
Oscar Piastri says relationship with Lando Norris unaffected by title battle
Oscar Piastri has claimed his relationship with Lando Norris will not spiral out of control as the McLaren drivers duel to become champion of the world.
Following his much-needed victory last time out in Monaco, Norris heads into Sunday's Spanish Grand Prix just three points adrift of his Australian team-mate.
McLaren have taken six victories from the eight rounds so far, with Red Bull's Max Verstappen – the only driver outside of the British team to win this season – claiming this week that he no longer feels he is in the title fight.
'Of course it is an interesting dynamic, but my relationship with Lando at the track, and away from the track, is very similar to how it has been, and, if anything, we get along better now than we ever have,' Piastri told the PA news agency.
'The way we work together to give ourselves the best chance of success is still as strong as ever, and that has been a strength from the moment we have been team-mates.
'We get along very well. That hasn't changed. I don't expect it to change. But obviously we are both trying to win a world championship and only one of us can do it.'
Piastri and Norris are in their third campaign as team-mates but their first as direct competitors for the title. McLaren have declared both are free to fight – a noble philosophy but one that rarely ends well.
Lewis Hamilton and Nico Rosberg's friendship soured across three seasons as title rivals when Mercedes dominated the sport. Here at Barcelona's Circuit de Catalunya in 2016, Hamilton and Rosberg took each other out on the first lap – one of multiple flashpoints which led to Toto Wolff threatening both men with race bans.
It started with Mercedes misery 💥💥It ended with Max's "unbelievable" maiden win 🏆👦
The 2016 Spanish Grand Prix was intense! #F1 #SpanishGP pic.twitter.com/JT2ZFbQ1QN
— Formula 1 (@F1) May 29, 2025
However, Piastri, who at 24 is a year younger than Norris, continued: 'We are both very different people (to Hamilton and Rosberg).
'If you look at Nico, he was towards the end of his career. Maybe there are certain emotions that take over and there is more at stake?
'For both Lando and I, we still have plenty of years left in Formula One. We want the chance to win the title every year, not just this season. It is a pretty good problem for the team to be in, and we have already put in a lot of preparation to contain any problems that might have already arisen.'
Piastri, in just his third season in F1, compared to Norris' seventh, has four victories to his team-mate's two this year, and has been the more consistent performer despite starting the year as a 9/1 title outsider.
Questions have been raised about Norris' championship-winning mentality – although the British driver went some way to answering those critics in Monte Carlo a week ago.
'Lando knows himself much better than I do, but speaking for me, being mentally strong and mentally resilient is a certainly a strength of mine,' added Piastri.
'There is a lot of work that goes into that. It doesn't happen by magic. What you see is what you get with me. But I still feel emotions, right? I am not immune to that.
'I feel pressure, I feel nerves. It is not like nothing is going on. But it is about how you channel that and getting in the right state.
'As a driver, you have to believe that you are the best. You have to go into every race thinking you are the best driver on track. And that has to be the mindset when you fight for the world championship, too.
'Would I be disappointed if I didn't win the title? Yes. It would hurt, as it would for anyone. But I am still young and I hope I get this opportunity more than once. I don't think it would be a failure, that is harsh, but that doesn't mean I don't want to win it.'
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Reuters
41 minutes ago
- Reuters
Piastri on pole as McLaren lock out front row in Spain
BARCELONA, May 31 (Reuters) - Formula One leader Oscar Piastri seized pole position from teammate and title rival Lando Norris by a hefty margin as dominant McLaren locked out the front row in Spanish Grand Prix qualifying on Saturday. Red Bull's Max Verstappen, last year's winner, qualified third fastest in the same time as Mercedes' George Russell, who will start fourth because the reigning champion finished his lap first. Piastri had set a target time of one minute and 11.836 seconds in the top 10 shootout but Norris went 0.017 quicker thanks to an opportunistic aerodynamic tow, with McLaren still in a league of their own despite stricter front wing flex tests. Norris, winner in Monaco from pole last Sunday to close the gap at the top to three points, managed to improve further to 1:11.755 before Piastri clinched pole with a brilliant final lap of 1:11.546 -- 0.209 seconds quicker around the Circuit de Catalunya. The pole was the Australian's fourth in nine races so far this season. "It wasn't the perfect lap but I think around here with the tyres going off so much through the lap it's very tough to do that," said Piastri, who said over the radio that Norris' slipstream was 'cheeky'. "I'm very happy with all the work we've put in." Norris said he had the pace but made a couple of small mistakes. "Just a couple of little mistakes. Turn One, where you don't want to make a mistake because it harms the tyres for the rest of the lap. A couple of little squiggles there. And Turn Four as well," he explained. "A good result for the team, a nice one-two and an interesting start for tomorrow," added the Briton, who started on pole last year but finished second. Seven-times world champion Lewis Hamilton, winner a record-equalling six times in Spain, qualified fifth for Ferrari and ahead of team mate Charles Leclerc for the second time this season. Mercedes rookie Kimi Antonelli was sixth fastest, with Leclerc seventh after doing only one flying lap because he had run out of tyres. "I think we were one of the only cars to have only four new sets of softs for the whole of qualifying. All the others around us had five new softs," said the Monegasque. "I sacrificed today, I hope it will pay off tomorrow. If it doesn't, it's my fault." Alpine's Pierre Gasly will start eighth and Isack Hadjar ninth for Racing Bulls. McLaren team boss Andrea Stella said the team had not been at all concerned by the flexi-wing saga, which rivals had hoped might slow the defending constructors' champions. "It entertained to have this kind of debate but our simulations said everything was very small. We weren't concerned from this point of view," the Italian told Sky Sports television. Spain's double world champion Fernando Alonso, yet to score a point this season, completed the top 10 for Aston Martin in front of his home crowd. Verstappen's team mate Yuki Tsunoda struggled again and qualified last with Alpine's Argentine rookie Franco Colapinto also on the back row after a problem pulling away from the pit lane exit at the end of the opening phase. Sauber's Brazilian rookie Gabriel Bortoleto did well to qualify 12th.


North Wales Chronicle
42 minutes ago
- North Wales Chronicle
Oscar Piastri beats McLaren team-mate Lando Norris to Spanish Grand Prix pole
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North Wales Chronicle
42 minutes ago
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