
McLaren's Canadian GP Disaster: Tyre Gamble, Piastri Penalty, Norris DNF
McLaren's promising weekend in Canada unraveled with a strategic tyre gamble, a collision for Piastri, and a gearbox failure for Norris, leaving team principal Stella to admit issues across the board.
McLaren's strong form from the Canadian Grand Prix sprint evaporated on Sunday as the team suffered a disastrous main race. Lando Norris retired with a gearbox issue, Oscar Piastri collected a penalty for clashing with Alexander Albon, and a questionable tyre strategy left the team with nothing. Team principal Andrea Stella admitted issues in 'pretty much all areas of racing.'
Why it matters:
This race was a critical opportunity for McLaren to assess its latest upgrade package, the second phase of its Miami spec. Instead, a flurry of problems prevented a clear read. The results also confirmed that Mercedes has leapfrogged McLaren as the benchmark team, while exposing a troubling sensitivity to low tyre temperatures that could hinder future performance.
The details:
- Strategic gamble backfires: McLaren chose intermediate tyres at the start of a drying track, a call that left its drivers vulnerable as rivals on slicks gained time. Norris and Piastri fell back immediately.
- Piastri's misjudgment: Trying to recover from the strategy error, Piastri attempted an optimistic pass on Albon's Williams and made contact. The stewards handed him a penalty, and the damage compromised his car.
- Norris's retirement: A gearbox issue forced Norris to park his MCL40 on lap 41, ending any hope of salvage.
- Tyre temperature woes: Even in clean air, McLaren lacked competitive pace. Stella pointed to an inability to get the front tyres into the ideal window, causing constant lock-ups and understeer. The MCL40 appears more sensitive to cold conditions than rival cars.
What's next:
Stella conceded that even without the issues, a podium was unlikely given the pace deficit. The team will now focus on understanding the tyre warm-up problem and ensuring its upgrades deliver as intended. With the next race around the corner, McLaren needs to rebound quickly to stay in the constructors' fight.
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