
Lando Norris achieved a perfect Interlagos weekend with sprint pole, sprint win, pole position for the main race and the Sao Paulo Grand Prix victory. By scoring the maximum 33 points with this sprint format, Lando extends his points lead in the championship and looking the favourite to win the drivers’ title.
Andrea Kimi Antonelli finished an impressive P2 for Mercedes, surviving a late race attack from Max Verstappen, who drove an incredible race after starting in the pitlane to finish on the podium for Red Bull.
As for Oscar Piastri, he received a ten-second penalty for causing a collision with Antonelli which knocked out Leclerc from the race. The McaLren driver only managed fifth.
Norris dominated a dry Interlagos race from pole, while behind him Verstappen marched from a pitlane start to third as Lando’s other title rival Piastri suffered his latest setback.
Norris led the start from Antonelli, Charles Leclerc and Piastri – the championship leader having started on the medium tyre while Antonelli opted for softs.
The race was neutralised after two laps for a crash by Gabriel Bortoleto, who was taken off the track at Turn 7 by Lance Stroll. After clipping the Aston Martin’s left-rear wheel, the Sauber veered into the wall at slow speed, enough to damage the suspension.
In the background there was also contact between Lewis Hamilton and Franco Colapinto on the main straight, as Hamilton appeared to misjudge an overtake and clipped his front wing off against the rear of the Alpine, forcing him to pit for a new nose and landing him a five-second penalty. It was an action-packed start to the race for Hamilton, who had already traded a blow with Carlos Sainz in Turn 1.
There was more drama on the lap six restart when fourth-placed Piastri went down the inside of Antonelli and Leclerc to make it three-wide into Turn 1. With Antonelli having nowhere to go in the middle, he and Piastri made contact, punting the Mercedes into the path of Leclerc.
The Ferrari driver came off worst suffering big damage, which brought out a virtual safety car. Meanwhile, pitlane starter Verstappen got up to P13 after the restart but used the following VSC period to change to the mediums due to a front-right puncture.
As the VSC was lifted on the start of lap nine, Piastri chased after Norris for the lead while stewards looked at the three-way incident, handing the McLaren driver a 10-second penalty for triggering the melee.
Norris soon restored a comfortable gap as he continued his superb form, and with Piastri out of the way the nearest competitors were Antonelli, who had escaped damage from the aforementioned contact, and the other Mercedes of George Russell.
They were eventually joined by Verstappen, who had lost ground due to his early VSC pitstop, but deployed much improved pace compared to Saturday thanks to his parc ferme set-up changes. Having gotten rid of his soft tyres early on, the defending champion cleared the entire midfield on his next two medium-tyred stints.
Verstappen’s impressive charge was such that Norris emerged behind him after both of his pitstops, but the Red Bull driver eventually converted to a three-stopper that left him a net fourth, 14 seconds adrift of Norris, and also behind Mercedes duo Antonelli and Russell.
On his newer softs Verstappen was the fastest driver on the track once more and quickly closed the gap to third-placed Russell, passing Russell into Turn 1 on lap 63 of 71. Verstappen then chased Antonelli for second, but just ran out of laps to take P2 from the rookie.
Norris achieved to his seventh Grand Prix win of the season with a 10-second margin on Antonelli, who recorded his best-ever Formula 1 finish in second. Verstappen completed his frantic comeback race with a hard-earned third to retain an outside chance of a fifth world title.
In contrast to the Red Bull driver’s impressive comeback, Piastri was in a tricky situation given his 10-second penalty. In theory, his best option would have been a one-stop to reduce the damage, but with Pirelli’s harder C2 tyre not looking very competitive, medium starter Piastri had to be put on the soft tyres with 31 laps remaining and then needed a second stop to get back onto the mediums with 20 laps to go.
Piastri then cleared midfield leader Oliver Bearman in the Haas for fifth, but the McLaren driver could not avoid falling behind title rival Verstappen and the Mercedes cars and stayed there until the finish.
Courtesy of another rapid race with bold overtakes, Bearman took home sixth on another big day for Haas in the constructors’ standings.
A one-stopping Liam Lawson held on for seventh despite his pace dropping off severely towards the end. Lawson’s strategy did help him stay ahead of Racing Bulls teammate Isack Hadjar and Sauber’s Nico Hulkenberg, with a determined Pierre Gasly taking a point for struggling Alpine.
As part of a long DRS train of midfield cars, Alex Albon and Esteban Ocon narrowly missed out on a points finish.
In the background Hamilton eventually retired with suspected floor damage from his early incident with Colapinto, completing an awful day for the Scuderia with two DNFs.
In the championship Norris now leads Piastri by 24 points with three rounds remaining, with Verstappen now 49 points behind.
Ferrari’s non-score meant Mercedes reinforced its second place in the constructors’ standings.
So the perfect weekend for Lando Norris by being the quickest and successful. The McLaren driver is looking the favourite to win the championship now in the dominant MCL39.
As for Max Verstappen, what a comeback performance from the pitlane to get P3. The Red Bull car was tricky to drive but he managed to drag that RB21 to a points finish.

Sao Paulo Grand Prix, race results:
1 Lando Norris McLaren 1:32:01.596
2 Andrea Kimi Antonelli Mercedes +10.388s
3 Max Verstappen Red Bull +10.750s
4 George Russell Mercedes +15.267s
5 Oscar Piastri McLaren +15.749s
6 Oliver Bearman Haas +29.630s
7 Liam Lawson Racing Bulls +52.642s
8 Isack Hadjar Racing Bulls +52.873s
9 Nico Hulkenberg Sauber +53.324s
10 Pierre Gasly Alpine +53.914s
11 Alexander Albon Williams +54.184s
12 Esteban Ocon Haas +54.696s
13 Carlos Sainz Williams +55.420s
14 Fernando Alonso Aston Martin +55.766s
15 Franco Colapinto Alpine +57.777s
16 Lance Stroll Aston Martin +58.247s
17 Yuki Tsunoda Red Bull +69.176s
Lewis Hamilton Ferrari DNF
Charles Leclerc Ferrari DNF
Gabriel Bortoleto Sauber DNF

















