McLaren error gifts Verstappen a vital victory
Formula 1 enters a rare three-driver title showdown after Max Verstappen wins a dramatic Qatar Grand Prix, caused by a major McLaren strategic mistake. Lando Norris calls it “not our greatest day,” understating the loss of a race that once seemed certain. His championship lead drops to 12 points heading to Abu Dhabi, while teammate Oscar Piastri falls another four points behind. Piastri stands stunned as a likely win turns into second place, and his second in the standings becomes third. “It’s pretty painful,” he admits. Norris remains the favourite because he only needs third place in Abu Dhabi to secure the title, even if Verstappen wins. Qatar proves that anything can happen, recalling 2010 when Fernando Alonso led Mark Webber and Sebastian Vettel, only for Ferrari to make a strategic error and hand Vettel his first championship.
The race-changing mistake
McLaren face a second painful weekend after losing second and fourth in Las Vegas through a double disqualification. Before Qatar, team boss Zak Brown likened Verstappen to a horror villain who always returns. Ironically, McLaren create their own horror at Lusail, giving Verstappen a win and increasing pressure on both drivers for the finale. When a safety car appears on lap seven after a crash between Nico Hulkenberg and Pierre Gasly, every team but McLaren pits for fresh tyres. Pirelli mandates a 25-lap tyre limit because of Qatar’s harsh kerbs and corners. The safety car leaves 50 laps, creating two safe stints, while stopping under caution saves nine seconds. Verstappen spots the opportunity immediately and predicts victory after exiting the pits. He cannot believe McLaren stay out.
Why McLaren stayed out
Norris asks engineer Will Joseph why both cars remain on track. Joseph says stopping would remove strategic options later. The real problem: staying out destroys track position, and overtaking at Lusail is nearly impossible. Team principal Andrea Stella says they feared others might stay out, which would surrender leading positions. The race proves anyone who stays out eventually loses to cars that pit. McLaren do not strongly defend the call, but Stella promises a calm and thorough review. He acknowledges possible bias in decision-making but stresses the team must analyse the error carefully.
Speculation over hidden motives
Rivals suspect McLaren wanted to treat both drivers equally. To win, both cars must stop, but Piastri holds pit priority. Norris would face a “double-stack” stop, costing about five seconds. He already trails Verstappen and could also drop behind Kimi Antonelli or Carlos Sainz. Stella calls this a factor but insists it was not decisive. Some insiders believe McLaren favour Norris, citing Hungary and Italy as examples, but Stella and Brown deny it. Brown calls the idea “nonsense” and repeats that fairness guides the team.
Three-way finale promises dramatic finish
For Formula 1, Qatar produces the perfect scenario. Three drivers enter the finale with real chances, creating tension and excitement. Norris downplays the pressure, saying he approaches Abu Dhabi like any other race. Piastri keeps disappointment in perspective after a strong weekend erased earlier setbacks that cost him a 34-point lead. “It’s not a catastrophe,” he says. “We made a wrong decision, but the world did not end.” He believes challenges strengthen the team. Verstappen, chasing a fifth consecutive title, enjoys the opportunity and approaches Abu Dhabi with positive energy. McLaren now faces serious reflection. Stella recalls past finales where third place won the championship, including 2007 with Kimi Raikkonen and 2010 with Alonso. He also remembers working with Michael Schumacher through triumph and heartbreak. Stella says racing teaches harsh lessons but insists McLaren will respond with determination, ready to fight for the title and challenge Verstappen’s dominance.
