Max Verstappen’s ruthless streak on show in battle with Norris
- class1group10term12
- Oct 29, 2024
- 4 min read
World champion is not only quick but he is clever and his aggression is on show once more

Max Verstappen (left) was on the wrong side of the driving guidelines at Mexico City when he clashed once more with Lando Norris (right). Photograph: Fernando Llano/AP
Two races and two flashpoints, the world championship battle between Max Verstappen and Lando Norris is in full flow. With the demonstrable full commitment of both protagonists, neither is leaving anything on the table for the final four races. Certainly the Mexico City Grand Prix on Sunday made clear Verstappen’s approach to securing his fourth title. He will be as ruthless as ever, perhaps because he is rattled like no time since Lewis Hamilton took him to the wire in 2021.
Norris and Verstappen had gone wheel to wheel at the previous round in Austin, with the Briton punished for going off track while trying to overtake the world champion. It was a decision many considered unfair in that Verstappen had deliberately been too hot into the corner and forced Norris off. There was disquiet and before Mexico a meeting with drivers and the FIA to discuss how to better define what are known as the driving guidelines, which govern what is legal in attacking and defending through a corner.
In Mexico once more they clashed and this time Verstappen was pulled up. Penalised once for forcing Norris wide in his defence at turn four and then shortly afterwards in launching a dive-bomb attack up the inside of turn seven and gaining a place in doing so by going off.
Norris finished second, five seconds back from the winner, Ferrari’s Carlos Sainz, while Verstappen, after his 20-second penalty, was sixth. The result enabled Norris to close the gap to his rival to 47 points, still a big ask but he remains optimistic, with the next round in Brazil this weekend.
Verstappen’s reaction, however, was perhaps instructive of how he viewed what happened in the race. “The problem is when you are slower you are being put in these kind of positions. I am not going to give up easily,” he said. “We are too slow. That is my problem.”
The suggestion appears to be that he has no issues in driving in an aggressive fashion – and one adjudged illegal in Mexico – when he feels he is forced to do so because he is on the back foot. Noticeably, an attitude that feels all too familiar from when Hamilton came at him with a quicker car in the closing stages of 2021 and the Dutchman employed similar tactics.

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