F1 News, Reports and Race Results

Lawson stunned by order to let Verstappen through in Miami GP

Tensions flared early in the Miami Grand Prix when Liam Lawson found himself at the centre of a controversial on-track moment involving Max Verstappen – and an unexpected team instruction that left the Racing Bulls driver questioning the call.

The incident unfolded just moments after the race start, when Verstappen, having spun at Turn 2 from a front-row grid slot, attempted to recover positions through the field.

His charge brought him into direct combat with Lawson at Turn 11, where the pair ran side-by-side before both cars were forced off the track.

Lawson rejoined ahead, seemingly having won the exchange. Verstappen, however, reacted angrily over team radio, calling Lawson an “idiot” while the Kiwi himself was left puzzled by the move.

“I don’t know what Max was doing there,” he said over the radio as he recovered from the skirmish.

Sudden instruction sparks confusion

Despite the intensity of the moment, it wasn’t until several corners later that Lawson’s race engineer intervened – with a clear directive that caught the RB charger off guard.

“Liam, we need to give the position back to Max,” said engineer Alexandre Iliopoulos. “We need to give the position to Max. 1.3 behind. Behind him, 1.3 Albon. Do it as soon as possible.”

©RB

Lawson complied immediately, yielding the place to his former Red Bull stablemate without resistance. But the decision left lingering doubts in his mind after the race, particularly as he believed he had not gained an unfair advantage.

“I didn’t think I had to give the place back, but apparently I did,” Lawson told reporters. “It’s close racing, but I wasn't really going to be fighting today anyway.”

Race unravels after early setback

Indeed, any chance for Lawson to recover from the incident soon faded. A gearbox failure four laps later race abruptly ended his afternoon, sending his car into the path of Pierre Gasly and forcing an early retirement.

But even before the mechanical issue, Lawson sensed that his race prospects were limited by an uncooperative car.

“At that point I didn't know, but I think a couple of laps after that I realised we had not a very good balance,” he said.

“So it would have been hard to stay in the top 10, but I think we could have done that today, and scored at least a couple of points.”

While the clash itself with Verstappen was brief, the aftermath – particularly the swift instruction to relinquish position – adds another layer to the ongoing scrutiny of racing rules and team interventions in Formula 1.

For Lawson, the Miami Grand Prix became less about results and more about a split-second decision that continues to prompt debate: when is a move fair, and when must it be undone?

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Michael Delaney

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