Norris claims Miami GP sprint race in McLaren 1-2

Formula One world champion Lando Norris won the Miami Grand Prix sprint race in a McLaren one-two with Oscar Piastri on Saturday as Mercedes suffered their first defeat of the season.

Charles Leclerc finished third for Ferrari, after starting fourth, in the first race following a forced April break due to the Iran war leading to the cancellation of Middle Eastern rounds.

Mercedes pair Kimi Antonelli and George Russell crossed the line fourth and fifth respectively but the Italian was demoted to sixth after being given a five-second penalty for repeated track limits violations, with Russell moving up a place.

The drop meant the 19-year-old winner of the previous two grands prix in China and Japan saw his championship lead over Russell cut to seven points. It also meant Red Bull’s four-times world champion Max Verstappen moved up to fifth, with Lewis Hamilton seventh for Ferrari.

Norris claims Miami GP sprint race in McLaren 1-2

McLaren driver Lando Norris (1) during the F1 Miami Grand Prix Sprint Race at Miami International Autodrome. Reuters

Alpine’s Pierre Gasly secured the final point in the 100-km race run in hot and humid conditions.

Antonelli now has 75 points to Russell’s 68 and Leclerc’s 55. Norris, fifth overall, is on 33.

Norris took the chequered flag 3.7 seconds clear of Australian Piastri after starting from pole position and pulling away to lead untroubled in a car benefiting from a raft of upgrades.

“Nice to be back on the top step. A good day for us,” he said of his first win since Brazil last November.

“I was pushing, trying to find that balance of pushing and staying relaxed to not make mistakes. A good start to the weekend but now I’ve got to do it all over again.”

Norris claims Miami GP sprint race in McLaren 1-2

First place finisher McLaren driver Lando Norris of Britain is interviewed after a sprint auto race at the Miami Formula One Grand Prix in Miami Gardens, Florida, on Saturday. AP

The main grand prix is on Sunday, when rain and possible lightning storms are threatened, with qualifying later on Saturday.

The win was a repeat of Norris’s 2025 sprint success at the Hard Rock Stadium, where the Briton took his first career F1 win in 2024, and on Saturday he was presented with the winner’s plaque by Reid Wiseman, commander of the recent Artemis II Lunar flyby mission.

The top three stood in a minute’s silence for former racer Alex Zanardi, who died on Saturday at the age of 59. All the drivers and team bosses had also held a similar tribute on the grid before the start.

Antonelli made a poor start but recovered and had looked to get the better of Russell after a tussle for fourth place, the pair passing and re-passing early on, but the Italian proved too erratic.

Reuters

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