‘How Did We Not Win?’ – Norris Says McLaren Strategy Cost Him Chance of Miami Victory
In the sweltering heat of the Miami International Autodrome, a frustrated Lando Norris stood on the second step of the podium, his eyes fixed on the top spot occupied by Kimi Antonelli. The 2026 Miami Grand Prix was supposed to be McLaren’s coronation—a race where the papaya-clad team finally broke through for their first win of the season. Instead, Norris was left asking a question that will haunt the Woking garage for weeks: “How did we not win?”
The British driver believes a strategic misstep by McLaren cost him the victory, handing the win to a resurgent Antonelli and Mercedes. This wasn’t just a loss; it was a missed opportunity that could define the championship narrative. Let’s break down what went wrong, why Norris is seething, and what this means for the 2026 title fight.
The Turning Point: A Strategy That Backfired
The race started with Norris on pole, having dominated qualifying with a lap that left rivals stunned. The early laps were textbook McLaren: Norris built a 3.5-second lead over Antonelli by lap 12, managing his tires perfectly. But then came the Safety Car—a staple of Miami’s chaotic circuit—when Logan Sargeant’s Williams stopped on the back straight. This is where the race unraveled for McLaren.
McLaren opted to keep Norris out on his aging medium tires, believing track position was king. Meanwhile, Mercedes pitted Antonelli for fresh soft tires. The decision, Norris argued, was a gamble that ignored the data. “We had the pace to win, but we played it safe,” Norris said post-race. “I told the team I wanted to box, but they said the undercut wasn’t worth it. Look where that got us.”
The result? Antonelli, with tire advantage, carved through traffic and caught Norris with 15 laps to go. The Italian executed a clean pass at Turn 11, and Norris had no answer. McLaren’s gamble on track position failed because they underestimated the performance delta of fresh rubber on Miami’s abrasive surface.
Key strategic errors by McLaren:
- Ignoring the undercut threat: Mercedes saw the gap and pitted Antonelli immediately under the Safety Car, gaining 2.5 seconds.
- Overestimating tire life: Norris’s medium tires were 20 laps old when the Safety Car came out; fresh softs gave Antonelli a 0.8-second per lap advantage.
- Lack of aggression: Unlike Red Bull or Ferrari, McLaren chose defense over offense, a mindset that cost them the win.
Norris vs. Antonelli: A Rivalry Forged in Miami
This wasn’t just a strategic failure—it was a statement win for Kimi Antonelli, the 20-year-old Italian who is quickly becoming the most exciting talent in Formula 1. While Norris has been hailed as McLaren’s future champion, Antonelli’s composure under pressure was chilling. He didn’t just beat Norris; he outsmarted him.
Antonelli’s post-race comments were measured but pointed: “We saw the opportunity and we took it. Lando is incredible, but today, the team made the right call.” The irony? Antonelli is a product of Mercedes’ junior program, a system that McLaren once dominated with Lewis Hamilton. Now, the roles have reversed.
For Norris, the frustration is palpable. He has finished second in three of the first five races of 2026, and each time, a strategic error has been the culprit. In Bahrain, it was a slow pit stop. In Saudi Arabia, it was tire temperature management. In Miami, it was a collective failure to read the race. “I’m tired of hearing ‘we’ll learn from this,'” Norris admitted. “We have the car to win. We just don’t have the execution.”
Expert analysis: Former McLaren engineer Mark Slade told this outlet that the team’s conservative approach is a symptom of a deeper issue. “McLaren has been playing it safe since 2024. They’re afraid of losing points, but in F1, you win by taking risks. Mercedes took a risk and won. That’s the difference.”
What This Means for the 2026 Championship
The Miami loss is a body blow to McLaren’s title aspirations. With Antonelli now just 12 points behind Norris in the drivers’ standings, the narrative is shifting. Mercedes, after a lackluster 2025, has found a second wind with their 2026 power unit, and Antonelli is driving with the confidence of a veteran.
Current standings after Miami:
- 1. Max Verstappen (Red Bull) – 98 points
- 2. Kimi Antonelli (Mercedes) – 82 points
- 3. Lando Norris (McLaren) – 80 points
- 4. Charles Leclerc (Ferrari) – 68 points
Norris’s title hopes now hinge on McLaren’s ability to learn from this debacle. The next race is the Emilia Romagna Grand Prix at Imola—a track that rewards strategic bravery. If McLaren plays it safe again, they risk falling into a midfield scrap. But if they embrace aggression, they could reclaim momentum.
Prediction: Expect McLaren to overhaul their strategic department before Imola. Team principal Andrea Stella has already hinted at internal changes. But words are cheap. Norris needs results, not promises. Meanwhile, Antonelli will smell blood. The Italian has a knack for winning when it matters—he won the 2024 F2 title in a similar fashion, capitalizing on rivals’ mistakes.
Conclusion: A Wake-Up Call for McLaren
Lando Norris’s question—”How did we not win?”—echoes through the paddock as a damning indictment of McLaren’s current state. They have the fastest car on the grid, a driver in his prime, and a budget that rivals the top teams. Yet, they keep finding ways to lose. Miami was not a defeat to a faster car; it was a defeat to a smarter strategy.
For Norris, the clock is ticking. He is no longer the young prodigy; he is a 27-year-old veteran who should be fighting for championships. If McLaren cannot deliver wins from pole position, they will never win a title. The 2026 season is still young, but the margin for error is shrinking. Antonelli and Verstappen are not waiting for McLaren to get their act together.
As the sun set over Miami, Norris sat alone in the McLaren motorhome, replaying the race in his mind. The data will show a lost opportunity. The history books will show Antonelli’s first win. The only question left is: will McLaren learn from this, or will “how did we not win?” become the team’s epitaph for 2026?
Source: Based on news from Sky Sports.
