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Missing out on world title would not be failure

Missing out on world title would not be failure

Norris' championship charge is back on track following his win from pole position at the previous round in Austria.
However, he still remains 15 points adrift of Piastri ahead of his home race at Silverstone this weekend.
DRIVER STANDINGS (after 11/24 rounds)
Norris closes the gap to Piastri to 15 points 👀#F1 #AustrianGP pic.twitter.com/z1pk0XbjKN
— Formula 1 (@F1) June 29, 2025
With Norris and Piastri pulling clear of their rivals in the individual standings – and McLaren 207 points ahead in the battle for the constructors' title – Red Bull team boss Christian Horner has already declared a two-horse race for the championship.
Norris started the season as the championship favourite with the bookmakers, but when asked if he thought it would be a failure if he did not land his maiden world crown this year, the British driver replied: 'I'd have to say I didn't succeed in achieving my goal, but I don't think you can ever call it a failure because I don't believe like I've failed anything.
'I will feel like I didn't live up to what I believed I could have done or the level I should have reached at certain times. But that's not a failure by any means.
'If things were much easier, and you don't achieve your goal, maybe you can call that a failure, but when it is such a long season, competing against the best in the world, I don't think you can ever call not winning the title a failure.'
Now in his seventh season on the grid, Norris will make his 140th Formula One start at Sunday's British Grand Prix.
On stage with Osc and Andrea 🤩🫶#McLarenRacingLive | #NeverStopRacing pic.twitter.com/gBZIaWGCWh
— McLaren (@McLarenF1) July 2, 2025
Mistakes by driver and team saw Norris fall short in his bid to beat Red Bull's Max Verstappen to the title last year.
The errors have carried over for Norris this year, particularly in qualifying, which leaves question marks over his championship credentials.
Norris excelled in Austria, but he has never won consecutive races.
He continued: 'It is only normal you feel the pressure from the outside world, but that's not different for me this year.
'It's more the desire, almost too much desire inside, to want to do such a good job every weekend. I want to do so well, I want to deliver for the team and I want to win. I kind of put myself under too much pressure.
'You never know what to expect when you're a kid growing up wanting to be in F1. You don't know about the hard times and the trickiness of achieving your goals, especially when you get so close, how much you can hurt when things don't go your way. Those things stick with you a bit.'
Norris will be among four British drivers on the grid this weekend, but there is a case to be made the McLaren man is the most popular of the quartet.
Norris has sold out his own 10,000-seated area – the Landostand – at Stowe corner for the weekend.
'It's very cool because I got it before Lewis (Hamilton) and George (Russell) so that's the best bit,' added Norris with a smile.
'It is incredible. Originally there was a select amount of seats, they sold out almost too quickly, so we had to buy and then sell a load more.'
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A tribute to Jules Bianchi, 10 years on from F1 driver's passing
A tribute to Jules Bianchi, 10 years on from F1 driver's passing

The Independent

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  • The Independent

A tribute to Jules Bianchi, 10 years on from F1 driver's passing

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As Bianchi's competition and companion at Marussia simultaneously, did Chilton grieve? 'It took a few years for me not to think about Jules every day, even if it was for a few seconds, and there's still not a week that goes by without me thinking about Jules,' Chilton says now, with a nod to one of F1's current staple of drivers. 'I've never met Charles Leclerc. But when I see Charles on TV, he is Jules. The way he speaks and drives, it's the same. Charles is driving for Ferrari, which is what Jules would've done, so I enjoy watching Charles succeed. 'I'd like to think Jules passed something on to him.' Indeed, Bianchi holds a beloved spot in Leclerc's heart, as illustrated by the Monegasque's tribute helmet for his godfather last April. But for Chilton, mourning Bianchi's loss is indicative of the camaraderie felt within a cohesive racing team, even for an outfit as shortlived as Marussia. Now retired and thriving in a new world of property entrepreneurship, the 34-year-old is grateful for the memories and friends made. Yet the cruelty of Bianchi's accident had an unusual way of binding the team together, in a moment of such despair. 'It was a slightly eerie feeling,' he says of Sochi, Marussia's final F1 race. 'All Jules' mechanics were there, the car was looking clean. 'But there was never any doubt of putting someone else [a reserve driver] in the cockpit. It was always going to be Jules' car in the pit lane.'

I worked with Chloe Kelly as a kid and have now spent £3,000 building my own pub to watch her at Euro 2025
I worked with Chloe Kelly as a kid and have now spent £3,000 building my own pub to watch her at Euro 2025

Scottish Sun

timean hour ago

  • Scottish Sun

I worked with Chloe Kelly as a kid and have now spent £3,000 building my own pub to watch her at Euro 2025

Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) A LIONESSES superfan who coached England's Chloe Kelly as an 11-year-old now spends more than £4,000 a year supporting the women's squad. Sports physiotherapist Zoe Bleach, 42, first met Chloe, who scored the winning goal in the 2022 Euros final, when she was playing at the Middlesex Centre for Excellence. 11 England's Chloe Kelly is a top player in the WSL for Arsenal Credit: PA 11 Zoe Bleach exclusively spoke to SunSport about her experience coaching Kelly as a kid Credit: Collect 11 Bleach forked out more than £3,000 on her very own garden pub called The Lionesses Den Credit: Collect And Zoe told of her pride that the formerly 'quiet and shy' Arsenal star is an inspiration for millions of women just like her who are embracing the beautiful game. 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Liverpool close on Hugo Ekitike transfer as Newcastle pushed aside after Alexander Isak threat
Liverpool close on Hugo Ekitike transfer as Newcastle pushed aside after Alexander Isak threat

Daily Mirror

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mirror

Liverpool close on Hugo Ekitike transfer as Newcastle pushed aside after Alexander Isak threat

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