Norris Shrugs Off Verstappen Claims as McLaren Tighten Grip on Championship Campaign

McLaren’s extraordinary 2025 season reached another milestone in Singapore when the team sealed the Constructors’ Championship with six rounds remaining, a feat that sent shockwaves through the paddock and reasserted the Woking outfit as Formula 1’s new benchmark. Their dominant early-season form has given them an advantage of more than 330 points over their nearest rivals, leaving both Mercedes and Red Bull chasing shadows despite signs of recent improvement.
Yet while the team battle has looked increasingly one-sided, the fight for the Drivers’ Championship has taken a more turbulent and unpredictable path. The championship lead has swung back and forth in recent months, particularly as Oscar Piastri’s early-season momentum faded in the second half of the campaign. His slump opened the door for Max Verstappen, whose deficit of more than 100 points after the Dutch Grand Prix at Zandvoort was dramatically reduced, keeping him mathematically in contention heading into Qatar.
Still, the three-time champion’s title hopes remain slim, and his latest assessment of the season — claiming that with McLaren-level machinery he would already have secured a fifth World Championship — struck a nerve with his chief rival, Lando Norris.
Speaking after Saturday’s Sprint in Qatar, where Norris kept Verstappen behind him to secure a controlled third place, the British driver pushed back firmly but calmly against the Dutchman’s remarks.
“Max is very welcome to say everything he wants, to be honest,” Norris told reporters. “He’s kind of earned the right. You know, he’s won four World Championships. I have a lot of respect and I think that gives anyone a lot of credit.”

It was a markedly diplomatic opening, reflecting a mutual respect that has grown between the two over recent seasons. But Norris quickly made clear that Verstappen’s latest comments did not reflect the full reality of the championship fight.
“He’s achieved an incredible amount — more than anyone generally dreams of achieving,” Norris continued. “So, you know, Max generally has a good clue about a lot of things, but there’s also a lot of things he doesn’t have much of a clue about.”
The pointed remark drew immediate reactions in the paddock, where Norris has long been known for his honesty but rarely for direct verbal sparring. He went further, suggesting that some of the noise emanating from Red Bull has been less about analysis and more about provocation.
“It’s also Red Bull’s way of going about things — this kind of aggressive nature and, yeah, just talking nonsense a lot of the time,” he said. “So it depends if you want to listen to it and talk about it — like you love to — or you do what we do as a team, which is just kind of keep our heads down, keep focused.”
Norris concluded with a final reminder that Verstappen’s hypothetical arguments carry one unavoidable caveat.
“So maybe he would have done,” he added, “but he hasn’t so far, and he keeps trying.”
The exchange underscores the rising tension around the title fight, even as McLaren appear poised to claim both championships. While the team trophy is already secured, the drivers’ crown could be decided as early as Sunday’s Qatar Grand Prix — and there are multiple permutations in which Norris could clinch it. The simplest is also the most emphatic: if he wins the race, he becomes World Champion for the first time.
For Norris, the moment feels both historic and logical. Long considered one of Formula 1’s brightest talents, he has blended speed, consistency, and maturity throughout the season, delivering race wins across circuits with wildly different characteristics. His command of tyre management and his ability to stay composed under pressure have drawn praise even from rivals.

McLaren’s resurgence has been equally critical. The team’s sweeping technical overhaul — which began in 2023 and accelerated dramatically from 2024 onward — has delivered a car capable of competing on every type of track. Their operational accuracy, from pit stops to strategy execution, has also reached new heights, enabling Norris and Piastri to systematically convert pace into points.
As for Verstappen, his season has been marked by flashes of brilliance but undermined by inconsistency, mechanical issues, and a Red Bull package that has been out-developed by McLaren for the first time in years. Despite his frustration, he remains the best-placed challenger should Norris falter.
But faltering has not been part of Norris’s vocabulary this season, and Sunday may now represent the culmination of a journey that has pushed him from promising talent to world title favourite. Should he cross the line first, no hypothetical scenario — Verstappen’s or otherwise — will carry any weight.
In Qatar, Norris stands not just on the brink of a championship, but on the verge of defining his era.