
Russell triumphs in Canada as McLaren drivers crash
George Russell secured Mercedes' first win of the season in the Canadian Grand Prix on Sunday as McLaren's championship-chasing drivers crashed in the final laps of an intriguing and hectic race.
The 27-year-old Briton beat close rival and four-time world champion Max Verstappen of Red Bull by 0.228 seconds under the safety car to claim his fourth career victory with his teenage Mercedes team-mate Kimi Antonelli finishing third.
The 18-year-old Italian rookie became the third-youngest podium finisher in Formula One history, showing composure in resisting late intense late pressure from championship leader Oscar Piastri of McLaren, who survived a collision with team-mate Lando Norris, on his way to fourth.
That ensured he extended his lead in the drivers' standings to 22 points ahead of Norris who crashed into him on lap 67 of the 70-lap race, breaking his front wing as he attempted to pass on the straight.
"Yep, I'm sorry," said Norris of his crash with Piastri. "It's all my bad, all my fault. Unlucky, sorry. Stupid from me."
Charles Leclerc finished fifth ahead of Ferrari team-mate Lewis Hamilton, Fernando Alonso of Aston Martin and Sauber's Nico Hulkenberg.
Esteban Ocon finished ninth for Haas, marking their 200th race with a solid points finish, ahead of Carlos Sainz for Williams.
Russell was delighted to deliver his team's first win since the Las Vegas Grand Prix last year.
"It's amazing to be back on the top step. The last time was Vegas and last year here felt like it was a victory lost. But today we obviously got the victory thanks to that incredible pole lap and I am so happy to see Kimi on the podium as well."
Verstappen was quick to congratulate both Mercedes drivers.
"It was quite a good race although we were struggling on the tyres in the first two stints. We had an aggressive strategy and we managed to hang in there. And this was the maximum possible for us today."
Antonelli was greeted enthusiastically by the big crowd at the Circuit Gilles Villeneuve with his name chanted as he took his podium place.
"It was so stressful," he said. "But I am super happy! I had a good start, managed to jump to P3, and just stayed up there in the front. I am so happy to bring this podium home."
The top six were all on mediums when the lights went out, Russell reacting quickest to pull clear while Antonelli passed Piastri for third.
Verstappen clung on to Russell's early pace, staying within a second of him throughout the opening five laps, and three clear of Antonelli, as he tried to put him under pressure, but by lap seven the Mercedes was 1.5 seconds clear.
Verstappen rejoined ninth as Russell reacted and pitted, returning in seventh on hards before Antonelli pitted from the lead on lap 15 leaving Piastri leading Norris in a McLaren 1-2.
Piastri pitted on lap 17 for hards, gifting Norris the lead after starting seventh on hards.
After a bright start, Hamilton pitted on lap 16 and came out trapped 10th in traffic, with reported damage to his car, that delayed his pursuit before Russell, on lap 26, swept past Leclerc for second.
Two laps later, Leclerc pitted for more hards followed by Norris, who took mediums. "I don't understand this choice," complained Leclerc, knowing it meant he had to pit again.
All this restored Russell and Verstappen to lead again ahead of Antonelli and Piastri with Norris charging in fifth, ahead of the two Ferraris.
Verstappen was early to pit again, on lap 37, but with a fast out-lap passed Antonelli, as Mercedes responded in vain to the Red Bull under-cut and began the second stops.
Only five seconds separated the top four as they began a furious final 10-lap dash to the flag that resulted in the McLarens battling wheel-to-wheel for fourth place near the end when Norris hit the rear of his team-mate's car and crashed out of the race.
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India Today
24 minutes ago
- India Today
Canadian Grand Prix: George Russell wins from pole as Piastri and Norris collide
George Russell secured Mercedes' first win of the 2025 Formula One season with a composed drive from pole position at a dramatic Canadian Grand Prix, while McLaren's championship battle took a chaotic turn as teammates Oscar Piastri and Lando Norris collided in the closing who had also started on pole in Montreal last year before finishing third, made no mistake this time, leading confidently from the start and navigating multiple strategy shifts and a late-race safety car to take the chequered flag. The win marks his second career victory, his last having come in Las Vegas in November amazing to be back on the top step," said Russell after the race. "I felt last year was a victory lost, and today we made up for it. That pole lap yesterday really set it all up." The race, which started under overcast skies at Circuit Gilles Villeneuve, was full of strategic variation. Some drivers opted for two-stop strategies, while others, like Norris, gambled on longer initial stints using the hard compound tyres. This mix created a tense finale with the top five cars all within striking distance as the laps wound held the lead from Red Bull's Max Verstappen, who had been aiming for a fourth consecutive win at the venue but had to settle for second after a late safety car scuppered any chance of a final them, all eyes were on McLaren. Oscar Piastri, in pursuit of third place, was being chased by teammate Norris in the final laps. With just three laps to go, the two came to blows - literally - as Norris clipped the rear of Piastri's car while attempting an ambitious overtake. The impact sent Norris off track and out of the race, prompting an immediate apology over team radio."I'm sorry. All my bad. All my fault. Stupid from me," said a remorseful Norris, who was later handed a five-second time penalty by the stewards - irrelevant given his emerged unscathed in terms of damage but lost track position and the chance to challenge for the podium. He pitted under the safety car, rejoining in fourth behind Mercedes rookie Kimi Antonelli, who held station to claim a sensational first career podium. At 18, the Italian becomes the youngest podium finisher since Max Verstappen's breakthrough in 2016 and the first Italian to stand on the rostrum since 2009."Honestly, I was just hoping the race would end!" said a beaming Antonelli. "It was a crazy final few laps and I'm still trying to take it all in."The late-race collision capped a weekend of growing tension within McLaren. Piastri now sits atop the drivers' standings with 198 points, extending his lead over Norris (176). Verstappen trails in third with 155, while Russell's win lifts him to fourth on the constructors' championship, McLaren maintain their lead, but Mercedes have now climbed to second, leapfrogging Ferrari and sitting 175 points adrift of the Woking Ferrari's Charles Leclerc came home fifth, just ahead of Lewis Hamilton, who endured a challenging race after an early collision with a groundhog caused minor front wing damage. Fernando Alonso took seventh for Aston Martin, with Nico Hlkenberg eighth for Sauber after a strong showing. Esteban Ocon brought Haas points in their 200th Grand Prix by finishing ninth, while Carlos Sainz took the final point in tenth for Red Bull lodged a protest relating to Russell's track limits on lap 42, but stewards dismissed the appeal over five hours after the race conclusion.


The Hindu
34 minutes ago
- The Hindu
Red Bull challenges George Russell's Canadian Grand Prix win, stewards reject official protest
Formula One stewards rejected a Red Bull protest of George Russell's Canadian Grand Prix victory for Mercedes on Sunday. The stewards said in a lengthy statement issued five-and-a-half hours after the end of the race that the protest was not founded. Red Bull, which forfeited its deposit, had Max Verstappen finish second. They had argued Russell breached the rules by driving erratically when the safety car was deployed in the final laps of the race and also showed unsportsmanlike conduct. READ: Canadian Grand Prix: George Russell holds off Max Verstappen for win as McLarens collide The stewards dismissed the allegations. While Russell and Verstappen are not friends and have clashed on the track, notably in Spain two weeks ago when Red Bull's four-time world champion was heavily punished, Christian Horner, Red Bull principal, said it was not personal. Red Bull has, however, protested twice in the space of five races now, both times against Russell. In Miami in May, it protested the Briton's third place, arguing the driver had failed to slow when yellow flags were waved during a virtual safety car period. Verstappen was fourth that time. The stewards had rejected that protest as well.


The Hindu
an hour ago
- The Hindu
Canadian GP: George Russell holds off Max Verstappen for win as McLarens collide
George Russell won his first race of the Formula 1 season as the Mercedes driver held off defending race winner Max Verstappen at the Canadian Grand Prix on Sunday. It was the fourth victory of Russell's career, and the race ended under yellow when McLaren teammates Oscar Piastri and Lando Norris staged a wheel-to-wheel late battle that ended with Norris hitting the wall. 'It's amazing to be back on the top step,' Russell said. 'I felt last year was a victory lost, so to get the victory and see (teammate) Kimi (Antonelli) on the podium, too, is an amazing day for the team. I think it shows the strength of our cars in the cooler conditions, so let's see in the coming races.' Russell started on pole for the second consecutive year in Montreal and held the advantage for most of the race at Circuit Gilles Villeneuve. The British driver became the fourth race winner this year, joining points leader Piastri, Norris and Verstappen, the four-time reigning F1 champion. Verstappen, who has one more race to go before points drop off his license and eliminate the possibility of a one-race suspension, was satisfied with his second-place finish. 'Was quite a good race, even though in the first two stints, we were struggling with the tires,' the Dutchman said. 'We hung in there in the final stint. That was the maximum we could have achieved today.' Mercedes rookie Antonelli finished third behind Verstappen for his first F1 podium. 'A really good day. It was absolutely victory on merit,' Mercedes team principal Toto Wolff said. 'We controlled the race all the way. George drove brilliantly and Kimi didn't crack under pressure, even with the McLaren right behind him. 'It's been a while since we've had two cars on the podium with a win and that's why everyone is delighted.' The two McLarens came together when Norris, then in fifth, attempted to pass Piastri multiple times on the 67th lap out of 70. Norris ultimately ran into Piastri and bounced into the wall, drawing a safety car for the final laps. 'I was defending the inside, then I felt a small touch,' Piastri said. 'That's all I've got to go on at the moment. It's a shame for the team.' Norris received a 5-second penalty for contact with Piastri after the race and took responsibility. 'I just went for it. I thought Oscar would move a bit more to the right, not leave a gap,' Norris said. 'I wasn't expecting anything easy from him. But in the end, it was all my mistake. I take full blame, and I want to apologise to my whole team and to Oscar for attempting something like that.' Piastri finished fourth, ending an eight-race podium streak dating back to the second race of the season. McLaren as a team failed to reach the top three for the first time this year. 'We never want to see a McLaren car involved in an accident and definitely not contact between our two cars,' team principal Andrea Stella said. 'This is a situation we know is not acceptable. At the same time, we appreciate that Lando immediately owned it. 'He raised his hand, as you should, and apologised to the team. For us, that sort of resets the situation. I'm sure there's an important learning point for him from this race. He's paid a price for the championship, and we value the way he handled it.' Piastri arrived in Montreal—the 10th of 24 stops this season—with a 10-point lead over Norris amid a dominant season for the papaya-coloured cars. The Australian driver extended his advantage to 22 points over his British teammate. Verstappen, ranked third in the drivers' championship, now trails Norris by 21 points. A race win is worth 25. Ferrari drivers Charles Leclerc and Lewis Hamilton were fifth and sixth. Aston Martin's Fernando Alonso, Sauber's Nico Hulkenberg, Haas' Esteban Ocon and Williams' Carlos Sainz Jr. rounded out the top 10. Leclerc, after holding off on a second pit stop, was the leader until the 54th lap when he finally swapped tires. That set up a five-man race to the finish involving Russell, Verstappen, Antonelli, Piastri and Norris in the final 16 laps. A little more than five seconds separated the drivers. Lance Stroll, the lone Canadian on the 20-driver grid, finished 17th after starting 18th. The Aston Martin driver received a 10-second penalty for forcing Alpine's Pierre Gasly off the track on the 47th lap. The Canadian GP returns to Circuit Gilles Villeneuve next year. The next F1 race is the Austrian Grand Prix on June 29.