Miami, FL
Ben Anderson's 2024 F1 Miami Grand Prix driver rankings
Formula 1’s third Miami Grand Prix was by far its most entertaining as first-time winner Lando Norris defeated Max Verstappen.
But was Norris the top performer of the weekend? And who else impressed?
Here’s the verdict from Ben Anderson (subbing in for Edd Straw this weekend) on which drivers performed best across the whole weekend.
How do the rankings work? The 20 drivers will be ranked in order of performance from best to worst on each grand prix weekend. This will be based on the full range of criteria, ranging from pace and racecraft to consistency and whether they made key mistakes. How close each driver got to delivering on the maximum performance potential of the car will be an essential consideration.
It’s important to note both that this reflects performance across the entire weekend, cognisant of the fact that qualifying is effectively ‘lap 0’ of the race and key to laying the foundations to the race, and that it is not a ranking of the all-round qualities of each driver. It’s simply about how they performed on a given weekend. Therefore, the ranking will fluctuate significantly from weekend to weekend.
And with each of the 10 cars fundamentally having different performance potential and ‘luck’ (ie factors outside of a driver’s control) contributing to the way the weekend plays out, this ranking will also differ significantly from the overall results.
Started: 6th Finished: 13th
On a weekend when pretty much everyone, including his race-winning team-mate, made errors, Piastri’s performance really stood out for how clean and efficient it was.
His McLaren was light on upgraded parts, and reckoned to be 0.2s per lap down on Norris’s according to the team, but Piastri was within that margin of Norris throughout qualifying – and ahead in Q2.
Piastri’s first lap in the race was superb – and he put moves on Charles Leclerc, kept Verstappen in check through the first stint and got inside Carlos Sainz’s head later in the race too.
Until the safety car gave Norris his chance to take control, I’d argue Piastri was the more consistent and marginally more impressive McLaren driver in Miami.
Verdict: A highly effective drive that didn’t get the result it merited.
Started: 2nd Finished: 3rd
Not a perfect weekend from Leclerc, but a pretty strong one overall.
He paid a heavy price for a small mistake in FP1 and basically missed all of that session as a consequence, but his recovery from that was exemplary in extracting pretty much the maximum from the Ferrari in both qualifying sessions and the sprint race.
I’m not sure the Ferrari was quite worthy of the podium here in normal circumstances, so Leclerc finishing third – without benefitting from the safety car timing – probably represents a slight overachievement.
Verdict: Not much in it, but marginally the better Ferrari driver.
Started: 5th Finished: 1st
The final stint after the safety car restart was obviously superb from Norris. There’s not been many races over the past three seasons where someone has genuinely driven away from Verstappen.
But up until the safety car gave him that crucial track position boost, I feel Norris had slightly underdelivered in the heavily upgraded McLaren – in both qualifying sessions – and was having to work too hard to extract a podium finish from a car that was clearly fast enough to win.
Verdict: Supreme final stint, but not a complete weekend.
Started: 1st Finished: 2nd
It’s almost frightening to consider how, even on a weekend such as this when he’s not comfortable in the car and making small mistakes, Verstappen is still basically dominating everyone.
He couldn’t get the two axles balanced properly in either qualifying session, but no one stepped up to take the chance to beat him. OK, he was eventually beaten in the grand prix, but there’s little doubt in my mind that the safety car intervention, as well as handing track position to Norris, also cost Verstappen the chance to fire up those hard tyres properly. By the time he did, the race was lost.
Verdict: Not his best or cleanest weekend, but still strong enough.

Started: 10th Finished: 7th
Tsunoda continues to put himself near the front of the queue of the midfield interlopers ready to pounce if any drivers from the top five teams underperform or hit trouble.
This time it was Mercedes and Aston Martin tripping up and Tsunoda was right there to capitalise, nestling between the two faster Mercedes cars and genuinely outpacing George Russell’s over the final stint of the grand prix.
Going out early in SQ2 is about the only thing Tsunoda did wrong this weekend.
Verdict: Another strong performance picking off inherently faster cars.
Started: 8th Finished: 6th
There were a couple of occasions this weekend when the Mercedes W15 somehow got the tricky Pirelli tyres into the correct working temperature range, where Hamilton was absolutely mighty.
His Q2 lap was so good he lapped within two tenths of Verstappen and Leclerc, and Hamilton’s final race stint after the safety car restart was also impressive, as he fired up the medium compound, despatched Tsunoda and menaced Sergio Perez’s Red Bull.
He was lucky to get away with hitting Alonso in the sprint, lost a point from that race to a speeding penalty, and slightly underperformed in Q3 compared to Russell, but was very good in the grand prix itself.
Verdict: Probably his best Sunday of the season so far.
Started: 13th Finished: 10th
Ocon is driving well this season and there was almost nothing to choose between him and Gasly at the business end of this weekend.
It was impressive to see him go wheel-to-wheel with his team-mate for almost half of the first lap of the grand prix without making contact, and although he lost that fight Ocon did win on-track skirmishes with Fernando Alonso’s Aston Martin and Nico Hulkenberg’s Haas.
It’s just a shame Ocon’s pace fell away a bit across the final stint and he lost out again to the Aston.
Verdict: Slightly underwhelming in qualifying but a really strong race.
Started: 12th Finished: 12th
Gasly finally got his hands on the upgraded, lighter Alpine chassis and floor that team-mate Ocon had first dibs on in China – and mostly put it to very good use.
Considering the lack of track time on a sprint weekend, and being a race behind in terms of familiarity with the updated car, Gasly drove well in the sprint and did a good job to shade Ocon in grand prix qualifying.
An inferior strategy of pitting early meant he got trapped in the Hulkenberg DRS train and that cost Gasly his chance of being in the mix for that final point.
Verdict: Couldn’t make things happen in the race, but impressive underlying pace.
Started: 3rd Finished: 5th
Sainz would have been higher in this list had he not gone to pieces during that late-race battle with Piastri. Up until the safety car reset things, Sainz was looking quite strong and in contention to finish on the podium depending on how the strategies shook out.
His underlying pace was within a tenth of Leclerc’s, and Sainz was also quite unlucky to not gain track position, having outgunned his team-mate at the start but almost been collected by Perez’s wayward Red Bull at Turn 1.
LAP 35 / 57
Sainz is on the radio demanding Piastri give back P4 after this moment 👀#F1 #MiamiGP pic.twitter.com/Ov7aHdEcDG
— Formula 1 (@F1) May 5, 2024
Sainz is normally so calm and collected, but he took exception to the way Piastri defended position into Turn 11 – fairly, the stewards concluded under 2024’s new racing guidelines – and seemed to lose his head thereafter.
The move Sainz pulled at Turn 17 was out-of-control and a bit desperate – and it completely ruined Piastri’s race.
Verdict: Strong pace again, but let Piastri get into his head.

Started: 4th Finished: 4th
Not Perez’s most effective weekend really. Probably the best thing he did was make sure Daniel Ricciardo didn’t embarrass him by beating the Red Bull to third in the sprint race. The move Perez pulled there was decisive and crucial, and something Sainz couldn’t manage.
But Perez let both Ferraris sneak ahead in grand prix qualifying, then decided to go full Mexico 2023 kamikaze-spec into Turn 1 and came within a hair of wiping Verstappen out of the lead.
Perez never found a rhythm after that and his pace during the final stint was disappointing, losing him contact with the leading cars and forcing him into a rearguard action against Hamilton’s Mercedes.
Verdict: OK result, but a laboured performance.
Started: 9th Finished: 11th
Up until the end of the first six or so laps of the grand prix, Hulkenberg was a serious contender for the top two or three in this ranking.
He’d been fast and consistent all weekend, scored strongly in the sprint race, qualified very well for the grand prix itself and had just forced his way ahead of Hamilton’s Mercedes.
But then it all unravelled. A relatively early pitstop to get off the medium and onto the hard tyre didn’t work and Hulkenberg went backwards in his second stint.
He was a bit better once the mediums went back on for the final part of the race, but two stops was one stop too many regardless and by the time Hulkenberg rediscovered his rhythm the damage was done.
Verdict: Outstanding underlying pace but a disappointing race.
Started: 15th Finished: 9th
For a large part of this weekend the extraordinary, overachieving version of Alonso appeared to have vacated the paddock. He was slower than Lance Stroll in both qualifying sessions, only 15th on the grid and lamenting some misguided set-up changes.
But Alonso did a much, much better job in the race, making the same one-stop strategy as Hamilton (hard/medium) work and salvaging two points by forcing his way back past Ocon in the final stint.
Verdict: His most muted weekend of 2024 but you can never count him out.
Started: 7th Finished: 8th
A difficult weekend characterised by losing crucial ground at the start of the races and not being able to coax useful grip out of the tyres over a stint.
Russell got stuck behind Logan Sargeant’s Williams and Zhou Guanyu’s Sauber in the sprint race, after the first corner three-way between Hamilton and the Astons, and could only really hang with Hamilton in the first stint of the grand prix (despite starting on the faster tyre) before dropping away from Tsunoda’s RB on the hard tyre at the end.
Kept it clean at least, and Russell also retained the tiniest edge of absolute qualifying pace over Hamilton this weekend.
Verdict: His least effectual weekend of 2024 so far.
Started: 20th Finished: 15th
Full disclaimer: the only reason Ricciardo isn’t towards the bottom of this ranking is that absolutely mega sprint performance, where he qualified and finished inside the top four, scored his first points of the season and looked again like the Mexico 2023 version of himself that deserves to stake a claim to Perez’s Red Bull seat.
The rest of Ricciardo’s weekend was poor. He was so mystified by his Q1 exit that he blamed a dud set of Pirellis while admitting he had no evidence for that claim.
And where Alonso and Hamilton made a hard/medium one-stop strategy work to great effect, Ricciardo made basically no progress at all save for incidents in front of him.
Verdict: Ricciardo fans, just cling to how good that sprint was.

Started: 11th Finished: 17th
It’s not often that Stroll puts Alonso in the shade, and the job he did in Saturday’s qualifying session was even more impressive considering he had to revert to a pre-Japan car spec following the damage done in that first-lap sprint collision – for which, it must be said, Stroll was at least partly to blame.
His grand prix was OK except he got stuck behind Gasly after making an early pistop, then made another one, then got stuck behind Ricciardo for a time, and then undid his result by overtaking Alex Albon’s Williams illegally.
Verdict: Decent underlying performance but couldn’t convert it.
Started: 17th Finished: DNF
This was one of those rare weekends when Sargeant’s underlying pace was comparable to Albon’s, and it was also one of those even rarer weekends when Sargeant was driving more cleanly and making fewer mistakes than his team-mate.
Sargeant produced a quietly effective but ultimately unrewarded drive to 10th in the sprint and was running comfortably within two or three seconds of Albon throughout the grand prix until Magnussen decided to leave his nose in where it didn’t really belong.
Verdict: One of his better weekends but no reward.
Started: 19th Finished: 14th
Did a good job to beat his team-mate Valtteri Bottas in both sprint qualifying and the sprint itself, but then underperformed in qualifying for the grand prix – even before missing the cutoff to complete his final run, Zhou was almost three tenths off Bottas’s pace.
He made a very respectable job of the first part of the grand prix, getting ahead of Bottas and Magnussen’s Haas and pretty much running at the pace of Alonso’s Aston.
Zhou’s final stint on the soft tyre didn’t go well, though, and he got picked off by Hulkenberg and Stroll and generally went backwards.
Verdict: Not too bad considering the Sauber wasn’t great here.

Started: 14th Finished: 18th
You could sense the quiet frustration in Albon, as the combination of difficult and hot track surface, tyres not quite firing up consistently, and the Williams no longer being the relatively efficient weapon in a straight line that it used to be, severely limited his scope to somehow pull off a miracle result.
When top 10 qualifying scalps are there to be had, it’s now RB and Haas (and increasingly Alpine) rather than Albon’s Williams there to capitalise. You could see Albon was trying hard to make something happen, but the sort of miracle offset stint holding off a train of cars to nick points looks completely beyond the car now, and this latest attempt ended in a cloud of brake smoke with points already well out of reach.
Verdict: A tough weekend in a car that’s limiting him.
Started: 16th Finished: 16th
Bottas has been performing relatively well in this first part of the season, but this was a more subdued performance than we’ve seen of late – maybe not helped by the feeling he is being eased towards the exit door by Audi’s recent swoop for Hulkenberg’s signature and sudden reshuffling of the engineering team.
Qualifying for the grand prix was about the only time Bottas was on top in the Sauber intra-team battle, and even then he only just beat Sargeant’s Williams while narrowly missing the chance to scalp Alonso’s underperforming Aston for a Q2 spot.
Bottas didn’t take any advantage from starting the grand prix on the soft tyre, and actually regressed in his first stint before having to switch to a two-stop strategy because his pace on the hard tyre after his early first pitstop was nothing short of horrendous.
Verdict: A weekend to forget and move on from.
Started: 18th Finished: 19th
Magnussen copped so many penalties this weekend that it was almost as if Pastor Maldonado had returned to the grid in spirit form.
This was overall a very difficult weekend anyway for Magnussen, who apart from SQ1 on Friday wasn’t able to consistently extract the same one-lap pace from the Haas as Hulkenberg.
Although Hamilton was impressed with Magnussen’s honesty in admitting to dirty tactics in the sprint race, the stewards took a dim view – and a deserved further penalty for needlessly wiping Sargeant’s Williams out of the grand prix puts Magnussen on the verge of a race ban that McLaren feels he should be serving already.
Verdict: Collecting way more penalty points than championship points is never a good look.
Miami, FL
North Miami Beach 6-year-old who was allegedly severely abused dies: Family
A 6-year-old boy with autism who police said was severely abused by his mother’s boyfriend in North Miami Beach has died after spending weeks in the hospital, family members said.
The boy, Mason, had been hospitalized in critical condition last month, but his grandmother told NBC6 on Friday that he’d been taken off a ventilator and passed away.
Police had responded to a home in the 1400 block of Northeast 179th Street for a report of a child in cardiac arrest.
In body camera footage released by police, Mason was seen wrapped in a blanket and had no detectable pulse.
North Miami Beach Police, Family Photo
North Miami Beach Police, Family Photo Mason
Mason was given CPR until Miami-Dade Fire Rescue crews arrived and regained a pulse, and he was taken to Jackson North Hospital in critical condition.
Doctors reported internal bleeding in the brain, lacerations to the liver and kidney, a broken arm, and bruises covering his entire body.
His mother’s boyfriend, 34-year-old Daniel Eduardo Romero, was accused of severely abusing the boy, and was later arrested on charges including aggravated child abuse causing great bodily harm involving torture, child neglect causing great bodily harm, and tampering with a victim.
According to an arrest report, Romero gave conflicting stories about how Mason was injured, first claiming he was teaching the boy how to ride a bicycle when he fell, then changing his story and claiming they were using a wagon.
Romero said the boy didn’t appear to be seriously injured and medical care was not sought but he woke up lethargic the next day and progressively weakened and when he became unresponsive they called 911, the report said.
Miami-Dade Corrections Miami-Dade Corrections Daniel Eduardo Romero

The boy’s mother, 32-year-old Cynthia Hernandez, was later arrested on charges including child neglect, failure to report child neglect and providing a false statement to law enforcement, officials said.
Police had previously said Hernandez was cooperating with the investigation and told officers Romero would become frustrated with Mason because of his neurodevelopmental condition. Records also show Romero has two prior convictions for domestic violence.
In the arrest report, Hernandez told detectives that Romero had a short temper and anger problems.
Hernandez’s attorney criticized her arrest, saying she was also a victim of domestic violence at the hands of Romero.
Her mother also said Hernandez was a domestic violence victim.
Romero pleaded not guilty and is being held without bond while he awaits trial. It’s unknown whether he’ll face new charges following Mason’s death.
Miami, FL
The Prime Cleaner Opens New South Miami Location, Expanding Premium Cleaning Services Across Miami-Dade County
Miami’s most trusted family-owned cleaning service opens a new South Miami location at 2000 S. Dixie Hwy. Serving Brickell, Coral Gables, Coconut Grove, Pinecrest, and surrounding areas.
MIAMI, FL – The Prime Cleaner, one of Miami’s fastest-growing residential cleaning services, officially announces the opening of its new South Miami office located at 2000 South Dixie Highway, Suite 100B-A, Miami, FL 33133. The expansion marks a major milestone for the family-owned business, which has completed over 9,000 cleanings and earned 500+ five-star reviews since its founding in 2021.
The new South Miami location positions The Prime Cleaner to deliver faster response times and same-day availability to homeowners and property managers across South Miami, Coral Gables, Brickell, Coconut Grove, Pinecrest, Key Biscayne, Kendall, Palmetto Bay, Miami Beach, Edgewater, Midtown Miami, the Miami Design District, and Aventura.
A Family Business Built on Trust
Founded by Jay and his mother Ana, The Prime Cleaner was built on a straightforward belief — that every Miami homeowner deserves a cleaning team they can genuinely trust. From day one, the business has operated with background-checked professionals, non-toxic products safe for families and pets, and a consistent crew model that ensures clients see familiar faces on every visit.
“Opening our South Miami office is something we’ve been working toward for a long time. South Miami and the surrounding neighborhoods have been part of our story since the beginning. Having a physical presence here lets us serve our clients faster, respond same-day, and continue building the kind of relationships this community deserves.”— Jay McGough, Co-Founder, The Prime Cleaner
Comprehensive Cleaning Services for Miami’s Finest Homes
From the South Miami office, The Prime Cleaner offers its full suite of professional cleaning services:
- Deep Cleaning — Top-to-bottom resets for homes that need a thorough refresh
- Standard Recurring Cleaning — Weekly, biweekly, and monthly housekeeping plans
- Move In / Move Out Cleaning — Built to landlord and property standards
- Post-Construction Cleaning — Dust, debris, and construction residue removal
- Event Cleaning — Pre and post-event cleanup for homes and venues
- Exterior Window Cleaning — Streak-free results for interior and exterior glass
- Tile & Grout Restoration — Deep cleaning that restores original color and shine
- Carpet & Upholstery Cleaning — Stain removal and odor elimination safe for pets and kids
- Post-Fumigation Cleaning — Full sanitization after pest control treatments
- Airbnb & Short-Term Rental Cleaning — Turnover cleaning to maintain five-star ratings
Every service is backed by The Prime Cleaner’s 100% satisfaction guarantee — if a client isn’t satisfied, the team returns and corrects it at no additional charge.
Rapid Growth Driven by Five-Star Service
Since launching in 2021, The Prime Cleaner has become one of Miami’s most reviewed and most trusted residential cleaning services. With over 9,000 cleanings completed and more than 500 five-star Google reviews, the company continues to grow month over month — driven entirely by client referrals, repeat bookings, and a reputation built one home at a time.
The South Miami expansion is part of a broader growth strategy that includes new neighborhood service pages, an expanded team of background-checked cleaning professionals, and an ongoing commitment to raising the standard of residential cleaning across Miami-Dade County.
About The Prime Cleaner
The Prime Cleaner is a family-owned residential cleaning service based in Miami, Florida. Founded in 2021 by Jayger and Ana, the company specializes in deep cleaning, recurring housekeeping, move in/out cleaning, post-construction cleanup, and specialty cleaning services across Miami-Dade County. Licensed, insured, and BBB accredited, The Prime Cleaner serves homeowners, landlords, Airbnb hosts, and property managers across South Miami, Coral Gables, Brickell, Coconut Grove, Pinecrest, Key Biscayne, Kendall, Miami Beach, Edgewater, Midtown Miami, the Miami Design District, Aventura, and surrounding neighborhoods.
New South Miami Office
2000 South Dixie Highway, Suite 100B-A | Miami, FL 33133 | (786) 420-4273 | www.theprimecleaner.com/location/south-miami
Media Contact
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Email: Send Email
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Address:2701 Biscayne Blvd
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Country: United States
Website: www.theprimecleaner.com
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Miami, FL
Inside Miami’s billionaire bunker, a manmade island for the .01% where billionaires like Jeff Bezos and Mark Zuckerberg shell out for total privacy | Fortune
In a city known for flash and nine-figure price tags, Miami’s most coveted waterfront neighborhood features addresses that start at $60 million—and a near guarantee that you’ll never be able to visit.
Indian Creek Island, also known as Billionaire Bunker, is a 300-acre, manmade strip of land in Biscayne Bay just north of Miami Beach that has attracted the ultra-rich in droves. Its monied residents include NFL quarterback Tom Brady, Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, and President Donald Trump’s daughter, Ivanka Trump.
The main island contains a mere 40 lots of purely waterfront property, adding another layer of exclusivity on top of the inflated cost to entry. The island’s interior is dominated by the Indian Creek Country Club and its private 18-hole golf course. Those looking to rub shoulders on the links will have to reportedly pay a $500,000 initiation fee and go through a lengthy admissions process.
Though properties could be had for less, Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg became the latest billionaire to reportedly snatch up a newly completed mansion at an estimated price tag of between $150 million and $200 million earlier this month. And of the ultra-wealthy who can afford to shell out millions for a home, many often tear down the existing structure to build a new one, said Michael Martirena, cofounder of the Ivan and Mike Team at real estate brokerage Compass.
The Price of Exclusivity
With only 84 residents as of 2020, Indian Creek Island is one of the most exclusive enclaves in America, and a big reason why is the privacy and security that it affords its ultra-wealthy residents.
Indian Creek is an independent municipality with its own government and a police force that patrols the island 24/7 not only by land but also by sea. A single guarded bridge connects it to the mainland, and any visitors must show their ID and may even undergo vehicle inspection, said Martirena, who has toured properties there with clients.
“It’s a bubble, and no one can get on and off, unless you have a reason,” said Martirena, who specializes in ultra-luxury real estate.
Unlike nearby South Beach celebrity enclaves such as Palm, Star, and Hibiscus Islands—where boat tours regularly pass by waterfront mansions—Indian Creek’s marine patrols keep onlookers away, Martirena told Fortune.
Because of the island’s location and strategic landscaping, very few homes in the surrounding areas, like the Bay Harbor Islands or Surfside, have a clear view of Indian Creek Island. This makes it very private, said Martirena, and very desirable.
“It’s the place to be,” said Martirena. “People of that caliber feel safe and not bothered.”
And yet, wealth alone doesn’t guarantee access. All the listings are done “off market,” said Martirena, meaning a buyer’s agent will have to deal directly with a property owner’s representatives, and contact them multiple times if they are not quite ready to sell.
“It’s a small community, and just to keep the chatter at a low level, they do it all internally and very private,” he said.
In an already exclusive community, the western side offers an even more seclusive experience because the lots border the intracoastal waterway separating the island from the mainland, Mick Duchon, a Miami Beach–based real estate agent with the Corcoran Group, previously told Fortune. On this side of the island, home to two of the five richest people in the world, Zuckerberg and Bezos, the lots measure about 80,000 square feet, compared to 50,000 square feet which is the norm on the island, Duchon said.
Since announcing his move from Seattle to Florida in 2023, Bezos snapped up three properties on the island for more than $230 million combined. He’s turning two western lots into a compound while he lives in a Mediterranean-style house on the third lot on the other side of the island.
The billionaire migration to Indian Creek reflects a broader influx in South Florida luxury real estate, which Martirena described as “COVID 2.0.” Thanks in part to Florida’s lack of a state income tax, interest from high end buyers is exploding even as activity at the lower end of the housing market slows.
Another factor is the proposed 5% billionaire wealth tax, which is gathering steam in California. Google co-founder Larry Page has reportedly begun shifting assets, including his family office, out of California. The billionaire recently paid $173 million for two waterfront mansions in Miami’s Coconut Grove neighborhood.
Martirena said his own business has picked up over the last couple of weeks, with three recent inquiries that he attributed directly to the potential wealth tax.
“They’re kind of pre-planning ahead of time. They don’t want to move here,” he said. “They want to stay in the state of California, because they love where they’re at, and they never thought of moving. But they work very hard for their money, and they said they like their pocketbook much more.”
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