MIAMI —
Lando Norris claimed a dramatic victory in the Sprint at the Miami Grand Prix,
capitalising on a well-timed pit stop and late Safety Car intervention to lead
home a McLaren 1-2 finish ahead of Oscar Piastri. The race was marked by
unpredictable weather, early crashes, pit lane chaos, and a series of
investigations that reshaped the final order.
Heavy rain before the Sprint created treacherous conditions
at the Miami International Autodrome. Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc was the first
casualty, crashing out on his way to the grid before the race even began. A red
flag followed the formation lap due to poor visibility, forcing all 19
remaining cars back to the pit lane.
Once the Sprint resumed in better conditions, pole-sitter
Kimi Antonelli struggled off the line, allowing Piastri to take the lead into
Turn 1. Norris followed closely in second as Antonelli fell to fourth after a
wide moment.
Meanwhile, the entire field – bar Carlos Sainz on full wets
– started on intermediate tyres, with the damp but drying track demanding rapid
strategy changes.
As the laps unfolded, teams began rolling the dice. Yuki
Tsunoda was the first to switch to slicks, prompting a flurry of pit stops.
Lewis Hamilton made an early call to switch to softs and gained ground, while
chaos erupted when Max Verstappen and Antonelli collided in the pit lane due to
an unsafe release by Red Bull, leaving debris scattered and Antonelli forced to
abort his stop.
The turning point came when Piastri pitted from the lead on
Lap 14, handing track position to Norris. Moments later, Fernando Alonso
crashed heavily after being tagged by Liam Lawson, triggering a Safety Car.
Norris made his stop just as the caution was called, perfectly timing his entry
to rejoin in the lead, effectively securing the win.
With the race ending under the Safety Car, Norris crossed
the line first, securing his first win since the season-opening Australian
Grand Prix. Piastri followed in second, sealing a McLaren 1-2. Hamilton
finished third for Ferrari, benefitting from strategy and Verstappen’s
10-second penalty for the pit lane incident, which dropped the Red Bull driver
out of the points.
Alex Albon delivered an impressive fourth-place finish for
Williams, though he faces a post-race investigation for a potential Safety Car
infringement. George Russell, Lance Stroll, Liam Lawson, and Ollie Bearman
completed the points-paying positions, though Lawson too is under review for
his role in Alonso’s crash.