All talk before the race started was how this Austrian GP was Norris's to lose. At least he made it off on the formation lap; Sainz was stuck in first gear and something (the hand brake?) was stopping it from moving altogether. The start was abhorted. The Williams made it to the end of the pit lane and then his brakes caught fire. And his race was over before it had even begun.
Everyone got a great start but the supeior pace of the McLaren meant that Piastri got past LeClerc for second and immediately started to go for Norris. Further back, Verstappen was clipped by Antontelli who locked up in the middle of the pack. The vet went to see if the rookie was okay with a smile. The Safety Car was out, we were three drivers down and it was only the second lap,
On Lap 11, Piastri briefly held the lead but Norris came back through the following corners. How long would they be allowed to race? Had there been a protocol set before the race? Whoever was ahead by the first pitstop? Etc.
The battle continued, with Norris positioning his car perfectly. There was less luck down the track, as Albon pitted and retired his Williams for a double DNF for the team. Even further back, Tsunoda hit Stroll.
Both McLarens made small mistakes as they pushed each other and then Norris pitted first. Nearly halfway through, when pit stops were complete and everything was back to level-pegging, Piastri was given a not-very-subtle warning not to get as close to Norris again.
Tsunoda and Colapinto came together again. He got a ten second penalty.
And then Norris began to lose confidence in himself, he probably is his own worst enemy. He held the lead through passing the back-markers.
Hamilton was made to pit against his will. He didn’t want a second stop believing position is king. This driver versus team strategists is going to run and run.
For the McLarens it was all down to the last set of pit stops. There were 16 laps to go. Tsunoda and Colapinto came together for a third time with Piastri in the middle. He was off and across the grass. There were more time penalties.
There were 6 laps at the end of the race for the McLarens to go head-to-head. Instead we watched Alonso and Bortoleto battling. The back-markers basically neutralised the McLaren race, much to the management's relief I imagine.
It finished Norris, Piastri (still ahead in the championship, by 15 points), LeClerc, Hamilton, Russell and Lawson. The Ferraris managed an almost secret race to get excellent points and a real in-road towards beating Mercedes and Red Bull. Piastri didn't look thrilled on the podium with his second place trophy.
Bortoleto was awarrded Driver of the Day as both Saubers were well within the points. Was it the Wheatley-effect on Sauber? The loss of both Williams' cars? Or some Austrian magic?
There is a quick turnover between Red Bull territory and Silverstone, where almost everyone claims a home race. It would be predictably disappointing for Norris to lose to Piastri there.