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Sainz apologises to Ferrari for two “very strange” crashes in Brazil

Sainz had a torrid Sunday at Interlagos

Carlos Sainz has apologised to his Ferrari Formula 1 team for what he called “two very strange, unfortunate crashes” on Sunday in Brazil.

Sainz went off heavily in the morning Q2 session, stranding himself in P14. However the team decided to take a complete fresh power unit plus a new gearbox, which meant a pitlane start.

From there he found it hard to make progress and he was running 13th when he again spun and hit the barrier, which led to his retirement after 38 laps.

His team mate Charles Leclerc also had a difficult day, but managed to score points in fifth place.

“Two very strange, unfortunate crashes today,” said the Spaniard. “Bit of a nightmare day. Honestly, the two of them, just no sign of me crashing, so I couldn’t do anything to avoid them.

“But at the same time, it didn’t look easy out there to overtake today. So starting from the pit lane, it was always going to be difficult to make it to the points with the lack of overtaking there was.

“At the same time apologies to the whole team for the two crashes. I hope we can come back stronger.”

Sainz admitted that the SF-24, which is kinder on its tyres in normal conditions that its predecessor, has not been an easy car to drive in the rain.

“I’ve always been a very strong driver in the wet,” he said. “But for some reason, ever since I tried this car in the wet this year, I’ve never had a good feeling with it.

“I don’t know if we just don’t put energy into the tyres, or we run it too stiff in medium to high speed, or what is it?

“But it’s clear that it’s very unpredictable, and very difficult to drive. I’m glad Charles brought it home in P5. I heard he was also struggling out there.

“So honestly, a bit of a nightmare the whole race, but yeah, hopefully some dry races coming up, and we will try and go for it.”

With three GPs and a sprint still to come Ferrari remains in contention in the constructors’ championship.

“We will be alive until the very end,” said Sainz. “Three weekends now coming up that are going to be obviously important for the whole team.

“And now we need to refocus, we’ll regroup and see how we can approach these last three races in the best possible way.”

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Piastri: Brake issues led to a “tough day” at Interlagos

Piastri had brake locking issues in the wet at Interlagos

Oscar Piastri says braking issues and an overall lack of speed in the latter stages contributed to a “tough day” at Interlagos that saw the McLaren driver finish in eighth place.

While team mate Lando Norris took pole for the Sao Paulo GP Piastri could manage only P8 in the wet Q3 session, having struggled with a brake locking problem that persisted into the race.

He also found it hard to overtake, and eventually moved up to seventh when he nudge Liam Lawson into a spin.

That earned him a 10-second penalty, and having finished seventh on the road he then dropped behind Yuki Tsunoda in the final results.

“I think it was just a tough day from start to end,” he said. “I think qualifying, partly a mistake, partly a bit of a problem. And when you put the two together, it creates a big problem, and then we’re still struggling with that a bit in the race. But I think we were just slow.

“The first half of the race, we seemed very quick. Lando was stuck behind George. I was stuck behind Liam.

“I got Liam out of the way, not really in the way I intended. But yeah, I think the second half of the race, after the red flag, we were just slow.  think both of us just struggled with pace, and that was a pretty tough 30 laps.”

Regarding the clash with Lawson he said: “I went for a move. I was stuck behind him for a long time.

“Didn’t really get far enough alongside, and I spoke to him about it, and he said he didn’t see me either, which, in those conditions is fair enough. But I think it was clearly my mistake. And the penalty was deserved. So just a tough day.”

He added: “Honestly, the toughest part of the race was behind the safety car trying to stay on the track. I think it kind of exposed a bit of the issue that we have with the wet tyre, when everyone is praying for a red flag, but refusing to go onto the wet tyre because it’s so bad.

“So a pretty dangerous situation to have cars literally struggling to stay on the track behind the safety car. But it’s not really anything new, so hopefully we can try and at least change it now.”

Earlier in the race he was powerless to keep the charging Max Verstappen behind.

“I just didn’t have enough pace at the beginning, but he seemed to be pretty much the only one that could actually overtake,” said the Australian.

“We were struggling with the brakes all day. We had a decent problem in qualifying that was the same in the race. So that certainly wasn’t helping things. One benefit for Max was going out so early, had a bunch of new inters, which I think probably helped a little bit.

“But I think he was just fast today. And the cards didn’t fall his way in qualifying with the red flag, they certainly did in the race. I think he was just quick and just had a good race.”

McLaren opted for high downforce for Sunday’s conditions, although Piastri didn’t blame that choice for the difficulty in overtaking.

“Top speed didn’t seem great, but I don’t think that was our biggest problem,” he said. “We were obviously gaining in the corners with the downforce we had, but clearly not enough. I think we need to understand a bit better, because the first half the race, we looked really quick, and then the second half, both cars seem to struggle a lot more.”

Elaborating on the wing level he added: “I’m not sure how limiting it was. You could argue with qualifying it helped with the extra downforce in the race. It should have helped in the majority of the lap, the first half of the race, yes, maybe you could argue it was, was holding us back a bit, because we were stuck behind cars.

“But the second half, we weren’t stuck behind cars. We were just slow. So I think it doesn’t really matter which rear wing we had on in the second half, we weren’t really going to finish any better.”

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How rookie driver success gave Binotto confidence to hand Bortoleto 2025 Sauber seat

Binotto says the big question was should Bortoleto start in ’25 or ’26?

Sauber and Audi Formula 1 boss Mattia Binotto admits that the recent success of young drivers helped to give him the confidence to put Gabriel Bortoleto straight into a race seat in 2025.

The Brazilian was announced as the team’s future driver on Wednesday after it was formally confirmed that Valtteri Bottas will leave at the end of this year.

Reigning FIA F3 champion Bortoleto, who is currently leading the F2 series, was released by McLaren to take up the Sauber drive.

Intriguingly Binotto has revealed that Bortoleto was free to leave the Woking team, and that Audi didn’t have to pay for him.

He will join fellow youngsters Jack Doohan, Liam Lawson, Oliver Bearman and Kimi Antonelli on the 2025 grid, with Franco Colapinto also potentially in the frame for a seat in the Red Bull camp.

Audi has long indicated that it had to chose between youth and experience, and having decided on the former ultimately it was a question of whether Bortoleto would race in 2025, or use the season as a year of preparation for a debut in ’26.

The instant success of the likes of Bearman and Colapinto encouraged Binotto to go for the earlier option.

“If I look around, I think he’s one of the most talented and high potential drivers we’ve got as rookies,” he said when asked by this writer about the influence of the likes of Colapinto and Bearman on the decision.

“And for Audi, that was a winner – ‘go for it.’ It was between experienced or young drivers, I think certainly young drivers was a certitude, an answer. So it was only a matter by when. So we would have gone for Gabriel. That would have been, anyhow, our choice.

“And I think that the second and last question we were asking ourselves was should it be straight in ’25, or should we give him some time first to develop, and then maybe postpone to ’26?

“But finally yes, we see also young drivers doing well in F1, that give me mainly more confidence on the fact that Gabriel can do very well since the very start.

“And if any, that has been the convincing factor, not of the overall choice for a young driver, which I think young driver for Audi journey and project is important and essential.

“But more how fast, how soon, could that maybe happening? And I’m convinced he will do well since the very, very start.”

Regarding any compensation for McLaren he said: “Gabriel was somehow free to leave because he got the opportunity.”

Binotto stressed that it was key to have a young driver who can learn and grow as the team does.

“Certainly having secured Gabriel for a multi-year contract for us is important in our journey, looking at obviously our future,” he said.

“Audi has committed for a long journey, for being in F1 for many years, and somehow for us really to I would say start the journey together with a young driver, was something as well important.

“There is much that we will need to learn, improve as much as him. He will be a part with us on the journey. I’m very happy because, no doubt, he is a fantastic, high potential driver. I think that his career has proved it.”

He stressed that Bortoleto’s ability to improve over a season in the junior categories was an important factor.

“What he achieved, what he is achieving, the way I think he is driving, has impressed me,” he said.

“But more than that, more than that, as I told him, is his capacity to develop, improve and progress through the season itself.

“And I think he’s doing it as well in his season of F2. The start has been difficult, but then he’s really been capable not to lose, I would say, the direction, what he is trying to achieve, and he’s shown progress, and that’s what counts the most for me.

“I met him now a few weeks ago here in Hinwil the very first time in my office. I’ve been as well impressed by his personality, the attitude and the mindset.

“So I don’t think he’s only a fantastic, high potential driver, but he’s a great person, too, and that’s something very important for our project as well.”

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Bortoleto: Improving form in F2 series drove Audi interest

Bortoleto has been in Audi’s sights for several months

Gabriel Bortoleto says that a turnaround in his fortunes in F2 drove Audi’s interest in signing him for a Formula 1 seat.

Having won the 2023 F3 title at his first attempt Bortoleto had a difficult start to his rookie F2 season.

However after second places in the Imola feature and Monaco sprint races in May the McLaren junior began to gather momentum, winning the feature race in Austria in July

That coincided with Mattia Binotto joining the Sauber/Audi team with finding a second driver for 2025 and beyond as one of his initial tasks.

After potential candidate Carlos Sainz committed to Williams to late August Bortoleto’s surge into the lead of the F2 series marked him as an obvious candidate, especially as it was clear that there would be no opening at McLaren for him in the coming years.

“Obviously this season didn’t start so well,” said the Brazilian. “So at the beginning we didn’t have any, let’s say, talks or anything about next year. We even thought at some time if we would repeat F2, what we were going to do, between my managers.

“But at some point, obviously this season had a turnover. I started winning races and podiums every round. So yeah, obviously this Audi thing started to happen. I don’t remember exactly when it did, but then we started talking. Mattia showed a lot of interest on my side.

“It’s a very nice project. And then we decided to go for it. Mattia was not sure about an experienced driver for next year, or a young driver, but the plan was always to be together if it was for ’25 or ’26, but I think it was very recent decision from Mattia about ’25.”

Bortoleto insisted he was “not stressed” despite having to wait a while for confirmation that he had landed the job.

“Obviously as a young driver you always want to be as soon as possible in F1,” he said. “But I fully trusted with my team that we would get a good opportunity.

“And when we spoke to Mattia for the first time, we had this conversation. And we were planning what to do for the future, not only for next year.

“I was quite easy with it. I was not too stressed, and it’s not going to change anything in my life right now, because I already knew that things should happen in the future.

“So I’m just going to keep driving the same and doing my job in F2 and targeting for this championship that we are leading right now.

“But obviously it’s very nice to be announced and stop all these speculations here and there, and to just focus in F2.”

As the first Brazilian with a fulltime F1 drive for eight years Bortoleto says he has a lot of support from fans.

“It’s very nice to be in the grid after so many years,” he said. “I think the last driver to race a full season was Felipe Massa. Actually the first ever team he raced for was Sauber, so it’s nice to begin my history in the same team he did.

“And, yeah, it’s special. I think Brazil always supported me, especially this season in F2, they created, obviously, as a lot of expectations, because of my good results in F3 and after we started doing quite well in F2, the expectations also to jump to F1 were high. And I don’t think this somehow dropped my performance or anything.

“I think it’s just got better and better, because it’s a type of thing that gives you energy, you create energy from them.  I think it’s going to be very positive to have the Brazilian fans helping us, supporting us, and just wanting me to perform well in F1 and have a good time there.”

He is confident that the Swiss team can move on from what has been a difficult 2024 season.

“Regarding next year’s car, obviously, I’m still meeting everyone here in Sauber,” he said. “But I think I’m very positive about it. I’ve seen there’s new people coming in, a lot of expectations with obviously my announcement as well here.

“I think we are basically not in a good position right now, but I’m sure we’re going to make steps ahead, and we’re going to be there.”

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How Alonso fought “painful” back to reward Aston mechanics

Alonso had a tricky afternoon in Brazil

Fernando Alonso had to overcome a painful back and brake issues to bring his Aston Martin AMR24 home in 14th place after a difficult Sao Paulo GP.

At one stage he reported on team radio that he wanted to finish the race mainly as a thank you to the mechanics for their earlier hard work in repairing his car after a crash in Q3.

Alonso missed Thursday’s activities after returning to Spain for checks on a health issued he suffered in Mexico, and arrived at Interlagos on Friday.

He finished 19th in Saturday’s sprint, ahead of team mate Lance Stroll, after the race turned into a test session for Aston after a setup change didn’t pay off.

Sunday’s wet qualifying session was initially promising, and Alonso was second in Q2 before having a heavy crash early in Q3.

The team managed to repair his car in time to make the grid, but he had to go back to an earlier and less favoured floor spec.

From ninth on the grid he held that position for much of the first half of the race, before slipping down the order in the latter stages his back became an issue.

“It was a lot of bounce and a lot of porpoising in the second half of the race,” he said when asked by this writer about the back problem.

“I don’t know why. So yeah, it was a tough race. We were out of the points. I think in any other circumstances, probably I will stop. But the mechanics did an incredible job before the race to put the car ready on the grid, so I had to finish for them.

“It was a difficult race. After this morning, we had to go back to a less performing package on the car. So the race was a little bit slower pace from our side. And then we had the brake issue.

“I think Lance had the brake problem in the formation lap, and I had the brake issue after all the restarts, where all the brake balance goes completely rearwards.

“It’s like a braking with a hand brake. So it was all-in-all a nightmare out there. We need to get better for the next three.”

Elaborating on his physical issues he said: “It was painful, for sure, and yeah, the lead into this race, it was a lot of preparation from my side, a lot of checks, a lot of work, a lot of physio and doctors in order to come here in Brazil.

“So it was a lot of effort from everybody, same effort as the mechanics put today. It was not comfortable in the car. But there are people worse than me. Also in Valencia, we have these terrible images. And people struggling. So I had to struggle in a couple of laps for everybody.”

He agreed that his trip back to Europe between races hadn’t been easy.

“It was an incredible commitment to come here, to have the race, and the car really was not able to race with the others,” he said. “So that was the most painful thing.

“All the checks have been done. I checked everything the last two or three days, we did a lot of work. My condition, I think, after this race we have a setback for sure, on my body. So the next four or five days, we have to reset everything.”

He also suggested that the FIA should look at some aspects of the weekend.

“It was a very non-typical race, with the qualifying and the race so close, even the time in between the two sessions,” he said. “Maybe it was too short, guys like Alex [Albon] didn’t have time to repair the car.

“So maybe we need to set a minimum time between the end of quali and the race just to allow everybody to race. Because the fans, they come here to see 20 drivers racing. At the end the weather allowed us to complete the race. So that was good.”

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Russell on Mercedes VSC strategy call: “Sometimes you have to trust your gut…”

Russell led the first half of the race at Interlagos – and finished fourth

George Russell believes that he would have finished at least second in the Sao Paulo GP had Mercedes not disagreed with him and called him in for a tyre change under the VSC.

Russell referenced the successful tyre strategy that he called from the cockpit at the Belgian GP, noting that “sometimes you have to trust your gut.”

Russell was in the lead ahead of Lando Norris when the VSC intervention prompted multiple teams to call their drivers in for a fresh set of intermediates. He challenged with the decision, suggesting that a red flag was likely, but was obliged to go along with it.

However Esteban Ocon, Max Verstappen and Pierre Gasly all stayed out and moved into the top three places.

When a red flag was called for shortly afterwards all three benefited from a free tyre change during the stoppage, and then went on to finish in the top three places.

Russell made his frustration clear on the radio, saying “I said it! We should have stayed out.”

He eventually finished fourth on the tail of Gasly as the best-placed driver to stop and change tyres under racing conditions.

“If we stayed out, we would have been we’d have been first at the restart, ahead of Ocon and Max and Gasly,” he said. “And leading from the front is much easier. Where we could have ended up, I don’t know. But I was pretty, pretty angry at the time, because I wanted to stay out.”

Russell was adamant that his preference to stay out was the correct one.

“From the team’s perspective it’s not obvious at all,” he said of the decision to pit. “From the cockpit it was very clear it was going to be a red flag or safety car, because the conditions were undriveable.

“The rain was not easing, and I could see the big black cloud above me. And then I had Shov [Andrew Shovlin] jump on, like overruling my engineer to say box.

“We’re working as a team. We’re trying to make the best decisions in the time. Clearly, the guys who didn’t pit, they finished one-two-three, and we finished the highest of the drivers who did so. I would take a small slice of satisfaction from that.”

Elaborating on the debate over the radio he said: “It was box, I said stay out, it was box again, it was stay out. They said box again, and as I said, I wanted to stay out. And then the last one, you’ve got to go for it.

“Sometimes you have to trust your gut. Last time I trusted my gut, it went down pretty well.

“Today who knows if we could have won the race, but if we didn’t pit, we would have been leading at the restart, and the first 30 laps, controlling the pace with Lando behind, we had very good straight line speed as well. P2 would have been a minimum.

“If we stayed out, we would have been we’d have been first at the restart, ahead of Ocon and Max and Gasly And leading from the front is much easier.

“Where we could have ended up, I don’t know. But I was pretty angry at the time, because I wanted to stay out.”

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Leclerc frustrated at “wrong direction” that left Ferrari “nowhere” in Interlagos rain

After two great wins Ferrari struggled in the Brazilian rain

Charles Leclerc admits that his Ferrari Formula 1 team was “nowhere” at a wet Interlagos on Sunday, and he took part of the responsibility for a wrong turn on setup that didn’t pay off.

Leclerc was sixth in wet qualifying on Sunday morning, and then struggled for pace throughout the race.

He was the first driver to pit for new tyres, coming in on lap 24, and that further compromised him. Helped by issues hampering others he eventually finished fifth.

Team mate Carlos Sainz had an even tricker time, crashing in qualifying, starting from the pitlane with a new PU and gearbox, and then spinning off again in the race.

“I think I’m partly to blame for it,” Leclerc said when asked by this writer about the SF-24’s poor wet weather form.

“Because obviously we decide the setups together with the team, and today I wanted to go into that direction.

“However it was the wrong one, for sure. And today, the pace was just not there. I think in qualifying, we actually weren’t too bad. With the new tyres, low fuel, you can extract more out of the car. But in the race, we were nowhere.

“And more than being nowhere, it was extremely difficult to drive, extremely difficult to not do any mistakes. And at the end, looking at all this, the only thing we could be a little bit satisfied with is being in front of the two McLarens.

“To only lose four points in the constructors’ is big damage limitation on a weekend where they seem to be so strong. Now we need to put everything together for the last few races of the season.”

Leclerc admitted that the early pit stop call, which he prompted, was the wrong choice.

“That was a mistake,” he said. “It’s easy to be said as well that on a race like this it’s very difficult to not do any mistakes in terms of strategy, because there are so many calls that you need to do.

“And if you look, I think only the top three did no mistakes on a race like this. We were on the other side of things. We stopped, I wanted free air, so I asked the team to find free air. They boxed me that lap.

“But unfortunately, the pit entry and the pit exit time in the wet was a lot longer than what we thought.

“And I ended up in the middle of traffic with Ollie [Bearman] and Lewis [Hamilton], and from that moment, I knew that we were losing so much. Then there was a safety car. We lost like three or four positions there. So then it was a lot more difficult.”

Regarding the new track surface he said: “I think it made it very difficult. I think honestly, the tarmac this weekend wasn’t a step forward.”

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Gasly: Race to second at Interlagos “felt like an eternity”

Gasly joined team mate Ocon in the Interlagos top three

Pierre Gasly said the later stages of the Sao Paulo GP “felt like an eternity” as he successfully fended off the challenge of George Russell on his way to third place.

Gasly started only 13th after getting caught by the same red flag as Max Verstappen in Q2. Up to ninth on the first lap, he then lost a spot to the charging Verstappen. He gained a few more positions before the VSC led to several drivers pitting for fresh intermediates.

Like team mate Esteban Ocon and Verstappen he didn’t pit, and moved up to third before a red flag gave him a free tyre change.

He remained third through the second half of the race despite pressure from Russell, crossing the line just three seconds behind Ocon.

“He was quite big in the mirrors,” said Gasly of the Mercedes driver. “I must say it wasn’t easy. It was difficult conditions. I wasn’t at ease with the car balance. So I was kind of like fighting it a bit. But I always had him at bay.

“I don’t think he ever had the idea of trying anything. So I knew as long as I keep him within one second, it’ll be good enough. He damaged a bit his tyres. So it was a long end of the race, but we managed to hold him off.

“There was Lando [Norris] at the restart and Charles [Leclerc] as well. So we’ve had our fair battles during the entire race, which felt like an eternity, to be fair, with the red flag and in these conditions.

“But we managed to make the right calls, faultless drive and strategy and excellent day for the team.”

Gasly made it clear that it hasn’t been an easy season for the Enstone camp.

“It’s been very difficult for everyone at times,” he said. “You’ve got to come every single weekend with the same mindset, the same approach, trying to put your best, even though you know that your chances are not really high.

“But it’s important to never give up because, you know, especially on days like today, anything’s possible.

“And I’m very grateful for all the work the team has been doing, because it all makes it worth it on a day like today when we get both cars on the podium.

“I don’t think anyone in the world today would have thought at some point this year, two Alpines are going to be on the podium.”

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Horner praises Verstappen’s “mental resilience” after qualifying frustration

An incredible afternoon for Verstappen and RBR unfolded in Interlagos

Red Bull Racing boss Christian Horner has praised Max Verstappen’s “mental resilience” after he bounced back from a difficult qualifying session to win the Sao Paulo GP.

Verstappen was caught out by a red flag in Q2 and left stranded in 12th, which became 17th after his PU change penalty was added.

In TV interviews after the session he expressed his frustration at the timing of the red flag, which allowed drivers ahead of the incident to set lap times.

However he put that behind him and put in a storming drive through the field to win the race, and give himself a chance of clinching the title in Las Vegas.

“Today was an emotional roller coaster,” said Horner. “We knew we had a good car. Yesterday, the car was quick, and to finish third then lose it with a VSC, but to be able to follow that closely around here in the sprint race, we knew we that we’d got good pace.

“Quickest in I think Q1, and Q2 obviously, the way things played out, we were just very unlucky.

“And so then having elected to take the five-place penalty as well with the engine, you’re on the penultimate row of the grid, P17.

“So very quickly you have to brush yourself down and focus on the race ahead. Max’s mental strength and attitude to deal with that is outstanding.”

Horner suggested that he didn’t have to give Verstappen a pep talk after his frustrating qualifying session.

“You know when to put an arm around him, but he’s not that kind of driver,” he said when asked by this writer if the Dutchman had needed any support. “He works it out for himself. His mental resilience is huge, and that’s part of the strength that he has.

“But you can see how much it meant to him. I don’t think I’ve seen him that animated on a podium for, I can’t remember the last time, so it meant a huge amount to him. And I really believe that we’ve witnessed one of the great drives in F1 today.”

Horner compared Verstappen’s early progress with that of Ayrton Senna at the 1993 European GP.

“I thought his start today was electric,” he said. “And that first lap was up there with Donington ’93, around the outside of Turn 3. I think he passed six cars on the on the first lap.

“He was the only car that was really making progress, being able to pick cars off, and so late on the brakes into Turn 1, whether it was with Lewis, with Oscar Piastri. And then obviously at the restart with Esteban.

“And then he just controlled the race and pulled away with ease, at some times a second a lap. So on a pretty dreary day, he shone pretty brightly today.”

He added: “I think the best response is to do your talking on the track, and that’s what he’s done today. And an attacking drive, to go from 17th to first, I think, is one of the best drives of his career. And on a day where conditions are difficult, obviously you see the differences in the drivers.

“There have been a lot of comments that have been made, and opinions that have been voiced against Max and the way he drives. And I think the best way to answer those critics is to drive, produce the drive that he did today.

“And we’ve watched a lead that has been diminishing since before the summer break, and having not won since June, it was great to hear the Rolling Stones playing again in the garage in memory of Dietrich Mateschitz that we play every time we win a Grand Prix.”

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Norris left frustrated by “silly rule” on red flag tyre changes

A difficult Sunday for Lando Norris in Brazil

Lando Norris insists that he has no regrets about pitting for tyres under the VSC in the Sao Paulo GP before a red flag gave rivals a free tyre change.

However the McLaren driver called the regulation that allows such changes “a silly rule that no one agrees with.”

While running in second place Norris followed leader George Russell into the pits just as the VSC was ending, but Esteban Ocon, Max Verstappen and Pierre Gasly all stayed out.

A red flag then allowed all three to get fresh intermediates under the stoppage without penalty.

Having passed Russell before the red flag Norris was thus in fourth place for the restart, only to drop behind the Mercedes driver when he ran wide.

At a later restart he had a second off, and eventually finished in sixth place after a hectic afternoon.

“You can change your tyres under the red flag, it’s what the others did,” he said. “So just unlucky, unfortunate. Sometimes it just goes your way. So nothing we did wrong.

“I don’t care what people say. Staying out was not the right thing to do. It shouldn’t been red-flagged, but obviously there was the crash in the end, which caused the red. That’s life sometimes. You take a gamble, and it’s paid off for them. It’s not talent, it’s just luck.”

He added: “It was the right time to box. So no regrets. Just unlucky.”

Asked by this writer about the stop Norris said that all F1 drivers dislike the rule that allows a free tyre change.

“It’s a silly rule that no one agrees with, but you’ll always agree with it when it benefits you. So every driver said that they don’t agree with it, and they wanted it changed.

“So it’s just unfortunate, but it’s the rule. You win some you lose some. It benefited them today. So, well done to them.”

Norris’s day was made worse when he ran wide at a safety car restart and lost out to Charles Leclerc and Oscar Piastri, although he soon moved back ahead of the Australian.

“I still made a couple of mistakes in the end,” he said. “I had cars on my left, on my right. I locked the rears, I went off. I lost two positions. So a little bit unfortunate there.

“My own fault. So not a perfect race for me. But I think no matter what, fourth was the best anyone could do today, of the people who boxed and didn’t get lucky.”

It was a rollercoaster day for Norris, one that included a qualifying session that saw him on the bubble for elimination in Q1 before taking pole.

“It’s been an up and down weekend, for sure,” he said. “Not a lot more I could do. I’m sure George probably feels like he won the race today, he deserved it more than anyone else. I probably finished third realistically, so it’s tough.

“Max probably would have come through anyway, and probably beaten us. Just unlucky for us, nothing more than that. I made a couple of mistakes, which I own up to, and it cost me a couple of positions in the end.”

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