the optimizer suggest a team without the championship leader?
- Apex Team ranks by projected points per dollar of your $100M budget, not raw points alone. A championship leader often costs enough that fitting them in means dropping value elsewhere in the lineup — the optimizer may find that two cheaper, in-form picks add up to more total points than one expensive star.