
It was a Papaya 1-2 finish at the Chinese Grand Prix with Oscar Piastri achieving his third career victory, leading home his McLaren teammate Lando Norris.
With tyre management the order of the day throughout the field, Piastri was able to control his race and finished ahead of Lando Norris, who was forced to manage a worsening brake issue in the closing stages.
George Russell was too far behind to pass Norris despite the tumbling pace but sealed consecutive third-place finishes for 2025.
With fifty of one-two finishes in the history of McLaren Racing, the team showed it is again the outfit to beat at present.
Max Verstappen put in a strong performance to finish fourth for Red Bull, finishing ahead of the Ferrari pair of Charles Leclerc and Lewis Hamilton.
Having been the worst team on the grid in the season-opening Australian Grand Prix, Haas secured a double points finish with Esteban Ocon seventh and a determined Oliver Bearman in tenth.
Andrea Kimi Antonelli held on to his eighth-place starting position to score points in back-to-back races, with Alexander Albon ninth for Williams.
Piastri squeezed Russell off the line, allowing Norris to make a move as the Papaya Rules saw the McLaren teammates work together to lead the field.
It was the opposite story at Ferrari, however, as Leclerc clipped Hamilton and suffered wing damage, although the duo did both pass Verstappen’s Red Bull.
Fernando Alonso was forced to retire on lap four as the brakes on his Aston Martin gave up. He was the only driver to retire in this race.
Meanwhile, Norris was complaining of graining on the troublesome left-front tyre with just eight laps on the board, with Piastri taking advantage of running in clean air.
The pitstop window opened on lap 11 as Leclerc disagreed with his team over which plan to use, as Charles ran close behind Lewis.
The undercut worked well for the midfield runners and lower points positions, with Yuki Tsunoda getting past Antonelli.
Both Hamilton and Verstappen stopped on lap 14, with Piastri boxing a lap later and having a slower stop than he would have wanted as he was stationary for 3.8 seconds.
Norris was in a lap later and lost out to Russell, who came in a lap earlier to regain his net second position in the Chinese Grand Prix, but it lasted just one lap before the McLaren retook the position into turn one the next time around.
On his 29th birthday, Albon inherited the lead, having not stopped yet, but soon fell into the clutches of the overall frontrunners.
Elsewhere, Hamilton was resisting requests from Ferrari to swap positions with Leclerc, with both homing in on Russell, but gave in to the team call at the start of lap 21.
McLaren was managing its two lead drivers well, Piastri pushing the pace to allow Norris to follow suit and pull further clear of Russell without entering the dirty air of the race leader.
As those two-stopping started to pit again, the leaders were quick enough to stay out on the hard compound, with Verstappen coming alive and chasing the pack.
Hamilton opted to pit on lap 38 for fresh hard tyres in the aim of catching the top five towards the end of the race, although it did not work out for the winner of Saturday’s sprint race.
The Racing Bulls of Tsunoda and Isack Hadjar also both opted for a second stop and were cutting through the field towards the top ten until Tsunoda suffered a front wing issue and Hadjar was run wide by Jack Doohan’s Alpine, who was hit with a 10-second penalty as a result.
Out front, Norris reported a brake issue as the pitwall urged caution rather than pushing to close in on Piastri in the closing stages.
There was no such warning for Verstappen, who attacked Leclerc and got through with three laps left.
Piastri took the chequered flag and Norris nursed the second McLaren over the line despite losing over three seconds to the chasing Russell on the last lap.
So not the most thrilling Chinese Grand Prix due to tyre management. And yet congratulations to Oscar Piastri in winning the race. Following a disappointing home race in Australia last weekend, Piastri was able to bounce back by finishing first in China.
As for McLaren, that MCL39 is a beast and it will be fascinating if the others can challenge them over the course of this long season.
UPDATE – Following a post-race scrutineering Leclerc’s and Gasly’s cars were both found to weigh 799kg after fuel was removed, one kilogram below the minimum weight limit. In Leclerc’s case, his damaged front wing was replaced by a spare example during the weighing. The scrutineers also took issue with Hamilton’s rearmost underbody skid block showing excessive wear beyond the 1mm wear limit. Hamilton’s blocks were down to 8.5 to 8.6mm thickness depending on the measuring point, with the minimum limit set at 9mm.

Chinese Grand Prix, race results:
1 Oscar Piastri McLaren 1:30:55.026
2 Lando Norris McLaren +9.748s
3 George Russell Mercedes +11.097s
4 Max Verstappen Red Bull +16.656s
5 Esteban Ocon Haas +49.969s
6 Andrea Kimi Antonelli Mercedes +53.748s
7 Alexander Albon Williams +56.321s
8 Oliver Bearman Haas +61.303s
9 Lance Stroll Aston Martin +70.204s
10 Carlos Sainz Williams +76.387s
11 Isack Hadjar Racing Bulls +78.875s
12 Liam Lawson Red Bull +81.147s
13 Jack Doohan Alpine +88.401s
14 Gabriel Bortoleto Sauber +1 lap
15 Nico Hulkenberg Sauber +1 lap
16 Yuki sunoda Racing Bulls +1 lap
Charles Leclerc Ferrari DSQ (+23.211s)*
Lewis Hamilton Ferrari DSQ (+25.381s)**
Pierre Gasly Alpine DSQ (+67.195s)*
Fernando Alonso Aston Martin DNF
*Disqualified for being underweight following post-race scrutineering
**Disqualified for excessive skid block wear in post-race scrutineering