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Liam Lawson may have finished his second grand prix start for Red Bull, unlike his first, but his performance continues to give the team cause for concern.

Having qualified last and started from the pit lane in order to make changes to his car’s set-up, Lawson only made it as far as 16th by the chequered flag, the last driver on the lead lap. That became 12th after Jack Doohan was penalised and three others were disqualified.

Lawson was one of three drivers who started the race on the hard rubber. His lap times kept pace with the other two, Lance Stroll and Oliver Bearman, for the first 15 laps. At that point the trio started to be passed by drivers who had started ahead of them on the medium rubber and pitted. At this point Lawson dropped well off their pace, losing one-and-a-half seconds to the other two on one lap alone, and Red Bull opted to switch him to the medium rubber.

Bearman and Stroll ran far longer on their hard rubber, reaching laps 26 and 36 respectively. This helped Bearman score the final point ‘on-the-road’, while Stroll was promoted to the top 10 by the post-race disqualifications. Lawson absolutely should have been in a position to do the same.

But his early switch to medium tyres consigned him to a two-stop strategy. Once back on the hards his pace quickly tailed off.

Lawson set a 1’35.985 when he left the pits on his new hard tyres, which was 1.2 seconds faster than team mate Verstappen did at the same time on the same rubber, albeit 17 laps older. Within six laps Verstappen was lapping quicker on his older rubber than Lawson. At the chequered flag Lawson was giving away over a second per lap.

As the race came to a close a crisis was developing at McLaren. Lando Norris’s brake pedal was lengthening each lap and his race engineer Will Joseph was urging him to back off to look after them.

Norris was desperate to chase down team mate Oscar Piastri for the lead of the race. As late as lap 53 of 56 he was still lapping quicker than the other McLaren, but he backed off over the final three tours.

At the same time third-placed George Russell picked up his pace, having given away up to a second per lap to Norris over the previous laps. Had he kept his pace just a little higher then, he could have got within DRS range of Norris on the final lap, and the McLaren driver would have found it very hard to defend his position at the turn 14 hairpin.

2025 Chinese Grand Prix lap chart

The positions of each driver on every lap. Click name to highlight, right-click to reset. Toggle drivers using controls below:

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2025 Chinese Grand Prix race chart

The gaps between each driver on every lap compared to the leader’s average lap time. Very large gaps omitted. Scroll to zoom, drag to pan and right-click to reset. Toggle drivers using controls below:

2025 Chinese Grand Prix lap times

All the lap times by the drivers (in seconds, very slow laps excluded). Scroll to zoom, drag to pan and toggle drivers using the control below:

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2025 Chinese Grand Prix fastest laps

Each driver’s fastest lap:

2025 Chinese Grand Prix tyre strategies

The tyre strategies for each driver:

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2025 Chinese Grand Prix pit stop times

How long each driver’s pit stops took:

Rank#DriverTeamComplete stop time (s)Gap to best (s)Stop no.Lap no.
116Charles LeclercFerrari22.151115
24Lando NorrisMcLaren22.2130.062115
36Isack HadjarRacing Bulls22.2340.083233
463George RussellMercedes22.3240.173114
530Liam LawsonRed Bull22.3550.204230
644Lewis HamiltonFerrari22.3640.213237
744Lewis HamiltonFerrari22.3880.237113
81Max VerstappenRed Bull22.4540.303113
922Yuki TsunodaRacing Bulls22.5190.368111
1030Liam LawsonRed Bull22.5360.385118
1122Yuki TsunodaRacing Bulls22.5830.432235
1212Andrea Kimi AntonelliMercedes22.6750.524112
1355Carlos Sainz JnrWilliams22.7210.57117
145Gabriel BortoletoSauber22.790.639226
157Jack DoohanAlpine22.7930.642111
1687Oliver BearmanHaas22.8080.657126
176Isack HadjarRacing Bulls22.8960.745112
1827Nico HulkenbergSauber22.9590.808120
1918Lance StrollAston Martin22.9950.844136
2031Esteban OconHaas23.1140.963111
2110Pierre GaslyAlpine23.1380.987110
2223Alexander AlbonWilliams23.3621.211120
235Gabriel BortoletoSauber23.3851.23411
2481Oscar PiastriMcLaren23.9381.787114
2522Yuki TsunodaRacing Bulls38.10215.951346

NB. Leclerc, Hamilton and Gasly were disqualified

2025 Chinese Grand Prix

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Lap 44 was the pivotal moment in the Australian Grand Prix. A sudden shower sparked a flurry of pit stops, and those who reacted immediately cashed in.

Lando Norris was leading when the cloudburst, which teams had long anticipated, began near the end of the lap. He and his pursuing team mate Oscar Piastri went off at turn 12, and while Norris gathered his car up quickly, Piastri skidded onto a patch of sodden, grip-less grass.

Norris didn’t hesitate, peeling off immediately into the pits. Piastri did the same after carefully extricating himself from the run-off area. But Max Verstappen, who had been third, pressed on.

What the remaining drivers did had a significant bearing on the outcome of their races. George Russell pitted from fourth and put himself on course for the podium. Charles Leclerc and Yuki Tsunoda stayed out, the former despite having spun, which cost both the top-six places they had held.

Alexander Albon, seventh, came in on the advice of his team mate Carlos Sainz Jnr, who sussed the conditions so well at Silverstone last year. His race engineer that day was Ricardo Adami, who now manages Lewis Hamilton’s races, but together they stayed out much too long on their slicks and Hamilton fell to the bottom of the top 10.

But while car 44 didn’t realise lap 44 was the time to pit, others behind him did, and moved ahead of the Ferrari as a result. Andrea Kimi Antonelli, Lance Stroll and Nico Hulkenberg, running 10th to 12th consecutively, all came in for intermediates and were rewarded with middle-order points finishes.

The drivers who didn’t come in on lap 44 stuck by their decision the next time around. Only on lap 46, when the rain intensified, did they head in. Could anyone have gained more by pitting on lap 45? The track was still substantially dry when the first drivers came in and some, like Albon, felt they were taking too great a risk.

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Verstappen insisted that Red Bull did not miss a chance to get him in and out of the pits before Norris caught up again. Part of the reason he felt able to risk the damp conditions for longer than Norris was that his Red Bull was on the medium rubber, rather than the hard.

Alexander Albon, Williams, Albert Park, 2025
Albon’s pit stop propelled him to fifth place

“I saw them go off in front of me, kept it clean, and when I saw Oscar rejoining, I thought, ‘let’s stay out,’ because it was only those three corners. The rest was still dry. When I continued, basically, the first two sectors were fine – it was just [about whether] I could survive the final sector.

“I think that lap I did was okay. If there wasn’t much more rain coming, I thought it could work. You also have to factor in that even if they caught me on an inter, they’d have to [pit] again for slicks, if it’s not going to rain anymore. So, it was fine.

“I thought, ‘Yeah, we’ll do another lap,’ but then, unfortunately, on that lap, the first sector was still okay-ish, but then in sector two, it started to rain a bit too much and we had to box.

“But in hindsight, it wouldn’t have mattered. If I’d [pitted] with Lando, it would have been P2. If I’d [pitted] the next lap, it would have been P2. And the lap that I did [pit], I was also P2. So, we tried something else, it might have worked. In a way, it didn’t work, but we didn’t lose any position, so it’s fine.”

Verstappen’s claim is backed up by his sector times from lap 45. He was only a few hundredths of a second quicker than Norris through the middle of the lap, but over three-and-a-half seconds slower in the final sector. It would have been closer than had he waited another lap, but it wasn’t a missed opportunity by Red Bull.

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2025 Australian Grand Prix lap chart

The positions of each driver on every lap. Click name to highlight, right-click to reset. Toggle drivers using controls below:

2025 Australian Grand Prix gaps chart

The gaps between each driver on every lap compared to the leader’s average lap time. Very large gaps omitted. Scroll to zoom, drag to pan and right-click to reset. Toggle drivers using controls below:

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2025 Australian Grand Prix lap times

All the lap times by the drivers (in seconds, very slow laps excluded). Scroll to zoom, drag to pan and toggle drivers using the control below:

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2025 Australian Grand Prix fastest laps

Each driver’s fastest lap:

2025 Australian Grand Prix tyre strategies

The tyre strategies for each driver:

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2025 Australian Grand Prix pit stop times

How long each driver’s pit stops took:

Rank#DriverTeamComplete stop time (s)Gap to best (s)Stop no.Lap no.
14Lando NorrisMcLaren18.031244
216Charles LeclercFerrari18.1540.123134
34Lando NorrisMcLaren18.4640.433134
444Lewis HamiltonFerrari18.5260.495133
523Alexander AlbonWilliams18.5730.542133
61Max VerstappenRed Bull18.70.669134
71Max VerstappenRed Bull18.7210.69246
831Esteban OconHaas18.7780.747239
918Lance StrollAston Martin18.8020.771133
1030Liam LawsonRed Bull18.880.84914
1118Lance StrollAston Martin18.9010.87244
1212Andrea Kimi AntonelliMercedes18.9120.881133
1323Alexander AlbonWilliams18.9520.921244
1422Yuki TsunodaRacing Bulls18.9970.966133
1563George RussellMercedes19.1251.094134
1622Yuki TsunodaRacing Bulls19.3121.281247
1787Oliver BearmanHaas19.371.339344
1863George RussellMercedes19.3781.347244
1910Pierre GaslyAlpine19.4821.451246
2010Pierre GaslyAlpine19.5891.558133
2131Esteban OconHaas19.6491.61814
2281Oscar PiastriMcLaren19.7191.688134
2381Oscar PiastriMcLaren19.851.819244
2431Esteban OconHaas19.8581.827346
2530Liam LawsonRed Bull20.0672.036233
2627Nico HulkenbergSauber20.2092.178244
2744Lewis HamiltonFerrari20.8022.771247
2827Nico HulkenbergSauber21.1233.092133
2912Andrea Kimi AntonelliMercedes21.9463.915244
3087Oliver BearmanHaas22.4414.41239
3187Oliver BearmanHaas22.4944.46314
325Gabriel BortoletoSauber24.0736.042133
3316Charles LeclercFerrari24.5286.497247
345Gabriel BortoletoSauber26.2148.183244

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2025 Australian Grand Prix

Browse all 2025 Australian Grand Prix articles