Max Verstappen wins Qatar GP to ensure three-way F1 title showdown

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Formula One F1 - Qatar Grand Prix - Lusail International Circuit, Lusail, Qatar - November 30, 2025 Red Bull's Max Verstappen celebrates with a trophy on the podium after winning the Qatar Grand Prix REUTERS/Mohammed Salem

Red Bull's Max Verstappen celebrates with a trophy on the podium after winning the Qatar Grand Prix.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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DOHA - Red Bull’s Max Verstappen won the Qatar Grand Prix, while McLaren blew it, to take the Formula One title battle with Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri to a season-ending showdown in Abu Dhabi next weekend.

Championship leader Norris finished fourth, behind the Williams of Spaniard Carlos Sainz, with the Briton’s advantage slashed to 12 points as McLaren paid a heavy price for a strategy blunder when the safety car was deployed early on.

Verstappen’s third win in a row in the night race moved the four-times world champion up to second in the standings, now four points clear of Norris’s Australian teammate Piastri who started on pole but finished second.

The top three drivers each have seven wins for the season.

“We stay in the fight until the end,” said Verstappen, who has been champion since a controversial 2021 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix duel with Lewis Hamilton.

“It’s still possible now,” added the Dutchman, who has staged an astonishing comeback from 104 points off the lead at the end of August when his hopes of remaining in the reckoning right down to the wire looked over.

McLaren stay out as all but Ocon pit

McLaren decided not to pit their drivers when the safety car offered the chance of a cheap stop on lap seven, leaving them at odds with all the others bar one who took advantage in a fast race where two stops were mandatory. 

Everyone else except Haas’s Esteban Ocon pitted after Sauber’s Nico Hulkenberg tangled with Alpine’s Pierre Gasly on lap seven and triggered the safety car.

That left Red Bull's four-times champion Verstappen right behind them but with a stop in the bag while McLaren still had two to make.

“I think in hindsight it’s pretty obvious what we could have done,” said Piastri of the strategy blunder.

“We lost the victory with Oscar and we lost the podium with Lando,” was the verdict of team boss Andrea Stella.

‘Hurts more than Vegas disqualification’

Oscar Piastri said it hurt more to finish second for McLaren than to be disqualified from the Las Vegas Grand Prix a week earlier.

"We didn't get it right with the strategy. The pace was very strong. I didn't put a foot wrong. Just a shame," said Piastri.

Over the team radio, he had confessed to being simply speechless. 

With one race to come in Abu Dhabi next weekend, Piastri is 16 points adrift of championship-leading teammate Lando Norris, who started on the front row and finished fourth on Nov 30.

Verstappen is now second and 12 points off the lead.

"I think on a personal level, I feel like I've lost a win today," Piastri told reporters.

"You know, in Vegas, I lost a P4. Obviously for the team it was a pretty painful weekend. But yeah, I think for me personally this probably hurts more."

"It's certainly not a catastrophe," added the Australian. "I think we made a wrong decision today. I think that's clear. But it's not like the world ended. Obviously it hurts at the moment but with time things will get better."

Piastri has won seven races this year, and was 34 points clear of Norris before the results tailed off dramatically with his last win at Zandvoort at the end of August.

He was at least back on the podium on Nov 30 for the first time in seven races and was the man to beat all weekend.

"I feel like you always become stronger through some of these moments," said the Australian, who can still become his country's first champion since Alan Jones in 1980.

"But it all depends on how you deal with it. So I'm sure we'll get through it. But yeah, obviously at the moment it does hurt."

Red Bull's Max Verstappen poses on the podium alongside second placed McLaren's Oscar Piastri and third placed Williams' Carlos Sainz Jr.

PHOTO: REUTERS

Verstappen, third on the grid, passed Norris at the start to slot into second behind Piastri while Mercedes’ George Russell plunged from fourth to seventh.

The pitstop dropped the Red Bull to fourth but that became third when Ocon was given a five-second penalty for a false start and pitted to serve it.

Norris had already questioned McLaren’s strategy over the radio.

“We should have just followed him (Verstappen) in, no? If we knew the car ahead was staying out,” he asked, with race engineer Will Joseph assuring him that “they have lost all flexibility for the remainder of the race.”

It looked to others, however, that McLaren had paid a price for a determination not to favour either driver in the title battle by having to stack them in the pits.

Piastri pitted on lap 24, coming back out in fifth and moving up to fourth when Norris came in a lap later and slotted back in behind.

The rest of the field had to pit on lap 32, due to Pirelli putting restrictions on how long cars could run on a set of tyres for safety reasons – a move forcing a minimum two-stop strategy.

That gave the stewards several unsafe releases to consider, with Haas’s Oliver Bearman handed a 10-second stop-and-go penalty.

Norris passes Antonelli on penultimate lap

Verstappen returned to the track in third, only 7.7 seconds off the lead but set to go to the end while the McLarens had to pit again.

Piastri made a lightning 1.8-second stop on lap 43, rejoining in third with a target of making up 17.2 seconds on Verstappen in the closing 14 laps. He was 7.9 behind at the chequered flag.

Norris pitted on lap 45 and came out in fifth with Sainz and Mercedes’ Kimi Antonelli ahead, passing the Italian on the penultimate lap.

Russell finished sixth with Fernando Alonso seventh for Aston Martin and Charles Leclerc eighth for Ferrari.

Liam Lawson took two points for Racing Bulls and Verstappen’s teammate Yuki Tsunoda completed the top 10. REUTERS

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