©McLaren
McLaren arrived in Monaco expecting to be firmly in the mix. Instead, the opening day of running left the reigning champions facing an uncomfortable reality: a significant pace deficit, an unexplained reliability issue, and a growing list of questions that need answering before qualifying.
What was supposed to be a circuit that suited the team's strengths quickly turned into one of its most difficult Fridays of the season.
While Ferrari dominated proceedings at the front, McLaren found itself struggling to unlock performance around the streets of Monte Carlo.
The situation was compounded in second practice when Lando Norris suffered an electrical problem that brought his session to an abrupt halt at the Nouvelle Chicane.
With Norris stranded down in 19th and Oscar Piastri more than a second off the pace in seventh, concern rather than confidence was the prevailing mood inside the Woking-based squad.
McLaren had hoped the low-speed form it displayed in Canada would translate well to Monaco's tight and technical layout. Instead, Piastri spent Friday chasing answers as Ferrari disappeared into the distance.
“It felt okay, just not as speedy as we would like, unfortunately, so it was a difficult one," Piastri reported.
"We made a bit of progress for FP2, but we went from a second and a half off to a second off. So, it's been a tough day for us. Some things to find overnight."
Perhaps most concerning was the scale of the gap. Around Monaco's short lap, losing over a second to the benchmark is a substantial deficit, and one that caught McLaren by surprise.
"We always expected Ferrari to be quick, and they look very, very quick as well, but we were hoping we would be a fair bit closer," he added. "Let's see what we can try and muster up for tomorrow.
"In today's Formula 1, there's never anything you can do to turn the car completely upside down. So, we'll try and find something for sure, because we need to. But I don't have any great ideas at the moment."
Those comments reflected a team still searching for a clear direction heading into a crucial overnight analysis session.
As if the lack of pace was not enough, Norris' day ended prematurely when his car suddenly shut down during FP2.
"We don't know conclusively yet. He had an electrical problem on the car and it shut down," explained McLaren chief designer Rob Marshall.
"But we've not had enough time to go through the data and find out exactly what's gone wrong yet. It could be anything, but it's electrical."
The reliability concern robbed Norris of valuable track time and added another layer of uncertainty to McLaren's preparations.
Marshall believes part of the team's struggles may stem from difficulties getting the tyres into the right operating window early in the lap.
"We're confident we can make it a bit better. I think we were struggling in the initial part of the lap. And then as it went through sector two and three, we started to be a bit more competitive," he added.
"I think maybe that's tyre temperature or maybe something else. But we've got a bit of stuff to work on, certainly, in the first half of the lap."
For McLaren, Friday ended not with confidence but concern. With Ferrari setting the pace and qualifying looming, the team faces a race against time to understand what went wrong – and whether it can be fixed.
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