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Team orders issued during Formula 1 races are universally loathed. Even at the squads that opt to deliver them.

In the years of the modern era when they were officially banned (2002-2010), “Fernando. Is. Faster. Than. You.” from then Ferrari race engineer Rob Smedley to the Scuderia star Felipe Massa summed up the awkwardness of the act.

It was, after all, delivered to a driver leading the German Grand Prix a year to the day since his near-death in Hungary…

But even now that they can be stated openly, it’s barely any more pleasant for the teams.

Money and technology matter so much in this sphere – it’s why the absurd spectacle of coded team orders was alleviated, because it’s still up to a team how it achieves the precious results it needs to survive. But they’re staffed by people who are sporting competitors to their carbon-fibre core.

And at grand old McLaren – the team that let Ayrton Senna and Alain Prost duke it out – team orders continue to be a topic. And not one the squad relishes being discussed.

But McLaren is nevertheless happy to front up to the awkwardness. Because it, more than any of the leading teams, signed up to exactly this situation in pairing Lando Norris with Oscar Piastri. Having two incredible, and incredibly closely matched drivers, is a good problem to have on the whole.

That is to McLaren’s credit. They’re playing a different game to, for instance, Red Bull. There, fielding a second driver unlikely to unsettle the good ship Max Verstappen is a key choice Christian Horner and co embrace.

Lando Norris, McLaren, Andrea Stella, McLaren

Lando Norris, McLaren, Andrea Stella, McLaren

Photo by: Andy Hone / Motorsport Images

After everything that played out last year, and turbocharged with the expectation that it would be the 2025 favourite, McLaren spent the off-season fielding inevitable questions about its team orders plan – then framed as a ‘rules of engagement’ discussion. And it had its answers.

Team principal Andrea Stella reiterated, “our fundamentals are based on the racing principles that we already used last year,” Norris explained, “there’s just responsibility on myself, on Oscar, Andrea, the teams around both of us as drivers, to handle these situations correctly”, while Piastri added, “as long as we’re not taking points off the team then that’s how we’re going to go racing”.

Then, immediately in round one of the new campaign and in front of Piastri’s home crowd, McLaren unleashed the theoretical team orders discussion into F1’s 2025 reality.

On lap 29 of 57 last Sunday, Piastri was told, “hold position please, hold position, transition to the dry, clear the backmarkers,” after he’d erased his team-mate’s hard won lead, initially ahead of Verstappen.

Norris was informed at the same time: “Don’t worry about Oscar for now, we’re going to clear backmarkers and make the transition”. Afterwards, Piastri made his point: “OK. I’m faster, but OK.”

Then, once the traffic had been cleared and on lap 30, Piastri asked, “Are we still holding now?” and was informed the order held. Two laps later, with the results of Piastri’s strong chase to Norris’s rear impacting his left-front tyre, pace and with the gap growing again, he was told, “We’re free to race now, free to race, you know the rules…”

Post-race, where his once close chase of eventual winner Norris had ultimately fizzled out in his grass-churning spins later in the race, Piastri indicated he accepted what’d happened.

Team orders were designed to keep the McLarens ahead of the rest

Team orders were designed to keep the McLarens ahead of the rest

Photo by: Sam Bagnall / Motorsport Images

“Today’s race and the circumstances were pretty extreme,” he said. “We were approaching backmarkers, [with] one dry line, not knowing if there was going to be rain to come. I’ll speak to the team and try and understand better what the thinking was, but I think it’s always clear that those kind of calls can come in either direction.”

The timing of the order was clearly critical in Piastri’s acceptance – although his classically understated radio responses to the orders suggested that he didn’t like it.

But he recognised what was going through McLaren’s hive mind at this exact point: that the switch to slicks was the only thing that could derail the 1-2 it had nailed on when Verstappen’s first set of inters cried enough, the Dutchman slid deep and Piastri got back ahead.

The Melbourne skies meant a further curveball later arrived – cruel as that development was to be for the home hero.

But Piastri’s words above suggest what happened last Sunday is consistent with McLaren’s overall approach to team orders, which he buys into. The team’s success comes first and once that is as secure as it can be, the drivers can compete for their personal glory.

Of course, the 2025 season remains very young. But it will be clear again to Piastri that he ultimately needs to make sure he’s the lead MCL39 as much as possible to ensure that such calls go his way next time.

McLaren has surely given him confidence this will indeed happen, with Stella praising how “you don’t have to do much of the psychological exercises of convincing him not to get too upset with himself or with the situation”.

Piastri's celebration was a little more muted than Norris's

Piastri’s celebration was a little more muted than Norris’s

Photo by: Andy Hone / Motorsport Images

“Because he is one of the mentally strongest drivers that I’ve ever met,” Stella added. “So, I’m sure in China he will be back and very soon he will have important results.”

For as awkward as it can be for those involved and around F1 fan aversion to team orders, McLaren was right to do what it did in Melbourne. It secured what it had to at that stage – and the emotion of past events has to be ignored in the moment, even if many outsiders think back to Hungary, Monza, Brazil and Qatar last year at the same time.

Getting similar or even more complex subsequent calls right will surely get harder for McLaren depending on how the season develops.

If it ends up 2024-like – with one driver locked in a long battle for the title (most likely with the ever-threatening Verstappen) and the other more distant but still mathematically in play – things will surely get tricky again.

But if 2025 quickly becomes a two-horse race, that’s in a sense much more straightforward.

McLaren will just need to prioritise its constructors’ needs before trusting its drivers not to crash. This is a process made much easier with a dominant car. On the little data available so far, the MCL39 is looking very good in this regard.

This topic surely, then, will keep coming up for McLaren. But given it chimed with exactly what the squad and its drivers were saying before and after, its first team orders episode of 2025 should go down as success, not a saga.

In this article

Alex Kalinauckas

Formula 1

Lando Norris

Oscar Piastri

McLaren

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Lando Norris kept Max Verstappen at sword’s length over the final laps of the Australian Grand Prix to claim victory in the season-opener.

He was the strongest threat to Verstappen’s fourth consecutive championship victory last year, and is arguably the most significant competitor the Red Bull driver has faced since pipping Lewis Hamilton to win his first championship in controversial circumstances in 2021.

Not since the conclusion to that championship, when Hamilton won consecutively in Qatar and Saudi Arabia, has any driver other than Verstappen managed to win two grands prix in a row. But Norris changed that by following up his victory in last year’s season finale.

It was a significant win for various reasons, not least the fact it dislodged Verstappen from the top of the standings for the first time in over 1,000 days, as covered here earlier. Norris leads the points for the first time in his career, not that he is setting too much store by that. “It’s great, doesn’t mean anything, I’ve not won it so I don’t really care at the minute,” he responded when it was pointed out to him after the race.

Start, Albert Park, Melbourne, 2012
McLaren last won the season-opener in 2012

It was also only the second time in Norris’s cars he has completed a hat trick of winning from pole position while setting the fastest lap (the latter feat, for the first time since 2018, no longer awards a bonus point). He previously did so at the Dutch Grand Prix last year.

Norris scored his 10th pole position, matching Jochen Rindt; fifth grand prix victory, equalling Giuseppe Farina, Clay Regazzoni, John Watson, Michele Alboreto and Keke Rosberg; and 13th fastest lap, tying with Jacky Ickx, Alan Jones and Riccardo Patrese.

He gave McLaren their first win in the season-opening round of the championship, and their first victory in the Australian Grand Prix, since 2012. Then as last weekend, McLaren also locked out the front row of the grid, though Norris should be grateful it wasn’t their second-placed starter who won, as on that occasion, when Jenson Button got the jump on Lewis Hamilton. Starts were not a strength of Norris’s last year, but he successfully converted pole position into the lead on this occasion.

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For the first time in six years, the new Formula 1 season began at the Albert Park circuit in Melbourne. It should have done in 2020, but the Covid-19 pandemic forced the postponement of the first seven rounds of the world championship. The season instead opened in Austria, where Norris made his first appearance on the podium in the first round of the season.

Andrea Kimi Antonelli, Mercedes, Albert Park, 2025
Antonelli bagged a fine fourth on his debut

This year George Russell reached the podium in the opening round for the first time in his career. He was followed by his new team mate, Andrea Kimi Antonelli, who impressed on his debut by climbing 12 places to finish fourth.

Antonelli, 18, became the second-youngest driver in F1 history to score points. Verstappen was 17 when he finished seventh in the 2015 Malaysian Grand Prix, two weeks after making his debut in Melbourne. He is the first Italian driver to score points in F1 since Antonio Giovinazzi at the Saudi Arabian Grand Prix in 2021.

Alexander Albon brought great cheer to Williams by finishing fifth. That was their best result since Russell’s second place in the 2021 Belgian Grand Prix, which officially lasted just one lap in dire conditions. They haven’t had a better result in a full-length race since Lance Stroll finished third for them at Baku in 2017. Felipe Massa was the last driver to finish that high for them in a season-opener, at Melbourne in 2016.

Stroll also had a positive weekend in Australia. After 11 races without scoring, he ended the longest point-less run of his grand prix career by finishing sixth.

He was one of several drivers who rose up the order by pitting at the right time when it rained. Ferrari kept both their drivers out, which meant Hamilton led a lap on his debut for the team. Unfortunately by that point the track was sodden and he was on slicks. He fell to ninth, then Oscar Piastri passed him around the outside at turn nine on the final lap.

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Hamilton’s eventual finishing position of 10th was the worst for a driver on their debut for the team since Luca Badoer’s notoriously unsuccessful two-race spell as a substitute for Massa in 2009:

It could have been worse, and it was for Isack Hadjar, who Hamilton’s father consoled after he crashed out on the formation lap prior to the start. The rookie became the first driver to fail to start on his debut since 2015. At least he qualified, which was more than could be said for Roberto Merhi, whose Marussia was not ready to run at all at this race 10 years ago.

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F1 statistics

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“I’ve not performed at the level of a world champion. Simple as that.”

Lando Norris took some criticism from the media last year for being too hard on himself when speaking about his own imperfections. Yet at the same time, the admission he made in Zandvoort, facing the media on Thursday ahead of the grand prix that would bring him his second career victory, was probably no more than just stating the obvious – not only to the media but also to the fans.

Maybe he’s not really being hard on himself, he’s just saying what’s on his mind.

“At certain times I have [performed], and in many races, I have,” he said back then, “but there have also been little things that just let me down along the way, and those are things I cannot afford to have. And that’s why I’ve not been happy with certain parts of the season and what I’m working very hard to try to improve.”

Half a year later, he has presented clear evidence of that promised improvement, as his victory in Melbourne was arguably his most complete in Formula 1. And it was the little things that ultimately made this victory happen.

To say that he was flawless all weekend would be an overstatement, yet most importantly, Norris delivered when it mattered.

Lando Norris, McLaren, Oscar Piastri, McLaren

Lando Norris, McLaren, Oscar Piastri, McLaren

Photo by: Simon Galloway / Motorsport Images

After his initial lap time was deleted in Q3 following his first attempt due to running wide at Turn 4, he kept his cool towards the end of the session to secure pole with the slightest of margins over McLaren team-mate, Oscar Piastri.

This time, he remembered the correct procedure for an aborted start – unlike Brazil last year – and then, with two small but crucially well-timed moves on the run down to Turn 1 at the actual start, he saved himself from another social media outcry about his alleged inability to hold the lead on lap one (is that still a thing?).

That provided him with the opportunity to remain in the position of the hunted for the duration of the grand prix – something he seemingly needs to get used to in 2025.

Read Also:

He wasn’t the fastest throughout, but – some would argue with a little help from the pit wall – he kept enough of a margin to Piastri in the middle part of the race and then to Verstappen at the very end, so neither managed to launch anything close to an overtaking attempt. It was as controlled a drive as it probably could have been in as chaotic a race as it gets in F1.

He did, of course, let his McLaren slide off the track at Turn 12 on lap 44 when the rain really started to intensify, but unlike Piastri, he still kept his wheels pointing in the right direction when sliding back onto the track from the grass – and crucially, kept the lead before diving into the pit lane.

Was it a tiny bit of luck, or was it that the Sochi experience from years ago helped him avoid losing the car in that moment? That’s a question which is impossible to answer – probably even for Norris himself. Yet, it’s the outcome that matters the most. After all, Norris was the first to arrive at that corner and experience the sudden loss of grip – but it was he who remained in control.

Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri, McLaren

Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri, McLaren

Photo by: Sam Bagnall / Motorsport Images

Add the more streamlined communication with his partner in crime, Will Joseph, to the list of things that have improved – and you get a driver who now seems prepared for whatever craziness may happen. The one who, perhaps, Norris himself believed he wasn’t last year.

Crucially, he delivered that near-perfect weekend while being labelled as the season favourite following a very impressive test for McLaren in Bahrain – and that’s the kind of pressure he hadn’t yet experienced in F1. He dealt with it as well as he could have.

And also, it was the second victory in a row that Norris delivered on demand after winning the 2024 finale in Abu Dhabi, which secured McLaren its first constructors’ title in more than a quarter of a century.

It would be too easy to overhype Norris’ drive now and conclude that this year’s championship is his to lose. It’s also important to acknowledge that it could have all gone wrong – with an odd yellow flag during his second Q3 attempt in qualifying, or with the weather favouring Red Bull, leading to a completely different outcome.

The smallest detail could have completely shifted the perception of his whole weekend, where even a second-placed finish could have been seen as a defeat – and that’s the new reality for Norris as well.

From now on, it has to become a must for Norris to win the races he should win. He did it in Abu Dhabi. But simply because of the nature of the Melbourne race, last weekend’s victory was arguably more impressive – simply because of how chaotic it was.

Lando Norris, McLaren

Lando Norris, McLaren

Photo by: Zak Mauger / Motorsport Images

Norris is right when he says “it’s not all about the car,” and it’s up to him now to capitalise on the progress McLaren has made. There’s no longer any discussion about whether he made the right decision sticking with the Papaya team during the challenging times, but now is probably the most crucial period of his career.

And although right now McLaren seems like a clear favourite, things can still change quickly. Yes, team boss Andrea Stella will probably ignore George Russell’s advice to switch focus to 2026 early on – but who’s to say Norris’ team is completely clear of the Red Bull and Max Verstappen threat?

Underestimating the Dutchman would be a silly mistake.

There’s also the FIA’s push to make F1 cars’ wings less flexible, with new tests coming in as early as this week in China and again before the Spanish Grand Prix on the 1 June. The pecking order can still shift, and the first part of the season could prove to be the most important one for the championship fight – exactly as it was last year.

After all, it was in the spring and early summer when Verstappen won his title, not in Brazil. And Norris needs to be flawless – perhaps even more than he was in Melbourne – to ensure he capitalises on McLaren’s current form.

And let’s not forget that his main rival for this year’s crown could be the guy sharing the garage with him. It’s the little things, again, that made the difference in Melbourne – Norris being a tiny bit more careful with his tyres during the decisive qualifying lap, so that he could really make the difference in the last two corners, and keeping the car on track on that very same lap 44. Piastri had an almost perfect race, but eventually let it slip away.

Lando Norris, McLaren, Max Verstappen, Red Bull Racing

Lando Norris, McLaren, Max Verstappen, Red Bull Racing

Photo by: Red Bull Content Pool

But with the Australian’s rapid and, more importantly, steady progression, he’s inevitably going to become a threat to Norris’ title ambitions.

Norris now appears to be the favourite for this season and his Melbourne performance strongly suggests that he’s as close to “performing like a champion” as it gets. Yet, there’s one clear difference between driving like a champion and being one. Melbourne was indeed one of his most convincing performances ever in F1. But doing it once won’t be enough.

And he clearly gets it.

“It’s not easy to put a weekend together like this,” he said on Sunday, “especially when I’ve got a lot of pressure from Max and Oscar because they’re hungry, competitive, and want it just as badly.

“Stressful, but I know what I’m capable of. I know what I can do.”

It’s not as headline-grabbing a quote as the “not performed at the level of a world champion” one. But coming from someone who’s supposed to be hard on himself – or who just says what’s on his mind – it should be worrying for his rivals.

Read Also:

In this article

Oleg Karpov

Formula 1

Lando Norris

McLaren

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Lando Norris said McLaren should be regarded as the championship favourites following his victory in the season-opening race yesterday.

However Norris, who led Max Verstappen home by less than a second, pointed out rival teams could overturn the advantage McLaren showed in Melbourne yesterday.

“Max was three-tenths off yesterday,” Norris pointed out after the race. “Last year, we were much further off [but] ended up with the best car by the end of the season. We were over half a second off at the beginning of last year behind Red Bull and ended up with the quickest car.”

He dismissed George Russell’s claim McLaren are so far ahead they could win the championship without putting further development into their MCL39. As last season’s champions, McLaren are already permitted less wind tunnel testing time than their rivals under F1’s performance handicapping rules.

“I know George made some comments earlier this weekend that we can just turn our focus to 2026,” he said. “If that’s their mentality, wonderful, but that’s not the mentality to have.”

“We know we still have a lot of work to do on this year’s car. If you relax in this position, you fail. In Formula 1, if you start thinking things are good and groovy, that’s when you get caught.”

McLaren and Mercedes are tied on points after the season-opener, while Norris leads Verstappen by seven points in the drivers’ championship. But Norris suspects other tracks won’t suit their car as well as Melbourne did, such as Bahrain International Circuit, where teams tested last month.

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“I do think we’re favourites because the team has done an amazing job and the car is flying,” he said. “But we will have races where we struggle.

“If we started the season in Bahrain, I don’t think we would have won, and [I wouldn’t be asked] this question. Let’s allow a few more races to take place before making any obvious statements.”

Norris came under sustained pressure during yesterday’s race from his own team mate, Oscar Piastri, as well as Verstappen. Sitting next to Verstappen and Russell, whose team mates are far less experienced than Piastri, Norris pointedly remarked that McLaren’s driver line-up is part of its strength.

“We are the team to beat, mainly because we have two drivers up there pushing each other. That helps.

“Do I think me and Oscar pushing each other in qualifying yesterday allowed us to get one-and-a-half [tenths], one tenth more than the two drivers here, because their team mates aren’t as equipped or experienced? Yes. So add that into the equation as well.

“It’s not just about the car. The team has done an amazing job, and I thank them for everything they’re doing. But we know we can make it better, and that’s our aim.”

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Teams’ fastest lap times in Melbourne

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2025 Australian Grand Prix

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McLaren drew criticism from some last year for declining to impose team orders on their drivers when doing so could have helped Lando Norris in the championship.

So their decision to impose team orders during the first race of 2025 was a clear departure from what they’ve done before. It came in the form of a ‘hold position’ order given to both drivers at the mid-point of the race.

McLaren told both drivers to hold their positions when Oscar Piastri caught Norris while he was leading just after half-distance. They gave similar messages to both drivers on lap 29.

The pair were closing on Oliver Bearman, the first driver they would put a lap down, and his team mate Esteban Ocon. As the MCL39s closed on the Haas pair McLaren told their drivers the order to hold position was in place while they “transition to the dry” and “clear the backmarkers”.

Once they lapped the two Haas cars Piastri asked if the order was to be lifted, but was told it remained in force. The next car they had to lap was Liam Lawson’s Red Bull, which was around 10 seconds ahead on lap 30.

On the next lap, Piastri made a mistake at turn six. The next time by McLaren told him the ‘hold position’ order had been lifted. He went off again at turn six on that lap, which dropped him well out of DRS range of his team mate.

McLaren Racing CEO Zak Brown insisted the pair remained free to race. However he admitted feeling some relief when Piastri ran wide and dropped back from Norris.

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“That was just a ‘hold’ while we were coming up on the lapped traffic just to make sure we can both get through that,” he told Channel 4. “They were free to race.

Oscar Piastri, McLaren, Albert Park, 2025
Piastri went off more than once at turn six

“Actually, once we cleared it, Oscar I think dropped a wheel [into the gravel], which was kind of a bit of a ‘phew, okay, they’re not that close to each other’. They’re free to race, but I knew I was going to bite my nails the rest of the race.”

Soon afterwards, Piastri’s pursuit of Norris was interrupted when Fernando Alonso crashed, triggering a Safety Car period. His race went awry soon after the restart, when more rain fell and he spun off while chasing Norris.

Piastri’s dissatisfaction with the order at the time was easy to understand, particularly given that it wasn’t lifted as soon as they lapped the Haas drivers. Exactly how McLaren believe they fulfilled the “transition to dry” element of the order wasn’t clear.

Would they have invoked the ‘hold position’ order again had Piastri got back within DRS range of Norris? Did they intend to keep turning it on and off like a light switch as they caught and passed backmarkers?

Later races may reveal more about how McLaren choose to implement this novel spin on team orders. And whether they can pull off the tricky balancing act involved when an F1 team has two competitive drivers and a car quick enough to win the world championship.

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Norris and Piastri’s radio messages

The two drivers were given similar ‘hold position’ messages on lap 29.

Lap: 28/58 NOR: 1’29.097, PIA: 1’28.629
StallardCars ahead are Bearman and Ocon, they will get blue flags.
Norris and Piastri lap Bearman
Lap: 29/58 NOR: 1’28.357, PIA: 1’28.188
JosephOcon should have the flags. We also need, minor, white default two two again, white default two two again. Don’t worry about Oscar for now, we’re going to clear [pauses] we’re going to clear backmarkers and make the transition.
Norris and Piastri lap Ocon
StallardOscar we should hold position please, hold position. Transition to the dry, clear the backmarkers. Next one is Ocon.
PiastriOkay. I’m faster, but okay.
Lap: 30/58 NOR: 1’28.032, PIA: 1’28.331
JosephLando, rain update. There’s no rain until lap 43 and it possibly might go up after then. How are the tyres?PiastriAre we still holding now that we’ve cleared the traffic?
NorrisYeah, they’re broken. They’re more ‘slicktermediates’ now. I think getting towards that phase, anyway.StallardYes, hold for now. Let us know your pace.
PiastriYeah. Do I [unclear] tell you my pace?
StallardOscar latest is more rain building up, more rain building up. I’ll give you a time in a second.
Lap: 31/58 NOR: 1’27.695, PIA: 1’27.916
StallardCurrently no rain expected ’til lap 45, but could be heavier rain after that. How’s the track?
PiastriIt’s drying, but we’re going to need another inter if it rains.
StallardVerstappen last lap 20 [unclear] to pick up his pace to match you.
Piastri runs wide at turn six

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McLaren told Norris the ‘hold position’ order had been lifted two laps after Piastri was notified. It appears other discussions took priority, likely because the threat from Piastri had visibly diminished.

Lap: 32/58 NOR: 1’27.800, PIA: 1’29.379
JosephWeather update when ready and I’ve got a race update for you as well.PiastriOn pit straight
Okay Oscar we’re free to race now, free to race, you know the rules. Weather update, lap 43 could be more rain, heavier rain possible No rain until lap 43.
Piastri runs wide at turn six again
Lap: 33/58 NOR: 1’27.495, PIA: 1’28.226
NorrisYes, the tyres, I think are pretty much worn to slicks and if I hit a wet patch I’m fucked.
Okay.
NorrisAny rain and I’m fucked, 100%.
JosephUnderstood. We see the tramlines forming. No rain expected until lap 45, then possible rain, but we’re not sure.
NorrisI don’t think it’s that far away from a slick right now to be honest
JosephOkay understood, keep us updated.
NorrisYeah, I think you definitely get away with a slick.
Lap: 34/58 NOR: 2’02.273, PIA: 2’07.025
JosephOkay, gap to Oscar’s 3.4, you are now, both of you are free to race each other, you’re free to race each other.
Alonso crashes and the Safety Car is deployed

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Formula 1

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It is rare for Lando Norris to speak with an air of confidence over his 2025 Formula 1 title chances but, after holding off reigning champion Max Verstappen to take victory at the Australian Grand Prix, he concluded McLaren is indeed leading the pack.

After McLaren locked out the front row in qualifying, Norris converted pole into the fifth grand prix win of his career to start his championship quest with the full 25 points in Melbourne.

McLaren ended last season as the strongest team on the grid, claiming a first constructors’ crown since 1998, but even after impressive pace in pre-season testing, Norris was keen to play down expectations.

However, victory at Albert Park as he held off Verstappen’s late charge to take the chequered flag has clearly allowed Norris to relax into the role of title favourite.

PLUS: How Red Bull blew its ‘Canada’ chance to hand Verstappen Norris’ Melbourne win

“We’re the favourites, we are the team to beat,” he said. “To start the season off like this, to start it off with a win is good enough, but to do it in such a stressful race, one where it’s so easy to make a mistake, so easy to ruin everything so quickly – it can all have gone wrong within a second, any second of the race.

“We know we have a lot of work to do on this year’s car still. I think if you do relax in that position, you failed because in Formula 1 if you start thinking things are good and groovy that’s when you start to get caught.

“We know we have a lot of work to do. I do think we’re favourites because the team has done an amazing job. If we started off in Bahrain I don’t think we would have won the race.”

Lando Norris, McLaren, Oscar Piastri, McLaren

Lando Norris, McLaren, Oscar Piastri, McLaren

Photo by: Sam Bagnall / Motorsport Images

A wet/dry race to open the new year means there are still some unanswered questions over relative race pace but, in the small window of dry running available, Norris and team-mate Oscar Piastri were a class above the rest of the pack.

Both were caught out by rainfall late on having switched to the hard tyres and Piastri followed Norris onto the grass at Turn 11 but, while the leader was able to recover, the hometown favourite slid off and fell down the order before recovering to finish ninth.

It was an unfortunate ending for Piastri, who has been told he is free to race Norris at this early stage of a new season with no McLaren ‘Papaya Rules’ yet at play.

Both Verstappen and George Russell were on the podium alongside the winner, and they have rookie team-mates this year at Red Bull and Mercedes, respectively.

Norris believes the quality of the McLaren driver line-up will help both to be better over the course of the campaign.

“We have two drivers up there pushing each other – that helps,” he added. “Do I think me and Oscar working together yesterday in terms of pushing one another allowed us to get one-and-a-half/one tenth more than the two drivers here because their team-mates aren’t as equipped and as experienced? Yes. Add that into the equation as well – don’t just say it’s the car.

“The team has done an amazing job. I thank them for everything they’re doing. We know we can make it a lot better still.”

Lando Norris, McLaren, Max Verstappen, Red Bull Racing, George Russell, Mercedes

Lando Norris, McLaren, Max Verstappen, Red Bull Racing, George Russell, Mercedes

Photo by: Simon Galloway / Motorsport Images

McLaren CEO Zak Brown wants the team to keep improving the current car as the squad seeks to prevent the field closing up to the leader in the same manner they did with Red Bull last year.

Asked how long he thinks the team will be able to keep up its advantage, Brown told Sky Sports F1: “I hope 23 more races. We definitely have a very quick race car, but we see how quickly things change in this sport.

“So we need to make sure we keep developing, but that’s what everyone back at McLaren has done an awesome job of doing in the last few years.

“I think the communication is very strong, our decision-making. We don’t kind of second-guess ourselves and so I think great execution today.

“The team had a plan. It was very tricky conditions, we communicated well. Communications with the drivers were great. We executed accordingly.”

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In this article

Mark Mann-Bryans

Formula 1

Lando Norris

Oscar Piastri

McLaren

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It is rare for Lando Norris to speak with an air of confidence over his 2025 Formula 1 title chances but, after holding off reigning champion Max Verstappen to take victory at the Australian Grand Prix, he has concluded McLaren is indeed leading the pack.

After McLaren locked out the front row in qualifying, Norris converted pole position into the fifth race win of his career to start his championship quest with the full 25 points in Melbourne.

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McLaren ended last season as the strongest team on the grid, claiming a first constructors’ crown since 1998, but even after impressive pace in pre-season testing, Norris was keen to play down expectations.

However, victory at Albert Park as he held off Verstappen’s late charge to take the chequered flag has clearly allowed Norris to relax into the role of title favourite.

“We’re the favourites, we are the team to beat,” he said.

“I mean, to start the season off like this, to start it off with a win is good enough, but to do it in such a stressful race, one where it’s so easy to make a mistake, so easy to ruin everything so quickly – it can all have gone wrong within a second, any second of the race.

“We know we have a lot of work to do on this year’s car still. I think if you do relax in that position, you failed because in Formula 1 if you start thinking things are good and groovy that’s when you start to get caught.

“We know we have a lot of work to do. I do think we’re favourites because the team has done an amazing job. If we started off in Bahrain I don’t think we would have won the race.”

Lando Norris, McLaren

Lando Norris, McLaren

Photo by: Sam Bagnall / Motorsport Images

A wet/dry race to open the new year means there are still some unanswered questions over relative race pace but, in the small window of dry running available, Norris and team-mate Oscar Piastri were a class above the rest of the pack.

Both were caught out by rainfall late on having switched to the hard tyres and Piastri followed Norris onto the grass at Turn 11 but, while the leader was able to recover, the hometown favourite slid off and fell down the order before recovering to finish ninth.

It was an unfortunate ending for Piastri, who has been told he is free to race Norris at this early stage of a new season with no McLaren ‘Papaya Rules’ yet at play.

Both Verstappen and George Russell were on the podium alongside the race winner, and they have rookie team-mates this year at Red Bull and Mercedes respectively.

Norris believes the quality of the McLaren driver line-up will help both to be better over the course of the campaign.

“We have two drivers up there pushing each other – that helps,” he added.

Lando Norris, McLaren, Oscar Piastri, McLaren

Lando Norris, McLaren, Oscar Piastri, McLaren

Photo by: Sam Bloxham / Motorsport Images

“Do I think me and Oscar working together yesterday in terms of pushing one another allowed us to get one-and-a-half/one tenth more than the two drivers here because their team-mates aren’t as equipped and as experienced? Yes. Add that into the equation as well – don’t just say it’s the car.

“The team has done an amazing job. I thank them for everything they’re doing. We know we can make it a lot better still.”

McLaren CEO Zak Brown wants the team to keep improving the current car as the squad seeks to prevent the field closing up to the leader in the same manner they did with Red Bull last year.

Asked how long he thinks the team will be able to keep up its advantage, Brown told Sky Sports F1: “I hope 23 more races. We definitely have a very quick race car, but, you know, we see how quickly things change in this sport.

“So we need to make sure we keep developing, but that’s what everyone back at McLaren has done an awesome job of doing in the last few years.

“I think the communication is very strong, our decision-making. We don’t kind of second-guess ourselves, and so I think, great execution today.

“The team had a plan. It was very tricky conditions, we communicated well. Communications with the drivers were great. We executed accordingly.”

Photos from Australian GP – Race

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In this article

Mark Mann-Bryans

Formula 1

Lando Norris

Oscar Piastri

McLaren

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Lando Norris was delighted after winning the thrilling wet-dry-wet Australian Grand Prix, particularly as McLaren had “got it wrong a lot last year” in similar circumstances.

The British driver was referencing his chances to win both in Canada and at Silverstone in 2024, where McLaren made mistakes on pitstop timings and tyre choices, but avoided similar mistakes as Norris turned pole position into the Melbourne win as the 2025 season commenced.

Norris finished ahead of Red Bull’s Max Verstappen, having soaked up pressure from the world champion early on and then his team-mate Oscar Piastri through the middle phase of the race, before the second McLaren spun down the order when the rain returned in the closing stages.

“We got it wrong a lot last year, so I guess we learned from our mistakes,” Norris said after climbing from his MCL39 following his fifth F1 career victory. “We lost out on Silverstone and Canada through a race like this. So, we’ve just learned from our mistakes, I think.

“It’s still only around one of 24, but dealing with the pressure, dealing with Max, dealing with Oscar behind me, I was pushing the whole way through. I could relax inside, but I wasn’t relaxing from how much I was pushing.

Lando Norris, McLaren

Lando Norris, McLaren

Photo by: Zak Mauger / Motorsport Images

“A tough one, so to not make overly too many mistakes, to not have a mistake that cost me anything, I guess I could take a little bit of credit for that.

“A tough challenging race, but I mean for McLaren, I need to give a big thanks because they’ve given me an amazing car. So, I have to start with them.”

Norris had to survive three safety car restarts – with the last coming just six tours from the flag and as Verstappen bore down hard with fresh tyres late on, after the two late safety car periods closed the field back up.

A mistake from Norris going too deep at Turn 6 got the Red Bull driver into DRS threat for the final three laps, but although he came close the world champion never made a move to try and take the lead.

“Just drive, I guess,” Norris replied when asked how he had dealt with Verstappen’s late pressure.

“I mean, Max was quick. I knew I had, like, good pace, but I made one mistake in Turn 6 and he got within the DRS – and the DRS around here is probably like a second or something.

“So, that allowed him to keep staying within that second and have a couple of like little looks.

“And I had to check my mirror a few more times than what I would have liked, but I stayed calm and I kept it together and I listened to Will [Joseph, Norris’s engineer who had warned him not to overdrive on the final lap], so that’s the most important thing.”

In this article

Alex Kalinauckas

Formula 1

Lando Norris

McLaren

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Lando Norris was delighted after winning the thrilling wet-dry-wet Australian Grand Prix, particularly as McLaren had “got it wrong a lot last year” in similar circumstances.

The British driver was referencing his chances to win in both Canada and at Silverstone in 2024, where McLaren made mistakes on pitstop timings and tyre choices, but avoided similar mistakes as Norris turned pole position into the Melbourne win as the 2025 season commenced.

Norris finished ahead of Red Bull’s Max Verstappen, having soaked up pressure from the world champion early on and then his team-mate Oscar Piastri through the middle phase of the race, before the second McLaren spun down the order when the rain returned in the closing stages.

“We got it wrong a lot last year, so I guess we learned from our mistakes,” Norris said after climbing from his MCL39 after his fifth F1 career victory.

“We lost out on Silverstone and Canada through a race like this. So, we’ve just learned from our mistakes, I think.

“It’s still only around one of 24, but dealing with the pressure, dealing with Max, dealing with Oscar behind me, I was pushing the whole way through.

“I could relax inside, but I wasn’t relaxing from how much I was pushing.

Lando Norris, McLaren

Lando Norris, McLaren

Photo by: Zak Mauger / Motorsport Images

“A tough one, so to not make overly too many mistakes, to not have a mistake that cost me anything, I guess I could take a little bit of credit for that.

“A tough challenging race, but I mean for McLaren, I need to give a big thanks because they’ve given me an amazing car. So, I have to start with them.”

Norris had to survive three safety car restarts – with the last coming just six tours from the flag and as Verstappen bore down hard with fresh tyres late on, after the two late safety car periods closed the field back up.

A mistake from Norris going too deep at Turn 6 got the Red Bull driver into DRS threat for the final three laps, but although he came close the world champion never made a move to try and take the lead.

“Just drive, I guess,” Norris replied when asked how he had dealt with Verstappen’s late pressure.

“I mean, Max was quick. I knew I had like good pace, but I made one mistake in Turn 6 and he got within the DRS – and the DRS around here is probably like a second or something.

“So, that allowed him to keep staying within that second and have a couple of like little looks.

“And I had to check my mirror a few more times than what I would have liked, but I stayed calm and I kept it together and I listened to Will [Joseph, Norris’s engineer who had warned him not to overdrive on the final lap], so that’s the most important thing.”

In this article

Alex Kalinauckas

Formula 1

Lando Norris

McLaren

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Lando Norris said his Australian Grand Prix victory shows McLaren have learned from the mistakes they made last year.

Periodic rain showers in Melbourne meant teams had to make split-second calls about whether and when to change tyres.

Norris went off the track when one shower hit and pitted immediately afterwards to switch from slicks to intermediates. This was potentially a pivotal moment in the race, as his pursuer Max Verstappen tried to stay out on slick tyres.

But the Red Bull driver eventually pitted for intermediates as well, which dropped him back behind the McLaren. They finished at the front of the field in that order.

It was a satisfying win for the McLaren driver who lost potential victories in similar circumstances during 2024.

“We got it wrong a lot last year so I guess we learned from our mistakes,” he said afterwards. “We lost out in Silverstone and Canada through a race like this, so we’ve learned from our mistakes, I think.”

His victory gives him the early lead in the drivers’ championship. “It’s still only round one of 24,” he said. “But dealing with the pressure, dealing with Max, dealing with Oscar behind me, I was pushing the whole way through.

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“I could relax inside, but I wasn’t relaxing from how much I was pushing. So it was a tough one. To not make too many mistakes, to not have a mistake that costs me anything, I guess I can take a little bit of credit for that.

“A tough, challenging race, but for McLaren I need to give a big thanks because they’ve given me an amazing car, so I have to start with them.”

Following a late restart, Norris resisted pressure from Verstappen to clinch victory. “Max was quick,” he said. “I knew I had good pace, but I made one mistake in turn six and he got within the DRS.

“The DRS around here is probably [worth] a second or something, so that allowed him to keep staying within that second and have a couple of little looks.

“I had to check my mirror a few more times than what I would have liked. But I stayed calm and I kept it together and I listened to Will [Joseph, race engineer].”

Norris also came under pressure from Oscar Piastri at one stage in the race. He admitted it had been a “stressful” afternoon.

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“It’s not easy to put a weekend together like this, especially when I got a lot of pressure from Max and from Oscar, because they’re hungry and they’re competitive and they want it just as badly.

“So it was stressful, but I know what I’m capable of, I know what I can do. But like you said, it’s just round one. So, we need to go and do it again next weekend and then continue from there. So a long season ahead, we just got to keep our head down and keep pushing.”

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