Verstappen back in F1 title race after Norris and Piastri disqualification follows his Las Vegas win

A picture


Max Verstappen swept to victory at the Las Vegas Grand Prix in dominant fashion, enough as he crossed the line to keep him just clinging on to hopes of retaining the world championship,But more than four hours after the race had concluded, the Dutchman found himself catapulted right back into the fight as the McLarens of Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri were disqualified,Norris had finished second and Piastri fourth, solid enough results to maintain an advantage over Verstappen, but two hours after the race the governing body, the FIA, announced it was investigating the wear on the skid blocks on their cars,They were found to be worn down beyond the limits of the regulations, leading to a double disqualification, as the rules around skid wear, which ensure the cars run at the prescribed height, are hard and fast and there are almost no mitigating circumstances,Verstappen, who had been 49 points behind Norris, is now 24 behind, the same deficit as Piastri, with two meetings remaining.

Fifty-eight points remain on the table from the final two rounds in Qatar, which includes a sprint race, and Abu Dhabi,If Norris comes out of Doha with a 26-point lead he will seal the championship there,As it stands, finishing in the points in front of Piastri and Verstappen in both races in Qatar would be enough for Norris but the Dutchman, extraordinarily, still has a shot at nicking the title from under McLaren’s nose at the death,If he does so, this extraordinary turn of events in Las Vegas will be the white whale that haunts McLaren’s papaya dreams for long into the future,Verstappen deserved his win without a doubt.

He was all but untouchable for Red Bull once he had taken the lead from Norris, the pole-sitter, through the first corner after the British driver paid the price for being too aggressive when the lights went out and went wide, losing the place.1.Lando Norris (McLaren) - 390 points - 7 wins2.Oscar Piastri (McLaren) - 366 points - 7 wins3.Max Verstappen (Red Bull) - 366 points - 6 winsNorris duly played the percentages and ground out a strong second place with Piastri in fourth.

So far so good for the Briton, who climbed into a huge, pink, Lego Cadillac driven by the actor Terry Crews alongside Verstappen and George Russell, who crossed the line in third, to the now traditional post-race interviews at the Bellagio fountains.At which point Vegas still tasted sweet for Norris who was in good humour, joking that he had messed up the start but knowing that he had 30 points on Piastri and 42 on Verstappen.As Mickey Mouse conducted the Bellagio fountains to the music of Fantasia, Verstappen was revelling in a strong victory and the only inkling that something was amiss came more than an hour later, when McLaren’s team principal, Andrea Stella, did not meet his usual post-race media commitments and rumours began to swirl.Norris had already left the track, as had all the fans, by the time the FIA confirmed an investigation was under way.It then summoned McLaren representatives at 11.

45pm local time but few believed the team would escape sanction.This year Lewis Hamilton was disqualified for excessive wear in China when the rearmost skid on his Ferrari was less than the 9mm minimum thickness required, as was Nico Hülkenberg in Bahrain.In both cases the FIA had applied the rules rigorously, as it did once more in Vegas.However, the process was drawn out, with the decision finally announced at 1.45am local time after the meeting with McLaren had apparently lasted for more than an hour and a quarter.

For Verstappen this is the sniff of a shot he has craved and he can be expected to pile on the pressure at the final two rounds.In the dry race conditions the Red Bull performed far better than in the wet in qualifying and Verstappen was all but flawless as he bossed the race on the street circuit in Nevada, perhaps making it the least invigorating of the three meetings the circuit has held.Sign up to The RecapThe best of our sports journalism from the past seven days and a heads-up on the weekend’s actionafter newsletter promotionThe win was another statement of intent from Verstappen and Red Bull that he will keep fighting to the very last in this championship and his late-season surge has been hugely impressive.Having been 104 points behind Piastri after the Dutch GP in August, he has won four races and taken three podiums in the last seven meetings, including coming back from a pit lane start in Brazil to claim third.It has been an extraordinary turnaround for the team and driver: he now has six wins, a feat that had looked all but impossible given he had in effect written off his chances of defending his title at the midpoint of the season.

Norris has been calm and collected all weekend, insisting he had banished considerations of taking the title from his mind but rather was focusing intently on each session, and it appeared to have paid off,He took pole in treacherous wet conditions and went on to maximise what he could from the race, even as he had to lift and coast to save fuel in the closing stages,Now, however, he must reset completely to be able to go again next week in Qatar, all the while knowing that Verstappen, who had been an outlier in the title fight, is now straining at the leash,Piastri, too, might consider it lucky that with both drivers penalised he has not dropped any more points to his teammate but will also be aware of the great chunks of points Verstappen has taken out of him in the past seven races,In a season that has already enjoyed its share of drama, with the advantage swinging one way and another, the gamblers in Vegas will surely now be tempted to bet big on Verstappen making the unlikeliest comeback of them all.

With the disqualifications applied Russell took second place and his Mercedes teammate, Kimi Antonelli, third,1 Max Verstappen (Neth) Red Bull 1hr 21min 08,429sec2 George Russell (GB) Mercedes at 23,546 3 Kimi Antonelli (It) Mercedes at 30,4884 Charles Leclerc (Mon) Ferrari at 30.

6785 Carlos Sainz Jr (Sp) Williams at 34.9246 Isack Hadjar (Fr) Racing Bulls at 45.2577 Nico Hülkenberg (Ger) Sauber at 51.1348 Lewis Hamilton (GB) Ferrari at 59.3699 Esteban Ocon (Fr) Haas at 1:00.

63510 Oliver Bearman (GB) Haas at 1:10,54911 Fernando Alonso (Sp) Aston Martin at 1:25,30812 Yuki Tsunoda (Jpn) Red Bull at 1:26,97413 Pierre Gasly (Fr) Alpine at 1:31,70214 Liam Lawson (NZ) Racing Bulls at 1 lap15 Franco Colapinto (Arg) Alpine at 1 lapNot classified: Alexander Albon (Tha) Williams 35 laps completed, Gabriel Bortoleto (Br) Sauber 2 laps completed, Lance Stroll (Can) Aston Martin 0 laps completedDisqualified: Lando Norris (GB) McLaren, Oscar Piastri (Aus) McLaren due to breaches of F1's technical regulations
trendingSee all
A picture

Americans are feeling the pain of the affordability crisis: ‘There’s not any wiggle room’

Frozen dinners were useful when no one was home to cook. A fancy cheese or apple roll felt like a family treat. But not any more. “We can’t afford to do those little luxuries any more because they’re just too expensive to feed five with,” says Cat Hill. “There’s not any wiggle room

A picture

Rachel Reeves, please, let’s make budgets boring again | Heather Stewart

Rachel Reeves should put us all out of our misery this Wednesday with a tax-and-spend statement bold enough to make future budgets boring again.Ask any economist or policy wonk and they’ll tell you the buildup to this year’s budget has been among the most drawn-out and chaotic they can remember.Treasury insiders are adamant they have maintained the same “Labour values” throughout and that Reeves first scribbled down her top three priorities – the NHS, the cost of living and the public debt – as long ago as July.But the combination of volatile bond markets, pass-or-fail fiscal rules, and Reeves’s decision to leave herself with less than £10bn of headroom against them, has led to months of uncertainty and indecision.It is not meant to be like this: aside from the agenda-setting first budget that follows a general election victory, and outside economic crises (though goodness knows we have had plenty), budgets should be reassuringly dull

A picture

Bro boost: women say their LinkedIn traffic increases if they pretend to be men

Do your LinkedIn followers consider you a “thought leader”? Do hordes of commenters applaud your tips on how to “scale” your startup? Do recruiters slide into your DMs to “explore potential synergies”?If not, it could be because you’re not a man.Dozens of women joined a collective LinkedIn experiment this week after a series of viral posts suggested that, for some, changing their gender to “male” boosted their visibility on the network.Others rewrote their profiles to be, as they put it, “bro-coded” – inserting action-oriented online business buzzwords such as “drive”, “transform” and “accelerate”. Anecdotally, their visibility also increased.The uptick in engagement has led some to speculate that an in-built sexism in LinkedIn’s algorithm means that men who speak in online business jargon are more visible on its platform

A picture

Leading law firm cuts London back-office staff as it embraces AI

The law firm Clifford Chance is reducing the number of business services staff at its London base by 10%, with the increased use of artificial intelligence a factor behind the decision.The head of PwC has also indicated that AI may lead to fewer workers being hired at the accountancy and consulting group.Clifford Chance, one of the largest international law firms, is making about 50 roles redundant in areas such as finance, HR and IT with role changes for up to 35 other jobs, according to the Financial Times, which first reported the cuts.Greater use of AI and reduced demand for some business services are behind the cuts, the FT report said, as well as more work being done at offices outside Clifford Chance’s main UK-US operations, in countries such as Poland and India.A spokesperson for Clifford Chance said: “In line with our strategy to strengthen our operations, we can confirm we are proposing changes to some of our London-based business professional functions

A picture

NFL Week 12: Chiefs hit back to beat Colts in overtime, Lions tame Giants and Packers crush Vikings

What a finish. Double overtime madness. The final scores and records now the dust has settled.(6-5) Baltimore Ravens 23-10 New York Jets (2-9)(8-3) Chicago Bears 31-28 Pittsburgh Steelers (6-5)(3-8) Cincinnati Bengals 20-26 New England Patriots (10-2)(7-4) Detroit Lions 34-27 New York Giants (2-10)(7-3-1) Green Bay Packers 23-6 Minnesota Vikings (4-7)(6-5) Kansas City Chiefs 23-20 Indianapolis Colts (8-3)(1-10) Tennessee Titans 24-30 Seattle Seahawks (8-3)That was an incredible comeback from Kansas City. The defense just completely shut the Colts out in the second half

A picture

Contepomi accuses ‘bully’ Curry of reckless tackle and shoving Argentina coach

Tom Curry found himself at the centre of a storm after England’s win against Argentina, as Felipe Contepomi accused the flanker not only of a “reckless” tackle on Juan Cruz Mallía but of shoving him, the Pumas’ coach, in the tunnel afterwards. Mallía, the full-back, was forced off late on with what is thought to be an anterior cruciate ligament injury, which meant Argentina, who had used all their replacements, had to finish the match with 14 men.“How old is he?” said Contepomi of Curry. “Twenty-seven? And strong. And I am 48 and he comes and just [shoves me]