Daniel Harris (earlier) and Dominic Booth (later) 

Lando Norris wins F1 Singapore Grand Prix despite hitting wall twice – as it happened

Lando Norris closed the gap on Max Verstappen in the drivers’ standings with the Dutchman second and Oscar Piastri third
  
  

Lando Norris
Lando Norris currently leads in Singapore. Photograph: Edgar Su/Reuters

That’s all from this live blog. We’ll leave you with Giles Richards’ report from Singapore. Thanks for reading.

The drivers have accepted the acclaim on the podium, so now is a good time to remind you that the next GP is the United States Grand Prix in Austin, Texas, on the weekend of 18-20 October.

A bit of a break before it all hots up and the final six races of the season get going.

Constructors world championship standings

Norris and Piastri have combined superbly this season to put McLaren in charge of the constructors’ race for the world title.

  1. McLaren – 516 points

  2. Red Bull – 475 points

  3. Ferrari – 441 points

  4. Mercedes – 329 points

  5. Aston Martin – 86 points

  6. RB – 34 points

  7. Haas – 31 points

  8. Williams – 16 points

  9. Alpine – 13 points

  10. Sauber – 0 points

Drivers world championship standings

Here’s how it looks after the race, with that gap tightening at the top:

  1. Max Verstappen - 331 points

  2. Lando Norris - 279 points

  3. Charles Leclerc - 245 points

  4. Oscar Piastri - 237 points

  5. Carlos Sainz - 191 points

  6. Lewis Hamilton - 174 points

  7. Sergio Perez - 144 points

  8. George Russell - 140 points

  9. Fernando Alonso - 62 points

  10. Lance Stroll - 24 points

  11. Nico Hulkenberg - 24 points

  12. Yuki Tsunoda - 22 points

  13. Alex Albon - 12 points

  14. Daniel Ricciardo - 12 points

  15. Pierre Gasly - 8 points

  16. Oliver Bearman - 7 points

  17. Kevin Magnussen - 6 points

  18. Esteban Ocon - 5 points

  19. Franco Colapinto - 4 points

  20. Zhou Guanyu - 0 points

  21. Logan Sargeant - 0 points

  22. Valtteri Bottas - 0 points

“It’s always tough around here, very warm … and I’m looking forward to a nice rest,” says a visibly drained and disappointed Verstappen.

“A few too many close calls,” reflects Norris, the winner. “The car was mega, we were flying the whole race, still tough but very fun, I’m still sweating. Nice to have Oscar here too on the podium, he drove well today.”

George Russell was fourth, Charles Leclerc was fifth and Lewis Hamilton sixth, with the Spanish duo of Carlos Sainz and Fernando Alonso mopping up the rest of the points, along with Nico Hulkenberg and Sergio Perez who were ninth and tenth respectively.

Thanks Daniel.

“Well done on the strategy,” is the message from Oscar Piastri to Team McLaren over the comms. It’s another podium finish for the Australian, with Norris the winner and Verstappen coming home in second.

I’m afraid I need to depart now, as I’ve a funeral to attend. Here’s Dominic Booth to chill with you as we reflect on the race and look forward to the next.

Daniel Ricciardo, driving in what might be his final race, steals the fastest-lap point! Who knows how crucial that’ll be come the end of the season? But for now, let us celebrate the title race that we and the sport deserve, Verstappen’s lead at the top cut to 52 points.

Updated

Lando Norris of McLaren wins the Singapore Grand Prix!

Max Verstappen of Red Bull will be second and Osscar Piastri of McLaren third.

Updated

Lap 62/62 Norris did superbly to start well and hold the lead round turn one; from there, it’s been a procession.

Lap 61/62 Norris’ McLaren is supersonic, another fastest lap helping him to a lead of 21.9 as he begins his final lap.

Lap 60/62 Norris cruises, Magnussen quits – it’d be funny had he done so while still owning the fastest lap – and Ricciardo comes it to make a third change, looking, perhaps, to skank a fastest-lap prize.

Lap 59/62 Can anyone set a lap faster than Norris’? Leclerc has youngish tyres but he’ll need to pass Russell first; he’s got DRS in that regard but Russell shuts the door.

Lap 58/62 Ultimately, it feels like Verstappen will do enough to get home this season but it doesn’t seem like his car has another win left in it. So if Norris can qualify well, he’s a very real chance of nicking it. Oh, and Leclerc is hacking at Russell seeking to pilfer fourth place.

Lap 57/62 Norris is putting an exclamation mark next to his win, the fastest-lap icon again sat next to his name. He’ll be starting to believe.

Lap 56/62 Norris bangs out another fastest lap but will know he’s been lucky today, well though he’s driven this weekend, having clipped the wall twice. Next time, he might not be so lucky.

Updated

Lap 55/62 The top seven looks set now, the smallest gap the 3.25s between Leclerc, fifth, and Russell, fourth. What’s been most notable about this race is how routine Norris has made it.

Lap 54/62 Norris zooms on, but Magnussen, last, has just set a fastest lap. But just as I’m about to suggest the leader come in, having a stop in hand on Verstappen, he beats the time anyroad.

Lap 53/62 Verstappen is now far enough ahead of Piastri not to have to worry about an attack; he’d probably have taken second at lights out.

  1. Norris

  2. Verstappen

  3. Piastri

  4. Russell

  5. Leclerc

  6. Hamilton

  7. Sainz

  8. Alonso

Lap 52/62 Lando, man! Another fastest lap means he leads by 28.650 and the extra point you get for that is a decent wrinkle in the overall picture of things – especially in races like this, where the identity of the winner has been known from the first turn.

Lap 51/62 That didn’t take long: Leclerc passes Hamilton and sits fifth; Norris bangs out another fastest lap and he’s absolutely loving life. Magnussen, meanwhile, hits the wall and flattens a tyre; I don’t think it’ll eventuate a safety car because the car makes it to the pits.

Lap 50/62 Leclerc, fourth, is within 1.423s of Hamilton, fifth and I’d expect them to swap places before the end of this. He’s on absolute flames, the gap lowered to 0.415 in the time it takes me to type that.

Lap 49/62 Maybe he should hit the wall more often! Nozza sets a new fastest lap which tells us how nifty his car is, if we didn’t know already, but also that perhaps he’s had his mind focused by that wall situation having drifted. Cav will not be impressed.

Lap 48/62 Ahem. Norris contacts the wall for a second time and again does well to escape; he’ll need to think about that because it wasn’t a glancing blow and on another day might’ve cost him the race.

Lap 47/62 Leclerc, sixth, sets a fastest lap, and even without a pit, Norris might have a hack at it late doors once his fuel tank is almost empty.

  1. Norris

  2. Verstappen

  3. Piastri

  4. Russell

  5. Hamilton

  6. Leclerc

  7. Sainz

  8. Alonso

  9. Hulkenberg

  10. Perez

Lap 46/62 Piastri trails Verstappen by 18.709s, and might just have time to challenge for second; that’d be a fun intervention, because Norris could really use narrowing the gap at the top by more than seven points.

Lap 45/62 Piastri has to go around Russell … and the Merc has nothing for the McLaren! He takes third and looks good for a third podium on the spin.

Lap 44/62 McLaren might think about pitting Norris to get fresh tyres and go for Piastri’s fastest-lap point; currently, if he wins every race from pole along with every fastest-lap point, Verstappen coming second to him, they’ll start the final weekend level at the top.

Lap 43/62 Ferrari order Sainz to let Leclerc by and he does, as Piastri sets a fastest lap; Norris won’t like that because he’ll want the bonus point. But he leads by 23.970s, and I’m sure he’d’ve taken that.

Lap 42/62 Another fastest lap to Norris, who is punishing the field; Piastri closes on Russell, eating up a second in one go-around so, with the gap 2.621, there’ll be a tussle in three laps’ time.

Lap 41/62 A round of applause in the McLaren garage as Piastri passes Hamilton and sets about cutting Russell’s lead, now standing at 4.521s; Norris sets a fastest lap. His car is a brute.

Lap 40/62 If Norris can keep taking pole, he can keep winning races – his car is now the fastest by far. Piastri, by the way, is out and in fifth, 0.479 behind Hamilton; he’ll surely pass him soon.

Lap 39/62 Finally, Piastri comes in; Norris leads Veratappen by 23.292. Russell, meanwhile, is a further 14.719 off the lead.

Lap 38/62 Colapinto leaves the track and overtakes Ricciardo – he might be in trouble for that – while Norris builds. We’ve not seen him since the start, which tells us how comfy he is.

Lap 37/62 Norris sets yet another fastest lap, leading Piastri by 13.113s – the Aussie really needs a new set of tyres – with Verstappen another nine seconds behind him.

Lap 36/62 Norris extends the gap between him and Piastra as Russell, held up by Leclerc, feels the breath of Hamilton’s nostrils on his neck. We might be about to enjoy some Merc-on-Merc action.

Updated

Lap 35/62 Piastri plots his strategy, but in comms they reckon McLaren are hoping he gets a safety car. Usually we’ve had one by now, but actually it looks unlikely here given the gaps between the cars.

Lap 34/62 Piastri still hasn’t stopped, and he’ll be looking at the gaps to see when he can dart in and out to undercut.

Lap 33/62 Norris leads Piastri by 6.638, while Verstappen is lapping a little quicker than both.

  1. Norris

  2. Piastri

  3. Verstappen

  4. Leclerc

  5. Russell

  6. Hamilton

  7. Tsunoda

  8. Sainz

  9. Alonso

  10. Hulkenberg

  11. Perez

  12. Colapinto

  13. Gasly

  14. Ricciardo

  15. Zhou

  16. Bottas

  17. Ocon

  18. Magnussen

  19. Stroll

Lap 32/62 Into the second half of the race now, Verstappen, third, 17.391s behind Norris with Piastri, yet to stop, splitting them. Oh and look at that! We see the incident that had Norris feart he’s caught the way and he might’ve shaved a coat of paint off it but otherwise all good.

Lap 31/62 Norris comes in and his wing is left well alone, so he must be fine; he leads Piastri by 2.921 while Verstappen fumes thinking he’s lost race position to Leclerc who he doesn’t know has pitted. Either way, he passes.

Lap 30/62 Verstappen comes in and can’t get by Lecler when he comes out; there’s concern Norris damaged his front wing clipping the wall, though he’s got the time to have it changed for him should he need that.

Lap 29/62 It’s cost him plenty of aggravation but Leclerc finally passes Hulkenberg to make fourth. In front, Piastri is bousting and he has to because Russell with be lightening on his new hards.

Lap 28/62 Russell comes in and comes out eighth, a place ahead of Hamilton. Piastria, meanwhile, now third, is told to get on with it.

Lap 27/62 This has been strangely uneventful so far, the new DRS zone offering little to aid overtakes. Norris is so far clear it’s silly.

Lap 26/62 Hamilton passes Tsunoda then goes so wide on the corner, Tsunoda reverses him. Norris’ lead passes 20s as he sets another fastest lap.

Lap 25/62 Norris ploughs on, the lead now almost 20s. What a car the McLaren now is.

  1. Norris

  2. Verstappen

  3. Russell

  4. Piastri

  5. Hulkenberg

  6. Alonso

  7. Leclerc

  8. Colapinto

  9. Perez

  10. Tsunoda

  11. Hamilton

  12. Ocon

Updated

Lap 24/62 Leclerc, in seventh, is frustrated: he’s meant top protect what he has but wants to add more to it – though, in front, Alonso and Hulkenberg are driving well.

Lap 23/62 So what does Norris have to do to win the driver championship? Help from Piastri would be one way – if his teammate can beat Verstappen in qualifying, he might just have the pace to hold him off in the races.

Lap 22/62 Norris speeds lonely as a cloud, leading by 16.504 with Verstappen leading Russell by 11 or so; Hamilton, picking back through the field after pitting, passes Ocon and now sits 11th.

Lap 21/62 Hulkenberg, Alonso and Leclerc are tussling for fourth place, currently sat in that order; Hulkneberg does well to stick in position/

Lap 20/62 Piastri looks like he might come in and try to undercut Russell, but at the front, the lead is increasing.

Updated

Lap 19/62 Norris continues to build while Piastri, fourth, is within DRS of Russell, third. We may have a battle coming up … but the Brit does well to widen the gap again.

Lap 18/62 Hamilton pits and comes out in 13th sporting hards. I can’t see a way he can close on Verstappen, but over the years he’s done plenty of things I couldn’t see, so.

Lap 17/62 Albon turns off the car and he’s out – overheating due to something in one of the ducts. Norris leads Verstappen by 11.411s with Hamilton a further 8.102s behind and Russell 1.900 away from him.

Lap 16/62 Albon is adrift at the back of the field, and his car can’t be right. I think he’s pitting, but perhaps he’ll actually be retiring. Perez, meanwhile, is impressed by how well Colapinto, ninth to his 10th, is doing.

Lap 15/62 Norris moves away from Verstappen who moves away from Hamilton; so far, so rivetingly uneventful.

Lap 14/62 Sainz, 14th, comes in, comes out on hards, and holds off Albon to stay 18th – while Norris goes away and away. “Undercut power looks strong,” he tells his team.

Lap 13/62 Norris leads by 7.586, but winning every remaining race with Verstappen coming second wouldn’t be enough for him to take the championship. He’ll need some help.

Lap 12/62 Norris is building and building, the gap now almost six seconds. How he’d love someone to get at Verstappen from behind, but Hamilton is nearly six seconds further back.

Lap 11/62 Ricciardo makes an early stop and though he comes out last, he’ll appreciate the clean air he’s now enjoying. Norris sets another fastest lap.

Updated

Lap 10/62 Another fastest lap from Norris takes the lead up to 4.515s; I doubt we see much of him today because the race is behind him. But Verstappen is well clear of Hamilton who’s well clear of Russell who’s well clear of Piastri, so there’s not much action at the front.

Updated

Lap 9/62 It’s nuts how quickly McLaren have improved. I mean, obviously they’ve been working at it for time, but they’ve gone from nowhere to everywhere in next to no time and Norris leads Verstappen by 3.924s.

Lap 8/62 Fastest lap from Nozza, now 2.305s in front of Verstappen. He’s looking very good indeed.

  1. Norris

  2. Verstappen

  3. Hamilton

  4. Russell

  5. Piastri

  6. Hulkenberg

  7. Alonso

  8. Leclerc

  9. Colapinto

  10. Perez

Lap 7/62 It’s hot and humid, apparently, which can’t be pleasant for the drivers; we check-in with Leclerc, who needs to find a way past Alonso in seventh. Ferrari, we’re told, think they’ve a fast car tonight, but in order to exploit it they need to get nearer the front.

Lap 6/62 Norris extends his lead to 1.568s, while Verstappen sets a fastest lap in increasing the gap between him and Hamilton, now at 1.3s. The soft tyres might’ve been the wrong call.

Lap 5/62 Looking again at the start, Verstappen was, perhaps, hampered by the speed of Hamilton behind him, forced to defend when he wanted to attack. Coalpinto, meanwhile, drove over the lip of the track to the consternation of Albon, who dropped right down the placings after others get away better.

Updated

Lap 4/62 Russell told to increase the pace as “the guys at the front are getting away”. Norris sets a fastest lap, his lead now 1.445, while Verstappen puts an extra second between him and Hamilton, the gap now 1.2s.

Lap 3/62 Verstappen is now out of DRS and Hamilton, 1.5s behind, is gaining on him. If Norris’ car doesn’t let him down, even at this early stage it’s hard to see how he doesn’t win this race.

Lap 2/62 Colapinto, by the way, made up three places on the first lap, so now sits ninth. Norris leads by 1.231, meaning Verstappen should get DRS on him … but the lead is increasing.

  1. Norris

  2. Verstappen

  3. Hamilton

  4. Russell

  5. Piastri

  6. Hulkenberg

  7. Alonso

  8. Leclerc

  9. Colapinto

  10. Perez

Lap 1/62 It takes a while for everyone to settle, here come the lights and Norris starts well, ahead into turn one with Hamilton also getting away nicely … but he can’t pass Verstappen. Hukelnberg, meanwhile, goes by Piastri, who’s back in front of him almost immediately.

Updated

We’re almost ready…

The formation lap is under way, all the top 13 bar Hamilton on mediums. Verstappen has the inside line on Norris going into turn one, and it doesn’t feel absurd to say the race may be decided in that little vignette.

Hamilton, by the way is racing in his 350th GP. What a ridiculous career he’s had; I really hope we get to see him in a properly competitive car again, before he turns it in.

There’s something very special about night races. It looks awesome out there.

Updated

We’re nearly ready to go. This is going to be something.

Stroll’s got a brake issue, so the mechanics are sorting them as a precautionary measure. It looks iffy that the car’s ready in time, but the team are certain there’s no issue.

“We have to be careful what we say,” Verastappen tells Brundle, whose next line is “Where’s Lenny Kravitz?” Last I heard, wandering through the fields of joy.

Christian Horner thinks it’ll be “an exciting first lap,” so I guess he suspects that if Verstappen can’t get by Norris at the start, he may have to content himself with defending second.

Mark Cavendish – sorry, Cav – is also in attendance and getting very close to disrespecting Martin Brundle’s personal space when responding to questions. He loves the mental focus of F1, saying in his game you have to build your own engine but the F1 drivers can’t lose concentration for a second whereas he races are so long you can “chill into them”. I once heard him memorably say, talking about the Tour, that “it means something to suffer that much”, so I think he may be doing himself down a tad.

Jackie Stewart is in the house, trademark tartan flat-cap on his swede of course. We should all look so good at 85 (apologies, I’ve no usable photos currently).

I can’t believe he still has to do this in 2024. But go on Lewis.

Updated

It looks like a one-stop strategy, soft to hard, for our likely winners. Overtaking on this circuit has been tricky previously, but there’s a new DRS zone that might help. Ph, and this race has never been completed without a safety car.

Nozza looks as relaxed as ever and, as he’s explaining how confident he is in his car, Russell comes up from behind shouting “Let’s go Landoooo!” He sees every race as an opportunity but he’s competing against a lot of great guys and people forget Red Bull are still Red Bull – which seems unlikely. He knows it’s in the balance.

The best driver in the last seven races – none of which have been won by the champ – is Oscar Piastri. He drove brilliantly last week, his composure particularly noteworthy, and he’ll back himself to outpace the two Mercedeseseses in front of him.

The grid

  1. Lando Norris (McLaren)

  2. Max Verstappen (Red Bull)

  3. Lewis Hamilton (Mercedes)

  4. George Russell (Mercedes)

  5. Oscar Piastri (McLaren)

  6. Niko Hülkenberg (Haas)

  7. Fernando Alonso (Aston Martin)

  8. Yuki Tsunoda (RB)

  9. Charles Leclerc (Ferrari)

  10. Carlos Sainz Jr (Ferrari)

  11. Alex Albon (Williams)

  12. Franco Colapinto (Williams)

  13. Sergio Pérez (Red Bull)

  14. Kevin Magnussen (Haas)

  15. Esteban Ocon (Alpine)

  16. Daniel Ricciardo (RB)

  17. Lance Stroll (Aston Martin)

  18. Pierre Gasly (Alpine)

  19. Valtteri Bottas (Kick Sauber)

  20. Zhou Guanyu (Kick Sauber)

Preamble

Now then. Now then. NOW. THEN. We’ve spent the last few weeks wondering if we’ve got ourselves a title race and finally the answer seems clear: yes we do.

Max Verstappen leads Lando Norris at the top of the driver standings by 59 points but, as we’ve learnt over the last few days – and weeks and months – his car is “fucked”. He said that word?! No! Horrors! How absolutely dare he! The paragons of F1 would never!

After forcing himself into the points from near the back in Baku last week, Norris begins today in pole and as such, is a heavy favourite to win the race. But Verstappen is just one spot behind him so, even if he can’t move in front, is well placed to limit any potential inroads the challenger might make into his cushion.

Which is easy to say. Because this being F1, what might happen barely matters because what does happen – the three-time world champ being handed a community service order for inadvertently using a naughty word to honestly describe his car, say – bears so little resemblance to reality that to predict any of it feels almost as foolish as the ludicrosity we’ve just discussed. Here we go!

Lights out: 8pm local, 1pm BST

 

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