Reigning world champion Max Verstappen triumphed in the sprint race at Formula 1’s Belgian Grand Prix to start Red Bull’s new era with a win.

Verstappen used his Red Bull’s superior top speed to draft past polesitter Oscar Piastri at Les Combes on lap one of the 15-lap contest, much like the Australian championship leader had feared before the start.

In Verstappen’s wake, Charles Leclerc made a similar move to nick third from the second McLaren of Lando Norris, while Esteban Ocon’s led the midfield battle in fifth ahead of Williams’ Carlos Sainz and Haas team-mate Oliver Bearman.

With Leclerc failing to keep up with the two leaders, Norris reclaimed third on lap four on the Kemmel Straight and soon caught up to the lead battle between Verstappen and Piastri.

Starting on used mediums compared to new tyres for Piastri and Norris, Verstappen couldn’t escape DRS range but used his straight-line speed to hold off Piastri, who continued to draft up to the Red Bull’s gearbox towards Les Combes without asking significant questions of the Dutchman’s resolve.

Piastri came closest at Turn 5’s main overtaking opportunity on lap 11, with McLaren still the quickest car overall and Verstappen starting to report brake issues. But that was as close as he would get, with Verstappen taking the chequered flag to start Red Bull’s new era without Christian Horner with a win.

Norris too was angling for an opening to attack his championship rival Piastri, but was forced to sit back and watch Verstappen and his team-mate cross the finish line. The result means Piastri adds a single point to his championship lead on Norris, which now amounts to nine points.

Lando Norris, McLaren, Oscar Piastri, McLaren, Max Verstappen, Red Bull Racing

Photo by: Steven Tee / LAT Images via Getty Images

Leclerc was a distant fourth as his Ferrari was easily dropped by the leaders, while Ocon and Sainz finished fifth and sixth uncontested. Bearman secured a double points finish for Haas in seventh, with Racing Bulls rookie Isack Hadjar easily defeating Sauber’s Gabriel Bortoleto and his team-mate Liam Lawson for the final point in eighth.

Mercedes’ George Russell and Andrea Kimi Antonelli failed to significantly move up in the DRS train after a poor qualifying session, Russell crossing the line down in 12th. Lewis Hamilton moved up from 17th to 15th in his Ferrari after an equally difficult race.

Meanwhile, Pierre Gasly lost out on a points-scoring opportunity with Alpine as a water leak meant he couldn’t take up his eighth grid spot. Gasly eventually joined the race two laps down for what turned out to be a test session.

Qualifying for Sunday’s Belgian Grand Prix will follow at 16:00 local Belgian time.

F1 Belgian GP – Sprint race results

In this article

Be the first to know and subscribe for real-time news email updates on these topics

Subscribe to news alerts

Read the full article here

Share.
Leave A Reply

Exit mobile version