Some rare drama surrounds Sunday’s 54th edition of the Formula 1 United States Grand Prix at the Circuit of the Americas in Austin, Texas.
After the last three editions had little to offer in terms of title implications, this race very well could serve as one of the defining moments in determining the prestigious world driver’s championship.
McLaren’s Oscar Piastri leads teammate Lando Norris by 19 points in the standings, with four-time defending F1 champion Max Verstappen lurking 63 points behind the leader.
Piastri dominated F1’s first trip to the U.S. this season with a lights-out performance at the Miami Grand Prix. That win marked the Australian’s fourth in the first six races to start the season and officially stamped him as the front runner.
Now, five months later, Piastri is looking to further improve his shot at a maiden title with another win in America at the flagship U.S. Grand Prix. With the closest points finish since 2021 on the horizon, each remaining moment carries extra significance for the season-long championship leader.
The 24-year-old Piastri’s torrid start slowed immediately after his statement in Miami, as he has won just three times in the 12 races since. Nonetheless, Caesars in Las Vegas still has him listed as a -225 favorite to take home the prestigious F1 season title.
Piastri’s 336 points lead Norris’ 317 points going into the final six races of the season. Verstappen’s recent resurgence, anchored by two wins in the last three races, has also allowed the Dutchman to climb back into the championship picture with 273 points.
While Red Bull hasn’t had the dominant car this season, the fact that Verstappen is still managing to inch toward the two McLaren frontrunners is certainly something to watch in the final weeks. Even if he’s downplaying his chances himself.
“I don’t really think about (the championship) too much,” Verstappen said. “I go to the race weekend, I try to do everything I can in the car. I don’t think if I’m in front or behind. I just see every race weekend as an opportunity to win. And if we don’t, we don’t. Life goes on.”
Tensions are a little bit higher on McLaren’s end. Such a tight battle between teammates has predictably resulted in some friction between the Norris and Piastri camps. Competition boiled over two weeks ago in Singapore, as Norris controversially collided with Piastri on the first lap.
Despite the fact that both McLaren drivers finished in the top 5 en route to clinching a second consecutive World Constructors Championship that day, the prevailing story since has been the incident between Piastri and Norris.
“The last thing I want is something like that to happen to cause these kind of controversial talks after a race,” Norris said. “At the same time, I put just as much risk on me putting myself out of the race as I do whoever I’m racing against, whether it’s Oscar or anyone else. … It’s clearly something I want to avoid.”
Whether Norris and Piastri avoid further complications in Austin this weekend remains to be seen. If recent history has any say, it seems likely. The rivalry has taken shades of Nico Rosberg and Lewis Hamilton’s iconic championship battles as Mercedes teammates in the mid-2010s, in both competition and drama.
Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc is the defending U.S. Grand Prix champion after Verstappen won three straight from 2021-23.
–Field Level Media