
Monaco pole 'a big thing' for Norris but there's jeopardy
Lando Norris said his pole position at the Monaco Grand Prix was a "step in the right direction" and "quite a big thing" after being unhappy with his form since the start of this season.The McLaren driver trails team-mate Oscar Piastri by 13 points in the championship after the Australian's four victories to Norris' one.The pole was Norris' first since the Australian Grand Prix at the start of the season, while Piastri has taken three.Norris said: "To classify it as a breakthrough, you also need consistency of results."I can look at it both ways. It's a breakthrough that I had a good Saturday. For me it's at least a step in the right direction, which I'm very, very happy about."But it's one weekend. Consistency is a big part of it, too, and I will be happier if I know and can get to that point where I am confident into every session that I can perform like I did today, because I think my performance was at a very, very strong level."If I go into Barcelona and Canada and the next few races and I can perform at this level, that is my goal.But certainly today is a step in the right direction, whether it's a small step or big step, it's a step and that's all I need for now."Norris beat Ferrari's Charles Leclerc by 0.109 seconds in an exciting session in Monaco, as pole swapped between Norris and the Monegasque over their runs.Leclerc did one flying lap, while McLaren chose to do two, staying out on track but cooling their tyres in between. Norris took pole, Leclerc snatched it from him, before the Briton grabbed it back again.Norris has been working hard on improving his qualifying performance this season, after explaining that he has been finding it difficult to trust the McLaren car enough to be able to take it consistently to the limit in qualifying.Asked to explain his step forward, he said: "Things from the car, just it being Monaco and a very different layout, a very different kind of style of driving that's needed here. It's a lot more risk commitment rather than just absolute car balance, in a way."And also things that I've been working on to improve, to do a better job."Never because I've not had the pace - just more that I've never put it together come Q3. today was probably the first time since Australia that I've really put it all together."It's not like I'm driving quicker, it's I'm driving in a better way, in a smarter way."But there's been a lot of work that's gone on. For me, even if I was pole in any other track, I think it probably would have been the pole that's meant the most to me."It probably means even more that's in Monaco, but more because of what's happened over the last couple of months. It may not seem like a lot, but for me, it's quite a big thing. So, yeah, like I said, a very, very good moment."He said he always believed he would get on top of the problem."I don't think I have ever doubted what I can do," Norris said. "I have got frustrated. I have been unhappy, because that's normal if you don't win, don't get pole, you're not going to be happy, especially when it's where you should be. It's what the objective is."Of course I've had those moments but I have never certainly this year doubted what I am capable of doing and having a day like today backs all that up so I'm happy with that."
Jeopardy for the polesitter
McLaren team principal Andrea Stella said Norris had done a "phenomenal job" in applying the work the team had done with him in recent weeks, and described Norris' performance as "an important step in the process" which "will somehow reassure Lando".But he added: "I kind of have a sense that there is quite a lot more to be extracted, so I take this very positively, but I am excited and I look forward to the steps further that we will be able to do in the future."Were this a normal Monaco weekend, Norris could be pretty confident of converting his pole into a win because overtaking is so difficult.But new rules this year introduce a mandatory minimum of two pit stops, in an attempt to increase the level of uncertainty.Stella said that the situation facing the teams was "tricky" and a "material threat" to McLaren's chances of a win."As a function of red flags, safety cars, team work, we may see cars helping each other of the same team," Stella said."The scenarios to consider are definitely many more than what you normally consider, not only in Monaco, but in any other race that we need to prepare."
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
30 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
CHRIS SUTTON: People were underwhelmed when Ange arrived in Glasgow, too... and look how that ended up!
The response to Rangers choosing Russell Martin to lead them into their new future has been underwhelming, and I get it in a way. It was between him and Ancelotti. When I first saw the latter linked, I thought, 'Jesus! Carlo?' But, no, it was his son, Davide, who's never managed before. Maybe there was a fantasist element among the Rangers fanbase who worked themselves up into a frenzy over that surname, therefore, and now they're disappointed that they've been left with Martin. But he deserves a fair crack at showing what he can do with this opportunity. There was a similar reaction when Celtic appointed Ange Postecoglou, remember. The jibes started as soon as he was announced. 'They've brought in an Australian bloke who's just been working in Japan,' and all that. But Postecoglou didn't turn out to be too bad, did he? Martin has a similar philosophy to him, too. Rangers might actually try to play football for the first time in goodness knows how many years, and the fans might grow to like his purist style if they give it a chance after the direct approach they witnessed under Philippe Clement. Martin deserves that leeway at the very least. Yes, we all know how badly it went with Southampton in the Premier League last season, but then he got them out of the Championship before that and did it in style. Rangers fans may see his win record in charge of MK Dons and Swansea and reckon they should be aiming for a higher calibre of manager. I say judge him on what he does next, not what he did before. Recruitment will be key for him. Making sure Nicolas Raskin stays would help, too. Last season, Rangers did well in their head-to-heads with Celtic. Yet they still ended up 17 points behind their great rivals in the Premiership. That wasn't where they threw away any chance at the title. It was in their other games. Now Martin needs to find that consistency which will hopefully get the fans on his side. I suspect they would have had an issue with whoever was appointed. That's the nature of football fandom. But let's judge Martin on how he does, not before he's even been shown where his office is at the training ground.


Reuters
33 minutes ago
- Reuters
Swiatek thankful for dominant French Open run after rare defeat
PARIS, June 5 (Reuters) - Iga Swiatek's 26-match winning streak at the French Open ground to a screeching halt as her title defence ended on Thursday but the Pole said she was happy to have enjoyed a glorious run at the claycourt Grand Slam. Swiatek's bid for a fifth Roland Garros title went up in smoke after world number one Aryna Sabalenka prevailed 7-6(1) 4-6 6-0 on Court Philippe Chatrier. The defeat was a blow for Swiatek, who was hoping to claim her first title in a patchy year for the usually dominant 24-year-old following a short doping ban in 2024, but she said she was glad to have Roland Garros to come back to year after year. "I love playing here, so for sure I'm happy I was fortunate enough to play so many great tournaments here. Even this one, I played better than weeks before," Swiatek told reporters. "So I'm just happy that I have this place to come back to every year and just try to push myself." Sabalenka's power made all the difference to end Swiatek's dreams of becoming the first woman in the professional era since 1968 to win four consecutive titles in Paris. "The pace was from her super fast," Swiatek said. "Especially in the beginning of the match, she played as hard as possible and pretty risky. So it was just hard to get into any rally. "And then, I was able to do that ... so more things happened because it wasn't just like serve and one shot or return and one shot, and I could build a rally a little bit. "But in the third set I feel like we came back to what happened in the first, and she used her chances, and I didn't really keep up what I was doing in the second set." Swiatek showed plenty of determination in her previous two rounds to see off 13th seed Elina Svitolina and 12th seed Elena Rybakina, and she said she was satisfied with the quality she showed during the tournament. "Now it's probably not the best time to look at the wider perspective," Swiatek said. "So probably it wasn't a bad tournament, but obviously not the result I wanted."


BBC News
34 minutes ago
- BBC News
Chelsea and England defender Bright has knee surgery
Chelsea defender Millie Bright has had a minor knee operation a day after the England international made herself unavailable for selection for this summer's European Championships. More to follow.