
Max Verstappen resisted his teammate Sergio Perez on the opening lap to take victory in the sprint race at the Red Bull Ring. Carlos Sainz finished in third for Ferrari.
The Red Bull drivers appeared to push each other off-track, which allowed Nico Hulkenberg to play an early starring role for Haas before he had to complete a late charge on slicks as his starting intermediates faded.
At the start of this wet condition sprint event, Perez made a slightly better getaway compared to polesitter Verstappen and then shot to the inside alongside the pitwall as the pair raced to Turn 1.
Perez forced his way ahead of Verstappen and then cut him off so forcefully on the run up the hill through the Turn 2 kink Verstappen briefly had to put his right-side wheels on the grass.
Then at Turn 3, Verstappen sent his car back up Perez’s inside from a long way back and the Checo had to take to the run-off, from where he rejoined behind Verstappen.
Their tangle held up Lando Norris, who fell from third into the final places in the top ten, while Hulkenberg got such a good run he was able to benefit when the Red Bulls fought again in Turn 4.
Perez was again on the outside and lost momentum as Verstappen saw him off, with Hulkenberg getting such a better run out of the long downhill right-hander and through Turn 5 he was able to surge ahead on the next downhill corner, the fast left of Turn 6.
That left Verstappen clear to ease ahead, taking chunks of time from Hulkenberg over the opening phase of the 24-lap sprint race.
Hulkenberg initially kept Perez at bay, with Sainz following the second Red Bull closely as the pack behind fell away, but by half distance and with Verstappen nearly ten seconds clear Perez was able to mount an attack.
Perez retook second on lap 12 with a better exit compared to Hulkenberg coming out of Turn 4, with Sainz also getting the Haas the next lap with a better exit from Turn 3 as Hulkenberg began to struggle for tyre life left on his intermediates.
George Russell and Lewis Hamilton had made good progress from their sprint shootout qualifying to run just outside the top 10 when Russell became the first driver to switch to slicks on lap 15.
His pace on the softs encouraged nine others to switch to slicks, although not the Red Bulls or Sainz, who ran untroubled to the finish in their established order to the finish, with Verstappen winning by 21 seconds over Perez.
Sainz was a further two seconds adrift by the finish, while behind the similarly inters-shod Aston Martins battled to the finish, with Lance Stroll holding off Fernando Alonso in fourth and fifth.
Hulkenberg ended up as the top slicks finisher as Haas opted to pit him for mediums on lap 17 having spotted Russell flying on the softs in the pack behind.
He had to make a last-lap pass on Esteban Ocon at Turn 1, but Hulkenberg was able to recover back to sixth by the finish.
Russell nearly got Ocon too having shot up the order with his early decision to change tyres paying off, finishing in a near dead-heat with the Alpine as they flashed down the start-finish line.
Norris took ninth ahead of Hamilton, the McLaren driver having engaged in an early race battle with Ocon and Charles Leclerc, who ended up P12 after a late battle with Alex Albon and Oscar Piastri, who were all passed by Hamilton during the second Mercedes driver’s charge on slicks after he had come in two laps after Russell.
So a frantic sprint race at the Red Bull Ring and yet the winner is the current world champion Max Verstappen. Can the Red Bull driver score maximum points in Sunday’s race? Judging by the speed and aggressiveness when racing, it seems Max is looking very strong in the Austrian Grand Prix.
Austrian Grand Prix, sprint race results:
1 Max Verstappen Red Bull 30:26.730
2 Sergio Perez Red Bull +21.048s
3 Carlos Sainz Ferrari +23.088s
4 Lance Stroll Aston Martin +29.703s
5 Fernando Alonso Aston Martin +30.109s
6 Nico Hulkenberg Haas +31.297s
7 Esteban Ocon Alpine +36.602s
8 George Russell Mercedes +36.611s
9 Lando Norris McLaren +38.608s
10 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes +46.375s
11 Oscar Piastri McLaren +49.807s
12 Charles Leclerc Ferrari +50.789s
13 Alex Albon Williams +52.848s
14 Kevin Magnussen Haas +56.593s
15 Pierre Gasly Alpine +57.652s
16 Yuki Tsunoda AlphaTauri +64.822s
17 Nyck de Vries AlphaTauri +65.617s
18 Logan Sargeant Williams +66.059s
19 Zhou Guanyu Alfa Romeo +70.825s
20 Valtteri Bottas Alfa Romeo +76.435s