Max Verstappen won the sprint race at the Belgian Grand Prix with a steely and opportunistic drive, to grind out victory against the odds. Having taken the lead on the opening lap he beat the McLarens of Oscar Piastri and Lando Norris into second and third, with Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc in fourth. His teammate Lewis Hamilton could manage only 15th having started in 18th.
It was something of another processional sprint over the 15 laps but the second place means Piastri has extended his championship lead over Norris from eight to nine points. For Red Bull in their first competitive session without the recently dismissed team principal Christian Horner and the opening meeting with Laurent Mekies in charge, it was just the start they needed.
They had brought upgrades to this race, including a revised front wing and had taken a chance on their setup to maximise top speed, in an effort to overcome the McLaren pace advantage but it had not appeared to pay off in qualifying where Verstappen was a full half a second off Piastri.
However in the race, Verstappen was decisive and audacious, taking his one chance with clinical authority. With the McLaren taking time to come up to speed he pounced and while Piastri was quicker through the twisty part of the second sector, he did not have enough to overcome Verstappen’s track position advantage. It is Verstappen’s 12th sprint win and his second in Belgium, he remains by some distance the most successful driver in the short format.
Piastri held his led on the short dash into La Source but Verstappen took a slipstream behind the McLaren on the Kemmel straight and took the lead into Les Combes, the Red Bull running a skinny wing for straight-line speed and making the most of it in the quick first sector.
Piastri harried Verstappen looking for a way through but the Dutchman used his speed advantage to stay just out of reach in the opening part of the lap and the Australian could not quite bridge the gap. The pair circled nose to tail for lap after lap, as Piastri looked for any slight opening but Verstappen was, as ever, almost inch-perfect.
Norris caught the pair with 10 laps gone yet he too could do nothing but on lap 11 Verstappen went wide at the Bus Stop and Piastri closed. The Dutchman told his team he was having issues with his brakes but just managed to cling on to the front and it was enough to see him through to the flag.
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Esteban Ocon and Oliver Bearman were fifth and seventh for Haas, Carlos Sainz sixth for Williams and Isack Hadjar eighth for Racing Bulls.