Norris's Testimony Preserves Antonelli's Prime Grid Position for China Sprint
Kimi Antonelli has retained his second-place starting spot for the Formula 1 China sprint race following an explanation that involved input from Lando Norris. The McLaren driver's account proved instrumental in resolving the situation that threatened Antonelli's grid placement.

Kimi Antonelli will maintain his coveted second-place grid position for this weekend's China sprint race, avoiding a potential penalty that could have reshuffled the starting order. The McLaren driver's grid spot has been secured following a clarification regarding the circumstances in question, with crucial support coming from teammate Lando Norris.
Norris's explanation played a pivotal role in the stewards' decision to allow Antonelli to keep his front-row berth for the sprint competition. The intervention from the experienced McLaren driver proved decisive in preserving the Italian's qualifying result, ensuring he will line up directly behind pole position when the sprint commences.
The resolution represents a positive outcome for McLaren's grid prospects at the Chinese Grand Prix, with both drivers now set to contest the sprint race from strong starting positions.
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The Race
Related Regulations
Hover over badges for quick summaries, or scroll down for full official text and simplified explanations.
Full Regulation Text
Article 28.3
Grid Penalties
Chapter: Chapter II - General Undertaking
In Simple Terms
Grid penalties drop you down the starting order. They can come from engine component changes, causing collisions, or other infractions. Multiple penalties add up. If your penalty exceeds available grid positions, you start at the back and remaining penalty may become a race time penalty.
- Penalties drop starting position
- Multiple penalties are cumulative
- Excess penalties start from back of grid
- Remaining penalty may convert to time penalty
Official FIA Text
Any driver who incurs a penalty under these regulations will have a grid place penalty applied to their starting position for the next race. If multiple penalties are received, they will be applied cumulatively. Should the resulting grid position exceed the number of cars entered, the driver will start from the back of the grid with any remaining penalty converted to a time penalty during the race.
Article B2.3.1
Sprint Session
Chapter: B2
In Simple Terms
A Sprint Session is a shorter race that takes place on the second day of competition at certain F1 events (called Alternative Format Competitions). It's a way to add variety to the weekend and gives teams another chance to score points and battle for position before the main Sunday race.
- Sprint races occur on the second day of track running
- Only used at Alternative Format Competition events
- Provides additional racing and points-scoring opportunity
- Held separately from the main Grand Prix race
Official FIA Text
Sprint session takes place on second day of track running at Alternative Format Competition.
Article B1.10.2
Investigation of Incident
Chapter: B1
In Simple Terms
When stewards think something needs looking into during or after a race, they can start an investigation. If they decide to investigate, the involved drivers get a message and must stay at the circuit for up to 60 minutes while stewards review what happened. The stewards will only hand out a penalty if they believe a driver was clearly at fault for the incident.
- Stewards have the authority to investigate incidents at their discretion
- Drivers involved must be notified and cannot leave the circuit for up to 60 minutes after the race finish
- Penalties are only given if a driver is wholly or predominantly to blame
- Stewards decide whether an incident warrants a penalty after investigation
Official FIA Text
Stewards discretion to proceed with investigation. Message informing Competitors of involved drivers sent. If displayed within 60 minutes after TTCS finish, drivers may not leave circuit without stewards consent. Stewards decide if penalty warranted; no penalty unless driver wholly/predominantly to blame.
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