Lando Norris took the first victory of his Formula One career at the Miami Grand Prix on Sunday, dedicating the win to his sick grandmother.
In his 110th F1 appearance, the 24-year-old from Bristol became the 21st British driver in history to stand on the top step of the podium after he took advantage of a safety car before holding off Max Verstappen.
“Whooooooooooo, whoooooooooooo, I love you all,” yelled an emotional Norris over the radio. “Thank you so much. We did it, Will [Joseph, Norris’ race engineer]. We did it.
“I guess that is how it is done. Finally. Oh, I am so happy. I knew it when I came in this morning. I said today is the day, full of opportunities. I nailed it, you nailed it, thank you so much.
“Thanks mum, thanks dad – this one is for my grandma. Thank you very much.”
He added later: “[That’s] for my grandma because she’s not been so well lately. I saw her last week and I told her that I was gonna win a race. I didn’t say when, I just said I was going to win a race…
“I didn’t know it would be coming this soon, but I’m just very happy that I was able to do it as quickly as I did!”
After stepping out of the machine that carried him to victory, Norris put down his yellow crash helmet before running and leaping into the arms of his mechanics.
They hoisted him into the air as a host of drivers – including fellow Briton George Russell and Daniel Ricciardo, the last man to win for McLaren in Monza in 2021 – came over to congratulate Norris.
“About time, huh,” said Norris, who was interviewed by 2009 world champion Jenson Button.
“What a race. It has been a long-time coming. Finally I have managed to do it. I am so happy I have delivered for the team. I am finally on top. I am over the moon.
“I am proud. The whole weekend has been good. I have had some little setbacks along the way. I knew we had the pace, and today we put it together.”
Just last month, Norris became the first driver in F1’s 74-year history to have finished on the podium as many as 14 times without winning.
And in China a fortnight ago he drove brilliantly, only to finish runner-up to Verstappen. However, the race here in Miami belonged to the driver who made his debut as a teenager in Australia in 2019.
He said: “What do I say to McLaren? I am just proud. I guess people doubted me along the way, and I have made mistakes over the last five years, in my short career, but I stuck with McLaren because I believed in them and today proved exactly that.”
Norris was a popular winner, with Lewis Hamilton, who finished sixth, slowing down on his in-lap before taking both hands off the steering wheel to congratulate his countryman.
“Lando was flying,” Verstappen said after he finished 7.6 seconds behind Norris. “I am very happy for him. It is not going to be his last one. He definitely deserves it today.”
How Norris ended Verstappen’s crushing winning streak
After starting fifth on the grid, Norris took advantage of a safety car period at the Hard Rock Stadium to move ahead of Verstappen before holding his nerve to take the chequered flag.
An emotional Norris crossed the line seconds clear of Verstappen, who had no answer to the British driver’s brilliant pace as he claimed McLaren’s first victory in nearly three years.
Verstappen had to settle for second as Charles Leclerc finished third for Ferrari, one place ahead of team-mate Carlos Sainz. Lewis Hamilton claimed his best result of the season, crossing the line sixth.
Miami GP 2024 result in full
- 1st: Lando Norris (McLaren)
- 2nd: Max Verstappen (Red Bull)
- 3rd: Charles Leclerc (Ferrari)
- 4th: Sergio Perez (Red Bull)
- 5th: Carlos Sainz (Ferrari)
- 6th: Lewis Hamilton (Mercedes)
- 7th: Yuki Tsunoda (RB)
- 8th: George Russell (Mercedes)
- 9th: Fernando Alonso (Aston Martin)
- 10th: Esteban Ocon (Alpine)
- 11th: Nico Hulkenberg (Haas)
- 12th: Pierre Gasly (Alpine)
- 13th: Oscar Piastri (McLaren)
- 14th: Zhou Guanyu (Sauber)
- 15th: Daniel Ricciardo (RB)
- 16th: Valtteri Bottas (Sauber)
- 17th: Lance Stroll (Aston Martin)
- 18th: Alexander Albon (Williams)
- 19th: Kevin Magnussen (Haas)
- DNF: Logan Sargeant (Williams)
Norris, who has emerged as one of the grid’s brightest stars following that first race in Melbourne, has so often been the nearly-man.
But the race here in Miami – with Donald Trump a visitor in the McLaren garage two hours before the lights went out – belonged to Norris.
Verstappen cruised to sprint victory on Saturday, and then secured his sixth pole in as many rounds and looked on course for a comfortable win when he nailed the start to assume the lead.
He also escaped damage when he clattered into a red and white traffic bollard at the chicane on the 22nd lap.
Verstappen pitted a lap later for new tyres to relinquish the lead but the race dramatically turned on its head – and in Norris’s favour – with 30 laps remaining when Haas driver Kevin Magnussen clattered into the back of Logan Sargeant.
Norris had assumed the lead of the race by virtue of not stopping for tyres and when the safety car was deployed to retrieve Sargeant’s damaged Williams, Norris was handed a golden opportunity.
With the chasing pack neutralised, Norris dived in for his only change of rubber to keep hold of his lead. Not only was he at the sharp end of the pack, but he had fresher tyres to boot, too.
After four laps, the safety car peeled in, and Norris’s nerves were put to the test with Verstappen, in his superior Red Bull machine, breathing down his neck.
Verstappen followed Norris on the 180mph drag to the opening corner, but the British driver put his papaya orange machine on the apex of the right-hander to keep the Dutchman at bay.
Norris then turned in the fastest lap of the race so far to establish a one-second lead over Verstappen, crucially putting him out of DRS-reach.
Suddenly the improbable looked possible with Norris continuing to increase his margin. One second became two, which became three and with 10 laps to go he was four seconds clear.
Norris’s mind might have cast back to Sochi in 2021 when a late downpour and a refusal to switch to wet tyres cost him the win.
But the contrast could not have been greater here under clear blue skies in the Sunshine State as Norris came of age to take the flag, raising both hands in the air as he crossed the line 7.6 seconds clear.