05/25/25 11:44:00
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05/25 11:43 CDT Lando Norris takes a 'dream' Monaco win to reduce Oscar
Piastri's F1 standings lead
Lando Norris takes a 'dream' Monaco win to reduce Oscar Piastri's F1 standings
lead
MONACO (AP) --- Lando Norris realized a childhood dream as he won the Monaco
Grand Prix on Sunday, and boosted his chances of achieving an even bigger goal,
the Formula 1 title.
Norris took his first Grand Prix win since the season-opening Australian Grand
Prix --- though he did win a sprint race in Miami this month --- and reduced
his McLaren teammate Oscar Piastri's lead from 13 points to three.
Starting on pole position, Norris locked up a wheel into the first corner but
still managed to hold off last year's winner, Charles Leclerc of Ferrari.
"It feels amazing. It's a long, grueling race, but good fun," Norris said.
"This is what I dream of. This is what I did dream of when I was a kid."
Leclerc was second after closing in on Norris late in the race --- though he
wasn't able to attempt a pass --- while Piastri was third and defending
champion Max Verstappen fourth, with seven-time champion Lewis Hamilton a
distant fifth.
Verstappen's gambit
Verstappen was the leader on track until the second-to-last lap but only
because he had yet to make his mandatory second pit stop under a rule change
introduced in an attempt to spice up the Monaco Grand Prix, where overtaking is
almost impossible.
Verstappen was almost certain to end the race fourth, no matter when he
stopped, so he eased off, slowing down Norris and allowing Leclerc and Piastri
to catch up. Verstappen seemed to be trying to pressure Norris into a costly
mistake, or maybe hoping for a red-flag stoppage which could have allowed him a
free tire change while keeping the lead.
Norris said the end of the race was a "little bit nervous with Charles close
behind and Max ahead, but we won in Monaco, so it doesn't matter how you win, I
guess."
Despite predictions it could allow some teams and drivers to spring a surprise,
the rule had little overall impact on the results, except for a few cases of
teams seemingly slowing down one car to benefit a teammate.
"We lost the race yesterday," was Leclerc's verdict, referring to the
importance of qualifying on pole in Monaco, his home race.
Making history at McLaren
It was McLaren's record-extending 16th win in Monaco and its first since a
victory for a young Lewis Hamilton in 2008. Hamilton went on to win his first
championship that year.
McLaren leaves Monaco with six wins from the first eight races of 2025 as its
two drivers battle for the title. Even with just a third of the season gone, a
second successive constructors' title for McLaren looks all but assured, as the
team's 319 points are more than double the total of any other team.
Piastri was on the podium for the second year running in Monaco, and being
disappointed with third was a sign of the progress he's made in those 12
months. Second place a year ago was only the third career podium finish for the
Australian, who had yet to win a Grand Prix. Third place Sunday was Piastri's
seventh podium finish in a row.
"If this is a bad weekend," Piastri said, "then it's not going too badly at
all."
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AP auto racing: https://apnews.com/hub/auto-racing
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