It’s not been an easy season for Liam Lawson, demoted from Red Bull Racing and then largely overshadowed of late by his Racing Bulls team mate Isack Hadjar.
While the Frenchman appears to have all but guaranteed his graduation to the senior team next season Lawson finds himself in a fight to retain his seat in a three-into-two scenario with Yuki Tsunoda and Arvid Lindblad.
Logic suggests that if the F2 driver is promoted – and not everyone in the camp is convinced that he is ready – then Lawson is the favourite to stay on. That would leave Tsunoda without a race seat, and potentially facing a future as reserve – unless Honda helps him to a third driver role at Aston Martin.
Nothing is fixed however. Thus a strong performance from Lawson in Baku that saw him held off a train of cars led by none other than Tsunoda came with perfect timing, and his fifth place will have done him a lot of good.
A great lap in Q3 saw him briefly second on the grid behind Carlos Sainz before Max Verstappen pipped them both.
Third was still a great outcome, but he knew that holding onto it with the two Mercedes immediately behind, and the two McLarens and two Ferraris further back and potentially able to make progress if the race turned into a safety car fest, was always going to be difficult.
In the end Lawson lost out only to the two Brackley cars as George Russell and Kimi Antonelli pushed him down to fifth. It was a decent result, and the confident way in which he kept a pack of potentially faster cars at bay would have done him a lot of good in the Red Bull camp.
“I don’t think we had the speed today to finish on the podium, as much as I would have loved it,” he said when I asked about his race. “And when you start there, obviously part of you tries to make it possible, or feels like it’s possible, and we tried everything today.
“I think we made the right call on pit stops. Tried to cover Kimi, but we just didn’t have the speed today. Part of it’s frustrating, but I think looking at it as a big picture, it’s a great result to finish fifth, and we’ll take that going forward.”
He initially stayed ahead of Antonelli when he came out the pits a couple of laps about the Mercedes rookie had stopped, but the Italian got by him on the straight at the end of the lap.
“I ran out of energy,” he acknowledged. “So frustrating! You see the bar, and you get to the straight, and you know that halfway down the straight you’re going to have nothing left.
“So it’s something I learned from and I made sure that when the next pack of cars came, it never happened. I made sure through the lap that I always had the energy.
“So yeah, big learning point for me in the race. But I think realistically, he [Antonelli] finished 10 seconds or something in front of me, so I don’t think I would have kept him behind for 30-odd laps. It was hard enough to keep the other group behind me.”
Staying ahead of Tsunoda, who had Lando Norris, Lewis Hamilton and Charles Leclerc lined up behind him, was far from easy. The Japanese driver had run the opposite strategy to Lawson, having started on the hard.
“For sure, he’s on a fresh set of tyres, on a medium and a grippier tyre, and honestly, I was preparing for him to end up catching me quicker, and I expected him to be faster. Obviously, looking at Max today, they had a great race, and the car looks good.
“So I think when I saw him come out on a better tyre, I was expecting him to catch me faster. But I think our sector three was strong this weekend, where he needed to be. And as I said, for that mistake with Kimi, I made sure that I never ran out of energy again.”
The fact that of all people it was Tsunoda leading the chase was an intriguing twist, especially after the two of them collided at the previous race in Monza, leaving Yuki with damage that compromised his race.
However Lawson insists that their battle for a 2026 seat was not on his mind.
“It’s probably easier to look in and think like that, but when you’re in the car I know the position I’m in. Actually to be honest, I had no idea what position I was in until we crossed the line! But I knew we were in a decent position because of all the cars that were behind me.
“So naturally, you’re just trying to keep the car behind. It was the same with Leclerc. It was the same with Kimi at the start. And at the end of the race obviously, I’m going to try to take a bit more risk to keep it there. So I don’t really think too much like that.”
Fifth was the best result of Lawson’s career to date, and while Tsunoda also enjoyed his strongest race of 2025 in sixth, the Kiwi is looking like a better long-term prospect to stay in the Red Bull family. Hadjar may have quite rightly stolen the headlines, but Lawson has also been a solid top 10 performer at most races since Monaco.
“It’s extremely positive,” he said. “I think the main thing is our car has been consistently good across the board at all sorts of different tracks. So that’s something that is very positive for us.
“And going forward, obviously we need to try and keep that consistency, and if we can just find a little bit more where we’re fighting for very good results. And I think ultimately, today, we didn’t quite have the speed for Williams, but to finish where we are, if we can consistently do that, it’s very strong for us.”
He added: “It’s a consistent car. I think it’s something that we can definitely be proud of that across the board at all sorts of different tracks it’s consistently fast. Doesn’t mean it’s easy to drive, but the speed is in the car, and that’s been something we’ve been able to utilise across the season so far.”