Oscar Piastri drove a calm and controlled race to win the Dutch Grand Prix on Sunday, while teammate Lando Norris saw his Formula 1 title chances damaged after his car broke down.
Norris was chasing Piastri in the final stages when he noticed a “funny” smell in his McLaren. Moments later, smoke came from the back of his car, and he had to stop on the side of the track.
“I don’t know if I’m on fire or not,” Norris told his team over the radio. He then climbed out of the car and stood with marshals, watching the race slip away. His engineer praised his pace, but a frustrated Norris replied, “Doesn’t matter.” This was his second retirement of the season, after a crash with Piastri in Canada.
The incident brought cheers from the Dutch crowd as Max Verstappen moved into second place at his home race. Behind him, Isack Hadjar of Racing Bulls claimed his first Formula 1 podium in third. The 19-year-old Frenchman was lifted off the ground by celebrating team members after giving his team their first top-three finish in four years.
“That was always the target since I was a kid, so this is the first step,” Hadjar said.
Piastri, meanwhile, had to keep calm through three safety car restarts. He stayed ahead of Norris twice, and then held off Verstappen after Norris’ retirement. The Australian’s victory stretches his lead in the standings from nine points to 34 with nine races left.
“Nicely done, everybody, nicely done,” Piastri told his team. “Obviously sorry for Lando for what happened.”
Ferrari Crash Out Again
It was another poor day for Ferrari. Lewis Hamilton lost control in wet conditions and hit the barrier. Later, Charles Leclerc was knocked out of the race when Mercedes rookie Kimi Antonelli hit him, sending him into the same wall.
George Russell took fourth for Mercedes despite an earlier clash with Leclerc that will be looked at by stewards. Williams driver Alex Albon came fifth, while Haas youngster Oliver Bearman scored a career-best sixth. Aston Martin pair Lance Stroll and Fernando Alonso finished seventh and eighth, Yuki Tsunoda was ninth for Red Bull, and Esteban Ocon took the final point in tenth.
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