18/10/2025 10:50
Jenson Button has posed a potential repercussion Lando Norris could
face after McLaren's secretive penalty against the Briton. On
Thursday, ahead of the United States GP, Norris and Oscar Piastri
both revealed that Norris would be subject to "repercussions" for
his move on Piastri on the opening lap of the Singapore GP, in
which he made light contact with the sister car of the world
championship leader. McLaren did not intervene during the race, but
in the two-week gap between Singapore and Austin, talks were held
between the drivers and team bosses Andrea Stella and Zak Brown,
with Norris labelling the decision to hold him "accountable" as
"fair" and that he accepted the sanctions the team would impose on
him for the rest of the season. However, the sanctions and
repercussions have not been revealed, with both Norris and Piastri
obfuscating when questioned. Button, the 2009 F1 champion, believes
Norris's penalties could include having to play second-fiddle to
Piastri when it comes to pit strategy. "I mean, you're always told
by your team owner or team principal that one thing you do not do
is crash into your team-mate," Button explained on Sky Sports F1.
"But normally, it is a telling off and you move onto the next race,
it is not like they're fighting for 10th and 11th, they're fighting
for the world championship - and this might be the only opportunity
these two drivers get to win or fight for a world championship. "So
they need to be given every opportunity possible, and maybe it is
going to be something like Oscar is allowed to choose when the
first pit-stop is, in terms of which car pits first, because we've
seen that it can be, and that's probably why they don't want to
tell us what it is." The article continues below. Martin Brundle's
view Adding his opinion on the matter, Martin Brundle felt Piastri
could also benefit in qualifying, with the use of the slipstream
when required. "Clearly, whatever they're going to do will be
inside the team, and it won't affect them against others, but it is
slightly odd," Brundle added. "Because I think what McLaren is
doing for the sport is actually very good, they can race from
lights out to chequered flag with one proviso: 'Don't run into each
other', and obviously there will be consequences. "Now, if it
hadn't been Piastri alongside him, the team would have cheered
those first few corners for Lando. It was brilliantly driven, but
he just touched his team-mate. "If we were in a development race, I
think it would be Oscar getting the new parts first, or if it is a
slipstream in qualifying, Oscar would get priority on that and that
kind of intra-team thing, as it doesn't hand any advantage to other
teams."