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Verstappen and Russell Deliver Verdicts on Dramatic Collision

The chaos unfolded after a Safety Car was deployed on Lap 61 of 66, triggered by a mechanical failure that left Mercedes’ Kimi Antonelli stranded in the gravel at Turn 10.
By Pete NjomoJune 1, 20254 Mins Read
Max Verstappen and George Russell collision

A late-race collision between Red Bull’s Max Verstappen and Mercedes’ George Russell sparked heated debate and significant consequences at the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya. The incident, which occurred in the closing stages of the race, led to a 10-second time penalty and three penalty points for Verstappen, dropping him from fifth to tenth place and leaving him just one point shy of a race ban. Both drivers offered starkly different perspectives on the dramatic moment that reshaped the race’s outcome.

The chaos unfolded after a Safety Car was deployed on Lap 61 of 66, triggered by a mechanical failure that left Mercedes’ Kimi Antonelli stranded in the gravel at Turn 10. Most frontrunners, including race leader Oscar Piastri and his McLaren teammate Lando Norris, pitted for fresh soft tires, setting the stage for a six-lap sprint to the finish. Verstappen, however, was forced to switch to hard tires—the only compound Red Bull had left—leaving him vulnerable to attacks from rivals on grippier rubber. As the race resumed, Verstappen suffered a significant slide exiting the final corner, allowing Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc to overtake him for third place, with minor contact between the two that was later deemed a racing incident by the stewards.

Russell, running in fifth, seized the opportunity to challenge Verstappen at Turn 1, diving down the inside. The two made contact, with Verstappen forced onto the escape road but retaining fourth place. Red Bull’s race engineer, Gianpiero Lambiase, instructed Verstappen to cede the position to Russell, believing the Dutchman had gained an advantage by going off-track. Verstappen, visibly frustrated over team radio, reluctantly complied on Lap 65, slowing into Turn 5 to let Russell pass. However, in a move that stunned observers, Verstappen accelerated again, colliding with the side of Russell’s Mercedes at the apex of the corner. The contact caused minor damage to both cars, but both continued, with Verstappen finally yielding the position at Turn 12.

The stewards swiftly issued a 10-second penalty to Verstappen for causing the collision, along with three penalty points, bringing his 12-month total to 11—just one short of an automatic one-race ban. The penalty demoted him to tenth, costing Red Bull valuable points in a race dominated by McLaren’s Piastri and Norris, who secured a 1-2 finish.

Russell, who finished fourth, was scathing in his assessment of Verstappen’s actions. Speaking to the media, he described the maneuver as “totally unnecessary” and likened it to tactics seen in simulator racing or karting, not Formula 1. “I just got crashed into,” Russell said. “I don’t really know why or what the thinking was behind it. It’s a shame for all the young kids looking up and aspiring to be Formula 1 drivers. Max is one of the best in the world, but maneuvers like that let him down.” Russell emphasized that the incident cost Verstappen and Red Bull far more, noting that he emerged unscathed in terms of points while Verstappen’s penalty dropped him behind drivers like Sauber’s Nico Hulkenberg and Ferrari’s Lewis Hamilton. “He could have fought for a podium,” Russell added. “Charles dropped off at the end, but Max risked damaging his own car and a penalty for no real reason.”

Verstappen, however, was defiant and dismissive when questioned about the incident. While acknowledging his frustration with Red Bull’s strategy and the hard tire disadvantage, he downplayed the collision’s significance. “Does it matter? I prefer to speak about the race, not one single moment,” he told reporters. When pressed on whether the move damaged his reputation, Verstappen retorted, “That’s your opinion,” before denying that the contact was deliberate. He argued that the earlier incident at Turn 1, where Russell’s move forced him off-track, justified his position, though the stewards later clarified that no penalty was warranted for that clash, meaning Red Bull’s order to give the place back was unnecessary.

George Russell Max Verstappen Mercedes Red Bull Spanish Grand Prix

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