Sainz finishes ahead of Norris and wins the Mexican Grand Prix

Sainz finishes ahead of Norris and wins the Mexican Grand Prix

After a double time penalty, Max Verstappen lost a lot of points in the toxic World Cup duel with Lando Norris in the thin air of Mexico City. The three-time Formula 1 world champion moved up from 15th place to sixth place. His pursuer Lando Norris raced to second place in the McLaren.

In the World Championship standings, the 24-year-old Brit from McLaren reduced his gap by ten points. Before the last four World Championship races this year, he is still 47 points behind the defending champion in Red Bull.

As in the US race, Ferrari also triumphed in Mexico. This time Carlos Sainz won, Charles Leclerc missed a double success when he braked under pressure from Norris a few laps before the end and only finished third. In the constructors’ world championship, the Scuderia overtook Red Bull, is second behind McLaren and can have legitimate hopes for its first world title since the team’s triumph in 2008.

Verstappen got off to a brilliant start. He secured second place in qualifying, only Sainz was faster. Norris had made it to third place, Leclerc was fourth. A very tricky situation, as it turned out a few laps later.

Verstappen grabs Sainz right after the start

The front went through the first few corners without any accidents. Verstappen pushed alongside Sainz and past, the Spaniard drove his Ferrari through the grass, cut back and came back in front of the Dutchman. However, as the rules dictate in one case, he let him pass again. Behind them, Norris was waiting for a gap between the two. But they didn’t do him the favor.

The safety car came out on lap one – Yuki Tsunoda had crashed into the barriers with his Racing Bull, as had Alexander Albon with his Williams. Verstappen mastered the restart after the clean-up work in his usual manner – he didn’t give Sainz a chance at first. But he didn’t stay in front for long. Sainz overtook spectacularly, then Norris wanted to try it too.

A week after the incident in Austin, when Norris was penalized for leaving the track while attempting to overtake Verstappen and fell back to fourth place behind the Red Bull star, the two provided new fuel for what had already long been an explosive World Cup duel. Verstappen pushed Norris off the track, the Brit came back in front of Verstappen, who tried it in his turn shortly afterwards. The cars touched. Norris raged over the radio. The race stewards promptly began an investigation.

It was only on Thursday that the Austin stewards reassessed what was happening at the Circuit of the Americas and rejected a possible objection from McLaren. This time Verstappen’s tough style was punished. He received a ten-second penalty for his driving behavior in the first duel. A little later it flashed again: “Penalty”. The race stewards also gave Verstappen ten seconds for the second action. What this means for the upcoming races in this World Cup is clear: it will be even more toxic.

As in Austin, Ferrari benefited from the rustic duel between their World Cup rivals. Leclerc moved into second place behind Sainz. The Scuderia celebrated a double success in Austin, where Leclerc won ahead of Sainz.

The suffering of the local hero

The next duel between Verstappen and Norris was looming in Mexico City. Before the Briton could get started, Verstappen turned into the pits to change tires. His mechanics stood frozen around the car for 20 seconds and only started when the penalty had expired. He was back in 15th place – one place behind his teammate Sergio Pérez.

The Mexican local hero wanted to make his home race the turning point of what he described as a “terrible season”. After another disappointment in front of his own fans, he probably has to worry more than ever about his future alongside Verstappen. Because it showed what is possible with Red Bull. He grabbed one after the other and was back in sixth place with 30 laps to go. But it wasn’t just Verstappen who saw that dark clouds were gathering.

Rain could have messed up the order again. Norris didn’t want to wait for that. He tried to reduce the gap to the two Ferraris. And at least Leclerc did that.

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