Lando Norris says he feels more pressure to win the championship this year after finishing runner-up to Max Verstappen last season.
But the McLaren driver believes his breakthrough 2024 campaign, in which he scored his first four grand prix wins, has given him valuable experience of the intensity of a championship fight.
“Last year was a great year because now I [was] on pole quite a bit, how do I deal with those things now – leading the race, how do I deal with those things? I kind of experienced a little bit of everything last year, apart from leading the championship, that’s something I’ve still never done.
“But I raced against Max and I came out on top sometimes, he came out behind sometimes, those types of things. So I learned a lot and I think last year set me up very nicely to come into this year and actually be very calm.
“I know there’s a lot more pressure on me and everyone is like ‘now he’s got to do it’. But I’m very relaxed and calm and I feel the most relaxed I’ve ever been, but in a good way and in a ready way.”
McLaren won the constructors’ championship in 2024 and became the first Formula 1 team to reveal their new car for the upcoming season last week. Norris said it is vital they do not repeat their poor starts to recent seasons.
“We have not started the season well, ever,” he told The Fast and the Curious. “This year is the first one we’re coming in like ‘we’ve done it now’, now there is pressure and there’s the expectation of ‘you’ve done it and now you have to start it’ [the way you finished it].
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“That’s our target, but it’s difficult. Everyone’s trying to improve and make as many changes and everything as possible. But I think we are confident we’ve figured out a lot of stuff and we definitely want to start how we ended.”
Verstappen claimed he would have won last year’s title in the McLaren. Norris received some criticism last year for failing to capitalise on chances to out-score his rival.
He said he’s happy to take reasonable criticism, but has no time for those who spread false stories about him and McLaren.
“I’m all up for people having their own opinions and saying, ‘what happens if he did this’, ‘should he have done that’,” he said. “I respect all those things, and a lot of those people’s jobs is to kind of comment on these things and so forth.
“The only thing you don’t respect is people who think they know better when they most likely don’t because they weren’t in that situation, they’re not living that moment. And false stuff. Stuff that’s just like, ‘how the hell has someone come up with that’?”
He admitted some false stories have had an effect on him in the past. “People don’t call it conspiracy theories now, they just call it ‘their facts’,” said Norris. “‘My personal facts’. That’s not how it works. That’s not the definition of ‘the facts’.
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“Again, you learn how to deal with these things, and that’s something I probably was affected by a lot more before. I think last year, I was. You’ve just got to live with it and roll with it, the fact that people are criticising you or supporting you.
“Of course, you always are much happier about those supporters. But I know I’m going to get criticised. I criticise myself all the time. I want my team to criticise me. And the thing I probably almost hate the most in the world is people who try to make me feel good and do it in the wrong way. I prefer the criticism than a ‘fake’ happiness.”
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McLaren’s Andrea Stella says the team won’t change its principles and racing rules this year as its drivers Norris and Piastri both aim to start the 2025 Formula 1 season on the front foot.
After several years in which McLaren missed the mark at the start of the season, the papaya squad is now aiming to hit the ground running and continue the kind of title-winning form that yielded its first constructors’ title since 1998.
Its poor start, before a spectacular turnaround from Miami onwards, seriously hindered Norris’ outside chance of realistically beating Max Verstappen to the title, with McLaren opting to rule out team orders until September’s Azerbaijan Grand Prix.
Now Piastri is adamant he has learned enough from an inconsistent 2024 campaign to be a stronger all-round performer in both qualifying and the race, so both he and Norris can fight for the championship as long as McLaren delivers the goods.
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That will further test McLaren’s racing principles, but team principal Stella is adamant nothing will change.
“The main aspect is that both drivers start the season with equal opportunities, and our fundamentals are based on the racing principles that we already used last year,” Stella said at the Silverstone launch of McLaren’s 2025 MCL39 car.
Andrea Stella, Team Principal, McLaren F1 Team
Photo by: Zak Mauger / Motorsport Images
“We reviewed last season – and I was actually quite proud of last season – we reviewed all the situations in which there was a proximity between the two drivers, and I was quite impressed by how well they behaved. We take some learning from last year, but already I think that was positive in terms of how we interacted and acted together as a team.
“When we reviewed last season – the drivers and the team, most of the time represented by myself – we always looked at ourselves, ‘I could have done this better’, rather than ‘Lando saying Oscar should have done this better’, and Oscar saying ‘Lando should have done this better’. So, I think we take some learning from last year, but already I think that was positive in terms of how we acted together as a team, and then we will start from this concept of equal opportunities and our racing principles.”
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Stella added that drivers didn’t belong at McLaren if they didn’t buy into to those racing principles that put the team first, with any circumstantial team orders discussed and agreed in advance.
“It’s important to say that the racing principles are representative not only of what the team believes in terms of how we go racing, but also what the drivers believe, because if a driver is not fully into these principles, then that’s not the right driver for McLaren,” he cautioned.
“I really look forward to having this kind of challenge. It means that we are doing well as a team, it means that the two drivers are doing well as drivers, and it means that the car is actually competitive, and we did a good job from a technical and racing point of view.”
In this article
Filip Cleeren
Formula 1
Lando Norris
Oscar Piastri
McLaren
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Both Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri gave a confident impression as they presented the 2025 McLaren Formula 1 car to the world on Thursday at a wet Silverstone.
Norris is adamant he has learned a huge amount from his first title battle, admittedly a long shot, last year and going up against now four-time world champion Max Verstappen wheel-to-wheel, having stewed over a number of confrontations in 2024 when he came off second best.
But Norris was still the driver scoring the most points on average once McLaren turned its MCL38 into a winning car in Miami, so there is little doubt that if the papaya squad can be competitive from the start, the 25-year-old will be right in the mix.
Then there is Piastri, who by his own admission was too inconsistent to keep pace with Norris in the championship, which forced him into a temporary number two role whenever the circumstances dictated it. McLaren has always been keen to stress it has two equal drivers, and sticking to its guns all the way until after September’s Italian Grand Prix earned it praise in some corners for its fairness, but equally criticism in others for not imposing team orders earlier to maximise its chances of a double championship having eventually won the constructors’ crown.
It was clear McLaren was still figuring stuff out as it went along, having not been in a title battle in its current iteration under CEO Zak Brown and team boss Andrea Stella. Its first version of the so-called ‘papaya rules’ still seemed to allow Piastri to make a risky lunge at Norris in Monza, which the 23-year-old pulled off deftly but still cost his team-mate not one but two positions.
The rules were then tidied up further in Baku, where McLaren openly said it would ask Piastri to support Norris when necessary. By that time it was arguably too late, with Piastri only able to move over for Norris in the Brazilian sprint before Verstappen struck the hammer blow in the sensational wet race that followed.
Oscar Piastri, McLaren MCL38, Lando Norris, McLaren MCL38
Photo by: Zak Mauger / Motorsport Images
While McLaren was still learning how to be a title contender, so was Piastri, and the Australian now believes “I can be the world champion this year”.
His two victories were punctuated by several weekends where Piastri felt he wasn’t quite at the races, which in a tight battle at the front cost him too many spots in qualifying and too much work to do on Sundays, where he has also uncovered some weaknesses. But Piastri is now adamant that he addressed many of those “opportunities” and is relishing the prospect of starting from a clean slate.
“In terms of managing myself and Lando, obviously our target is to have every weekend be an easy one-two and make sure that we then fight for that,” Piastri mused on the subject of McLaren’s rules of engagement this year.
“Of course, we’re going to be racing each other from the start. We’re all starting on zero and I want to win the world championship this year and hopefully we have a car that’s capable of doing that from the start.
“Everyone is going to have that mentality, you have to, but we are going to be able to race each other and we’ve shown time and time again that we can race each other hard but cleanly. As long as we’re not taking points off of the team then that’s how we’re going to go racing.”
Piastri is managed by Mark Webber and Ann Neal, who are sure to have played an important role navigating the young Australian through uncharted territory for him, but a familiar scenario for Webber. Webber unsuccessfully fought against the status of being a number two driver to Sebastian Vettel at Red Bull, and will now make sure to fight Piastri’s corner so history doesn’t repeat itself.
Mark Webber, Red Bull Racing and Sebastian Vettel, Red Bull Racing
Photo by: Charles Coates / Motorsport Images
Norris acknowledged Piastri might well be his biggest threat if McLaren picks up in Australia where it left off in 2024, but says there is a joint responsibility between the drivers and the team to not let things derail.
“It’s a different year, how we start the year just changes everything and I know Oscar’s hungry for a championship,” Norris pitched in. “For sure he’s capable of winning a championship, but at the same time I’m taking one race at a time and that’s our mentality of the team. Everyone knows that we want to beat each other and you want to be the top dog in the team and that’s normal, that’s the expectation.
“But I don’t think it changes anything, I hope it doesn’t in some ways, I know probably in some ways it will because that’s competitiveness, every driver wants to go out and prove their point, but there’s also just responsibility on myself, on Oscar, Andrea, the teams around both of us as drivers to handle these situations correctly.
“In some cases that will mean slightly more rules and then tightening up on some things, because we might be closer together more often, we might race more often. But we’ve definitely set a good standard last year of how we can work together as a team, how up until Baku there was no priority over one or the other, it was pretty much: ‘You’re fighting each other, it’s up to you’.”
Naturally, having two drivers at the sharp end of the grid is a good problem to have – just ask Red Bull – but there have been few examples in the past where things didn’t get feisty, or escalated into something much worse, once that equal status was maintained as the title fight headed towards its conclusion. But Stella, the architect of McLaren’s racing rules as well as of its technical success, vows the squad will not deviate from the principles it has established last year once it became clear its car was going to be a regular winner.
When asked if things can get spiky between the pair, Stella said he was “looking forward to having this kind of challenge” but still insisted that drivers who don’t buy into the team’s ethos do not belong in a McLaren F1 car in the first place.
Watch: Why Stella is confident as McLaren launch their F1 2025 season
“The team is in the lucky position of having two drivers that can contend for victories, like they have already proven, and can contend for championships if the car will be good enough,” Stella said. “The main aspect is that both drivers start the season with equal opportunities, and our fundamentals are based on the racing principles that we already used last year.
“I was actually quite proud of last season, we reviewed all the situations in which there was a proximity between the two drivers, and I was quite impressed by how well they behaved. We take some learning from last year, but already I think that was positive in terms of how we interacted and acted together as a team.
“It’s important to say that they are representative not only of what the team believes in terms of how we go racing, but also what the drivers believe as to how we go racing, because if a driver is not fully into these principles, then that’s not the right driver for McLaren.”
Time will tell if McLaren’s rules of engagement were as robust as the team believes, or if they were merely kept intact by the performance difference and ensuing points gap between Norris and Piastri.
But if Piastri has really upped his game in 2025, then McLaren’s principles will be stress tested more than they were last year.
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In this article
Filip Cleeren
Formula 1
Lando Norris
Oscar Piastri
McLaren
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Being considered the pre-season favourite can sometimes add yet more weight to the heavy burden a driver puts on their own shoulders – however, Lando Norris is aiming to win the F1 title in 2025 not just for himself but also to help line the pockets of those who back him to do so.
As the McLaren MCL39 broke cover at a cold and grey Silverstone on Thursday afternoon, the forecast for the upcoming season is much brighter for Norris.
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The 25-year-old is predicted by many to be the man who finally overthrows Max Verstappen, with several bookmakers declaring the Brit as the most likely champion in 2025.
Far from being crushed under the weight of expectation, Norris wants to go one better than last season, when he ultimately came up short in his quest to claim a first world championship and wrestle the crown away from Verstappen.
Asked if being the favourite ramped up the pressure, Norris replied: “No, I mean I hope they make a lot of money on me!
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“I feel bad if I let them down if they put money on me, so that’s definitely not something that will ever sway me in terms of my pressure, that people are doing that kind of thing.
“I know because of last year, that’s just how things have gone, because as well last year, those were the expectations, the expectations for the team and for myself.
“I’m definitely not feeling the pressure of all of these things, I know there’s the expectation and we have more partners and sponsors and all of these things and fans, every single one of these things adds to the pressure and the nerves of it all.
“I like seeing those things, I like hearing them, I like that I have that kind of bit of pressure on my back, but at the same time I just hope I can go out and make some money.”
Lando Norris, McLaren F1 Team, in the garage
Photo by: Glenn Dunbar / Motorsport Images
One bookmaker that considers Norris the hot favourite is Betfair, who has the McLaren man at +225 (9/4) to take the title this season.
“The 2024 F1 season was the most unpredictable in recent times and more of the same is expected in 2025, with drivers from three different teams topping the list of favourites for the upcoming season,” said Betfair spokesperson Sam Rosbottom.
“Having pushed Max Verstappen close in 2024, Lando Norris is the favourite to win the title. Verstappen’s Red Bull team are predicted to drop in performance this season, with Ferrari and Red Bull joint-favourites to top the constructors’ standings.
“Norris and his team-mate Oscar Piastri both won multiple races last year, but the Brit is clearly ahead of his McLaren colleague in the market. This could indicate the British team’s intention to prioritise Norris as team leader once again in 2025.
“All eyes will be on Lewis Hamilton as he joins Ferrari, but he is set for a tough battle against established team-mate Charles Leclerc, which the latter is favourite to edge.
“Despite a strong end to 2024, George Russell’s heads into his first season as Mercedes team leader as sixth favourite for the Championship.”
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Lando Norris
McLaren
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Lando Norris has said starting a new Formula 1 campaign on equal footing with Red Bull’s world champion Max Verstappen will change how aggressively he can race the Dutchman.
Norris mounted an unlikely title bid last year after McLaren started the season significantly worse than Red Bull, but a comprehensive Miami upgrade turned around the papaya squad’s fortunes and transformed the MCL38 into the best car on average from May onwards.
As McLaren rose to the top to beat Ferrari to the constructors’ crown, Verstappen and Red Bull suffered a 10-race winless streak crippled by car balance woes, but by that time the Dutchman had already amassed such a sizeable lead in the drivers’ championship that Norris’ outside title bid was relying on a faultless romp until the end of the year.
Instead, Norris lost costly points on several occasions in his battle with Verstappen, whose outstanding Brazilian Grand Prix win further cemented a fourth title that was wrapped up with two races to spare.
According to Norris, having to overcome a large points deficit also affected how he and Verstappen raced each other, with the Red Bull man much more aggressive than the Briton – safe in the knowledge that Norris desperately needed to see the finish line and bank points much more than he did.
That attitude difference first emerged when the pair came to blows in the Austrian Grand Prix as Norris attacked Verstappen for the lead, with the resulting contact forcing the McLaren driver into retirement while Verstappen finished fifth.
Max Verstappen, Red Bull Racing RB20, Lando Norris, McLaren MCL38, battle for the lead
Photo by: Andy Hone / Motorsport Images
They then battled on in Austin and Mexico, where Verstappen shoved Norris off the road and appeared happy enough to take a time penalty while Norris lost crucial track position to Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc, an incident which ended up costing him a chance to fight Carlos Sainz for a valuable win.
“With how he [Verstappen] drives and the risks that he takes and the aggressiveness that he has, there was almost no way that I could come back from the deficit that I had,” Norris reflected as McLaren launched its MCL39.
“Because there would have been too many scenarios that replicated Mexico or replicated the Red Bull Ring – that kind of thing where we were both out in a way and that benefited him more than it benefited me.”
If McLaren manages to end its run of early season woes and start 2025 where it left off last year, Norris will not have to mount such a dramatic fightback this time around.
Starting on relatively equal footing in a competitive car would mean he could race Verstappen as aggressively as his rival has raced him, rather than Norris having to walk on eggshells not to waste chances to claw back points against the reigning, four-time world champion.
“The main thing is just starting off on the right foot, which changes the mentality of every driver,” Norris said. “It would be [a different] mentality for Max if he’s 50 points behind versus 50 points ahead. That’s the biggest key difference.”
Max Verstappen, Red Bull Racing RB20, battles with Lando Norris, McLaren MCL38
Photo by: Sam Bloxham / Motorsport Images
However, those peculiar 2024 championship circumstances are no excuse for Norris to shy away from the fact that Verstappen had his number more often than not when they went toe to toe, with Norris admitting he “wasn’t at the level that I need to be” racing his infamously fierce rival.
“It was a tough year, but I learnt a lot from those moments,” the 25-year-old said. “There’s definitely things I need to do better. I’ll always be the first to admit it – I don’t need people telling me this kind of thing, [as] I have people that help me through these situations and advise me.
“Definitely, Texas Turn 1 up the hill [where Norris left the door open on the inside for Verstappen] was just poor on my behalf. I know that better than anyone else. There are definitely things I need to tighten up on and improvements that I’ve got to make and I feel I already at the end of last year improved on those situations.
“I know I wasn’t at the level that I needed to be when I first went into those battles with Max – that was clear. And I take that on the chin. It hurts. It’s always going to hurt when you’re mixing it at times and you don’t come out on top.
“That’s the way it is in life sometimes. As long as I learn and don’t make them [mistakes] multiple times, that’s the way it is and I need to do a better job.”
When asked if needs to make a point to Verstappen as they inevitably rub shoulders in 2025, he replied: “I need to get my elbows out and I need to show him that I’m not going to willingly give him positions – those kinds of things.
“But I just have to be a smart driver. You have to be a smart driver to go up against Max. I look forward to it.”
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In this article
Filip Cleeren
Formula 1
Max Verstappen
Lando Norris
Red Bull Racing
McLaren
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Ahead of his second Formula 1 season with McLaren last year, Oscar Piastri could feel an awkward “weaknesses” he wanted to address. Now, as his team launches its 2025 challenger, he’s crystal clear he has what it takes to become world champion.
After all, the 2024 campaign that ended with McLaren as constructors’ champion was just Piastri’s sophomore year.
And it started with many questions over whether he could improve from a still impressive 2023 campaign to match established team star Lando Norris in the critical areas of tyre management and help make McLaren a grand prix winner again.
But Piastri rose to the challenge – arguably starting the year just as strong as Norris, before his team-mate found a critical edge just when McLaren transformed its MCL38 with a massive development upgrade in Miami.
Norris won there, before Piastri was able to get close enough to attack him at the start of the Hungarian GP he would go on to win – after an uncomfortable team orders saga late on.
Piastri, who produced a stunning drive to win again in Baku, eventually ended up supporting Norris’s doomed bid to topple Max Verstappen as drivers’ world champion, but only after they raced each other too hard and lost a further win at Monza.
Charles Leclerc, Ferrari SF-24, 1st position, Oscar Piastri, McLaren MCL38, 2nd position, Lando Norris, McLaren MCL38, 3rd position, on their slow down lap
Photo by: Zak Mauger / Motorsport Images
Now, with McLaren’s MCL39 challenger viewed by many as the pre-2025 season favourite, Piastri says he and Norris are “definitely” starting the new campaign “on a clean slate” – but within himself he now feels capable of producing another performance step that could help yield F1’s ultimate prize.
“I do think that I can become world champion this year,” Piastri told select media including Autosport on Thursday.
“I feel like 12 months ago I was going into the season still with some weaknesses that I wasn’t particularly confident with.
“I think through last season I addressed them. It’s now just about addressing them every weekend and making sure that I’m putting my best foot forward every weekend and that is what is going to be the difference.
“I’m confident and I think we’ve still got some things to work on. I’m definitely not the finished product but I don’t think anyone necessarily is.
“I think if we can work on some of the things that we’ve set out to do in this off-season then I’ll have a lot of tools to be able to try and make that happen.”
Oscar Piastri, McLaren MCL38, Lando Norris, McLaren MCL38
Photo by: Steven Tee / Motorsport Images
Piastri ended the 2024 campaign feeling his main discrepancy to Norris had come down to regularly being slower in qualifying (they ended the season with a 20-4 record for all counting sessions in Norris’s favour, with Piastri fourth in the drivers’ standings while his team-mate was runner-up).
But as he faced the F1 press corps fresh from spending his longest period back home in Australia since he had moved across the world to start his motorsport career, Piastri revealed that now he has spent time working with McLaren on its new simulator this off-season, he has discovered there are other – so far unspecified – areas of his driving game that he feels must improve that will boost him overall.
“We’ve gone into a lot of detail on how we can be better prepared for this season and some of the more specific driving opportunities,” he explained.
“I said at the end of last season qualifying is something I wanted to work on, but I think going through a lot of the details and things, it’s not just qualify better.
“There’s some specifics that if I can improve on those, it’ll make everything better. Then you get the confidence and everything naturally helps itself.
“There’s definitely some opportunities we’ve identified and I think if I can work on those, then hopefully those weekends at some points from last season [where Norris was clearly McLaren’s quicker driver] will disappear.
Zak Brown, CEO, McLaren Racing, with Oscar Piastri, McLaren F1 Team
Photo by: Steven Tee / Motorsport Images
“You can still start to work on those things in the sim and build the right things. I think the opportunities that I have are things that you can work on in the sim.
“I think there was a lot of strengths that I had last year as well. The races in particular, I had to fight for a lot of my finishes that I had last year and in a lot of cases had to improve from where I started and I think that side of things you can’t really work on in the sim.
“I’m happy with a lot of the things I did last season but some of those opportunities we can already start working on now.”
When it comes to both McLaren drivers starting 2025 as potential title contenders, Piastri was also confident of how things stood in terms of rules of engagement.
“We are going to be able to race each other,” he said. “We’ve shown time and time again that we can race each other hard but cleanly and as long as we’re not taking points off the team then that’s how we’re going to go racing.”
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Alex Kalinauckas
Formula 1
Lando Norris
Oscar Piastri
McLaren
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Lewis Hamilton was back on track with Ferrari for the Pirelli Formula 1 tyre test that took place this week at Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya, with Charles Leclerc fastest overall.
As the new technical regulations for 2026 make F1 cars smaller and lighter, the tyres will also be narrower – by 25mm at the front and 30mm at the rear – and have a slightly smaller diameter, though wheel size is not changing.
As a consequence, Pirelli has been testing prototypes ahead of next year, with a two-day test completed with McLaren at Circuit Paul Ricard last week for wet and intermediate tyres, and further two-day running was just completed in Spain.
Ferrari drivers Hamilton and Leclerc shared an SF-24, while on Tuesday Lando Norris was driving the MCL60 from the 2023 season, with both cars featuring technical adaptations making them closer to the 2026 technical requirements.
This was the first time the seven-time world champion was back on track after his crash on the same track last week, which was detrimental to Ferrari’s and Leclerc’s mileage.
“This time the programme centred around development of the slicks,” a press release from Pirelli stated. “Specifically being tested were various combinations of construction and compound, the latter from the hardest end of the range, from the C1 to the C3, as they are well suited to the Spanish track which is particularly demanding on tyres.”
The three drivers completed no fewer than 332 laps overall on Tuesday, with Norris racking up 159 laps while Leclerc and Hamilton covered 86 and 87 respectively. Norris was fastest, setting a 1m15.215s as his quickest lap time, followed by Hamilton in 1m15.930s and Leclerc in 1m16.060s.
Lando Norris, McLaren during Pirelli test
Photo by: Pirelli
Oscar Piastri took over at the wheel of the McLaren car on Wednesday and completed 152 laps, while Leclerc and Hamilton managed 74 each. This amounted to 300 more laps, meaning Pirelli’s engineers now have a whopping 2,943km’s worth of data to look into from the two-day test.
Leclerc was fastest overall thanks to a 1m14.971s marker, with Piastri and Hamilton lapping in 1m15.815s and 1m16.759s respectively on Wednesday. The Pirelli press release did point out that those lap times “have no real significance given the different work programmes”.
“It was a very useful session, particularly when it came to providing a comparison between the various different constructions for next season, as well as experimenting with some compounds from the harder end of the range,” Pirelli motorsport director Mario Isola stated following the two-day test.
“The Barcelona circuit is known as one of the most demanding for the tyres in terms of the energy exerted and degradation, therefore the information we have gathered over these two busy days will be very important for the future development of this generation of tyres.”
Pirelli’s 2026-spec tyre testing will resume on 13-14 February in Jerez with Alpine (two days), McLaren and Mercedes (one day each). Bahrain will then host another session on 2-3 March, just after pre-season testing, with Alpine and Williams in attendance on both days.
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Ben Vinel
Formula 1
Lewis Hamilton
Charles Leclerc
Lando Norris
Oscar Piastri
Ferrari
McLaren
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Lewis Hamilton was back on track with Ferrari for the Pirelli Formula 1 tyre test that has been taking place this week at Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya, with the first day topped by Lando Norris.
As the new technical regulations for 2026 make F1 cars smaller and lighter, the tyres will also be narrower – by 25mm at the front and 30mm at the rear – and have a slightly smaller diameter, though wheel size is not changing.
As a consequence, Pirelli has been testing prototypes ahead of next year, with a two-day test completed with McLaren at Circuit Paul Ricard last week for wet and intermediate tyres, while further two-day running is under way in Spain.
Ferrari drivers Hamilton and Charles Leclerc have been sharing an SF-24, while Norris was driving the MCL60 from the 2023 season, with both cars featuring technical adaptations making them closer to the 2026 technical requirements.
“This time the programme centred around development of the slicks,” a press release from Pirelli stated.
“Specifically being tested were various combinations of construction and compound, the latter from the hardest end of the range, from the C1 to the C3, as they are well suited to the Spanish track which is particularly demanding on tyres.”
Lando Norris, McLaren during Pirelli test
Photo by: Pirelli
The three drivers completed no fewer than 332 laps overall on Tuesday, which amounts to 1,546km of data for Pirelli’s engineers, with Norris racking up 159 laps while Leclerc and Hamilton covered 86 and 87 respectively.
This was the first time the seven-time world champion was back on track after his crash on the same track last week, which was detrimental to Ferrari’s and Leclerc’s mileage.
Norris was fastest on Tuesday, setting a 1m15.215s as his quickest lap time, followed by Hamilton in 1m15.930s and Leclerc in 1m16.060s – though there obviously are no conclusions to draw from the pecking order with older cars in tyre testing.
Oscar Piastri is taking over at the wheel of the McLaren car on Wednesday, with Leclerc driving the Ferrari in the morning before handing it to Hamilton.
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Ben Vinel
Formula 1
Lewis Hamilton
Charles Leclerc
Lando Norris
Oscar Piastri
Ferrari
McLaren
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Formula 1’s official tyre supplier Pirelli tested the latest version of its new, narrower tyres for next season at the Circuit de Catalunya today.
Ferrari and McLaren supplied cars for the test. Lewis Hamilton and Charles Leclerc drove last year’s SF-24 which had been modified to suit the tyres intended for use on cars which should be lighter than current designs.
At McLaren, Lando Norris used a car based on the 2023 MCL60, again modified to provide more representative testing data. McLaren also conducted a test for Pirelli last week at the Paul Ricard circuit in France, working on the intermediate and full wet weather tyres.
In dry and sunny conditions at the Spanish circuit, the three drivers covered a total of 332 laps. Norris, having his car to himself, covered 159 laps of the Spanish Grand Prix venue, close to two-and-a-half race distances. He set the quickest time with a 1’15.215.
Hamilton, who crashed a 2023 Ferrari when the team tested at the circuit last week, did 87 laps, one more than his new team mate. His best time of 1’15.930 was a tenth of a second faster than Leclerc’s.
The drivers used examples of the hardest tyres in Pirelli’s range, from C1 to C3. They ran a variety of constructions as Pirelli hones the designs which are 25mm narrower at the front and 30mm narrower at the rear than those used since 2017. The FIA said last year it hoped for a greater reduction in wheel sizes in 2026, but did not want to risk an increase in tyre overheating, which would detract from the goal of its new regulations.
Both Ferrari drivers will continue to test tomorrow while Oscar Piastri will take over from Norris in the McLaren.
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Pirelli tyre test pictures
Lewis Hamilton, Ferrari, Pirelli 2026 tyre testing, Circuit de Catalunya, 2025
Lewis Hamilton, Ferrari, Pirelli 2026 tyre testing, Circuit de Catalunya, 2025
Charles Leclerc, Ferrari, Pirelli 2026 tyre testing, Circuit de Catalunya, 2025
Lewis Hamilton, Ferrari, Pirelli 2026 tyre testing, Circuit de Catalunya, 2025
Lewis Hamilton, Ferrari, Pirelli 2026 tyre testing, Circuit de Catalunya, 2025
Lando Norris, McLaren, Pirelli 2026 tyre testing, Circuit de Catalunya, 2025
Lando Norris, McLaren, Pirelli 2026 tyre testing, Circuit de Catalunya, 2025
Lando Norris, McLaren, Pirelli 2026 tyre testing, Circuit de Catalunya, 2025
Lando Norris, McLaren, Pirelli 2026 tyre testing, Circuit de Catalunya, 2025
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