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'It just worked': Lawson's mega effort ends in points in Brazil

Author
Christopher Reive,
Publish Date
Mon, 10 Nov 2025, 9:45am

'It just worked': Lawson's mega effort ends in points in Brazil

Author
Christopher Reive,
Publish Date
Mon, 10 Nov 2025, 9:45am

Start how you intend to finish.

That was the story of Liam Lawson’s race in the Sao Paulo Grand Prix, finishing in seventh place after starting in the same spot on the grid. It was the Kiwi driver’s sixth finish in the points this season - his first in the past four events - and his third-best finish of the campaign.

It was a mega effort from the 23-year-old, who was one of just two drivers on the grid to complete the disrupted 71-lap race on a one-stop strategy, dragging his Racing Bulls VCARB 02 to the end on 52-lap-old medium tyres.

Lawson finished a place ahead of Racing Bulls teammate Isack Hadjar, making it a successful grand prix with a double-points finish.

“It’s been a very good weekend. It was a very hard race, honestly,” Lawson said.

“We had to make something work after the first couple of stops. It’s always tough when you’re the second car because obviously the first car gets priority.

“I lost a couple of spots in the first stop and I would have lost more in the second one so we went for the one-stop and it just worked.”

McLaren’s Lando Norris extended his lead in the Drivers’ Championship standings, backing up his win in the sprint race with a win from pole in the main event to claim his first grand prix win since Hungary in early August. He finished comfortably ahead of Mercedes’ Kimi Antonelli, who had his best finish yet.

But the story of the race was the performance of Red Bull ace Max Verstappen, who finished third after starting in the pit lane. It was only the eighth time that a driver has finished on the podium from a pit-lane start.

Verstappen won the event in Brazil last year from 17th on the grid, so no one was counting out a charge from the Dutch driver, but a podium finish might have exceeded expectations - particularly given Verstappen had to pit early with a puncture and there was no rain during the race.

It was one of several moments early in the race that had the potential to change its course, with two safety cars within the first 10 laps.

Kick Sauber’s Gabriel Bortoleto saw his horror weekend end in such fashion as he hit the wall on lap one. The lone Brazilian driver on the grid missed qualifying for the grand prix altogether after a bad crash late in the sprint race.

That saw the first safety car out on the track, and a couple of drivers head for early pit stops, before the race restarted about five laps later.

It was only moments after the race got properly under way again that another incident had an impact on the race, with Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc forced to retire after coming out worst off in a three-car incident.

Antonelli found himself squeezed by McLaren’s Oscar Piastri and Leclerc around a corner. He was clipped by Piastri and spun into Leclerc, which forced the Ferrari off the track and saw him lose a tyre.

Liam Lawson completed a one-stop race, completing the last 52 laps on the same set of medium tyres. Photo / Red Bull Content Pool

Liam Lawson completed a one-stop race, completing the last 52 laps on the same set of medium tyres. Photo / Red Bull Content Pool

The early carnage might have changed some strategies, but Lawson was held out on the track on soft tyres until the 20th lap, holding his position well before being called in to switch for mediums.

He came under pressure down the back end of the race to hold his position, but was perhaps fortunate that the main source of that pressure was Kick Sauber’s Nico Hulkenberg - the only other driver on track who completed a one-stop race.

A seventh-placed finish saw Lawson add six points to take his season total to 36, moving to 14th in the Driver’s Championship standings.

Importantly, it was a result reflective of the promise shown in qualifying, and as the spotlight heats up on what the Red Bull stable will look like in 2026, it was a drive that only adds to his claims.

“It’s an important part of the year, for sure. We’re all putting maximum effort into trying to score as high as we can. But, honestly, for me it doesn’t change much. Every time I get in the car, I try to drive as fast as I can. I left it all out there today and it’s paid off.”

Sao Paulo Grand Prix results

  1. Lando Norris - McLaren
  2. Kimi Antonelli - Mercedes
  3. Max Verstappen - Red Bull
  4. George Russell - Mercedes
  5. Oscar Piastri - McLaren
  6. Oliver Bearman - Haas
  7. Liam Lawson - Racing Bulls
  8. Isack Hadjar - Racing Bulls
  9. Nico Hulkenberg - Kick Sauber
  10. Pierre Gasly - Alpine
  11. Alex Albon - Williams
  12. Esteban Ocon - Haas
  13. Carlos Sainz - Williams
  14. Fernando Alonso - Aston Martin
  15. Franco Colapinto - Alpine
  16. Lance Stroll - Aston Martin
  17. Yuki Tsunoda - Red Bull

DNF: Gabriel Bortoleto - Kick Sauber, Lewis Hamilton - Ferrari, Charles Leclerc - Ferrari.

Christopher Reive joined the Herald sports team in 2017, bringing the same versatility to his coverage as he does to his sports viewing habits.

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