F1 News, Reports and Race Results

Piastri rues 'quite messy' Friday but McLaren ‘pace is there’

Oscar Piastri has admitted to a “quite messy” opening day of running at the Monaco Grand Prix, but the Aussie also feels confidence about McLaren’s pace in the Principality.

The championship leader, who is chasing his fifth win of the season this weekend, concluded FP1 in fifth position but advanced to second behind Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc in Friday’s late afternoon session.

However, Piastri’s FP2 was marred by a costly mistake at Sainte Devote, where he clipped the wall, necessitating a return to the pits and a new nose for his MCL39.

“Tricky. Yes, I think just the whole day has been up and down,” Piastri told Sky F1 at the end of his day.

“I think when we get everything together, the pace is quite good. It’s just not proving that easy to do at the moment.

“So some things to look at, especially for myself, it’s been a very messy day. So yeah, to try and reset a bit tomorrow, because I think the pace in the car is there.”

Piastri noted Ferrari’s strength around Monte Carlo’s tight streets, with Charles Leclerc topping both sessions and looking increasingly like the driver to beat this weekend.

“I think clearly Ferrari are looking a lot stronger here than they have done,” he continued.

“But yeah, I think for today, it’s been on my side, been quite messy, but yeah, plenty of things to learn, and think tomorrow will be an interesting day.”

Norris Cautious Despite “Good Fun” Start

Lando Norris, who topped FP1 at one point FP1 before slipping to third and then fourth across both sessions, echoed the sentiment that while McLaren’s underlying speed is there, perfect execution is proving elusive.

“It’s always good fun here. It’s always stressful, but, yeah, good fun,” Norris said. “Just difficult to get some clean laps and things at times. But I think a nice feeling, felt comfortable from the beginning. But you know, progress [needed] more in some areas.”

The Brit pointed to the unique but predictable demands of the Monaco circuit, where even the smallest errors can snowball into larger issues.

“It’s difficult to describe the things,” Norris explained. “But, you know, we’re talking small things, like it’s not huge, you know.

“But when you’re talking about hundredths here and there, it’s small, all the small things that add up, but just too difficult to get the braking right, to get the cornering right, to get the tyres, the grip, the feeling all in like the perfect window.”

With qualifying looming on Saturday afternoon – Monaco’s most critical session – both McLaren drivers are hoping for a cleaner day to maximize the promise of the MCL39.

Read also:

Apples, pears, and peaches': Stella’s fruity take on McLaren’s form

Keep up to date with all the F1 news via X and Facebook

Michael Delaney

Recent Posts

Tsunoda ‘not giving up’ on F1 as ‘anything can happen’

In the high-stakes, musical-chairs reality of the Formula 1 paddock, being sidelined by a team…

10 hours ago

‘Not about protecting position’: Komatsu eyes bigger Haas challenge

Anyone walking into the Haas hospitality suite during pre-season testing and suggesting they would be…

11 hours ago

When the third time was a charm for Lauda

In 1982, it took only three races for Niki Lauda to seal his successful comeback…

13 hours ago

Coulthard: Time for Russell to ‘start eroding’ Antonelli’s confidence

There’s a fine line in Formula 1 between harmony and hierarchy – and right now…

14 hours ago

Gasly: ‘Too much negativity’ around F1’s rules – but changes needed

For all the noise generated by Formula 1’s controversial 2026 regulations, Pierre Gasly is striking…

15 hours ago

Brundle: Wheatley a good catch – but Aston must ‘settle down’

Sky F1’s Martin Brundle has backed Jonathan Wheatley’s expected move to Aston Martin, a team…

16 hours ago