The few points available in the sprint means these short races historically haven’t mattered too much to the title table.

Unless, of course, the championship is separated by only one point.

And unless, of course, one title contender fails to finish while the other wins.

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Lando Norris’s determined victory on a morning Oscar Piastri crashed out in slippery conditions added eight points to the Englishman’s lead, more than the difference between first and second.

Assuming Norris, who is in cooly imperious form this weekend, wins the grand prix, he could end up doing at least two grands prix worth of damage to his teammate in a single round.

THE ANATOMY OF TITLE-CHANGING CRASH

The heavy overnight rain had almost entirely dried in time for the sprint race to start, enough that everyone started on slick tyres. There were only a few section of road still damp — the final sector and front straight — though the serrated kerbs, as always, still held water.

On lap 6 Norris exited the Senna S and rumbled along the exit kerb.

Andrea Kimi Antonelli, directly behind him, noted that the McLaren’s tyres and aerodynamics spat some of the water out of the kerbs. In the second or so he had to react, the Mercedes driver kept his steering locked to keep his car on the track and off the kerbs.

Piastri, another second or two down the road, didn’t have the luxury of that visual warning. He took the kerb but unexpectedly the tyres didn’t grip.

His car spun from underneath him at full throttle, launching him into the barriers and out of the sprint.

“Just dipped a wheel on the white line or the kerb and around I went,” and understandably brief Piastri said. “Silly mistake, really, or unfortunate mistake, so that’s it.”

Some were quick to see the irony of one McLaren car appearing to create the conditions for the other car to crash.

“A little bit like Mario Kart where you throw the banana out behind,” George Russell joked of Norris’s racing line appearing to wet the track for Piastri.

Of course it wasn’t deliberate, and television replays show both Norris and Piastri had used that kerb on earlier laps.

Arguably lap 6 was the deepest both drivers stepped onto the kerb — and the standing water rests in the deep divots furthest from the track with this type of kerb.

Telemetry also suggests Norris had the subtlest of lifts from full throttle as his car rumbled over the kerb. Piastri’s data suggests he reached full throttle approximately where Norris lifted, after which his car snapped from his control.

Piastri can fairly feel hard done by to have been put out of the race given circumstance played a significant role, and it’s unlucky that he happened to be the first unsighted driver on the road to hit the newly wetted kerbs.

But ultimately this is a case of driver error. It’s up to the driver to choose whether the kerbs are safe to use in damp conditions, and every driver will know that the condition of the kerbs can change during a race.

The cost was eight points, but with four grands prix and a sprint remaining, those eight points could take a significant toll.

Piastri crashes out of Brazil sprint | 00:45

QUALIFYING DEFEAT DEALS PIASTRI ANOTHER BLOW

Pole position would have been the perfect antidote to Piastri’s sprint crash, but despite leading Norris after the first runs of Q3 from provisional pole, the Australian will line up fourth, on the second row, behind his pole-getting teammate, Andrea Kimi Antonelli and a superb Charles Leclerc.

But in the context of Piastri’s score rate being reduced to a trickle in recent rounds — and despite what ended up being a chunk 0.324-second deficit to Norris in qualifying — it’s important to note that the Melburnian has been a much better match this weekend.

The difference between them on that crucial final lap appears to be all about understeer — on-board vision clearly shows Piastri battling with a car more recalcitrant to turn in.

The telemetry reveals the cost: despite getting back on the throttle sooner than Norris through pretty much every corner, on each occasion it takes him longer to get to full throttle.

That costs him momentum through the middle section of the circuit and time down every straight.

Part of that will be down to set-up choice — the team made changes after the sprint, but lacking laps after the race will have left Piastri lacking some experience of the changing track — while part is also down to getting a feel for the changeable, gusty conditions in the aftermath of Saturday morning’s storm.

“Just at tricky session, really,” Piastri said. “I think the conditions were very tough — the track just didn’t really get any quicker from Q1.

“It was just very difficult to find that last little bit. I didn’t quite get the most out of it at the end, obviously. It was just tough.”

The result, though, is that Piastri will start off the front row for the sixth consecutive weekend.

Andrea Kimi Antonelli starting on the front row is a particular complication. Antonelli pressured Norris hard throughout the sprint, though that had more to do with him using the favourable medium tyre to Norris’s faster degrading softs.

Even if the Mercedes isn’t expected to have the race pace to go with the McLaren on the same tyre, it’s clearly fast enough to hamper Piastri, more so than Leclerc’s Ferrari.

Even if Piastri were to have the performance to challenge Norris, his chance of victory will shrink every lap he spends behind slower cars — and ever lap Norris is able to build a buffer.

If second place is the best Piastri can hope to achieve, he would walk away from Brazil with a 16-point championship deficit, which would be his largest gap to Norris since the season-opening Australian Grand Prix.

“I’ll try and make up some positions,” he said. “That’s all I can try and do.

“I’ll see what kind of pace I’ve got. I think the car’s looked quick this weekend, so hopefully I can use that to my advantage tomorrow.”

Piastri suffers blow to title tilt | 02:27

NORRIS IS PEAKING AT THE RIGHT TIME

There’s an essential reverse side to the championship coin that is Norris’s sizzling form.

The Englishman is peaking at the right time. Whereas Piastri has had a couple of bad weekends in terms of pace in Austin and Mexico City and now a couple of crashes in Baku and Sao Paulo, Norris hasn’t missed a beat since the mid-season break.

The qualifying-defining mistakes are gone. The race-pace inconsistency is gone. He hasn’t really had a day on which he’s had to accept there’s some deficit to his teammate that can’t be closed over a weekend.

He’s finished ahead of Piastri in every points-paying race both have finished and is indisputably in the ascendancy.

“I just feel like I’m doing a good job,” he said. “I’m driving well.

“Earlier in the season I would just have weaknesses. I feel like I’ve maybe still got some here and there, but I’ve lessened them — they’re not like 0.1 seconds now, it’s 0.02 seconds.

“When I can put together the good parts and have those not-so-bad parts, things go very well.”

Where has this consistency come from?

Undoubtedly Norris will have undertaken some deep reflection in the mid-season break. While he’d shrunk his deficit to Piastri in three of the four races prior to the break, the Australian was clearly still the form McLaren driver.

Perhaps some of it has come, ironically, from the power unit failure in the Netherlands that at the time appeared to severely damage his championship hopes. He spoke afterwards about some of the pressure of expectation coming off his shoulders, and since then he’s certainly driven with a sharper edge than we’d seen earlier.

You have to wonder too how the Azerbaijan Grand Prix might have subtly changed his approached. It was a dire weekend for Piastri, but Norris was roundly criticised for failing to capitalise, qualifying and finishing a lacklustre seventh to do minimal damage to his teammate.

“We’ve been on very good form,” he said. “The team are good at giving me a great car of course, so I’ve always got to thank the team.

“I think when I’m in a good rhythm, when I can stay calm, when I can just put it all together, then I’ll be on top.”

Whatever the cause, the effect is a version of Norris most expected at the start of the year.

He appears to have turned up at exactly the right time to establish himself as the championship favourite in the final rounds of the year.

Bortoleto out after sprint crash | 01:23

VERSTAPPEN COUNTS HIMSELF OUT OF THE CHAMPIONSHIP AFTER Q1 EXIT

Max Verstappen lost three points to Norris’s title lead in the sprint race — he’s now 39 points adrift, though now only 30 points behind Piastri — but he’s poised to lose far more after a disastrous qualifying result.

The defending champion was knocked out of qualifying 16th, in Q1.

It was a history-making result.

The last time he was knocked out of the first qualifying segment was the 2021 Russian Grand Prix, when he chose not to set a time given engine penalties guaranteed him a last-place start.

But it’s the first time in Verstappen’s Formula 1 career he’s been knocked out of Q1 on pure pace — or, in this case, a pure lack of pace.

“It’s not what you want to see,” a clearly deflated Verstappen said. “The whole weekend has already been quite tough, but this is a bit unexpected, I would say, after changing quite a bit on the car.

“It was just not responding. I had no grip out there, so had to really massively underdrive it, basically, and it just didn’t work.”

It’s worth noting that Verstappen started one place lower, in 17th, last year and still won the race, but these are very different circumstances to 2024.

This is Red Bull Racing at its 2025 worst, and not just in terms of performance.

After appearing to have finally cracked the code of its troubled car at the Italian Grand Prix, launching Verstappen into a run of form that had his force himself back into title contention, in Mexico City and now particularly in Sao Paulo the team appears to have lost the thread again.

The situation was barely salvageable in Mexico, but in Brazil, where the sprint format means less practice time, Red Bull Racing is back to rolling the dice on set-up and hoping to get lucky.

After the sprint — where Verstappen finished a reasonable fourth, albeit not on McLaren’s pace — the team gambled on reverting to its pre-Mexico floor as well as reportedly making ride-height and suspension changes.

Some of the modifications were educated guesses based on Yuki Tsunoda starting the race from pit lane to trial some set-up ideas, though the Japanese star’s lacklustre speed appeared to direct the team away from some ideas rather than guiding it towards a workable solution.

The result was a car with much less downforce, but on a track cleared of grip by rain, it also meant a car that simply lacked enough grip to be competitive.

The gamble spectacularly backfired on Saturday.

Verstappen’s championship hopes are dangling by a thread.

“I can forget about that,” he said, per Autosport. “With these kinds of performances, I mean, forget about it.”