Max Verstappen back atop the podium
with Canadian Grand Prix victory
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[June 10, 2024]
Reigning Formula One world champion Max Verstappen won for
the sixth time this season, navigating wet and dry conditions and a
challenge from Lando Norris to capture the Canadian Grand Prix on
Sunday in Montreal.
Verstappen's Red Bull Racing Honda finished the 70 laps at Circuit
Gilles Villeneuve by a 3.879-second margin over Great Britain's
Norris in his McLaren Mercedes. George Russell and his teammate
Lewis Hamilton drove their Mercedes to third and fourth places,
respectively, while McLaren's Oscar Piastri was fifth.
Verstappen collected 25 points for the victory and increased his
lead in the drivers' championship standings from 31 to 56 points
over Charles Leclerc, a Monaco native who didn't finish the race. An
engine issue and trouble with slick tires in wet conditions led
Scuderia Ferrari to pull Leclerc's car for no points.
Lando is in third in the standings, 63 points behind Verstappen.
Russell, who won the pole, and Verstappen battled for the lead early
in the rain before they were overtaken by Norris on lap 22 as the
track dried out. Norris, however, was at a disadvantage when Logan
Sargeant crashed, bringing out a safety car on lap 25 of 70. Norris
had already passed the pit lane entry point and had to pit later,
causing him to drop to third place.
"It was a pretty crazy race, a lot of things were happening and we
had to keep on top of our calls," Verstappen said. "As a team, we
did really well today, we remained calm and we pitted at the right
time, the safety car worked out nicely for us, but even after that
we were managing the gaps quite well.
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"I love it, that was a lot of fun, those kind of
races you need once in a while."
Verstappen had already moved in front when he used the restart to
protect his lead. Cars switched from intermediate tires to slicks as
track conditions improved, but drivers couldn't catch Verstappen
despite another safety car period after a collision between Carlos
Sainz and Alex Albon on lap 53.
Norris stayed ahead of Russell, who had to deal
with challenges from his teammate and seven-time champion Hamilton
as well as Piastri.
"It was (wild)," said Norris, who had outpaced Verstappen for his
first F1 victory at the Miami Grand Prix on May 5. "It was chaos. It
was eventful. To be honest, I felt like I drove a good race the
whole time, from start to finish.
"The first two stints were strong, I had amazing pace, then the
safety car had me over, just like it helped me in Miami. It's now
had me back over. Honestly, I thought it was a pretty perfect race
from my side, just a bit unlucky but it was good fun overall.
"These conditions were so stressful inside the car but very
enjoyable at the same time."
--Field Level Media
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