McLaren's Oscar Piastri ended a long win drought with a pole-to-flag victory in the Qatar Grand Prix sprint race on Saturday to trim teammate Lando Norris's Formula One championship lead to 22 points.
Mercedes's George Russell finished second, 4.951 seconds behind the Australian whose win was his first of any sort since the Dutch Grand Prix at the end of August but third Qatar sprint success in three years.
Norris started and finished third with Red Bull's four-times world champion Max Verstappen fourth and now 25 points adrift.
Norris has 396 points with Piastri on 374 and Verstappen on 371 with 50 remaining to be won, but only 25 after Sunday.
Qualifying for that main grand prix was following later, with Norris still in a position to win his first championship with a round to spare.
"I think the last couple of weekends has just been things going wrong rather than a lack of pace," Piastri said after 19 laps of the floodlit Lusail circuit.
“Here, everything’s gone smoothly so far, and the pace has been strong. It’s a track I’ve enjoyed in the past, and I’m enjoying it again, clearly."
Norris had recognised before the start that overtaking would be a problem and he was not wrong.
“It’s going to be a tough race tomorrow... it’s not easy to pass around here, it’s too difficult, so it’s all about qualifying,” he said.
Yuki Tsunoda finished fifth for Red Bull, after obligingly moving aside for teammate Verstappen on the opening lap, with Kimi Antonelli sixth for Mercedes after a five-second penalty for a track limits violation demoted him one place.
Fernando Alonso was seventh for Aston Martin, after starting fourth, and Carlos Sainz was eighth for Williams.
Piastri's win was his first in a sprint this season and he was never challenged or troubled from the moment the lights went out, with Russell and Norris almost touching in the race for the first corner but avoiding contact.
Verstappen complained again that the bouncing that had plagued him in qualifying was back but he still made up two places on his starting position.
Ferrari failed to score any points and fell ever further behind in the battle to be best of the rest behind McLaren, who have already clinched the constructors' title for a second successive season.
Charles Leclerc was 13th while seven-times world champion Lewis Hamilton started from the pitlane and finished 17th.
"I don't know how we made the car worse," said the Briton. "We started from the pit lane because we wanted to explore and make some changes. They had some things they found on the simulator last night.
“So we implemented those changes and the car was really in the wrong direction and very, very difficult for whatever reason, clearly for both of us."