Norris feels ‘nowhere near’ his best as Formula 1 title contest heats up inside McLaren

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Lando Norris may be top of the F1 standings but he feels like he's driving “nowhere near” his best and can't work out why.

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Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 14/04/2025 (265 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

Lando Norris may be top of the F1 standings but he feels like he’s driving “nowhere near” his best and can’t work out why.

After placing third Sunday at the Bahrain Grand Prix — won by his McLaren teammate Oscar Piastri — Norris said he felt far more confident last year, when he lost out on the drivers’ title to Red Bull’s Max Verstappen.

“I’m confident that I have everything I need and I’ve got what it takes,” Norris said. “I have no doubt about that, that I’m good enough, but something is just not clicking with me in the car.”

Frome the left ,first-placed McLaren driver Oscar Piastri of Australia, McLaren team principal Andrea Stella and third-placed McLaren driver Lando Norris of Britain stand on the podium after the the Formula One Bahrain Grand Prix, in Sakhir, Sunday, April 13, 2025. (AP Photo/Altaf Qadri)
Frome the left ,first-placed McLaren driver Oscar Piastri of Australia, McLaren team principal Andrea Stella and third-placed McLaren driver Lando Norris of Britain stand on the podium after the the Formula One Bahrain Grand Prix, in Sakhir, Sunday, April 13, 2025. (AP Photo/Altaf Qadri)

Norris, who qualified sixth for Sunday’s race, saw Piastri close to within three points of him in the standings.

“As soon as you’re not gelling (with the car), then you’re going to be in issues, and that’s what I have at the moment,” Norris said.

Even though he’s still leading and won the season-opening Grand Prix in Australia last month, Norris said he hasn’t felt comfortable all year with McLaren’s car — widely considered the fastest on the grid.

Last year, “I knew every single corner, everything that was going to happen with the car, how it was going to happen. I felt on top of the car. This year could not have felt more opposite so far,” Norris said.

“Even in Australia, I won the race but never felt comfortable, never felt confident. The car was just mega and that’s helping me get out of a lot of problems at the minute, but I’m just nowhere near the capability that I have, which hurts to say.”

Norris and Piastri combined to help McLaren won the constructor title in 2024, the team’s first since 1998.

Teammate battles which shaped F1

The years when F1 has been dominated by a single team have produced some of the most bitter rivalries, as McLaren witnessed in the late 1980s with a feud between Ayrton Senna and Alain Prost.

More recently, the relationship between Lewis Hamilton and Nico Rosberg turned sour during their championship fight at Mercedes in 2016.

Norris and Piastri are keeping things civil, though there were awkward moments last year when Norris was asked to make way for his teammate in a race.

McLaren has faced tests from other teams, with Verstappen winning in Japan last week for Red Bull and Mercedes’ George Russell competing with Norris and Piastri on Sunday. Still, the pace of the other teams seems to be fluctuating from race to race, and McLaren’s isn’t. The gap of 58 points on the constructor standings to second-place Mercedes after just four races is vast.

“We haven’t had a consistent challenger week-in, week-out,” Piastri, a 24-year-old Australian, said. “As long as we have the best car, it’s going to be tight between Lando and I.”

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