Why COTA is crucial to F1’s title fight

Get ready everyone, the United States is about to take center stage in the Formula 1 championship battles. A four-week gap since the last race in Singapore has really whet the appetite for racing to return this weekend in Austin, but it’s not just …

Get ready everyone, the United States is about to take center stage in the Formula 1 championship battles.

A four-week gap since the last race in Singapore has really whet the appetite for racing to return this weekend in Austin, but it’s not just the long wait that means you’re going to want to pay attention to the way the United States Grand Prix plays out.

During the summer break there wasn’t a huge amount of expectation that we were going to get a drivers’ championship fight this season, but McLaren’s increasingly strong performance has been paired with strong driver showings and Lando Norris has outscored Max Verstappen at each of the four races since the August shutdown.

His biggest points swing in each of those events is eight – achieved with a win and the fastest lap in Zandvoort, and third place with the fastest lap to Verstappen’s sixth in Monza. Another dominant victory last time out in Singapore meant Norris only took seven points out of Verstappen, after Daniel Ricciardo’s final act was to score a fastest lap and take the extra point off the McLaren driver.

Verstappen has done a really good job of limiting the damage by finishing second to Norris on the two occasions the Briton has disappeared into the distance, and can perhaps count himself a little fortunate that a bigger chunk of points weren’t taken out of his advantage in Baku. But the trend has been clear, as McLaren has moved into the lead of the constructors’ standings.

Given the way the season started, it’s remarkable that Verstappen hasn’t won in eight races, a run stretching back to the Spanish Grand Prix in June. And while he might have prevented Norris from significantly reducing his lead in one go over the past four rounds, the average gain per weekend – 6.5 points – would be enough over the next five rounds to force a title decider in Abu Dhabi.

In many ways, the break in races came at the perfect time for Red Bull. McLaren was building real momentum, and although there were signs of progress at the last two races, the race pace difference was still far too big for Verstappen to trouble Norris.

But this wasn’t a shutdown period, so teams could work flat out to try and understand their performance issues and seek improvements. Without any fear of car damage being accrued – because there were no races – the manufacturing capacity could be allocated without the potential demand for last-minute spares.

So teams were able to plan out their development schedules to target an upgrade for Austin this year, as the visit to Circuit of the Americas will kick off a run of six races in eight weeks to complete the 2024 season.

As late in the year as it is, that still makes up a quarter of the entire season, so there’s significant value in any new parts that can be delivered to the cars this weekend.

McLaren goes into the final rounds of the season with the momentum. Andy Hone/Motorsport Images

Red Bull is looking to resolve the balance issues that have become increasingly prominent as the season has gone on, and team principal Christian Horner said after the Singapore Grand Prix that the team had identified a development direction that it could work towards ahead of the next race.

But McLaren is not standing still either, with Andrea Stella admitting he won’t let the fear of updating such a strong car hold back its own plans. If McLaren has shown a particular strength over the rest of the field this year, it has been its ability to add new parts and have them work as intended, while Red Bull, Ferrari and Mercedes all going through phases of problem solving.

How it plays out between the two teams is going to be crucial. COTA is a track that should suit Red Bull a little more than some of the recent layouts, and an upgrade could put it back in the mix for victory. But if McLaren is able to retain the performance advantage it has held since the summer break, then the title fight is well and truly on.

Mexico City and Interlagos should be venues where McLaren is strong, while Mercedes and Ferrari continue to show peaks and troughs that make at least one of them a threat at the front on most weekends. They will both also have upgrades of their own at COTA that could further impact the competitive picture.

The margins have been so small that there are so many potential outcomes in terms of relative performance this weekend. They range from Red Bull having a race-winning car again and McLaren facing threats from Ferrari and Mercedes, to McLaren retaining an advantage and Red Bull slipping to the fourth fastest car. Or many variances in between.

As the likely last major update for all of the teams, though, COTA will largely set the competitive order for the rest of the season, with the usual fluctuations based on circuit characteristics still to factor in.

With the Sprint format also offering a further eight points up to the race winner, if Norris has a quicker package than Verstappen at his disposal then he has every chance of taking the championship battle right to the wire, and a big swing in points would go at least some of the way towards even making him the favorite.

But if Red Bull is able to erase the performance deficit that it has been dealing with over the past few months, then it will have a chance of halting the momentum that McLaren and Norris have been enjoying. In that scenario, not only would Verstappen have the ability to snuff out any threat to his drivers’ championship lead, but McLaren’s 41-point advantage in the constructors’ championship could look more fragile, too.

And yet, on top of all that, there is still the added caveat of just one practice session potentially leading to teams getting their set-ups wrong, and not being able to extract the full performance capabilities out of their cars.

The time for waiting, though, is nearly over, and the direction of the championship battles this season will quickly be set when COTA kicks off the triple-header.

Lloyd joins McLaren Driver Development program

McLaren Racing announced Tuesday that Ella Lloyd has joined the McLaren Driver Development program and will represent the team in the 2025 F1 Academy season with Rodin Motorsport. Lloyd, 19, began racing competitively in 2022 in the Ginetta Junior …

McLaren Racing announced Tuesday that Ella Lloyd has joined the McLaren Driver Development program and will represent the team in the 2025 F1 Academy season with Rodin Motorsport.

Lloyd, 19, began racing competitively in 2022 in the Ginetta Junior Championship, finishing in the points at 15 of 25 races that season. The following year, she competed in the Ginetta GT Championship, and finished the year as runner-up.

At the start of this year, Lloyd competed in the Formula Winter Series, taking the Female Driver Trophy multiple times. She competed in British F4, completing the 2024 season with three P2 results, one P3 and multiple points finishes. The Welsh racer also took part in the Singapore F1 Academy weekend as the Wild Card driver, finishing in the points in both races.

In line with the F1 Academy regulations limiting drivers to a maximum of two years in the series, Lloyd will step up to represent McLaren in the 2025 F1 Academy season, racing with Rodin Motorsport.

Her involvement in the McLaren Driver Development program, led by Stephanie Carlin, will see her compete in Formula E’s first-ever Women’s Test for the NEOM McLaren Formula E Team on Nov. 7, 2024, in Valencia, Spain.

Carlin, director of F1 business operations at McLaren Racing, said: “Ella has great talent and potential and has already cemented herself in the series, performing brilliantly as the Wild Card entry in Singapore, so we’re excited to see what she can do with us. We look forward to supporting her development.”

Lloyd herself said: “It’s an honor to drive for a team that has such a great racing history and also a long track record for developing talent. With McLaren, I now have everything I need to keep developing and pushing the boundaries as a female in motorsport.

“Thank you to Zak Brown [McLaren CEO], Stephanie Carlin and the entire McLaren team for their faith in me. I can’t wait to get racing in papaya.”

Stella wants McLaren to stay aggressive on development

Team principal Andrea Stella wants McLaren to remain aggressive when it comes to its car development for the final six rounds of the season, despite its recent strong showings. McLaren is on a run of three wins in the past four races, with two of …

Team principal Andrea Stella wants McLaren to remain aggressive when it comes to its car development for the final six rounds of the season, despite its recent strong showings.

McLaren is on a run of three wins in the past four races, with two of those being dominant outings for Lando Norris in Zandvoort and Singapore. With many teams struggling to consistently upgrade their cars, Stella admits that having such an advantage over the field at the last race left him wary of making changes that could impact the McLaren’s balance, but the Italian believes his team can’t afford to be cautious. 

“In fairness, that was one of my thoughts after the race [in Singapore],” Stella said. “Because we do have some stuff in the pipeline and obviously when you have this kind of performance on track you always may approach things from a cautious point of view in terms of development.

“At the same time, we need to trust the process, we need to trust the way we’ve been working so far. I’ve said already that we have taken our time to make sure that once we deliver trackside we have done the due diligence.

“I don’t think this will change our plans. In Formula 1 I’m not sure you can back off too much because backing off means that the others may catch up and we don’t know what the plans of the others are.

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“In Red Bull we see that on a track in which they thought they would have not been very competitive, ultimately they were potentially second best. I think we haven’t seen [Ferrari’s potential] but even Ferrari, in P1 and P2, they seemed to be as fast as us and the final stint of [Charles] Leclerc was very competitive.

“The race may flatter us a little bit. The situation from a competitiveness point of view, I would say we need to keep being aggressive in terms of development.”

Norris’ victory in Singapore saw him reduce Max Verstappen’s advantage by seven points as the championship leader finished second, but Stella says he takes more confidence based on the team’s pace advantage rather than the actual point-scoring outcome.

“Look, from a numerical point of view, it’s a little frustrating because I think we could have gone away from Singapore having gained more points on Max,” he said.

“I think Ferrari could have finished ahead of Max, I think even Oscar [Piastri], polishing a little bit the qualifying laps, he could have finished ahead of Max. The positives that come from the pace of the car definitely overcome this kind of frustration I think when you have this sort of pace. We are heading on to the next six events, three of which are sprint events.

“So I think it’s definitely not in our hands because it’s still in Max’s hands. Likewise, the constructors’ [title], that’s more in our hands, in fairness, but I think we go away potentially encouraged and even more optimistic that the drivers’ championship is possible because of the performance of the car.”

McLaren IndyCar drivers, Button headline fifth Velocity Invitational

The fifth edition of the Velocity Invitational returns this weekend to Sonoma Raceway, where 2009 Formula 1 world champion Jenson Button and an array of NTT IndyCar Series and other marquee drivers will headline the historic racing event. In 2023, …

The fifth edition of the Velocity Invitational returns this weekend to Sonoma Raceway, where 2009 Formula 1 world champion Jenson Button and an array of NTT IndyCar Series and other marquee drivers will headline the historic racing event.

In 2023, Velocity founder Jeffrey O’Neil and the McLaren Racing Formula 1 team partnered to create an unforgettable experience where the team took over a building with an installation of eight F1 McLaren F1 cars spanning 1969-2008 and drivers like Lando Norris, Tony Kanaan, Pato O’Ward, Alexander Rossi, Stefan Johansson and team CEO Zak Brown rotating through the machines.

In 2024, the involvement is significantly smaller, but McLaren has dispatched Kanaan, local product Nolan Siegel and, in his first official duty for the Arrow McLaren IndyCar team, Christian Lundgaard.

The trio will pilot three privately-owned turbocharged McLaren Indy cars with the 1974 M16C/D “Black Label” formerly driven by David Hobbs, Johnny Rutherford’s Gatorade-liveried 1975 M16E and the Red Roof Inns 1978 M24 being shared among the 2014 Indianapolis 500 winner and the team’s current drivers.

Kanaan achieved a lifelong dream of driving his hero Ayrton Senna’s championship-winning 1991 McLaren MP-4/6 at last year’s event (pictured above) and will prepare himself for the brutish power of an old school Indy car when he arrives on Friday.

“I don’t think anything Velocity will do ever again will top that for me, because of many reasons,” Kanaan told RACER. “So I was grateful that they invited me back, and now I can come and enjoy and be more relaxed. It’s almost like when Dan [Wheldon] won his first 500, he was all happy and stuff, and then he goes, when he won his second, ‘Man, I enjoyed the second a lot more because I was more relaxed.’ Bro, it’s the same thing to me.

“I’m going this weekend with no pressure, no butterflies about driving one of Senna’s cars. I know I’m going to drive old IndyCar. I’m going to see old friends. I’m just going to enjoy the weekend this time.”

Fellow IndyCar driver Romain Grosjean from Juncos Hollinger Racing will also be driving a few cars that have yet to be determined, and rally and drifting stars Travis Pastrana, Scott Speed and Ryan Tuerck complete the array of stars who will be in motion.

“I don’t know what I’m gonna drive yet,” Grosjean said. “I know there are really cool cars up there, so I’m not worried about getting a cool ride.

“I think it’s fantastic that a new U.S. organizer is starting an event like this that are high-end, well organized, at beautiful places. I’m excited to go; I’ve heard really good feedback from different people. It’s not a secret that I love wine and I love cars. It sounds like it’s a great fit.”

Stella sees Norris upping getaway game as poles pile up

McLaren team principal Andrea Stella says analysis has shown that perceptions of first-lap weakness from Lando Norris were overblown, although he believes that Norris is improving as he gains experience of starting from pole position. Prior to the …

McLaren team principal Andrea Stella says analysis has shown that perceptions of first-lap weakness from Lando Norris were overblown, although he believes that Norris is improving as he gains experience of starting from pole position.

Prior to the Singapore Grand Prix, Norris had a record of failing to retain the lead of a race at the end of the opening lap each of the seven times he had started from pole position, or first on the grid in a Sprint. In Singapore, however, he held off Max Verstappen and pulled comfortably clear to secure a dominant victory, and Stella says it was an aspect of Norris’ racing that has been analyzed closely but hadn’t shown a major weakness.

“I don’t disagree that at face value, starts and overall approach to the first corner or first lap might have looked like an opportunity for Lando,” Stella said. “But having done a little bit of analysis as a group, including Lando, we have gone through the season, every single start and every single first lap. And in fairness, even in cases in which Lando started in pole position and he was not the one leading at the end of first lap, we haven’t found that he had kind of given up very much in terms of performance.

“We reviewed Barcelona and we thought that [George] Russell would have been P1, even with Lando trying something different. There were some opportunities in terms of execution of the start, but we recognized that that was also on the team side.

“For instance, I think it was Zandvoort in which both cars had cold tires because of an issue from a team point of view and both cars didn’t have a great start. So I think, while at face value it looked like Lando had a significant opportunity there, actually the facts weren’t so clear.

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“But definitely we have been focusing on the execution of the start and preparation of the tires. Lando himself, even the time we focus on start preparation during a weekend, is now more concentrated.

“And then, I think you gain confidence and you gain familiarity with starting from pole position and understanding, even in terms of territorial defense, what you need to do, even to dissuade people from going [for a move]. So I think this is part of the journey and it’s just good that we are now having to face this kind of opportunity.”

Stella says it has been a similar learning curve for McLaren itself, as it gets used to being a front-running team with a car capable of fighting for victory at every venue.

“I think there’s a combination of factors. Definitely the more you race at the front, the more you get familiar not only with the situation, but even with the approach that the team should have,” he said. “We were discussing that we should adjust our weekend schedule, because we need to have many more conversations, even with the drivers, in terms of internal competition, something that in the past wasn’t part of going racing.

“Likewise, from a strategic point of view, playing kind of defensive strategies in which you don’t have to be the first one pulling the trigger — you just sort of wait for the car in P2 to go and then you cover. These are scenarios that we were not very familiar and now we are getting familiar.

“So I think it’s fair to say that there’s a development of which the team are part of. Not only the drivers, but for me the most important thing is that even in the situations in which we had some missed opportunities, we approached them in such a constructive way, really leaning on our culture to make sure that we cash in the learning for these situations. We will have more opportunities if we keep the team together and we keep growing.

“So for me this is the most important thing and the one I’m more proud of, rather than the fact that we now can actually deliver performance. I’m more proud of [overcoming] when the times were difficult.”

McLaren signs Red Bull’s Courtenay as sporting director

Another senior figure has opted to leave Red Bull, with Will Courtenay moving to McLaren to become its future sporting director. Courtenay has been at Red Bull for 20 years – having previously been part of the Jaguar team before the change of …

Another senior figure has opted to leave Red Bull, with Will Courtenay moving to McLaren to become its future sporting director.

Courtenay has been at Red Bull for 20 years – having previously been part of the Jaguar team before the change of ownership – and is currently the team’s head of race strategy. He will join McLaren at a date still to be confirmed as his current contract with Red Bull runs until mid-2026, and when he does so the new sporting director will report into racing director Randeep Singh.

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“We are delighted to welcome Will to McLaren,” team principal Andrea Stella said. “His experience, professionalism and passion for motorsport make him the ideal candidate to lead our F1 sporting function.

“We are now entering a key phase in our journey as a team, and we are confident that he will be a great addition to our strong leadership team as we strive to continue challenging for wins and championships.”

McLaren already leads the constructors’ championship by 41 points from Red Bull, while Lando Norris has closed the gap to Max Verstappen in the drivers’ championship to 52 points, having been 78 adrift after the summer break.

The news that Courtenay will move to McLaren marks the third senior team member to announce their departure from Red Bull this year, following chief technical officer Adrian Newey’s move to Aston Martin and sporting director Jonathan Wheatley’s switch to become the team principal of the future Audi F1 team.

Both Newey and Wheatley will start work with their new teams in 2025, while Courtenay’s arrival at McLaren is currently set to be a year later unless an agreement for an early release is reached with Red Bull.

McLaren form leaves Red Bull with ‘hard work’ to do – Horner

Christian Horner says Red Bull has a lot of work to do to try and catch McLaren ahead of the next race in Austin, following Lando Norris’ dominant victory in the Singapore Grand Prix. Norris pulled out a lead of over 20 seconds in the opening part …

Christian Horner says Red Bull has a lot of work to do to try and catch McLaren ahead of the next race in Austin, following Lando Norris’ dominant victory in the Singapore Grand Prix.

Norris pulled out a lead of over 20 seconds in the opening part of Sunday’s race, although he lost some time before his pit stop when he locked up and very nearly hit the barrier. McLaren had asked its driver to open up an advantage of at least five seconds by around lap 15 but Norris went far clear at that point, with Horner admitting it was impressive pace that Red Bull had no answer to.

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“Yeah, that was taking the p***, although I shouldn’t say that in a public capacity!” Horner said. “The pace he had in hand on that tire at that point in time was… at that point we’ve conceded the race on pace. He touched the wall for the first time, then he touched it for the second time but they’ve got away with it.

“I actually think Max [Verstappen] drove a very strong race, and that was what we had, which, when you consider where we were a couple of weeks ago, I think we have made some real progress and obviously, we’ve got a lot of work to do before Austin.”

Horner told Verstappen over the radio about the two occasions Norris touched the barrier during the race, suggesting it showed how close the leader came to costing himself the win.

“It’s to show him he was a lucky bastard. You know, hitting the wall once is usually a wake up call. And to hit it twice, you’ve got somebody smiling on you… Hope I don’t get done for ‘lucky bastard’!”

While joking about the recent requests for drivers not to swear on team radio or in official press conferences, Horner says he was satisfied with the return in Singapore despite Verstappen losing seven points to Norris in the drivers’ championship.

“You have to congratulate Lando and McLaren. They had a very strong car this weekend, and particularly on the first stint they were very quick. I think on the hard tire, we looked in better shape. But of course, the gap is way too big by then at a track that, anyway, is very hard to overtake.

“So I think if you roll back the clock to Friday night, if you’d have said we’d qualify on the front row and take second place a significant amount ahead of the rest of the field, I think we would have certainly taken that.

“But obviously the gap to Lando was significant in the first part of the race, and we’ve now got the best part of a month to work hard and try and bring some performance to the car in Austin.”

Norris admits he pushed too hard after hitting wall in dominant Singapore win

Lando Norris admits he was likely pushing too hard at times in his run to a dominant victory at the Singapore Grand Prix, as two specific mistakes risked damaging his car. The McLaren driver led every lap and pulled over 20s clear of Max Verstappen …

Lando Norris admits he was likely pushing too hard at times in his run to a dominant victory at the Singapore Grand Prix, as two specific mistakes risked damaging his car.

The McLaren driver led every lap and pulled over 20s clear of Max Verstappen before his first pit stop, but then lost time locking up at Turn 14 and only just managing to keep his car out of the barrier. Later in the race Norris did, in fact, hit the wall with his right rear entering Turn 10, and he says it was a sign of how aggressive he was driving, trying to give himself a full pit stop in hand over the field.

“I was flat out,” Norris said. “I was probably pushing a bit too hard. It was definitely not like I was cruising. I was pushing to open up a gap, and at one point I wanted to try and open up a pit window to give myself an opportunity to maybe box at the end of the race for quickest lap if I needed to try and achieve that. Daniel [Ricciardo] stole that away from me at the end of the race.

“A tough one, but it wasn’t easy. The car was not easy to drive, especially on the hard tires. I struggled a lot more than what I did on the medium. With the traffic and things, it was a bit harder to manage the second half of the stint compared to the first, but I was pushing. Let me tell you, I was definitely pushing — probably too much, hence the mistakes I was making, or the two mistakes I made with the wall, but otherwise things were going well.”

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Despite those two incidents, Norris doesn’t believe there was any damage caused to his car and says he was slightly surprised by the way the car’s characteristics changed when approaching traffic.

“The team said that there was something with the front wing, maybe being a little bit off,” he said. “I hit the front wing against the barrier, so it might have tweaked it a touch, but I don’t think probably much to change it, but hard to know. On these cars, as soon as you tweak something a tiny bit, it can have quite a big impact, but nothing that I was probably feeling.

“As soon as I did that, and I think it was more… I was pushing, but also it was just as I was catching up to the dirty air from the cars ahead. Whether they were 3-4s ahead, it changes from the past 20 laps that I had. You have a little bit less grip, a little bit less downforce, tires are going away a little bit; it just caught me out.

“It wasn’t like a lack of concentration or anything. It was just a bit of a surprise to me, but I think the car was all good… A big thanks to the team.”

Brown questioning RB’s fastest lap move with Ricciardo at Singapore

McLaren Racing CEO Zak Brown says he will ask questions relating to Daniel Ricciardo’s fastest lap at the end of the Singapore Grand Prix, as it helped Red Bull. RB opted to pit Ricciardo from 18th place and fit a new set of soft tires to take the …

McLaren Racing CEO Zak Brown says he will ask questions relating to Daniel Ricciardo’s fastest lap at the end of the Singapore Grand Prix, as it helped Red Bull.

RB opted to pit Ricciardo from 18th place and fit a new set of soft tires to take the fastest lap away from Lando Norris, a move he duly completed to prevent Norris scoring an extra point. It meant race-winner Norris only outscored Max Verstappen by seven points rather than eight, and Brown believes it highlights a problem with Red Bull owning two different teams.

“That’s a nice A/B team sporting thing that I didn’t think was allowed…” Brown told SiriusXM. “But hey, that’s not the first time we’ve seen it, probably won’t be the last.

“I’ll certainly ask some questions. It’s something I’ve spoken about in the past and I think it illustrates that it does happen, because I think you wouldn’t have made that pit stop to go for that. It’s not going to get anyone a point, so I think it does illustrate the issue around that topic.”

Brown raised concerns relating to Red Bull’s ownership of RB over the past year, but Red Bull team principal Christian Horner says the teams make their own decisions.

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“Racing Bulls stopped and did the fastest lap at the end of the race!” Horner also told SiriusXM. “There’s nothing more to it than that. Kevin Magnussen would have had it had he not gone wide earlier in the race and he has a Ferrari engine. Every team has its own independence.”

When it was put to Horner that Magnussen had to pit due to a puncture, while RB risked a car that was finishing 18th, he admitted the ownership situation would lead to scrutiny.

“Sure, sure. It’s always going to get raised because it’s the same ownership, so it’s inevitable that question’s going to get raised,” he said. “But Daniel’s lap in a grand prix car… He wanted to… Remember, he gets paid a bonus on a fastest lap.”

While Verstappen said he was thankful to Ricciardo for the move, Norris himself downplayed any frustration at the lost point.

“Well done, Daniel,” Norris said. “I don’t know. Nothing I can do, so good on him. I did my best at trying to get a quickest lap when the tires were in a good condition in the middle, but I can’t have them all. I’ve done my best at trying to get quickest laps over the last few weekends and I’ve been able to get them more often than not. But I can’t, on a hard tire in the middle of a stint, beat a guy on a new soft. That’s just life.”

Stella downplays McLaren’s constructors’ points lead

McLaren’s move into the lead of the constructors’ championship is a huge milestone for the team, but Andrea Stella doesn’t want it to receive too much attention. Red Bull’s early-season advantage has been consistently reduced since McLaren upgraded …

McLaren’s move into the lead of the constructors’ championship is a huge milestone for the team, but Andrea Stella doesn’t want it to receive too much attention.

Red Bull’s early-season advantage has been consistently reduced since McLaren upgraded its car at the Miami Grand Prix, and a first and fourth places at Baku lifted the team to the top of the standings for the first time in over a decade. It marks a remarkable turnaround from a tough start to last season, but Stella said that while the significance should be recognized, there can be no room for complacency.

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“If I look at it for a second as a milestone then it is definitely huge, because we don’t have to forget at the start of 2023 we were last when started the season and now we lead the classification,” Stella said. “That’s a huge milestone that has been possible because of the great work, hard work and quality of work of the whole team, the support from our shareholders, the support from our partners, the fans, you achieve this because you achieve it together.

“At the same time – which is my way of going racing, and the way that I would like the team to go racing – this second is already over. We don’t look at the classification, we just look at executing at every single event, delivering the upgrades that we still plan to take to some of the future races, because the car is still not fast enough to create some boring races – which is not in the interest of Formula 1, but definitely the way that we want to go racing.

“So we have work to do in terms of making the car faster and we need to remain humble, keep our feet on the ground, because we see that in fairness there is not much to pick at all between the four top teams.

“I often hear that McLaren is the best car, but this is not in the numbers. I think in the numbers McLaren is the best car at some kinds of circuit, like Barcelona, Hungary, Zandvoort, for good technical reasons. But (at Baku) I don’t think McLaren enjoyed any advantage over Ferrari, and I think not even over Red Bull.

“Even in Monza, Mercedes was in the 0.086 seconds between P2 and P6, so it is just very, very balanced. So I think the execution by the drivers and by the team is what makes the difference.”

Oscar Piastri won in Baku with Lando Norris fourth, but the latter is ahead in the drivers’ championship, and McLaren recently said it will back him where necessary to try and catch Max Verstappen. Stella said that remains the plan, but pointed to Norris’ role in holding up Sergio Perez in Sunday’s race as proof it will still ask both drivers to prioritize the team.

“We have two number one drivers, effectively,” he said. “Having two number one drivers mean we approach things first of all in the interest of the team. The interest of the team is to win the constructors’ championship and also the drivers’ championship.

“Lando was in the most favorable position. I think he still is in the most favorable position, so naturally we would have supported Lando. But I think we have evidence [from Baku] that actually, interestingly, it was Lando supporting Oscar and enabling Oscar’s victory thanks to driving for the team and driving to support his teammate.

“So that remains our approach and we always intended to review after every event with each driver, with the drivers together, what is going to be the best approach for the next races. We will do that and set the plan for Singapore.”