Verstappen fends off Norris to win in Japan

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Red Bull's Max Verstappen fended off a race-long challenge from the McLarens of Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri to win the Japanese Grand Prix.

The Dutchman's fourth consecutive victory at Suzuka was his first of the year and moves Verstappen to within one point of Norris at the head of the drivers' championship.

Verstappen's drive was cool under intense pressure, with rarely more than two seconds between him and Norris, and founded on a quite brilliant pole position lap on Saturday.

McLaren had feared that the Red Bull would be difficult to pass if Verstappen held the lead at the start, and so it proved.

Verstappen led the two McLarens for the entire first stint, the three lapping closely together.

There may be questions as to why McLaren pitted Piastri first, when it might have made sense to attack Verstappen with Norris with an earlier pit stop.

Verstappen and Norris stopped on the same lap, one later than Piastri, and there was an immediate flashpoint.

As they pitted, they were separated by just 1.5 seconds. Norris' stop was faster by a second, and as they left the pits the McLaren was halfway alongside the Red Bull.

But Verstappen held his line, and Norris ran out of track, taking to the grass.

Norris complained about Verstappen's driving, saying he had been pushed off, while Verstappen countered by saying his rival had driven off by himself. The stewards agreed with the four-time world champion.

From then on, Norris and Piastri tracked Verstappen for the final 32 laps, with just over two seconds separating them most of the time.

But Norris could not get within a second of Verstappen, and in fact it was Piastri who looked to have the best pace, sometimes closing to within 0.5secs of his team-mate.

Piastri suggested to the team that he felt he had the pace to beat Verstappen - a thinly veiled request to be let past.

But McLaren did not interfere in their battle and the drivers crossed the line in the order they had held all race, separated by just 2.2 seconds.

Piastri moves into third place in the championship ahead of Mercedes' George Russell, and is 13 points behind his team-mate.

Verstappen said: "It was tough, just pushing very hard on the last set. The two McLarens were pushing me very hard.

"Not easy to manage the tyres. I'm incredibly happy. It started off quite tough this weekend but we didn't give up, we carried on improving the car and today it was in its best form. Starting on pole was very important."

Norris added: "The pace was too similar to do anything more. Long race, a lot of pushing, flat out from start to finish, but nothing special we had to get Max on. He deserved it.

"They were quick, they've made some improvements and we'll have to work hard."

The top three were in a race of their own and the entire grand prix was pretty static in terms of order.

Ferrari's Charles Leclerc held off Russell for fourth place, while the Briton's 18-year-old team-mate Andrea Kimi Antonelli put in a strong final stint to close to less than two seconds behind his team-mate.

Lewis Hamilton, on an alternate tyre strategy, took seventh from eighth place on the grid, getting ahead of Racing Bulls' Isack Hadjar early in the race.

Alex Albon drove an attacking race, complaining to the Williams team about his strategy, to take ninth, ahead of the Haas of Briton Oliver Bearman.

In his first race for Red Bull, Yuki Tsunoda finished 12th with the man he replaced, Liam Lawson, 17th in the Racing Bull.

Formula 1 travels to the Middle East for part two of a triple-header with the Bahrain Grand Prix in Sakhir next weekend. Lights out for the race is at at 16:00 BST on 13 April.

British racing driver Alice Powell on BBC Radio 5 Live

That was perfection from Max Verstappen, as he said. He hasn't got the fastest car underneath him and we didn't expect him to win this race.

I think Lando Norris will be thinking that he should have slotted right behind Verstappen [on the pit-stop exit]. He had a faster pit stop by a second compared to Verstappen. It could have been a different story to this race if Norris did slot in behind, he would have been only a couple of tenths behind down into Turn One.

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