Lando Norris, McLaren, Albert Park, 2025

Norris explains why he’s learned to accept McLaren’s “very weak” handling

Formula 1

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Lando Norris may have won the opening round of the world championship, but that doesn’t mean he’s comfortable at the wheel of his team’s latest car.

This is Norris’s seventh season at McLaren, the only team he has driven for in Formula 1. Last year’s McLaren was quick enough to deliver the constructors’ championship, but Norris wasn’t always satisfied with its handling characteristics. “Some of the traits are the same” in this year’s car, he said.

“It still doesn’t suit my driving style at all. I think I’ve almost gotten to a point where I’ve just accepted that you can’t have a perfect car that suits your style. Maybe it suits some people, but I’ve kind of stopped asking for exactly what I want and more just focused on whatever makes the car quicker.”

Despite that, the MCL39 is definitely an improvement on last year’s car, he said. “It’s probably a tricky car to drive and to put together a lap, but clearly it’s taken a step forward from last year. At the end of the day, my job is to drive whatever car I get given. That’s why I’m here. That’s why McLaren wanted me. They believe I can drive it better than others can.”

Max Verstappen, Lando Norris, Rob Marshall, George Russell, Albert Park, Melbourne, 2025
Norris started the season on the podium
Norris said the way the car turns in to corners doesn’t match his instinctive driving style. “Some of the characteristics I don’t like and don’t suit the way I want to drive, in an attacking way. It doesn’t suit me in terms of me wanting to push the entries and push the braking. It’s very weak, I would say, from that point of view. Not what I like.”

He’s come to accept some aspects of the car’s handling are fundamental to how McLaren designs chassis. “Some of it is down to the adaptation, needing to change my driving style every year, because the car I drive is very different from what McLaren was a few years ago – clearly, because then we were at the back and now we’re at the front.

“But some things carry on. Some things are like ‘this is a McLaren’ for those reasons and I’ve only ever driven McLarens, so that’s all I know. I think it’s unique in certain aspects.”

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Other drivers have remarked on the particular handling characteristics of McLarens, such as Norris’s former team mates Carlos Sainz Jnr and Daniel Ricciardo.

Lando Norris, McLaren, Circuit Gilles Villeneuve, 2019
Earlier McLarens Norris drove were much less competitive
“Obviously we have our strengths and weaknesses and whenever someone has been at McLaren and gone to another team they have often said how hard or odd the McLaren has been to drive, whether that’s Daniel or with Carlos,” he said.

“It’s also all I’ve got used to, so I’ve got to the point where I’ll just drive whatever car I have to drive. As long as it’s fighting for a win and quick enough to fight for a win, I’m happy enough to drive what I’m given.”

Although the team has tried to develop a chassis which has the handling traits he wants, the pursuit of performance has forced him to accept compromises.

“The thing is the aero guys and girls back in the factory, they just try to find lap time,” he said. “You’ve got to balance how you work the car.

“Like certain other teams have said, at times you can try to find a more peaky aero balance. If it works at the peak, it’s better, but it might be trickier to drive and worse in windy conditions. Or, do you try to get rid of some of that peak grip and make it a slightly more all-rounded car?

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“You have to play with this balance, because it’s difficult to get both. You have to choose what direction you want to go in.”

Lando Norris, McLaren, Albert Park, 2025
McLaren’s turn-in performance is “very weak,” says Norris
Norris also suspects the handling characteristics he desires are not easy for the team to create. “Definitely I think some of what I want from a car is, first of all, just very hard to get. That’s probably the best answer.

“For me, a good front at the apex, that’s kind of all I feel like I want. I very rarely have what I need, from that perspective.

“But the car can still win races. It’s not like if I don’t have what I want, the car is bad. I can still get the most out of the car, if I don’t have what I want. There are just compromises.”

He suspects the performance compromises needed to make the car suit his driving style are not worth making.

“It’s so complicated when the guys and the girls try to take you through [it]. If I do want more front end at mid-corner, at the minute we can only get that if we compromise low-speed or high-speed performance, or making the car more sensitive to windy conditions.

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“There are so many compromises you have to make and at the end of the day, you just want the best all-rounded car. I think that’s the main answer to it all.”

As a result, Norris said his attitude towards getting what he wants from a car has changed. “I think I’ve got a better understanding of that over the past couple of years on driving styles, how I need to drive the car,” he said.

“Maybe making a bit of that switch from ‘I want this from the car, and I want to keep driving my way until you make it more suited to me;’ I guess I’ve kind of thrown that away and just said, ‘alright, give me the best car, and I need to adapt a lot more to the car I get given.’

“It’s not the most comfortable, it’s not what I like the most, it’s [not] what I can get the most out of. But over the last year and a half, I’ve probably learned more about my driving than I did in the previous five years, just because the car has changed, and I’ve fallen into this philosophy of ‘give me the best car and I’ll adapt to that’ rather than ‘give me the car I want’.”

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Keith Collantine
Lifelong motor sport fan Keith set up RaceFans in 2005 - when it was originally called F1 Fanatic. Having previously worked as a motoring...

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6 comments on “Norris explains why he’s learned to accept McLaren’s “very weak” handling”

  1. This is truly a very introspective article full of first-hand technical tidbits. But, I must continue in a different style.
    Dear Jimmy, I know you can’t hear me or read my posts because you’re dead for almost six decades. Luckily, some of your driving was recorded so jaws are still dropping these days. I know that you never complained about the car, you just drove the damn thing to the limit to everyone’s delight. I just want to tell you, even though you can’t hear me, there has never been a racing driver like you before or since. God bless you for all eternity.

    1. Jeffrey Powell
      20th March 2025, 22:53

      Wonderful, I couldn’t express myself better, I was there as I hope you were.

  2. Looking forward to the regulation change next year, to take a step away from this over reliance on platform stability to get the aerodynamics to work.

  3. Makes you wonder why McLaren don’t/can’t make the car suit his style like we hear Red Bull have been doing for so long for MV and SV beforehand ??
    Or is it a case of Lando making out he does a belter of a job with a kack handling bus ?
    I’ll admit, I’m not a fan of his teenage stupidity.
    Wanna win a world champion ? Grow up then, boy.

  4. Norris has indeed said this for years now, and it’s good to see him get on with it. Being given long-term trust by the team probably also helps him approach it with a more open attitude in which he is willing to try things different from his normal approach. And he seems to be a clever enough guy, so the things he says about working with the engineers probably also help him understand the characteristics of the car.

    Part of this is also due to the tyres. I wonder how guys like Norris would do on the old Michelin tyres. The way Alonso drove those was just something else.

  5. Lots of people here complaining about this insight he’s providing… saying he should just get on and drive it.

    Umm… he’s doing exactly that. He’s driving it, and even explicitly stating that he has to just get on and drive it.

    This talk of “never complain” is absurd—especially when I suspect that this response was prompted by a question from a journalist; and it’s a fair question with an honest response. Fair play all round.

    Those who need to grow up are those complaining about honesty.

Comments are closed.