Red Bull's Max Verstappen won the Saudi Arabian Grand Prix.
Verstappen's win was his second in two races in 2024 and his ninth consecutive victory dating back to September.
Verstappen continued to dominate the F1 field for nearly two years, leading teammate Sergio Perez to a one-two for Red Bull.
Ferrari's Charles Leclerc finished third. His teammate, Briton Oliver Bearman, scored points in seventh place on his debut.
Bearman, who replaced Carlos Sainz when the Spaniard had an appendectomy, became, at 18, the youngest British driver in F1 history and the third-youngest British driver in history.
He fended off potential challenges from McLaren's Lando Norris and Mercedes' Lewis Hamilton with a mature drive, fighting back after they made late pit stops for new tires on inverted strategy.
Norris and Hamilton stayed out during the initial safety car, which was brought out after Aston Martin's Lance Stroll crashed on lap six.
They stopped with 13 and 14 laps to go, and Hamilton put on soft tires a lap ahead of Norris, hoping he could use the extra grip to close in on the teams ahead.
However, after initially taking away Bearman's advantage considerably, their tires began to fade, leaving Norris and Hamilton to battle for eighth place rather than challenge the teenager.
Bearman was named before final practice and started 11th, but was 12th after the safety car.
He overtook Zhou Gunayu's Sauber, then Nico Hulkenberg's Haas, and benefited from Hamilton and Norris' strategy, making an excellent debut that cemented his status as a future star candidate.
Bearman was voted driver of the day in a fan vote and Leclerc paid tribute to him after the race.
“He totally deserves it,” Leclerc said. “He did an unbelievable job. He set the pace straight in P3, did an unbelievable job in qualifying and missed Q3 by a very small margin.”
“To finish seventh in his first F1 race with a new car is incredible. Everyone recognizes his talent and it's only a matter of time before he gets into F1.”