• Oscar Piastri claimed his fifth victory of the 2025 F1 season in Spain on Sunday
  • He fended off Lando Norris who shipped seven points in his world title fight
  • Max Verstappen and George Russell reignited their fiery feud late in the race 

By JONATHAN MCEVOY

Published: 15:47 BST, 1 June 2025 | Updated: 18:23 BST, 1 June 2025

Lando Norris shipped seven points in his world championship fight as an unflappable Oscar Piastri won the Spanish Grand Prix from pole – as Max Verstappen lost his control with an extraordinary lunge on George Russell late in the race.

As for Norris, it was a case of back to earth with a bump a week after his morale-boosting triumph on Monaco’s twisty streets. An error-dented qualifying session condemned the Briton to start from second on the grid, and his best obvious chance of seizing the lead presented itself on the long drag into the first corner.

But Norris was away slowly, at least relative to Piastri’s smart getaway. He even slipped a place to Verstappen, the Red Bull man pressing his claims strongly as usual.

Norris was able to pass Verstappen on lap 13, his McLaren’s superior pace too much for the Red Bull. A breeze into second, where he finished.

Piastri, therefore, leads Norris by 10 points after nine rounds.

So the damage to Norris was contained but the outcome was the opposite of the ideal he required to maintain momentum established seven days before.

Oscar Piastri claimed his fifth victory of the F1 season, fending off his team-mate Lando Norris

Oscar Piastri claimed his fifth victory of the F1 season, fending off his team-mate Lando Norris 

Norris shipped seven points in his world championship fight as Piastri won from pole position

Norris shipped seven points in his world championship fight as Piastri won from pole position

Piastri (C) now leads Norris (L) by 10 points after nine rounds after a brilliant start to the season

Piastri (C) now leads Norris (L) by 10 points after nine rounds after a brilliant start to the season

Norris has never won two races back-to-back during a season, a curious anomaly in such a fast car. 

His language coming into the weekend betrayed a lack of conviction. For example, he said that he did not necessarily need pole but just a strong qualifying performance. 

There is no such thing in a McLaren of such unmatched pace – it is pole or failure, a view underlined by the result of the race.

Imagine Lewis Hamilton making such a meek comment at the height of his brilliance. He would have rather gouged his eyes out than have ceded pole to Fernando Alonso in 2007 at McLaren (or anyone else at Mercedes).

Norris’s soul-searching led Nico Rosberg, the 2016 champion to whom Hamilton lost out in a psychological thriller, to say: ‘I don’t know if Lando has a mental coach. Does he work with a psychologist or not? He definitely should because there’s so much value in that.

‘I worked with one, just to help us understand the best possible approach. I did two hours every two days leading up to the season. It was more difficult than the physical training. It was insanely difficult and extremely valuable.’

As for Hamilton, he suffered the indignity of being told to allow Ferrari team-mate Charles Leclerc through just 10 laps into the 66.

This instruction has come his way on the two occasions he has out-qualified Leclerc, here and in China. He finished sixth, passed by Stake’s Nico Hulkenberg, to Leclerc’s far more competitive third, with Mercedes’s Mr Reliable Russell fourth.

Charles Leclerc claimed his third podium finish of the 2025 season in Barcelona on Sunday

Charles Leclerc claimed his third podium finish of the 2025 season in Barcelona on Sunday

Max Verstappen was handed a 10-second penalty after he clashed with George Russell late on

Max Verstappen was handed a 10-second penalty after he clashed with George Russell late on

Norris admitted: 'I just didn’t have the pace to match him [Piastri]. It was a good, fun race.'

Norris admitted: ‘I just didn’t have the pace to match him [Piastri]. It was a good, fun race.’

After the race, Piastri told Sky Sports that it has been a 'great year already for McLaren'

After the race, Piastri told Sky Sports that it has been a ‘great year already for McLaren’ 

A safety car came out 11 laps from the end after Kimi Antonelli’s Mercedes engine gave up on him and he slid across the gravel at Turn 10.

The leaders peeled into the pits to be reshod. On the restart, Verstappen wobbled off on the kerb while running third, was passed by Leclerc and Russell. 

The Dutchman ran off track and was told to hand his place back to Russell.

He screamed defiance, before finally appearing to move aside, but then turned into Russell. He was handed a 10-second penalty that plunged him back to finish 10th.

:
Oscar Piastri sees off McLaren team-mate Lando Norris to claim his FIFTH victory of the F1 season at the Spanish Grand Prix – as Max Verstappen and George Russell reignite fiery feud



***
Read more at DailyMail.co.uk