Russell wins Austrian GP after late Norris-Verstappen collision
Verstappen had appeared to be cruising to victory with a seven-second lead over Norris before his final pit stop, even though the McLaren had been closing in on the Red Bull and the world champion complaining his tyres were losing grip in the final laps of that stint.
But a slow stop for Verstappen as both pitted together for their final stops, and the choice by Red Bull to fit a set of medium tyres which had three laps of use on them while Norris had a new set, set up a grandstand finish.
Verstappen and Norris rejoined the track with the McLaren just 1.7secs behind and the Briton was on his tail within two laps.
They fought hard for several laps. Norris complained that Verstappen made an illegal move under braking when he attacked at Turn Three on lap 55, with 15 to go.
Norris then passed the Red Bull into Turn Three on lap 59, only to run off the track on the exit, which earned him a five-second penalty for abusing track limits because he had already been given a black-and-white flag for the same offence.
After another close run through Turns Three and Four, Norris then came on the radio to say Verstappen was repeatedly moving under braking and responding to his attacks in ways that are not allowed.
The critical moment came on lap 62. Norris attacked on the outside and Verstappen moved back towards him as they approached the corner.
The two cars touched, and both suffered punctures – Verstappen on the left rear and Norris on the right rear and that was the end of their chances of victory.
Verstappen managed to get around to the pits without too much damage as his tyre stayed intact, but Norris’ tyre flailed on the rim and tore his rear body work apart and McLaren were forced to retire the car.
Verstappen scoffed at the 10-second penalty he was given for the incident but former F1 driver Jack Aitken, commentating for BBC Radio 5 Live, said: “It’s very clear to me that Verstappen overstepped the mark. He was pushing the limits and it’s very clear from the rules by the book he was reacting too late.
“It’s a very difficult track to stay clean on but you still have to leave room for your competitors, leave them space if they come up the inside, and he wasn’t doing that today.
“He was lucky not to get a penalty before and the penalty for the incident with Norris was deserved.”
Finishing fifth means Verstappen still extends his championship lead, which is now 81 points over Norris heading into next weekend’s British Grand Prix.