Verstappen Dominates 2025 Las Vegas Grand Prix as Norris Extends Title Lead with Second Place
Max Verstappen delivered a commanding victory at the 2025 FIA Formula 1 Las Vegas Grand Prix, keeping his championship hopes alive with a dominant lights-to-flag performance. The Red Bull star crossed the line 20.7 seconds ahead of title leader Lando Norris, with George Russell completing the podium after a tense, high-speed battle under the Las Vegas night lights.
With only two rounds and one final Sprint remaining in the season, the championship fight tightened further as Norris extended his lead — and Verstappen surged closer.
Masterclass From Verstappen After Turn 1 Takeover
Starting second, Verstappen seized control immediately. Pole-sitter Lando Norris overcooked Turn 1, going wide under braking and opening the door for the Dutchman to power into the lead.
From there, Verstappen controlled the tempo:
- Built an early buffer over Russell
- Managed tyre wear superbly across a tricky first stint
- Unleashed pace on Hard tyres in the second half
- Closed the race by setting the fastest lap on the final lap
“Getting into the lead in Turn 1 helped,” Verstappen said. “We were all finding our feet in the first stint… but once we got onto the hards, everything felt very enjoyable. Very relaxed, great communication with the pit wall.”
Incidents Behind Keep Leaders Clear
The opening laps were chaotic further back:
- Oscar Piastri collided with Liam Lawson, dropping the Australian to P6.
- Gabriel Bortoleto and Lance Stroll made contact, with both retiring early.
Up front, Russell initially kept Verstappen within a second, but by lap 8 the Red Bull had broken the DRS, steadily extending the gap.
Ferrari on the Move: Leclerc’s Charge
Starting from P9, Charles Leclerc delivered one of the drives of the night, telling his team he was “pushing like an animal” before overtaking:
- Piastri
- Isack Hadjar
The Monegasque eventually finished sixth after a late fight with Antonelli and Piastri.
Mid-Race Strategy: Verstappen Pulls Clear Again
As the field boxed around mid-distance, Verstappen remained out longest, pitting on lap 25 and rejoining 1.2 seconds ahead of Russell.
From there, he steadily pulled away once more.
Norris Clears Russell for P2 — Then Forced to Save Fuel
By lap 32, Russell informed Mercedes he couldn’t hold off Norris without risk. The team let the McLaren through, and Norris set off in pursuit of Verstappen — only for McLaren to instruct him to save fuel in the closing laps.
That sealed Verstappen’s comfortable win.
Antonelli Impresses but Drops Back After Penalty
Mercedes rookie Kimi Antonelli gained an impressive 13 places to finish fourth on track with a bold one-stop strategy, holding off Piastri and Leclerc in a DRS train.
However, a five-second penalty for jumping the start dropped him to P6, promoting Piastri to fourth and Leclerc to fifth.
Final Classification — 2025 Las Vegas Grand Prix (50 Laps)
1. Max Verstappen — Red Bull/Honda RBPT — 1:21’08.429
2. Lando Norris — McLaren/Mercedes — +20.741
3. George Russell — Mercedes — +23.546
4. Oscar Piastri — McLaren/Mercedes — +27.650
5. Kimi Antonelli — Mercedes — +30.488
6. Charles Leclerc — Ferrari — +30.678
7. Carlos Sainz — Williams/Mercedes — +34.924
8. Isack Hadjar — Racing Bulls/Honda RBPT — +45.257
9. Nico Hülkenberg — Sauber/Ferrari — +51.134
10. Lewis Hamilton — Ferrari — +59.369
11. Esteban Ocon — Haas/Ferrari — +1’00.635
12. Oliver Bearman — Haas/Ferrari — +1’10.549
13. Fernando Alonso — Aston Martin/Mercedes — +1’25.308
14. Yuki Tsunoda — Red Bull/Honda RBPT — +1’26.974
15. Pierre Gasly — Alpine/Renault — +1’31.702
16. Liam Lawson — Racing Bulls/Honda RBPT — +1 lap
17. Franco Colapinto — Alpine/Renault — +1 lap
DNF: Alexander Albon — Williams/Mercedes (Lap 35, withdrew)
DNF: Gabriel Bortoleto — Sauber/Ferrari (Lap 2, accident damage)
DNF: Lance Stroll — Aston Martin/Mercedes (Lap 0, accident damage)
Championship Picture Tightens
Verstappen’s sixth win of the season moves him to 366 points, now:
- 12 behind Oscar Piastri
- 42 behind leader Lando Norris
With two races and a Sprint left, the title race is the closest it has been in years — and far from over.
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