Motor racing-Norris on back foot in Monaco after qualifying eighth in McLaren struggle


Formula One F1 - Monaco Grand Prix - Circuit de Monaco, Monaco - June 5, 2026 McLaren's Lando Norris during practice REUTERS/Yves Herman

MONACO, June 6 (Reuters) - ⁠Reigning world champion Lando Norris's hopes of back-to-back victories in Monaco always looked fanciful, ⁠but he admitted after qualifying eighth for Sunday's race that he will ‌now need some luck even to threaten the podium.

McLaren have struggled all weekend in their 1,000th Grand Prix and Norris broke down in Friday's second practice session with an electrical problem that the team's engineers worked late ​into the night to fix.

In final practice on Saturday, ⁠the Briton was ninth quickest, more ⁠than a second off the pace of Kimi Antonelli's Mercedes.

He narrowed the gap a little in ⁠qualifying ‌and might have earned a higher slot but for a lock-up on his final flying lap. He will line up alongside teammate Oscar Piastri on the fourth ⁠row.

"We've been on the back foot all weekend and qualifying ​showed that," Norris said.

"We ‌did make some gains from practice and the earlier sessions looked better, but ⁠that was partly ​because the faster cars were more conservative while we were already flat out."

On his prospects for Sunday, the 26-year-old suggested the race would be more about gaining some pointers ahead of next week's Grand ⁠Prix in Barcelona.

"We know what's missing, and it's ​better to recognise it now rather than later in the season," he said.

"Tomorrow we'll be aggressive on strategy and ready to take chances with safety cars or anything that comes our way, ⁠but overtaking is tough here, so we have to be realistic.

"The focus is on improving the car, getting the rear stability and downforce we need, so we can translate the kind of pace we had in Miami to tracks like Barcelona."

Australian Piastri was also playing ​down his chances of making a charge on Sunday.

"While we've made ⁠some progress since Friday and improved the balance of the car, we're still lacking the ​speed," he said.

"Looking ahead to the race, we have to ‌be realistic. This circuit is notoriously difficult for ​overtaking, and we don't expect that to change. Anything can happen in Monaco, so let's see what we can do."

(Reporting by Martyn HermanEditing by Toby Davis)

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In Motorsport

Motor racing-Rejuvenated Verstappen happy with Monaco front row
Motor racing-Antonelli snatches Monaco pole with 'magic lap' for Mercedes
Motor racing-Antonelli quickest in final Monaco practice
Motor racing-Ferrari principal Vasseur misses Monaco qualifying for medical reasons
Motor racing-Ferrari mark their intent in Monaco practice runs
Motor racing-Audi unfazed by V8 chatter, keeps faith in turbo future
Motor racing-Ferrari set pace in first practice for Monaco Grand Prix
Motor racing-Las Vegas to host Formula One until 2037
Motor racing-MotoGP riders are 'nuts', says F1 leader Antonelli
Motor racing-Monaco favourite Leclerc wary of Mercedes threat despite Ferrari gains

Others Also Read