Ferrari’s Sainz wins Mexico F1; Norris closes gap on penalised Verstappen | Motorsports News

Ferrari’s Sainz wins Mexico F1; Norris closes gap on penalised Verstappen | Motorsports News

Verstappen’s two clashes with Norris cost him two points, closing the drivers’ gap to 47 points with four races to go in the Formual One season.

Ferrari’s Carlos Sainz took an emotional win in the Mexico City Grand Prix after Red Bull’s Formula One leader Max Verstappen was twice penalised for clashes with title rival Lando Norris and finished sixth.

McLaren’s Norris, who called Verstappen ‘dangerous’ during Sunday’s race, finished second to slash the triple world champion’s overall advantage from 57 points to 47 with four rounds remaining.

Charles Leclerc, caught and passed by Norris with nine laps to go to deny Ferrari a second successive one-two, was third and took a bonus point for fastest lap.

The win was a first for Ferrari in Mexico since 1990 and fourth of Sainz’s career.

“I really wanted to win this one. I needed it for myself. I said I wanted one more win for Ferrari and to do it here with this mega crowd is incredible,” said the Spaniard, who is leaving for Williams at the end of the season.

Verstappen, who pitted from third place to serve two 10-second penalties on lap 27, had to fight back from 15th after starting on the front row with Sainz on pole position.

The Dutch driver had won five of the last six races in Mexico, including the last three editions, but has now not won for 10 races in a row.

Still the clear title favourite, he sounded unconcerned and unrepentant.

“The biggest problem that I have is that today was a bad day in terms of race pace,” said Verstappen.

Mercedes pair Lewis Hamilton and George Russell finished fourth and fifth respectively after a lively battle in the closing stages.

Haas had another good weekend with Kevin Magnussen seventh and Nico Hulkenberg ninth, with McLaren’s Oscar Piastri sandwiched between in eighth.

Alpine’s Pierre Gasly took the final point, moving the Renault-owned team closer to seventh-placed Williams.

McLaren stayed top of the constructors’ standings, but only 29 clear of Ferrari.

Verstappen had seized the lead from Sainz down the long opening straight but his advantage did not last long once the safety car came in on lap six, with the Spaniard taking back the lead three laps later with the help of drag reduction (DRS).

Sainz finished 4.705 seconds clear of Norris, with Leclerc 34.387 behind his teammate after a late stop for fresh tyres to set the fastest lap.

‘This guy is dangerous’

Verstappen was again the talk of the afternoon, with stewards taking a hard line against him for forcing Norris off the track after a controversial previous weekend in Texas where it paid off.

In Mexico as in Austin, it was the battle with Norris that provided the sparks.

“I was ahead the whole way through the corner,” said Norris over the team radio after being forced off at turn four on lap 10.

“This guy is dangerous. It’s the same as last time. I’ll be in the wall in a minute.”

They clashed again at turn seven on the same lap and Verstappen was ruled to have gained an advantage by leaving the track.

“I respect Max as a driver but I was ready to expect something like this and this is not very clean driving in my opinion,” Norris said later.

Max Verstappen, of Netherlands, steers his Red Bull followed by McLaren driver Lando Norris of Britain during the Formula One Mexico Grand Prix auto race at the Hermanos Rodriguez racetrack in Mexico City, Sunday, Oct. 27, 2024. (AP Photo/Eduardo Verdugo)
Max Verstappen steers his Red Bull followed by McLaren driver Lando Norris during the Formula One Mexico Grand Prix at the Hermanos Rodriguez racetrack in Mexico City [Eduardo Verdugo/AP]

Source link

Harris doubles down on 'fascist' comments at start of CNN town hall: 'unstable'

99 days: Kamala Harris has yet to do formal press conference since emerging as Democratic nominee

Smuggler reveals how he has helped more than 1,000 people cross Channel

Smuggler reveals how he has helped more than 1,000 people cross Channel