Norris expects to benefit from McLaren ‘clean slate’
Last updated: October 25, 2025 | 09:26
McLaren's Lando Norris during practice. Reuters
Lando Norris expects to benefit from McLaren’s decision to remove sporting ‘consequences’ from clashes with team-mate Oscar Piastri in their battle for the Formula One drivers’ championship.
The repercussions, details of which were never disclosed by the team, were imposed after Norris gained from forcing the Australian wide at the first corner in Singapore.
The pair collided in Austin during a sprint race last Saturday, forcing both to retire, and Piastri revealed in Mexico on Thursday that he had taken responsibility and they would be starting with a clean slate.
“It’s better for my interests,” Norris, 14 points adrift of Piastri after 19 of 24 rounds, told reporters at the Autodromo Hermanos Rodriguez.
“I don’t know if relieved is the right word. It wasn’t like I was sweating before, but it gives me better chances in races,” added the Briton.
McLaren's Lando Norris after practice. Reuters
“It was certainly a disadvantage. I would never choose it.”
The Briton has been steadily eroding Piastri’s lead, beating the Australian in the last four races but also losing ground to Red Bull’s reigning champion Max Verstappen, who is now 40 points off Piastri.
Norris said he was still in a good position with five rounds remaining.
“I probably prefer being first, but I’m also in second with nothing to lose. So, no, I’m in a comfortable place,” said the 25-year-old, who finished overall runner-up last year.
Norris said he did not believe in momentum, with every race weekend different and the car and track characteristics changing.
He also emphasised how tricky to drive he still found McLaren’s 2025 car, which he said was incredibly quick once in the elusive perfect performance window.
“I clearly found last year’s (car) easier to understand and easier to get the most out of than I do this year,” added the Briton, making clear he was not seeking to make excuses.
“You have weekends where things suit you a bit better and others not. In the end there are days when I can’t get as much out of the car as Oscar does. And there are days I get more out of the car than Oscar does.
“I’m trying every weekend to still do a better job but it’s pretty impossible to figure out.
“Still, even at this point of the year, to figure out how to do every type of corner, how to produce every lap in every condition, it’s just not something I can do anywhere near as well as last year.”
Meanwhile, Lewis Hamilton hopes Ferrari can repeat last year’s Mexican Grand Prix triumph this weekend but teammate Charles Leclerc sounded a more pessimistic note on Thursday, saying a victory looks out of reach without “strange things happening”.
Carlos Sainz, who is now driving for Williams, delivered Ferrari’s last victory 12 months ago in Mexico, with the team now on a 23-race winless streak.
“I think we were very strong here last year. So I’m hoping that we can take the learnings that they had last year and apply them this weekend,” Hamilton, who has yet to stand on the podium since joining the Italian team in January, told reporters.
The seven-times world champion faces the additional challenge of missing the first practice session, with endurance racer Antonio Fuoco taking the seat to gain Formula One experience.