Next year is my year, says Norris after winning constructors’ title for McLaren
Last updated: December 10, 2024 | 09:32
McLaren's Lando Norris celebrates on the podium after winning the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix. Reuters
Lando Norris delivered McLaren a first Formula One constructors’ title since 1998 on Sunday and said next year was going to be his turn at the top.
The Briton won the season-ending Abu Dhabi Grand Prix from pole position, racing untroubled from start to finish as McLaren chief executive Zak Brown endured 58 laps of nervous agony on the pitwall.
“You all deserve this. Thank you so much. It’s been a special year,” said Norris over the team radio after taking the chequered flag.
“Next year is going to be my year too.”
The 25-year-old expanded on that later in pre-podium comments -- once he had told everyone that he and Brown were going to celebrate by getting “absolutely hammered” with the team.
“We want to win the constructors’, we want to win the drivers’ next year,” he said.
“I made my mistakes this year, but I’ve learned a lot, and I’ve learned a lot from (Red Bull’s four times champion) Max (Verstappen) and my competitors around me. As much as I’m happy now, I’m excited to get next year going.”
McLaren’s driver Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri celebrate with their team after winning the constructors’ title at the Abu Dhabi Formula One Grand Prix at the Yas Marina Circuit. AFP
McLaren’s constructors’ title lifted them joint-second on nine with Williams in the all-time lists, behind only Ferrari who have 16.
It was also their first title of any sort since Lewis Hamilton’s first drivers’ crown in 2008.
The last time they were Formula One’s top team was with Finland’s Mika Hakkinen when Ron Dennis was in charge, a different era -- before either Norris or teammate Oscar Piastri were born.
“Today was a very special day for all of us. It was ours to lose today and I’m sure at certain moments people thought that it was not far away from being lost,” said Norris of a race full of nervous tension after Piastri collided with Verstappen at the first corner.
That left the Australian at the back of the field before fighting back to 10th.
“For a minute, my heart was like, ‘Oh God, it’s not looking as likely’,” said Norris. “But if I just kept my head down and kept focused, I knew I could deliver and do what I got to do.
“But the bigger picture of us winning a championship for the first time in 26 years, you wouldn’t have thought that when you say the name McLaren.
“For me to be part of that, for Oscar to be part of it, is something we’re incredibly proud of. And delivering that for the team has put the biggest smile as possible on everyone’s face.”
Brown, who has steered the team through the lows of the pandemic when McLaren’s finances were parlous, went from biting his nails to embraces all round as McLaren beat Ferrari by 14 points.
“That was the worst two hours of my life, by far,” said the American. “I was worried about everything, and he drove flawlessly.”
Hamilton says farewell to Mercedes with a champion’s drive: Hamilton raced one last time for Mercedes on Sunday, Formula One’s most successful driver and team partnership ending in a cloud of tyre smoke, a radio love-in and a performance worthy of a seven times world champion.
The 39-year-old Briton, who will be driving for Ferrari next season, arrived at Abu Dhabi’s Yas Marina circuit on race day dressed in red and bowed out with emotional farewells flooding the airwaves.
“We dreamed a lot but together we believed,” Hamilton said, after finishing fourth in a season-ender he started 16th thanks to a plastic bollard becoming wedged under his car in qualifying.
“Thank you for all the courage, the determination, the passion and everything in supporting me.
“What started out as a leap of faith turned into a journey into the history books. We did everything together and I’m so, so grateful to everyone.”
Hamilton performed some smoking ‘doughnut’ spins for the crowd on the finish straight and then got out, huddled by the car and kissed it.
He embraced race winner Norris who secured a first constructors’ title in 26 years for his former team McLaren.
Hamilton’s 12 years at Mercedes brought them together six drivers’ titles, eight constructors’ championships, 84 wins, 78 poles and 153 podium finishes.
Hamilton’s own records extend well beyond that, with a first title for McLaren in 2008 -- the team also powered by Mercedes -- and his personal tally of wins now at 105.