McLaren confirms Bird Formula E signing

NEOM McLaren has confirmed that Sam Bird will replace Rene Rast at the team for its second Formula E season. Bird joins Jake Hughes in an all-British lineup for the team which debuted in the 2022-23 season after taking over the back-to-back …

NEOM McLaren has confirmed that Sam Bird will replace Rene Rast at the team for its second Formula E season.

Bird joins Jake Hughes in an all-British lineup for the team which debuted in the 2022-23 season after taking over the back-to-back championship-winning Mercedes entry. The move comes after Bird’s departure from Jaguar TCS Racing, his seat there being taken by Nick Cassidy.

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“I’m super excited to get going with the NEOM McLaren Formula E Team. Becoming part of a team with so much heritage and prestige as the McLaren Racing family feels special,” said Bird. “We know there is some work to do ahead of Season 10, to ensure we get to where we want to be, which is at the front of the Formula E pack.

“It feels great to be part of the team and I can’t wait to kick off the season preparations. I’m super motivated and driven to deliver success with the team in Season 10.”

Bird’s resume boasts a second-placed finish in the 2013 GP2 season,an FIA World Endurance Championship title in the LMP2 class with G-Drive Racing in 2015, and a runner-up finish in the GTE class with Ferrari a year later, as well as stints as a test driver for the Williams and Mercedes Formula 1 teams.

Bird (left) will take the seat vacated by Rene Rast (right). Alastair Staley/Motorsport Images

But it’s in Formula E where Bird has spent the majority of his top-level career. He has competed in every season of Formula E, and sits joint second on the series’ all-time entry list with 114 races entered, just two behind Lucas di Grassi. In that time he’s notched up 11 race victories (third overall) and had a best championship finish of third in the 2017-18 campaign.

He made his category debut with Virgin Racing, remaining with the team for six seasons as it morphed into DS Virgin and eventually Envision Racing. He moved to Jaguar for 2020, where he remained until the 2022-23 season finale.

It’s that experience that Ian James, managing director of NEOM McLaren Electric Racing and team principal, NEOM McLaren Formula E Team, believes will help propel the team forward.

“It’s great to be able to share the news that Sam will be joining the team for Season 10, alongside Jake,” he said. “Sam is a proven force in Formula E, as well as other categories of racing, and his experience and determination will fuel the team ahead of an exciting season to come.

“As soon as the deal was done, his first question to me was when he could come into the office to start the preparations for Season 10 – this clearly shows his hunger and commitment to making Season 10 a success for the NEOM McLaren Formula E Team.

“Having both Sam and Jake on board has already instilled confidence in the team.”

Mclaren Racing CEO Zak Brown added: ““It is a pleasure to welcome Sam to the McLaren Racing family. Throughout his time in Formula E, Sam has proven himself to be an impressive talent, and we are eager to leverage his experience and expertise to help bring the NEOM McLaren Formula E Team further success in Season 10.

“Alongside Jake, I’m confident that we have one of the strongest pairings on the Formula E grid. Bring on Season 10!”

Ride along with Zak Brown in Dan Gurney’s 1970 McLaren M8D

Ride with McLaren Racing CEO Zak Brown in the 1970 McLaren M8D raced by the late Dan Gurney, as Brown competes at the Rolex Monterey Motorsports Reunion on August 19, 2023. Or click HERE to watch on YouTube.

Ride with McLaren Racing CEO Zak Brown in the 1970 McLaren M8D raced by the late Dan Gurney, as Brown competes at the Rolex Monterey Motorsports Reunion on August 19, 2023.

Or click HERE to watch on YouTube.

McLaren’s upgrade at Austria biggest team has brought in last five years according to Lando Norris

Norris says that despite the new upgrades, there’s one aspect of the car he hopes the team can get a handle on in the future.

McLaren F1’s recent rise in the 2023 Formula 1 season was a surprising development to many, but it seems to have been in the works for some time.

British driver [autotag]Lando Norris[/autotag] spoke to media before the Hungarian GP in July, and according to Formula1.com, his second-place finish during the British Grand Prix at Silverstone was in part due to upgrades that the team had brought the race before — when he placed fourth during the Austrian GP.

“The upgrade we brought to Austria is the biggest upgrade McLaren as a team have brought in the last five years,” Norris said. “In terms of having a car, making improvement to it, it’s the biggest improvement we’ve had in my five years of being at McLaren, that’s a fact.”

Those upgrades have certainly paid off. With five top-5 finishes from Austria onward, McLaren’s 2023 challenger looks to be one of the fastest cars on the grid.

Norris did, however, mention that the work isn’t done. He said that the McLaren car is still a bit difficult to drive, and that although that aspect of it is easier to manage with the team out ahead, he’s hoping that they can change that aspect of the ride in the coming years.

“I don’t want to get too ahead of myself, but we have yet, over the last five years, to make that step in slow speed, in handling, in driveability, disregarding load and absolute grip let’s say,” Norris said. “So, for me, a bigger step would be in how we drive the car, how easy it is to drive the car, then just adding ten more points of load in the slow speed, because that’s only going to get us so far up the order, I’d rather have both.”

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How 2022’s tough decisions are now bearing fruit for McLaren

Rewind 12 months and McLaren was about to find itself under intense scrutiny heading into Formula 1’s summer shutdown. It’s a time when no team really wants to be in that position, rather than being able to regroup ahead of the second part of the …

Rewind 12 months and McLaren was about to find itself under intense scrutiny heading into Formula 1’s summer shutdown. It’s a time when no team really wants to be in that position, rather than being able to regroup ahead of the second part of the season and focus on aspects other than the week-to-week racing schedule, while the majority of the team earn a well-earned break.

But having made the decision to sign Oscar Piastri for 2023 and yet to finalize exit terms with Daniel Ricciardo, the announcement that Fernando Alonso was heading to Aston Martin and Alpine’s attempts to retain Piastri thrust the driver decision into public view.

It was a very tough call for Zak Brown and his team to make given the popularity of Ricciardo and the potential that has arrival had come with, but it was one that many could at least understand even at the time. The pressure was on Piastri, who was tasked with proving to be at the very least a match for what eight-time winner Ricciardo had done and then build on his own potential.

Almost seems laughable that he was under any pressure now, doesn’t it?

Halfway through his rookie season, Piastri is proving not only an ideal wingman for Norris but a strong contender in his own right. Mark Sutton/Motorsport Images

But there was another point between last August and now that threatened to provide Piastri and McLaren with an even bigger challenge, as there was a senior leadership overhaul on the horizon. And it’s probably fair at this stage that I repeat how I closed a column back in March, as McLaren announced those changes off the back of its worst start to a season since 2017:

“According to Brown, that’s the drivers, the facilities and the personnel all in place. It remains to be seen if it all clicks, but having moved from a technical department run by committee to a more traditional setup and now back again, any potential excuses are running out.”

While it would be remiss to judge all of those decisions on the four months that have followed — and rather than against the longer-term target of fighting for wins and championships that McLaren has in place — I’m sure there are few who would disagree that things have gone pretty well since then…

Brown was adamant that Andrea Stella was the right man to replace Andreas Seidl, hence the speed of that transition over the winter when Audi came calling for the former team principal. But Stella also saw changes that he felt were imperative when it came to the technical set-up, and the entire team was talking down its chances pre-season as it wasn’t happy with its launch car.

With the benefit of hindsight, such an unusual approach was clearly being followed because of the confidence that McLaren had in its ability to improve the situation in the short term. There were directions already being explored that offered significant performance gains, and light could be seen at the end of the tunnel that wasn’t all that far away.

James Key’s departure suggested a scapegoat had been found to take the fall for the missed opportunities with the early 2023 car, but his rapid hiring by Seidl at Hinwil suggests there a structure one team principal wants that another doesn’t, and much like Ricciardo’s performances there’s a chance Key finds a better fit back in Switzerland.

But none of that detracts from the fact that Stella and Brown had made the right decisions, with both showing a ruthlessness that has led to a rapid recovery.

Ricciardo still had a contract for 2023, don’t forget, but rather than miss out on a driver that McLaren felt could be a future star, Brown ended that partnership early to grab Piastri. The same is true of Key as the likes of Rob Marshall and David Sanchez were hired for the evolving technical team.

The latter of those changes did build a semblance of pressure, as the finger was pointed at others amid such a disappointing start to the season. It helped Piastri to some extent because expectations had dropped so low that the driver focus was actually on how McLaren intended on retaining Lando Norris moving forward.

The most obvious answer is to give him a car capable of fighting at the front, and in the space of two weeks between Canada and Austria it did just that.

“We’re Number 2” might not seem the sweetest thing to celebrate, but for McLaren it’s proof of a dramatic turnaround in performance. Michael Potts/Motorsport Images

Of course the work had been ongoing for a much longer time but the update did not flatter to deceive at the Red Bull Ring. In fact, it was perhaps failing to show its true potential, that was only really seen at the Hungaroring last weekend. On a track with few high-speed corners, and with high track temperatures that had proven McLaren’s weakness earlier in the year, the drivers were still able to lock-out the front row.

And who knows, perhaps a double podium was a possibility had Piastri not picked up floor damage that seemed to really hit him in his second and third stints after an encouraging first part of the race.

Instead, the rookie has to be content with feeling unfortunate for two weekends in a row — unfortunate in that they “only” yielded a pair of top-five results while Norris picked up back-to-back second places for the first time in his career. Perhaps more tellingly, though, it was also the first pair of podiums McLaren has managed in more than a decade, stretching back to Lewis Hamilton and Jenson Button securing consecutive victories to close out 2012.

It might have taken nearly 11 years to enjoy such strong weekend results in succession, but in the space of four months, McLaren has gone from a team looking in real trouble to arguably the nearest challenger to Red Bull, and in doing so has been cited as an inspiration to the rest of the chasing pack that such big gains are possible mid-season under these new regulations.

By the same token, such fluctuations mean there’s still no guarantee McLaren is there to stay, and it does have a long way to go to truly threaten for wins — let alone championships — while the lack of a works power unit deal in 2026 could also be a hurdle to overcome too. But the past year has shown that when the calls get tough, McLaren tends to get them right.

Norris downplays prospects of a Silverstone repeat for McLaren in Hungary

Lando Norris played down expectations of a strong result for McLaren this weekend at the Hungaroring, despite his stunning second-place finish in Silverstone. The heavily upgraded MCL60 looked at home at the British Grand Prix’s fast, sweeping …

Lando Norris played down expectations of a strong result for McLaren this weekend at the Hungaroring, despite his stunning second-place finish in Silverstone.

The heavily upgraded MCL60 looked at home at the British Grand Prix’s fast, sweeping bends, qualifying second and third and finishing second and fourth, with Oscar Piastri missing out on a maiden podium thanks only to the timing of the safety car.

Further upgrades are due on the car this weekend, completing a three-race update cycle that Norris said was the largest he seen in his Formula 1 career. But despite the positivity around McLaren’s big step forward into the front-running pack, the Briton is anticipating tougher going in Budapest, where he doesn’t expect the circuit’s slower layout to play to the car’s strengths.

”No matter what the outlook of it all is, we’re not very good in the slow speed,” he said. “I doubt it’s going to be as good as Silverstone, because there are not high-speed corners. I think the last two tracks have made us look better than where we stand over the whole season.”

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Norris is preserving some optimism, though, given the Hungaroring’s recent resurfacing has produced a grippier surface, while ever-increasing downforce loads in Formula 1 have also raised the minimum speed of most corners. Combined, the track has become more medium speed than slow speed. But that also means McLaren will be forced to wait for a sterner examination of its slow-speed bona fides.

“I don’t think this is the true test,” he said. “I think it’ll be a good test, mainly because it’s not high speed.

“I don’t think this is a bad track for us. The tarmac we have here is a grippy tarmac. The corners are quite long corners — which I would also say is not our strength — but even if you say slow speed, they’re not super slow speed. So I think we’re going to have bigger tests of how bad it is going to get at some other tracks that are going to be coming up.”

Norris also pointed out that some of the car’s most significant slow-speed problems weren’t down to aerodynamics alone but more fundamental dynamic issues.

“It’s aerodynamics … but at the same time it’s a handling characteristic which I would say is not all to do with aerodynamics,” he explained. “Even if, say, we had the same load as the Red Bull in slow speed, I don’t think we have the right balance of car in slow speed, which I think is also a limitation for us.

“I don’t think it’s just about looking at aerodynamically how we perform but also mechanically, and tying everything together and coming up with little tricks and things that some other teams have to accelerate low-speed performance.

“Even with this upgrade we’ve had, the performance of driving the car, the handling, has not got any better. It’s still just as difficult to drive, as difficult to execute qualifying laps with. So for me a bigger step would be improving how we drive the car, how easy it is to drive the car, rather than just adding 10 more points of load in slow speed, because that’s only going to get us so far up the order. Red Bull have both.”

Norris, who tends to take a glass-half-empty approach to the car’s competitiveness, said the broader picture of the MCL60’s potential is keeping feet on the ground at Woking despite recent strong results.

“I don’t think anyone has a spring in their step at all,” he said. “We also know [podiums are] not going to happen that often at all.

“We enjoyed the moment for sure, but we know we’re not competing for wins or even podiums or even close to that very often. A lot of things went right for this to happen — even though we should’ve had a P2 and a P3.

“I think the confidence came from knowing we took a good step in the right direction. That’s just where people gain confidence that we were able to improve the car in some of those areas. But I don’t think anyone’s got overconfident in any way.”

Hakkinen reunites with 1999 title winner at Goodwood

The 1999 Formula 1 championship battle was one for the ages, with reigning champion Mika Hakkinen fending off an unlikely challenge from Ferrari’s Eddie Irvine – stepping up to the plate after teammate Michael Schumacher was injured – in a duel that …

The 1999 Formula 1 championship battle was one for the ages, with reigning champion Mika Hakkinen fending off an unlikely challenge from Ferrari’s Eddie Irvine – stepping up to the plate after teammate Michael Schumacher was injured – in a duel that went to the final round of the season in Japan.

Now, 24 years on, Hakkinen has been back behind the wheel of the McLaren MP4/14 he campaigned that year, driving Chassis No.4 – the very car he won in Suzuka with to secure his second successive title – at the Goodwood Festival of Speed.

“Well, it is exciting of course. Before driving I was… I don’t say I was nervous, but I was not comfortable. I was a bit like… what’s it going to feel like?” Hakkinen tells RACER of the reunion. “And then when I did sit down, with the seatbelts on and the steering wheel, I was looking at the dashboard and suddenly I relaxed. 

“I thought ‘okay, I know this machine, this is mine’ and everything around me was like, eyes closed, you know where everything is. So suddenly I calmed down and it was a good feeling.”

Hakkinen’s run at Goodwood was part of McLaren’s 60th anniversary celebrations. Dominik Wilde

Hakkinen has driven his other title winner, the MP4/13, on a number of occasions since his 1998 triumph, but this was the first time he’d got behind the wheel of its successor since the turn of the millennium – and in massively different circumstances, too.

“It’s impossible to compare to the time when I was testing or racing because this car requires very high speeds, it requires temperatures in the tires and also I didn’t have my original seat in the car so I was moving a bit in the car so that also made driving a bit difficult,” he says. “But everything – the steering, the gearing, the changes of gears, everything was just right.”

Like the MP4/13 that came before it, the MP4/14 was an incredibly fast car in its day, notching up 11 pole positions from 16 races, all courtesy of Hakkinen, as well as nine fastest laps and seven wins between Hakkinen and teammate David Coulthard. But while the 14 was mightily quick, the Finn points out that it was also “fragile”.

“It was different to the 1998 car, the regulations changed a little from ‘98 to ‘99. The front tires were different. The car was more on the edge of performance so everything was lighter, every material was stronger, everything was more compact and got better aerodynamics so the car was a bit more fragile,” Hakkinen recalls. “It was a fragile car. For me and David Coulthard … we had to keep our foot down and go as fast as we can. 

“It was a beautiful car, but on the edge. There was a lot of time in high-speed corners, low-speed corners, if I went a little bit quicker, that’s it, I’m going to go off. Compared to the 1998 car, that was more forgiving. You felt, ‘okay, on the edge I can still go more on the throttle.’ But this car was like an on or off switch.”

At the time though, that fragility, which led to 12 retirements between Hakkinen and Coulthard, wasn’t something that ever played on the minds of the drivers.

“No. You don’t think about about it,” Hakkinen insists. “The idea is to go flat out, you don’t think about it. If we really know there is a certain part of the car which is… if there is a problem, I’m aware of that, the team tells me that and I’m careful about it, but it really rarely happens.”

Hakkinen crosses the line to win the Japanese grand prix and the 1999 Formula 1 world championship. Motorsport Images

The MP4/14 contributed to a quarter of Hakkinen’s 20-strong win tally in F1, but when asked which other car from his career he’d like to be reunited with next, aside from his two title winners, Hakkinen pointed to a car that he only finished once with – the 1993 MP4/8.

“Well all of them are good cars, there is no bad car, because drivers always complain about a little understeer, oversteer and it’s ridiculous,” he says. “Well, it’s not ridiculous, we are fighting for the one tenth of a second, so they are so tiny, those issues. So if you look at the overall package, it is unbelievable. An unbelievable car. 

“An interesting car to drive was the active suspension in ‘93. That was an incredible machine, and how you can set it up with the computers, the ride heights at different corners, traction control, power steering, power brakes, you have so many different things helping you to go faster that it was sometimes scary how a machine can do that. 

“There was no limitations. You’re going in the corner in sixth – at that time, top gear – and going 300 kilometers per hour through the corner and you could feel the energy, what was happening through the car, and it’s not normal, and this was the result of those things.”

McLaren still aiming to be on podium from next year despite recent step forward

McLaren’s expectation is to fight regularly for podiums in 2024 and for victories a year later despite recent steps forward in car performance, according to team principal Andrea Stella. The strong showing at Silverstone has raised expectations …

McLaren’s expectation is to fight regularly for podiums in 2024 and for victories a year later despite recent steps forward in car performance, according to team principal Andrea Stella.

The strong showing at Silverstone has raised expectations around McLaren as the team made a major lap time gain over the past two races thanks to an upgrade package that will see further additions in Hungary this weekend. However, Stella says the team’s aims are not going to change instantly as a result, with the main lesson from the latest update being that it shows McLaren is doing the right things at the moment.

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“While you can have targets as an element of discussion, it doesn’t necessarily change our approach,” Stella said. “Our approach was always going to be to push as hard as possible with development, but with a logic and clear direction and then we will see where we end up.

“Once we started to develop the car we saw that the rate of development meant or reasonable expectation was that by the end of the season we could have fought with the four quickest teams. That’s what we thought was possible, so it is in a way a bit of a surprise that we find ourselves in this position now, but we will see how things unfold later.

“Our expectation is for McLaren to compete for podiums in the future, next season, and for victories in the following season. This is the long-term vision, but you don’t deliver based on visions, you deliver based on the facts that you actually bring to the car and that’s our focus.”

And Stella believes it is better for McLaren to be fully invested on where its next step is going to come from, rather than letting that ultimate aim of winning races again become a distraction.

“By nature I don’t necessarily think about the destination, I think about what do we need to put in place to keep improving. The way we discuss it internally is to let the results come to us. We just have to focus on what do we need to do on a technical level, at sporting level, financial level, that is our mindset.

“So if we take the technical level and performance, we just have to keep delivering upgrades to the car. Then sometimes you find surprises, like these upgrades that we took to Austria and (Silverstone), numerically we weren’t expecting this improvement from a lap time point of view.

“So we remain focused on delivering upgrades to the car, which means designing them, conceiving them, producing them and logistics and so on. Then we will see later on where we are in the journey.”

McLaren set for Hungary upgrades and a further test of progress

McLaren will have further updates at the Hungarian Grand Prix that should give it a better read on how much of an overall gain it has made in terms of race pace. With new parts, Lando Norris finished fourth in Austria on a track well-suited to the …

McLaren will have further updates at the Hungarian Grand Prix that should give it a better read on how much of an overall gain it has made in terms of race pace.

With new parts, Lando Norris finished fourth in Austria on a track well-suited to the McLaren, and the team also felt the high-speed corners and low temperatures of Silverstone played a key role in its stunning pace that saw Norris qualify and finish second and Oscar Piastri end up fourth. Piastri was still lacking some of the updates at the last race but team principal Andrea Stella says both drivers will have an equally developed car in Budapest.

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“For Hungary we have some further upgrades that will help more from the point of view of trying to improve the race pace,” Stella said. “This will be available to both drivers — we don’t expect that the specification of the car will not be aligned between Oscar and Lando.

“Like any other team, we will carry on delivering some upgrades to the following races, and this is also thanks to the fact that once we started redesigning the car we kind of unlocked performance. In new iterations we keep seeing the aerodynamic development being quite effective. So as soon as you see a project is mature enough to deliver, you press the go button.”

Mercedes’ George Russell believes McLaren can be fighting to be the second-fastest team to Red Bull at all venues but Stella says Hungary will provide a much clearer picture of how big the team’s step forward has been.

“When it comes to whether this improvement will manifest itself in the future, even if George says that the tracks are different, actually there are significant elements of commonality between Austria and Silverstone; especially there is a high density of corners in which we know our car performs well. Conditions like (last Sunday), they do help because they don’t overheat the tires, which is also something on which we have some work to do. I hope George is right, by the way!

“In a way we look forward to Hungary to check more comprehensively where we really are. There is not as much high speed — if anything it is a low- and medium-speed dominated track and also you can have hot conditions, which is another testing territory for us. We will see.”

McLaren gains show what in-season development can do – Wolff

Toto Wolff believes the major gains made by McLaren over the past few races are exciting for Mercedes because it shows what is possible during as season. McLaren brought a major update to the Austrian Grand Prix and further added to it at …

Toto Wolff believes the major gains made by McLaren over the past few races are exciting for Mercedes because it shows what is possible during as season.

McLaren brought a major update to the Austrian Grand Prix and further added to it at Silverstone, where Lando Norris followed up a fourth place at the Red Bull Ring with second at his home race. Oscar Piastri ended up fourth on Sunday having qualified third.

“I think we’ve seen that major step that Aston Martin was able to bring, and now McLaren,” Wolff said. “We have been fighting with the car since a year and a half, trying to do performance but it’s just chipping away at those small gains, rather than to do such a step.

“But I really see the positives, because fundamentally I don’t care whether we finish second or third. It’s important to find our way back to fighting for victories and the world championship. And while podiums make us really happy to see that the car has potential, fundamentally all eyes are on the big prize and that’s why it’s exciting to see that McLaren was able to find a second.

“Why it is exciting to see the McLaren bounce back is that you can within a season. Fair enough, they had much more wind tunnel time, but in any case, coming with upgrades which completely changed the performance of the car.

“We are not talking about two tenths up and down, but we are talking about a second. And that’s good for the sport, that if you do the right things and put things together — we’ve seen it with the Aston Martin year-to-year, we’ve seen it with the McLaren now during the year, and I like it.”

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Although Wolff acknowledges Mercedes doesn’t have as much aerodynamic testing freedom as McLaren, he also says Mercedes can target such a major gain if it changes its approach in future.

“I think we are restricted by the cost cap and by the relative less amount in wind tunnel and CFD time that McLaren was able to have. They finished further back in the championship and they were like fifth or sixth mid-year. So they carried over that more wind tunnel time allocation. And that’s why it’s kind of difficult.

“Do I believe that we have upgrades in there that are going to fundamentally change the car? I don’t believe so. But we have a few small steps that are to come. And you can see that if you find the tenth or two or three, it puts you in a different position on the grid. But yeah, I think we can do that step.”

‘My heart was racing’ Norris says after leading British GP and landing first F1 podium

Lando Norris admits his “heart was racing” while leading his home race after his strong start to the British Grand Prix. Max Verstappen suffered wheelspin from pole position and Norris took the lead from the front row, with Oscar Piastri also …

Lando Norris admits his “heart was racing” while leading his home race after his strong start to the British Grand Prix.

Max Verstappen suffered wheelspin from pole position and Norris took the lead from the front row, with Oscar Piastri also attacking the Red Bull for second place. Verstappen withstood that pressure and then overtook Norris on lap four, but the British driver says the spell leading the field at Silverstone was a special time.

“My heart was racing a bit more than normal, and I was watching the crowd a few times…” Norris said.

“The team have done a good job. They’ve improved the car. The last few weeks have been extremely good. I’m very happy for them. But to get the launch kind of saved me from some of the chaos behind, because you never know what can happen in Turn 3 and Turn 4.

“I managed to push on quite a bit the first few laps, which was exactly what we wanted to do. It doesn’t always go to plan. We planned for that, and got me out of trouble. Very good pace the first stint. We managed to break away from everyone quite a bit. We managed to go with Max for a little bit, just not as much as I would have loved to do.”

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Going on to hold off Lewis Hamilton after a safety car period and finishing second, Norris says his first podium in his home race makes it the best result of his career to date.

“I would say the best, most exciting one. I think your first podium in Formula 1 is always pretty special. That’s one you remember forever. Maybe not when you’ve got as many as (Verstappen and Hamilton) do. For me, I’m still in that phase where every one means a lot, especially my first one here in my home grand prix.

“It’s special hearing everyone chanting, seeing all the fans, seeing all the team below the podium. It’s something like I saw back in 2007, 2008, when I first started watching Formula 1, seeing Lewis and Fernando (Alonso) here. Now it’s my turn. It’s pretty special to be here now and to be in that position, and especially on a day like today give how tricky it was at times. I’m very proud.”

Having been so comfortable for the first part of the race, Norris was given a tough task to finish ahead of Hamilton on hard tires with the Mercedes on softs, and admits he felt it made for an unnecessarily tense finish.

“We would have been in the same position (if McLaren fitted softs), so I don’t see why we wouldn’t have done it. I feel like we put ourselves under more pressure to try and get a hard tire to work with a safety car restart with 10 laps to go pretty much.

“It’s one we’ll talk about. I was telling them to think of the softs quite a bit, insinuating it as much as I could. But then they just told me you’re on the hards. So not really what I wanted, but it still worked out.”