Skip to main content

Sign up for free

  • Get quick access to your favorite articles

  • Manage alerts on breaking news and favorite drivers

  • Make your voice heard with article commenting.

Autosport Plus

Discover premium content
Subscribe

Recommended for you

Pedro Acosta leads MotoGP standings after opener – but history says it’s no title guarantee

MotoGP
Thailand GP
Pedro Acosta leads MotoGP standings after opener – but history says it’s no title guarantee

Analysis: Mercedes versus its F1 customer teams – how can the gap be so large?

Formula 1
Australian GP
Analysis: Mercedes versus its F1 customer teams – how can the gap be so large?

How the Red Bull-Ford F1 engine project fared on its Australian GP debut

Formula 1
Australian GP
How the Red Bull-Ford F1 engine project fared on its Australian GP debut

Mercedes drew first blood in F1 2026 - but did Ferrari miss a prime opportunity?

Feature
Formula 1
Australian GP
Mercedes drew first blood in F1 2026 - but did Ferrari miss a prime opportunity?

McLaren has 0.5-1s performance gap to close to Mercedes after F1 Australian GP

Formula 1
Australian GP
McLaren has 0.5-1s performance gap to close to Mercedes after F1 Australian GP

Mercedes has "a fight on our hands with Ferrari" as true F1 pace order revealed

Formula 1
Australian GP
Mercedes has "a fight on our hands with Ferrari" as true F1 pace order revealed

Verstappen wants FIA to take action over F1 2026 rules

Formula 1
Australian GP
Verstappen wants FIA to take action over F1 2026 rules

Norris continues criticism of "very artificial" F1 2026 rules

Formula 1
Australian GP
Norris continues criticism of "very artificial" F1 2026 rules

F1 Chinese GP: Norris sets blistering pace in sole practice session, Leclerc second

Melbourne winner Lando Norris was at the head of the field as McLaren showed again it has the quickest car at the start of 2025

Lando Norris, McLaren

Lando Norris, McLaren

Photo by: Zak Mauger / Motorsport Images

Lando Norris needed the whole of the one and only practice session at the Formula 1 Chinese Grand Prix before he ultimately set the benchmark with a stunning lap.

With the pace of the McLaren a talking point heading into the second race weekend of the year, Norris was head and shoulders clear of the field with a time of 1m31.504s.

Charles Leclerc was the closest to matching Norris - 0.454 seconds adrift - as Ferrari showed more pace than throughout the Australian Grand Prix, while an error into the final corner of his last run left the sister McLaren of Oscar Piastri in third.

While the changeable weather from race day in Australia gave way to sunshine in Shanghai, a strong tailwind caught out a number of drivers throughout the sole practice session.

With China being the first sprint race of 2025, the six rookies had only this one hour to get to grips with the Shanghai International Circuit – quite literally as the track has been completely resurfaced from last year.

Lewis Hamilton was fourth for Ferrari as the Scuderia appeared the best equipped to challenge McLaren, while George Russell was fifth for Mercedes ahead of another impressive outing for Sauber’s Nico Hulkenberg and the Williams of Alex Albon.

Max Verstappen, Red Bull Racing

Max Verstappen, Red Bull Racing

Photo by: Simon Galloway / Motorsport Images

Max Verstappen set his fastest time on the medium tyre and ended the session down in 16th as four rookies occupied the last four places.

Jack Doohan’s session cut short by a power steering issue on his Alpine as Gabriel Bortoleto, Liam Lawson and Isack Hadjar all struggled.

Lawson had a Red Bull debut to forget in Australia and had an early run through the gravel here, too, while Yuki Tsunoda reported the new asphalt was offering up much more grip than previously.

Carlos Sainz laid down an early marker for Williams as the Spaniard hopes for a better weekend than his debut for the squad in Australia, where he crashed out under the first safety car having qualified behind new team-mate Albon.

But Sainz ultimately fell to 15th as it did not take long for the McLaren pair to clock times that took them ahead of the rest of the field, Piastri just edging clear of Melbourne race winner Norris.

The Ferraris of Hamilton and Leclerc enjoyed a spell at the top of the timesheets, although the latter spun off into the gravel at Turn 2 with 20 minutes of the session remaining.

It was Russell who was the fastest runner on the medium compound before the times fell later on.

Doohan’s session ended early, bringing out a red flag which cut even shorter the running available to teams ahead of sprint qualifying.

The short delay to clear Doohan’s stricken Alpine meant the majority of the field was queuing in the pitlane with soft tyres bolted on for their one and only qualifying-spec run.

FP1 result:

   
1
 - 
4
   
   
1
 - 
2
   
Cla Driver # Chassis Engine Laps Time Interval Tyres km/h
1 United Kingdom L. Norris McLaren 4 McLaren Mercedes 23

1'31.504

  S 214.456
2 Monaco C. Leclerc Ferrari 16 Ferrari Ferrari 21

+0.454

1'31.958

0.454 S 213.397
3 Australia O. Piastri McLaren 81 McLaren Mercedes 24

+0.649

1'32.153

0.195 S 212.945
4 United Kingdom L. Hamilton Ferrari 44 Ferrari Ferrari 22

+0.691

1'32.195

0.042 S 212.848
5 United Kingdom G. Russell Mercedes 63 Mercedes Mercedes 26

+0.873

1'32.377

0.182 M 212.429
6 Germany N. Hulkenberg Sauber 27 Sauber Ferrari 21

+1.003

1'32.507

0.130 S 212.130
7 Thailand A. Albon Williams 23 Williams Mercedes 24

+1.183

1'32.687

0.180 S 211.719
8 Spain F. Alonso Aston Martin Racing 14 Aston Martin Mercedes 23

+1.262

1'32.766

0.079 S 211.538
9 Italy A. Antonelli Mercedes 12 Mercedes Mercedes 27

+1.370

1'32.874

0.108 S 211.292
10 Japan Y. Tsunoda RB 22 RB Honda 23

+1.430

1'32.934

0.060 S 211.156
11 United Kingdom O. Bearman Haas F1 Team 87 Haas Ferrari 23

+1.463

1'32.967

0.033 S 211.081
12 Canada L. Stroll Aston Martin Racing 18 Aston Martin Mercedes 19

+1.480

1'32.984

0.017 S 211.042
13 France E. Ocon Haas F1 Team 31 Haas Ferrari 23

+1.552

1'33.056

0.072 S 210.879
14 France P. Gasly Alpine 10 Alpine Renault 23

+1.619

1'33.123

0.067 S 210.727
15 Spain C. Sainz Williams 55 Williams Mercedes 26

+1.641

1'33.145

0.022 S 210.677
16 Netherlands M. Verstappen Red Bull Racing 1 Red Bull Red Bull 24

+1.780

1'33.284

0.139 M 210.364
17 France I. Hadjar RB 6 RB Honda 23

+1.881

1'33.385

0.101 S 210.136
18 New Zealand L. Lawson Red Bull Racing 30 Red Bull Red Bull 23

+2.127

1'33.631

0.246 S 209.584
19 Brazil G. Bortoleto Sauber 5 Sauber Ferrari 24

+2.318

1'33.822

0.191 S 209.157
20 Australia J. Doohan Alpine 7 Alpine Renault 17

+2.419

1'33.923

0.101 M 208.932
Previous article Johnny Herbert on the man who made him, Eddie Jordan
Next article F1 drivers given clarification about swearing in "quite fair" Australia FIA discussion

Top Comments

Latest news