
Lando Norris Takes Pole For F1's Belgian Grand Prix After Max Verstappen Wins Sprint
Norris is targeting his third straight win in a Grand Prix race and is the first McLaren driver on pole in Belgium since Jenson Button in 2012.
'The car has been been flying all weekend, Oscar has been doing a good job all weekend, so we're pushing each other a lot,' Norris said.
'It's tough because you see where your strengths and weaknesses are easily and you learn from each other quickly. It's a good but tough battle that we have at the minute.'
Rain is expected for Sunday, setting up the prospect of another wet-weather battle between the two McLarens after Norris won a thrilling race at his home British Grand Prix.
Norris said it could be a 'Silverstone-esque' race with plenty of chaos, or tricky conditions if only part of the circuit, the longest on the F1 calendar, gets wet and other areas stay dry.
Lewis Hamilton's disappointing weekend continued with 16th in qualifying after his best lap time was ruled out because he'd strayed off track. The day before, the Ferrari driver was 18th in qualifying for the sprint race following a spin.
Hamilton had declared Thursday it was 'crunch time' after struggling for much of his first season with Ferrari.
Verstappen's teammate Yuki Tsunoda is set to start eighth, his best qualifying result of an otherwise disappointing time since joining Red Bull after two races of the 2025 season.
Verstappen overtook Piastri and drove '15 qualifying laps' to win the sprint race at the Belgian GP as Red Bull begins a new era without fired team principal Christian Horner.
Verstappen surged past Piastri on the straight on the first lap. The Australian was close behind Verstappen for the rest of the 15-lap sprint race but couldn't find a way past the four-time champion.
Norris, in the other McLaren, was third after retaking the place from Ferrari's Charles Leclerc and catching up to Piastri.
'You're keeping faster cars behind, so you have to drive over the limit of what you think is possible,' Verstappen said.
'Tire management is out of the window, so that's what's making it really difficult. I'm just doing 15 qualifying laps to try and keep them behind on a track where tire management is important.'
It was Verstappen's first race win of any sort since the Emilia-Romagna Grand Prix in May, and his first in a sprint since the United States Grand Prix last October.
Piastri extends his lead over Norris in the standings to nine points from eight. Verstappen is third, 68 points off the lead.
Leclerc held on to fourth and it was an impressive result for Haas, with Esteban Ocon fifth and Oliver Bearman seventh. Carlos Sainz, Jr. was sixth for Williams and Isack Hadjar took the final point for Racing Bulls in eighth.
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The Hindu
7 minutes ago
- The Hindu
Belgian Grand Prix: Piastri beats Norris in rain-hit race
Oscar Piastri passed McLaren teammate and title rival Lando Norris with a bold early move to win the rain-delayed Belgian Grand Prix and extend his Formula One lead to 16 points on Sunday (July 27, 2025). Charles Leclerc was a distant third for Ferrari as reigning champions McLaren celebrated their sixth one-two finish in 13 races and the third in a row. The race at Spa-Francorchamps was red-flagged after an initial formation lap and delayed by an hour and 20 minutes due to the weather, with standing water and heavy spray affecting visibility. Piastri was not in a mood for hanging around when the racing got going with a rolling start after four laps behind the safety car. The Australian charged through the spray to slipstream Norris through the daunting Eau Rouge and scythed past on the uphill straight. "I knew lap one would be my best chance of winning the race. I got a good exit out of Turn One, lifted as little as I dared out of Eau Rouge," he said. "The rest of the race we managed really well. I struggled at the end. Maybe the mediums were not the best for the last five or six laps. We had it mostly under control." If Norris had a battery issue, the Briton asking over the radio why he had "no pack" before his race engineer assured him it was coming back, he was not looking for any excuses afterwards. "Oscar just did a good job. Nothing more to say. Committed a bit more through Eau Rouge, and had the slipstream and got the run," he said. "So nothing to complain of. He did a better job in the beginning, and that was it. Nothing more I could do after that point. I would love to be up top, but Oscar deserved it today." Piastri pitted on lap 12 of 44 to switch from intermediates to medium tyres and Norris followed a lap later, but opting for hards, before both then went to the chequered flag on a one-stop strategy. Piastri crossed the line 3.415 seconds clear of Norris, who had been chasing a third win in a row and managed to reduce the gap in the final laps with putting the ever-calm Australian under too much pressure. Reigning champion and Saturday sprint winner Max Verstappen finished fourth, in Red Bull's first grand prix since the dismissal of team boss Christian Horner, with George Russell fifth for Mercedes. Williams' Alex Albon held off Ferrari's seven-times world champion Lewis Hamilton to secure sixth. Liam Lawson was eighth for Racing Bulls with Gabriel Bortoleto ninth for Sauber and Pierre Gasly securing the final point for Alpine


Time of India
2 hours ago
- Time of India
Formula 1: Piastri clinches crucial Spa victory, extends championship lead to 16 points
Oscar Piastri delivered a commanding performance at a rain-hit Belgian Grand Prix , fending off teammate and title contender Lando Norris to clinch his third win of the season. The McLaren driver now leads the Drivers' Championship by 16 points, heading into the summer break with momentum firmly in his favour, reported IANS. The race at Spa-Francorchamps was delayed by nearly 80 minutes due to heavy rain, turning the 44-lap contest into a test of patience, precision, and tyre strategy. When racing finally got underway on Lap 5, it was Piastri who seized the moment. Starting alongside pole-sitter Norris, the Australian made an assertive move through Eau Rouge and passed his teammate on the Kemmel Straight before braking into Les Combes. That overtake proved crucial. Kia Carens Clavis first drive review: Game-Changer for electric MPVs? | TOI Auto As the track dried, strategy came to the forefront. Piastri opted to switch to medium tyres on Lap 12, while Norris stayed out for an extra lap and gambled on hard compounds. The decision saw him rejoin nine seconds behind. Although Norris chipped away at the gap and got within striking distance in the final laps, a lock-up at La Source ended his charge, allowing Piastri to cross the line with a 3.4-second lead. Ferrari's Charles Leclerc took the final podium spot, 20 seconds behind the leading McLaren pair. Max Verstappen , who had won the Sprint race on Saturday, applied pressure but ultimately finished fourth, just 1.5 seconds adrift of Leclerc. Further down the field, Lewis Hamilton staged an impressive recovery drive in his Ferrari. Starting from the pit lane, he climbed 11 positions and was among the first to switch from intermediates during the crossover window, eventually finishing seventh. For Piastri, this win is more than just another tick in the victory column—it's a statement. With the season now at its halfway point, the 23-year-old leads what has become a McLaren-dominated title battle, and he's looking increasingly like the man to beat. (Inputs from IANS). Discover everything about the automotive world at Times of India .

Mint
2 hours ago
- Mint
Oscar Piastri clinches win at Belgian Grand Prix; strengthens F1 championship lead with sixth victory of 2025
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