JapaneseGP, McLaren, Norris, Piastri

(L to R): Oscar Piastri (AUS) McLaren celebrates his third position second placed team mate Lando Norris (GBR) McLaren. 24.09.2023. Formula 1 World Championship, Rd 17, Japanese Grand Prix, Suzuka, Japan, Race Day.

McLaren’s resurgence continued at the Japanese Grand Prix as the team secured its first double podium in two years – but for Oscar Piastri, the route to claiming his first trophy in Formula 1 exposed the magnitude of the challenge he has against team-mate Lando Norris.

After a multitude of rookie drivers had passed through in previous years without truly stamping their authority on the top flight, Piastri has delivered on the lofty expectations that placed him as the centrepiece of last year’s driver market.

Eventually, McLaren won out over Alpine in a protracted legal battle, locking down arguably the most exciting and talented driver line-up on the entire F1 grid.

But McLaren’s attempts to provide its revitalised youthful combination with a competitive machine from the outset were stymied by the admission it had missed development targets with its MCL60 car. Instead of building upon the progress it had made last year following a stuttering start to the latest regulation cycle, the Woking camp plummeted to backmarker territory.

A pitiful total of only 17 points were scored across the opening eight races, but the introduction of a heavily revised car from the Austrian Grand Prix – extensively remodelling the sidepods, floor and engine cover – transformed the team’s fortunes and propelled it into front-running contention.

Norris had already utilised the changes to register a triumvirate of second-place finishes ahead of the Japanese GP, while Piastri had converted second place on Sprint Saturday in Belgium. The Australian had been unfortunate not to accompany his team-mate on the podium at the British Grand Prix, being denied a top-three placing by an ill-timed Safety Car intervention.

JapaneseGP, McLaren, Norris, Piastri

Oscar Piastri (AUS) McLaren MCL60. 08.07.2023. Formula 1 World Championship, Rd 11, British Grand Prix, Silverstone, England, Qualifying Day.

However, McLaren’s encouraging speed at Silverstone in July provided promising reading heading to a similarly high-speed configuration at Suzuka – something that was not lost on Mercedes, who trailed comfortably behind its powertrain customer.

“Well, I think the update they [McLaren] did in Singapore didn’t look massive there, but that’s all low-speed corners, here [Japan] it’s all high-speed, and that’s what we saw them get very good at when they did the previous update in Austria,” Mercedes Head of Trackside Engineering Andrew Shovlin said.

Ferrari Team Principal Frederic Vasseur went even further, highlighting how Norris stormed to third on the grid in Barcelona with McLaren’s old-spec car. “I think that they [McLaren] had a big issue at the beginning and then they recovered pretty quickly because, even in Barcelona, they were on the second row,” the Ferrari chief retorted.

But the revised MCL60 – bolstered further with the aforementioned upgrades implemented in Singapore – accentuated its core strength in high-speed corners, helping McLaren to deliver its best race result of ‘23.

From the moment the cars hit the track on Japanese soil McLaren appeared to have stolen a march on its closest rivals, eventually winding up second and third in qualifying. However, for only the fourth time this year, it was Piastri who led the way for the British squad, excelling around the highly challenging sweeps of Suzuka to pip his team-mate to a front-row starting berth.

Piastri’s slender advantage over his more senior partner would not extend into Sunday, though, with Norris comprehensively turning the tables on the newcomer to eventually classify ahead by 16s come the chequered flag. The margin between the two papaya-liveried McLarens made for more emphatic reading when analysing the events that unfolded during the 53-lap encounter.

JapaneseGP, McLaren, Norris, Piastri

Oscar Piastri (AUS) McLaren MCL60. 24.09.2023. Formula 1 World Championship, Rd 17, Japanese Grand Prix, Suzuka, Japan, Race Day.

Although Norris had assumed the position as the lead McLaren at the start when polesitter and eventual race winner Max Verstappen pinched the fast-starting Piastri on the approach to Turn 1, the second of the two McLaren drivers managed to get back ahead through a large element of fortune.

Wary of the undercut threat, McLaren pitted Piastri first on Lap 13 and it coincided with the timing of a Virtual Safety Car, thus reducing the length of his overall stop. Furthermore, Norris’ advances had been hampered by the slow-moving lapped Red Bull of Sergio Perez, which he estimated to have cost him up to 10s in overall race time.

The end result was that Piastri emerged in front once Norris exited the pit lane at the start of Lap 18. But the latter immediately began to erode the initial 6.5s gap, prompting McLaren to issue team orders once its two cars were nose to tail. Piastri let Norris through into Turn 1 on Lap 27 before falling behind at an average rate of 0.6s a lap across the second half of the race.

While those arrears could partially be attributed to Piastri momentarily being delayed by the one-stopping Mercedes of George Russell in the latter stages, Piastri was relatively downbeat when addressing his race-day outing, allotting his drop in pace to being stifled by tyre degradation concerns.

“Yeah, just I think the tyre management and just pace at certain points of the race was not as strong as I would have liked,” he reflected. “The first stint it felt like everyone was driving extremely slowly and then when I tried to push a bit more the tyres didn’t really let me go much faster.”

This wasn’t the first time Piastri had fallen foul on the tyre management side versus his team-mate. Although notoriously recognised as a slow-speed circuit, there are several long, winding corners at the Hungaroring circuit that vastly punish the tyres, which undeniably hindered Piastri as he slipped from being ahead of Norris and in podium contention to fifth by the end of that race.

JapaneseGP, McLaren, Norris, Piastri

Lando Norris (GBR) McLaren (Right) celebrates his third position in qualifying parc ferme with second placed team mate Lando Norris (GBR) McLaren. 23.09.2023. Formula 1 World Championship, Rd 17, Japanese Grand Prix, Suzuka, Japan, Qualifying Day.

Thankfully for the rookie, McLaren’s status as the outright second-best force in Japan allowed Piastri to escape a repeat of his Hungary troubles unscathed. However, he is acutely aware that getting on top of that glaring weakness will be instrumental to his rate of improvement, particularly when McLaren won’t always be uncontested.

Nevertheless, it’s a testament to Piastri’s credentials and the high standards expected of him that his flaws are being magnified this early into his fledgling F1 career. Being juxtaposed against one of the best all-round drivers on the grid in Norris, who has been granted five years now to perfect his craft, was always going to greatly exaggerate any deficiencies Piastri upheld in his debut year.

Most importantly, Piastri has exhibited on multiple occasions that he has the inherent speed to suggest he can regularly challenge at the sharp end once he smoothens out the rough edges. The 22-year-old has already displayed signs of tidying up his execution in qualifying, culminating in the impressive feat of toppling Norris over a single lap on a proper drivers’ circuit like Suzuka.

“I think the one-lap pace especially in last few weekends has been a good improvement from the start of the year.”

Therefore, there are plenty of reasons to expect that Piastri will take a marked step forward when it comes to his competitiveness in race trim. The McLaren racer has the mentality required to match his sublime skillset and displayed a maturity beyond his tender years to recognise there is room for improvement in the midst of the greatest racing moment of his career so far.

JapaneseGP, McLaren, Norris, Piastri

3rd place Oscar Piastri (AUS) McLaren. 24.09.2023. Formula 1 World Championship, Rd 17, Japanese Grand Prix, Suzuka, Japan, Race Day.

McLaren Team Principal Andrea Stella has emphasised that point on Piastri’s character, admiring his willingness to retrospectively seek improvement from the first day.

“What happened in the early days of the collaboration with Oscar is that we could see that what he achieved in the junior categories had good reasons for that to happen,” Stella expressed. “We even saw it in the first day of the simulator in the way he was assessing his own performance, saying. ‘This is where I am. This is where I need to improve’. It was matching what we could see from the data. That was quite impressive.”

Amid McLaren’s remarkable rise up the competitive order during this year, there is little reason to dispute that the former World Champions will begin in an even stronger position next season. Stella insists that the team hasn’t even explored 50% of its current car philosophy and every upgrade it has attached since Austria has immediately delivered the anticipated gains.

Meanwhile, unlike both Ferrari and Mercedes, McLaren will also not be thwarted by the obstacles that can emerge from needing to radically change car concept over the winter.

Piastri’s path towards potential title glory appears to perfectly concur with McLaren’s planned ascension to the top, placing him within the ideal environment to realise his potential. However, only time will tell whether both parties can rectify the issues at hand to turn their collective dreams into reality.

But for the time being, with two stellar driving talents at the wheel and an ever-improving car underneath them, the future continues to shine bright for McLaren.

Keyword: How Piastri’s path to his maiden F1 podium revealed his greatest test

CAR'S NEWS RELATED

Williams: Sargeant Suzuka crash ‘masking steady performance’

Logan Sargeant (USA) Williams Racing FW45 crashed in qualifying. 23.09.2023. Formula 1 World Championship, Rd 17, Japanese Grand Prix, Suzuka, Japan, Qualifying Day. Williams Head of Vehicle Performance Dave Robson believes Logan Sargeant’s qualifying crash in Japan is “masking his steady performance” gains recently. Sargeant has endured a challenging ...

View more: Williams: Sargeant Suzuka crash ‘masking steady performance’

Alpine must clarify Suzuka team orders communication – Famin

Pierre Gasly (FRA) Alpine F1 Team A523. 24.09.2023. Formula 1 World Championship, Rd 17, Japanese Grand Prix, Suzuka, Japan, Race Day Alpine Interim Team Principal Bruno Famin says the side must clarify whether the communication given to Pierre Gasly during the Japanese Grand Prix was clear enough. Gasly had ...

View more: Alpine must clarify Suzuka team orders communication – Famin

Verstappen drags Red Bull to title glory in F1 2023

Max Verstappen (NLD), Red Bull Racing 24.09.2023. Formula 1 World Championship, Rd 17, Japanese Grand Prix, Suzuka, Japan, Race Day. The Red Bull horror show of Singapore swiftly became a distant memory in Japan as Max Verstappen performed a complete factory reset on Formula 1 to dominantly claim his ...

View more: Verstappen drags Red Bull to title glory in F1 2023

Five-second penalties not ‘strict enough’, vent F1 drivers after Perez example

Sergio Perez (MEX) Red Bull Racing RB19 hits Kevin Magnussen (DEN) Haas VF-23. 24.09.2023. Formula 1 World Championship, Rd 17, Japanese Grand Prix, Suzuka, Japan, Race Day. – www.xpbimages.com, EMail: [email protected] © Copyright: Coates / XPB Images Alex Albon has called for tougher penalties for avoidable collisions as Formula ...

View more: Five-second penalties not ‘strict enough’, vent F1 drivers after Perez example

Lawson: Tsunoda Suzuka battle ‘as close as it gets’

Liam Lawson (NZL) AlphaTauri AT04. 24.09.2023. Formula 1 World Championship, Rd 17, Japanese Grand Prix, Suzuka, Japan, Race Day. Liam Lawson says his battle with Yuki Tsunoda in the opening exchanges of Sunday’s Japanese Grand Prix was “as close as it gets.” The New Zealander, continuing to deputise for ...

View more: Lawson: Tsunoda Suzuka battle ‘as close as it gets’

Ocon: ‘Not relevant’ if Gasly was quicker amid Alpine team orders

Pierre Gasly (FRA) Alpine F1 Team A523. 24.09.2023. Formula 1 World Championship, Rd 17, Japanese Grand Prix, Suzuka, Japan, Race Day. Esteban Ocon contends that it’s “not really relevant” if Pierre Gasly was quicker than him at the Japanese Grand Prix amid Alpine’s decision to utilise team orders late ...

View more: Ocon: ‘Not relevant’ if Gasly was quicker amid Alpine team orders

McLaren: Deficit to Red Bull in Japan qualifying shows work ahead

Qualifying top three in parc ferme (L to R): Oscar Piastri (AUS) McLaren, second; Max Verstappen (NLD) Red Bull Racing, pole position; Lando Norris (GBR) McLaren, third. 23.09.2023. Formula 1 World Championship, Rd 17, Japanese Grand Prix, Suzuka, Japan, Qualifying Day. McLaren Team Principal Andrea Stella asserts Max Verstappen’s ...

View more: McLaren: Deficit to Red Bull in Japan qualifying shows work ahead

Sargeant surprised Bottas didn’t opt for inside line in Japan F1 clash

Valtteri Bottas (FIN) Alfa Romeo F1 Team C43 is hit by Logan Sargeant (USA) Williams Racing FW45. 24.09.2023. Formula 1 World Championship, Rd 17, Japanese Grand Prix, Suzuka, Japan, Race Day. Logan Sargeant says he was surprised that Valtteri Bottas didn’t opt for the inside line during the incident ...

View more: Sargeant surprised Bottas didn’t opt for inside line in Japan F1 clash

Horner: Avoiding Qatar penalty ‘only decent thing’ from Perez’s Japan race

Motorsport Week’s F1 2023 Japanese GP Driver Ratings

Magnussen criticises ‘desperate’ Perez move that ‘ended our race’

Bottas plans to speak with Sargeant after Japanese GP clash

Norris ‘shouting’ in helmet when Perez ‘almost crashed’ into him

Mercedes explain reason for Hamilton team orders at Suzuka

Gasly doesn’t ‘understand’ Alpine Japanese GP team order

Horner: ‘Impossible’ to top Red Bull 2023 F1 season

Perez laments ‘disastrous’, incident-filled Japanese GP

Russell: Hamilton battle ‘hard but fair’ despite team radio tension

Sainz ‘had better pace than the results show’ in Japan

Norris: McLaren double Suzuka podium more ‘deserved’ than Monza ’21

OTHER CAR NEWS

; Top List in the World https://www.pinterest.com/newstopcar/pins/
Top Best Sushi Restaurants in SeoulTop Best Caribbean HoneymoonsTop Most Beautiful Islands in PeruTop Best Outdoor Grill BrandsTop Best Global Seafood RestaurantsTop Foods to Boost Your Immune SystemTop Best Foods to Fight HemorrhoidsTop Foods That Pack More Potassium Than a BananaTop Best Healthy Foods to Gain Weight FastTop Best Cosmetic Brands in the U.STop Best Destinations for Food Lovers in EuropeTop Best Foods High in Vitamin ATop Best Foods to Lower Your Blood SugarTop Best Things to Do in LouisianaTop Best Cities to Visit in New YorkTop Best Makeup Addresses In PennsylvaniaTop Reasons to Visit NorwayTop Most Beautiful Islands In The WorldTop Best Law Universities in the WorldTop Richest Sportsmen In The WorldTop Biggest Aquariums In The WorldTop Best Peruvian Restaurants In MiamiTop Best Road Trips From MiamiTop Best Places to Visit in MarylandTop Best Places to Visit in North CarolinaTop Best Electric Cars For KidsTop Best Swedish Brands in The USTop Best Skincare Brands in AmericaTop Best American Lipstick BrandsTop Michelin-starred Restaurants in MiamiTop Best Secluded Getaways From MiamiTop Best Things To Do On A Rainy Day In MiamiTop Most Instagrammable Places In MiamiTop Interesting Facts about FlorenceTop Facts About The First Roman Emperor - AugustusTop Best Japanese FoodsTop Most Beautiful Historical Sites in IsraelTop Best Places To Visit In Holy SeeTop Best Hawaiian IslandsTop Reasons to Visit PortugalTop Best Hotels In L.A. With Free Wi-FiTop Best Scenic Drives in MiamiTop Best Vegan Restaurants in BerlinTop Most Interesting Attractions In WalesTop Health Benefits of a Vegan DietTop Best Thai Restaurant in Las VegasTop Most Beautiful Forests in SwitzerlandTop Best Global Universities in GermanyTop Most Beautiful Lakes in GuyanaTop Best Things To Do in IdahoTop Things to Know Before Traveling to North MacedoniaTop Best German Sunglasses BrandsTop Highest Mountains In FranceTop Biggest Hydroelectric Plants in AmericaTop Best Spa Hotels in NYCTop The World's Scariest BridgeTop Largest Hotels In AmericaTop Most Famous Festivals in JordanTop Best European Restaurants in MunichTop Best Japanese Hiking Boot BrandsTop Best Universities in PolandTop Best Tips for Surfing the Web Safely and AnonymouslyTop Most Valuable Football Clubs in EuropeTop Highest Mountains In ColombiaTop Real-Life Characters of Texas RisingTop Best Beaches in GuatelamaTop Things About DR Congo You Should KnowTop Best Korean Reality & Variety ShowsTop Best RockstarsTop Most Beautiful Waterfalls in GermanyTop Best Fountain Pen Ink BrandsTop Best European Restaurants in ChicagoTop Best Fighter Jets in the WorldTop Best Three-Wheel MotorcyclesTop Most Beautiful Lakes in ManitobaTop Best Dive Sites in VenezuelaTop Best Websites For Art StudentsTop Best Japanese Instant Noodle BrandsTop Best Comedy Manhwa (Webtoons)Top Best Japanese Sunglasses BrandsTop Most Expensive Air Jordan SneakersTop Health Benefits of CucumberTop Famous Universities in SwedenTop Most Popular Films Starring Jo Jung-sukTop Interesting Facts about CougarsTop Best Hospitals for Hip Replacement in the USATop Most Expensive DefendersTop Health Benefits of GooseberriesTop Health Benefits of ParsnipsTop Best Foods and Drinks in LondonTop Health Benefits of Rosehip TeaTop Best Air Fryers for Low-fat CookingTop Most Asked Teacher Interview Questions with AnswersTop Best Shopping Malls in ZurichTop The Most Beautiful Botanical Gardens In L.A.Top Best Mexican Restaurants in Miami for Carb-loading rightTop Best Energy Companies in GermanyTop Best Garage HeatersTop Largest Banks in IrelandTop Leading Provider - Audit and Assurance In The USTop Best Jewelry Brands in IndiaTop Prettiest Streets in the UKTop Best Lakes to Visit in TunisiaTop Highest Mountains in Israel