Lewis Hamilton rejected Max Verstappen’s in-race demand for a penalty following a prolonged and intense defensive battle at the Austrian Grand Prix on Sunday, saying Verstappen should have known better than to attempt a pass around the outside of a high-speed corner against a seven-time world champion.
The two old rivals engaged in one of the most compelling early-race battles of the season at the Red Bull Ring, with Hamilton defending his position for 22 consecutive laps before Verstappen finally found a way through. The confrontation at Turn 6 produced the most contentious moment of their duel.
What happened at Turn 6
Verstappen made his first significant attempt to pass Hamilton on lap 11, getting alongside at Turn 3 before losing the position on the run to Turn 4. The Red Bull locked up but still generated enough exit speed to draw alongside Hamilton again, this time positioning on the outside line through Turn 6.
With the Red Bull on the exterior of the corner, Hamilton took the inside apex, the preferred line through the turn, and the two cars ran side by side as they exited, with Verstappen pushed toward the gravel runoff area as the track narrowed. Verstappen called immediately over team radio for a penalty, describing the move as a clear case of forcing another driver off the track.
The stewards reviewed the incident and noted it as a possible violation but chose not to investigate after examining the footage. Their decision not to pursue the matter effectively validated Hamilton’s line through the corner.
Hamilton’s position on the incident
Hamilton was direct in his assessment after the race. He argued that attempting to pass a champion around the outside of a fast corner at that circuit carries an inherent risk, and that the onus was on the overtaking driver to accept that the inside line would be taken. He said Verstappen was behind at the apex of the corner, which is the determining factor in who has the right to the preferred line, and that he had left sufficient room for the Red Bull to avoid contact.
His broader point was about the unwritten understanding between experienced competitors at this level. Going around the outside at that kind of corner is a high-risk maneuver that requires the leading driver to surrender the racing line, something Hamilton was not prepared to do. Verstappen ultimately conceded the attempt and found a way through 11 laps later by positioning himself on the inside of the same corner, the approach that gave him clean air and left Hamilton without a viable response.
Red Bull’s performance concerned Hamilton more than the penalty dispute
After the race, Hamilton shifted his focus toward what he described as a significant performance step by Red Bull in Austria, suggesting the team had arrived with upgrades that reduced the car’s weight considerably and brought additional performance gains. He placed the combined improvement in the range of several tenths of a second, which in a competitive field translates directly to race positions and championship implications.
Hamilton started third and finished fifth, with Verstappen crossing the line in second. The result left Hamilton reflecting not so much on the turn confrontation as on what Red Bull’s Austrian form suggests for the races ahead. He described them as a force to be reckoned with over the coming rounds, a characterization that carried both respect and concern from someone in direct championship competition with Verstappen.
The stewards’ decision not to act on the Turn 6 incident means it will remain a matter of interpretation rather than regulation. Both drivers know they will meet again under similar circumstances before the season is over.

