Lando Norris attempted to play down McLaren’s dominant-looking start to the Bahrain Grand Prix which left their rivals describing the pacesetters’ Friday advantage as being “very big” and putting them “on a different planet”.
McLaren head into this weekend’s event, the season’s fourth round, leading both world championship standings and already appearing big favourites for victory at Sakhir after topping Friday’s two practice sessions.
Oscar Piastri and team-mate Norris also finished one-two in the more representative floodlit evening session, when McLaren’s advantage over the field on the single-lap timesheet was in excess of half a second.
Rival teams talking up the performance advantage of McLaren’s car, and the Woking team insisting they are not actually so far ahead of the pack, has quickly become a theme of the 2025 season’s early weeks.
Mercedes’ George Russell claimed at the season’s second round in China that McLaren “should win every race”, while Red Bull’s Max Verstappen cheekily said after his narrow victory over Norris and Piastri last week in Japan that “you wouldn’t have seen me” had he been driving the MCL39.
Verstappen confirmed on Thursday that he had not been joking when he made that remark, to which Norris replied: “I have a lot of respect for Max but I also know some things are not true.
“He can come and test our car any day that he wants and I’ll be excited to see the disappointment on his face after he gets out.”
Russell, who was third quickest for Mercedes, said: “We expected McLaren to be a big step ahead here and we saw that today. A long way ahead in the middle sector where the tyres are overheating.
“So we know we have got a bit of work to do but we’re in the position fighting for the next best [positions] I think.”
Verstappen was only seventh, 0.8s away from Piastri, and said of the gap: “It’s big. We did a bit of a different approach to our Friday so I think this gap is very big.”
And Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc, whose team have brought floor upgrades to this weekend in a bid to start turning around their largely disappointing start to the season, admitted after finishing half a second adrift in fourth: “I’m trying to push into a direction that allows me to extract a bit more out of the car, but to be honest the potential of the car remains the same and we’re just not fast enough.
“When we look at the McLaren, they are just on another planet for now. So it’s annoying but it’s the way it is and it actually motivates me to try and close that gap as soon as possible, but they are incredibly fast.”
So what are McLaren saying about their pace?
Despite the team’s impressive Friday one-two, Norris started his post-session interview by saying the MCL39 had actually felt “shocking” and “horrendous” compared to how it did in pre-season testing at the same circuit six weeks ago when conditions were significantly cooler.
And although the title leader did accept that “relatively our pace was still in a reasonable place”, he was not buying the large timesheet gap and implied that rivals had not turned their engines up on Friday as much as McLaren.
“I don’t think they turned it up,” said Norris in apparent reference to rivals’ engine modes.
“Everyone just looks at the timesheets, they have no idea about information on who turns things up and who doesn’t.
“It’s worth three or four tenths around here. That puts us immediately back in the same position as the Mercedes.
“At the minute I wouldn’t say we are any quicker.”
Team-mate Piastri appeared more convinced about McLaren’s advantage, saying their “one-lap pace looks strong and the long run looked reasonable”, although the Australian too said he expected the pack to close in by qualifying on Saturday.
“For it [the gap] to be quite that big was a surprise but I think the others will find a bit more tomorrow and it will be pretty close,” he said.
“Nice to have it now but Bahrain is also a track you can overtake on and tyre degradation is a big factor.
“Qualifying is important but we need to make sure we have a good race car as well.”
Sky Sports F1’s Bahrain GP Schedule
Saturday April 12
- 11.10am: F3 Sprint Race
- 1.15pm: Bahrain GP Practice Three (session starts at 1.30pm)
- 3.10pm: F2 Sprint
- 4.10pm: Bahrain GP Qualifying build-up
- 5pm: BAHRAIN GP QUALIFYING
- 7pm: Ted’s Qualifying Notebook
Sunday April 13
- 10.50am: F3 Feature Race
- 12.20pm: F2 Feature Race
- 2.30pm: Bahrain GP build-up: Grand Prix Sunday
- 4pm: THE BAHRAIN GRAND PRIX
- 6pm: Bahrain GP reaction: Chequered Flag
- 7pm: Ted’s Notebook
Formula 1 continues its triple-header in Sakhir at the Bahrain Grand Prix this weekend, live on Sky Sports F1. Stream Sky Sports with NOW – No contract, cancel anytime