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Untouchable Verstappen wins in Baku; Piastri crashes out of race in nightmare weekend

Hannah Kennelly
Updated ,first published
Pinned post from 11.21pm on Sep 21, 2025
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‘Not my finest moment’: Piastri crashes in Baku but Norris fails to capitalise

By Hannah Kennelly

As the red lights flashed, nineteen F1 cars hurtled towards the first corner of Azerbaijan Grand Prix, except the sport’s championship leader Oscar Piastri was momentarily stationary.

The Australian jumped the start which triggered the anti-stall on his McLaren, dropping the 24 year-old from ninth place to dead last in seconds. Piastri attempted to recover but locked up seconds later and crashed into the barriers near turn five, ending his race on the opening lap.

Oscar Piastri watches the race after crashing in Baku. Getty Images

The uncharacteristic error from the typically unflappable Australian cements a nightmarish week of unforced errors, including a similar shunt in qualifying.

However, Piastri’s teammate and rival Lando Norris was unable to capitalise on the Australian’s mistake, finishing in seventh place and reducing the championship gap to 25 points. While it’s been a grim day for the Aussie driver, the damage to his lead could have been much worse.

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“Certainly, not my finest moment,” Piastri said in a post-race interview.

“Just anticipated the start too much… silly, simple error really with that... the crash, just didn’t anticipate the dirty air in the way I should’ve.”

“I think the grip level was low… but I should know that, so certainly not blaming it on anything other than myself,” he continued. “I didn’t make the judgment calls that I needed to at the right times.”

The Australian conceded it was a “messy weekend” but said he was not worried about the championship gap.

“It is what it is, I’m not too concerned about that, I’m solely focused on myself and what I can do to improve,” he said.

Meanwhile, Red Bull championship Max Verstappen clinically converted pole position to win the Azerbaijan Grand Prix, with George Russell in second and a dream podium for third-placed Carlos Sainz and the underdog Williams team.

Max Verstappen wins the Azerbaijan Grand Prix.Getty Images

Baku’s street circuit – characterised by high-speed corners and 90-degree turns – is incredibly twisty and narrow and therefore the perfect recipe for chaos and calamity. This was evident during Saturday’s rain-soaked qualifying session which was marred by multiple crashes and a record six red flags.

However, Sunday’s race was relatively incident-free, excluding a brief collision between Alex Albon and Franco Colapinto. Piastri’s crash briefly triggered a yellow flag, but reigning four-time world champion Verstappen was able to maintain a healthy lead, while the middle of grid squabbled for places.

Kiwi Liam Lawson defended third place for the majority of the race but was eventually overtaken by rookie Kimi Antonelli, who drove superbly after a challenging few races.

It was a fairytale finish for Williams who are one of the most decorated teams in F1 history, but have unfortunately found themselves slipping behind over the past two decades. The team’s last podium was in 2021 at the drenched Belgian Grand Prix when Russell finished second.

Now the drought is over with a podium and a Driver of the Day win for Carlos Sainz – his first podium since moving from Ferrrai to Williams. The Spaniard was ecstatic over the radio, declaring that this was “the best podium in my career”.

The next race will be in Singapore on Sunday October 5.

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Thanks for joining us

By Hannah Kennelly

Goodnight and thanks again for joining us!

Tune in on Sunday, October 5 for the Singapore race.

Pinned post from 11.21pm on Sep 21, 2025

‘Not my finest moment’: Piastri crashes in Baku but Norris fails to capitalise

By Hannah Kennelly

As the red lights flashed, nineteen F1 cars hurtled towards the first corner of Azerbaijan Grand Prix, except the sport’s championship leader Oscar Piastri was momentarily stationary.

The Australian jumped the start which triggered the anti-stall on his McLaren, dropping the 24 year-old from ninth place to dead last in seconds. Piastri attempted to recover but locked up seconds later and crashed into the barriers near turn five, ending his race on the opening lap.

Oscar Piastri watches the race after crashing in Baku. Getty Images

The uncharacteristic error from the typically unflappable Australian cements a nightmarish week of unforced errors, including a similar shunt in qualifying.

However, Piastri’s teammate and rival Lando Norris was unable to capitalise on the Australian’s mistake, finishing in seventh place and reducing the championship gap to 25 points. While it’s been a grim day for the Aussie driver, the damage to his lead could have been much worse.

View post on X

“Certainly, not my finest moment,” Piastri said in a post-race interview.

“Just anticipated the start too much… silly, simple error really with that... the crash, just didn’t anticipate the dirty air in the way I should’ve.”

“I think the grip level was low… but I should know that, so certainly not blaming it on anything other than myself,” he continued. “I didn’t make the judgment calls that I needed to at the right times.”

The Australian conceded it was a “messy weekend” but said he was not worried about the championship gap.

“It is what it is, I’m not too concerned about that, I’m solely focused on myself and what I can do to improve,” he said.

Meanwhile, Red Bull championship Max Verstappen clinically converted pole position to win the Azerbaijan Grand Prix, with George Russell in second and a dream podium for third-placed Carlos Sainz and the underdog Williams team.

Max Verstappen wins the Azerbaijan Grand Prix.Getty Images

Baku’s street circuit – characterised by high-speed corners and 90-degree turns – is incredibly twisty and narrow and therefore the perfect recipe for chaos and calamity. This was evident during Saturday’s rain-soaked qualifying session which was marred by multiple crashes and a record six red flags.

However, Sunday’s race was relatively incident-free, excluding a brief collision between Alex Albon and Franco Colapinto. Piastri’s crash briefly triggered a yellow flag, but reigning four-time world champion Verstappen was able to maintain a healthy lead, while the middle of grid squabbled for places.

Kiwi Liam Lawson defended third place for the majority of the race but was eventually overtaken by rookie Kimi Antonelli, who drove superbly after a challenging few races.

It was a fairytale finish for Williams who are one of the most decorated teams in F1 history, but have unfortunately found themselves slipping behind over the past two decades. The team’s last podium was in 2021 at the drenched Belgian Grand Prix when Russell finished second.

Now the drought is over with a podium and a Driver of the Day win for Carlos Sainz – his first podium since moving from Ferrrai to Williams. The Spaniard was ecstatic over the radio, declaring that this was “the best podium in my career”.

The next race will be in Singapore on Sunday October 5.

Sainz clinches dream podium

By Hannah Kennelly

It’s been a grim night for Aussie fans, but it’s been a spectacular day for Williams and Carlos Sainz.

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“Vamos, best podium in my career guys,” Sainz said over the radio.

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Untouchable Verstappen wins in Baku; Piastri crashes out of race in nightmare weekend

By Hannah Kennelly

Max Verstappen has clinically converted pole position to win the Azerbaijan Grand Prix, with George Russell in second and a dream podium for third-placed Carlos Sainz.

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A nightmare result for Oscar Piastri who stalled then crashed out of the race in Baku – coming away with zero points and opening up the championship battle.

His rival Lando Norris has clinched seventh place.

Lawson and Tsunoda battle for fifth; Norris stuck in seventh

By Hannah Kennelly

After being demoted from his Red Bull seat, Liam Lawson now has his replacement, Yuki Tsunoda in his rear-vision mirrors.

Tsunoda is chasing Lawson for fifth place but has so far been unable to overtake the Kiwi. Norris is still struck in seventh with Hamilton close behind in eighth.

Williams close to podium dreams; Verstappen ready for consecutive victory

By Hannah Kennelly

Lap 43: Max Verstappen is still 12 to 13 seconds ahead and we’ve got George Russell in second, with Williams driver Carlos Sainz in third.

Lando Norris is currently in seventh place. Unless Norris is able to overtake Yuki and/or Lawson, he won’t inflict huge damage on the championship gap, but it will still be notable.

Meanwhile it’s been a good day for Lewis Hamilton who has carved his way up to eighth place.

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Where is Oscar Piastri? Dejected Aussie watches from the sidelines

By Hannah Kennelly

Crashing out of a grand prix is a pretty unpleasant and frustrating experience. Some drivers chose to head directly to their garages and the pit lane. While others brave the media and get their dreaded post-race interviews over quickly.

Oscar Piastri watches the race. Getty Images

Others choose to sit and watch the race, like Oscar Piastri who cuts a pretty glum figure. Fair enough, although it’s hard to beat this below pic from Charles Leclerc. The Ferrari driver had to retire during the Netherlands race and watched the rest of the grand prix from a sand dune.

Charles Leclerc watches the race after retiring his Ferrari.Getty Images

Slow pitstop plagues Norris again

By Hannah Kennelly

Oh dear! That’s two weekends in a row where McLaren have had two slow pitstop.

Lando Norris pitted except it was slow, around 4.6 seconds which is an eternity for an F1 driver. It looks like there was an issue with getting the right front tyre on.

Huge opportunity for Norris to reduce championship gap

By Hannah Kennelly

Max Verstappen is almost in a different universe. The lead has now pushed out to 13 seconds. As Sky Sports commentators note, “Nothing is bothering Verstappen right now.”

Max Verstappen leads the Baku race. Getty Images

We’ve got George Russell in second and Lando Norris in fourth. However, the British driver has not pitted yet.

This is a massive opportunity for Norris to reduce the 31-point gap between himself and Piastri.

Piastri crashed and therefore comes away with zero points.

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Formidable Verstappen sustains healthy lead; Norris yet to pit

By Hannah Kennelly

Lap 30: Verstappen has pushed his lead to nearly 12 seconds. Unless his Red Bull spontaneously combusts or shuts down.… he is tonight’s likely winner.

Carlos Sainz has pitted from second and is now on hard tyres.

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