Winners and losers from F1's 2025 Canadian Grand Prix
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SportsLine's model analyzes Red Bull's Max Verstappen, McLaren's Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri and the rest of the starting grid's chances at the 2025 F1 Canadian GP
1don MSN
In the closing laps of the Canadian Grand Prix, McLaren teammates Oscar Piastri and Lando Norris were battling for fourth place, with hopes of a fight further up the grid on the table for the McLaren driver who emerged victorious.
Lando Norris accepted the blame, but outspoken 1997 F1 world champion Jacques Villeneuve says Oscar Piastri is not entirely without fault for the bundle between the two McLarens in Canada.
Lando Norris was handed a further punishment by the stewards after his crash at the Canadian Grand Prix. Norris, 25, started from P7 following a disappointing qualifying session on Saturday afternoon. Towards the closing stages of the race, the Brit was on the charge as he closed in on his teammate, Oscar Piastri, who was running in P4.
Lando Norris sorry for 'stupid' Oscar Piastri collision at Canadian Grand Prix: 'I made a fool of myself' - Norris has “a lot of regret” after self-inflicted late blow to world title chances in Montre
F1 expert Martin Brundle has issued a blunt warning to a “clumsy” Lando Norris that he will not win the world championship if he keeps having weekends where it “all falls apart” after his dramatic run-in with Oscar Piastri at the Canadian Grand Prix.
McLaren principal Andrea Stella doesn't see the team drastically changing its approach going forward after Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri's crash in Canada.
F1 legend Jacques Villeneuve has made extraordinary claims that Oscar Piastri contributed to the collision with Lando Norris in the Canadian Grand Prix. Norris failed to finish after clipping the back of Piastri's car while trying to overtake his McLaren teammate with four laps remaining.
Reigning champion Max Verstappen finished second, making points up on Norris and Piastri ahead of Red Bull's home race in Austria at the end of June