This all sounds very promising. Gradient of development McLaren showed in second part of the season was incredible so if they can keep improving at that rate, that would be amazing.
Quite surprised to see them so positive.
Now let's do this again but this time offer him the seat alongside Perezmwillems wrote: ↑28 Jan 2024, 15:02Norris on why Family is more important than the quickest car. Also talks about the unfinished story of ups and downs with Mclaren.
https://racingnews365.com/mclaren-norri ... -champions
AR3-GP wrote: ↑28 Jan 2024, 15:34Now let's do this again but this time offer him the seat alongside Perezmwillems wrote: ↑28 Jan 2024, 15:02Norris on why Family is more important than the quickest car. Also talks about the unfinished story of ups and downs with Mclaren.
https://racingnews365.com/mclaren-norri ... -champions
McLaren have been methodically working their way back up to the top. They have the tools in place and personal to cope with the 2026 regulation changes. Signing a new deal with Mercedes for PU's is a no brainer for McLaren (Brown was being diligent checking out Red Bull PU's). Sure, Red Bull have poached people from Mercedes HPP etc, but the boss of Mercedes HPP is relishing the challenge of the '26 PU regulations. All we've heard from Red Bull is extremely negative comments from Max about the Red Bull PU in the simulator.JordanMugen wrote: ↑28 Jan 2024, 06:02It's a perfectly cromulent word, thanks! I checked the dictionary and everything.
I'm not sure even Red Bull themselves are confident they will be winning races in 2026. It would seem an act of great hubris for any Grand Prix team to think they will be winning under such a radically new set of regulations.
All they can do is built the best car they can, like Red Bull did in 2022, surely? Their best guess of what the regulations require? The same as for McLaren F1 Team?
McLaren's ability to correct course and now have a car that is truly competitive under the 2022- regulation set is truly impressive.
That is fair. Hamilton was a Mclaren man until it proved untenable.mwillems wrote: ↑28 Jan 2024, 15:43AR3-GP wrote: ↑28 Jan 2024, 15:34Now let's do this again but this time offer him the seat alongside Perezmwillems wrote: ↑28 Jan 2024, 15:02Norris on why Family is more important than the quickest car. Also talks about the unfinished story of ups and downs with Mclaren.
https://racingnews365.com/mclaren-norri ... -champions
I'm sure it'd be more enticing and im sure thered be a circumstance that he would leave Mclaren for, but that isn't the lay of the land today
That's why I was saying I think his contract will have get out clauses. But the time is not yet right.
For now he's a Mclaren boy and personally I am in no doubt of his affection for Mclaren or its story. And in no doubt it will only go so far in the absence of titles.
Steady, the Ford boss was saying just last week how they are gonna go straight to the top with the new PU with Red Bulltaperoo2k wrote: ↑28 Jan 2024, 17:33McLaren have been methodically working their way back up to the top. They have the tools in place and personal to cope with the 2026 regulation changes. Signing a new deal with Mercedes for PU's is a no brainer for McLaren (Brown was being diligent checking out Red Bull PU's). Sure, Red Bull have poached people from Mercedes HPP etc, but the boss of Mercedes HPP is relishing the challenge of the '26 PU regulations. All we've heard from Red Bull is extremely negative comments from Max about the Red Bull PU in the simulator.JordanMugen wrote: ↑28 Jan 2024, 06:02It's a perfectly cromulent word, thanks! I checked the dictionary and everything.
I'm not sure even Red Bull themselves are confident they will be winning races in 2026. It would seem an act of great hubris for any Grand Prix team to think they will be winning under such a radically new set of regulations.
All they can do is built the best car they can, like Red Bull did in 2022, surely? Their best guess of what the regulations require? The same as for McLaren F1 Team?
McLaren's ability to correct course and now have a car that is truly competitive under the 2022- regulation set is truly impressive.
Lando might look like a genius in 2026 if McLaren get the aero side of the regulations bang on and Mercedes HPP produces a great PU, while Red Bull is left in the dust with a not so good PU that needs work. But we shall see. I'm looking forward to how the PU's shake out in '26 given the range of manufacturers designing and building PU's for 2026 and beyond.
For sure, who your teammate would be is a determining factor in any decision to move camp and your scenario, as theoretical as it is, would be enticing. But other factors still remain. There is a clear trajectory that has been marked out at McLaren, you could say everything is adding up to them becoming a major threat for, if not a championship in 2024, then race wins on merit. Failures and weaknesses have been addressed - infrastructure and team personnel structure in particular.AR3-GP wrote: ↑28 Jan 2024, 15:34Now let's do this again but this time offer him the seat alongside Perezmwillems wrote: ↑28 Jan 2024, 15:02Norris on why Family is more important than the quickest car. Also talks about the unfinished story of ups and downs with Mclaren.
https://racingnews365.com/mclaren-norri ... -champions
He already had a contract until the end of 2025. This renewal means he will have a contract until, at least, 2027.Darth-Piekus wrote: ↑28 Jan 2024, 21:13I don't think it matters now. Lando is with us for two more seasons. It's up to the team to give him a championship in these two seasons. He will be better this year and if he has a car that is as good as Red Bull I am confident he will deliver.
McLaren seems to be improving, but it's a bit delusional to legitimately think they are in a better position for 26 than RB. Being a customer has inherent disadvantages, the engine freeze has somewhat mitigated those but that will be going away again for 26. And extremely negative comments? I think you misinterpreted what he was saying. Those were not an indictment of their development, more a general critique of how the 2026 engines will operate across the board, with lots of clipping. In terms of development all comments I've read are essentially saying they are on track.taperoo2k wrote: ↑28 Jan 2024, 17:33McLaren have been methodically working their way back up to the top. They have the tools in place and personal to cope with the 2026 regulation changes. Signing a new deal with Mercedes for PU's is a no brainer for McLaren (Brown was being diligent checking out Red Bull PU's). Sure, Red Bull have poached people from Mercedes HPP etc, but the boss of Mercedes HPP is relishing the challenge of the '26 PU regulations. All we've heard from Red Bull is extremely negative comments from Max about the Red Bull PU in the simulator.
Lando might look like a genius in 2026 if McLaren get the aero side of the regulations bang on and Mercedes HPP produces a great PU, while Red Bull is left in the dust with a not so good PU that needs work. But we shall see. I'm looking forward to how the PU's shake out in '26 given the range of manufacturers designing and building PU's for 2026 and beyond.
Indeed, Lando was being honest. Some of the comments Lewis made last year saying he'd happily go up against Max in RB, those are cute but entirely meaningless when everyone knows that was never happening. RB didn't want him and I don't think he wanted to leave Merc.Ground Effect wrote: ↑29 Jan 2024, 08:36Lamdo is getting a lot of criticisms for apparently not thinking it's wise to go to be Max’s team mate. Meanwhile, he's probably the only top driver honest and open enough to admit that nobody among the top drivers would want Max as a team mate. Lewis can say what he likes, but we know there were small windows of opportunity for Mercedes to sign him, but it never materialised likely due to Lewis’s reluctance. The Red Bull environment is a Max Verstappen kingdom. But Personally, I'd fancy Lando's chances against Max if he were to join McLaren.