
Championship leader Max Verstappen came through the wet/dry conditions to win the Canadian Grand Prix.
The Red Bull driver retained position over polesitter George Russell during their pitstops for intermediate tyres, following a safety car by Logan Sargeant, and then-leader Lando Norris was compelled to stop a lap later having passed the pit entry when the safety car was called.
“Yeah, it was a pretty crazy race and we had to be on top of our calls,” Verstappen said. “We remained calm, pitted at the right time, and the safety car worked well for us. After that we were managing the gaps.
“[McLaren and Mercedes fought us] in different stages as well, so it was a lot of fun out there.”
Norris filtered out in third and was forced to stick with the cars ahead, waiting for a drying line to form to reprise his pace from the opening stint that had allowed him to take the lead from Russell.
When the drying line emerged, the leading duo decided to pit together on lap 45, but Norris attempted to extend his time gap by staying out by going two laps longer.
This helped him ahead of Russell and, briefly, Verstappen – but the McLaren driver suffered a snap of oversteer when coming out of the pits to allow Verstappen to take his lead.
The triple champion had to endure a second safety car when Carlos Sainz slipped off track and put Alex Albon into the wall, but he overcame the restart perfectly and never came under threat from Norris thereafter.
Verstappen had not been able to pass Russell at the start, and initially fell beyond two seconds behind the Mercedes driver, but started to catch back up.
But Norris then started to lap much faster than the leading pair, and closed down Verstappen to start his challenge towards the lead as the circuit started to produce a drying line.
The McLaren driver was determined that Verstappen was closing in on DRS range of Russell, and thus took a lap out of cooling his tyres on the wet patches to put a move on the Red Bull along the back straight at the close of lap 20.
He put the same move on Russell at the end of the next lap, and the Mercedes driver subsequently went off at Turn 14 to allow Verstappen to trickle past.
Norris started to forge an impressive lead over the Red Bull driver at a rate of over two seconds per lap but, as he was approaching a 10-second lead, his progress was halted by a safety car as Logan Sargeant dropped his car into the wall on the exit of Turn 5.
The timing of the safety car, unlike Lando’s Miami Grand Prix win, was not in his favour; Verstappen could take a pitstop for fresh intermediates with a threat of further rain emerging, followed by Russell and Oscar Piastri, and Norris had to wait until the following lap to make a stop.
Norris lost out and cycled out in third, behind Verstappen and Russell, and remained locked behind them as the rain began to fall once again, despite staying in touch. Verstappen extended a lead beyond the three-second mark, as the trio waited for the rain to subside.
Once the period of precipitation had ended, it had become clear by the lap 42 that the intermediate-to-dry crossover was emerging as Pierre Gasly was lapping at the leaders’ pace on hard tyres.
Both Verstappen and Russell stopped at the end of lap 45, taking on the medium and hard respectively, but Norris was confident in his pace and was still setting personal bests, and thus took another two laps on the intermediate in a bid to undercut both.
It worked, for a time, and he emerged from the pits on mediums ahead of Verstappen for a handful of seconds – but with minimal grip coming out of the pitlane, his McLaren wagged its tail and allowed Verstappen to pick up the lead.
Russell won out in his late-race battle with Hamilton to secure the team’s first podium of the season, although Hamilton clinched the fastest lap at the end of the race.
The pair cleared Oscar Piastri to ensure they could battle for the final podium place, leaving the McLaren driver to a lonely final few laps as Fernando Alonso was over seven seconds behind in sixth.
Lance Stroll claimed seventh, while Daniel Ricciardo withstood big pressure from the Alpines of Pierre Gasly and Esteban Ocon to finish in eighth – his first finish in the points this season for RB.
So a wild race in Montreal and yet it was inevitable that Max Verstappen comes through to win. The wet/dry conditions made the racing entertaining and it is encouraging that Mercedes have good performance. More competition is good for the sport.

Canadian Grand Prix, race results:
1 Max Verstappen Red Bull 1:45:47.927
2 Lando Norris McLaren +3.879s
3 George Russell Mercedes +4.317s
4 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes +4.915s
5 Oscar Piastri McLaren +10.199s
6 Fernando Alonso Aston Martin +17.510s
7 Lance Stroll Aston Martin +23.625s
8 Daniel Ricciardo RB +28.672s
9 Pierre Gasly Alpine +30.021s
10 Esteban Ocon Alpine +30.313s
11 Nico Hulkenberg Haas +30.824s
12 Kevin Magnussen Haas +31.253s
13 Valtteri Bottas Sauber +40.487s
14 Yuki Tsunoda RB +52.694s
15 Zhou Guanyu Sauber 69 +1 lap
Carlos Sainz Ferrari DNF
Alexander Albon Williams DNF
Sergio Perez Red Bull DNF
Charles Leclerc Ferrari DNF
Logan Sargeant Williams DNF