Max Verstappen Easily Wins the F1 Japanese Grand Prix to Edge Closer to 2023 Series Title
With Verstappen's victory, Red Bull secured the constructors' title, their sixth overall and second in a row
SUZUKA, Japan (AP) — Max Verstappen survived a dramatic first lap then coasted to victory at the Japanese Grand Prix on Sunday to move a step closer to securing his third consecutive Formula One championship.
The Red Bull driver, who missed out on the podium a week ago in Singapore, started from pole and held on for his 13th win of the season.
With Verstappen's victory, Red Bull secured the constructors' title, their sixth overall and second in a row. They did it with six races remaining.
"What an unbelievable season we are having," Verstappen said. "You can all be very proud here at the track and back at the factory. You guys built a rocket ship of a car, well done."
McLaren driver Lando Norris was second, 19.4 seconds back of Verstappen, while his teammate Australian rookie Oscar Piastri was third for his first F1 podium.
Verstappen, who also secured a point for the fastest lap, increased his lead over Red Bull teammate Sergio Perez to 177 points. He could wrap up his third consecutive title at the Oct. 6-8 Qatar Grand Prix.
The race got off to a thrilling start with Verstappen, Piastri and Norris going wheel-to-wheel but the Red Bull driver held his lead through the first two turns.
Verstappen commented on the excitement at the start.
"Luckily nothing happened," Verstappen said. "It all got quite close but that's racing, that's how it goes at the start. And then of course you had a good battle into Turn 1 and Turn 2, I was lucky there (was) a bit more grip in Turn 2."
It was a disastrous day for Perez, who was given a penalty for hitting Haas driver Kevin Magnussen and retired from the race after serving the penalty.
The Mexican driver won in Saudi Arabia in March and Azerbaijan in April but has struggled since.
Verstappen saw his record 10-race winning streak come to end at Marina Bay in Singapore and came to Japan determined to get back on top of the podium. Prior to Sunday's race, he led every session at the fast Suzuka circuit, where he wrapped up last year's championship in a rain-shortened race.
Conditions on Sunday were ideal and Verstappen took full advantage.
The safety car came out on the first lap when Alfa Romeo driver Valtteri Bottas made contact with another car resulting in debris on the track.
Verstappen was able to quickly retake the lead after his first pit stop and was never seriously challenged.
Ferrari driver Charles Leclerc was fourth followed by Mercedes' Lewis Hamilton.
A battle between the McLaren drivers was ultimately won by Norris. The Briton got ahead of Piastri at the start, dropping behind after the rookie pitted under a virtual safety car then producing enough pace to swap positions.
"The progress we've made is pretty outstanding," said Norris who was also second in Singapore. "We're coming for Red Bull."
It was a memorable result for a Piastri with the 22-year-old driver just signing a contract with McLaren until the end of 2026.
"It's definitely been a pretty special week," Piastri said. "Obviously with the announcement of the extension and then qualifying on the front row and the first podium today it's definitely been a fun week."
Last week's winner Carlos Sainz Jr. finished sixth for Ferrari, ahead of George Russell in the other Mercedes.
Aston Martin's Fernando Alonso was eighth followed by Alpine's Esteban Ocon with his teammate Pierre Gasly rounding out the top ten who finished in the points.
With their cars starting ninth and 11th, AlphaTauri were points contenders early on but faded as the race developed. Liam Lawson finished 11th while local favorite Yuki Tsunoda was 12th.
- Max Verstappen Earns 50th Career F1 Victory at US Grand Prix, Ties Record with 15th Win of Season
- Max Verstappen Wins Third Straight Formula One Title
- Max Verstappen Wins Again, and Red Bull Remembers: Behind the Scenes at the United States Grand Prix
- Lenovo Created an F1 Trophy That Glows When Kissed
- Max Verstappen Was Right: Here’s Three Ways to Fix the Las Vegas Grand Prix
- Sainz Wins Singapore Grand Prix as Verstappen and Red Bull’s Streaks End
- Jim Harbaugh Opens up on Future at Michigan After CFP Title GameSports
- Dolphins’ Raheem Mostert Set a Goal of Being a First-Time All-Pro at 31 — How Is He Making It Happen?Sports
- Girl’s High School Basketball Game Canceled After Yonkers Players Use Anti-Semitic Slurs Against Jewish TeamSports
- US Olympic Swimmer Who Boycotted 1980 Summer Olympics in Russia Dies at Surf VenueNews
- Browns Giving Joe Flacco $75,000 Incentive to Not Play Final GameSports
- Jim Harbaugh Advocates for Paying College Athletes Team Revenue Again: ‘There’s No Voice For The Players’Sports
- LeBron James Says His Son Bronny Could Play for the Lakers Right Now, ‘Easy’Sports
- Kentucky Men’s Basketball Survives Near Upset to Florida on Game-Winning 3-PointerSports
- Vivek Ramaswamy Admits He Doesn’t Know Who Caitlin Clark Is at Iowa RallySports
- LeBron James Frustrated By Question About Ricky Rubio’s Retirement After Loss to GrizzliesSports
- Blackhawks’ Rookie Sensation Connor Bedard Put on Injured Reserve with Broken JawSports
- PWHL Check-In: Attendance Record, New York’s Venue Challenge, Physical PlaySports
