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Three drivers were disqualified following last weekend’s Chinese Grand Prix – the most to have been thrown out of a race in more than two decades.

Both Ferrari drivers, Lewis Hamilton and Charles Leclerc, and Alpine’s Pierre Gasly lost their finishes after the stewards ruled their cars did not comply with the technical regulations at the end of the race.

You have to go back to the 2004 Canadian Grand Prix for the last time as many drivers were disqualified from the same race. On that occasion a total of four drivers – two from two different teams – lost their finishes.

Williams drivers Juan Pablo Montoya and Ralf Schumacher, plus Toyota duo Olivier Panis and Cristiano da Matta, were all thrown out of the race for the same reason: The dimension of their cars’ front brake cooling ducts breached the rules.

Lewis Hamilton, Ferrari, Shanghai International Circuit, 2025
Hamilton and Leclerc’s efforts were in vain

When both drivers in the same team are disqualified it is often for the same reason, as a technical infringement on one car is likely to be present on its twin. This happened with both Haas cars after qualifying in Monaco last year. However this was not the case for Ferrari last weekend: Leclerc’s car was found to be underweight while Hamilton’s failed an inspection of its plank.

It’s almost three decades since a team last saw both its drivers disqualified for different reasons. It happened to Tyrrell at the 1996 European Grand Prix, held at the Nuerburgring. Mika Salo’s car was found to be underweight but his team mate Ukyo Katayama was disqualified for receiving outside assistance in the form of a push start during the race.

The double disqualification was a huge blow for Ferrari after they started the weekend strongly. Lewis Hamilton scored his and the team’s first ever victory in a sprint race, and it’s a good thing for him that he did, otherwise he’d be on one point instead of nine at this stage.

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Oscar Piastri won the main event from pole position, taking the third grand prix win of his career. That puts him level with 10 drivers including George Russell, who lost a win to a disqualification at Spa last year.

Giancarlo Fisichella, Jordan, Interlagos, 2003
Fisichella scored Jordan’s final win in 2003

The other drivers on three wins include Mike Hawthorn, Peter Collins, Phil Hill, Didier Pironi and Thierry Boutsen, plus three more names who are particularly noteworthy following the sad passing of former F1 team principal Eddie Jordan last week. Johnny Herbert won the British F3 championship for him in 1987, Heinz-Harald Frentzen enjoyed his strongest championship run with the team in 1999, winning twice, and Giancarlo Fisichella scored his first and the team’s last win at Interlagos in 2003.

Piastri has already had two pole positions for sprint races but claimed his first grand prix pole position last year. That makes him the 106th different driver to take pole (F1 officially counts 107, including Kevin Magnussen who took pole position for the 2022 sprint race at Interlagos but not the grand prix).

Hadjar ended Tsunoda's nine-race run of out-qualifying his team mate
Qualifying data: Hadjar ends Tsunoda’s nine-race run of out-qualifying his team mate

The McLaren driver took pole position with the fastest ever lap of Shanghai, at 1’30.641. This was only the second time the course record has fallen since it was established in 2004: Sebastian Vettel previously broke it in 2018.

Michael Schumacher’s race lap record of 1’32.238, set at the inaugural race, still stands. Lewis Hamilton originally set the fastest lap last weekend, moving one closer to Schumacher’s record tally, but lost it to Lando Norris when he was disqualified.

Piastri led McLaren’s 50th one-two finish. The only teams with more are Ferrari (87) and Mercedes (60). He led both of the one-twos featuring himself and Norris. No prizes for guessing which McLaren driver pairing scored the most: It was of course Ayrton Senna and Alain Prost with 14 over two years. Mika Hakkinen and David Coulthard managed 13 between them, albeit over a six-year spell as team mates.

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The trio of disqualifications handed Haas their second-best result in a grand prix. Esteban Ocon moved up to fifth, their highest individual finish since Kevin Magnussen in the 2022 Bahrain Grand Prix, while Oliver Bearman took eighth. Haas’s sole better finish than this was fourth for Romain Grosjean and fifth for Magnussen in the 2018 Austrian Grand Prix.

Romain Grosjean, Kevin Magnussen, Haas, Red Bull Ring, 2018
Haas only has one result better than last weekend’s

Haas and Racing Bulls scored their first points of the season, and the latter their first points under their latest identity. That leaves Alpine as the only team on zero after the first two rounds.

The post-race changes to the order also promoted Carlos Sainz Jnr to 10th place, meaning he picked up his first point as a Williams driver. There is a parallel here: Logan Sargeant scored his first (and only) point for Williams after two of the same drivers, Leclerc and Hamilton, were disqualified after the 2023 United States Grand Prix.

Even before the disqualifications, Alexander Albon had already matched his 2024 points total in just two races. He is now on 16 points.

Two drivers saw noteworthy streaks of out-qualifying their team mates come to an end. Yuki Tsunoda’s nine-race run was halted by Isack Hadjar, while Piastri beat Norris for the first time in eight rounds.

Fernando Alonso out-qualified Lance Stroll for the 14th grand prix in a row, which is the longest ongoing streak of any driver. However Stroll beat him in qualifying for the sprint race.

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Alonso is also the only driver yet to finish a grand prix. But there’s one driver whose season appears to be going worse than his.

Liam Lawson posted his first finish as a Red Bull driver, though a poor 12th was flattered by a total of four penalties ahead of him (in addition to the trio who were disqualified, Jack Doohan picked up a 10-second time penalty). But he can take heart from the fact he is not yet Red Bull’s worst debutant in terms of grand prix results: neither Sebastian Vettel nor Daniel Ricciardo were classified in their first two starts for the team, the latter following a disqualification at Melbourne.

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Lando Norris kept Max Verstappen at sword’s length over the final laps of the Australian Grand Prix to claim victory in the season-opener.

He was the strongest threat to Verstappen’s fourth consecutive championship victory last year, and is arguably the most significant competitor the Red Bull driver has faced since pipping Lewis Hamilton to win his first championship in controversial circumstances in 2021.

Not since the conclusion to that championship, when Hamilton won consecutively in Qatar and Saudi Arabia, has any driver other than Verstappen managed to win two grands prix in a row. But Norris changed that by following up his victory in last year’s season finale.

It was a significant win for various reasons, not least the fact it dislodged Verstappen from the top of the standings for the first time in over 1,000 days, as covered here earlier. Norris leads the points for the first time in his career, not that he is setting too much store by that. “It’s great, doesn’t mean anything, I’ve not won it so I don’t really care at the minute,” he responded when it was pointed out to him after the race.

Start, Albert Park, Melbourne, 2012
McLaren last won the season-opener in 2012

It was also only the second time in Norris’s cars he has completed a hat trick of winning from pole position while setting the fastest lap (the latter feat, for the first time since 2018, no longer awards a bonus point). He previously did so at the Dutch Grand Prix last year.

Norris scored his 10th pole position, matching Jochen Rindt; fifth grand prix victory, equalling Giuseppe Farina, Clay Regazzoni, John Watson, Michele Alboreto and Keke Rosberg; and 13th fastest lap, tying with Jacky Ickx, Alan Jones and Riccardo Patrese.

He gave McLaren their first win in the season-opening round of the championship, and their first victory in the Australian Grand Prix, since 2012. Then as last weekend, McLaren also locked out the front row of the grid, though Norris should be grateful it wasn’t their second-placed starter who won, as on that occasion, when Jenson Button got the jump on Lewis Hamilton. Starts were not a strength of Norris’s last year, but he successfully converted pole position into the lead on this occasion.

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For the first time in six years, the new Formula 1 season began at the Albert Park circuit in Melbourne. It should have done in 2020, but the Covid-19 pandemic forced the postponement of the first seven rounds of the world championship. The season instead opened in Austria, where Norris made his first appearance on the podium in the first round of the season.

Andrea Kimi Antonelli, Mercedes, Albert Park, 2025
Antonelli bagged a fine fourth on his debut

This year George Russell reached the podium in the opening round for the first time in his career. He was followed by his new team mate, Andrea Kimi Antonelli, who impressed on his debut by climbing 12 places to finish fourth.

Antonelli, 18, became the second-youngest driver in F1 history to score points. Verstappen was 17 when he finished seventh in the 2015 Malaysian Grand Prix, two weeks after making his debut in Melbourne. He is the first Italian driver to score points in F1 since Antonio Giovinazzi at the Saudi Arabian Grand Prix in 2021.

Alexander Albon brought great cheer to Williams by finishing fifth. That was their best result since Russell’s second place in the 2021 Belgian Grand Prix, which officially lasted just one lap in dire conditions. They haven’t had a better result in a full-length race since Lance Stroll finished third for them at Baku in 2017. Felipe Massa was the last driver to finish that high for them in a season-opener, at Melbourne in 2016.

Stroll also had a positive weekend in Australia. After 11 races without scoring, he ended the longest point-less run of his grand prix career by finishing sixth.

He was one of several drivers who rose up the order by pitting at the right time when it rained. Ferrari kept both their drivers out, which meant Hamilton led a lap on his debut for the team. Unfortunately by that point the track was sodden and he was on slicks. He fell to ninth, then Oscar Piastri passed him around the outside at turn nine on the final lap.

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Hamilton’s eventual finishing position of 10th was the worst for a driver on their debut for the team since Luca Badoer’s notoriously unsuccessful two-race spell as a substitute for Massa in 2009:

It could have been worse, and it was for Isack Hadjar, who Hamilton’s father consoled after he crashed out on the formation lap prior to the start. The rookie became the first driver to fail to start on his debut since 2015. At least he qualified, which was more than could be said for Roberto Merhi, whose Marussia was not ready to run at all at this race 10 years ago.

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