F1 champ Max Verstappen wins Brazilian GP; teammate Sergio Perez helps himself in push for season runner-up

AP photo by Andre Penner / Red Bull driver Max Verstappen, front, leads the pack in Formula One's Brazilian Grand Prix on Sunday in Sao Paulo.
AP photo by Andre Penner / Red Bull driver Max Verstappen, front, leads the pack in Formula One's Brazilian Grand Prix on Sunday in Sao Paulo.

SAO PAULO — Three-time reigning Formula One champion Max Verstappen led from the start to win the Brazilian Grand Prix on Sunday, adding to his record haul with a 17th GP win for the 2023 season.

Meanwhile, his Red Bull teammate Sergio Perez finished fourth, distancing himself from Mercedes' Lewis Hamilton in one of the few competitions left this season: the race for runner-up to Verstappen.

Perez nearly took the podium position from third-place Fernando Alonso of Aston Martin, but the Spaniard reached the checkered flag 0.053 second before the Mexican.

The two raced for the position in the three final laps of the race, with the Red Bull driver overtaking Alonso once and then losing the position.

"For me, it was like 30 laps," Alonso said after being chased by Perez. "I had the pressure from Checo, but when he passed me two laps to the end, I thought. 'OK, this is gone, the podium is not possible.' Then he braked a bit late into turn one."

McLaren's Lando Norris finished second.

Perez is 32 points ahead of Hamilton with two races left — in Las Vegas on Nov. 19 and in Abu Dhabi a week later. At a news conference after the race, Verstappen said it's not up to him to help his fellow Red Bull driver secure the runner-up position, though.

"It shouldn't always be on me to get the points," the 26-year-old Dutchman said.

Perez started the race at Interlagos in the ninth position with fan favorite Hamilton fifth after a frustrating qualifying for the Red Bull driver on Friday. He showed some improvement during the sprint race Saturday, and said later he was more confident for the main-event GP.

"I was happy with the weekend," Perez told broadcasters. "I just know I could have had more if I didn't get unlucky on Friday."

Ferrari's Charles Leclerc, who was going to start second, crashed during the formation lap before the start due to an engine problem.

"Disappointed to say the least. Lost the power steering and the engine power on the formation lap. It hurts," Leclerc said via social media after the race.

A red flag after the second lap because of a crash involving Kevin Magnussen of Haas and Williams' Alex Albon gave Red Bull drivers more time to seek improvement.

Verstappen never lost the lead, while Perez had an aggressive drive to face Hamilton. On the 18th lap, the Red Bull driver overtook the Mercedes for fifth place, much to the disappointment of Brazilian fans who support the seven-time F1 champion.

The international open-wheel series will race in Sao Paulo at least until 2030, organizers announced Friday.

"The whole race was about the management of the tires," Verstappen said. "Las Vegas will be new for everyone, full of surprises, I am sure."

"It is going to be very different from here. Low temperatures, street circuit, we don't know the track's grip," he added.

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