
Lando Norris played the team game by letting Oscar Piastri take the sprint win at Qatar. McLaren scored a 1-2 finish and with this sprint result, 15 points has been gained which will be important in the constructors’ championship.
George Russell finished in third place and despite several attempts to pass the McLaren of Piastri, the Las Vegas Grand Prix winner had to settle behind the Papaya cars.
Norris ensured Piastri remained second by staying within DRS range, which allowed Oscar to resist the pressure from George throughout the 19-lap race.
Having looked to have sealed the victory, Norris then let Piastri through at the finish line to allow his teammate to claim the sprint victory – and admitted that he had long planned to pay Piastri back for giving up the sprint win in Brazil.
Norris held off the pressure of starting from pole and led the way in Turn 1, leaving fellow front-row starter Russell in close company of Piastri – hanging his McLaren around the outside and held the favoured line for Turn 2 to complete the move.
With Norris driving off into an early lead, Piastri came under renewed pressure from Russell when the Mercedes driver collected DRS. This prompted Piastri to defend at the start of the third and fourth laps.
Norris then backed off to keep Piastri in DRS range, ensuring that the car number 81 had more tools to contain Russell over the rest of the race.
It got to a point where Norris admitted to struggling with his front tyres, and asked if he should continue to help Piastri stay in his wake – McLaren responded in the affirmative, and thus Norris continued to aid McLaren’s claim to a 1-2 finish.
Piastri didn’t manage to get DRS in the final lap which opened him up to a final Russell assault, but the eventual winner held firm – and then moved past a slowing Norris at the line to pick up the win.
Russell had Carlos Sainz behind him throughout the race, although the Ferrari driver was locked in the DRS train and unable to interlope on the battle for a top-three finish.
Charles Leclerc wrested fifth from Lewis Hamilton with an impressive move at the start of lap 13, in which the Monegasque gathered pace with DRS and went down the inside into Turn 1.
Hamilton held on around the outside and looked to have defended with the inside line into Turn 2, but Leclerc kept his foot in and went around the outside to gain the upper hand into the next corner.
Nico Hulkenberg got valuable points on the board for Haas with seventh, as the new 2024 champion Max Verstappen finished eighth – the Red Bull driver was wayward in the opening lap and got passed by a fast-starting Hamilton, Hulkenberg and Gasly after suffering with oversteer.
Verstappen reclaimed the final point from Gasly ahead of the race’s halfway point, but could make no inroads into Hulkenberg. Gasly finished just under a second clear of Kevin Magnussen, who made a stunning getaway off the line to convert P15 into P10.
Zhou Guanyu and Sergio Perez were the only stoppers in the race – the Sauber driver soft-tyre gamble did not pay off, while Perez was slow to get away from his pitlane start and was passed by fellow slow-lane occupant Franco Colapinto on the pit exit. The Red Bull then stopped for a new front wing after spending the early laps stuck at the back.
So respect to Lando Norris to gift the sprint win to Oscar Piastri as payback to what happened in Brazil. Yes, the drivers’ championship is over but playing the team game to score the most points in the constructors’ is the most important factor.

Qatar Grand Prix, sprint results:
1 Oscar Piastri McLaren 27:03.010
2 Lando Norris McLaren +0.136s
3 George Russell Mercedes +0.41s
4 Carlos Sainz Ferrari +1.326s
5 Charles Leclerc Ferrari +5.073s
6 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes +5.650s
7 Nico Hulkenberg Haas +8.508s
8 Max Verstappen Red Bull +10.368s
9 Pierre Gasly Alpine +14.513s
10 Kevin Magnussen Haas +15.485s
11 Fernando Alonso Aston Martin +19.204s
12 Valtteri Bottas Sauber +23.351s
13 Lance Stroll Aston Martin +24.421s
14 Esteban Ocon Alpine +30.379s
15 Alexander Albon Williams +33.062s
16 Liam Lawson RB +34.356s
17 Yuki Tsunoda RB +35.102s
18 Franco Colapinto Williams +35.639s
19 Zhou Guanyu Sauber +71.436s
20 Sergio Perez Red Bull +74.371s