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F1 Drivers’ Championship: Updated standings after Max Verstappen wins Las Vegas

F1 Drivers’ Championship: Updated standings after Max Verstappen wins Las Vegas

Max Verstappen’s win at the Las Vegas Grand Prix, coupled with disqualifications for both Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri, has rocked the top of the Formula 1 Drivers’ Championship standings.

Verstappen now sits just 24 points behind Norris, who remains the leader in the Drivers’ Championship race. But Verstappen has pulled level with Piastri in the standings, and remains alive in his pursuit of a fifth title.

Here is a look at the updated Drivers’ Championship standings, what changed at the Las Vegas Grand Prix, and what is on the line next weekend at the Qatar Grand Prix.

F1 Drivers’ Championship standings

Here is the updated F1 Drivers’ Championship table following the Las Vegas Grand Prix:

Position

Driver

Team

Points

Change

1 Lando Norris McLaren 390
2 Oscar Piastri McLaren 366
3 Max Verstappen Red Bull 366
4 George Russell Mercedes 294
5 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 226
6 Lewis Hamilton Ferrari 152
7 Kimi Antonelli Mercedes 137
8 Alexander Albon Williams 73
9 Isack Hadjar VCARB 51 +1
10 Nico Hülkenberg Sauber 49 -1
11 Carlos Sainz Jr. Williams 48 +2
12 Oliver Bearman Haas 41 -1
13 Fernando Alonso Aston Martin 40 -1
14 Liam Lawson VCARB 36
16 Esteban Ocon Haas 32 +1
15 Lance Stroll Aston Martin 32 -1
17 Yuki Tsunoda Red Bull 28
18 Pierre Gasly Alpine 22
19 Gabriel Bortoleto Sauber 19
20 Franco Colapinto Alpine 0
21 Jack Doohan Alpine 0

As noted at the outset, Verstappen is now tied with Piastri, and both drivers are 24 points behind Norris. Piastri remains ahead of Verstappen on the tiebreaker for now (Piastri has seven Grand Prix wins while Verstappen has six).

Norris also has seven Grand Prix wins this season.

Beyond the top three, results in Las Vegas led to some changes in the pecking order. Isack Hadjar finished sixth, one spot ahead of Nico Hülkenberg, and that moved him ahead of the Sauber driver for ninth in the standings. Carlos Sainz Jr. was qualified fifth after the disqualifications of Norris and Piastri, and he moved up two spots to 11th, jumping ahead of Oliver Bearman and Fernando Alonso.

And a ninth-place finish for Esteban Ocon pulled him even with Lance Stroll on points, but with Ocon’s fifth-place finish at the Chinese Grand Prix, the Haas driver wins the tiebreaker between the two.

What is at stake at the Qatar Grand Prix?

Next weekend’s Qatar Grand Prix is not only the penultimate race weekend of the 2025 F1 season, but it represents the final F1 Sprint weekend of the campaign.

Prior to the Las Vegas Grand Prix, there was a scenario where Norris could have clinched the title in the F1 Sprint race on Saturday. However, that scenario is now out the window.

Still, Norris could theoretically clinch his first Drivers’ Championship on Sunday.

Even if Norris were to win the F1 Sprint race in Qatar — while Piastri and Verstappen finished outside the points — he would have a 30-point lead over his two title rivals. A win in an F1 Sprint race is worth eight points. But with 50 points still available from the two remaining grands prix, he could not clinch.

But following the Qatar Grand Prix, there will be a maximum of 25 points available in the season finale to the driver who wins the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix. This means that if he outscores both Piastri and Verstappen by at least two points each over the weekend in Qatar, Norris will clinch the 2025 F1 Drivers’ Championship.

The simplest way for Norris to clinch? Win both the F1 Sprint race and the Qatar Grand Prix. That would give him 33 points, and even if the same driver finished second in both, that driver would only pick up 25 points. Norris would have 423 points in this scenario, while the other driver would have 391.

If you would like to work through the various title permutations, RaceFans has a championship calculator you can use.

While that may be the cleanest way for Norris to clinch, nothing in this sport is easy.

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#Drivers #Championship #Updated #standings #Max #Verstappen #wins #Las #Vegas

On Selection Monday, the Auburn Tigers were slotted in as the fourth overall team in the NCAA baseball field, thanks to a 38-19 overall record against the toughest schedule in all of college baseball. Their reward? A spot as a regional host, and a first-game date with Milwaukee out of the Horizon League, a 25-31 team that secured a spot in the field after winning the conference tournament.

Even better, Auburn would be sending left-hander Jake Marciano to the mound, he of the 2.65 ERA and 0.97 WHIP.

To say things were set up well for the Tigers would be putting it mildly. But by the top of the first inning the Panthers had put six runs on the board, Marciano was already in the showers, and Milwaukee was on its way to a stunning 13-8 win, putting Auburn on the brink of elimination.

The Panthers hung four runs on the board in the top of the first. A single from designated hitter Dom Kibler brought two runs home, staking Milwaukee to the early lead. That brought left fielder Bradyn Horn to the dish with a pair of runners aboard.

In the blink of an eye, it was 4-0 Panthers:

It was the fifth home run of the year for Horn, and an unexpected start to the contest. And after keeping the Tigers scoreless in the bottom of the first, Milwaukee chased Marciano in the top of the second with two more runs.

Milwaukee held a 6-0 lead in the top of the fourth, when they broke into double digits. Third baseman Grant Ross singled to bring home Connor Bozak, bringing Charlie Marion to the plate with a pair of Panthers aboard.

That’s when Marion blasted his 13th home run of the season:

Auburn would start chipping away at Milwaukee’s lead, and a blast from Eric Guevara in the bottom of the seventh cut the Panthers’ advantage to 12-7. And the Tigers got out of a bases-loaded jam in the eighth, when Jett Johnston struck out Horn to keep Auburn within five.

But the Tigers could not complete the comeback.

Riley Peterson held Auburn scoreless in the eighth, retiring the side in order with a strikeout and a pair of groundouts. Milwaukee pushed another run across in the ninth, when Marion walked with the bases loaded, the fourth walk given up by Auburn pitchers in the frame.

The Tigers loaded the bases in the ninth and got a sacrifice fly from Guevara to cut the score to 13-8, but Peterson got catcher Chase Fralick to line out to center for the final out.

The celebration was on in the Panthers’ dugout.

For Milwaukee, it was just the second NCAA tournament win in program history, the first coming back in 1999 when the Panthers knocked off Rice. Milwaukee finished the afternoon having gone 8-for-16 with runners in scoring position, and the 13 runs were the most scored by the team in their NCAA tournament history.

As for the Tigers, they became just the sixth top four national seed in NCAA tournament history to lose a regional opener, joining Alabama (No. 3, 2002), Georgia Tech (No. 3, 2003), Florida State (No. 4, 2008), Baylor (No. 4, 2012), Florida (No. 2, 2014), and North Carolina (No. 2, 2017).

The Tigers will hope to join an even smaller list with Florida State and Baylor, as those two teams still went on to win their regional.

Milwaukee will take on the winner of No. 3 NC State and No. 2 UCF, while Auburn will face the loser of that contest in an elimination game.

#NCAA #baseball #tournament #Milwaukee #stuns #Auburn">NCAA baseball tournament 2026: Milwaukee stuns Auburn  On Selection Monday, the Auburn Tigers were slotted in as the fourth overall team in the NCAA baseball field, thanks to a 38-19 overall record against the toughest schedule in all of college baseball. Their reward? A spot as a regional host, and a first-game date with Milwaukee out of the Horizon League, a 25-31 team that secured a spot in the field after winning the conference tournament.Even better, Auburn would be sending left-hander Jake Marciano to the mound, he of the 2.65 ERA and 0.97 WHIP.To say things were set up well for the Tigers would be putting it mildly. But by the top of the first inning the Panthers had put six runs on the board, Marciano was already in the showers, and Milwaukee was on its way to a stunning 13-8 win, putting Auburn on the brink of elimination.The Panthers hung four runs on the board in the top of the first. A single from designated hitter Dom Kibler brought two runs home, staking Milwaukee to the early lead. That brought left fielder Bradyn Horn to the dish with a pair of runners aboard.In the blink of an eye, it was 4-0 Panthers:It was the fifth home run of the year for Horn, and an unexpected start to the contest. And after keeping the Tigers scoreless in the bottom of the first, Milwaukee chased Marciano in the top of the second with two more runs.Milwaukee held a 6-0 lead in the top of the fourth, when they broke into double digits. Third baseman Grant Ross singled to bring home Connor Bozak, bringing Charlie Marion to the plate with a pair of Panthers aboard.That’s when Marion blasted his 13th home run of the season:Auburn would start chipping away at Milwaukee’s lead, and a blast from Eric Guevara in the bottom of the seventh cut the Panthers’ advantage to 12-7. And the Tigers got out of a bases-loaded jam in the eighth, when Jett Johnston struck out Horn to keep Auburn within five.But the Tigers could not complete the comeback.Riley Peterson held Auburn scoreless in the eighth, retiring the side in order with a strikeout and a pair of groundouts. Milwaukee pushed another run across in the ninth, when Marion walked with the bases loaded, the fourth walk given up by Auburn pitchers in the frame.The Tigers loaded the bases in the ninth and got a sacrifice fly from Guevara to cut the score to 13-8, but Peterson got catcher Chase Fralick to line out to center for the final out.The celebration was on in the Panthers’ dugout.For Milwaukee, it was just the second NCAA tournament win in program history, the first coming back in 1999 when the Panthers knocked off Rice. Milwaukee finished the afternoon having gone 8-for-16 with runners in scoring position, and the 13 runs were the most scored by the team in their NCAA tournament history.As for the Tigers, they became just the sixth top four national seed in NCAA tournament history to lose a regional opener, joining Alabama (No. 3, 2002), Georgia Tech (No. 3, 2003), Florida State (No. 4, 2008), Baylor (No. 4, 2012), Florida (No. 2, 2014), and North Carolina (No. 2, 2017).The Tigers will hope to join an even smaller list with Florida State and Baylor, as those two teams still went on to win their regional.Milwaukee will take on the winner of No. 3 NC State and No. 2 UCF, while Auburn will face the loser of that contest in an elimination game.  #NCAA #baseball #tournament #Milwaukee #stuns #Auburn

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