Austrian GP: George Russell ends Mercedes win drought after Max ...

2 days ago
Austrian GP

George Russell cashed in to take a completely unexpected Austrian GP win for Mercedes after Max Verstappen and Lando Norris collided in an acrimonious battle for the lead in the race's closing stages.

A rare slow Red Bull service on race leader Verstappen's car at the second round of pit stops turned the complexion of the race on its head and put Norris, who had been six seconds adrift of his rival before then, on the Dutchman's tail in to the closing laps of the race and saw him launch a series of bids for the lead.

Norris had already twice expressed his anger with what he felt was Verstappen's "unfair" defence of position, with the Red Bull driver also accusing his McLaren rival of trying over-ambitious moves, before the two made controversial contact as the Briton tried to overtake again on lap 64.

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With the McLaren attempting to go around the outside of the Red Bull into the Turn Three braking zone, the two cars touched rear wheels - each suffering punctures - and went wide in to the run-off area before heading for emergency visits to the pits with their damaged cars.

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McLaren's Lando Norris and Red Bull's Max Verstappen engaged in an exhilarating battle for the race lead before the pair crashed into one another, as George Russell ended up capitalising to win the Austrian Grand Prix

While Norris was unable to continue and dropped out of the race, Verstappen returned to the track and finished in fifth place.

Verstappen was soon adjudged by stewards to have been at fault for the collision and handed a 10-second time penalty, although it did not change his fifth place result.

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With Russell having run third for the majority of the race, the Briton gleefully took over the lead and completed the final laps to secure just his second career win in F1 - his and Mercedes' first since November 2022.

McLaren's Oscar Piastri ended up a close second and left to rue what might have been after he had dropped from third to seventh on the grid after a track limits penalty, which he and his team had vehemently disagreed with, on Saturday.

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Toto Wolff attempts to motivate Lewis Hamilton, after the Mercedes driver received a five-second penalty at the Austrian Grand Prix

Carlos Sainz beat Lewis Hamilton to the final podium berth on an otherwise disappointing weekend Ferrari when they were clearing only the fourth-fastest car again.

Hamilton, who had battled team-mate Russell for third in the opening laps before dropping back, had earlier served a five-second penalty for crossing the white line on the entry to his first pit stop.

On a sensational day for the Haas team, Nico Hulkenberg crossed the line in sixth and team-mate Kevin Magnussen eighth - the pair finishing ether side of Sergio Perez, whose struggles in the second Red Bull continued - in a bumper points day for the team which moves them into seventh place in the Constructors' Championship.

Despite finishing only fifth, Norris' retirement meant Verstappen - who had topped every session on the Sprint weekend up to Sunday's main event - increased his championship lead over the McLaren driver 81 points ahead of the British Grand Prix at Silverstone this coming week.

Austrian GP result: Top 10

1) George Russell, Mercedes

2) Oscar Piastri, McLaren

3) Carlos Sainz, Ferrari

4) Lewis Hamilton, Mercedes

5) Max Verstappen, Red Bull

6) Nico Hulkenberg, Haas

7) Sergio Perez, Red Bull

8) Kevin Magnussen, Haas

9) Daniel Ricciardo, RB

10) Pierre Gasly, Alpine

How the Verstappen-Norris battle unfolded - and controversially ended

The moment that ultimately decided the race - and led to all manner of post-race claims and counter claims between the key Red Bull and McLaren protagonists - came with eight laps to go of what for most of the afternoon had been a race that Verstappen, despite some concerns over tyre wear and engine settings, had appeared to have under near-total control.

It was the world champion's lap-52 second pit stop that ultimately put him under unexpected pressure after a delay on his car's left-rear wheel meant he lost three-and-a-half seconds - more than half his lead - to Norris, ho had pitted for McLaren directly behind him.

The pair left the pits just 2.9 seconds apart. This is how their duel then unfolded in the key laps that followed:

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Anthony Davidson was at the SkyPad to give his verdict on whether Max Verstappen or Lando Norris was at fault for the crash which saw both of them surrender the chance of winning

Lap 55/71
Quicker on his new medium tyres in the laps after their stops to the point where he now had DRS usage on the back of the Red Bull, Norris initially took a brief look up the inside of the race leader into Turn Three but was covered off by the Dutchman.

Not that Norris was happy the way he felt Verstappen had come across on him.: "He reacted to my move," said Norris on McLaren team radio. You're not allowed to do that.

"He saw me move and then he moved. That's not allowed."

Lap 59/71
Lining up the Red Bull again on the curved uphill run to Turn Three, Norris did get down the inside of Verstappen this time but could not slow his McLaren down in time and ran slightly wide into the run-off area.

Although returning to the track in the lead, the McLaren swiftly ceded the position back to Verstappen on the run down to the next corner.

On Red Bull team radio, an adamant Verstappen remarked: "He overtook outside the track."

But Norris argued that the Red Bull was again illegally moving in the braking zone. "He can't keep moving after I move, it's just dangerous," he told his race engineer. "Or we're going to have a big shunt. He forced me to go wide."

Having already been shown the black-and-white warning flag for repeat track limits infringements, Norris' latest off-course moment though was swiftly 'noted' by stewards. He was eventually handed a five-second time penalty, albeit not issued until after his later crash with Verstappen.

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McLaren driver Lando Norris was left fuming after his collision with Red Bull's Max Verstappen saw him have to retire from the Austrian Grand Prix

Lap 63/71
In Norris' third attempt to seize the lead at Turn Three, Verstappen ran off off track this time but came back on still in front of Norris.

"He should give the position back," said an increasingly-frustrated Norris on team radio. "I was ahead at the apex."

But Verstappen himself argued: "He forced me off again. He just dive-bombed me, it's not how you overtake."

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Red Bull team principal Christian Horner believes Lando Norris was given enough space to avoid crashing into Max Verstappen, while McLaren boss Andrea Stella believes the Red Bull driver was at fault for the incident

Lap 64/71
And then came the collision as the two cars made wheel-to-wheel contact after Norris tried the outside line in to Turn Three and Verstappen moved left in defence in a move that stewards ruled meant the Red Bull driver was "predominantly" at fault for the resulting clash of tyres.

With both cars suffering instantaneous punctures, the pair ran wide and then grappled their cars back on to the track - with Norris still initially unable to get ahead as he was forced wide onto the grass next to Verstappen halfway down on the next straight - and then trying to get back to the pits for possible repairs as quickly as possible.

Russell soon came steaming past both to seize the lead and go on to secure the race win, despite late pressure from a quicker Piastri in the other McLaren.

Mercedes finally back to winning ways as Russell profits

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George Russell and Toto Wolff hilariously make up after the Mercedes driver swore on team radio.

For Mercedes and Russell though, the Verstappen-Norris collision was perfectly, albeit fortunately, timed.

Having been out of the F1 winner's circle for 18 months, the eight-time constructors' champions though found themselves in the position to profit on the back of a recent development push that has seen them close on the top two teams and overtake Ferrari.

Russell, who had qualified third, briefly lost his podium position in the early laps to a fast-starting Hamilton in the sister car but, once back ahead, drove strongly before finding himself the chief beneficiary of the fireworks ahead.

"They [Verstappen and Norris] were going for it," said Russell, who has now claimed both of Mercedes' wins in the current regulation era since the start of 2022.

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Mercedes driver George Russell gave Ted Kravitz a 'champagne shower' after his win at the Austrian Grand Prix.

"I couldn't believe how close we were to Lando and Max.

"We were only about 12 seconds behind and I knew it [the collision] was a possibility. You are always dreaming.

"Just so proud to be back on the top step. We have made so many strides since the start of the season. The last few races have been incredible. More to come."

Austrian GP Result
Driver Team Time 1) George Russell Mercedes 1:24.22.798 2) Oscar Piastri McLaren +1.906 3) Carlos Sainz Ferrari +4.533 4) Lewis Hamilon Mercedes +23.142 5) Max Verstappen Red Bull +37.253 6) Nico Hulkenberg Haas +54.088 7) Sergio Perez Red Bull +54.672 8) Kevin Magnussen Haas +60.355 9) Daniel Ricciardo RB +61.169 10) Pierre Gasly Alpine +61.766 11) Charles Leclerc Ferrari +67.056 12) Esteban Ocon Alpine +68.325 13) Lance Stroll Aston Martin +1 lap 14) Yuki Tsunoda RB +1 lap 15) Alex Albon Williams +1 lap 16) Valtteri Bottas Sauber +1 lap 17) Zhou Guanyu Sauber +1 lap 18) Fernando Alonso Aston Martin +1 lap 19) Logan Sargeant Williams +2 laps 20) Lando Norris McLaren +7 laps

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