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McLaren's Piastri wins China GP, Ferrari's Hamilton and Leclerc DQd

(Reuters)
23 Mar 2025 16:37

Berlin (dpa)

Oscar Piastri won the Chinese Formula One Grand Prix from team-mate Lando Norris in a demonstration of McLaren strength in Shanghai on Sunday, while the Ferrari pair Lewis Hamilton and Charles Leclerc were disqualified some four hours after the race.

Piastri made the most of his first career pole position as he only came under pressure heading into the first turn in Shanghai before pulling away and claiming a third career victory.

Championship leader Norris completed the McLaren one-two despite major brakes pedal problems in the late stages, and Mercedes driver George Russell was third on the podium.

Ferrari shock

Leclerc and Hamilton originally finished fifth and sixth, respectively, behind world champion Max Verstappen in fourth, but were then deemed to have broken rules by race stawards and disqualified along with Alpine driver Pierre Gasly who had come 11th.

Stewards ruled that the plank assembly of Hamilton's car was "found to be 8.6mm (LHS), 8.6mm (car centerline) and 8.5mm (RHS). This is below the minimum thickness of 9mm specified under Article 3.5.9 of the Technical Regulations."

Leclerc and Gasly's cars were found to be underweight, with Leclerc's Ferrari missing the required 800kg limit by one kilo.

The statements said that Ferrari admitted to a "genuine error" in both of their cases which came the day after Hamilton had won the Shanghai sprint race.

McLaren live up to top billing

McLaren were always tipped to be the team to beat this season and have so far lived up to it by winning both grands prix, from Norris in Australia and Piastri in China.

They missed a one-two in the wet Australian race because Piastri went off late to finish ninth but made amends in China where Piastri also came second in the sprint.

"I'm just so proud of the whole weekend. This is what I feel like I deserved from last week. The team did a mega job with the one-two. I'm very happy," Piastri said.

"It's been an incredible weekend from start to finish. The car's been pretty mega the whole time."

Norris was surprised how well the one-stop strategy worked but named the late brake problems "my worst nightmare.

"It's scary! If I have a nightmare it's when the brakes are failing and I was losing two three four seconds the last couple of laps. So I was a bit scared but we survived and got to the end.

"I am happy with second, it's good points and great points for us as a team with a one-two. Just how we wanted the race to go," he added.

Norris leads the championship with 44 points from Verstappen (36), Russell (35) and Piastri (34).

Verstappen was well off the pace and will face a hard time to get a record-equalling fifth straight title.

"We are worried, but it's not like we're throwing in the towel just yet," Red Bull adviser Helmut Marko told Sky TV.

How the race unfolded

Piastri won the start from his first ever pole and Norris sneaked past Russell into second in the first turns while both Ferraris got the better of Verstappen who dropped from fourth to sixth.

Hamilton and Leclerc made contact in the hectic start phase which damaged Leclerc's front wing but he could continue without slowing down.

Fernando Alonso had to retire his Aston Martin in lap six with a brakes problem, while up front Piastri and Norris pulled away. Hamilton and Verstappen were the first top drivers to pit, with everyone else following soon.

Russell reclaimed second from Norris who emerged just too late from the pit exit but the joy was shortlived as Norris soon swept past the Mercedes man to have both McLarens in front again.

Hamilton pitted for a second time in lap 38 but none of the other in the top positions followed. He lost fifth place to verstappen in the process, and the champion then also got past Leclerc into fourth with four laps left.

Russell almost snatched second place when Norris struggled with his brakes problems but the McLaren driver just held on.

Russell admitted to McLaren's dominance but also spoke of "probably one of my best weekends in Formula One in terms of performance."

Antonelli best rookie, Lawson struggles again

Hamilton's successor at Mercedes, Kimi Antonelli, was the best rookie in sixth after the disqualifications while Verstappen's new partner Liam Lawson had another race to forget, ranked 12th from 16 classified drivers and under big pressure. 

Lawson crashed in Australia as a tyre gamble did not pay off, was 14th in the Shanghai sprint, and dead last in both Shanghai qualifyings.

Alpine's Jack Doohan got a 10-second penalty for forcing fellow-rookie Isak Hadjar of Visa RB off the track, and the other VISA RB driver, Yuki Tsunoda, came last after his front wing broke without contact and he required a new one.

The Haas team meanwhile impressed with both drivers in the points as Esteban Ocon placed fifth and Oliver Bearman eighth in the updated results.

The next race is the Japanese Grand Prix on April 6.      

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