The final stint of the Hungarian Grand Prix provided one of the most remarkable examples of a team convincing its driver to give up a victory to his team mate.
Teams have issued similar orders many times in past races, and not just McLaren. What made this occasion unusual was that McLaren didn’t simply bark out an order, but coaxed Lando Norris for lap and after until he finally gave way.
Once he did, Norris remarked “you don’t need to say anything”. By that point his race engineer Will Joseph had said so much it was hard to imagine more ways he might have twisted his driver’s arm.
McLaren faced the dilemma because Norris jumped ahead of his team mate Oscar Piastri through the final round of pit stops. Piastri led from the start until then, and although McLaren pitted Norris before his team mate the first time around the drivers remained in their original order that time.
Norris might have been forgiven for assuming McLaren intended to move him ahead by pitting him first during their initial pit stops, as that is exactly what they did in the same race 12 months early. But this time they made it clear to him that was not the plan:
Lap: 17/70 NOR: 1’26.485, PIA: 1’24.248 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Lap: 18/70 NOR: 1’41.807, PIA: 1’26.496 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Lap: 19/70 NOR: 1’23.779, PIA: 1’42.479 |
After a long middle stint, McLaren prepared to bring their drivers in for their final stops. As was the case the first time around, they were concerned about the threat from Lewis Hamilton behind and chose to bring Norris in before Piastri:
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