Lando Norris admitted he had made âtoo many mistakesâ after qualifying seventh for the Canadian Grand Prix, four places behind title-leading team-mate Oscar Piastri.
Norris will start Sundayâs race from his second-lowest grid penalty of the season as, not for the first time this year, a promising start to qualifying gave way to costly errors when it mattered most in Q3.
The Briton wrecked his first attempt at a lap in the final phase by running straight on at the final chicane, before banging the Turn Seven wall on his last run.
âNot ideal,â admitted Norris, who trails Piastri by 10 points in the world championship, to Sky Sports F1.
âJust too many mistakes. I hit the wall in the last lap.
âI had confidence, the car felt good today, I just made too many mistakes.â
While the Circuit Gilles Villeneuve is a track on which overtaking is possible with a faster car, Norris admits the championship leaders are not enjoying their usual advantage around the challenging wall-lined track.
Quizzed about McLarenâs race pace, he said: âItâs looked good, but itâs not been as good as Max [Verstappen, who start on the front row].
âWe clearly donât have our advantage around this track comparing to normal, itâs a lot more of a track where you just need very good ride and just ability to take kerbs and bumps and very low grip.
âItâs still good, the car was quick. Maybe the medium tyre was a bit quicker at the end of qualifying. I think our pace is good enough itâs just Iâm a bit too far back again.â
Advantage Piastri â but McLaren ready for âdamage limitationâ
Frustratingly for Norris, Q3 is the only session so far this weekend when he has been outpaced by Piastri.
The Australian had been the one making more errors around he Circuit Gilles Villeneuve up to then, most notably in final practice when he tagged the infamous Wall of Champions in an incident which had appeared to damage his MCL39âs rear suspension.
Indeed Piastri admitted his three practice sessions had been âpretty miserableâ. Given that preparation, Piastri â who has opted to run McLarenâs old front-suspension arrangement with his team-mate on the new â was satisfied to still qualify at the gridâs sharp end.
âAfter how practice went, Iâm pretty happy with myself. A nice turnaround,â he said.
âIt was always the question, do we want the medium or soft for Q3? We went with the soft because we were having a lot of problems and wanted to keep things consistent.
âIâm pretty happy with third which is a bit different this year but I will definitely take it.â
Piastri starts in a position to increase his title lead over Norris although his prospects of taking a sixth win of the season look less clear cut from third.
Asked if he could take on the front-row duo of Russell and Verstappen, Piastri replied: âI think so. Again, Friday didnât look great in any run, but I certainly feel more comfortable now than I did this morning and then yesterday.
âOur pace on race days is generally where weâre strong. These two next to me were very quick in the race runs yesterday, so itâs certainly not going to be a slam dunk win, but I think weâre definitely in the fight.â
McLaren have only been beaten twice in the seasonâs first nine grands prix â by Red Bullâs Verstappen at Suzuka and Imola â but Sunday is the first time they will start without a car on the front row.
Team principal Andrea Stella told Sky Sports F1: âThe picture changes completely for the race, thatâs what we have to focus on.
âI think in terms of race pace we should be a bit more comfortable but letâs see.
âThis weekend could be one of damage limitation.â
Sky Sports F1âs Canadian GP schedule
Sunday June 15
3.50pm: F1 Academy Race Three
5.30pm: Grand Prix Sunday: Canadian GP build-up*
7pm: THE CANADIAN GRAND PRIX*
9pm: Chequered Flag: Canadian GP reaction
10pm: Tedâs Notebook
*also on Sky Sports Main Event
The 2025 Formula 1 season resumes live on Sky Sports F1 with the Canadian Grand Prix this weekend. Stream Sky Sports with NOW â no contract, cancel anytime.
<