How the lap of Lando Norris’ life earned him a maiden F1 podium
In a dramatic and eventful start to the 2020 season, McLaren’s Lando Norris starred to achieve his maiden Formula 1 podium finish at the Austri𝓰an Grand Prix.ไ
Thanks to an excellent performance from start to finish, Norris came of age at the Red Bull ♔Ring on a weekend he and McLaren will remember for a long time to come.

In a dramatic and eventful start to the 2020 season, McLaren’s Lando Norris star🐻red to achieve his maiden Formula 1 podium fin♓ish at the Austrian Grand Prix.
Thanks to an excellent performance from start to finish, Norris came of age at the Red B🌞ull Ring on a weekend he and McLaren will remember for a long time to come.
He was a regular fixture within the top six through all three practice sessions and his impressive form continued into qualifying. A brilliant qualifying lap secured fourth place on the grid with an effort that ꦅwas just 0.687s shy of Valtteri Bottas’ pole position time.
A late grid penalty issued to Lewis Hamilton an hour before the start of the race on Sunday for failing🔯 to slow for yellow flags in Q3 promoted Norrღis to third and put him in prime position to capitalise.
The Briton initially struggled to keep up with the pace of the leaders and dropped to fifth in the opening laps. After Max Verstappen retired with mechanical issues, and Lewis Hamilton and Sergio Perez picke🃏d up five-second time penalties amid a flurry of late Safety Cars, he clawed himself back into podium contention.🔯
Having survived a scrap with McLaren teammate Carlos Sainz and making a bold overtake on Perez’s Racing Point, Norris found himself running iꦅn fourth.
With Hamilton running second on track with a penalty looming for bumping Albon off the road in the closing stages, Norris knew he had to close the gap to the Mercedes driver fast if he was to have a chance of earning his first-ever top th൲ree finish.
It appeared an unlikely prospect in reality with Hamilton holding the buffer he needed entering the final lap, but Norris turnedꦯ in one of the most important𓃲 laps of his career to post the race’s fastest lap on the last tour.

Norris gained a huge 0.728s on Hamilton on the last lap to take third place 🧸by just 0.198s once the reigning world champion’s penalty was appli🥀ed.
"I'm speechless,” Nor😼ris said after the race. “I think there's a few points in the race where I thou🥂ght I kind of fudged it up a bit.
"I dropp🐭ed to fifth with a few laps to go, Carlos was almost going to get past me. But I didn't give up and I managed to get past Perez and ended up on the podium.”
"The last few laps, when I had to get past Checo, I knew he🌟 ℱhad a five second penalty but nothing more than that," he added.
"I always seemed to strugg🌜le when I was close to the cars ahead and more vulnerable to the guys behind.
“So I knew - not just because of Lewis, because I didn't know at the time [he had a penalty] - I had to try to get past him. And then when the Lewis penalty c꧙ame, I knew I had to turn it up a little bit.”
At just 20-ye🍃ars-old, Norris has become the third-youngest podium finisher in F1 history, behiꦛnd only Verstappen and Lance Stroll.
Norris already enjoyed a strong rookie F1 campaign as he helped McLaren claim fourth place in the constructors’ championship last year, but he looks to have made further gains over the winter andꦓ has returned for his soph⭕omore season with added confidence.
And his performan🌸ce and amazing last l🧔ap even took McLaren team principal Andreas Seidl by surprise.
“To be honest I didn’t expect that he could pull o💙ff that lap at the end,” Seidl told Sky Sports.
“He 🦩had a strategy in mind, and for 🌳such a young guy to be pulling off such a lap on the very last lap and end up on the podium, it’s just great.”
Speak🌊ing in his post-race debrief later on, Seidl added: “It was a roller coaster in the last few laps. At one point we thought we ওhad missed the podium when Leclerc went through.
“Bu🦋t then obviously we were communicating with Lando the gaps to Lewis, knowing that he gets the penalty. Then the engineers together with Lando prepared it for his last lap🧔s, in terms of using the maximum of everything the car had.
“But for Lando to actually pull it off like that, it’s impressive.” 💧;

Penalties scupper Hamilton in poor start
The Austrian Grand Prix did not go the way Hamilton would have hoped aღfter the defending world champion made the perfect start to the weekend by domi𝔉nating all three practice sessions.
Things began to unravel in qualifying after Hamilton was not only beaten to pole position by teammate Valtteri Bo🧔ttas by the slender margin of just 0.012s, but also found himself under investigation for two potential rules breaches.
Hamilton had his first Q3 lap time deleted for a trac🍰k limits infringement but kept his P2 starting position and was also initially cleared of 🌺a second offence - failing to slow for yellow flags when Bottas took a trip across the grass.
That was until Red Bull appealed the decisio꧅n just hours before lights out on Sunday after bringing new evidence to light. After a second investigation, the stewards found Hamilton guilty of failing to slow for the yellow caution flags and subsequently handed him a three-place grid penalty, dropping him to fifth.
Following the early꧑ retirement of🍸 Verstappen, Hamilton was up to second place by lap 10, and had begun to close in on Bottas. The gap was less than three seconds by lap 25 when Mercedes double-stacked their cars in the pits during the first Safety Car period.

Hamilton continued to apply the pressure to Bottas but both Mercedes drivers were soon instructed to nurse their cars home after discovering gearbox-related sensor issues, taking awa🍷y some of the Briton’s momentum.
Albon emerged as a threat dur☂ing a thrilling climax to the race after Red Bull opted to switch the British-born Thai racer onto a fresh set of Soft tyres late on, while the hampered Mercedes duo remained out on ageing hards.
Albon 𝓰closed in and attacked Hamilton, leading to the pair’s collision at Turn 4 that resulted in Hamilton picking up his second penalty of the weekend and ultimately 𝓀left him having to settle with fourth.
Hamilton’s penalty not only paved the way for Norris’ podium, but also an unlikely second-place🍎 finish for Charles Leclerc, with the Ferrari driver starring 🔜in his Melbourne-spec SF1000 that was a second off the pace in qualifying.
Head𓆉ing into next weekend’s second consecutive race at Spielberg, dubbed the Styrian Grand Prix, Hamilton already finds himself on the backfoot in hisও quest to win a record-equalling seventh world championship, with a 13-point deficit to Bottas - his most realistic title rival.
Adding to the blow, Hamilton is now over halfway towards picking up a one-race ban after picking up four penalty points on his superlicence acroꦅss the openi🌼ng weekend of the season alone.
However, a wounded Hamilton is a dangerous opponent. As he has proven so 🦋many times in the past, Hamilton is often his best when his back is up against the wall, and he has it well within his weaponry to bounce back instantly.
After over three months of delays and disruptions caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, Austria delivered a classic first race o🍨f the♈ season that was worth waiting for.


Lewis regularly attends Grands Prix for mahbx.com around the world. Often reporting on the action from the ground, Lewis tells the stories of the people who ma🌼tter in the sport.