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Piastri 'ready to get back into it' after Melbourne mishap

Oscar Piastri is a man who knows how to move on. After the heartbreak of a home race that ended before it even began, the McLaren driver has arrived in Shanghai with a spirit of pure resilience.

While some might still be replaying the sight of his MCL40 meeting the Albert Park wall on the reconnaissance lap, Piastri has already filed the incident under "lessons learned" and is charging toward the Chinese Grand Prix with his sights set firmly on the horizon.

The Aussie’s embarrassing demise on race day was caused by a cumulation of factors, including a sudden spike in power, that pitched his car off the road just a few corners after he had taken to the track to join the grid.

It was obviously an agonising moment for the 24-year-old, especially as it came a year after his previous painful Albert Park outing, when he slid off in wet conditions while battling near the front.

Yet, Piastri remains refreshingly grounded.

Moving On from Melbourne

“Yeah, I’m fine,” he said when asked if he had put the disappointment behind him. “I’m ready to get back into it. Obviously, it’s certainly not going to be the favourite moment of my career!

“I think I still tried to learn as much as I could from the race. I’m still going through some of the things that happened last Sunday, in terms of what happened during the race. But I tried to learn as much as I could.

“And I think up until that point, in a similar vein to Melbourne last year, through practice, through qualifying, we did things well, we executed the plan we had correctly.

“We kind of realised maybe the plan we had maybe wasn’t necessarily the best, but we at least executed well.

“So there’s definitely positives to take from last weekend. But I think last year, and the start of last year, we are only two points worse off – even though it’s more embarrassing – than I was at this point 12 months ago.”

A Quick Reset for Shanghai

With Formula 1 moving immediately to the next race, Piastri says the busy calendar has helped him refocus.

The 2026 cars and regulations have already thrown up plenty of challenges, leaving drivers with little time to dwell on mistakes.

“I think there were a lot of things to understand from the weekend in general, understanding how Sunday went so wrong,” he said.

“But I think I understood the factors that went into it pretty quickly, and then focused on all of the things I’ve got to try to do this weekend to be as fast as I can.

“The good thing about coming straight into another race, and the good thing about having so many things to focus on, is it’s pretty easy to shift your focus onto the future."

From his vantage point in Melbourne – the McLaren garage, Piastri also gathered intelligence on the sheer pace of the frontrunners. While Lando Norris finished a daunting 51 seconds behind winner George Russell, Piastri believes the gap isn't quite as pessimistic as it looks.

“Yes and no. I think the race was chaos for the first 10 laps, and a very different kind of racing to what we’ve ever had in F1, and I think very different to your kind of traditional way of racing,” he said.

“Once everyone settled down, it looked more similar to what we’ve seen previously. I think the gap to Mercedes, I think we still had a lot of things we wanted to figure out in the race, not optimising things as much as we could have, or probably should have.”

While Piastri respects the Silver Arrows' current form, his goal for Shanghai is simple: close the gap and start the season for real.

“I think hopefully it paints a slightly pessimistic picture,” he said “But we’re under no illusion that Mercedes is incredibly strong, and we’ve got time to find. Hopefully we can get closer.

“I don’t think we will be in the fight to beat them over a race distance, but I think we can get a lot closer than what we did in Melbourne.”

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Michael Delaney

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