On the back of scoring Red Bull’s 100th pole position on Saturday, Verstappen was never threatened in the first F1 race in Shanghai since 2019 and effortlessly overcame two safety car restarts in the middle period of the race.
After leading the field away without any real threat from behind, Verstappen unearthed a 1.6-second gap at the end of the first lap over Fernando Alonso, who had opened his race with a sumptuous move around the outside of Sergio Perez into the first corner.
The usual Verstappen break-build that contemporary F1 fans have come to expect ended up being eradicated by a safety car on lap 20, as Valtteri Bottas’ Sauber came to a halt at Turn 11 with an engine problem – which prompted an eventual virtual safety car prior to the emergence of the Mercedes-AMG GT.
On the restart, a punt on Yuki Tsunoda from Kevin Magnussen put the Japanese driver out, causing another safety car period to stunt the progress that Verstappen was able to make.
Tasked with leading the field away on both restarts, Verstappen opened the throttle on the exit of Turn 14 to hold his position and, when the second safety car period came to an end on lap 32, he resumed his progress at the front.
He was now leading from Lando Norris, who took his sole stop of the race under the virtual safety car, and the decision from Red Bull to pit both Verstappen and Perez under the full safety car a few laps later ensured that the Briton cycled out in second.
Initially keeping Verstappen in his sights, Norris could not maintain the same level of pace as the lead Red Bull and instead focused on preserving the runner-up spot over Perez – who also dropped behind Charles Leclerc after his pitstop.
As such, Verstappen maintained his level of pace and crossed the line with 13.7s in hand over Norris. The McLaren driver put together an expertly managed second stint despite his team’s reservations about its pace in China, while Perez could not made any real inroads; at the flag, the gap between the other podium finishers stood at 5.3 seconds.
Leclerc and Carlos Sainz finished fourth and fifth after finding a way to make a one-stop – designated Plan D over the radio – work; although Leclerc was able to extend his first stint and managed to secure a stop under the VSC on lap 21, Sainz had pitted four laps before and had a tougher job to drag his efforts on the hard tyre to the end.
Sainz had also been able to resist a brief period of pressure from…
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