Lando Norris CONFIRMS Shocking Meeting with FIA & Teams After Explosive Ultimatum: “If They Continue Covering Up Max Verstappen’s Illegal Victories Like Las Vegas, I Will Leave F1 Immediately” – World Champion Threatens Immediate Exit from Formula 1

Lando Norris has doubled down on his most dramatic threat yet, confirming he held emergency talks with FIA President Mohammed Ben Sulayem, F1 CEO Stefano Domenicali and representatives of every current team principal just hours after publicly declaring he would quit Formula 1 immediately if the governing body continues what he calls “the blatant cover-up of Max Verstappen’s illegal victories.”
The 2025 World Champion dropped the bombshell during a surprise appearance on the Sky Sports F1 podcast late last night, where he stated without hesitation:
“If the FIA keeps doing what they did in Las Vegas — turning a blind eye to clear rule breaches just to protect Max’s title run — then I’m out. I will leave Formula 1 immediately. I won’t race in a series that pretends to be fair while everyone knows the game is rigged at the top.”
The comments — made in reference to the controversial 2025 Las Vegas Grand Prix, where Verstappen was accused by multiple teams (including McLaren) of running an illegal floor stay and ride-height device that gave him a decisive advantage in the closing stages — have sent shockwaves through the paddock.

Just minutes after the podcast aired, Norris confirmed he had already been summoned to a crisis meeting at FIA headquarters in Geneva. Sources close to the championship say the 90-minute session included:
FIA President Mohammed Ben Sulayem F1 CEO Stefano Domenicali Technical delegate Nikolas Tombazis Representatives from Red Bull, McLaren, Mercedes, Ferrari, Aston Martin, Alpine, Williams, Visa Cash App RB, Stake F1 Team Kick Sauber, Haas and Alpine
According to insiders briefed on the meeting, Norris arrived with printed telemetry screenshots, video stills and protest documents from Las Vegas that McLaren had submitted (and the FIA dismissed) last November. He reportedly told the room:
“You all saw the same data I did. The car was out of legal parameters. You chose not to act. If that happens again in 2026, I won’t be part of it. I love this sport, but I won’t race in one where the champion is protected by selective blindness.”
The meeting ended without immediate resolution. Ben Sulayem reportedly promised “a full internal review of all 2025 technical decisions” and assured Norris that the 2026 scrutineering process would be “the most transparent in F1 history.” However, no public apology or retrospective penalty for Las Vegas was offered, leaving the situation unresolved.
Norris left the meeting stone-faced and refused to speak to waiting media, but later posted a single cryptic message on Instagram:
“I said what I said. The ball is in their court now.”

The reaction has been explosive. Fans worldwide are divided between those hailing Norris as a principled stand-taker and those accusing him of “sour grapes” after losing the 2025 title to Verstappen in controversial circumstances. #NorrisLeavesF1 and #JusticeForLasVegas are trending globally, while Verstappen supporters have countered with memes accusing Norris of “crying after winning with the best car.”
Red Bull team principal Christian Horner issued a short statement: “We respect Lando’s right to speak his mind. All our cars have always passed scrutineering. Max won the championship on merit, not favours. If anyone has evidence of wrongdoing, present it to the FIA — not the media.”
McLaren team principal Andrea Stella declined to comment on the record but is understood to have held crisis talks with Norris immediately after the Geneva meeting. Sources say the team is “extremely concerned” about the possibility of losing their 2025 champion and is working behind the scenes to mediate.
The FIA has called an emergency meeting of the F1 Commission for next week to discuss “recent public statements regarding technical integrity.” Insiders say the governing body is now under enormous pressure to either reopen the Las Vegas investigation or risk a credibility crisis at the start of the radical 2026 regulation era.
With pre-season testing in Bahrain beginning in just 10 days, the 2026 season is already on the brink of chaos before a single lap has been turned.
Lando Norris has drawn his line in the sand. The FIA must now decide whether to cross it — or watch one of its biggest stars walk away forever.
The countdown to Melbourne has never felt more uncertain.