Formula 1 Racing

Our writers rate the 2024 F1 Miami Grand Prix

Our writers rate the 2024 F1 Miami Grand Prix


The McLaren driver made the most of a safety car period to change tyres for the only time in the race and emerge in a lead he maintained all the way to the finish line.

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Our writers give their verdict on the sixth round of the 2024 season.

Relief for Lando: 7/10 – Alex Kalinauckas

A mark up from Sainz’s win in Australia simply because Verstappen was still in this contest with just over half the race remaining. The world champion was in command until the safety car boosted Norris, who has had a wild weekend here in Miami – going from sprint pole contender to eliminated in the shorter event and then having a quiet GP qualifying with the snazzily upgraded McLaren.

Norris’s tyre life offset seemed to make the critical difference in pulling away from Verstappen post-restart on Sunday, but his pace once released from Perez’s rear much earlier hinted at what was to come, even if there was no predicting what would happen back then regarding Kevin Magnussen’s latest shunt. You can never count Verstappen out, but in the end he was well beaten by a driver previously, outrageously, called overrated by some.

As good as Miami will get: 8/10 – Filip Cleeren

A one-stop race in Miami doesn’t sound like a humdinger on paper, but Sunday’s grand prix was about as good as this track and these cars can offer us. Of course, a first-time winner in the likeable Lando Norris is a feel-good story F1 could use this year. But beyond that there was fighting throughout the field, between Oscar Piastri and Carlos Sainz, and seemingly between Lewis Hamilton and everybody else.

Not only was the race interesting to follow, but the minor gaps between the top teams bode well for the rest of the year, although the track layout and hot conditions may have played some part. McLaren’s upgrades seem to have allowed it to close the gap to Ferrari, which could inject some dynamism in 2024’s pecking order.

Norris a feel-good story, but no real fight for the win: 6/10 – Ben Vinel

Lando Norris is the obvious feel-good story of the day, with this maiden victory which had proven so elusive in the past through many missed opportunities. However, there never was any real battle for the win, with Verstappen comfortable at the front in the first half of the race and Norris slowly but surely edging away after he was gifted a golden opportunity by the safety car, which he did not fail to seize. Without this Magnussen-vs-Sargeant crash skewing the picture…

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