Vestappen takes stunning São Paulo win from P17 on the grid

Vestappen takes stunning São Paulo win from P17 on the grid

Alpine score double podium


Max Verstappen took a stunning win at the São Paulo Grand Prix, climbing from 17th place on the grid to take his eighth victory of the season almost 20 seconds clear of the chasing pack. Behind the three-time champion, Esteban Ocon and Pierre Gasly took a surprise double podium for Alpine. 

 

On the formation lap ahead of the start, Aston Martin’s Lance Stroll crashed and Race Control indicated an aborted start. That should have signalled the drivers to remains on the grid after the formation lap to await further instructions. Norris, however, pulled away and a number of other drivers followed the pole sitter. Another formation lap was the result and Norris and several others were informed that the incident would be investigated agfter the race. 

 

When the light eventually went out, front row starter Russell reacted best and he stole the lead on the run to Turn 1 ahead of Norris. RB’s Yuki Tsunoda held his starting third place ahead of Ocon, while Ferrrari’s Charles Lecler moved ahead of RB’s Liam Lawson to take fifth. 

 

Further back, Verstappen made a brilliant start from P17, and as the field exited the Senna S, the Dutchman charged around the outside to climb to P11 behind Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton. And at the start of lap 2 the Dutchman dived down the inside of the Mercedes to climb into a points-paying position.

 

Verstappen wasn’t done, though, and after picking off Alpine’s Pierre Gasly’s Alpine at the start of lap 3, he muscled his way past Aston Martin’s Fernando Alonso on the following lap. He then chased down Oscar Piastri and Lawson and by the end of lap 11 he was a remarkable sixth. 

 

At the front, on lap 20, Russell still led, just under a second ahead of Norris. Eight seconds behind the top two, Tsunoda headed a DRS train consisting of Ocon, Leclerc and Verstappen. 

 

On lap the shape of the race changed. In worsening rain, Haas’ Nico Hülkenberg  went wide in Turn 1 and stopped at the edge of the track. The VSC was deployed, sparking a flurry of pit stops. 

 

With the aid of marshals, Hülkenberg was able to rejopin – a move that ultimately led to him being black-flagged – and just as the VSC ended, the top three of Russell, Norris and Tsunoda dived into the pits for more Inters. That promoted Ocon into the lead, with Verstappen in P2 ahead of Gasly.

 

With the VSC spell complete, Norris eased past Russell to claim fourth place but with the conditions worsening badly, the Safety Car was eventually deployed. And when Williams’ Franco Colapinto lost control in Turn 12 and hit the barriers, the red flags came out and the race was halted.

 

At the restart, Ocon held his lead over Verstappen and Gasly, but behind them Norris went wide and Russell was able to sneak through to P4. On lap 40, though, Sainz, who had been trying to catch Pérez, crashed at Turn 8 and the Safety Car took to the track for the second time. 

 

The restart took place at the end of lap 42 and this time Verstappen judged it perfectly. He stuck with Ocon and when the Frenchman tried to pull away, Verstappen stayed close enough to dive down the inside into Turn 1 and steal the lead. 

 

Behind them Gasly managed to hold onto third but Russell, Leclerc and Norris were all jockeying for position. Desperate to avoid a collision, Norris locked up behind Russell and dropped back to P7 behind team-mate Piastri. The Australian, facing a time penalty for a collision, would later wave the Briton through to P6. 

 

At the front, Verstappen began to stretch away from the pack and with 20 laps remaining the Dutchman had pulled out a five-second gap to Ocon, with Gasly three seconds further back in third. 

 

In the closing stages, Verstappen took complete control and after posting a staggering 17 fastest laps that earned him a bonus point the Dutchman crossed the line to take his eighth win of the season and his first the Spanish Grand Prix in June.

 

Behind the champion Ocon and Gasly completed a shock double podium for Alpine, while Russell took fourth ahead of Leclerc. Norris, facing an investigation for breaching starting regulations when the original start was aborted, finished sixth ahead of Tsunoda and Piastri while Liam Lawson made it a double points finish ahead of Hamilton.

2024 FIA Formula 1 São Paulo Grand Prix – Race 
1 Max Verstappen Red Bull/Honda RBPT 69 2:06'54.430 
2 Esteban Ocon Alpine/Renault 69 2:07'13.907 19.477
3 Pierre Gasly Alpine/Renault 69 2:07'16.962 22.532
4 George Russell Mercedes 69 2:07'17.695 23.265
5 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 69 2:07'24.607 30.177
6 Lando Norris McLaren/Mercedes 69 2:07'25.802 31.372
7 Yuki Tsunoda RB/Honda RBPT 69 2:07'36.486 42.056
8 Oscar Piastri McLaren/Mercedes 69 2:07'39.373 44.943
9 Liam Lawson RB/Honda RBPT 69 2:07'44.882 50.452
10 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 69 2:07'45.183 50.753
11 Sergio Pérez Red Bull/Honda RBPT 69 2:07'45.961 51.531
12 Oliver Bearman Haas/Ferrari 69 2:07'51.515 57.085
13 Valtteri Bottas Sauber/Ferrari 69 2:07'58.018 1'03.588
14 Fernando Alonso Aston Martin/Mercedes 69 2:08'12.479 1'18.049
15 Zhou Guanyu Sauber/Ferrari 69 2:08'14.079 1'19.649
     Carlos Sainz Ferrari 38 - 31 laps
     Franco Colapinto Williams/Mercedes 30 – Retirement
     Alexander Albon Williams/Mercedes 0 - Not started
     Lance Stroll Aston Martin/Mercedes 0 - Not started
     Nico Hülkenberg Haas/Ferrari 30 – DSQ
 
 


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