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Piastri focussing on what he can control as F1 title battle ramps up

Piastri could have a bigger lead over Norris – but he’s not looking backwards

Oscar Piastri heads into the final 10 races of the 2025 Formula 1 season with a nine point advantage over McLaren team mate Lando Norris.

Had things gone his way at certain races, or perhaps more accurately not gone the way of Norris, he could have been sitting on a much more substantial lead.

The most recent example was in Budapest, where as the chasing car Norris had the option of an alternative strategy – one that allowed him to secure victory, a result that created a 14-point swing in his favour.

Having done the difficult bit and been in front in the early stages Piastri could be forgiven for feeling a little bit miffed.

Hungary wasn’t the only time that events that were essentially out of his control conspired against Piastri and favoured his team mate. However, he denies that he feels hard done by in any way.

“No, I don’t,” he says. “I think there’s always going to be things in racing that you don’t necessarily agree with or don’t go the way you want. And that’s just part of it. Sometimes it makes you wonder why you picked this damn sport! But no, I think certainly don’t feel hard done by

“I think we’ve done a lot of things well that we can control this year. There’s been some tough moments, some tough lessons.

“But I’m very confident with the position that I’m in. I feel like I’ve driven well this year, and again all the things I can control, I feel like I’ve controlled very well. There is an opposite universe where a lot of things look very different, but none of that matters.

“So I’m just trying to focus on these next 10 races, and how I can perform either the same or, if not even better, than I did at the start of the year.”

For both Norris and Piastri the intensity of being in the spotlight of a World Championship fight is a new experience, although both have been battling for and indeed winning titles from their karting days and into the junior single-seater categories.

It’s also important to have a good team around you, and thanks to manager Mark Webber Piastri can absorb advice from someone who went through it himself back in 2010.

“The intensity will kind of naturally increase as we get close to the end of the year,” says Piastri. “And I’m ready for that. I’ve been in that position before and in other championships, and that kind of feeling and that countdown to the end of the year, that is the same. So I’m ready for that.

“And yes, I can lean on Mark. Ultimately, it’s down to how I manage it, how I drive, how I cope with the things that are going to be coming. But having an important team around you and a good group of people around you is very important to be able to lean on. So Mark is certainly one of those people. And yeah, I’m excited to see how it goes.”

You don’t have to be a sports psychologist to appreciate that Piastri’s outwardly calm demeanour contrasts with the heart-on-the-sleeve approach of Norris.

However, it would probably be a bit simplistic to suggest that the former will pay dividends as we get closer to the end of the season, and the title battle reaches its climax.

Indeed Piastri concedes that it’s not that straightforward, and there’s more going on below the surface.

“I definitely do get nervous,” he says. “Yes, I think before every race, nerves are there. Firstly, I don’t believe anyone that says they don’t get nervous, because I don’t think that’s possible. And I think it would be a bit weird if you weren’t nervous. So they are definitely there.

“I think it’s just how you how you manage it, how you try and channel it in the right ways. Because I think ultimately, the nerves can be good or bad, and it’s how you manage it that decides that. I think for me, being calm is just part of who I am, but definitely I’ve learned through the years that that’s how I get the most out of myself as well, and that doesn’t look the same for everybody.

“So it’s not a magic thing, but that’s how I feel like I work best. It’s kind of partly natural and partly through experience and through learning. It’s just how I am in some ways, and how I try and get the best out of myself.”

Meanwhile what unfolded in Budapest, and the possibility of future similar scenarios, has been the subject of debate in Woking.

“Yeah, we’ve spoken about it since then,” says Piastri. “I think ultimately there are race situations where being the second car from the team on track, or you don’t even have to be the second car from your team, it’s just being the kind of last car in the train, or the last car in the group, you’ve got a lot less to lose.

“So that kind of aspect is always going to be there. And I think it would be unfair to neutralise that just because of wanting to be on the same strategy. There were discussions about whether there was anything we could have done differently for myself, which were very productive discussions.

“I think we’re still going to be free to pick alternative strategies if that’s what we want. But yes, there were definitely some discussions about how we can tackle that, because it’s obviously a difficult thing to try and cover different strategies, especially when you’re in the position we are in the championship.”

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Why Piastri has steered clear of McLaren’s suspension update

Only Lando Norris is using the suspension tweak McLaren introduced in Montreal

One of the more intriguing aspects of the ongoing battle between McLaren Formula 1 team mates Lando Norris is that since Canada they have been driving subtly different cars.

In Montreal Norris ran a front suspension update that Piastri has opted not to use on the basis that it doesn’t bring performance, and that in effect he doesn’t want to mess with a successful recipe.

What it does do in theory is give Norris some of the feel that he felt was missing earlier in the season, although even he admits that he can’t be sure how much difference it makes given that every track has its own quirks.

You could argue that his strong performance in Austria was evidence that it’s boosted his confidence – although one could speculate that there’s something of a Placebo Effect in action.

“It’s even an answer I can’t give to the team that clearly, if you ask me now, is it better or not?,” he said on Thursday.

“I can’t give a definitive answer. It’s something that we believe might shift things in the right direction. That’s how small of a change it was. It wasn’t like, we know this is going to help, it’s going to do a better job.

“It’s also not a performance item. It’s not something that we’ve got and gone, now we’re going to be quicker. It’s something that might change how the feeling is to the steering and to the front suspension.

“But because you go track-to-track, it’s not something you can necessarily just change between sessions. It’s not where I can just go out and give a clean answer to the team.

“It’s one where I’ve just got to have the confidence and belief in the guys and girls who have put it together and thought of it believe it’s in the right direction to give me maybe some more feelings or a better feeling, or more of a contrast in feeling.

“And I’m happy enough that that’s a good enough answer, that they think it’s better, and I’m confident that it’s going to give me that feeling, but it’s not something I can go, ‘I’m feeling a lot more in the car.’

“I certainly felt more in Austria. Canada is a very separate one and the car is always all over the place in Canada, so it’s hard to judge things there.

“But certainly in Canada, I felt like we unlocked a little bit more, but I also don’t feel like I’m still back to the level necessarily that I was at last year with feeling, understanding, and things like that.”

Piastri meanwhile has preferred to stick with the original spec, and he has no interest in trying the new suspension.

“I’ve not used it ever yet,” said the Australian. “I think the thing is for me, it’s not an upgrade, it’s just something that is different. It makes some things potentially a bit better. It makes some things a bit worse.

“If it was just all benefits, I would be putting it on with no questions asked. But for me, I’ve not, not really struggled with that kind of particular feeling.

“The year’s been going pretty well, so I’m keener to just keep the car consistent, and worry about how we get the most out of the setup and the other upgrades we actually have than this change to the suspension.”

As the drivers suggest, it’s a subtle difference, but nevertheless it’s an interesting twist to what will be a very closely fought contest over the second half of the season.

Norris had the upper hand in Austria, although his team mate didn’t get his final Q3 run in due to yellow flags, and thus started only third.

“I think it is a very tight battle,” said Piastri. “I think it will be for the rest of the year. I think Canada I don’t was the best Sunday for me, definitely, in terms of pace, but I think last weekend was probably one of the better ones.

“I think qualifying ultimately, we’ll never know what was possible. But my first lap of Q3 or the only lap of Q3 was not great, even compared to some of my Q2 laps.

“So I think last weekend, I was happy with my pace, especially on Sunday. But I expect it to ebb and flow through the year. I think the weekends where either of us put our absolute best forward, it’s probably enough either of us to win.

“It’s just that doing that and finding 100% of your potential instead of 99 or 99 and a half is very, very difficult.

“So I think that’s been the difference so far this year. I think we’re very, very evenly matched. And on our good days, either of us is very hard to beat.”

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Will Piastri’s new qualifying pace give him a title edge?

Oscar Piastri has upped his game over one lap. Can he continue to outrun Lando Norris?

Can Oscar Piastri maintain the momentum that he’s started to build over the first four races of the 2025 Formula 1 season?

He heads into Sunday’s race in Jeddah just three points shy of McLaren team mate Lando Norris. They’ve been closely matched, but Piastri’s late off in the Melbourne rain proved costly and gave the Englishman the initial advantage.

Since then the Aussie has scored two wins from pole position, and he’s shown beyond all doubt that his one-lap pace has taken a big step since last year, when Norris was dominant.

Lando meanwhile has made it clear that he’s not comfortable with the MCL39, and thus far is not maximising his potential.

With his main rival on the backfoot now would seem to be the perfect time for Piastri to press home the advantage.

Amid all the talk of papaya rules and equal treatment if he continues to outqualify and outrace Norris then the World Championship will ultimately take care of itself.

“Qualifying is incredibly important I think,” he said when I put that to him in Jeddah on Thursday.

“Regardless of the kind of intra-team dynamics with pit stop preferences and whatever that that causes. Just the power of clean air is so important. So I think regardless of that, you always want to be qualifying at the front.

“But yes, with two drivers in the same car, I think with very similar pace, whenever you can be ahead, it’s a pretty major advantage.

“So it is going to be important to have good qualifying. But we’ve seen in the past that it’s not always everything, there’s other areas where you can make up the difference, if you do a good enough job.”

Piastri worked over the winter to improve his one-lap form, and it appears to have paid dividends. The team mate qualifying battle now stands at 3:2 in his favour, including the Shanghai sprint.

“I think the hard work we’ve been putting in definitely has been making a difference,” he says. “I think I’ve felt comfortable in qualifying, and felt like I’ve taken a bit of a step up. I think last year it wasn’t much that I often missed out by.

“But this year I’ve had a couple qualifying just on the wrong side of that gap still, but also more qualifyings on the right side of that gap now. So it’s been a lot of hard work in a lot of different areas, trying to get those last few hundredths of a second. And I think it has been paying off.”

His earlier dirty air reference is significant. We’ve seen this year how Lewis Hamilton in the Shanghai sprint and Max Verstappen in Suzuka were able to stay out in front of potentially faster McLarens. Piastri doesn’t believe that the MCL39 suffers more in traffic than other cars.

“Not necessarily, I think everybody struggles with it, it’s pretty similar for most of the teams,” he says. “We saw in China that the Ferrari was very quick through the whole weekend, and they also struggled to get through the dirty air. So I think it’s just a grid wide problem.

“I don’t think it’s specific to us, and I don’t really plan on testing that theory too many times hopefully! It is just difficult for everybody with more and more downforce going on, more and more dirty air.”

One intriguing aspect to the McLaren battle is that the team will have to work hard to ensure equal treatment, and especially that neither driver gets an advantage from having a single set of development parts, which happened on occasion last season when the team had to get new bits to the track asap. Piastri doesn’t see that as an issue this time around.

“I think this year the situation is very, very different,” he says. “I think last year, especially at the beginning of the season, we were incredibly keen to get whatever performance we could onto the car as quickly as possible. And we needed to make up a points deficit, in the constructors’ championship, especially.

“This year, we’re in a very different position. Obviously, we have already a decent gap in the constructors’ championship and both of us fighting for the drivers’ championship.

“It’s expected that that we’ll both have an equal opportunity and the same car to be able to fight for the drivers’ championship, and obviously in the constructors’ championship, we’re in a good place. While we have the opportunity to keep it equal, and have the same car every weekend, we should do that.”

Any advantage that either man can establish will have to come from the cockpit. You don’t have to be a sports psychologist to see the contrasts in approach between the pair, with Norris wearing his heart on his sleeve and being open about his struggles, and Piastri seemingly gliding serenely through each race weekend.

“I think for everyone, they kind of work in different ways,” he says. “For me, trying to stay calm is a very important thing. It helps me get the best out of myself. So that’s how I think I operate the best. And I think it’s been working so far.”

So does he ever get emotional in the car?

“I have been a couple of times through my career,” he admits. “And yeah, I think when they’re negative emotions, it does have a negative impact. So that’s why I try… I think it comes somewhat naturally being calm and trying to stay relaxed, but there’s a lot of conscious effort on that as well.

“But there’s also positive emotions that are there as well. I said after China if you had a camera on me, and you could see my face, I was pretty damn excited.

“So there are emotions out there. The radio is a button for a reason, and you use it when, when you think you should. There’s probably more that you don’t see under the helmet…”

What then of this weekend? Norris had the edge by just 0.163s in Friday’s FP2 session, and it will be fascinating to see how qualifying unfolds when it really matters on Saturday evening.

[If you’re an outlet that can use stories like the above do get in touch as I am available for work!]

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Norris: “Silly” and “stupid” to postpone Piastri pass in Hungarian GP

Still pals! McLaren team mates Norris and Piastri at Spa

Lando Norris says he was both “stupid” and “silly” not to let his McLaren team mate Oscar Piastri past earlier than he did during the Hungarian GP.

Having been given the earlier pit stop to help protect him from rivals Norris got ahead of leader Piastri, who had dominated the first part of the race.

However when asked by the team to switch the positions back Norris delayed the move and argued his case on the radio, until finally letting Piastri by in the closing laps.

Norris says he now accepts that he should have let the Australian by immediately – and had he done so potentially then had the chance to race him and legitimately earn a victory.

He also conceded that by creating a team orders controversy he had taken attention away from Piastri’s first win and a one-two for his team.

“Could it have been handled slightly differently from both a team side and from a personal side?,” Norris said at Spa on Thursday. “Yes, absolutely. And I think we would not be having this conversation now.

“Whether people on the outside think and kind of come up with their own stories of what happened, and what I would have done, and wouldn’t have done that kind of thing, I don’t mind about that.

“But it’s the things that I could have done, the fact that I kind of clouded over Oscar’s first race win in F1 is something I’ve not felt too proud about.

“The fact that we had a one-two, and that was barely a headline after the race, and nothing was really spoken about it from that side. Yeah, that’s the kind of bits I felt worse about.

“But apart from that, yeah, we discussed it, we’ve spoken about it. Both sides could have done things a little bit better, and a little bit differently. It’s not good that we had it, but it’s a good moment that we’ve had it, we’ve learned from it, and hopefully it’s done better next time.”

Asked by this writer what he would now do differently Norris had one simple answer.

“Just let him past straight away,” he said. “Such a stupid thing that I didn’t, because we’re free to race, and I could just let him pass and still try to overtake and to race.

“It sounds so simple now, but it’s not something that went through my head at the time. So, yeah, such a simple thing like that, I could have done, but I was just in a good rhythm, and things were going well at the time.

“So I questioned it a few times, questioned the team a few times, but I knew as soon as they boxed me ahead of him, or before him, that I was going to have to let him go. I was a bit silly, and didn’t think of letting him go earlier.”

Norris insists that he’s not too stressing too much about what happened.

“I don’t need to overthink it, overcomplicate it,” he said. “A couple of very simple things, I feel like it’s turned into a much bigger deal than it needs to be, and that kind of thing.

“It was always clear, I always knew that I had to let him go, but the longer I waited, just because it didn’t matter if I let him go straight away or at the end, necessarily, the longer I waited, the more people questioned whether I would have done it or not.

“I think that’s the main thing, and a lot of people think that I wouldn’t have done. But I knew I had to. That made no difference.

“But I don’t need to replay it. I just know that I should have let him past earlier, and I still could have had a chance to try and win the race myself, and that’s what I should have done.”

Asked if that was now the obvious choice he said: “If I thought of that at the time, 100%. But I didn’t think of that for whatever reason. I just probably wasn’t thinking of the right things at the time more than anything.

“As they basically said, let him past now, I let him past straight away. So it wasn’t never a fact of was I ignoring and not listening, all of these types of things. It was always clear what I wanted to do, I needed to do, but I just let it go on for a little bit too long.”

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Stella: Piastri “in a strong place” after Miami

He didn’t win the race but Oscar Piastri impressed McLaren in Miami

McLaren Formula 1 boss Andrea Stella says that Oscar Piastri is “in a strong place” after the Miami GP despite his performance being overshadowed by the victory of team mate Lando Norris.

Piastri went into the weekend with what Stella described as “50%” of the upgrade package that Norris has on his car,

While the Australian had the new front wing and revised suspension, he didn’t have the floor and sidepods that were used by his team mate to such good effect.

After running second in the early stages and briefly leading the race after Max Verstappen pitted Piastri’s Miami race was ruined by contact with Carlos Sainz that damaged his front wing. He finished outside the points.

“I think Oscar comes out of this weekend even more conscious of his strengths as a driver,” said the Italian.

“We sort of knew already how fast he is on a single lap. Consider that he didn’t have the full package. And let me pay proper credit to Oscar, the gap he had to Lando during qualifying is smaller than the difference of the package he had.

“So he was really pulling off a strong performance over a single lap in very difficult conditions, like all drivers said with the soft tyres.

“His performance in the race was again very strong. Lando said something really nice, he said, by looking at Oscar overtaking a Ferrari, he got like, ‘Wow, we are actually there today.’

“So it was a realisation for Lando himself. And Oscar could keep a strong pace in the first stint.

“I think he comes away from this weekend with these sort of convictions, which, especially in terms of race pace, is something that we wanted to improve, having looked at Japan, having looked at China. So for me, he is in a very strong place.”

In addition Stella praised Piastri’s reaction after learning that he wouldn’t have the full update package in Miami.

“He also comes off this race having proven once again how strong a team player is,” he said. “Because clearly when I told him, ‘Oscar, we’re going to give the sidepods and the floor to Lando,’ he wasn’t the happiest in the bottom of his heart.

“But at no point he made this decision difficult. At no point he said, ‘But why?’ He understood the reasoning, and he was immediately supportive, like all the entourage around Oscar.

“So I think he comes away with a lot of positives. And the fact that it was the collision with Carlos actually, I think that he was a little late in braking, he had a bit of an overseer, contact with Oscar, but I think that was a really racing incident, and it doesn’t detract anything of the weekend that Oscar has been able to pull off.”

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