Boss Defends Lando Norris Amid ‘Weakness’ Criticism

F1 Grand Prix Of Bahrain Final Practice
BAHRAIN, BAHRAIN - APRIL 12: Lando Norris of Great Britain and McLaren talks with Andrea Stella, Team Principal of McLaren during final practice ahead of the F1 Grand Prix of Bahrain at Bahrain International Circuit on April 12, 2025 in Bahrain, Bahrain. (Photo by Peter Fox/LAT Images)
F1 Grand Prix Of Bahrain Final Practice
BAHRAIN, BAHRAIN - APRIL 12: Lando Norris of Great Britain and McLaren talks with Andrea Stella, Team Principal of McLaren during final practice ahead of the F1 Grand Prix of Bahrain at Bahrain International Circuit on April 12, 2025 in Bahrain, Bahrain. (Photo by Peter Fox/LAT Images)

McLaren team boss Andrea Stella has leapt to the defence of championship leader Lando Norris.

While Bahrain polesitter and winner Oscar Piastri is regarded as calm and stoical, teammate Norris regularly dives into distress and self-deprecation after what Stella admits was a “sloppy” weekend for the Briton.

However, Stella – who has worked with champions including Michael Schumacher, Kimi Raikkonen and Fernando Alonso – says Norris is basically in the same mould.

“I haven’t seen any professional athlete, especially F1 drivers, or even world champions, who feel completely comfortable in a situation where they want to do something with the car, but it doesn’t do what they want,” said the Italian.

“It’s an awkward situation, but the way Lando is dealing with it is no different to other champions I’ve seen in the past. If anything, Lando has more style.”

Stella admits, however, that the 25-year-old is “relatively unique” in how open he is publicly – which is often denounced as a sign of mental weakness.

“He makes it visible,” he explained. “He’s very self-critical in interviews. I know other champions who would be quick to blame others.”

Stella said Norris’ tendency to “absorb” errors and “blame himself” is actually helpful for a team.

“For example, in Q3, he didn’t complete the lap and immediately raised his hand, even though we know we made some changes to the car that made his life difficult,” he said.

“There are drivers who, as soon as there’s a problem, blame the team. That’s not healthy. It’s not something you can build on.”

Norris also defended himself, explaining that what the public is interpreting as weakness is “just an outlet for frustration when I haven’t achieved what I wanted to achieve”.

“It’s my deep desire to do well and my enormous ambition to win,” he added. “That’s just the way I am. But I don’t think the things I say have a negative impact on me. I’ve done that my whole life, and I know how to block negative comments out of my mind.”

From F1 news to tech, history to opinions, F1 Chronicle has a free Substack. To deliver the stories you want straight to your inbox, click here.

New to Formula 1? Check out our Glossary of F1 Terms, and our Beginners Guide to Formula 1 to fast-track your F1 knowledge.

Comments

Subscribe
Notify of
guest
0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

More in News

F1 Grand Prix Of Canada

McLaren Driver Equality Is ‘Playing With Fire’

As far as championship leader Oscar Piastri is concerned, he ...
F1 Grand Prix Of Austria Previews

Max Verstappen Explains Ongoing F1 Media Attitude

Max Verstappen giggled to the Dutch media as he explained ...
Pierre Gasly

Pierre Gasly Called Management After Shock CEO Exit

Pierre Gasly says he followed through on contacting management after ...
F1 Grand Prix Of Singapore Final Practice

Sergio Pérez Claims Red Bull Regrets Dropping Him

Pérez says Red Bull “very sorry” for ending his contract, ...
F1 Grand Prix Of Canada

Verstappen, Wolff Not Fans Of Le Mans Rules

Toto Wolff has joined Formula 1 rival Max Verstappen in ...

Trending on F1 Chronicle