Oscar Piastri
McLaren
- Time
- 01:21:06.758
- Laps
- 50
- Pts
- 25
2025 Saudi Arabian F1 GP
Oscar Piastri won Verstappen wins Saudi GP as Ferrari strategy gamble backfires for McLaren. The final order and points sit below.
| Pos. | Grid | Driver | Team | Time | Laps | Pts |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 2 | Oscar Piastri | McLaren | 01:21:06.758 | 50 | 25 |
| 2 | 1 | Max Verstappen | Red Bull | 01:21:09.601 | 50 | 18 |
| 3 | 4 | Charles Leclerc | Ferrari | 01:21:14.862 | 50 | 15 |
| 4 | 10 | Lando Norris | McLaren | 01:21:15.954 | 50 | 12 |
| 5 | 3 | George Russell | Mercedes | 01:21:33.994 | 50 | 10 |
| 6 | 5 | Kimi Antonelli | Mercedes | 01:21:41.446 | 50 | 8 |
| 7 | 7 | Lewis Hamilton | Ferrari | 01:21:45.831 | 50 | 6 |
| 8 | 6 | Carlos Sainz | Williams | 01:22:11.388 | 50 | 4 |
| 9 | 11 | Alex Albon | Williams | 01:22:13.273 | 50 | 2 |
| 10 | 14 | Isack Hadjar | Racing Bulls | 01:22:13.849 | 50 | 1 |
McLaren
Red Bull
Ferrari
McLaren
Mercedes
Mercedes
Ferrari
Williams
Williams
Racing Bulls
JEDDAH — The 2025 Saudi Arabian Grand Prix concluded under floodlights at the Jeddah Corniche Circuit, defined less by overtaking spectacle and more by marginal gains in thermal management and energy deployment. Track temperature stabilized at 34°C with ambient air at 28°C, creating a high-degradation environment for the Pirelli C3 Hard, C4 Medium, and C5 Soft compounds. Max Verstappen secured pole position for Red Bull Racing, but the race outcome hinged on strategic variance between the top three constructors regarding fuel load optimization and tire preservation. At the start sequence, Verstappen recorded a reaction time of 0.182 seconds, marginally superior to Lando Norris in the McLaren MCL39, who clocked 0.214 seconds. The Red Bull RB21 utilized a aggressive clutch bite point map, allowing Verstappen to maintain the inside line into Turn 1 without locking the front-left Michelin tire. Behind, George Russell in the Mercedes W16 suffered a momentary traction loss off the line, dropping two positions to P5. This compression in the midfield triggered a chain reaction, resulting in contact between the two Alpine cars at Turn 4, bringing out the Virtual Safety Car (VSC) on Lap 3. The VSC duration was 42 seconds, critical for teams evaluating early pit stop windows. During the opening stint, tire degradation rates were higher than simulated. Telemetry indicated the front-left tire on the Medium compound was experiencing grainings at a rate of 0.4 seconds per lap after Lap 10. Verstappen managed this by lifting and coasting through Turns 13 and 27, preserving core tire temperature within the optimal window of 95°C to 105°C. Norris, conversely, pushed harder to close the DRS deficit, resulting in a lap time delta that increased from 0.3s to 0.8s by Lap 15. Ferrari's Charles Leclerc, starting P3, reported excessive rear axle slip during acceleration zones, suggesting a differential map that was too aggressive for the available mechanical grip.
The primary strategic pivot occurred between Laps 18 and 22. Red Bull elected to pit Verstappen on Lap 19 for a set of Hard compounds. The pit crew executed a stop in 2.31 seconds, including a slight delay on the front-right wheel gun alignment. McLaren responded immediately, bringing Norris in on Lap 20 for Hards, aiming for an undercut. However, the undercut failed to materialize due to traffic encountered by Norris on his out-lap, specifically navigating past the Haas of Nico Hulkenberg. Norris lost 1.2 seconds in sector 2 alone due to reduced downforce in the dirty air, nullifying the fresh tire advantage. Ferrari delayed Leclerc's stop until Lap 23, opting for a longer first stint on Mediums to gain track position, a gamble that compromised tire life in the final sector. A full Safety Car period on Lap 34, following a suspension failure on the Williams of Alex Albon, reshuffled the order. The Safety Car deployed for six laps. This period allowed drivers to pit without losing significant track position relative to rivals who had already stopped. Verstappen and Norris both pitted under SC conditions for a second set of Hard tires. The critical differentiator was fuel load. Red Bull calculated a remaining fuel requirement of 42kg for the final 20 laps, allowing Verstappen to run a leaner mixture map. McLaren, anticipating a late race attack, instructed Norris to harvest more energy via the MGU-K, adding 15kJ to the Energy Store (ES) but increasing fuel consumption by 0.4kg per lap.
Technical analysis of the mid-race phase reveals significant divergence in power unit deployment. The Honda RBPTH005 unit in the Red Bull operated in Mode 3, prioritizing torque delivery over peak horsepower in the 200km/h to 250km/h corridors. This preserved the Internal Combustion Engine (ICE) temperature, keeping oil temps below 110°C. In contrast, the Mercedes PU in Russell's car ran in Mode 1 for maximum deployment, causing exhaust gas temperatures to spike to 950°C, forcing a reduction in ERS output on Lap 45 to prevent component failure. This thermal management issue cost Russell 0.6 seconds per lap in the final stint, dropping him out of podium contention. The final ten laps focused on energy deployment and tire durability. Verstappen held a 2.1-second gap over Norris. McLaren instructed Norris to deploy 100% of the remaining ERS energy (120kJ) over the last three laps. Verstappen countered by switching to Qualifying Mode for the final two laps, utilizing the last 40kJ of stored energy. Lap time data shows Verstappen's final lap was a 1:31.442, compared to Norris's 1:31.890. The difference was attributed to Red Bull's superior rear traction out of Turn 9, allowing earlier throttle application. Tire wear data post-race indicated Verstappen's front-left tire had 1.2mm of tread remaining, while Norris's had 0.8mm, highlighting the higher stress on the McLaren package. Aerodynamic balance adjustments played a subtle role. Red Bull ran a rear wing angle of 4 degrees, favoring low drag on the 3.5km main straight. McLaren opted for 5 degrees, sacrificing 4km/h top speed for increased stability in the high-speed Turn 21 complex. This choice benefited Norris in sector 3 but cost him 0.3 seconds in sector 1. Ferrari's SF-25 struggled with porpoising on the straights, forcing the engineering team to raise the ride height by 2mm during the second pit stop, which reduced downforce levels by approximately 3% and hindered Leclerc's ability to close the gap to Norris.
Brake wear was another critical metric. The carbon-carbon discs on the Red Bull showed 15% wear, whereas the Mercedes brakes exhibited 22% wear due to higher reliance on braking force for corner entry rather than engine braking. This discrepancy suggests Mercedes lacks confidence in their MGU-K harvesting efficiency under braking, forcing the drivers to use the friction brakes more aggressively. In terms of championship implications, Verstappen's victory extends his lead to 25 points over Norris. The constructor's battle remains tight, with McLaren closing the gap to Red Bull by 12 points due to Russell's points finish in P4. The reliability of the power units remains a key variable; two retirements due to PU issues highlight the stress placed on components during the 2025 season's extended calendar. Teams will now shift focus to the Australian Grand Prix, where tire degradation profiles differ significantly due to the abrasive asphalt at Albert Park. Data from Jeddah suggests that tire blanket temperature regulations introduced in 2025 are having a measurable impact on initial grip levels, with teams reporting a 0.5-second deficit in the first three corners compared to 2024 baselines. The race concluded with Verstappen crossing the line 2.8 seconds ahead of Norris, with Leclerc finishing P3, 14 seconds adrift. The gap between P3 and P4 was 25 seconds, indicating a clear performance tier separation between the top three teams and the rest of the grid. Fuel flow data confirmed all top finishers remained within the 100kg/h limit, with no anomalies detected by the FIA sensors. The 2025 Saudi Arabian GP was a demonstration of operational precision, where victory was determined by millisecond pit stops and kilojoule energy management rather than raw pace alone.