
Oscar Piastri’s dream result of a win in the Formula 1 Australian GP slipped away on lap 44 of Sunday’s race, when his pursuit of McLaren team mate Lando Norris was ended by a sudden shower and a trip onto the Albert Park grass.
A recovery to ninth place and a couple of points was of little comfort given what he had lost, but nevertheless it was a strong weekend overall for the 23-year-old.
Norris may have been a step ahead for most of the time, but Piastri was right there throughout, and was especially strong in the race. It’s now in his hands to get in front and prove that he can be the team’s main title candidate.
“Oscar today was deserving to be in contention for the victory until the last moment,” said team boss Andrea Stella.
“And he drove exceptionally well. And when I use the verb driving, that’s not only driving the car around the track, but it’s also the kind of assessment of the conditions of the decisions that we should have taken.
“It was very lucid, very calm. And he is starting his year three in F1, but he looks like one of the most expert drivers that I worked with. So, extremely impressed by Oscar today, just a little bit unlucky.”
Piastri’s life was made harder by losing a spot to Max Verstappen at the start, but he was able to keep the pressure on the Dutchman, eventually pushing him into a rare mistake.
“The start was not amazing,” he said when I asked about his race. “I just got pinched on the inside a little bit, and I got overtaken, I think the pace was really strong until we pitted for slicks. I think Max obviously locked up a little bit and went wide, and I was able to show the pace I had.”
On lap 32, shortly after a mistake had cost him a couple of seconds, a radio message revealed that only now – with backmarkers out of the way – was he free to race Norris.
“We were holding position before that. I think by the time we were free to race, it kind of killed my front left a little bit getting to the back of Lando. So by that point, there wasn’t much I could do.
“I think today’s race and the circumstances were pretty extreme. We were approaching backmarkers, one dry line, not knowing if there’s going to be rain to come. I’ll speak to the team and try and understand better what the thinking was. I think it’s always clear that those calls can come in either direction.”
It was when the rain returned that things went from for Piastri. At the end of lap 44 both he and Norris went off towards the end of the lap, and while his team mate was able to scrabble back onto the track and dive into the pits Piastri was left stranded on the wet grass for what seemed like an age.
“I tried to push a bit too much, I guess. In those conditions, very difficult to judge just how slippery it’s going to be. I think from one lap to the next, it had really changed a lot. And I could see Lando going off in front of me, but I was also already in the corner, basically.
“So there wasn’t much I could do to slow myself down at that point. And then once you’re in the gravel and the grass, you obviously try to keep the car as straight as possible. And then obviously to get stuck in the grass like that was pretty unbelievable sat in the car, but I’ve only got myself to blame for being there, so it’s a shame.”
Eventually he managed to reverse back onto the escape road and get into the pits: “I was just trying to stay in the race. Tried to go forwards, and I couldn’t, so a good thing I spent some time in the off-season trying to learn how to reverse a tractor on Jeremy Clarkson’s farm, because I think it came in handy today. I was just trying to get myself back in the race.”
He was 13th for the restart after the safety car, and was given a little help through being waved past to regain his lap – which helped to take the green with warm tyres.
“I knew that we had strong pace. I knew that I had strong pace. Even after the final restart it was frustrating. Ocon went wide or nearly lost the car at the last corner. So I went past just by driving normally, and then had to give the position back. So I lost three or four seconds doing that.
“And then given that I had to unlap myself, I had some pretty good temperature in the tyres, and was just able to capitalise on that, the car’s pace and my own confidence, I think. I’m glad that we at least got back to the points, but it should have been a lot more.”
He made it as far as ninth, pulling off a bold passing move on Lewis Hamilton right at the end. It was another sign that he means business this year.
“I think for essentially 56 laps of today’s race I was very proud of the job I did,” he said. “I feel like the pace was really strong, and obviously disappointed with the mistake I made.
“But I think that doesn’t take away completely from just how strong the whole week has been for not just the team, but for myself. I feel like I’ve done a good job all weekend. So I think it would be pessimistic of me to just write-off the whole weekend because of one mistake.”
