30/07/2025 18:45
Lando Norris possesses all the speed he needs to become an F1
drivers' champion this season. However, the Belgian Grand Prix
re-established a concerning weakness in the 25-year-old's arsenal.
The McLaren driver failed to capitalise on pole position at
Spa-Francorchamps, and I cannot help but feel he handed victory to
team-mate Oscar Piastri. As a consequence, what should have become
a mere two-point gap to the Australian in the title hunt grew to a
16-point deficit. Not a huge discrepancy, but another performance
like that at the Hungarian Grand Prix and Norris will be heading
into the summer break almost a full race victory behind the
24-year-old – if not worse. Fortunately for the British driver,
McLaren continues to insist upon its admirable "two number one
driver" stance and looks set to maintain parity between the two for
the duration of the campaign, something made all the more likely by
Max Verstappen increasingly becoming a non-entity in the
championship equation. Therefore, so long as Norris and Piastri can
keep within 25 points of one another, their battle for a maiden
crown will go down to the wire, and then anything can happen. Plus,
with the Australian on a 41-grand prix finishing streak – the
third-longest in F1 history – he is surely due a retirement soon.
Surely. But, to even be in the picture come Abu Dhabi, Norris needs
to address a critically exposed area in his armour – and quickly.
Piastri is less fazed by being behind; he can play both the hunted
and the hunter and is more comfortable in combat. Norris is less
battle-ready. Breaking down happened at Spa-Francorchamps Norris
failing to convert pole into victory in Belgium was undoubtedly and
undeniably down to a catalogue of errors, and they were not all his
mistakes. However, the series of unfortunate events, to borrow from
Lemony Snicket, was instigated by the eight-time grand prix winner.
Some of the misfortune was plainly not Norris's fault, like Isack
Hadjar squarely inserting himself into the heart of the fight for
victory by taking far too long to get out of the way when being
lapped by the second McLaren in the dying stages of the race. But
the most egregious moment that cost him the win also doubles up as
the catalyst for the snowball effect that transpired thereafter.
When the race eventually got underway on Lap 5, Norris fumbled the
restart; he arguably went too soon and certainly took the wrong
line through Turn 1. That left him fighting a squirrelly exit from
La Source, whilst Piastri, who had taken a wider line through the
corner, was well positioned to attack with a better run to Eau
Rouge and through Raidillon. The Briton was exposed, as McLaren
team principal Andrea Stella had warned against , and at the mercy
of his team-mate, who duly made him pay, seizing the lead and
control of the race. From there, Piastri had pit stop priority,
which further stung Norris, who was forced to pit for dry tyres a
lap later. It cost him precious time, and when he eventually did
rid himself of the intermediate compound, it was a poor stop from
the team. That part he had little control over, but he was only in
that position because of his initial misjudgment at the rolling
start. Norris emerged from the pit lane almost 10 seconds adrift on
hard tyres to Piastri's mediums. He set about on an impressive and
concerted effort to reel the latter in, delivering push laps one
after another. But then the first of three further errors occurred.
Going wide at Pouhon cost him almost one and a half seconds, before
two lock-ups at Turn 1, the last of which came on the penultimate
lap, added a further 1.2 seconds to the gap, and ultimately
consigned Norris to his fate. He crossed the line 3.4 seconds
adrift, and those mistakes - coupled with Hadjar delaying his
charge by almost a full lap - prevented him from getting within
striking distance of Piastri. Bringing the intensity and
performance of qualifying, lap after lap after lap, is incredibly
difficult. However, when the chips were down and the stakes were
high, Norris showed a lack of composure, losing valuable time and
throwing away any possibility of reclaiming the lead. Previously in
The Scoop Winning from behind The Singapore Grand Prix last season
saw Norris almost lose a certain victory through multiple errors as
a result of wayward concentration, but what happened at
Spa-Francorchamps is something different. It appears his operating
window is narrower than his team-mate's, which manifests as being
less versatile in his ability to win from differing situations.
That poses a problem. At the moment, Norris is quicker than
Piastri. He has the edge, both over one lap and a grand prix
distance, but only just. And whilst the former has seemingly found
the antidote to the session and weekend-ruining mistakes he was
making earlier in the campaign, he is not able to deliver the
metronomic consistency of the latter. There is less variance and
fluctuation in Piastri's performance, and the unflappable
Australian is more clinical in wheel-to-wheel action. Piastri is
less fazed by being behind; he can play both the hunted and the
hunter and is more comfortable in combat. Norris is less
battle-ready. It's a paucity he must address. He showed at the
Austrian Grand Prix that he can soak up and absorb Piastri's
pressure, but can he win when he falls behind and needs to chase?
Both have won eight grand prix, but Norris has only twice triumphed
when he has not been on pole. Conversely, Piastri has taken victory
five times from the same scenario. Although Norris is the faster of
the two, he will need to improve in that area. He cannot merely
rely on winning from the front because he isn't always going to be
in front. The pace delta is close, and sometimes Piastri will be
quicker, and when that is the case, Norris will need the poise to
find a way to win.