logo
Piastri sees 'cooler' stats ahead after great start

Piastri sees 'cooler' stats ahead after great start

The Advertiser17 hours ago

Oscar Piastri could stand alone after the Canadian Grand Prix as the only Australian to win six or more races in a single Formula One season -- but the 24-year-old has bigger and better statistics in his sights.
Only Jack Brabham and Alan Jones, world champions both, won five in the same year although their tallies reflect the fact that there were far fewer races then in an annual campaign than the current record schedule of 24.
Piastri, who leads McLaren teammate Lando Norris by 10 points in the championship, has won five of the nine so far and been on the podium in the last eight.
It will surprise nobody if the remarkably calm 24-year-old driver is back on the top step at Montreal's Circuit Gilles Villeneuve on Sunday.
"It's a nice stat to have," he said of matching the maximum season haul of 1980 champion Jones and late triple title-winner Brabham.
"But I'd be happier with the stat of joining them as world champion.
"To have five wins in nine races is beyond what I expected really, even with a very competitive car," he added, saying there had also been a few other moments he wished he could rerun.
"Whilst those stats are cool, that's ultimately not why I'm here," he said. "I'm here to try and win even more races and fight for a championship. So I think there's some cooler statistics to come hopefully."
Piastri said he expected Montreal to be a continuation of how the season has gone so far, with champions McLaren winning seven of the nine and Red Bull's reigning champion Max Verstappen the other two, and also good for him.
"Max will probably be competitive again. This was a very competitive race for Mercedes last year and I expect them to be quick again here," he added.
"But you never quite know whether that's going to be matching us or challenging in qualifying especially, or a tenth or two back. Hopefully it's not a tenth or two ahead but you just never quite know exactly where the challenge is going to come from.
"Monaco was a strong race for Ferrari and there's some similarities to here but we said that 12 months ago and it wasn't a great race for them."
Piastri qualified fourth with Norris third on the grid in Canada last year but the Australian finished fifth with his teammate runner-up to Verstappen.
"Somewhat ironically the races that were pretty bad for me last year have been the best so far this year, and some of the ones that were good last year haven't been great," he said.
"So we'll see how we go but I'm expecting it to be a good weekend...I've been very comfortable with the car the whole year and I feel like I'm in a good place at the moment so I'm expecting it to be strong."
Oscar Piastri could stand alone after the Canadian Grand Prix as the only Australian to win six or more races in a single Formula One season -- but the 24-year-old has bigger and better statistics in his sights.
Only Jack Brabham and Alan Jones, world champions both, won five in the same year although their tallies reflect the fact that there were far fewer races then in an annual campaign than the current record schedule of 24.
Piastri, who leads McLaren teammate Lando Norris by 10 points in the championship, has won five of the nine so far and been on the podium in the last eight.
It will surprise nobody if the remarkably calm 24-year-old driver is back on the top step at Montreal's Circuit Gilles Villeneuve on Sunday.
"It's a nice stat to have," he said of matching the maximum season haul of 1980 champion Jones and late triple title-winner Brabham.
"But I'd be happier with the stat of joining them as world champion.
"To have five wins in nine races is beyond what I expected really, even with a very competitive car," he added, saying there had also been a few other moments he wished he could rerun.
"Whilst those stats are cool, that's ultimately not why I'm here," he said. "I'm here to try and win even more races and fight for a championship. So I think there's some cooler statistics to come hopefully."
Piastri said he expected Montreal to be a continuation of how the season has gone so far, with champions McLaren winning seven of the nine and Red Bull's reigning champion Max Verstappen the other two, and also good for him.
"Max will probably be competitive again. This was a very competitive race for Mercedes last year and I expect them to be quick again here," he added.
"But you never quite know whether that's going to be matching us or challenging in qualifying especially, or a tenth or two back. Hopefully it's not a tenth or two ahead but you just never quite know exactly where the challenge is going to come from.
"Monaco was a strong race for Ferrari and there's some similarities to here but we said that 12 months ago and it wasn't a great race for them."
Piastri qualified fourth with Norris third on the grid in Canada last year but the Australian finished fifth with his teammate runner-up to Verstappen.
"Somewhat ironically the races that were pretty bad for me last year have been the best so far this year, and some of the ones that were good last year haven't been great," he said.
"So we'll see how we go but I'm expecting it to be a good weekend...I've been very comfortable with the car the whole year and I feel like I'm in a good place at the moment so I'm expecting it to be strong."
Oscar Piastri could stand alone after the Canadian Grand Prix as the only Australian to win six or more races in a single Formula One season -- but the 24-year-old has bigger and better statistics in his sights.
Only Jack Brabham and Alan Jones, world champions both, won five in the same year although their tallies reflect the fact that there were far fewer races then in an annual campaign than the current record schedule of 24.
Piastri, who leads McLaren teammate Lando Norris by 10 points in the championship, has won five of the nine so far and been on the podium in the last eight.
It will surprise nobody if the remarkably calm 24-year-old driver is back on the top step at Montreal's Circuit Gilles Villeneuve on Sunday.
"It's a nice stat to have," he said of matching the maximum season haul of 1980 champion Jones and late triple title-winner Brabham.
"But I'd be happier with the stat of joining them as world champion.
"To have five wins in nine races is beyond what I expected really, even with a very competitive car," he added, saying there had also been a few other moments he wished he could rerun.
"Whilst those stats are cool, that's ultimately not why I'm here," he said. "I'm here to try and win even more races and fight for a championship. So I think there's some cooler statistics to come hopefully."
Piastri said he expected Montreal to be a continuation of how the season has gone so far, with champions McLaren winning seven of the nine and Red Bull's reigning champion Max Verstappen the other two, and also good for him.
"Max will probably be competitive again. This was a very competitive race for Mercedes last year and I expect them to be quick again here," he added.
"But you never quite know whether that's going to be matching us or challenging in qualifying especially, or a tenth or two back. Hopefully it's not a tenth or two ahead but you just never quite know exactly where the challenge is going to come from.
"Monaco was a strong race for Ferrari and there's some similarities to here but we said that 12 months ago and it wasn't a great race for them."
Piastri qualified fourth with Norris third on the grid in Canada last year but the Australian finished fifth with his teammate runner-up to Verstappen.
"Somewhat ironically the races that were pretty bad for me last year have been the best so far this year, and some of the ones that were good last year haven't been great," he said.
"So we'll see how we go but I'm expecting it to be a good weekend...I've been very comfortable with the car the whole year and I feel like I'm in a good place at the moment so I'm expecting it to be strong."
Oscar Piastri could stand alone after the Canadian Grand Prix as the only Australian to win six or more races in a single Formula One season -- but the 24-year-old has bigger and better statistics in his sights.
Only Jack Brabham and Alan Jones, world champions both, won five in the same year although their tallies reflect the fact that there were far fewer races then in an annual campaign than the current record schedule of 24.
Piastri, who leads McLaren teammate Lando Norris by 10 points in the championship, has won five of the nine so far and been on the podium in the last eight.
It will surprise nobody if the remarkably calm 24-year-old driver is back on the top step at Montreal's Circuit Gilles Villeneuve on Sunday.
"It's a nice stat to have," he said of matching the maximum season haul of 1980 champion Jones and late triple title-winner Brabham.
"But I'd be happier with the stat of joining them as world champion.
"To have five wins in nine races is beyond what I expected really, even with a very competitive car," he added, saying there had also been a few other moments he wished he could rerun.
"Whilst those stats are cool, that's ultimately not why I'm here," he said. "I'm here to try and win even more races and fight for a championship. So I think there's some cooler statistics to come hopefully."
Piastri said he expected Montreal to be a continuation of how the season has gone so far, with champions McLaren winning seven of the nine and Red Bull's reigning champion Max Verstappen the other two, and also good for him.
"Max will probably be competitive again. This was a very competitive race for Mercedes last year and I expect them to be quick again here," he added.
"But you never quite know whether that's going to be matching us or challenging in qualifying especially, or a tenth or two back. Hopefully it's not a tenth or two ahead but you just never quite know exactly where the challenge is going to come from.
"Monaco was a strong race for Ferrari and there's some similarities to here but we said that 12 months ago and it wasn't a great race for them."
Piastri qualified fourth with Norris third on the grid in Canada last year but the Australian finished fifth with his teammate runner-up to Verstappen.
"Somewhat ironically the races that were pretty bad for me last year have been the best so far this year, and some of the ones that were good last year haven't been great," he said.
"So we'll see how we go but I'm expecting it to be a good weekend...I've been very comfortable with the car the whole year and I feel like I'm in a good place at the moment so I'm expecting it to be strong."

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Albanese suggests some Olympic sports could be held outside of Brisbane
Albanese suggests some Olympic sports could be held outside of Brisbane

9 News

time14 minutes ago

  • 9 News

Albanese suggests some Olympic sports could be held outside of Brisbane

Your web browser is no longer supported. To improve your experience update it here BREAKING Australian killed, another injured in Bali villa shooting incident Anthony Albanese has cast doubt over some of Brisbane's Olympic venues for 2032. Speaking on the Two Good Sports podcast on Friday, the PM suggested some sports could be played out of Sydney. "Are we really going to do rowing in Rockhampton on the Fitzroy River? When there are some pretty good facilities in Penrith?" Albanese asked. Speaking on the Two Good Sports podcast on Friday, the PM suggested some sports could be played out of Sydney. (Nine) Albanese hinted that some events could be on the move, less than three months after the reveal of Queensland's 2032 vision. "It might be that you can't just do everything in one spot," he said. The Queensland government begs to differ, rejecting calls to move rowing from the Fitzroy River in Rockhampton. "That is the plan; they are the venues. The plan is not changing," State Housing Minister Sam O'Connor said. While the Prime Minister's comments may have opened the door to changes to the Olympic plan, Tennis Queensland is sticking firm with its plans for a substantial upgrade at Pat Rafter Arena, including a new 3000-seat indoor arena. "The Premier confirmed in March that Olympic and Paralympic tennis will be played in Brisbane, and we've had productive discussions since," Tennis Queensland said in a statement. The housing minister also rubbished claims that a venue spat could put the joint $7 billion funding agreement at risk. Anthony Albanese has cast doubt over some of Brisbane's Olympic venues for 2032. (Nine) "I'm not going to buy into those hypotheticals, we have a plan, we have a great plan," O'Connor said. Rowing Queensland Chief Executive Anthea O'Loughlin said the body welcomed the PM's engagement in the discussion about rowing's location. "We support the decision to keep rowing in Queensland and look forward to continued discussion on legacy, value and long-term benefit to the sport." "We continue to engage and support the State Government, the Brisbane 2032 Organising Committee and other key stakeholders to ensure rowing is delivered to international standards and leaves a meaningful legacy for our sport in Queensland." CONTACT US

Test cricket LIVE: Australia vs South Africa day four from Lord's
Test cricket LIVE: Australia vs South Africa day four from Lord's

The Age

time20 minutes ago

  • The Age

Test cricket LIVE: Australia vs South Africa day four from Lord's

6.48pm Smith's West Indies tour in doubt after finger left at sickening angle By Daniel Brettig Steve Smith's West Indies tour has been thrown into doubt after he was taken to hospital for x-rays on a compound dislocation to his right little finger. Smith's digit was left bent at a sickening angle after he dropped a sharp chance offered by Temba Bavuma on the third afternoon of the World Test Championship final at Lord's, having moved up very close to the bat at slip. A Cricket Australia spokesperson confirmed that Smith was set to be taken for scans on the badly damaged finger. The first Test against the West Indies in Barbados is scheduled for June 25, a little less than two weeks from now. 'Steve Smith has suffered a compound dislocation of his right little finger while fielding in the slip cordon during the ICC Men's World Test Championship final against South Africa at Lord's,' A CA spokesperson said. 'He was assessed by Australian team medical staff at the ground and taken to hospital for x-rays and further treatment.' Australian assistant coach Daniel Vettori told reporters during a press conference that Smith was taken straight to hospital following the incident and didn't even make it to the change rooms. 6.47pm Good evening and welcome to day four By Jon Pierik Hello, and welcome to day four at Lord's. Following decades of falling agonisingly short of success, South Africa is on the cusp of a first major cricket triumph with 69 runs needed to win the World Test Championship final. Only four wickets were taken on day three – two each in the first two sessions before Aiden Markram (102 not out) and hobbled captain Temba Bavuma (65 not out) lifted the Proteas into a position of strength, batting through the entire evening session for an unbroken third-wicket stand of 143. It shapes as an exhilarating opening session tonight. Don't miss a moment of the action, as the Proteas attempt to dismiss ghosts of failure's past, while Australia look to conjure a morning miracle. 1.21pm England close to locking in next three Test championship finals English cricket is close to agreeing to host the next three world Test championship finals despite an attempt from India to stage the show-piece event. The world Test championship began in 2019 and has run three two-year cycles, all of which concluded with a final in England in June. India expressed an interest to stage the game in International Cricket Council meetings and there has been discussion about sharing hosting rights around the world. It is understood, however, that in recent days, officials from the England and Wales Cricket Board have been verbally informed of the ICC's intention to host the next three finals on these shores. It is expected that the decision will be rubber-stamped at the ICC's annual conference in Singapore next month, but the ECB is expected to begin planning the 2027 edition of the WTC final promptly after the current one, between Australia and South Africa, ends. The next cycle of the championship begins on Friday, June 20 with the first Test of England's five-match series against India. Despite mooted changes to two divisions, the WTC's structure will remain the same for this cycle as the last. With a vast population, wealth and an insatiable appetite for the game, India are the dominant force in world cricket. The ICC's Indian chairman Jay Shah has been at this year's final. Until November when he moved across to ICC, the 36-year-old son of Amit Shah, India's Minister of Home Affairs and a close ally of president Narendra Modi, was in charge of the Board of Control for Cricket in India. The Indian influence at ICC headquarters is expected to extend with the appointment of Sanjog Gupta, of broadcast giant Jiostar, as chief executive. The three finals so far have all been at different venues in England. In 2021, when COVID-19 protocols were still in place, the Utilita Bowl in Southampton hosted the game between New Zealand, who won, and India, because of its ability to house the players on site. In 2023, Australia beat India at the Kia Oval, which hosted in part because of sponsorship snags at Lord's, where the game has been played this week. History and prestige means Lord's will be the strong favourite to host the game again in 2027, but conversations over exactly where it is played remain at a nascent stage.

Test cricket LIVE: Australia vs South Africa day four from Lord's
Test cricket LIVE: Australia vs South Africa day four from Lord's

Sydney Morning Herald

time21 minutes ago

  • Sydney Morning Herald

Test cricket LIVE: Australia vs South Africa day four from Lord's

6.48pm Smith's West Indies tour in doubt after finger left at sickening angle By Daniel Brettig Steve Smith's West Indies tour has been thrown into doubt after he was taken to hospital for x-rays on a compound dislocation to his right little finger. Smith's digit was left bent at a sickening angle after he dropped a sharp chance offered by Temba Bavuma on the third afternoon of the World Test Championship final at Lord's, having moved up very close to the bat at slip. A Cricket Australia spokesperson confirmed that Smith was set to be taken for scans on the badly damaged finger. The first Test against the West Indies in Barbados is scheduled for June 25, a little less than two weeks from now. 'Steve Smith has suffered a compound dislocation of his right little finger while fielding in the slip cordon during the ICC Men's World Test Championship final against South Africa at Lord's,' A CA spokesperson said. 'He was assessed by Australian team medical staff at the ground and taken to hospital for x-rays and further treatment.' Australian assistant coach Daniel Vettori told reporters during a press conference that Smith was taken straight to hospital following the incident and didn't even make it to the change rooms. 6.47pm Good evening and welcome to day four By Jon Pierik Hello, and welcome to day four at Lord's. Following decades of falling agonisingly short of success, South Africa is on the cusp of a first major cricket triumph with 69 runs needed to win the World Test Championship final. Only four wickets were taken on day three – two each in the first two sessions before Aiden Markram (102 not out) and hobbled captain Temba Bavuma (65 not out) lifted the Proteas into a position of strength, batting through the entire evening session for an unbroken third-wicket stand of 143. It shapes as an exhilarating opening session tonight. Don't miss a moment of the action, as the Proteas attempt to dismiss ghosts of failure's past, while Australia look to conjure a morning miracle. 1.21pm England close to locking in next three Test championship finals English cricket is close to agreeing to host the next three world Test championship finals despite an attempt from India to stage the show-piece event. The world Test championship began in 2019 and has run three two-year cycles, all of which concluded with a final in England in June. India expressed an interest to stage the game in International Cricket Council meetings and there has been discussion about sharing hosting rights around the world. It is understood, however, that in recent days, officials from the England and Wales Cricket Board have been verbally informed of the ICC's intention to host the next three finals on these shores. It is expected that the decision will be rubber-stamped at the ICC's annual conference in Singapore next month, but the ECB is expected to begin planning the 2027 edition of the WTC final promptly after the current one, between Australia and South Africa, ends. The next cycle of the championship begins on Friday, June 20 with the first Test of England's five-match series against India. Despite mooted changes to two divisions, the WTC's structure will remain the same for this cycle as the last. With a vast population, wealth and an insatiable appetite for the game, India are the dominant force in world cricket. The ICC's Indian chairman Jay Shah has been at this year's final. Until November when he moved across to ICC, the 36-year-old son of Amit Shah, India's Minister of Home Affairs and a close ally of president Narendra Modi, was in charge of the Board of Control for Cricket in India. The Indian influence at ICC headquarters is expected to extend with the appointment of Sanjog Gupta, of broadcast giant Jiostar, as chief executive. The three finals so far have all been at different venues in England. In 2021, when COVID-19 protocols were still in place, the Utilita Bowl in Southampton hosted the game between New Zealand, who won, and India, because of its ability to house the players on site. In 2023, Australia beat India at the Kia Oval, which hosted in part because of sponsorship snags at Lord's, where the game has been played this week. History and prestige means Lord's will be the strong favourite to host the game again in 2027, but conversations over exactly where it is played remain at a nascent stage.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store