By Ian Ransom, Reuters
First-placed McLaren's British driver Lando Norris celebrates on the podium with his trophy after winning the Australian Formula One Grand Prix at Albert Park Circuit in Melbourne on 16 March 2025. Photo: WILLIAM WEST / AFP
McLaren's Lando Norris swept to victory in a wet and wild Australian Grand Prix on Sunday, holding off defending champion Max Verstappen in a white-knuckle finish to a Formula One season-opener littered with crashes and safety cars.
Mercedes' George Russell was third on the slippery Albert Park circuit where only 14 of the 20 cars finished in the treacherous conditions.
Norris, the pre-season favourite for the drivers' title, started the Formula One season as he finished the last at Abu Dhabi, with victory from pole.
The win ended Verstappen's long run at the top of the championship standings dating back to May 2022.
Norris's teammate Oscar Piastri started second on the grid but finished ninth, his dreams of becoming the first home driver to claim victory or a consolation podium ending with a skid into the grass.
Norris claimed his first win in Melbourne and the fifth of his career, saying it was difficult with Verstappen breathing down his neck.
"It was amazing. Tough race, especially with Max behind me," he added.
"I was pushing, especially in the last two laps. It was a little bit stressful, not going to lie.
"This time we got it right and ended on top so I'm happy."
Drivers take the start during the Australian Formula One Grand Prix at Albert Park Circuit in Melbourne on 16 March 2025. Photo: SAEED KHAN / AFP
Red Bull kept Verstappen out on worn tyres hoping for a break in the rain but he was ultimately forced to pit, potentially costing him a better shot at taking out Norris.
Verstappen said it was "worth the gamble".
"It was quite spicy on the slick tyres. It was alright in the end," he said.
"This is where I expected to be. In the first stint we were lacking a bit of pace to the McLaren."
Lewis Hamilton's debut for Ferrari proved a damp squib with the Briton finishing 10th, two places behind teammate Charles Leclerc.
But it was an encouraging day for Williams, with Alex Albon finishing fourth after Mercedes' 18-year-old rookie Andrea Kimi Antonelli was demoted to fifth due to a five-second penalty for an unsafe release from the pit.
Lance Stroll was sixth for Aston Martin, while Sauber also celebrated points for seventh-placed Nico Hulkenberg.
Safety cars in grim conditions
The race was held up for 15 minutes after debutant Isack Hadjar lost control in the formation lap and rear-ended his Racing Bulls car into a wall.
With his rear wing bent out of shape and his race over, the unharmed Frenchman was in tears as his car was hauled off track.
Australian rookie Jack Doohan was gone soon after the restart, crashing his Alpine at turn six on the first lap to trigger the safety car as his father Mick, the motorcycling great, looked on in disbelief from the team garage.
The drama continued as Carlos Sainz spun out of control at turn 14 during the safety car's deployment, bringing a premature end to his debut for Williams.
While Norris had a clean start, Piastri was skidding left and right at the first turn, allowing Verstappen to roar past him on the outside.
But Verstappen later locked a front brake and veered wide to allow Piastri to snatch back second.
Piastri, with more pace than his teammate, had Norris in his sights but was ordered to hold position by the McLaren garage until a rain shower passed.
Twice world champion Fernando Alonso became the fourth car knocked out when he veered off track at turn seven on lap 34 and crashed, bringing out the safety car again.
Norris and Piastri pitted to change to hard tyres but another shower wreaked havoc 10 laps later, as Piastri skidded into gravel then ended up in the grass.
Red Bull's Liam Lawson of New Zealand and Sauber's Gabriel Bortoleto then crashed out in quick succession, triggering a third safety car deployment.
Liam Lawson hits the wall at the Melbourne Grand Prix. Photo: Screenshot / X / F1
Though that gave Verstappen a last crack at reeling in Norris, the Briton held the relentless Dutchman at bay to land the first blow in the championship ahead of round two in China.
- Reuters