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‘Pray with me’ – Stroll’s blunt plea amid Aston Martin’s struggles

There’s optimism, and then there’s whatever Lance Stroll is clinging to right now amid his Aston Martin team’s crisis.

The Silverstone-based outfit’s 2026 campaign hasn’t so much stumbled out of the blocks as faceplanted into them. Minimal running, crippling vibrations, and a car that seems intent on shaking its drivers into submission – it’s been less a racing effort, more an endurance test for human nerve endings.

And yet, somehow, Stroll is still talking about belief.

‘It’s not a great time…’

“It’s not a great time for the team,” the Canadian admitted last weekend in Shanghai.

“Everyone’s frustrated with where we are. It’s not why we want to come racing, to be fighting for these positions. But there’s a lot of potential, of that I have no doubt.”

Potential is doing a lot of heavy lifting here.

On paper, the ingredients are mouthwatering: a state-of-the-art factory, top-tier talent, and the arrival of design legend Adrian Newey. Add in Honda power – fresh off a dominant run in Formula 1 – and this should be a team on the rise.

Instead, it’s a team stuck in a violent mechanical loop, quite literally.

“We have a great facility, very talented people inside the team, Adrian [Newey], who joined, Honda has won four of the last five championships,” Stroll added.

“Right now, it’s not ideal, but we keep pushing forward, and I have a lot of belief in the whole team and the whole operation.”

Learning… slowly

Even understanding the car has become a luxury. Between missed sessions and limited mileage, Aston Martin is still gathering the kind of basic data most teams locked down weeks ago.

For Stroll, every lap feels less like progress and more like catching up on lost time.

“Sure, every run,” he said. “Saturday was my first proper qualifying laps in the car, because I didn’t really run much in Bahrain, didn’t run in Barcelona, and I didn’t run in Australia, so Saturday was the first time I even qualified the car properly.

“In the race, getting a start in and doing a few laps is just kilometres under my belt, so I’m just learning more about the car.

“As a team, we’re collecting more data and learning more and more with every lap.”

It’s the kind of language you expect in pre-season testing – not a couple races into a new era.

Suzuka looms… and so does reality

Next stop: Japan, and a Suzuka Circuit owned by Honda, no less. So, it’s a home race of sorts for Aston Martin. If there were ever a place it would want to look competent, this is it.

The problem? Competence currently feels like a stretch goal. Which brings us to Stroll’s final, almost painfully honest assessment – part plea, part punchline:

“Unless they can find some magic in the next 10 days. Pray. Pray with me,” he exhorted.

At this point, it might indeed be less about setup changes and more about divine intervention. Because right now, Aston Martin aren’t chasing podiums.

They’re chasing relief.

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Phillip van Osten

Motor racing was a backdrop from the outset in Phillip van Osten's life. Born in Southern California, Phillip grew up with the sights and sounds of fast cars thanks to his father, Dick van Osten, an editor and writer for Auto Speed and Sport and Motor Trend. Phillip's passion for racing grew even more when his family moved to Europe and he became acquainted with the extraordinary world of Grand Prix racing. He was an early contributor to the monthly French F1i Magazine, often providing a historic or business perspective on Formula 1's affairs. In 2012, he co-authored along with fellow journalist Pierre Van Vliet the English-language adaptation of a limited edition book devoted to the great Belgian driver Jacky Ickx. He also authored "The American Legacy in Formula 1", a book which recounts the trials and tribulations of American drivers in Grand Prix racing. Phillip is also a commentator for Belgian broadcaster Be.TV for the US Indycar series.

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