
Lando Norris backs up Monaco win by soaring to top spot in Spain first practice
Lando Norris followed up his victory in Monaco by soaring to top spot in first practice for the Spanish Grand Prix.
Norris earned a morale-boosting second win of the campaign last Sunday to move to within three points of McLaren team-mate Oscar Piastri in the championship.
And the British driver headed Red Bull's Max Verstappen by 0.367 seconds in the opening running at Barcelona's Circuit de Catalunya with Lewis Hamilton third for Ferrari.
Hamilton was 0.378 sec adrift of Norris while his Ferrari team-mate Charles Leclerc took fourth spot. Piastri finished fifth.
McLaren's rivals might have hoped that a clampdown on flexible front wings – which some believe has contributed to the British team's rise – would slow them down.
However, the early evidence of the rule tweak appears to have done little to influence McLaren's speed with Norris holding an early advantage. Although there could be some concern for Piastri who was more than half-a-second down on his team-mate.
Verstappen is the only driver outside of McLaren to win a race this season following victories in Japan and Imola to put him 25 points off the title pace.
The Dutch driver indicated here that he will not be able to challenge Norris and Piastri over the championship stretch, but he can at least take confidence from being second in the order after he missed 20 minutes of the one-hour session as Red Bull made tweaks to his rear suspension.
Hamilton will also be encouraged by his early showing after he finished a tenth-and-a-half clear of Leclerc.
Liam Lawson was seventh for Racing Bulls, one place ahead of British rookie Ollie Bearman. George Russell finished a distant 11th for Mercedes, one second behind Norris. Second practice takes place at 17:00 (16:00 BST).
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Daily Mirror
42 minutes ago
- Daily Mirror
George Russell left with Spanish GP concern despite Mercedes return to form
George Russell matched Max Verstappen's time in Spanish Grand Prix qualifying and Kimi Antonelli also returned to form after difficult weekends for Mercedes in Imola and Monaco George Russell was left worried about whether Mercedes have actually improved their race pace after a return to qualifying form. The Brit will start the Spanish Grand Prix fourth on the grid and was unlucky not to be one place higher. He set the exact same time as Max Verstappen but, because the Red Bull racer got his lap in first, Russell was classified one place below. They will share the second row behind the two McLaren cars of pole-sitter Oscar Piastri and his drivers' title rival Lando Norris. It was a welcome return to form in the final qualifying session of this European triple header of races that have been tough for Mercedes. Russell slipped from third to seventh at Imola while both he and team-mate Kimi Antonelli finished pointless in Monaco. But it remains to be seen whether the Silver Arrows will have the race pace to compete in Barcelona. They have been working hard to improve that aspect of their car but Russell worries his strong qualifying performance may indicate that his car is still geared too much towards one-lap pace. Sign up to our free weekly F1 newsletter, Pit Lane Chronicle, by entering your email address below so that every new edition lands straight in your inbox! He said: "We know that on a Saturday our car is anywhere between P2 and P5. That's where it's been all season and again today. It's good we managed to get into Q3 on only two sets of tyres so we have a new soft tyre for tomorrow which is a valid race tyre – that's a positive. We know that the car isn't quick on Sundays. "We also made a lot of changes to the car this weekend to try to improve the race pace, so to see that we haven't really hindered qualifying pace is a positive – but then also it may mean it's not going to improve the race pace. Mercedes have struggled in high temperatures and the track is set to be blistering hot in the Spanish sun on Sunday. "Tomorrow's going to be an interesting one for us," Russell added. "We struggled a lot when it was the soft compound of tyres when it was hot but when it was the hard compound of tyres in Bahrain and it was hot we finished second there." After back-to-back failures to reach Q3 in Imola and Monaco, Antonelli seemed a relieved man to put his car further up the grid for the Spain race. The 18-year-old split the two Ferrari cars in sixth, despite being at a tyre disadvantage. He said: "I struggled a little bit to get into a rhythm at the start of the session, and it put me in a position where I only had one new set for Q3 which was not really ideal, because the difference from used to new [tyres] was quite big. Overall, I think I'm decently happy with the performance. "There was a bit of time here and there, but tomorrow is going to be a lot about race pace. We're going to race at the hottest time of the day so degradation is going to be something to look at. It's not going to be easy but, overall, we've been doing a lot of long runs so we have quite decent data. We're also aware that the others are very fast, so let's see. I'm ready to do my best."


Scottish Sun
an hour ago
- Scottish Sun
‘Changed nothing' – Lewis Hamilton slams F1 rule change as ‘waste of money' and says ‘we should be giving it to charity'
LEWIS HAMILTON slammed the 'waste of money' flexi-wing rule change after qualifying in Barcelona. The seven-time world champion out-qualified teammate Charles Leclerc for only the second time this season to take fifth in Barcelona. 5 Ferrari's Lewis Hamilton blasted the 'pointless' new flexi-wing change as a 'waste of time and money' 5 The FIA introduced a flexi-wing clampdown in Barcelona this week It came after Oscar Piastri pipped McLaren teammate Lando Norris to pole position after a blistering lap. Red Bull's Max Verstappen was third fastest ahead of Mercedes driver George Russell. All the talk in Spain this week has been about the potential impact of the FIA's clampdown on the flexing of front wings. In January the sport's governing body released a technical directive for more stringent flexibility tests on front wings that would be introduced in Barcelona. READ MORE F1 NEWS SPANISH WAR Piastri takes pole for Spanish Grand Prix in huge boost to title hopes The FIA hopes this might close up the pecking order on the grid, particularly those chasing high-flying McLaren. But fuming Hamilton said: 'The balance is definitely not as nice as what we had before. It hasn't made any [difference to the leaders]. 'What a waste of money, it's just wasted everyone's money. It's literally changed nothing. CASINO SPECIAL - BEST CASINO BONUSES FROM £10 DEPOSITS 'Everyone's bent wings still bend, it is just half the bending, and everyone's had to make new wings, and spend more money to make these. It doesn't make sense. 'We should be giving it to charity.' One of F1's most recognisable voices reveals Leclerc and Hamilton moments that will live with him forever McLaren bagged their first front row lock out in Barcelona since 1998 with Piastri and Norris looking red hot. When asked if McLaren are untouchable, Hamilton replied: 'Yeah. It's an amazing job they've done. To me it's half a second, but to the guys in front it is three tenths. 'It's not an insurmountable amount that you could catch up, but for example, a lot of work, months, went into developing and getting a tenth of performance. 'We don't have half a second coming, that's for sure, which is what I would need to topple them.' 5 McLaren again outpaced everybody else after the flexi-wing change 5 Oscar Piastri beat his team-mate Lando Norris to pole position in Spain Hamilton is still gunning for a first podium of the season, adding: "My target is to try and get to the podium. I haven't been on the podium for a long time. 'The car is so much different to what I drove previous years. So through the weekend, I'm having to adapt this new driving style, which is horrible.' Piastri has vowed to not let the title scrap between him and Norris get between him, but things could all go pear shaped in sunny Spain. Just three points separate the two McLaren team-mates in the drivers' standings following Norris' win at Monaco last weekend with Piastri still ahead. Norris seems to be feeling the pressure of the title race more though as he produced a scrappy final lap and rued 'too many mistakes' in the final qualifying session. The two McLarens battled to and fro in Q3 with Norris coming out trumps after the first run to take provincial pole before Piastri's moment of magic. There had been drama earlier on as fuming Williams driver Alex Albon slammed 'dirty, dirty' Haas drivers who he felt drove purposely slow as he was knocked out in Q2. Red Bull's No2 driver conundrum continued with Yuki Tsunoda's situation going from bad to worse as he suffered a nightmare last place position in qualifying. It was the third race in a row where he was out-qualified by both drivers from Red Bull's junior team Racing Bulls. Meanwhile Carlos Sainz was left miserable as he was booted out in Q1 for Williams at his home Grand Prix.


The Sun
an hour ago
- The Sun
‘Changed nothing' – Lewis Hamilton slams F1 rule change as ‘waste of money' and says ‘we should be giving it to charity'
LEWIS HAMILTON slammed the 'waste of money' flexi-wing rule change after qualifying in Barcelona. The seven-time world champion out-qualified teammate Charles Leclerc for only the second time this season to take fifth in Barcelona. 5 It came after Oscar Piastri pipped McLaren teammate Lando Norris to pole position after a blistering lap. Red Bull's Max Verstappen was third fastest ahead of Mercedes driver George Russell. All the talk in Spain this week has been about the potential impact of the FIA's clampdown on the flexing of front wings. In January the sport's governing body released a technical directive for more stringent flexibility tests on front wings that would be introduced in Barcelona. The FIA hopes this might close up the pecking order on the grid, particularly those chasing high-flying McLaren. But fuming Hamilton said: 'The balance is definitely not as nice as what we had before. It hasn't made any [difference to the leaders]. 'What a waste of money, it's just wasted everyone's money. It's literally changed nothing. money to make these. It doesn't make sense. 'We should be giving it to charity.' One of F1's most recognisable voices reveals Leclerc and Hamilton moments that will live with him forever McLaren bagged their first front row lock out in Barcelona since 1998 with Piastri and Norris looking red hot. When asked if McLaren are untouchable, Hamilton replied: 'Yeah. It's an amazing job they've done. To me it's half a second, but to the guys in front it is three tenths. 'It's not an insurmountable amount that you could catch up, but for example, a lot of work, months, went into developing and getting a tenth of performance. 'We don't have half a second coming, that's for sure, which is what I would need to topple them.' 5 5 Hamilton is still gunning for a first podium of the season, adding: "My target is to try and get to the podium. I haven't been on the podium for a long time. 'The car is so much different to what I drove previous years. So through the weekend, I'm having to adapt this new driving style, which is horrible.' Piastri has vowed to not let the title scrap between him and Norris get between him, but things could all go pear shaped in sunny Spain. Just three points separate the two McLaren team-mates in the drivers' standings following Norris' win at Monaco last weekend with Piastri still ahead. Norris seems to be feeling the pressure of the title race more though as he produced a scrappy final lap and rued 'too many mistakes' in the final qualifying session. The two McLarens battled to and fro in Q3 with Norris coming out trumps after the first run to take provincial pole before Piastri's moment of magic. There had been drama earlier on as fuming Williams driver Alex Albon slammed 'dirty, dirty' Haas drivers who he felt drove purposely slow as he was knocked out in Q2. Red Bull's No2 driver conundrum continued with Yuki Tsunoda's situation going from bad to worse as he suffered a nightmare last place position in qualifying. It was the third race in a row where he was out-qualified by both drivers from Red Bull's junior team Racing Bulls. Meanwhile Carlos Sainz was left miserable as he was booted out in Q1 for Williams at his home Grand Prix. 5