Sports

George Russell claims 4th straight win in virtual F1 Canadian Grand Prix

Williams driver George Russell took his fourth successive virtual Formula One victory on Sunday in the virtual Canadian Grand Prix, the last race before the real season starts in Austria next month.

Canada's Nicholas Latifi finishes 7th in final race before real season starts

George Russell started on pole position and beat Red Bull's Alex Albon into second place in the virtual Formula One Canadian Grand Prix on Sunday. (CBC Sports)

Williams driver George Russell took his fourth successive virtual Formula One victory on Sunday in the last race before the real season starts in Austria next month.

With Ferrari's Charles Leclerc absent, the Briton had already 'won' a fun series designed to fill the gap left by the Australian opener being canceled in March due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

The 22-year-old, who failed to score a point in the real world last year as Williams struggled, started on pole position and beat Red Bull's Alex Albon into second place in the virtual Canadian Grand Prix.

Mexican Esteban Gutierrez was third for Mercedes.

WATCH | Russell wins virtual Canadian Grand Prix:

George Russell wins in virtual Montreal for 4th straight GP victory

4 years ago
Duration 1:17
George Russell finishes 1st in the virtual Canadian Grand Prix for his 4th consecutive win of the series.

For a second straight race, Russell's Williams teammate Nicholas Latifi, who is from Toronto, finished in 7th place.

The race, shown live on Formula One's digital platforms and broadcast partners, took place on the day the postponed Montreal race would have happened.

Albon collected a series of time penalties for exceeding track limits late in the race, leaving Russell comfortably ahead at the end.

"It's been great. It's kept us entertained, kept us busy that's for sure. And it's kept the competitive side of us busy and interested," said Russell.

"Having this opportunity to race against all of us, our mates, has been great fun along the way. I've put a lot of hard work and effort in and I'm glad we got some good results to show for it."

Leclerc, who was racing in the virtual 24 Hours of Le Mans for Ferrari, had led the standings after two wins in a row before Russell got himself a simulator and rose to the challenge.

"He's extremely quick now," said Albon, who refused an offer from Russell for him to slow down to make the racing more exciting for fans.

"In the beginning Charles looked like the quick one and George has come through and just destroyed all of us. I've just been an average P2 the whole way. Average Alex."

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